The Weather f
■	nncM %
Pair, Little Warmer ,
THE PONTIAC PRESS
Hoiri*
Edition
VOL. 12* -- NO- 85
★ ★ ★- ★ -
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 16; 1967	—48 PAGES uNiTi$s$l&rfi&Mio
Move to Hike Debt Limit Points	to Long-T War
WASHINGTON W - The Johnson administration gradually is gearing its money operations including the national debt — for a Vietnam war lasting at least as longes the U. S. involvement in World War II.
A request yesterday to Congress for a permanent debt ceiling of $365 billion to carry the government through June 30, 1969, was on one of several recent moves in that direction.
They also include President Johnson’s request for a 6 per cent income tax surtax, sales of new “freedom share” savings bonds pegged directly to the length
of the war and a voluntary program to stem the flow of investment dollars over-
terday before the House Ways hnd Means Committee.
‘T ant hero to talk about financing a-war. ills a costly war and it must be financed in a manner consistent with \preserving sound, balanced and fruitful Wonomic growth'at home,” he said.
Jh recommending a permanent debt" ceiling of $365 billion, Fowler said World War II provided a precedent for large debt limit increases to insure the ceiling “would hot be a constraint on necessary wartime finance.”
i clear in Fowler’s appearance yes- The present temporary ceiling of $336
World War H fighting began for the United States Dec. 7, 1941, and ended with Japan’s surrender Aug, 14, 1945. i ★ A ,
The U. S. troop buildup -in Vietnam, reached major scale in mid-1965 and administration fiscal planning now runs through June 30, 1969.
FOWLER
- .The implication for the national debt
billion will drop to $285 billion, the current permanent level, on July 1 unless Congress ants. The actual'debt as of May 10 — the latest date for which a figure is available — was $328.4 billion.
, p *	★
In proposing the surtax, Johnson pegged its length at either two years —. Which would carry it to June 30, 1969 — spr as long as the war lasted.
The “freedom shares” went on sale . May Tto. persons buying Series E bonds on the payroll savings or bondm-month. plans. They pay 4.74 per cent interest When held to ntoturity of 4% years.
Talks Ended
as Tariffs Cut
TALKING LIKE A CANDIDATE - Michigan’s Gov. Rqmney winds up a visit to Expo 67 in Montreal with a press conference yesterday where he said he was prepared to run for president “if the party and the people of the
AP Wlrtphoto ,
United States want me.” On the question of his eligibility, he said the Constitution requires, the president to be “a natural-born citizen. I know that I am natural-born because my mother had only a midwife.”
Romney Sure He's Eligible to Run.for the Presidency
GENEVA (t) — More than four years of Kennedy Round 'negotiations have finally ended with agreement to cut tar-„ iffjs an estimated 33 to 35 per cent on world trade now worth $40 billion | year.
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The accord between the United States and the world’s' major commercial nations was reached just before midnight last night a|ter four intensive day and
See Story, Page B-5
night sessions during which* the negotiations appeared doomed at one point.,
IMMOLATION IN SAIGON — A 33-year-pld teacher who poured gasoline on herself, lighted it and burned to death is shown in, Buddha position, foreground, as a Wailing Buddhist nun is aided by Buddhist lay woman and a monk at Tu Nghierfi pagoda in Saijgon today. Before the immolation, the teacher, Phan Thi Mai, placed a Buddhist and Christian statue on either side of her.
nered <
LANSING (D — Michigan Gov. George His Mormon parents were there at the Romney said today he thought there tijae with other members of the religi-should be no question about his being ous sect, fleeing persecution, eligible as a candidate for president.
Romney, considered a leading cot}* tender for the Republican nomination, ‘'was born in Mexico of parents who were citizens Of the United States.
Rep. Emanuel Celler," D-N.Y., had raised the question.
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Celler noted that the Constitution said
Mrs. Kennedy, LBJ to Join in Launching
WASHINGTON (AP) - Mrs. John F. Kennedy and President Johnson will participate in the launching of the aircraft carrier John F. Kennedy at Newport News, Va., May 27, the Pentagon said today.
The late President’s daughter, Caroline, will christen the 1,051-foot long carrier.
Secretary of Defense. Robert S. McNamara said Johnson will speak at the launching ceremony scheduled at 11:45 a,m. at the Newport Nejvs Shipbuilding and Drydock Co.
Mrs. Kennedy has been designated matron of honor for the occasion.
The USS John F. Kennedy will carry a crew Of more than 5.QOO men, including an tur wing. The big vessel has a displacement of 64,000 tons. Her keel was * laid Oct 22, 1964.
De Gaulle: End Viet'Scandal'
. ¥
In Today's _ Press
Bloomfield Twp. ’"Nice place to live if you can afford it - PAGE A-8.
Waterford Zoning Final action due next week— PAGE A-8.
Cage League
* Pontiac group seeks pro basketball franchise - PAGE C-l.
Area News .... .	.... .A-8, A-9
Astrology ..............B-6
Bridge......L...........  M
Crossword Puzzle	.....C-ll
Comics ...............  B-6
Editorials .............A-4
High School ........ . B-l
Markets ..............  C-5
Obituaries ...........  B-4
Sports'.............C-l—C-S
Theaters ..............  04
TV sad Radio Programs . C-ll
Wilson, Earl..........  C41
Women’s Pages ......B-7—B-i
PARIS (AP) — President Charles de: Gaulle called today for ah eml “to the scandal of foreign intervepuon in Asia” and said his government will continue to oppose foreign—meaning American— involvement in Vietnam. At the same time, he said he; would not veto Britain’s bid for entry into the European Common Market but he listed a series of obstacles which he- said Britain might find hard to overborne.
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Speaking to hundreds of newsmen in the ballroom of the Elysee Palace, de Gaulle reiterated, in harsh form, his government’s position that the United States must piill out of Vietnam if there is to be peace there. -
“The scandal of foreign intervention in Asia must cease; that is the path the government intends to follow,” he declared, j
Summarizing other broad policy aims, de Gaulle said France would keep its national independence, continue to promote East-West detente and strengthen the six-nation European Common Market
the President must be a “natural barn” i. citizen.
‘NO QUESTION’
“Rep. Celler concedes that there la no -question about my being born an American citizen,” Romney said, after . reading an Associated Press story quoting the head of the House Judiciary Com- A mittee to this effect.	. ’
“I know that I was' naturally born — during my recent trip out West, I met the sou of file midwife who -delivered me. So,” - concluded Romney, “that makes me a natural born citizen — as specified in the Constitution.”
Romney added that his own legal experts nad been researching the question raised by Celler.
• ★ ★ ★.
Celler had suggested that. Republican leadqrs might appoint some sort of commission to. “come up with an answer to this situation.”
•TO PLAGUE ROMNEY’
He added the Republican leaders t might, throw his suggestion “in the ash : , can if they wish, but I think this is going to plague Mr- Romney from now on
South Viet Newsmen Draw Threat From Ky
LONG XUYEN, Vietnam (AP)-Premier Nguyen Cae Ky threatened today to Close Vietnamese newspapers that “create dimension” among the people during the upcoming presidential election. *	",	"
Ky Is a candidate for the presidency and made his remarks in Vietnamese to Vietnamese newsmen covering his trip to an Giang Province hi the Mekong River delta southwest of Saigon.
★ ★ •. ★
“I want to point out to the press that from now until election day, any newspaper article which will create dissension between the people-miUtary-civilian, military-military-will be censored,” Ky said.	‘*
Oakland Highway Toll in ’67
37
,Deputi< of contrc
fell short of the 50 per cent over-all cut that had been sought, but they far surpassed any achieved before in tariff negotiations.
.The agreement affects more than 80 nations and is expected to result in a big increase jn world trade.
William Roth, head of the U.S. delegation, aaid the result was of "tremendous worl(| importance.” He predicted that it would affect between* $5 billion and $16 billion in U.S./imports and exports.
. * ■ ★ ★ i •
The United States exports $27 billion worth of goods a year and imports $19 billion worth.
The principal agreements included in the final package were:
•	Tariff reductions on about 6,306 industrial and farm items in world trade, from live animals to waste and scrap. -The cuts are reciprocal with every participating nation benefiting from new opportunities to export to the others.
•	A - higher minimum- world grain price of $1.73 a bushel for hard red winter. wheat ready to ship at pops on the Gulf of Mexico.
•	An international food aid program
of 4.5 million tons a	year, with	contributions	from other	major	industrial
countries as well as the United States.
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•	An	antidumping	accord	to	prefect
businessmen from foreign competitors trying to export-goods below coat.
Preliminary Figure on Tax Spread Set
The Oakland County Tax Allocation Board yesterday set a preliminary 1967 taxing authority for the county, school districts and townships amounting to 15.18 mills.
Weatherman Says Fair Days Ahead ir» Pontiac Area*
Today’s sunshine is expected to raise the mercury info the 60s by late afternoon.
Skies will be partly cloudy tonight with
K
A NICE DAY
temperatures not quite so cool. A low of 33 ,to 42 is expected.
/Fair with little temperature change is tomorrow’s forecast. Fair and slightly warmer is the outlook for Thursday.
West to southwesterly winds, at 5 to 15 miles per hour will continue.
The low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 36. At 2 4>.m., the mercury registered 63.	'
Highland Crash Fatal to Youth
A 19-year-old Highland Township youth died early today of injuries received in an accident in Highland Township yesterday. A
Two other persons were hospitalized as a result of the mishap.
Norwood Caswell of 2224 Davista died about 1:5(1 a. m. in Pontiac General Hospital.
Oakland County sheriff’s deputies said he-was- the driver of a car which wait out ■ of control on Milford Road and struck § utility pole about 7:15 p. m.
Listed in critical condition at Pontiac General is Thomas F. Murphey, 21, of 527 Livingston, Highlnnd Township. He is being treated to the intensive care nnit, according to hospital officials.
Jackie E. tinning, 21, of 5109 Rippleway, Highland Township, is in satisfactory condition, they said.
_ ities said Caswell’s car went out control on a wire just south of McPherson. The 'road was slick due to recent oiling of side streets in the area, according to investigators.
OCC Takes First Step in Accreditation Move
Final hearings on the tax spread are scheduled May 22 and 23 and the allocation board will set final rates May 26.
Local schools gained .66 of, a mill in the preliminary allocation spread at the expense of tile county whose 1.46 mills rate last year was decreased to .5.35 ■ mills.	. ,
Oakland Schools, the Intermediate school district, received the same .16 -mills allocation as last year and townships fared about the same,, ranging to * 'no allocation to Lyon and Springfield, where none was requested, to 1.40 mills tor Bloomfield and West Bloomfield.
■ '
If the preliminary rate total stands when the final allocation is made, it will mark the third consecutive year that the-traditional 15-miH limitation, has been exceeded.
HIGHEST M1LLAGE
The State- Constitution allows use of the highest available millage when a governmental unit in one county overlaps a county line. Oakland Schools extends into surrounding counties and this overlap permits taxing authority beyond 15-mills, acceding to Richard H. Me- • «Gram, allocation board chairman.
★ ,	★. ★
Daniel T. Murphy, Chairman of the County Board of Auditors and an alloca- \ tion board member, said he is confident-the allocation board will restore the .05 mills to the county in its final session.
. This would yield $153,000 in tax revenue.
Oakland Community College has taken its first step to apply for candidacy for membership in what has been described as “one of the truly outstanding regional accred-itating agencies of the nation.” OCC President Dr. John E. Tir-rell said the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools received this week a 40-page status study and a request from OCC for an accrediting team 1o visit the campuses. 1 "
\ This move Was recommend-' ed last fan by Dr. B. Lamar Johnson, OCC’s educational consultant for accreditation from the University of California, Los Angeles.
“Our goal is to get accreditation by March of 1969,” Tirrell said.
. ★	* A.
QCC opened its doors on two campuses to 3,860 students in September 1965. An estimated 6,000 students are expected this faU with the addition of a third campus in Farmington Township. ' v
Johnson generally praised OCC ; in his report last September and advised the growing community college:
“Accreditation can be achieved 'only after an institution has been in operation long enough to present evidence regarding the nature and effectiveness of its program ...” OCC officials have established this timetable in the extensive process of receiving accreditation: p Fall 1967: Association team .yisits campuses as requested.^ >" f March 1968: Team makes its report.
„. * • If the team report is favorable, OCC would submit an extern sive self-study report, followed by another team visit.
• March* 1969: Earliest formal decision regarding accreditation could be made.
Accreditation is necessary for students to be able to transfer to other colleges. Credits are currently transferred while the accreditation process is under Why.
New Rail Strike Threat Reported
WASHINGTON (*) — A new nationwide railroad strike threat by conductors and hrakemen was reported today while Congress resumed hearings on President Johnson’s efforts to head off .a walkout by six railroad shop unions.
The independent Order of Railway Con- , ductors and Brakemen has advised railroad negotiators that sane 20,000 of its members have authorized a strike for June 2, it was learned.
■ ' * * .. * *.
President Johnson could appoint an j emergency board under the Railway Labor Act to stave off the new strike threat for 60 days, but fee development seemed likely to complicate congressional action at the special law be seeks to prevent ato strike by fee shop unions.
Neither the unions nor'the railroads announced the new strike threat, hut it wm confirmed by government sources.
The conductors’ and brakemen’s dispute, like feat of the shoperaft unions, involves 90 per cent" of the nation’s major railroads and a strike would virtually paralyze the industry.}
A—2
THE frONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, MAY 16,1997
jh Senate Awaits OK by Party Caucuses

.	| IjlJ III.,I,
f!	-iv-: * *. ■?*'	* V
But it will be at least Wednesday or Thursday before the lawmakers can get. together in private and thrash oat any differences.	J
Seven state senators were in,
Montreal, Monday for Michigan % I I I rendezvous at Expo 67 andSP™^^ weren’t scheduled to return to>9
LANSING (UP!) .- Political party, decisions on a revised incomp tax plan in the State Senate! probably won’t come for an-otty>r week or 10 days.
Tlfe once-defeated program of Gov; George Romney, revised by the Senate Taxation Committee; to give lower income groups more tax credits, must be ap-[the stateuntfl late today] proved by Republican and Dem-j “	*	*	*	. ?
ocjratic caucuses before it Once the caucuses begin it is readies thy voting stage again, expected they will deUberate for i several days as the lawmakers expand on their individual be-1] lids of a tax program. WEEKEND RECESS If the c a uc uses start this! week, there will be the usual interruption for p. weekend recess. At the same time a few leaders on the Senate Appropria-I Sentencing May 26 tions,	wUi leave town
57	' I on legislative business further
for Slayer of Nurses delaying the private tax talks.
;* -V	Sen. Harry De Maso, R-
CHICAGO (UPD- - Richard ^We ^wk’ Chainnan of the Speck’s life was on the line, put there, his attorney said, by thf
Speck Lawyer Loses Appeal
PLANS 18,006-MILE FLIGHT—Dr. Frhncis X. Sommer of BarbourviUe, Ky., stands beside the single-engine airplane he’s hoping will carry him and< another traveler, Dr. John Rieber, 18,000 mi)es around the world on the anniversary of Charles A. Lindbergh’s
nonstop flight from New York to Paris. Dr. Sommer plans to take off from New York Thursday and head over the Atlantic on the first leg of his trip. The flight may carry the two over Da Nang in central South Viet-1 nam, en route to Hong Kong.
Senate Taxation Committee, has been waiting for more than a week to send A compromise tax package to the party caucuses.
Senate Majority Leader Emil Lockwood, R-St. Louis, said, on day. the party .caucuses
Woodward Crossover on Schedule
Construction of a new median crossover on. Woodward near .	-	Opdyke in Bloomfield Hills is
can’t be ^called until all the proceeding on schedule and and Billy Hoag, 11,
|should be completed by Sept, ljseen, presumably entering one {the Michigan State Highway De-I°f the many-caves that lead into
“implanted prejudice of human beings.” But the judge disagreed and today Speck, convicted of murdering eight nurses, still.faced the electric chair.
One month to the day after a' jury! of seven meiv and five {members represent, wonjen found the one-time sea-1	*	* i
mail guilty on eight counts of He also kept alive word thatjpartmenri;eported today, milder and said, “We fix the a private joint caucus between . The new, crossover will re-penalty at death,” Specks at_|members of both parties might place the one at Opdyke, which ^eS*er<*a^ ‘or a he held for a complete airing of 'according to engineers, danger-the revised tax package. jously angles traffic onto south-REMAINS SECRET	I
The new proposal and exemption plan is being kept secret uhtil the party caucuses take action.
Lockwood, who said after the initial defeat of the Romney program that “fiscal reform is dead for this session,” has since changed his mind,
“I’m more hopeful now than
Hunt for 3 Boys in 6th Day Without Substantial Clue
HANNIBAL, M6. ,(AP) - It has been nearly -a week since Craig Dowell, 14, Joey Hoag, 13,
neW^trial.
Judge Herbert C. Paschen refused toe new trial and also dotted a motion to arrest judgement He said he would sentence toe lanky 25-year-old on May 26 after hearing arguments on a defense appeal for
Speck, who appeared in his 1 usual courtroom attire — dark suit, white shirt, dark tie, his long blond hair slicked backwards, went back to his cell a|L w;s“; month‘io7’“heMys! few steps from the electric i	*	*	*
chair. • . '	However, he refused to pre-
bound Woodward.
The new crossover is being built about 600 feet north of toe present Opdyke crossover.
Motorists wanting to go south on Woodward from Opdyke will first have to turn north on Wood-! Ward until they can .turn around in the crossover.
Also under construction nearby is another crossover, on Woodward just north of Long Lake
His.attorney, public defender Gerald ,W. Getty, cited “points of error” ta‘the murder trial which was held in Peoria because of “prejudicial” news coverage in Chicago following the July 14 massacre. DISAGREES Paschen, who had heard all the pretrial motions and the trial itself, disagreed. “<
“These are points that have been thoroughly argued in pretrial motions and in toe trial/’ he ruled. “You have not convinced me that toe trial was not fair and impartial. I see nothing here to warrant a new trial.”
Getty said the state had presented “wobbly1’ evidence had failed to prove Speck’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
This will be used by north-diet what the outcome will be bound Woodward traffic wanting
with the hew program!
LITTLE CHANCE
Some lawmakers who voted against the Romney plan privately say there is little chance of a reversal of the 23-14 vote.
Most Republicans, hoWever, are hopeful concessions made tb Democrats, who all voted against the original plan, will sway some new votes their way.
De Maso hopes the new program Will reach a happy compromise.
The jawbone of a Stone Age mouse found about* 500 /ards west of the Nile Riveir near the Egyptian-Sudanese /border has indicated that there may have been dense vegetation in the .presently hot, dm area.
to go west on Long Lake Road.
Left turns directly onto Long Lake from Woodward will be prohibited when the crossover is completed.
The Weather
Richard Samrick, 22, also of Belniont, demanded examination on a charge of possessing an automatic weapon — a Thompson submachine gun equipped with a silencer.
Both men were released on | persona! recognizance to appear May 23 for preliminary hearing, i WEAPONS VARY Kent County Sheriff Ronald ^Parsons said police found two Thompson submachine guns in Samrick’s home along with am-I Monday's Timpsruurs chart munition, land mine detonators,
• Aipena	ss 29 Fort worth 75 land a military hand grenade
«I“aRa.&. 54 m	n S containing plastic explosive.
41 Houghton 53 39 Los Angalts 95 69	n. ..........—
Full UtS. Weather Bureau PONTIAC AND VICINITY* — Mostly/sunny and slightly warmer today, high 55 to 62. Partly cloudy and not quite so cool tonight. Low 33 to 42. Wednesday:/fair with little temperature change. West to southwest winds 5 to 15 miles today. Thursday’s outlook: fair and slightly warmer.
|	Monday In Pontiac
Highest temperature ....
Dlrectton*'westW,B0 v,,oc,,y * m-pnjLowest Temperature ......
Sun sets Tuesday at 7:4$ p.m.	Mean temperature
Sun -rises Wednesday at 5:11 a.m. Weather; Partly cloudy Moon sets Wednesday at 2:02 a.m.
Moon rises Tuesday at 11:07 a.m.
Downtown Temperatures
and flash lights near Murphy’s Cave.
*	*	*
As the search entered its sixth day, observers noted that women have been an important factor in the hoped-for rescue operation,	Not	only	have	they
cooked and served hot meals at almost any hour for the searchers, but At least two of their number have joined the men in the dirt and mud, crawling over shale and rock, .slithering through the narrow, cramped passages i>f the caves.
★	★	* ■
Tiny Susan Devier, 23, squirmed through a previously unexplored cave Monday night {and returned with the news that
less than 5 feet tall and is an *	I experienced caver.
WASHINGTON (AP) — House A TEACHER Democratic leader Carl Albert |- when not exploring caves, Susan is Mrs. Charles Devier of
many
a spider-like web of passages Under the old home town of Mark Twain.
There have been no substantial clues discovered since the boys were seen last Wednesday afternoon, - carrying a shovel
Dem Leader Hits 'Romney
Birmingham Area News *
Glue-Sniffing Ordinance OK'd
BIRMINGHAM-An ordinance designed to curb “glue, sniffing” was adopted by toe city commission last night.
The ordinance, which also controls toe sale of model glue to juveniles, went ,into effect immediately.
The commission acted on toe recommendation of Lt. Robert Schaule of toe Birmingham Police Department. “We have |jad many incidents regarding juveniles and adults being involved in “glue* sniffing,” said Schaule; in a report porting oqt that toe department had no authority to regulate toe sale and inhalation of toe glue, which releases toxic vapors.
■k ' W ' ★
Both toe Birmingham-Bloom-field Chamber of Commerce and the Birmingham Youth Assist ance Committee urged toe adoption of the ordinance.
In offering toe cooperation of the chamber,/Knowles B. Smith, executive director, said, “The
he smells toe stuff,” said Schaule. “He can be looking right at you and not see you. We’re afraid he’s going to walk in front of a car.”
The new law prohibits anyone from intentionally inhaling the fumes from any model glue “for toe purpose of causing a condition of intoxication, euphoria, excitement, stupift-cation or dulling of the senses or nervous system.”
voluntary control of toe sale of this type of glue has been tried in toe past with some success, but-in recent months the problem has become acute.”
“It seems the jdnly effective cpntrbl of too sale of this material is by toe adoption of a city ordinance which would regulate toe sale of this type of glne by placing the responsibility on toe seller,”
George A. Schmidt, chairman of the Youth Assistance Committee, noted that surrounding communities have similar ordinances that “appear to be helping solve toe problem.” Royal Oak and Southfield have “glue sniffing ordinances.”
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Schaule said today that no major crimes have resulted in Birmingham from glue sniffipg, but cited one example of toe effects of toe glue.
EXAMPLE
‘There’s one 20-year-old guyi who actually gets stupid when
The ordinance" provides that persons under 17 years of age cannot purchase model glue unless he has the written consent of his parents or guardian.
★ ' ★ '★
In addition, toe seller must make a record of toe name, address, age and phone number of the juvenile. All the data must be available for inspection by toe police department for at least six months.
t1 CandidalestoCompete in Waterford School Race
Eleven candidates, all will compete for three board of education trusteeships in the Waterford Township School Dis-trict’s June 12 election.
Four candidates, including incumbent Michael G. Patterson, will vie for a three-year seat. The others are entered in a seven-man' race for two four-year posts now held by Treasurer Donald W. Potter and Mrs. Dorothy B. Barningham.
Porter is running for Selection, but Mrs. Barningham is nqt.
The final four candidates to file nominating petitions were Ejean A. Salley, 39, of Jameson mid Robert L. Buchanan, 33, of 5180 Joangay for four-year seats; and Rudolph C. Id-sac, 38, of 2113 Pompey and Philip M. Hampton, 34, of 3191 Alco, for three-year terms.
Making his third school board bid, Salley has been very active in school district affairs. He has served on several school groups
and West Virginia. He is married and toe father of three children.
of Oklahoma accused Michigan Gov. George Romney Monday of having “demonstrated his elemental lack of knowledge of American overSead economic programs,”
a House speech, Albert
Police Uncover Weapons Cache in Kent County
/ GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - An 18-rponth investigation by toe Kent “County Sheriffs Department and city police was climaxed Monday with toe arrest of two men and confiscation of an arsenal of weapons and ammunition.
Jerry a. Bouman, 29, of nearby Belmont, demanded, examination in Municipal Court on a charge of selling a bomb or explosive weapon:	?
Columbia, Mo. She teaches psychology at Hickman High School.
Ann Schallert, 23, also is an experienced cave explorer. Her
referred to a Romnev soeeoh I ubderSround, specialty is meas-reierrea to a Romney speech ^ ^	MiS8 Schal-
May 5 to the National Federation of Republican Women in which Romney called for a ’government whose foreign economic development programs encourage greater private investment, partnership and ^elf-help.”
“This statement,” Albert said, Is not only an insult to responsible government agencies, but it ignores the numerous contributions to international econ-nomic development made by countless numbers of private American organizations such ac CARE, J whose assistance, training efforts and technical and medical help are known all over the world; Operation Crossroads Africa; Hospital. Ship Hope; Books, USA,' and toe internationally known foundations such as. Ford, Rockefeller and Carnegie.
lert works as a laboratory technician in St. Louis.
‘She’s equal . to any . caver standing here,” a member, of a caving team stated as four men and Miss Schallert: descended into a passage for further mapping.
Tear Gas Used to Rout Rowdies
DETROIT (UPI)-Njne youths were arrested today after police lobbed tear gas grenades into West Side house to break up rowdy beer party.
Police were called after a 13-year-old giri-at, the /party told them she had been raped by three young men. •
State Senator Seeks Parade
to	Support G and was chairman of a school!
.	facilities committee and a com-
LANSING (AP) - A massive on employment-bound march to demonstrate Michigan' y°uth-backing of soldiers fighting in
Vietnam has been proposed by a state senator.
Sen. Basil Brown, D-Detroit, made the proposal in a Senate resolution Monday night. +
*	★	★
Brown asked all .patriotic, fraternal, veterans and university groups to join in toe march i part of the observation of Flag Day on June 141 *	★	★
Brown, a Pacific Theater veteran of World War II, said his proposal is backed by several veterans organizations. PARADES Parades in Detroit and other major Michigan cities could show “massive support for our boys fighting in Vietnam," Brown said.
• * * *
Such a march recently held in New York City, be said, brought
pi Is First to Be by South Korean
out On estimated 250,000 partici- neer$.
A township resident for 20 years, he is president of All State Credit Bureau, Inc., in ’erndaie.
frlS GRADUATE Married and the father of six children, Salley attended Waldorf College in Forst City, Iowa. He is a 1946 graduate of Pontiac High School.
Salley is a member of Community Activities,-Inc., board of directors' and»is chairman of, this year’s North Oakland County Fair.
He js a past president' of the Waterford Township' Jay-cees.
A1954 graduate of Berea, Ky. College where he received t bachelor’s degree with a geology majqj, Hampton presently is | employed with Johnson and Anderson, Inp., consulting engi-|
A native of Shingleton in toe Upper Peninsula, Ldsac is employed as a maintenance engineer at Montgomery Ward and Co.’s Pontiac Mall store.
Married and the father of eight children, he attended Mather High School in Munising.
This marks Lisac’s first bid for public office.
• ★ ★ ★
Also making his first try for public office is Buchanan, a Waterford Township businessman. OWNS BUSINESSES -Buchanan’ is dwner of Oakland Seamless Floor Covering and B and D Building Maintenance.;
Married and the father of four children, he is a 1951 graduate of Pontiac High School.
Buchanan is treasurer of the Republican Club of Waterford Township and is a member of the Detroit Torginol Dealers As-sociation.
’ . ★' ★ ★
Other candidates for the four-year positions are W. Cecil Stricklin, 30, of 3325 Angelus; William t). Motzny, 36, of 3078 Grace View; Lewis S. Long, 40, of 5657 Brunswick; and Charles ‘ W. Meyka, 37, of 3068 Grace View. „
Also In contention for-the three-year post is Leo-F. Kamp-sen, 44, of 4689 Motorway.
On* Yur Ago in Pontiac
Highest tomporotur*..............
Lowest temperature .	.........
Moon temperature .................
Weather: Sunny
Highest ond Lowest Temperatures
54	31	Miami Beach
52	40	Milwaukee	57	361
56	34	New Orleans	79	62
50	33	Phoenix	94	63
74	47	Pittsburgh	42	42|
68	,30	Tampa	07	74
5<mM Salt Lake C. 70 441 52^5 S. Ftanclsco - 03 60
69	41	S. 5. Marie	47	27
57	32	Seattle,	69	50
60 Washinaion 79 47
NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are forecast tonight , ih the mkkUe Mississippi Valley, northern Rockies and Wash-tngfaw» femrt’ Northeast will be cooler and the Southwest
Askimooo
in Ship Ilsalh
From AP y/tre Story A $500,000 claim was filed yesterday in U. S. District Court in Cleveland for damages in the death of a. Waterford Township seaman aboard the Daniel Morrell which sank in a Lake Huroh storm last Nov. 29.
The claim was filed on.behalf of the estate of toe late Ernest G. Marcotte, 62, of 221(9 Rosewood by attorney Howard Bernstein. Marcotte was third mate on the ill-fated ship.
★ * *
Bernstein also filed claims for two other crewmen aboard ^he Daniel Morrell., *
Named defendants in the three actions were the Bethlehem Steel Gorp. and its subsidiary,' Cambria Steamship Co. / f
■ * '■	■. r ..
«SEOUL, South Korea (AP)— The first American soldier to be tried in a South Korean court pleaded innocent today to charges of setting fire to a Korean home and assaulting^ Korean taxi driver.
Air Force S. Sgt. Billy J. Cox,
129, of Fall Branch, Tenn., entered his plea at toe opening session of his trial before three
SGT. BILLY-COX
judges in the Seoul District Criminal Court. He is the first American serviceman to face South Korean charges since the U.S.-Korean status of forces of agreement went into effect Feb. 9.
Wearing a light tan, winter uniform, Cox seemed a little nervous but, calmly denied both charges before toe three judges and a courtroom packld with about 150 spectators, newsmen and photographers.
He told toe court he had left t Korean house, where he and hi: Korean girl friend were renting ,a room, about 30 minutes before toe time when he is accused of setting fire to the house. PROSECUTION’S CHARGE
Prosecutor Lee Kon-kai alleged that CoX set the house afire in anger at the absence of his girl friend and said a house maid heard Cox lighting his cigarette lighter before he left toe house.
■j Cox said toe Korean taxi driver tie is accused of assaulting overcharged him a nickel ana tried to run away with a cloth he had bought for his wife in the United States.
Parts valued at more than $200 were stolen from new automobiles on toe McAuliffe Ford dealership parking lot, it was reported yesterday.
* * ★
Taken were carburetors and air cleaners, Pontiac police were totil.
Investigators said entry to the lot was made by cutting through a wire fence.
Auto Parts Stolen From Parking Lot
He is the firm’s director of public relations, vice president^ and assistant chief engineer. He also is in charge of .coordination of all federal programs. PROFESSIONAL ENGINEER Hampton is a registered professional engineer in Michigan
Auditors Report Tickets Missing
ROMULUS TOWNSHIP^ (AP) -A check into toe court records ’of a former justice of toe peacO reportedly showed more than 500 traffic tickets issued at Detroit Metropolitan Airport unaccounted for.
We’re not even clear as to the significance -of the missing tickets,” said a spokesman for toe Wayne County Board of Auditors, which issued a report after studying toe records of Alfred J. Perry. Perry is now township clerk.
U.S. JDdge Sets DST Hearing
Suit Seeks to Enjoin Board on Petitions '
GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) - A {federal judge yesterday ordered Secretaiy of State James M. Hare and toe Michigan Board of Canvassers to show cause why they should not be enjoined from approving a referendum petition that would put Michigan on day- ~ light time.
Hare, the Board of Canvassers and Robert B. Montgomery, secretary oL toe board, (Were named as defendants in a
Police Action
Pontiac police officers ! and Oakland County sher-iff’s deputies investigated ! some 80 reported inci-| dents, including both ® criminal activity and accidents, toe past 24 hours.
★ * ★
A breakdown of causes for police action:
Arrests—6 Vandalisms—12 Burglaries—9 v Larcenies—12 Auto Thefts—12 Obscene Phone Calb—2 Assaults—13 Disorderly Persons—2 Indecent Liberties—1 Indecent Exposures—1 Molestings—1 pProperty Damage Accidents—11 ,
Injury Accidents—9
teMWflsuit filed by Detroit attorney 1 George E. Lee in federal court
here on behalf of two citizens.
Judge Fox ordered, toe defendants to answer toe show cause order May 23.
The' suit is based qn a stipulation in the federal Uniform Time Act which says Daylight Savings Time can begin only on April 30, with thC conversion back to standard time set for ' the last Sunday in October.
★ . * A
'The Michigan Legislature ex- . empted the state from the federal time measure and Lee said that when the state failed to change over,, to'“daylight time April 30, Michigan lost its chance to go on the so-called fast time this year.
COLLECTED PJ?rMONB Proponents of fast "time collected a petition to put the time question on a referendum in toe 1968 election.
Under Michigan few, enacted {legislation is suspended if the 'question is placed on toe ballot.
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1967
Board Airs Rezoning Bids, Action Due
The Waterford, Township Board last night voted to take final action on two rezoning requests for apartments at next Monday’s meeting.
First notices were read on the two proposals at last night’s ses-' 4*®,	'	;	/ 7	:’.J'
The separate requests are to rezone from single family residential to multiple dwelling property ott Malcolm near Cooley Lake Road and on Scott Lake Road opposite
Both requests have been recommended for denial by the Oakland County Coordinating Zoning and Planning Committee. .
★ ‘ ★ ★
-The Township Planning Commission turned in a negative recommendation on the Malcolm Drive proposal, but favored the other request by a 4-2 vbte.1
TRUSTEE PRESIDED Last night’s board /meeting was presided over by Republican Trustee E. Frank Richardson in the absence of Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson who was ill.
Tabled one week for further study was a recommendation
by Treasurer L. Catherine Wolters to revise the payroll procedure for ' township employes so that they aren’t paid far advance.
This . creates bookkeeping problems, according to township officials, because overtime, pay must be estimated.
★ Sr ★
It was suggested that pay be held back gradually to remedy the situation.
BILLING MACHINE Also tabled a week pending recommendations by Mrs. Wolters and Clerk Arthur J. Salley was action regarding the purchase of a billing machine for the treasure^ office.
Representatives from Nn-tional Cash Register and Burroughs Corp. gave presentations las t night on machines they hope to sell the township.
A machine would help considerably in processing the pay-
roll and tax bills, according toithe transfer of a 1966 SDM liq-Mrs. Wolters. It would save Lor license from Hamady Broth-
money and time, she said.
. . '	* Or 'At -
Mrs. Wolters said it cost the township an dxtra 97,358 for overtime wages and part-time help when tax bills Were prepared last year.
MACHINS COSTS The National Cash Register machine sells for $19,500, while the Burroughs machine costs $6,000.
Also hut night tile board authorized Township Attorneys Booth and Patterson to acquire title insurance on rights-of-way for tile Elizabeth Lake - Marion - Vooifaeis -Chadwick - Colrain sanitary sewer project.
Estimated cost of the special assessment district sewer project is $$67,352. Bids will be opened at the board's June meeting.
* ★ ★
In other business last night, the board authorized Salley to advertise for bids on workmen’s compensation and employer’s liability insurance. The' present polity expires July 1. j LIQUOR LICENSE Also, approved last night was
ers Food Market, Inc., to Peoples Food Market, Inc., 3415 Elizabeth Lake.
An amusement park permit for May 23 to June 4 at Pontiac Mall was granted to the Wprld of Pleasure Show. The event is being .sponsored by the merchants association at the Mall.
David Belisle Post 1006 of the Veterans of Foreign Wan was given the go-ahead to conduct a parade from 10 to 11 a.m. May 30 along Dixie Highway from Frembes to Williams Lake Road.
a July k fireworks permit for Oakland Beach Civic Association.
Nursing Home Exec Gets Post
Basil.F. Boyce, administrator of Spjminole Hills Nursing Home, 532 Orchard Lake, has beph elected treasurer of the Michigan Nursing Home Association.
New association officers were elected at a- conference Boyne Falls.
|	An octopus hfas eight arms;
Also granted by the bodrd was [the sqhid has 10.
Township Construction on'Rise
Triggered by new commercial , development, construction was | on the upswing in Waterford Township last month.
According to a monthly building department report presented to the Township - Board last night, 142 permits were issued in April for new construction, additions and alterations estimated to cost $1,398,249.
This compares with 151 building permits for construction worth an estimated $1,340,952 the previous April and 83 permits for building estimated to cost $784,317 hi March of this year.
However, total valuation of n^w construction, additions and alterations the first four fhonths this year was $2,761,! compared with $4,160,092 for the same period Iasi year.
,★ ★ • *
Seven permits were granted last month for new commercial construction estimated to cost $492,300 compared with five
permits for construction worth new home construction- esti-an estimated $134,544 in April mated to cost $674,656 against 1966.	153 .permits for building worth
COMMERCIAL PERMITS - Jan estimated $1,020,061 in April The commercial permits are for three retail shops at Pon-
tiac MaU, $201,500; a B. F. Goodrich Tire Sales and Service store at 60 S. Telegraph, $92,800; a conservation department district office, $80,000; a machine shop on Williams Lake Road, $50,000; a service station at M59 and Airport Road, $24,000; and a service station at Williams Lake and Elizabeth Lake roads,' $24,000.
Another six permits were approved for remodeling and additions to commercial buildings estimated to cost $66,080. Included is an estimated $30,-000 expense for alterations at Crescent Machine Co., Inc., at 2501 Williams Drive.
New home construction last month, however, was down from the previous April. Thirty-one permits were issued for
.'1966.
Other permits approved last month were for 20 home additions, $52,790 ; 39 home remodel-j ings, $51,966 ; 25 garages, $38,-four swimming fjpools, $9,400; two garages and breeze-ways, $6,895; two fire repairs to residences, $5,000; one sign, $400; and a tool shed, $200.
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Look Closely . . . You May Know This Outstanding Man
He is one of an outstanding group of 511 top professionals -— the Mass. Mutual representatives who qualified for our 1967 President’s Club. To achieve* this honor each sold $1 Million or more of individual life insurance and annuities last year. Perhaps you saw his picture in the March 11 issue of the Saturday Evening Post.
He is also a charter recipient of the National Sales Achievement Award presented by the National Association of Life Underwriters, and a consistent qualifier' for the National Quality Award.
Men like this* are friendly, helpful .neighbors who contribute to the progress of the towns In , which they live and work. Their expert knowledge of financial planning for families and , businesses has made them leaders (in their field and good people to know. Now you know why we say "the one thing no other life insurance compafty can offer your family is a, Mass. Mutual agent.” And L. MACK OAKLEY is one of these outstanding men.
FRANK W.’HOWLAND, C.L.U., Gen. Agent 1680 First National Building—Detroit
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THE PONTIAC PRESS
41 Vfest Hutto Street	Pontiac, Michigan 4S056
TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1987
W ' - ' ■ * '	■■	'•	: ' ' • .	/ . - ' ■	^ .	. . ‘ ■ '
H0W»*B H. PmnntALD, II "1 -i	President, ml Publlihar ■
Richarb U. Pmsrauo Treasurer and Finance Officer .
Local Advertising Manager
Are You Worried by Sex Deviates? Air Need for Effective Measures.
(Editor’s Note: Mothers and fath-ers take note, If you are afraid for the lives of your children because of sex molesters, tfiis editorial is for you. To gik action, sit down note and write your State Legislators in Lansing.)
The rising rate of child molestation and murder by sex fields has thrown local parenthood into a state of fear beyond compare.
LAw ^enforcement agencies, the Judiciary, social scientists seem equally ineffective in providing protection against the invisible menace that threatens our children.
In increasing numbers parents* t desperate in their anxiety, offer counter measures to safeguard their yoflhg against predators crazecl by lust.
The Pbess daily receives letters from distraught parents calling for action of various kinds aimed at perpetrators of sex crimes.
Since sex crimes are often the acts of “repeaters,” confinement for life -on conviction of a first offense hits been urged, As have a return to capi-
tal punishment and sterilization.
There is merit in, many of the proposals advanced, but since virtually all entail legal measures they become matters for legislative consideration. ★ ★ ••
This newspaper suggests that citizens whpse deep Concern has taken, the* form of concrete steps to combat this social cancer communicate them to their legislators in Lansing. A consensus of such proposals could well be helpful to the lawmakers in formulating resultful legislation..
WRITE YdUR LEGISLATORS AND DEMAND HELP. *
For the Pontiac area, those to be contacted are State Senators L. Harvey Lodge, George Kuhn, Robert Huber and Sander Levin. Address these Senators: Michigan State Senate, Lansing, Michigan 48902. State Representatives Loren Anderson, Arthur Law, William Hampton, Clifford Smart, Donald Bishop, Raymond Baker . and William Huffman. Address these Representatives: House of Representatives, Lansing, Michigan 48901.
Armed Might Protector of Israel Independence1
Israel entered its 20th year as an Independent state yesterday, and has issued four postage stamps to commemorate the date.
One of the stamps Shows the War of Independence Monument on the road approaching Jerusalem from the sea. The others depict three types of military.aircraft. In Israel more than in most countries, independence is inseparable from military strength.
The passage of two decades has done nothing to ease the mutual enmity of Israel and its Arab neighbors. Border incidents .of varying degrees of seriousness a re’an almost daily occurrence. Hostility toward Israel often seems to be the only
thing besides Islam that the Arab countries have in common.
★	★	★ 5
While Israel’s frontiers with Lebanon and the United Arab Republic have been relatively quiet in recent months, there have been serious clashes along the borders with Syria and Jordan.	*.
A Syrian terrorist organization . called al - Fatah has announced that it would strike against Israel. Like so many similar threats in the past, this one has not been carried out. The reason why can ? be deduced from Israel’s Inde-t pendence Day stamps — the country’s military strength is sufficiently great to deter a serious attack. *
Turn Deaf Ear to ‘Echo’ Author’s Office Bid
Feminine politicos are, it seems, as difficult of prediction as their male counterparts.
This is clearly indicated by the recent, election of Mrs. Gladys O’Donnell to the presidency of the National Federation of Republican Women despite the traditional succession to the office by the incumbent vice president. y	” ;V
★ ★ ★ 1 But the vice president happened to be Mrs. Phyllis Schlafly who, you’ll remember, caused quite a stir before the 1964 GOP national
convention with her sensational pro-Goldwater book “A Choice, Not an Echo.”
Since both candidates lean to the right, political philosophy was hardly a-determining factor in the 1*910 to 1,494 vote that upset precedent and elected the Long Beach (Cal.) businesswoman and pilot to head the distaff division of the Republican Party organization.
Could it be that the “choice” of the voters hinged on the “echo” of Gold* water’s disastrous bid for the White House that still rang in their ears? .
Is a Bigger War Around the Corner?
BY JAMES MARLOW AP News Analyst WASHINGTON — The war is wrapped in gloom 1 i k e a shawl at night. No end in view. No
MARLOW turn, unhappy but realistic, is patched together from the words of men miles apart, in geography and thinking, but in a position to see what they’re talking of.
And the words provide no Mght at the turners end, ■HMtfl if they did it would ba Rahil for President John-
4a cod to the war before the 190 elections, a break, a timetable he c o u 1 d lay out for American* withdrawal bran Asia would do no end of good foe Ids chances of reejecttoo. But hn himself has.been
grim, mostly, speaking of the necessity for doing what’s being done without buttering it over with forecasts of happy tomorrows.
STILL FIDGETY First, there was U Thant, secretary-general of the United Nations, a distressed Burmese made fidgety by the war from the, beginning. He has rooted around endlessly for solutions, always* wound up baffled.
In brief, what he said was that, at the present rate of things, war between the United States and Red China looks sure.
This is h o w he put it; “In my view, if the present trend contjnues, I am afraid direct confrontation first of all be; tween Washington and Peking is inevitable. I hope I am wrong. I am afraid we are witnessing this initial -phase of World War HI.”
★ ★ ★
Then, without saying how, he indicated he knlw what he was talking about.
NOT BUYING If this Was an attempt to scare the United States into
Who, Us?
David Lawrence Says:
China Won’t Risk a Larger War
backing down a bit with North Vietnam Washington didn’t buy it, at least not officially or publicly. Officials here said they saw no Increased likelihood of such a war.
But then word came from Peking through Chou En-lai, Red China’s premier, by way of Simon Malley, a naturalized U.S. citizen and U.N. correspondent for some African newspapers. He had an interview with the premier.
What he learned from Chou was made available by the Chicago Daily News and Publishers Newspaper Syndicate. ★ ■ ★ ★
Chou said Red China is ready to said hordes of “volunteers” into Vietnam tomorrow if:
—North Vietnam asks for them.
—The United States keeps on building up the war and particularly if it lands troops in North Vietnam and Red China thinks it’s a menace to it
—The Soviets and Americans' are about to arrange a • peace which Red China thinks betrays the Vietnamese.
WASHINGTON - Fears that Red China may increase its participation in the Vietnam conflict and bring on World1 War IH are being expressed in a speculative way in Congress. Such warnings are being interpreted as part of the movement to LAWRENCE persuade the United States to suspend bombing and accept the e n e m y ’ s conditions for peace in Vietnam.
What m ah y of the propo-* nents of de-escalation of the Vietnam war overlook, however; is that Red China has more reasons now for avoiding a war with the United -States than ever before.
A sizable army of Chinese Nationalists, well-trained and-eager to return to China, is in readiness on Formosa.
It could, within a brief time, start a counterrevolution on the mainland which would . be immediately assisted by ~ millions of Chinese who are tired of the Communist regime in Peking.
If Red China had not been apprehensive that the United States might give the go-ahead signal to the foreds on Formosa, far more assistance would have heretofore been sent to the North Vietnamese than has been recorded to date.
If the Red Chinese should enter the war with any substantial number of troops, the restraint which the American government has been-applying to Formosa for several years now, to prevent any ma- . jor conflict in the Figr East, would be automatically removed.*
The Soviet Union might not come to the aid of Peking, as it did in Korea, should there be an outbreak of war between Red China and the United States. The people of Russia are by no means eager to help the Red Chinese these days.
The Moscow government would be taking chances,
Verbal Orchids
Mrs.' PI inn F. Morse of 2741 Woodward;
82nd birthday.
Mrs. Emma Herbert of 845 Woodward; 82nd birthday.
, Mrs. Henrjy K. Hayes . of Sylvan Lake/84th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hail of 43 Waldo;
55tH wedding anniversary. Mrs. Bertha Allen of 1136% Holbrook; -84th-birthday.
Mrs. Edward C. Tanner of 2056 Cass Lake Road;
91st birthday
Mrs. Dora Howard of 652 E. Madison; * 82nd birthday.
Frederick Strong of Orchard Lake; 80th birthday;
too, if it risked enlargement of any conflict which might arise between the U n i t e d States and Red China.
The revolution going on to-day inside Red China is also a factor that can .hardly be ignored. For iL^ras the outbreak of Worn War I which gave the Russian people the chancejo overthrow the czar. If the Peking government became erfmeshed in d con-flict with the United States,
the revolutionaries in C h i n a might take charge.
Red Chinese leaders are too well informed about the whole world situation to risk confronting the United States — ‘ the major military power in the world — with a challenge such as is being described in the* speeches In this country by critics of the Vietnam war as likely to result from an “escalation” of the conflict. .
(Copyright, 1
Voice of ^the People:
Appeals to Area Citizens f or Reduction in Crime
The rise in crime disturbs me, especially the display of crime in .our City of Pontiac. Youthful crime is the reflection of poor supervision by the parents and lack Of interests of senior citizens and city fathers.
★	★ 4r
I appeal to the youth and parents of Pontiac and Oakland County to not put their communities in the public spotlight under the heading of crime.
★	★ ★
Youth is the offspring of those wonderful people we meet on the street and .on our jobs every day. What’s happening? National averages show that §5 per cent of America’s youth have good records, but the remaining 5 per cent can and must be reduced. Senior citizens and parents must set an example. It is too late to turn the time back,
■ but. what about the future?
^ GEORGE S. MICHAELS SR..
410 EMERSON
‘We Must Make Streets Safe for Children*
Why should we have to put up with thisjjjgyer-ending threat of losing one of our Children to someone' who has problems. There must be a way Jo make the streets §afe for kids. Maybe sex education in the schools is the answer. If they were taught sex by a special teacher maybe we’d be able to take the dirt out of sex.	'	.
★ ★ ★
I believe ..that capital punishment will take care of the problem of sex offenders for today, but how many will become Involved with something like this in the future?
SHARON SMITH 1 LAKE ORION
Offers Suggestion for Schedule of Movies
Why can’t the theater situation be reversed so families with small children can attend drive-in theaters and teenagers, young adults and oldsters attend inside theaters. We live jiour a drive-in and last year a family movie was* advertised for- weeks “be sure to bring the kids.” It ran with a movie so sexy I wouldn’t even go, and the family picture was shown second at 10 p.m.
MRS. R. D. EDWARDS WATERFORD TOWNSHIP
Bob Considine Says:,
Guadalcanal Revisited by War Correspondent
NEW YORK — People:.,/sjBfb d6and;wfe’d better do ft. places....	“{• feel we are-'winning this
“Incredibly, It’s 25 yegrs war not only In the field'-but since the days by winning over the people, of Guadalcanal More than 50,000 .Vietcong Diary,” writes have come over to our side in famed war the past year. We’ll have them correspondent, all someday.”
Richard Treg- Big Chuck flew a combat askfe from that mission during his trip,, hallowed Is- crowded as rfiany as 14 ap-land.	pearances into his 18-hour
. “It’s a weird ,days in the booidocks. feeling* to be
County Resident Recalls 1947 Snowstorm
Jn reply to the person who asked if anyone remembered the big snowstorm of 1947, I sure do. My oldest brother died at that time and we could not bury him for a week as it was impossible to get into the cemetery.
RESIDENT OF OAKLAND COUNTY
Question and Answer
, I always thought scalping was done only by a few of the Indian tribes, but someone told me white people used to scalp Indians, too. Is this true?
SEVENTH GRADER
REPLY
It’s hard to know the extent of- such practices, but according to a booklet put out by the Bureau of Indian Affairs (U.S. Dept.,of Interior), white reprisals were harsh following the Minnesota Uprising of Sioux Indiahs. At one point a bounty was paid forSioux.scalps.	<
roMsiniiMF ttving Mere on CONSIDINE Q,e- site of ^
Japanese high command headquarters. There are two hotels here now, one run by an American who came here first during the war.
“He also came from my home town, Elizabeth, N.J. Name is Alvin Blum, the only American on the island now-
“My bride Moana.. and ' I found it easy to get here: Jumped on our old favorite Qantas and got off at Nandi In Fiji.
★ ★ ★
“Then by Fiji Airways Heron—four engines.and eight passengers, with foe pilots navigating lijce mad because it’s ail over open ocean and no Loran a- other electronic aides.
OVERGROWN i “Stopped at Vila in the New Hebrides overnight. Hie three-man crew relaxed’with us, South Pacific style.
“The old battlefields are overgrown with green. You need a machete to find the ancient foxholes, but there are skulls and dogtags, U.S. and Japanese, In them.
“The old rusting wrecks of tanks and guns are floWer-of leafy green!
In Washington:
Protesters Arse Party of Big War
BIOSSAT
“Apd if the Arizona monument at Pearl Harbor is hallowed, how about these waters? There .are 50,000 Americans and Japanese still in their ships in Iron Bottom Bay.”
Chuck Connors, the former Brooklyn Dodger turned actor; sends us a note from Vietnam: - * ★ ★ .
“I feel more strongly than ever that we have made the right move by staying here and punching.
> “Call me »triple hawk, if you will. But we have a job
.. *
By BRUCE BIOSSAT WASHINGTON (NEA) - A group of war protesters came aWay from a meeting with Secretary of State Dean Rusk in Scarsdale, N.Y., saying he was plainly prepared to “risk world conflagration.” Obviously there is somei that any limited war—which the Vietnam conflict cer-| tainly is—can flare tiito general war. But,, according tol one authority,r some to limit-1 ed wars have* been fought in the world since 1945 without this happening.
The Scarsdale protesters, ft judge from their public comment after seeing Rusk, appear to be arguing that oily the United States is taking such a risk in Vietnam. Yet the Vietnamese Communists first took the risk by beginning that war.
And, it should be noted, of the to limited wars fought since World War H, ti'in-volved Communist participation. Only three have in-, volved the United States.
★
If it be argued that no limited war should ever be fought because of the risk of “world ^conflagration,” then the consequent logic is that neither America nor any other free nation should ever resist the piecemeal aggressions of those who are wiping to undertake forceful political or military coupe.
That logic is, in fact, at the
core of the position many liberal opponents hold on the Vietnam war. .The various trimming proposals — the demand for negotiations for their own sake, file calls for unilateral cease-fire, the urge for a retreat to defensive enclaves — are al} ways of saying that we and the South Vietnamese ; should stop resisting.
The Purely, adverse results of such action — the loss of South Vietnamese freedom and a small but significant shift in the world power balance — are clearly deemed by the “stopthe-war” advocates to be of no importance.
By .logical extension, they would hold to the same position and, attitude with respect to any proposed limited war defense against any other minor aggression which might occur in Asia or anywhere elsfe.
Inasmuch as we have already had some to limited wars in the last 22 years, more than half of them involving a face committed to tyranny, it! will not do to argue — unprovably — that no such aggressions will hereafter occuf.
★. . ★ ★
Nor will it do to contend, as
Ufc Lapeer and —.jHh Itb $18.00 a year, elwwhere In Michigan and f!1, oHy Place* In tlw . United State, QUO a year. AH Mall Wb-acrlptions payable In advance. Pottage hat been paid at the 2nd da** rate at Pontiac. MlchigOh. Member of ABC
many liberals evidently would, like to do, that at po point in a progression of this sot would the world balance of power be tipped against the free nations.
From that point on, the question would, quickly become whether any or all free lands could long hope to be masters of their own destiny. And with it would come die question of what to do about tt. .
Tire stake Would then be survival as free peoples.
Is this, in the minds of liberals who Will have us avoid limited war as foo risky, the cause that is finally, worth fighting fa?
★ * ★
If the apswer is no, then their judgment is, unmistakably, that freedom is a secondary commodity in human 1 affairs — not worth preserving when the test is had.
But if the answer is yes, then they will have left the free wald with ailv one prospect — to undertake the geeP eral holocaust of nuclear warfare in the name of freedom’s “survival.”
The irony in all this is excruciatingly painful.
Invoking always file “risk of wald conflagration” when confronted with file fact a the prospect of limited war^ these liberals would have ns do nothing until file choice is either wald conflagration at surrender to tyranny.
So this country’s coterie of protesters, however large a small it,may be, is, in ultimate logic, the party of the. big war. They would have us fight no other.
frHE PONTIAC PRESS* TUESDAY, MAY lft, 1967
A-*-.
Stokely's Successor Hints of Shift
SNCC May Shun 'Dramatics'
ATLANTA, Ga. (AP)-Indica-tions are that the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Comnijttee will shift hack into its tradition'll role of. undrarfiatic political organizing with a new emphasis on economic force after a year under black power symbol Stokely Carmichael.
Carmichael was replaced as SNOC’s national chairman last week by H. Rap Brown, 23, the Alabama field director, in elections by the organization’s staf^ in Atlanta.	.
At a hews conference, Brown said the SNCC philosophy would be along tjie same line articulated by Carmichael. Brown’s prepared statement reflected Carmichael’s views, calling for nationwide antidraft program and the building of political and economic forces gmong Negroes.
But there was perhaps a hint of a difference. Brown spoke of “a programmatic approach,” apparently indicating more actual planning and concrete programs ps opposed to considerable emphasis on speaking
Carmichael, 26, who won an internal power struggle a year tours by'Carmichael, ago to take the chairmanship,! apparently .gave up the post without a fight. He had said long before the staff meeting he I
Carmichael himself said he
rould nt>t continue his speechmaking campaign. Several SNCC sources said Carmichael would join in a summer drivel for home rule in Washington, D.C- Carmichael said his assignment would be decided by SNCC’s central committee. ,i I. think Carmichael will con* , tinue to serve as & spokesman, provocateur,” an informed! source said. “But no one tliinks we can pull <>ff any substantial change with rhetoric. I’m going to push with them' not to sidetracked with these traumatic. events, that the organization not get sidetracked with these ephemeral, eye-catching, dramatic things.” *
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wanted to step aside.
None of; the SNCC leaders!
30-DAY FORECAST — These maps, based on ones issued by the U.S. Weather Bureau, show the precipitation and temperature outlook for the next 30.days. According to the maps, Pontiac and area residents are due for near normal precipitation with temperatures on the border between below and near normal.
would give details of the week-|long staff meeting. But neither! Carmichael nor other members! indicated there was any serious! contest. Carmichael, in fact,! showed plainly that Brown had his blessing.
Bobby, Reagan Divided on Keys to Viet Solution
NEW YORK (AP) - Face-to-face on split television screens around the nation . Monday night, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and Gov. Ronald Reagan divided too oh issued essential to tfie resolution of the war in Vietnam.
The New York Democrat answered “ye,s” and the California Republican “no” to a question on whether the National Liberation Front, the political arm of I the Vietcong, should take part in any future peace talks.
They took, opposite positions in a discussion on the effect of* mass protests against the war.
Kennedy said ^ people who! questmn United States policy would be unpatriotic if they did| not express their beliefs andl added, “If all the protests and demonstrations ended today, the war would not-end.”
PROLONG WAR
Reagan contended that the demonstrations prolong the war because they give encouragement to the enemy.
The two leaders, often mentioned as possible -op.ponents in] the 1972 presidential race, .appeared on the CBS “Total Meeting of the World” in which they answered questions from 17 students in London.
Among the questioners was Bill Bradley-, the Princeton Uni-
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A—8
THE PONTIAC PRESS; TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1967.

Bloomfield Twp....a Nice Place to Live
PICTORIAL STORY By ED BLUNDEN Too bad everyone can’t live in , a place like Bloomfield Township. It’s got everything schools, good roads, fine police and fire protection and dedicated public servants ,r~ arxk-be-sides that ft's beautiful.
But it has one big drawback It's expensive!
Taxes on an average home fa $38,001 investment) are $950 per year.
However, those that can afford it find themselves in one of the finest residential areas anywhere. The opinion is virtually unanimous:
The township is a place to live, irwill be kept that way by strict zoning laws. Only a few spots in the township, 04,main arteries; Telegraph and'Woodward, are zoned anything but residential. DWELLING REQUIREMENTS And the strict requirements for construction, of a dwelling are what give the township its' characteristics.
For one thing, approximately one-half acre of ground is required in each of three types of residentially zoned areas. Minimum floor areas' are 1,250, 1.650 and 1,850 depending on the zone.
In all the areas, a minimum back yard of 35 feet and 25 feet in front are required. Under the circumstances, it would be difficult to got away with spending' less than $25,000 for a home, explain township officials.
Arno Hulet, treasurer and senior township official with .34 years of office-holding, gave some background to the strong zoning rules imposed.
FIRST CODE
He said that iii 1942, when the 'first code was established, it. was the intention of the town fathers to keep the area-residential in Character. .
To insure a higher quality of home, a minimum of $5,000 cost was established for new homes. “Everything was done by price then,” Hulet said.
In terms of today’s money thhf would be about $20,000. i However, there really wasn't much to worry about in those days, Hulet'recalls, as little de-
veldpment'occurred until the1 1950s. /
* * *
Hulet took office as a justice! |of the peace in 1933, which under! the old township jaws made hittv similar to a trustee today. One of his first chores was to separate the assets of Bloomfield Hills and Birmingham which divided themselves from township rule, and became cities in the!
years 1932 and 1933, respectively.
|° Thisieft about 25 square miles out of the original 36. Most ft that area was orchards. and dairy farms,/Hulet said. / Though much has beep' said about the growth of /various communities in the area, few can match the huge strides of Bloomfield Township from 1950 until the /present,
cording to population studies. . .jmainder is unusable for one) The association also bring vio-/in 1950 the population wasirea^n °r another. Of the 30 perlations to the
3,850 and- today it stands at *38,; 034— a jump of 1,000 per cent But the boom which saw 61 residences built last year will soon peak off.
# / ★ ★ , ¥ Glen Hoots, building Official, estimates that about w-per cent of the land, is no\^ occupied. About W per cent of the ye*'f
cent remaining, almost all of it] has been acquired by prospective builders, he said.
At present there are 9,601 homes in the township, so there’s prqbabfy' room for about 3,906 more and that will be it, said Hoots.
The trend toward luxury apartment complexes has also come to Bloomfield artd 760 units §|§1 are occupied. This type'of dwelling is faced with far more strict requirements here than many other areas.
A CLEAR, BABBLING BROOK - This stream is typical of . thd many crisscrossing Bloomfield Township. It is located at Franklin and 14 Mile and is the west branch of the
Rouge River. Clear at this point, it is the one that emerges in the Detroit River — cited as one of the most notoriously polluted rivers in the country.
a 11 a n tio n [of building officials, Hoots Indicated.
111 lam Maloney, as:
[few facts that indicate the effort by persons BLUNDEN to get a Bloomfield Township address.
, #	★ it ■
Empty lots, suitable .for a sin-gin, building are practically unobtainable and those available are selling	for high figures,!
Maloney said.
their b
ter g
push
isiorical Note . . ,.
Historical notes on early Bloomfield Township:
When people “arrived” to take tip residence here in many had little more than they could carry on,
For instance, such apartments iWOMSITE can’t be more than two stories ** .,akes are over *20,000 hi_h	I with one three-quarter acre site
selling for $50,000 recently, he SUBDIVISION ASSOCIATIONS said. A lot pot on a lake, With-Another feature of township out a sewer connection is going life that'tends to keep property for about W8° and with im- j nt n hi„h nt	iprovements the price is around1
at a high level of maintenance|tiannrt	i Held Miracle Mile along the The township’s fire and police
north portion of Telegraph and protection is imposing. There Blooiftfield Plaza at Telegraph I are four flre stationg 4nd round.
1 early chronicler describes them: "They came,
‘ "1 their families and household goods (the lat-srally meager in quantity and small in' value)
' the lands they had purchased, 'with"no impediments but’the knapsack and perhaps an axe..
When they got there they could refresh themselves at three tivems near the spot that is near downtown Birmingham These buildings were among the first built and belonged to John W. Hunter, John Hamilton and Elijah *Willits.j
This center was given the name “Piety Hill” for awhile. But a historian writes, “It is difficult to explain why that name, was first applied.”
' * *
A majority of the settlers came from New Jersey and New York State, and many of them reportedly found the area too dismal and went back.
Getting there was no fun in those days and the father of WiDets sailed on the schooner Neptune from Buffalo to Detroit, taking 21 days.
The Hunter family came by sleigh through Canada al-though how long that took is not recorded.
hjgh
is subdivision associations, 114 in all.
These groups have a limited authority and subdivision residents must obtain approval of their officials before making improvements oh property, such as adding buildings, swimming pools and the like.
$16,000, he said.
And the land is desirable. It’s mostlyjsoftly rolling terminal morrain hills, spotted with 33 lovely lakes and cut through* with an intricate system of streams.
There are no factories or industrial developments of any kind. Two large shopping cen-
and Maple. Stores are allowed1 the.cio6k pollde patrols, at a few other places, mostly.
intersections.	The township expenditures
*• ' ★	*	, ! for these services is high —
Three country clubs are with-j 5*78,00 set aside out of the ui the borders, the largest being) recent budget tour of $1,125,-Oakland Hills with two complete The police department re-18-hole courses. The others are cent,y •Pent 542-00*	■ com-
ters serve the area, the Bloom-Birmingham and Forest Lake. | puterized law enforcement
system that is far in advance of most communities of this size, law officials point out. • Township officials estimate about half the homes have sewer 'and water facilities. Many subdivisions are in the process of installing utilities, due to the recent extension of Detroit lines. Several subdivisions find their well and septic tanks adequate.
Although most access roads are paved, some aren't and side roads dw present a problem, especially during spring thaw. ‘DEATH TRAP’
One continuing problem to the township is Telegraph. This old road continues to be a “death trap,” and six persons lost their lives on the stretch in the township last year, or one per mile of road.
Continuing modifications are made on the highway and the police department conducts a Vigorous campaign to cut
Exclusive Shops Abound In Bloomfield Plaza
centhal
Parentsy)Lbchooi children are especialf^Wjtunate in . being served -.by the Bloomfield Hills School District, where th.e most advanced educational practices are in-ueffect, according to ad-ucayors.
This fall most A the school system will xw/ch over to a ™ “nohgraded’*Vpe of procedure. | Each student will proceed wfth his studies/at his own pace for each sub*ct.
IvfospsV RESIDENTS
Je 8,200 students are en-in the .schools this year, if that number are Bloom-Township residents. About 10 per cent of township students, to the extreme north and east [\are-served by other districts.
\ Three new schools are under contraction at present, a high schOtt. junior high and elemental)- Three more elementary sch'dtif, are in the planning stage ft meet needs of the burgeoning’jopulation. -Eugene Johnson, 'Jiperintend-ant of schools, point* out the district has been commenced by the Department of Health, .Td-ucation and Welfare for its'eb-lege prep courses.
An indication that affluence breeds affluence is evidenced by statistic supplied by Johnson. GO TO COLLEGE About 75 per cent of graduates go on to college and “most of them do well,” he added. • The community has been described as the home, of industrial leaders. The younger generation promises to maintain that image.
New Fire Station Is Gracefully Landscaped
Lovely Homes On Valletf Chase Road Are Elegant, But Typical
t/i- : .
THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1967
A—®
Farmington Council OKs Contribution to Stucjyof Area Future
FARMINGTON — The City Council last night be-^ came the third of four governmental units to agree to contribute financially to a proposed study of the future of the Farmington area.
The villages of Wood Creek' Farms and Quaker-town have agreed to pay their share of‘the $3,500 I study to be made by Mich-I igan State University's Institute for Community De- j velopment.
Farmington Township, how- j aver, has held up action on its contribution until after an Oct.!; 23 Incorporation vote. Board members felt the proposed study would “cloud” the incor-l poration issue.
In light of the township’s refusal to participate at this time, the Future Farmington Study Committee will meet tonight to deckle whether dr not to continue with plans for the study.
The Committee has been! studying the effects of consolidation of the four communities junder one government. It has reached the point, according to |or. John Richardson, Chairman, where the study must now be turned over to professionals.
He stressed that the MSU study committee, will not mak<
~T7
Rochester Parents Hit Split Sessions

By JEAN SABLE |lng of the board with ROCHESTER — The spectre itives of his group to study the of half-day sessions next fall for I suggestion.
1,100 elementary students Schools Supt. Douglas Lund weighed heavily on the minds of told the crowd, which had been
Planners Back Zoning Code
New Ordinance, Map for White Lake Twp.
WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -The planning commission las night finally started a proposed new zoning ordinance and map on the w a y to becoming a reality,
After a two-month delay, the commission recommended proval of the updated zoning classifications.
Joseph Joachim Represents Parents At Rochester Meeting
Almont School District Wins 2 Cases on Merger
ALMONT — Schools Supt.iregarding the proposed Almont Walter Walbom said he had Gould merger, been informed by attorneys, yes-1 m st ^ Intermediate
School District and the Could
Teen-Age Boosters of MCC Plan Event
terday that the school district has won two Circuit Court-cases!'
Walled Lake
Attracts Five
After a two-month delay, the commission recommended proval of the updated zoning classifications.
Hie proposed ordinance must now go to the Oakland County * »	.
Coordinating, Zoning and Plan- oCilOO/ ROC© ning Committee for another recommendation before going tc the Township Board for final approval.
Unlike two previous hearings which drew crowds of more than 200 persons, last night’s meeting was attended by about 10 citizens.
And, unlike the first hearing in March, only one or two persons protested some of the zoning
any recommendations; it will,
merely point out the alteraa- ci •	i xi/’ll
lives open to the camfountti«.| Clying Uub Will Each community la being	_ .	.
asked to contribute to the study SnOW Trip Film opr the basis of their assessed valuation..
School District had sought permanent injunction again the Lapeer Intermediate School District and the Almont School District to prevent the merger of Gould and Almont.
Two months ago, property owners strongly protested a proposal to change suburban farm and agricultural calassifications to suburban Estates.
★ ★ ★
In the face of the objections, the planning commission agreed to amend the ordinance to permit these classifications to remain as they are under the existing ordinance.
DELAY VOTE
Last month, ;the commission agreed to hold off approval of the. ordinance so that certain minor changes coulcr be sidered and so that residents would have an opportunity to examine the map at the township hall.
Supervisor James • Reid said the new ordinance and map are “pretty much” the way the people want them.
The map, he said, is changed very little from the present one but wording in the ordinance been changed, particularly in the section governing industrial and commercial zoning, to take care of the growth of the town-• ship.
WALLED LAKE - Five persons, including the two incumbents, filed nominating petitions! yesterday for the two four-year terms to be filled on the board of edcation in the June 12 school (lection.
Incumbents. Barbara Scully and Robert Thibideau will seek reelection.
They will be opposed by Roy r. Fogle, 2355 Keith, West Bloomfield Township; Herman Werther, 7361 Honeysuckle, West Bloomfield Township; and Richard K. Schiiskey, 1910 Dawn Ridge, Commerce Towhship.
Other areas and their June 12th "election lineup are listed below.
* Almont
Seeking two four-year terms are Incumbents Donald D. Bowman, 5691 Sandhill, and Paul Herpolsheimer, 6400 Hall, Dry-den. They will face newcomers Jay W. Tuggle, 5596 Bishop; Dr. Merle B. Haney, 400 Juliet; and James C. Wade, 7692 Bordman, all of Almont and all former members of the Citizens Advisory Committee.
The merger was approved by The monthly meeting of. the voters in a 'Sept. 26 school re-Nomads Flying Club will be organization election. It is sched-held May 22 at 8 p.m. at the uied to take effect July 1. Michigan Bell Southfield office, i The Gould district has been | between Nice and Ten Mile ipart of foe St Clair Intermedi-Tbads.	late School District. Its merger
*	*	*	! with Almont places it within the
The travel film being shown is Lapeer Intermediate District.
last year’s fun-filled trip to I--------------------------;—
Europe since the Nomads are planning another two-week European jaunt from July 22 to Aug.
6 and a few seats are still available.
ROCHESTER— The Teen-age Boosters (TAB) of Michigan Christian College will sponsor formal dinner for high school juniors and seniors who do not care for the activities associated with the' traditional high school prom.
- ★ • * ★
Beginning at 8 p.m, Friday, a smorgasbord dinner will be served at the Holiday Inn, South-field. The Belles and Beaux of Harding College will provide entertainment.
★ ★ ★
A period of devotion at Beverly Bills Church of Chris t, 90055 Thirteen Mile, will follow and the group will adjourn from there to a night of bowling.
some 85 people attending last night’s board of education meeting.
Present were parents of students now attending Meadow Brook School and those designated1 to attend the new Long Meadow School.
Sprinkled throughout the crowd were some of toe seven announced candidates for the two board seats which will be filled at the Jane 12 election. While the meeting was j search on the part of citizens for an alternate.to the proposed split-day sessions at M e a dow Brook, it was also seized by one candidate as the opportunity to attack what he( called “secretive sessions” on the part'd the board.
★ ★ *
As a means of housing future .Long Meadow students until completion of the new 20-room school some time during the first semester, the board in workshop” session had admittedly more or less settled upon the split session plan.
PLAN APPROVED The plan was voted into being at the board meeting two weeks at which few parents had been present.
Reaction was immediate.
move#frdm the regular board offices to Central Junior School’s gymnasium because oi its size, that such alternatives been considered by the hoard.
It was felt, he said, that a regular established classroom offered benefits not to be duplicated in toe use of activities and multi-purpose rooms or even church rooms.
Apart from the problem of transportation and the extra time taken from the school day for that purpose, he said the board had considered that students would be better off on the split session.
Using extra rooms from ing elementary schools, he said,
would mean a disruption in the'backs.
school life of better than 4,000. elementary students.
By combining Long Meadow and Meadow Brook students, the stop-gap measure would affect only 1,100 students, Lund said.
He reported Meadow Brook had been chosen because of its similar size to the new school and because 45 per cent -of the enrollment of Long Meadow is made up of present Meadow Brook students.
Sessions are currently planned frpm 8 a.'m. to 12:15 p.m. for" Meadow Brook students and• from 12:30 p.m. to 4:45 p.m. for Long Meadow students.
Administrators are ainjiqg'for a Nov. 1 completion date of the school, though contractors have said they might be finished as early as Sept. 1 and school officials feel it Could go as longj as Jan. 1 with construction set-
Last night Joseph D.. Joachin, chairman of the newly formed Citizen's* Committee for Adequate Education, asked for the formation of an alternate plan using, available outside classrooms as needed which could be put into use next August if construction appeared to be delayed on the new school.
He asked for a further meet-
W. Bloomfield Twp.
New Jaycees Seek Members
WEST BLOOMFIELD. TOWNSHIP - The newly, or- | ganized Jaycees are looking for members.
Before they can become chartered with the Interna- | ■ tional organization, they must have at least 25 members. g ” To date they have 18, according to Thomas Rosenfeld, 1 membership chairman, 2662 W. Long Lake.
Rosenfeld said toe only requirements are young men between the ages of 21 and 35.
The organization works with young people, sponsors | safety programs,-and attempts to interest residents of a : community in their governmental affairs. ,
* ★ ★ ★
The group will meet at the Keego Harbor City Hall at. 1 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. Interested persons are Invited to attend.
J
Drydeh
Two four-year board positions' are uncontested. Running are incumbents Fred Thiemkey Jr., 4060-S. Mill, and Mrs. Marion West, 4043 S. Mill.
Renewal of 3 mills for operating expenses plus an additional 3 mills will be the ballot question.
Water Dispute Meeting Today
Teepee need fixing?
SHELBY TOWNSHIP - A meeting this afternoon between township officials and toe Detroit Water Board loomed as the means of resolving a dispute over water line construction in the township.
★ , ★ ★
The township has asked an injunction from Macomb' County Circuit Court. Judge Edward J. Gallagher, yesterday heard arguments in his chambers and, according to Supervisor Kirby Holmes, proposed a trial for later this week providing today’s meeting is not fruitful.
★	-★	★
The township contends that the contract was not followed regarding placement of tap-ins and that construction has seriously lowered, the water table in the township’s southeast ’Section.-	■,
★	★	★
Detroit is building its water lines through the township as part of its Port Huron arm. The township is expecting to tie into the service, according to Holmes.
Shelby Board to Air Rec Program Plans
SHELBY TOWNSHIP-A plan for the township’s first recreation program Is to be presented by Supervisor Klr.by Holmes to the township board tonight.
Armed with a letter from Victor Rieck Post No. 351 of the fAmerican Legion and verbal commitments from Utica Mayor Fred Beck and Ford Motor Co., Holmes has a plan that could put close to 50 acres of township land into recreational usage.
“And it shouldn’t cost too much money eighter,” Holmes said. 1 '^\ "
The letter firajpi toe American Legion la in fegards to three acres north el the township hall on Can, now an abandoned gravel pit	■
The Poet would like to co-
operate with the township in fixing it up and maintaining it as a play area.
The letter reports the Pest has the offer of a Warren contractor to fill and grade toe lot free of charge. It then plana to outfit toe land with playground equipment for the use of Shelby and Utica children. A future ice skating rink at the site is included in the plan.
; Holmes said he had been, in conversation with Beck regarding a man-made lake sd&th of 21 Mffe and adjacent to toe freeway which the state bps recently deeded-to the city oPUtica:
•" " _ h , tit. ★' '
Now used illegally as a swimming hide, the lake Ilea in Shelby Township.
"there’s plenty of room there for both areas, and for a protected, regulated swimming area,” Holmes said.
The nee of 46 acres given to tiie Shelby-Ufica Little League by Ford Motor Co. inspires another idea in
Seethe
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TheyU give you money to fix up your home if you promise to give it beck.
Vou'il save with Community National low "thrifH-k>anM bank rates.
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“With township help, the land could accommodate four separate baseball diamond?, backstops and bleachers,” he avers. “There’s plenty of room for parking, and the land has easy access off Van Dyke.” '	1
* .
Also pending is a deal with! toe Utic* Community School1 System whereby the township! and schools could jointly finance
areas for youngsters.
fe I'1.
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LBJ Seeks Firmer Ties With Governors
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Johnson is courting the nation's governors in the name of federal-state partnership— and,, in an apparent effort to avoid the kind of criticism once aimed at him by Democratic stfite executives.
BID FAREWELL TO PRESIDENT — President Lyndon B. Johnson waves from an airplane ramp while a group of New England governors wave back as he leaves Bradley Field in the/rain and fog at Windsor Locks,
Conn., yesterday following a meeting with the governors. Governors (from left) are: John W. King, New Hampshire; John A. Volpe, Massachusetts; Philip H. Hoff, Vermont; and John Denipsey of Connecticut.
Detroit1	Gets Reprieve
LANSING (AP) - Wayne National Life Insurance Co. of Detroit today has a 60-day reprieve in which to put financial affairs in an order acceptable to the State Insurance Commission.1
Commisioner David Dyk-house had ordered the company to repair a $1,147 million shortage in capital by Monday.
★ 1 ★ ' ★
He granted the extension, until July 15, following nearly five hours of deadline d‘ with members of the Wayne National, board of directors.
“We are satisfied that the board has a realistic - plan of action outlined,” Dykhouse said. That plan, he said, should put
the company in solid operating position by July 15.
AMOUNT PAID
Some $900,000 of the impairment already has been paid, Dykhouse. said.
The payments were backed by ' two former company officials, John J. Collins and Dr. Leon Fill. Both resigned their positions following the outset of the commission investigation. Fill and Collins each still hbld stock.in the company, however;
The current impainhent, now I some $200,000, must be repaid by July 15, Dykhouse said.
Dykhouse said the surplus and
losses could not be estimated at this time.
He said that at the conclusion of his examination, fome two months from now. there -would be “A variety of other matters which will have to be examined.”
He refused to elaborate.
Attorney Brian Sullivan of Detroit, counsel for Wayne National, said t h e .board is confident it will be able to meet the commissfon-imposed order by July 15.
before the governors.
„ * * *■
Johnson speht about 2% hours ..with the six New England governors, four of them Democrats, and declared again his dedication to White House—state house cooperation. /
We can sucoeea in dealing with the modern problems that confront our people in the 20th century only if the federal and the state governments are Willing to Work together,” Johnson said, “with an exchange of ideas and information, and with the true spirit of real partnership.”	>
DATA'ON MEETINGS The White House produced a deluge of data on 31 administration meetings with governors earlier this year, and nine more to come. Former Florida Gov. Farris Bryant and a team of federal officials are conducting those sessions.
At Windsor Locks, Johnson took a personal habd in the campaign. He brought along a dozen top administration officials,- four of Cabinet rank.
★ ★ ★
Around a long mahogany taj ble, they talked with the gover-i
nors about problems ranging from the future of the New Haven Railroad to the impact of shoe imports on Maine’s economy,
Johnson named Widthrop G. Brown, now U.S. ambassador to Korea, to serve as liaison man all the nation’s governors with all matters r relations with
VIET
‘Of course, he will be available to brief the governors and their cabinets at any time upon their request,” Johnson i “Ambassador Brown will speak with the voice of the secretary of state.” *.
Johnson said Brown, as a special assistant to Secretary of State Dean Rusk, will be available to talk about the Vietnam war, import and tariff problems, foreign aid, U.S. forces In
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Europe add anything else on the minds of the governors, jb' A . q “Mr. President,” said Connecticut Gov. John^N. Dempsey, a Democrat, “we’re very grateful to you for the wonderful add continued cooperation that you have extended to all of the gov-
Vermont’s Democratic Gov. Philip H. Hoff said “a new dialogue has been opened between
Relations between the White House and the nation's state houses have not always been1 that cordial. Five months ago, a caucus of Democratic governors bluntly blamed the administration for party losses in the 1966' election., in a meeting at White Sulphur I xings,- W.Va., they complained of a lack of communication with Democratic leaders, and said the “Great Society”!
was moving too fast for the voters.	•
The men in charge of the 50 state houses, now evenly divided between' Democrats and Republicans, will wield crucial 'influence ip next year's presidential race.
Ski resort areas 4n New England'plan to invest about 18 million dollars for construction land improvement this yeajr.
the federal government and the states’ during the/past ' six
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Funds to for Programs
Oakland Community College has received funds of $24,640 for its work-study program and $15,-000 for the educational opportunity grant program, Merrill Miller, assistant director of educational services announce? today.
★ At ★
At the present time 100 OCC students “have obatined part-time jobs in the work-study program.
Under the Department of Health, Education and Welfare’s educaiioqal- opportunity program, 50 grants up to $300 far high school students will be available for 1967-88 school year.
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Utica High Seniors Awaitfriday Dance
THE DbNTCAC PRESS
frONTIAg, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1967
GET HIM TO THE PROM QN TIME! -Kathy Cummings is ready for Saturday’s prom trip to “Blue Hawaii” but she’s afraid that her date George Lekas won’t make it on time despite the help of tape-measure
Pontiac Prow Photo, by R*H WIltMr
engineer John Getzon. All are seniors at Clarkston High School. The prom is given by the junior class to- honor the graduating seniors.
Hawaiian • Theme at Clarkston
By LINDA HEATH
One of the most exciting events of the school year at Clarkston' High School is the annual prom given by the juniors honoring graduating seniors.
This year’s prom, “Blue, waii,” Will be’held Saturday at . the high school.
Entertainment will be* provided by Dave and the Dividends.
• To complement the Hawaiian theme, there Will be palm trees, a waterfall, and other Polynesian decorations.
Prom chairman Sallr'Radoye is working in cooperation with junior c 1 a s s faculty sponsors Bill Dennis and Max Inman, as well as all interested juniors.
"' •The music department is sponsoring its annual spring concert, “An International Ho l id a y,“ with Charlene Rice, vocal instructor, directing Thursday at 7:30 p. m.
Many seniors have been honored by receiving various college s c h o l a r ah ip s. In the M i c h i g a n Education Higher Assistance Authority scholarship program, Chris Maier, Carol Quertermous, Chris Quinlan, Mark Richard, Joette Schultz and Clay Wilsorj all received monetary awards.
Hbnprary award winners the prog-ram include Terry Dutcher, Linda Heath, Larry Klemrn, Hugh Rose, Mike ' Schweitzer and Priscilla Wice.
Winners off the Regents Alumni Scholarships from the University of M i c h i g a n are Chris Maier, Joette S c h u 11 Linda Heath and Clay Wilson.
Carolyn Trent received a scholarship from Michigan Business School Association and Jack Frost" won a 'Michigan
You-Want Atmosphere? Try Room 204 at Marian
By PATRICIA POLMEAR j earned her master’s degree in Step into Room 204 at Marian 6“ •*» from Wayne State Uni-High School and you step into a vers'ty-
world with an atmosphere all its own.
From the gently swaying mobiles and collage-covered walls to the ceramics and original tote-bags, the art room reflects the individuality and creativity of studeAts and teachers.
Step into this room anytime, any school day and you will see at least one of than 300 art students at work on some project.
For the sophomores, this mandatory course is an, introduction to art and helps develop a true of. appreciation.
Plans for reorganization of the art department are still somewhat indefinite, but there is hope.
According to the new plan, freshmen will receive the art appreciation program apd the remaining classes may elect art.
Brother Rice Choral Event Draws Near
This vital cultural background! offers a pasis for (he student L
By GARY MILLER The Brother Rice High that she may understand how to School’s Junior and Senior Glep judge art	Club will .present its annual
spring concert tomorrow and NEW TECHNIQUES	Thursday at 8 p.m.
For the junior or senior who Accompanying the 60-member elects a studio art course, this isiGlee Club will be the chofral opportunity to develop her group from Sacred Heart High
Spring Concert NearatWKHS
By JUDY FRANCIS Saturday at 8 p. m! is the tim^ and date to remember as Waterford Kettering’s Vocal Music Department presents the annual Spring Concert.
This year’s performance, “A Song Is Made for Singing Again,” will donate all proceeds to the beautification of the WKHS campus.
Peggy Underwood, soprano will be soloist in the songs “When I Have Sung My Songs” by E. Charles and “H Bacio” by Arditi. /
A special portion of the annual concert is “Walk Hand In Hand,” sung by the Gleemen, with Gleemen alumni doming up and joining in.
“The Battle Hymn of the Republic” will also f e a t ur e all chorus alumnis joining with the present chorus to close the program.	K
GYM IS SETTING This program, directed by Janet Hunt, will be held in the gym.
Instrumental accompanists will be Gail Strader, Sonia Martin and Judy Baker, piano; Griff Verhey, bass; Rex Hamil,drums; and Sandy Inglehart, chimes.
Kettering’s Art Festival is under way this week as the main lobby turns into a show-place for creative masterpieces.
Projects on display are from this year’s first - through - fourth-year art classes.
^Girls’ Athletic Association (GAA) and its letter club will host Mom’s Nite Monday at 7 ), m.
A cooperative dinner is planned and any GAA member may sign' up in the girls' locker room.
talents and master new techniques.
Sister Mary Andre, head of the art department, and Carol McQuaid, sophomore art teacher, endeavor to give their students a sense of appreciation and understanding.
“To me, art is the concrete, tangible expression of a human experience,” explains Sister Mary Andre.
School.
The newly formed, Brother Rice band, which made it’s debut at the Brother Rice mu-sicale will accompany the singers from the two schools. Theme of tee Concert, under the direction of A. A. Callaghan ‘ A! A. Callaghan Jr.,, will be “Sounds of Spring.”
Brother Rice’s annual Field Day took place last week. Field Day enables all four classes to She also feels, however, teat compete for a trophy and tee
everyone is born with some degree of artistic talent, which must sometimes be drawn out. Some are better, usually because they are more skilled and thus more interested.
FIRST YEAR Prior to this year, her first at Marian, Sister Mary Andre
Technological Institute scholar- taught art at Immaculate Heart sh*P-__	______[High, Westchester, 111. She
Ancient Rome to Rise at	Kingswood Banquet
prestige that goes with it.
Greg Hengesbaugh has received an Art Scholarship from the Birmingham-Bloomfield Art Association. EdHier this year preg took first place for his college in the Birmingham-Bloomfield Teen Center Art Show.
Brother McGovern, moderator of the school paper, The Chieftain, announced next„ year’s staff., Steve Mitros will be managing editor; Gary Miller, news editor; John Cruit,, feature editor; Sid Smith, sports editor and Dave Lawson, business manager.
By MARY STEWART j Ancient Rome will r\se again! as dancers, singers, flowers and festive Roman decorations fill the Kingswood School Cranbrook Auditorium during the Latin Banquet Friday.
The faculty and Latin students will be entertained by the skit, “Nero’s Golden House.”
Planting a delicious Roman banquet to add to the enjoyment are Cynthia Sherman, Latin instructor, and Candy Angel, chairman.
* The pttelic is invited to attend a vocal concert given by Diane Mauch and her vocal -students in tee Kingswood Auditorium at 8:15 p.m. on Thursday.
Performing in the concert are Carol Balloff, Lynne Carpenter, Beth Evans, Vicky Farah, Ann Fitzgerald, Hilary Hackett and Thayer Hanson.
Others included in the program are Jean Harlan, Diana Namisnak, Billy Pivnick, Lisa Purdy, Carolyn Thomas and Lori VSlassis.
Bertha Seifert will accompany the vocalists, whose selections “range from^ra artast to folk
songs..... vS
Sunday, the wSSjQr’s Luncheon aiifl T&jqtobe held for the. faculty and sttiwfs of all the Cranbrook institutions
Dinner music will be provided by Griff Verhey playing selections on tee organ. After dinner, one of toe Girls’ Ensembles, tee Nonette’s will entertain.
Next year’s officers. will be named and the GAA presentation of outstanding senior will be announced at' the meeting. STUDENT CHAIRMAN
Sandy Postle Is studentchaifc man of the program. SS*.'"
Preliminary elections for next year’s senior class board have been run.
Todd. Baker, Mark Campbell and Jim Swartz have been named as competitors for the presidency.
Running for vice president are Linda Buddy, Tito Donaldson and Debbie Stireman.
Cindy Corkum, Nancy Cover, Noreen Ihrke and Joanna Newton are campaigning for secretary.
Treasurer s e e k e r s are Pat Cahape, Janet Furr and Krfs Hall.
Activities Mount at St. Lawrence
By^JAMES PAKLEDIN AZ The -end of the year draws nearer at St. Lawrqpce High School ami students rush back and forth in many tasks.
Senior? eyp tee end of the year with apprehension and worry.
Many affairs still await them before they throw off the “shackles” of high school and step into tee adult world. iThe coming weeks are filled with activities for the seniors, iryluHing the senior prom and graduation exercises. ‘
following the service at Christ The last day of school for the Church Cranbrook.	/ >—-Seniors will be June 2.
Representatives Are Selected at N. Farmington
By KATHY KOURTJIAN North Farmington High School representatives for Girls’ and Boys’ State have been cifosen.
They are Linda Haviland, Jim Haviland; Jim Benva, Randy Benya, Randy Harp, Tom Huber Benva", Randy Harp, Tom Huber, DougJLa&u	v
Linda will spend one weel this summer at the University of Michigan, and the boys will-go to Michigan State in Lansing.
Total income netted from tee Student Council Work Day was just over $1,200. This will provide at least three scholarships for deserving graduating seniors.
The sophbmore class held its annual dance last Friday evening from 8 to 11. The theme was “Only-Hawaiian.” The cpr-sairs provided musical entertainment.
4
i i o r activities committee during the past month. Recently, tee committee announced the theme chosen as “Distinguished Memory.”
The couple who turned in the winning suggestion will receive free ticket to the prom.
★ . * ★
This year’s sports awards edition of tee paper will be written by tee two journalism classes.' MANY8 FEATURES The edition, given free annually to all students, will include such features as sports awards, team standings, list of boys who received letters and interviews.
Varsity cheerleaders have been chosen. To qualify, girls had to know-three cheers, one original cheer, phis stunts. V.arsity squad for UHS will be juniors Cherie Burnette, Nancy ~ r i c k s e r, Kaye Nate, Linda Pawlowski, Michelle Pressley, Yvonne Reid and Nancy SchneU.
Varsity cheerleaders for Stevenson High School are also Juniors. They are Cyqjhis Browning, Jackie Freeman, Peggy Howe, Laurie Hume, Linda Mabarak, Barbara Trufyi-ble and Karen Wojrowski.
YEA, CENTRAL — Stacia Burns (front) and Beth Vershure give a a cheer for Pontiac Central High School. Juniors, “Stacia and Beth are on next year’s Varsity Cheerleading Squad. This summer the squad will attend
At Pontiac Central
Camp All-American in-Hartland. The camp is sponsored by, Michigan State University. PCH cheerleaders are chosen by the Student Council after rigorous competition.
Hootenanny Due Friday at Rochester
Cheerleading Big Job
| By KARIN HEADLEE Rochester High School’s Student Council will sponsor a Hootenanny Friday at 8 p.m. .
The event will be held on the concourse lawn in front of the school.
Due to the location*, seating facilities will not be provided. Students may bring blankots or any suitable seating arrangements.
Tickets may be purchases from any Student Coundl*»em-ber.	«	''
> * * ★
P e r f o r m i n g will be “The Roamers” — Phil Nye and pave Stelmaszek — both college students.
The 125 members of Rochester High School choirs will present Spring Sing-In” concert Thursday at 8 p.m. Frank Irish, music instructor at the high school, will direct the program.
The performance will feature the Triple Trio, several soloists and the Madrigal Singers.
A0 participants in either varsity or junior varsity sports will be honored at an All-Sports banquet May 23 in the high school cafeteria.
., ★ ★ *
Speaking at ihe dinnetwiP be representatives of Detroit Red Wings and Detroit Pistons.
ilal Newhouser, ex-pitcher for the Detroit Tigers, will be master of ceremonies.
By CHRIS BLAKENEY Cheerleading is an art. The task of producing enthusiasm in a sometimes apathetic student .body takes originality and spirit.
A cheerleader finds herself in a position of responsibility and leadership which she accepts gladly. To be a cheerleader is to open the door to student prestige and one grueling practice session after another.
Because cheerleading is an important symbol of school unity not everyone can qualify for tee job,-
Milford Prom
Every year more than 100 Pontiac Central girls try out. Usually not more than eight new girls are accepted. This year there was only room for six.
★ W ★
Through the years there has been' criticism of the judging procedure so last year, a more democratic system was initiated. PCH cheerleaders are now chosen solely by the Student Council. -
PREPARE FOR JUDGING Last'week six girls were selected for next year’s squad. They had been through numerous practice sessions with the old cheerleaders in preparation for their performances in front of the student council. a -k .★
In a preliminary tryout the student council judged the girls on the basis of pep, coordination, voice, poise, agility, and rhythm.
From the students’ numerical voting the top 14 girls qualified fpr tee final tryouts.
In this performance tee candidates were asked to perform an original cheer and do four jumps — tee split jump, the toe jump, and stag jump, and the spread eagle.
8 SURVIVE JUDGMENT Surviving this judgment
■HHU . _ six girls who will compose next a professor at Oakland Com- year>s junior Varsity squad.
Juniors from this year’s squad automatically form tee Varsity squad.
Sacred Heart in Guest Role
By MARY GRACE ALTALO The Sacred Heart Academy high school chojr will participate in “Hie Sounds of Spring,” a concert to be presented by Brother Rice, Thursday and Friday at 8 p.
★
Six girls receiving scholastic' awards from . Phi Beta Kappa were Jane Johnston, Mary Helen Lorenz, Melinda Churches, Melanie Baer, Mary Vinson and Mary Ellen Quinn.
Thursday, Dr. A. A. Valsi,
tors and seniors on the relationship between lbve and psychology..
As a part of tee Ecumenical movement in the C a t h o li c Church, instructors in various faiths have spoken to the students concerning the problems of today and about their faiths.
They are Marva Burns, Doreen Corpron, ■ Maureen Cor-pron, Allesia Daniels, Barb Johnson and Marilyn Quance.
★ ■ ★ t '★
The - cheerleaders cheer at
football and basketball games plus cross-country, swimming and wrestling meets. During season they keep the halls filled with pep signs and stage several pep assemblies.
ATTEND CLINICS
In tee past school year they have attended two clinics. In a clinic in Warren, the JV squad took 3rd place tee first time a Central squad had ever competed.
★ ★ *
They have experimented with splits, flips, and minitrap routines — all new this year. -
This summer next year’s varsity squad will attend Camp All-American in Hartland for four days. The camp is sponsored by Michigan State University.
Pontiac Central’s forensics speakers brought their school more honors yet by. scoring highly in tee stator competition. Willie Black, humorous reading, placed second^ Veta Smith, } original oratory, third; Mike Lee, sophomore declamation, third; and Cecylya Brown, interpretive reading, although not placing survived three rounds of competition.
GIRLS’ STATE CHOICE/ i Cathy Crew, junior/nas been selected the Girls' iRate renre-sentative from Pontiac Central.
■it it it
Cathy WM/ chosen from a group of la Central girls recommended by their counselors. The final selection was made on the bdsis of an Interview with a representative of the American Legion. Bfev. Bacak was chosen Cathy’s alternate!
■B
By SUSAN OWEN Seniors at Utica High School are eagerly awaiting Friday.
The Hillcrest Country Club in Mount Clemens will be tee site of a dance from 9 p. m. to midnight, entertainment provided by “The Mergers.”
Suggestions from a prom theme were turned to to tee
By TOBY MAKI
Juniors at Milford High School have chosen “The Language of Flowers” as their theme let tee senior prom to be held Saturday from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. in the high school cafeteria.
General chairman of tee party is Wayne Hall class vice president.
Cochairmen-a r e Mark and Toby Maki, who have been assisted by Candy Adam, Nancy Adams, Nancy Clark, Mike Mitchell and Joan Schmidt.
Flowering shrubs, trellises of out - sized blossoms and garden swings will contribute to .the pastel floral motif.
The refreshments, arranged under the leadership of Marjory Caravagjo,' w i H be served by waiters costumed in the dress of the “Gay Nineties.”	*
* .* ’ ★
The orchestra, Nortoville Dance Band from Nortoville, will be seated on a raised bandstand such as those seen in the village parks of Yesterday.
Members of the orchestra will also be dressed in costumes resembling those worn in tee
“Nineties.” ^	FLOWERS SPEAK — Hie language of Nancy
. Advisors to the junior class	tee flowers is heard differently by the sexes,	of tee c
are Mrs. Arthpr Mitchell, Mrs.	Wayne Hall (left) and Toby. Maki hang a	all are hard	at w
David Laidlaw and Wendall Har-	last-minute poster promoting the forthcoming	gala honoring the
fkton.	prpm With an air of perfunctoriness while
B—2
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 16,1967
China Reportedly Tried to Halt Hanoi Peace Move
CHICAGO (AP) - Red China triad to head .off a January attempt by Hanoi to end the Vietnam war, die Chicago Daily News says in a copyright story.
But Hanoi issued a peace feeler anyway—only to have it rejected by the United! States, the News ssdd.
The story by Simon Malley,
, United Nations correspondent for the French-language Jeune Afrlque and other African newspapers, quoted an interview with Premier Chou En-laL Yesterday’s' report was the] second in a series based
hands of the United States and the Soviet Union.
This idea of negotiations was pushed by the Soviet revisionists,” he quoted Chou as saying. “In fact, it may well have originated with them. But their aim was not to help the freedom fighters — Vietcong — but to undermine and isolate than from 'their comrades in the North.
"We were convinced that the United States would not accept the proposal because of their continued belief in the possibility of military victory."
Chou told Malley that the
talks between Malley and Chin-peace feeler was eventually ese government leaders during!turned down by the United a recent trip to China, States.
1-Millionth Shell Made
WARREN (AP) —Chevrolet workers in Warren quietly produced their one-millionth 81 -millimeter mortar shell yes ter day.
The three-inch, five - pound, shell was unceremoniously packed into a cardboard box to be shipped to the Milan Army Ammunition Plaid: in Tennessee to be loaded with explosives.
★ ★ ★.
Then, with Its tail fin and .nose fuse added; it wifi add to the noise of war iq^. Vietnam.
No explosives are loaded at the Chevrolet Division of Gen-
Malley said Chou told of warning the North Vietnamese that to proceed with peace moves would be to play into the
French Leader Due to Outline Bid for Powers
The story quoted Chou as saying a high-level delegation of Vietnamese haid visited Peking i to tell Chou of Hanoi’s intention to offer the United States peace negotiations in return for a halt! in bombing. Chou said he told the North Vietnamese that such a proposal would lead to further demands from the United States.,
Later, the story said; British Prime Minister Harold Wilson j persuaded Soviet Premier Alex-
FINAL INSPECTION — Hundreds of shells receive final inspection at the General Motors Corp. Chevrolet plant in Warren where workers preduced their one-milli6nth 81-millimeter mortar shell. The shells are taken to an ammunition plant in Tennessee, loaded with explosives and then shipped to Vietnam. In 10 months of operation, the Warren plant has become the nation’s biggest producer of the projectiles.
eral Motors plant where the shell bodies are produced. BIGGEST PRODUCER
In the 18 months since GM got the government contract to build the shells, the Warren plant has become the nation’s biggest producer of projectiles.
The first shell came off the production line last October. |
The Finest In Home Furnishings
Today 224 .employees work two 10-hour shifts, six days a week to keep up with $20 million1 in Army contracts.
, * ■ * ' *
The munitions operation is only a small building In the Warren plant where 3,400 other workers make car axles suspensions.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation reported that 97 per cent of the cases It investigated last year resulted in convictions.

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OCC Sets 'Mi Festival'
PARIS (AP) - With a nationwide general strike hanging 'over his head, President Charles de Gaulle is expected to outline his case at his semiannual news conference for Ms government’^ request for emergency ^ legislative powers.
Hie president was certain to try to dull tiie opposition of the French left to his government’s attempt to legislate by decree on economic and social matters until Nov. 1,
Deaf Mas Perfects Midgel Transistor Hearing Aid
If you can hear people talk and , can’t make, oat the wards clear-
______	Community services division “Man^ Alone” at 8 pin, June ly then this may be the answer.
ei Kosygin to forward an Ameri-jofi Oakland Community College 14, 2l and 28 at Highland An extremely small hearing aid can proposal of mutual de-esca- will present films, art exMbits, Lakes Campus. Individual ad-jwijig a tiny energized unit, has lation to Hanoi. Chou termed tours and music during June, mission is $1.50 and series tick- perfected by a man who tiiis “the latest act in this Rus-jwMch they have designated ets, $3.	Ihimself is hard of hearing and
sian conspiracy against the; Mini Festival Month.	eA plane trip to Expo 87L.-_.--_- ...	„
Vietnamese people.”	i The following events are'from June 18-19 at $100 for f”
*	* ■*	'planned:	j transportation and lodging. Interested it is suggested you
Mareti, U.N. Secretary, ,A tour to CMcago Art In ,A free outdoor ^teur write A. W. Newell, 2616 W. 8tii ^	°S stiblte from June 24 at a cost of professional art exMbit at noon st-»	Y«n
North vfe^Mmese°rew««ntehIf30 for transPortatIon and lod«-!to 6 p.m. June 25 at HigMand faU information at newest or Hves" in Rangoon, Chou toldn£ A	,	\	. Lakes Campus.	obligation whatsoever. -Adv.
T, „	, i	• Av communication and mu-
toy. Hunptan, to Otou»| *
words, was “merely a restate- „	___T„
ment of the Kosygin-Wilson proposal” and actually originated
\\Mdiftyou really rather drive | a bargain?
Biiick Bargain Days are here!
Since! defense and foreign policy are the private {reserves of the presidency, De Gaulle is asking the new National Assembly to yield its only important areas of control and in effect suspend itself from office before it has had an opportunity to warm the assembly benches.
An electorate increasingly restless about the sluggish rise of wages and social benefits chose an assembly that is nearly evenly divided between the Gaullists and their allies and opposition parties of the left and center.
Communist, Socialist and Catholic labor unions have called a 24-hour general strike Wednesday to protest the government’s request lac emergency powers.
The general strike, the first on a frankly political basis in 29 years, coinddes with the opening of assembly debate on the government’s emergency pow-
with President Johnson.
‘These so-called peace plans would have meant the practical surrender of the Vietnamese1 people," Malley quoted Chou as saying.
including' Kenneth Jewell Chorale, Baroque Trio and Us-tad All Akbar Khan, at Bloomfield Hills High School Auditorium. Individual admissions are! $2.50 and series tickets, $8.
• A three-part lecture-film
GIRLS . .. get a good job, oam good money. Loam tho language of computere. You can loam operation and programming of the IBJ Card Punch in fust 8 weeks! Class size limited

THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY,
W C(tt0R$ _
DAY, MAY 16, 1967 ^w«iy B-~« ,
China Torn fcy Year of Strife
By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent - A political bomb exploded to Pelting Just a year ago. The incredible binge of violence which followed apparently brought Red China to the edge of civil war. It may be looking at the same specter again.
Bruised and dazed, Red China's Communist party seems nof to be struggling desperately to dear the wreckage. By all evidence, vast political and economic damage has been done, with more likely before the show ends.
★ ★
The upheaval has endangered China’s food supply. It alsQ may be seriously affecting Peking’s nuclear bpmb program.
^.Piecing evidence together, analysts deduce that x^an^on May 16, 1966, that a power struggle claimed its first important victim.
REDUCED TO RUBBLE Thereafter, a madness gripped Coquminist China. Party and government administrative structures in the capital and provinces have been reduced to rubble, if even part of
the^eports froto Red China are true. ■ J
From a Politburo of 23 members which ruled the party, and through it the nation, prior to last May? only six members re? main, mainland reports indicate.
Of 47 top government ministers, 23 have been severely attacked by Mao Tse-tong’s Red Guards and "revolutionary rebels.” Many have been Bred. Many others are inoperative because of the confusion swirling about them.
Of 15 deputy premiers who were serving last year under Premier Chou En-lai, eight have been purged. Two others are ip danger of being sacked.
NONE ESCAPE
Not a province or autonomous region to the whole nation of 750 million has escaped the uprbar. The most explosive, Peking reports say, are Szechwan to the southwest, Honan in the south district which/ is the nation’s food basket; Shantung in the east, Kansu and Sinkiang in the Northwest. The latter two prov-1 inces hold important installations of China’s nuclear program
A struggle to determine which way China’s future would be shaped brought the nation almost to dvil war last summer, some analysts say. Now the confusion seems to be threatening both China’s Industry and her agriculture in a nation already short of food and goods.
provided by» Mao’s ' “re\ tionary rebels.” *,// Perhaps the opposition has lost its chance to destroy Mao. But between them the two factions in Red China seemed to be well on the way to destroying ‘the Communist party, as it existed for foe first 17 yean of Red China.
The forces of Vice Chairman Lin Piao, arrayed behind Mao’s symbolic figure, had seemed to toe past few months to be winning toe Struggle, but toe opposition obviously is stubborn and the issue far from decided. The Maoist hold remains tenuous in many areas in toe uproar of the "great proletarian cultural revolution" touched off officially in August by toe Mao-Lto faction. COSTLY VICTORY
If it wins out, the victory will prove to have been a costly one.
To establish and insure their power, the Mao-Lto faction had to attack toe entrenched party bureaucracy at province and city levels and sweep out any suspected of underrating “Mao Tse-tungV thinking.” A whole new structure will nave to be rebuilt on the ruins, from toe green, inexperienced material
Postal Problem IsaReal'Honey
TRAVERSE CITY * (AP) Postmaster Edward Perkett has a honey of a. problem on his hands....49 small boxes of queen ‘ ees.
The boxes were banded together to form one package and arrived by airmail Saturday. But one of the braces was missing and that one contained toe address label. Perkett said he doesn’t know who sent the package or where it was to go.'
Perkett said he probably will wait another day or so foir someone to claim the package before disposing of it. Meanwhile, the boxed bees buzz.
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B—4
THE PONTIAC PliKSSr TtTESDAY, MAY lg, 196T
Tool Company Chief Is Dead
Cogsdill, 82, Dies at | Orchard lako Homel
x ■” I
Stuart A. Cogsdill, chairman
Donnd M. Harper	Fredrick, L»™ Mrs. Harvey L. Tarry I
r I and Brian; three sisters, Janice,	,.;	' i	r !
Service (or Donna M. Harper,1 Janet and Beverly, all at home; MARLETTE — Service for 15-year-old daughter of Mr. and and grandparents, Mr. and MraJ Mrs. Harvey L. (Vivian) Terry,
Mrs/Claude H. Harper of 346 HaiokLMcVeigh of Romeo and 52, of 5530 E. Marlette will be
N. Cass, will be 1:30 p.m. Thurs-Mr8. Katherine Michaud of MK. Dm tomorrow *1^,-!	WS3|
day * at the Huntoon Funeral v-do	? P tomorrow at the Mar-rf ^ boam of Cogsdill Tool
Home	„	lette United Missionary Church.fproducts, Inc., Oak Park, died!
Donna died this morning. She Perry C. Fisher Burial will be in Marlette Cem-[yesterday M his home, 49501 was a student at Lincoln Junior ■'	'	etery by Marsh Funeral Chapel. I Birth way, Orchard pke, Hel
High School.	WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN-i ’ Hr,. Terry 4M Soncloy.	1
Surviving are her parents; SHIP — Service for Perry, C.	... - l/-.. .	. .	.1 Services will be 11 a.m. to-,
two sisters and a brother, Pa-!Fisher, 84, of 2380 Rolandale| Surviving besides her husband morrow ,t Christ Church Qran-tricia Janet Louise and Claude (will be 10 a.m. Thursday at"* a daughter, Mrs. Clayton brook, Bloomfield Hills. Buriall W ail at home.	St. Patrick’s Catholic Church, jhmes of Snover; five sons, Paul,.will be in WoodWwn Cemetery,!
■/	Union Lake, with burial in Holy ArUmr and Daniel of Marlette,!Detroit, by Bell Chapel of the'
Mrs Henrietta H. Pope;Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield.'Keith of Pontiac and Ronald William R. Hamilton Co., Birm-’ /	X Elton Black Funeral Home,#7 Kansas City, Kan.;* eight ingham.
Seryide for Mrs. Henreitta H.|union Lake.	jgrandcbUdren; a stepmother; a! rntnAm h.u __.	M
TT ”•	MoodayHe 8lateri . broO*r.	!
11^’®: ^	member of the church. i • p_v .	....	tools. He had served as a i
Lake with burial in Oakland!" Surviving are three sons, Har-	^	^ I member of the Industry Ad- I* 1/ jILJ j —
^r^P^iSlvi	I old B. of Union Lake, Paul I. LUM - Service for Ray L. visory Committee of the War IS IKIUGO 111
Mrc Pn^’ retired practical0* st Clair Shores and George Utley, 67, of 4915 Lum Road,I Production Board hr World	_	.
nu^e chJviady	I* of Moab, Utah; two daugh- will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at War I. CODter CrCtsH I
^S^ivh^^tfdaughter, MissJ^8’	and Barbara J.JMuir Brothers Fuheral Home' One of the original members	\
Helen Pope of Pontiac.	both of Urnpn Lake; a brother, j	im|ay	City*	with	burial in Lum of the board of directors of the .	.
™	two grandchildren; and nine	Cemetery.	Oakland Hills Country Club, he A	Pontiac man,	Army	Pfc.^
Gina M. Santa Vicca j great-grandchildren.	I Mr. Utley died Sunday. He also was a member of the dJ Midhael L. Elmy, was killedin
ui. „ r» MrAiilev lwas a *‘*e member of Euqlidtroit Athletic Club; the Bloom-'a helicopter crash last week wayne u. /vtc^uiey	^	m F&AM	and llfe mem- field Hills Country Club Indian over the	South	China	Sea	off
PONTIAC TOWNSHIP—Serv-	her of	Lum	Chapter 436, Order Creek Club, and Orchard Lake (h	• t	f Vi;|
ice for Wayne D. McAuley, 24, of Eastern Star. Utley ran a Country Club.	#
3142 E. Walton will be 1 p.m. (grocery store to Lum for 33| Serviving are his wife, Flor-j	*	< ■'
tomorrow at Bell Chapel of the 'ears and was caretaker of ence; two daughters, Mrs. Genel Pfc- E,my< who died May 9, William R. Hamilton Co., Bir-1 Lum Cemetery.	•	|a. White of Birmingham andwas originally listed
Avon Karine Killed™ Viet
PFC. MICHAEL L. ELMY
Pontiac Gl
An Avon Township couple,
Mr. and Mrs, R. V. Snyder,
346 Wimpole, have been notified of the death May 8 of their son,
Marine Pfc. Richard A. Snyder, 19, near Quang Tri, Viet-mm.
The official telegram said he had been killed by hostile rifle fire. Snyder had been in the Marines since March 15, 1966, serving since last September in Vietnam.
His parents received a letter
j froth him the same day that PFC. RICHARD A. SNYDER the notification of. his death arrived. It spoke of the weather i—hot and raining, of a B-52 attack, and of his view of Freedom Bridge leading into the | Demilitarized Zone and the display of both North and South Vietnamese flags there. .
Graveside service for Gina M. Santa Vicca, one-month-dld daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Santa Vicca of Ann .Ar-bor was to be this morning* at Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston
by the Lewis E. Wint Funeral Home, Clarkston.
The infant died Sunday.
Surviving besides the father and mother a former Waterford Township resident, are grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Leo E. Davis of Waterford Township, and Mr. and Mrs. Emedio Santa Vicca of East Detryit; and a great-grandmother, Mrs. Maria D’Alessandro of Detroit
mingham. Burial will be in Per- Surtriving are his wife, Pearl; Mrs. Robert E. Fife of Bloom-1 in action and later reclassified'
Traffic Club Installs Exec'
Pontiac Traffic Club installed m|g^ingfWarner J. Canto of Huntington
Suicide Is Ruled
A death in Bloomfield Hills yesterday afternoon was ruled! a suicide by Coroner Donald Smith. .
Mrs. Jdan Powers, 35, of 2325 |Eastways, was found dead' by her family from apparently self-inflicted wrist lacerations, police said!
Sanity Tests Ordered Area Slaying
l^o psychiatrists' were appointed yesterday by Circuit Judge Robert L. Templin to determine the mental condition of a Farmington Township . man charged with murdering his wife.
Die testing of John Merlo, 25, by doctors Emanuel Tanay and William E. Gordon,, both of Detroit, will provide only, a preliminary evaluation.
Their report will permit Temp* lin to decide if Merlo should un-|dergo further psychiatric examinations by state appointed doctors. Their findings would indicate if Merlo was capable of standing trial.
! Merlo is accused of shooting his wife Sharon, 18, white she was Working in the Crest Beauty Salan, 27432 Eight Mite Road, on Jan. 6.
He was arrested in Philadelphia two weeks later, and returned to Oakland County.

ry Mount Park Cemetery, Pon- a daughter, Mrs. Phyllis Worthy field Hills; and eight grandchil- kiilMl, tiac fc	i of Waterford Township; hi s dren?
\ .... ...	....	* • i - -	-	action.
.meeting the result of nonhositle ntght
He
Woods as president at a general
He was the son of Mr. and |v'ce presidentij Irs. Raymond F. Elmy of 77 'and general
as the result of an automobileipeer: ‘w® sisters, including Mrs. be made to the American I ------------------
accident. He was an employe^®r.a Sharp °.f. Im,ay	"■^ ^ *fy*ond
of Pontiac Motor Dim J ,!kI	grMch.l-]ville, Ky. «; Ih, Michigan C.n-1 S. P««ock.
a nMniier ol Emamid BapUA **°	_________________ kef Foundation.	,	.	*	-	-	]
‘	Pfc. Ebny went to Vietnam in.
Church of Tontiac.
Surviving are his wife, Pam-
and a great-grandfather, Elmer ela S; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Davis of PonUac.	c- A- Sprouse of Pontiac; a sis-
ter, Mrs. K. E. Abbott of Pon-Daniel Weir tiac; a brother, Gary at home;
.	- ~	^	. .. . and his grandmother, Mrs.1
Service for Darnel Weir, 16, of Qladya Bird ^ Pontiac
he Caa44 T i«tra WafApCnm Tnwn.1
State Audit Report
County Bookkeeping in Order
805 Scott Lake, Waterford Town-j
Oakland County’s bookkeeping
^ ^ P m- tomo^™w at; Mrs. George Schlesser procedures are in proper order, the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home,	*	accOrdine to a renort of the
with burial in faterford Center! HOLLY - Service for Mrs. acc0 -ng t0 a "P0" 01 “e Cemetery.	‘ George (Laura) Schlesser, 75,:
Daniel died early yesterday of 201 College will be 2 p.m. morning after being struck byjFriday at Fenton Baptistj an auto.
Mrs. Basil Brown
HOLLY - Service for Mrs. Basil (Leona), Brown, 43, of M3 Seminole will be 10:30
’fice
county books and calendar year
Church. Burial will be in Lake-1 side Cemetery by Dryer Fu- ,	„ .
neral Home	(Audits by the state office are
Mrs. Schlesser died today. 1 ™de “"ft \ead} cfounty _	. ,	... . • u .	. and sent to the board of au-
Surv.vmg besides her husband ^ and ^ of supervisors. are two daughters, Mrs. Nor-|	v ,
Thursday at Dryer Funeral man Inman and Mrs. William As of Dec. 31, 1965, Oak-Home. Burial will be in Lake-|Buell, both of Roily; her mother,! land County had available side Cemetery.	|Mrs. Harriett Peek of Holly; cash of $11458,454 and invest-
Mrg;> Brown died Sunday. . five grandchildren; and two1 meats of $5,771,373, according Surviving beside her husband brothers,	to the audit report This
are four sons, Basil and Alfred, both of Holly, Everett and Robert, both of Davisburg; a daugb-ter, Beulah of Davisburg; her father, Glen Cross of Holly; her mother, Mrs. Gladys Remington' of Flint; four sisters, including Mrs. Laura Shearer of Pontiac; three brothers, including Charles Parks of Milford and Harold Cross of Pontiac.
Parley Carr
TROY — Service for former resident Perley Carr, 73, of Hazel Park will be 19;30 a.m.
Thursday at Price Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery.
Mr! Carr, a retired employe of National Mqphine Products Co., Utica, died yesterday.
Surviving are his wife, Emma ifl a daughter, Mrs. Russell Davis of Royal Oak; a son, William F. of Lansing; and three grandchildren.
Norwood Caswell ,
HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP Service for Norwood Caswell,
.19, yof 2224 Davista will be 1; p.m. Thursday at me Rich-ardson-Bird Funeral Home, Mil-1 ford.
Mr. Caswell, a machinist, died ! early today as the result of I an auto accident in the township.
Surviving are his wife, Diana; his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles N. Caswell of Highland; four sisters, Mrs. Ronald Wim-brow of Fowlerville; Mrs. Edison Redman of Highland, Mrs.!
Frank Currie of Milford and Betty Jo of Highland; two broth--• ers. Jan B. and Jack R., both! of Highland.	^
' Michael W. Fernsemer
ORION TOWNSHIP - Service;! for Michael W. Fernseiher, 16, j son of Mr. and Mfs. Oscar F.
Fernsemer of 915 Hemingway,! will be 2 p.m., tomorrow at Flumme^elt Funeral Home, Ox-1 Oxford, with burial in Eastlawn 1 Cemetery, Lake Orion.
He. died Monday.
Surviving are his p a r e n t s,
’ nonce os public saue"”
T**‘“*^ *i turoby olven by tr ^ on Tnuridtyr May
Transport Co.
„ S If Other newlyl late February, He was stationed | elected officeiT8"
in Da Nang. He entered the include Gene army in September 1966. I jonas of 6260 CANTO
*	*	*	' (Grace K, Waterford Township,
| Elmy, 20, belonged to the Cen-:Vice president; Gus J. Couretas tral Methodist Church. He 0f 606 Third, secretary; and worked at GMC Truck and Philip Blaylock of 59 Tregent, Coach Division prior to joiningi treasurer, the Army. He attended Pontiac;	★	* w
amounted to a total fund equity of $16,929,827.
The investments included $608,000 in U. S. government bonds,' $81,200 in federal securi-debentures, $642,877 in federal securities — FHA' mortgages, $2,053,000 in industrial se-| _________ ____________
curities, $495,296 in municipal jloN^£,(t,i*t	M.y,h1«unm7' handles transportation arrange-
sequrities and $1,891,000 in nub-	J !X“rvcS!,n^ mentS f°r industries in Pontiac- i
lie Utilities securities.	| Michigan!' public sale of the following /o “	—-------—**
Other information in the re-at auction: The undarsigned reserves the The name O’Brien is derived; P°rt included a 1964 tax lovy !i!S^.%erSi *£* ^jM$wif*?nspec- from Brian, the Christian name
Central High School.
WWW
His body is being shipped, to Pontiac and will be taken to the Melyin Schutt Funeral Home.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Elected to.the executive board; are Dean Duffey of 918 Atlantic, I Milford; Merlyn Matthews of, 151 Clive; and Gene Stanley of; 3272 Erie, Orchard Lake. I The Pontiac Traffic Club
THE’CALMNESS OF OUR SURROUNDINGS SPELLS UNDERSTANDING
|§
Sparics-
a per capita cost of $36.26 for g* county government based on the 1960 census figure of 690,583
• “UonTbanhot ostroit ®f Independent Ireland. Usually sw M«m street known as Brian Boru, he was
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*1, iw killed in a battle in 1014.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1967
B-*
Geneva Tariff Talks End With Opt
By CARL HARTMAN AP News Analysis
GENEVA (AP) - The successful conclusion Monday night of the long Geneva tariff talks has filled in some of the details of President Kennedy’s grand design for a partnership between America and Europe.
Walter Hallstein, Chief executive of the European Common Market, had predicted : “Only when it is united will Europe be strong enough to assume the rights and obligations of a full end equal partner and «o deter-- mine its own destiny. The Kennedy Round is the first example of. this policy in practice. With these negotiations the wnnorpic dialogue of the continents has been opened.” /
The picture will not emerge exactly as President Kennedy Baw it. But after five years of negotiations the Kennedy Round has done a great deal of what It set out to do.
The United States and the ConSmon Market have emerged as the world’s two great trading units. What they decide determines the commercial policy of ^he non-Communist world. REPRESENTATIVE
The Common Market has spo; ken successfully for all six member countries: President Charles de Gaulle’s France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, the ^Netherlands and Luxembourg.
While the agreed tariff cuts’ will average 33 to 35 per cent in some 80 nations, many tariffs will be cut 50 per cent over.a period of five years.
A $5,000 Italian sports car now pays $325 duty in the United States. Beginning the-first of next year, $32.50 will be knocked off.
A $2,500 American car which now pays a tariff of $550 in Western Europe will only have to pay $440 beginning July 1, 1968.
SAVINGS
Whether the savings, will be passed on to the purchaser is another question.
Few of the 6,300 items in the U.S. tariff book are sold directly to consumers. All pass through the bands of dealers, wholesale and retail
If past experience is any guide, these businessmen will hang on to most of the savings.
Experience may not be the perfect guide. The tariff cuts are expected to average 33 fo 35 per dent, which is five or six times more than the last tariff-1 cutting exercise, the Dillon Round of 1960. This time the savings may be more perceptible,
BUSINESS STIMULATION
Economists say tariff cuts stimulate business, in facilitating a free flow of trade..
Between 1948 and 1966 world trade increased from $53.3 billion to $180 billion. Five tariff cuts in that period may have had something to- do with the
Foreign exporters will certainly see new opportunities to self their - goods in America, goods that would not have been' able to compete before the tariff cuts. Likewise American producers should find new opportunities in foreign markets, for tariff cutting is a two-way street.
Businessmen ail over the world ought to be stimulated to improve then* products and bring down prices to meet the new competition, but prices are rising so fast that the process may only slow down the natural increase.
For the first time, farm products have been included in a major tariff-cutting exercise. Though the results are more modest than expected, one new thing has been accomplished.
An iUternitional food aid program has been set up under which the world’s richer nations acknowledge a joint responsibility for feeding the poor nations.
* ★ ★.
The program is less than half the size of the one the United States has been operating on its own in recent years — the giving of 10 to 13 million tons of grain annually to India, Pakistan, Brazil, Egypt and other countries whose population increasing faster than their ability to feed it:
,. Now a dozen governments will be in on the giving.
Those which do not have grain surpluses will have to buy on the open market to make their contributions. They wifi be paying hard cash, to the delight of expqrters: the United States, Canada, Australia and Argenti-
The exporters will also rejoice in ah increase Of the minimum world wheat price- This more money in the pockets of their formers.
. Though the poorer countries will benefit from the give-away, they still feel they are not getting the break they were promised. Many economists see this as the world’s, next unsolved problem.
Not only are the populations of the poorer countries exploding, but tiie things they want to buy abroad cost more and more and the things they have to sell bring less and less.
Moreover, the richer countries keep thinking up ways to prevent the poorer ones from selling their competitive goods — like the “voluntary" agreement that limits trade in cotton textiles.
*	★ ir'"
Spokesmen for the Asians, Africans and Latin Americans say they want trade, not aid. If they can only sell what they make, they can raise the tiny incomes, :of their people and make them less receptive .to what they hear from the Communists about how‘their countries ought to. be run and who they ought to cooperate with in world affairs. «-»•
To do this, they want the benefit of deeper tariff‘cuts than other countries get. - Strictly speaking this may not be fair, but the richejr countries may find it to their own interest
The trouble is that the present system of, commercial negotiations, the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade — GATT operates on the principle of toe “most favored nation.” means if any nation gets the benefit of a tariff cut, so must all the others that belong to the club.
This arraignment may now be| inadequate.
Eric Wyndham-White, the GATT secretary general who was the major referee in the Kennedy Round, said: “Even the greater economic powers can no longer pursue their destinies in disregard of others. Still less can they seek solutions to their economic problems by narrow Rationalistic policies. Nor can one escape the impact of the econqmic difficulties of the others. When the bell tolls for one, it tolls for all."
BOMB FOUND IN HOTEL - Clark County Sheriff Ralph Lamb examines a homemade bomb which was found in a closet in a room at the Sahara Hotel on the Las Vegas strip early yesterday. With the bomb was a note demanding $75,000 for details concerning tiie location of two other bombs said to be planted in other hotels owned by the Del A. Webb Oorp. No other bombs were found, however. Demolition experts said the bomb, made with black powder, would have heavily damaged the one room, but would-not have harmed the rest of the hotel.
U. S. la Oust Cuban Exile as Expo Threat
MIAMI, Fla, (AP) - The leader of. a Cuban-exile anti-Castro group that authorities fear might try to blow up the Cuban Pavilion at Canada’s Expo 87, now faces deportation. But to what country?
Felipe Rivero, head of the Miami-based Cuban Nationalist Association, was a Cuban refugee until U.S. immigration authorities arrested him Friday night. ^
• ’ ★ *
Now he is a Cuban without a country. His parole as a refugee has been revoked.
Immigration officer * James
27 Teachers in OU Project
Twenty -seven elementary school teachers are enrolled in! an Intensive institute at Oakland University this sumnier! and fall to improve their skills in how to teach youngsters to read.
The three-week summer pro-, gram will run from Aug. 14 to Sept. l%Thie fall session will! consist of Saturday meetings through Dec. 16.
Heading the institute staff will be Harry T. Hahn,\ professor, of education at Oakland: The institute is funded by the U<S. Office of Equation under the Na-| tional Defense Educatipn Act\ I
Tillman ruled after a J________
Monday that the 43-year-old Bay of Pigs invasion veteran be excluded from U.S., territory, at least temporarily.
U.S. officials admit they don't know where to send Rivero, who is in the Dade County jail.
hearing Ottawa that the Cuban Nationalist Association was responsible for a minor bombing outside the Cuban Embassy last fall and the firing of a package bombing device at a Montreal auction last March.
His attorney, Gina Negretti, said he would appeal the case on the premise, among others, that this “would set a precedent in controlling political activities and the thoughts of foreigners in this country."
Two months ago, Canadian Foreign Secretary Paul Martin told the House of Commons in
Martin fold ' Commons that Rivero had said something about visitors at the’ Expo 67 Cuban Pavilion being in danger, Rivero told a recent news conference that, his men did the bombing at Montreal because the auction house was “selling objects confiscated by Fidel Castro from refugees leaving Cuba.”
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY lft, 1967
Jacoby on Bridge |
ROBIN MALONE
By Bob Lubbers
north
♦	*7
tJ74» /
♦	882
♦	Q9 74 KAST
♦	AS	♦ Q5
\VAXQ1	V 10985
♦	K Q 10 3	♦ A4 /
♦*JI	♦ A 6 5 3 2
\ SOUTH (D)
'^KJ108 8 4 2
Us. 7 5
♦	10\
East-West vulnerable South West North East 3 ♦ Dble Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead—U K
By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY
ties for first In each of those three categories with a few other women and some men.
Jules Farell, her husband,/ is i» mighty good player also apd he and Mary Jane have won many titles together.
Mary Jane has taken dn' the tough job of discussing preemptive bids. We aren’t going to get into the ment or lack of merit of East’s pass of the three spade double or of.South’s non-vulnerable three spade opening.
Suffice to say, that the game was match point duplicate and South was playing three spades doubled. Be didn’t like his prospects. It looked as if the best he could do would be to collect five spade, tricks and lose 700 poihta which would be a very bad sbm-e because 311 East and
Hie introduction to Mary Jane ^est cbqld make would be _ Farell’s chapter on “Bridge for (vulnerable game in either hearts Women’’ mentions that long be- or no-trump, fore she took ver.as the
spectable 500 by 'Using the diamond suit as a threat. He ruffed the second heartjend led a diamond. East won with the ace and led a third heart. South ruffed that also and s played a second diamond. West " and nicest op- was in with the ten and cashed ponent ’onehis queen to see if everyone could meet. would.foliow. When East We aren’t going to go quite showed out, West decided that far. We will say that she I lead ace and another spade
JACOBY
*	<9.i*AV» *	^
■V SYDNEY OMARR For Wednesday l min control* his destiny ... Astrology points M My."
ARIES (Mir. 21 - Apr. If): Stress practical affairs. Taka Initiative where security is concerned. Ignore those who •>ik of pie-ln-sky schemes. Realize Solid ■MMAhme, family affairs require di-
consequences of
GEMINI (May ability today to unvdil- constructive views. Do sol Undue hesitation could lead to loss. Know this and sat forth toward goal. Your speed may be I United s— but progress is shown.
CANCER (June 21 - July 22): Don't be tempted into foolish action or lourney. Know that flurry and flash will not replace real accomplishment. Relatives, others may be sincere — but perhaps they lack, facts.
LEO (July 21 • Aug. 22): Your fl-
------1 status subject to change — for
Midf----------it today on transaction
_.., _. Newmarch, Waterford and Brenda J. Ouellette, 4531 Parnell Joel N. Goldberg, 107? Jams- H Sandra S. Mills, 500 Scott Lake Jack F. Larkin Jr., Keego Harbor i - Arlene J. Moran, 2271 Marston James A. Wright) 102 Emerson i I
Christine Lee, Keego Herb.
Gerald W. Bowling, Ypsllantl a ala S. Tull, Birmingham James S. Straub. 7M Palmer ma C. Powell. 294 West Huron Leslie E. Waggert, 3"' ""
Carl F. Edwards, Orel
Sandra S. Bagbey, Union I___
Joseph J, / Brancik, War re A. Hinson, Milford Jack Wilson, Farmington ai t» Farmington O. Curry, Davisburg at __________Birmingham
' Robert L. Gllloe, ill East and PatrleS A. Pye, 42if Lanette Larry jTwagnar, 3143 York and Donn J. Young, Troy
Paul W. Monk, 1539 Parkway and Pamela J. Hanson, 1S4* Parkway —
Daisy C. Roes, __________
■	“	* dar, Birmingham i
____„.j, Birmingham
^	Rutzen, Milford and Carol)
S. Reed, Clarkston
Walter R, Toll, Troy and Charlene E Blondal, Royal Oak	. . W
Sammuel Llttlelohn, 404 South Saginaw
Thoma*nB'. *Frlel!n?,*1364 2 A Karotyn K. Kinsley, OrchardiLaks
wWaili L. Miller, Union L4________ _______
Petrtda A. Foster, Union Lata.
James L. Sullivan, Royal Oak and Bev-|
role of a father to those children. And if. he has young children of his own (and if their mother hasn’t already replaced him with another "father") he should see them. occasionally, too.	✓
But a man who is seriously trying to make a second marriage work should concehtrate on being a father 4o the children of, his present wife. Bunoing back and forth (usually out of a sense of guilt) confuses the kid-, dies and enbitters the wife.
DEAR ABBY: I feel that a 17-year-old girl shotild be allowed to shut her bedroom door if she chooses.	*
My mother and 1 live alone in a four-room house and I am not allowed to shut my bedroom door unless I am studying. My mother claims that I am "shutting her out.”
Abby, I love my mother very much, and I am not “shutting her out." I just want a little privacy.
My mother is very fair about almost everything except this. Please print your answer. If you
say I’m wrong, I’ll promise to do as you say with no more arguments. When I try to discuss, it with my mother we both end up stretching our vocal cords. Thank you.
SEVENTEEN
DEAR SEVENTEEN: I think you should be allowed to shut your bedroom door , whenever you wish.
DEAR ABBY: Do you think a girl is ever justified in proposing marriage during Leap year?
1 - E. L: D.
DEAR E. L. D.: Positively! During Leap year, and during any other year. However, in all fairness to the girls who do the asking, I should add, no man ever marries a girl because she asks him. He just marries her sooner.
★ ★
CONFIDENTIAL to La Verne> and Luigi on North Saltair: You two could give, the world a lesson on how to succeed in marriage without even trying. Yours is a .beautiful example of total commitment through unselfish love.
Pausing to admire table decorations at Monday’s luncheon are two committee, chairmen of the Pontiac Woman’s Club. From the left are Mrs. William, Bedard, Crescent Lake Road, and. Mrs. Hazel Anderson, Rosshire Court. The luncheon was held tit the Waldron Hotel.
Scholarship Committee Presents $10,000 to OU
The afinual meeting of the Oakland University Scholarship Committee, Inc., was held Monday in the Gold Room of the Oakland Center. About 125 committed members attended the luncheon meeting.
Chancellor D. B. Varner was the main speaker. He an-■ nounced that more than $82,000 was raised last year by the com-
Programming Workshop Has Places Qpdn
Reservations are still being accepted for the Program Plan-ning Workshop on Saturday.
Sponsored by the Pontiac* Area Federation of Women’s ■Clubs, the day-long session at Central Methodist Church is open to any woman in the area.
Constructive helps in planning programs, as well as lists of source materials, speakers,
■ booklets and films will.be offered.
★ ★ ★
Discussion groups will be conducted by Mesdames Hans Schjolin, David Saks, Raymond Rapaport, C. L. Coppersmith, B. B. Roush, James Campoli' and Sol Newhouse.
Others on the program include Mesdanies Lee Hill, Richard Veazeytf S. V. Sekles, Fred Goines and Miss Lillian Davidson.
Members of the Parliamentary Study Club will be available to answer questions on parliamentary procedure.
★ ★ ★'
Although the event is scheduled for all day, individuals may attend just the morning or afternoon sessions.
For’those planning to stay a|l day, luncheon reservations must be made in advance with Mrs. Saks, Mrs. Sekles or Mrs. Wil-, liam Furlong, Silverside Drive.
Further information may be obtained from any of the above women.
Mrs. Lloyd Peltier of Orchard Lake was crowded the “Mother of the Year” Saturday during the seventh annual dinner for the Twins Mothers’ Club of Oakland County. The Waldron Hotel aids the setting for the festivity. ,Mrs. Peltier has 12 children and two sets of b twins. One set of twins is 18 years old and the ■* other is two and a half.
mittee for OU scholarships.
Mrs. Cyril S. Perlman, outgoing <chairman of the Scholar Shop, presented Chancellor VarneF with a letter Ifnnouncing the transfer of $10;000 from the Scholar Shop to the scholarship fund.
V ★ w
< Mrs. Noel Buckner, Orcbora Lake, chairman of th^stmoter-ship committee, Murbunced the election of neyKofficers of the Oakland Cotimy committee.
They^are Mrs. Clement Jen-Birmingham, chairman;
'Mrs. Norman Cheat, Bloomfield Hills, vice chairman; Mrs. Jack R. Moeller, Rochester, secretary, and Mrs. Robert Cosner, Birmingham, treasurer.
★	, ★y	★
Mrs. Cosner also was named chairman of the Scholar Shop.
'The gift shop, staffed completely by volunteers from the Scholarship Committee, is open in the Oakland Center during the winter season and at Trumbull Terrace* on the Meadow Brook Festival grounds during the summer months.
* Mrs, Perlman announced that the Trumbull Terrace shop wilL be opened on,June 14.
The Macomb County scholarship chairman, Mrs. John Me-Ginty, Mount Clemens, announced that her committee has turned over a check for $10,000 to the scholarship fund.
•' This money was realized from . the profits of the - committee’s fund-raising project, die Macomb Town Hall lecture series held in Mount Clemens and Warren. .	.
Sororities Plan Fair
. Members of 'four sororities will join in presenting a fair Thursday from 7:30 to. 11 p.m. in First Federal Savings of Oakland? •
Boutique items and * baked .goods are among items to be sold to benefit philanthropic projects. Coffee and foreign pastries will be served during the evening.
Participating groups are Beta Sigma Phi, Sigma Beta, Epsilon Sigma Alpha and pj, Omi-cron National Sorority.
'Beverly Fox and Mrs. Wallace Williams are cochairmen.
Dinner-Dance Marks Reunion
Edgewood Country Chib in Union Lake has been chosen for the ten year dinner-dance reunion, June 17, qf the 1957 ■ graduates of Waterford Township High School. >
• * * >
Dancing, door prizes and a hot and cold buffet figure in ' the plans along withl a souvenir booklet of all new and up to date names and addresses of classmates.
Ted CollOm and Mrs. William DeRousse (nee Barbara Martin) are general co-chairmen.	i
Working with them on various committees are: Harvey Gammage, Tom Birkk, Roger .Reynolds; Mrs. Richard De-Shetler, Mrs. Robert Foes, Mrs. Larry McNeil and Mrs. James Knapp. .
They’ve reached the top—of the	>*«n»c rt«» Ph«t«.
stairs and of club positions. Mrs. Ernest Woman’s Club. Mrs. Jay Stephens, Ros-Huthwaite, West Iroquois Road (left) is shire Court, is ireasiiref and Mrs: Lee incoming president^of the Pontidc Hill, StoweltStreet, the retiring president.
W^WrsICTIONi
Husband Should Assume Role
of Father to Wife's Children
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My husband spends every holiday — Easter, Thanksgiving, Christmas, etc. with his exrwife and their three | children. When |
I grumble be-| cause I and my I two children by l a former mar-1 riage are left! alone, he says, P,
“Why don’t, you iKfe get YOUR chil- - ABBy dren’s father to come and spend the holidays with you and HIS children the way I do?"
I want to be fair, Abby, but I also want to be treated fairly. Where do you think my hus-, band’s loyalties should lie?
ACHING HEART DEAR ACHING: How old, are his children? And how old" are yours? A man who marries a woman with young children (under 10) should assume the
MARJORIE GIBBS
Consumer Agent Receives Award in Washington
Marjorie Gibbs, Detroit con-
*	Sumer marketing information agent for the Cooperative Extension Service, received one of six awards to Extension workers in Washington today.
. ★ ■ ★ ★
Mrs. Gibbs earned her supe-. rior service award for “responsive leadership in bringing autonomous interests of the food industry together, providing new- * resources for consumer education in the Detroit Metropolitan Area and professional leadership in her specialized task.”
*	* t
Since 1980, she has worked
*	with inner city families. She has enlisted and trained volunteer hqme economists to help mothers in food buying and meal planning.
A graduate of Wayne State University, Marjorie Gibbs was home service department director for Pontiac Consumers Power Company before she assumed her present position ip 1954.
new omcers were elected Mondav'by the Pontiac Woman’s Club during the annual luncheon meeting in the Waldron Hotel.
* • * !h r v
Those elected are Mesdames:
W. E. C. Huthwaite, president;
C. M. Pelican, first vicepresi-" ; ‘ \ . / .
Founders Day
Is 63rd Year
for C ran brook
Sunday is Founders DajMft Cranbrook and will mark the ^rd anniversary of the establishment of the complex by. Mr. and Mrs. George G. Booth.
Events will begin with a Service of Rjededication at 10:$5,a.m. in Christ Church Cranbrook.
* *• ,
Heads, board members a n d officers of the six Cranbrook institutions will march behind the institutional flags.
John p. Denio, Headmaster of Brooksjde School, will deliver 'the address.
Will host ,
Following the annual lunch; eop, Mr. aiid Mrs. H^nry S. Booth (he is the youngest son of the founders and chairman of the board aof trustees , of the Cranbrook Foundation) will host -the Founders Day tea from 4 to 6 p.m. in Cranbrook House.
At 4 p.m., Frederick Marriott, organist-director of Central Methodist Church, Detroit, will present a carillon concert fFom the church.
Tea table hostesses will be:. •Mesdames Don E. Ahrens, Samuel E. MacArthur, William H. Baldwin, Richard C. Van Dusen,' W. Edwin Mosher Jr., Gerald B. O’Grady Jr., Stephen F. Booth and Charles H. MacMa-hon Jr.	*:
I Calendar I
I WEDNESDAY I Menscola Guild of j I Lourdes, Lourdes Nursing I I Hopie, Watkins 'Lake I I'Road; Luncheon and card i 1 party, 12:30 p.m.
Woman’# World Series, j I Pontiac Mall, 9:30 a.m.; \ 1 Mrs. June fears, Wayne j I County Home Economist, ’ I will speak on “Food Spoil- :
dent; A: D. Stimer, second president; Hayden Henley, recording secretary; Charles Allen corresponding secretary; E. M. Row, financial secretary and ■ Joy Stephens, treasurer .
.; Others named were Mrs, Clarence Myers, Mrs. William H. Bedard, Mrs. Fred' Gotts-chalk and Mrs. Lee Hill.
Mrs. Huthwaite was named delegate to the state convention. She will also represent t h e group at the Southeastern District meeting.
Mrs. H, N. Watson was the installing officer.
* *
Committees were: Mrs. F. A. Parks, Mrs. S. M. Pierson, Mrs.
L. C. Cambrey, Mrs. H. A. Luther and Mrs. John Lyons and Mrs. John Radenbaugh.
Mrs. Lyons was , presented with an honorary membership.
Guest for the day was Mrs. George Gray.
Chairman of. the/ event Iwas Mrs. H. M. Anderson. **
License Cost Will Go Up, Rules io Stay
LANSING W r- If you plan • to get married irf Michigan, do it now. You can save $2.
“But ‘if you’d like to marry your mother-in-law, do , it in some other state.
Sent to the governor-for his signature Monday was a bill to raise the marriage licenw fee for Michigan residents from' $3 to $5 and impose a special $10 charge if both applicants are nonresidents.
*	★	★
Rep. Raymond Kehres, D-Monroe, sponsored the measure. *	*	*
It is designed to help pay for accommodating out - of - staters who flock to southern Michigan counties to tie the knot. IMMEDIATE EFFECT
The	House	joined	the	Senate	in	giving	the	bill immedi-
ate effect. That means it becomes law as soon as Gov. George Romney signs it.
The House also agreed with Senate action in deleting material it had written' into the bill to permit persons to marry cer-. tain relatives — including Inlaws and, with probate court approval, first cousins.
Singing Group to Celebrate Birthday July Vows Set
“Sweet Adeline” will celebrate her 20th birthddy on Thursday.
On.that date, 17,000 women (members of the organization known professionally as “Sweet Adelines, Inc.”) will raise their voices in chorus and quartets for audiences in hospitals, homes for the aged, civic assemblies and chacjty benefits. -
The Inter-Lakes Chapter will celebrate “Share a Song Day” by providing an evening’s entertainment for the patients at the Oakland County Stuiatorium.
* ' ★ *
They plan a program of songs by their 25-voice chorus and some good ol’ barbershop harmony by the Four-Tune Cookies Quartet. The concert will’begin at 7:30 p.m.
PROMOTE HARMONY
During the day, some 450 choruses and more than 700 quartets in the United States (including Hawaii and Alaska), the Canal Zone and Canada will participate in a coast-to-coast effort to promote harmony, vocal -and spiritual, among women.
★ * ★
Coinciding with the birthday celebration will be Sw'eet Adelines’ salute to Canada in her Centenpial Year.
Chapters from both sides of the border will meet and sing at border cities, in an enthusiastic attempt to achieve “the most harmonious border incident in a hundred years.”
The Inter-Lakes Chapter meets Mondays at 8 p.m. at Four Towns Methodist Church.* ★ * ★ .
This active group of “women who love to sing” was chartered in 1961.
Last Saturday,'’ they were guests of the .Milford Chapter of the Society for the Preservation of Barbershop Quartet sing-
ing in/America, at the''Multi-Lakes Conservation Club.
Next Monday, as part of the celebration of Michigan Week, they are scheduled to sing at the Michigan Precision Moulding Building in Walled Lake.
Installation of officers for the coming season took place'Monday night.
Mrs. Martin Beneteau is presi-
dent; Patricia Forbes, vice-president; Mrs, Norman Thompson, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Irvin Melville, recording secretary; Mrs. John Hoye, treasurer and Mrs. Walter Pohl, publicity chairman.
Local warblers who would like to join the group are invited to contact any of the above women.*
Kathryn Jane Shaw and Mi- . chaei Bradley Gilkey of De-.
iroit are. i planning July 29----
vows. Their parents'^ are* Mr. ■and Mrs, Robert R. Shaw of Farmington and Mr. and Mrs.
W. Bradley Gilkey of St. Louis,
Mo. recently of Pontiac. 9
• The bridegroom-to-be is a junior at University of Detroit.
The “Four-Tune Cookies’’ tujie up Song”,day, Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Left for their appearance with the 25-voice to right, the songsters are Mrs. Norman chorus of Inter-Lakes Chapter of Sweet, Thompson, Mrs. Jack Berglind, Miss Adelines, Inc. at Oakland County Sana- Helen Teeter and Mrs. Patricia Forbes. tofiurr\ on the organization’s “Share A

THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. MAY 16, 1967
'fofe
Invites You and Your Family To Be Wednesday Highters
Enjoy Tender9 Golden, Deep-Fvied
COMPLETE CHICKEN DINNERS $1 20 Children QCC
"| Un JJQ
PONTIAC MALL
Only
CHOICE OF
POTATOES OR VEGETABLE DINNER SALAD OR DESSERT ROLLS AND BUTTER COFFEE, TEA OR MILK
SERVED EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT PONTIAC MALL CAFETERIA ONLY 4:30 to 8 P.M.
MRS. BARRY DONALD. KING
Noon Installation Planned
(Mutn's
The Oakland County Osteopathic Auxiliary will celebrate an installation luncheon in
Chic Summer Dresses..
*16**30
A wide selection of styles for the summer ’ months. Choose from dressy or casual styles.
f ATTENTION ^
1967
High School GRADUATES
MR. MICHAEL’S PONTIAC
BEAUTY COLLEGE
16¥2 E. Huron St.
(upstair*) , ,
FE 4-1854
Devon Gables Wednesday at poon.
Mrs. Otterbein Dressier, past president of the Auxiliary of the American Osteopathic Association, will conduct the installations.
★ * *
New officers are: Mrs. Andrew Berry, president; Mrs. Eugene Sikorski, president elect; Mrs. William Bilyeu, vice president; Mrs. David Kellam, recording secretary and Mrs. Gale Huddle Jr., treasurer. *
1 Shower Shopping For A Bride-To-Be? Check Wiggs Bride's Registry - Avoid Gift Duplication,.
Barry Kings Speak Vows in Almont
The First Baptist Church in Almont was the setting Saturday for a ceremony in which Ruth Ann Wilcox became the bride of Elec. Tech. Seaman’ Barry Donald King.
1	it At :
The bride wore white silk organzk over taffeta with a rounded p e c k 1 i n e, empire waist and: A-line skirt. Her train featured a wide band 0) Chantilly lace on its edge.. „ ★ . ★
Her veil of sil)c illusion was held by a crown of matching Chantilly lace and seed pearls. * *
Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Reid R. Wilcox of Almont and Mr. and Mrs. Donald G. King of Tops-field, Mass.
* ★ ★
Maid of honor was Rochelle McCormick. Bridesmaids were Sylvia King; sister of the bridegroom, and Linda Hobson.
Susan and Mary Ellen Wilcox, sisters of the bride, were flower girls.
★ . ★	★
Stanley King was best man. Brothers of the bride, David J. and Paul M, Wilcox were ushers.
★	*	★
A reception in the Congregational Church Education Building' followed the ceremony.
The couple will reside in Pensacola, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. Nolan Epley Sr. of Sylvan Lake announce the be? trothal bf their grand-defughtet, Linda. Kay Epley, to Randall Freeman Moon\son of the George F. Moons of St. Louis, Mich. The couple are students \at Great Lakes Bible College. They plan tomarrfin the summer of 1SI68. “/
Rhonda Anne Trzos and Jeffrey K. Rogers are planning July vows. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Trzos of Gateway Drive and Mr. and Mrs. Bob F, Rogers aft Milwaukee, Wis. The young couple are students at Oakland Community College and Eastern Michigan University, respectively.
Spring Dream
NEW YORK (UPI) - Easy does it on the spring clean-' ing. Don’t work so hard you miss >out on one of spring’s noblest pleasures: fondly daydreaming about how much housecleaning you’ll do tomorrow.
That’s the advice from “Bab Fest,” produced by Gals Advisory Bureau of Frank Leonard Inc. in New York.
Toothbrush Bodkin ’
Save the handle from the ' next old toothbrush that has a hole in the end. Cut the handle three inches in length and use it "for a bodkin for running cord through freshly washed and ironed curtains.
French Miss\, Misses Mountains
%
EUREKA, Kan. (UPU—Amy 1 burgers here are just lovely.” Brissaud says Kansas is “much Miss Brissaud was one of
**’’ 7h«n C0Tr^T eigbf French students spending the Alps of her native Chamo- .......	„	, ;	...
nix France	' !a month visiting Eureka families
“But I don’t really miss any as Part °f the Experiment in-thing in France,” she said. International Living project.
“The hamburgers and cheese- \ *W is wonderful the way we —L- ---------— ------»----- f\ave been received,” she added.
“It isn’t that way in France.
’ People here are so friendly. The kids Here have much more freedom than in France. „ FASHIONS
“I like the American'clothes. Of course, it is the fashion in
Will Wed Soon
Mr. and Mrs. Richard j. Lange of Grey Road, Pbntiac Township announce the engagement of their daughter, Ruth Ann to Kenneth Dean Blair.
His parents are the James Blairs of Qryden. A wedding on July IS is planned by the couple.
Europe\ noWLfb wear American clothes.'’
| STOP
as You	^
k^SIlOPP
|| in the Relaxing j I Atmosphere of ! the
The heaviest twins ever born .in St. Joseph’s Hospital, Marshfield, Wis., and among the heaviest, ever born in the. U. S. were born to Mr. and Mrs. LaVerne Dupee, of rural Arpin, Wis., Mayj^ 11. The boy (left) weighed 11 pounds and the-girl 10 pounds nine ounces. The Dupees have seven other; children, smallest of which weighed 10 pounds one- ounce at birth.
#' ■ '
Up-lift for the face
that desires to look “Ageless”
Summer Fashion News
Glistening -white patents, elegantly stitched in fine black lines with tiny nail heads. Contemporary shoes to click beautifully with today's fashions. Sizes 5 to 10, AAA to B widths.
Arzberg Elegant WJ&ite China
Beautifully shaped pieces to use with any- table decor — china'that will, endure and be fashion right for years.
J Open-stock Pieces.................. .20% off
Reg. 34.80,16-pc. Starter Set...... ^. .22.93
Reg. 69.60,32-pc. Family Set... ......55-75
Viking Swedish Crystal to go with your Arzberg China. Open stock, stemware pcs., each .... 3.25
HURON at TELIGRAPH
Bloomffeld Hills 4080 Telegraph Rd.,
Pontiac 24 West Huron St.
1 l)ou:ntmtn.Pontiiir. FE 41234 J Daily till Bt30 China. Cryetnl. Clflt and Ethan Asian furniture
The woman who is called “ageless” has all the advantages ; no one can tell how old she ia and no one cares— the “ageless” look is too exciting to evoke petty guessing. And it's not hard to achieve now that we have ft way to semi-permanently smooth “catty” facial lines into insignificance. Greaseless, aqueous 2nd Debut applied nightly does it And as a beanty-honna it rids your akin of all dryness as long as you use it regularly. Moreover, it “lifts” the tone of the entire complexion to give you credit for youthful freshness and vigor you should reflect even when yon don’t Follow up in the morning with a second film of 2nd Debut before make up just to keep the goad work of 2nd Debut going for you all through the day too. We have 2nd Dthat with CEF600 and'with the double potency QEF1200 for the older woman whose skin is somewhat more difficult to smooth than the akin of •the woman of 40. Choose according to your age, $3.00 and J5.00.
i Night and morning applications of 2nd Debut (with CEFSOO) detp, dpep-molsturiza tha akin to help smooth your prematura ago linos. Aa linn first grew mom and mora ahallow, your akin appeals smoother and mom youthful-looking. Dryness goat. 2nd Dabut (with CEF600),4oz.sin is *340. 2nd Debut (with CEF1200) double potsney , lor the face war «-or for the hnpetlert lady not accustomed ta waiting for any* tMng.4K.sim *540.
AntSUa
LIQUID
CLEANSER
Ola quick cleansing wall 2nd Dabut Liquid Cltanser will astound ! you! You will agree you'
akin to really clean.
Ntmrl Its a rkh liquid you spread on J your tics and neck. AUowft to imuaJa their	S
one minute, than-dowss your akk with cool weter. Tha 2nd DebuUJquM dissolm into thewatar and talwuAhRhhhiddsd dirt and mMm.StayaKatti Ha*«ah new cleanliness. The 2 «. battle ii *100.
3 STORES TO SERVE YOU
149 North Saginaw, near Stan • Huron Straat, Comar of Talaftrapli 4195 Dixia Hwy., Drayton Plaint
Tuesday,
Trumpet Trio InvitefJ to Areq
Three teen-age boys from k* group of U trumpeters belong-\ ing to the Youth for Christ organization of Kalamazoo have been invited to perform as a, trumpet trio with the MacDowell Male Chorus in their annual spring concert at Pontiac Northern High School May 28 at 3 p.m.
★ ★ *
The youngsters, Duane Gish, Dean Christopher and Howard SpiUers, will be accompanied by Carol Nydag-ger. -p ★ * ★
The Kalamazoo group has held first place in- Michigan State competitions within tee Youth for Christ organization for two years.
ThUtrT
Spring Specials! BUDGET
PERMANENTS
$*750 AND UP • ir	COMPLETE
SCISSOR HAIRCUTTING OUR SPECIALTY
WUk or Without Appointment
CJffit’S
■ Beauty Shop Riker Bldg., FE 3-7196
AUTEN’S
DONALD C. AUTEN
Coftfit;
omJL duXtbuL
iml
TSiaMit
AVTEN
furniture
6605 Dixie Hwy.
Clarkston
625-2022
Mr. and Mrs. Elias Iliades of South Genesee Avenue were honored at a family dinner Sunday at the Fox and Hounds Inn in celebration of their golden wedding anniversary. The couple Was wed in Greece May 15, 1917. Hosting the dinner were their children, Mr. and Mrs. Michael UwdeSf Mr. and Mrs. Sam Uiades, Mr. and Mrs, william Thomas and Mr. and Mrs. David Goff., all of Pontiac. The couple has 10 grandchildren. Mrs. Iliades will leave Saturday for a visit to her bottle i/i Greece{. the first since arriving in. America 38 years ago.
PTA in Action
Wednesday WATERFORD BURT, 7:30 p.m., Children’s art display and installation of fficers.
Thursday
PONTIAC
BETHUNE, 1:45 p.m., Installation of officers; first graden’ play, “Chicken Licken”; address by principal,
EMERSON, 7:30 p m. Multipurpose room. Installation of officers; 5th and 6th grade choir, refreshments.
FROST, 7:30 p.m., John F. Perdue, director of Community Schools and Human Relations, is guest speaker.
MALKIM, 2:30 p.m., Virginia Fowler will present a program on "Art for Children.” Babysitting service.
WEVER, 7:30 p.m., Installation YSF officers: musical program, first grates children.
WATERFORD
CRARY, 7:80 p.m., Election of officers; gymnastic display; art and home economic program.
FOUR TOWNS, 8 p.m. Installation of officers. School band and orchestra will play.
SCHOOLCRAFT, 7 p.m., school library, installation of officers. School band will perform under George Fetter’s direction. Puppet show for parent-accompanied children simultaneously-in kindergarten.
Lake Orion Is Scene oF Lacey Vows
Jeanette Jane Uzelac and Thomas Edward Lacey were wed Saturday evening in Lake Orion Methodist Church.
- ‘	’ ★	*./ A •
Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Milan Uzelac of Lake Orion and Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Lacey of Royal Oak.
' it :' it it
, For the double ring ceremony tee bride chose a gown of linen, embossed with Venise lace' A court train was attached at the shoulders. A Venise lace crown secured her veil of illusion.
- it it it
She carried white orchids within a frame of daisies.
Carolyn G. Uselac (sister of the bride) was maid of honor. Barbara Rowland, Christina Bear and Ginger Dodge were bridesmaids.
★	- ★ it
Brother of the groom, Richard A. Lacey was best man.
Ushers were Kenneth Lacey, and Stanley Uzelac, brothers of the bridal couple with Charles Bonfield.
★	*' ★
Following a reception in tee Knights of Columbus Hall in Lake Orion, tee couple left for a wedding trip to Montreal wlti Expo ’67.
MRS. THOMAS E. LACEY
Banish Tangles With Spoolboard
To keep up with .spools of thread, the National Cotton Council suggests you make a spoolboard to hang pn tee wall by your sewing machine.
A rectangle of plywood can be the base. Cover the boaird with a colorful cotton fabric, taping the edges in place in back.
For spool holders, use two-inch nails, lightly driving teem in even rows across tee board. Slip spools bf thread over tee nail heads, and you-can find tee color you need at a glance.
Mission Work Group Meets
The Women’s Association of Orchard Lake Presbyterian Church will meet at the church Wednesday at 7:45 p.m. This is the only evening meeting- of the group ^arranged as an' accommodation for those unable to attend during tee day.
Home-sewn articles will be received and dedicated berore being sent to missions at home and overseas. -A mission skit will be presented under tee direction of Mrs. Christian Koch. Reservations map be made through the chufch office.
'Hot' Water for Sanitizing
The hotter the water, the more sanitary tee wash, says tee National Cotton Council
To sanitize cotton laundry loads, the Council recommends tee following combination: tee hottest water, a detergent, and a liquid chlorine bleach.
California News
Mr. and Mrs. Ralfe C. Smith of Marina Del -Rey, Calif, announce the engagement of their daughter, Linda Joyce to AF Capt. Dus-tan T. Smith of Inglewood, Calif. He is tee son of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall E. Smith of Okemah Road.
A July 8 wedding in Hawthorne, Calif. is planned by the couple.
FORMAL WEAR
•	FOR PROMS
•	FOR WEIIINGS
•	FOR PARTIES
Marty Stylet From
THE LEADER In
Formal Wear Rentals
No Compromise WMr Quality! “AFTER SIX” Garments Exclusively!
SAMBOLSN
Hagnionft
Clothiers-Uniforms , "After-SW" Tuxedo Rentals 908 W. Huron at Telegraph Pontiac
FOR A LIMITED TIMEfONLY
GORHAM STZE3ELTjXiSTGr
A STARTER SET FOR JUST THE TWO OF YOU
Receive with our compliments two lovely ^
Gorham sterling candlesticks when you purchase a "Candlelight Dinner-for-Two” consisting of 4 teaspoons, 2 place knives, 2 place forks, 2 individual salad .forks and liable or serving spoon..,
For Quiet Entertaining. *. DINNER FOR FOUR
Purchase two"Candlelight Dinnsr-for-Two"«nd receive with our compliments FOUR Gotham sterling candlesticks for that discriminating decorator's touch to your dining table, mantle or buffet.
For a Complete Service, •. DINNER FOR EIGHT Start with two "Candlelight Dimtars-for-Two'' and your four candlesticks and add a Gorham completer sat for total service of 16 teaspoons^ 8 place knives, 9 place forks, 8 individual salad forks and 8 place or serving spoons all at an additional savings of $28. Completer sets are also available separately.
Choose from 22 World Famouf Gorham Originals "Cpndlelight Dinner-For-Two” prices start at $77.59
Poll/s Pointers
Clean Baby -Shoes
I closed teem with gripper snappers after facing teem with bias tape so the snappers would hold. Three raincoats with three-cornered rain hats cost less than $10-DOROTHY
You will receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite home-! making idea, Polly’s Problem or solution to a problem. Write Polly in care of The Pontiac] Press.
DEAR POLLY -1 would like to suggest that Mrs, B. try using neutral leather cream on her baby’s white shoes. This cream will not cover the scuffs but does -give a nice shine and clean off the dirt and grime.
It will not rub off an anything.
I use it on my colored shoes anti white summer bags. I do hope this helps Mrs. B. and >thers.-ALICE P.
DEAR POLLY - Mr. B. can remove tee scuffed marks on her baby’s white shoes by using the shoe dye that we women use to change the color of ours. Be sure to wash off all tee accumulated white polish before trying this. I have even touched up scuff marks without first using tee conditioner, but it should be used for a really good job.
-ALICE D.
DEAR POllY - My three] J daughters all needed new rain-Jw coats at. one time. After shop- :• ping and comparing prices I de- L* cided to make them myself. For] • one coat I bought flannel-backed * plastic by the yard at the dune' • store and for the other two I • used pretty flannel-backed table • 1 Mt. Clemens St. Cloths.	«••••••••••••••••••<
WE HAVE
| • Colorful Feathers | • Basin for Decorator I W*M»
% • Crafts of AN Sorts
;X Find What Yov Want.
cleo’s wsr
" 366 Oakland Ava.
% FE 8-3361
C. R. HASKILL STUDIO
Has Photographed Qver 2,000 Weddings May We Make Your Pictures?
Price Includes:
e Picture for Press e Just Married Sign • Wedding Guest Book e Miniature Marriage Certificate e Rice to Throw ‘‘Everything but
a WILLING MATE!”
FE 4-0553

1
Ready! Set! Go after the biggest wl Frigidaire values yet. Find the appliance you want, priced low, low, low, for Frigidaire Week only! Hurry in now!
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*10-01, non-retum
Frigidalrs Minl-Freazar Ra-Mgsrator. 4% Freezar •G% Refrigerator. For frV.z,r owntra. 14J2 cu. ft. rringtrator section defrosts . automatically. 9.9-lb.
NOW! FRIGIDAIRE 546-LB.SIZE FREEZER AT A BUDGET PRICE!
Lots of storage room for the money! Five full-width shelves —including three Fast-Freeze. New style door shelves hold more. Frozen juice can holder, built-in door lock. .
It’s the Year af die Happening at Frigidaire! Cume to where the happenings are...
CLAYTON’S
“where quality furniture is priced righf9
2133 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD-Ph* 333-7052
LOR
THE PONTIAC ■PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1887
mm
Reach for the
HOT LINE
to Extra Cash
The telephone in your home is your own personal "hot line" to the money* making possibilities awaiting you when you use a Pontiac Press Want Ad.
Whether it be to sell some item of value which you no longer need, to rent your vacant room, or apartment, or to find an item you need to buy, a friendly, well-trained Pontiac Press Ad-Visor Will answer your call to the Press Want Ad department, end help you word and place your fast-action want ad.
To use your Want Ad "hot line" to extra cash, just pick up your phone and call 332-8181.
Be Sure to Ask for the Thrifty 6-Time Rate!

Dial 33(2-8181
JS.a U
'I
TUB PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1967
G—1
L Raps Indians' Platoon System
Sports Group Makes NABL Bid for Team
Application Decision /May Receive, Okay of League Saturday
By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Pontiac’s representation in minor league sports is expected to! be expanded this weekend with' the approval of a city franchise in the North American Basketball League.
*
It was learned today that the Pontiac sports group which operates the Pontiac Firebirds in the Midwest Football League has made franchise application in the NABL. The league, holds its annual meeting Friday and* Saturday in Columbus, Ohio, will make a decision on it at that time.
Commissioner of the eight-team circuit, Harry Bomers of Muskegon, said several applications have been received and that Pontiac and Fort Wayne, Ind:, are the two cities most likely to be awarded franchises.
The eight teams currently in the league are Columbus, Chicago, Grand Rapids, Lansing, Muskegon, Holland, Battle Creek and Benton Harbor.
MAKE APPLICATION Paul Parks, veteran Pontiac sportsman who is president of the Pontiac Firebirds, and Phil Sauer, downtown businessman who is one of the football company’s stockholders, admitted the company has made application with the hope of'eventually, “giving Pontiac year-round representation in the athletic leagues of the Midwest.
★	*- ★
“With the hope that some day In the near future we may have a sports arena in the city, it is conceivable for Pontiac to have basketball and hockey franchises on a minor league scale for the indoor winter-spring calendar and baseball and football for the summer-fall sports.”
★	*	★
The Firebirds, assuming a new name in the MFL this fall, have been highly successful on the field and at the gate.
“This indicates somewhat that area sports fans are receptive to this kind of athletic competition-and it would certainly help the city’s prestige ~ to have representation in these sports in the Midwest.”
There is no indication who would coach the basketball team should the franchise be awarded. The Pontiac group has looked into the possibility of using Northern’s court for it home schedule.
TODAY'S
Slugger	ColavitoRocks Tribe's Teepee
Torres Favoredl to Regain
NEW YORK (AP) - The first three rounds are expected to tell the story tonight when Nigeria' Dick Tiger defends his light heavyweight title in a return 15-round bout with ex-champion Jose Torres at Madison Square Garden.
“If Torres doesn’t knock him out or soften him up in the first three rounds then I don’t think he’ll win,” Roger Rouse said today.
'You bettef root for me,
gain the 175-pound division crown he lost to the 37-year-oldl Tiger on a unanimous decision! in 15 rounds at the Garden last Dec. 16.
The 31-year-old Puerto Rican, 1 was a 3-1 favorite when he was § soundly whipped, by the older,1! shorter and tighter Tiger. . %
The veteran Nigerian had been, dethroned , as middleweight3 (160 pounds) champion eight months'
| earlier by Emile Griffith. I ’ The first Torres-Tiger fight
NEW YORK m - Rocky Colavito wants to play more so he can earn back the . money the Cleveland Indians cut from his 1967 contract.
“That’s all I( want, a chance to earp back the money they cut me,” the slugging outfielder said Monday in a 1%-page handwritten statement to baseball writer Russell Schneider of the Cleveland plain Dealer. PLATOONED Colavito, 33, who has been
earning a reported $55,000 as against an estimated $67,000 in 1966. „
“Our ball .chib has a much better chance of scoring runs with both Wagner and myself in the line-up at the same time,” said Colavito, who is hitting .297 in 15 games, 10 of'which he started. “They are making sure 1 get no chance to earn back my cut.
“I’ve given this a lot of thought. Ibis situation haB
platooned with Leon Wagner been bugging me for quite _ in left,, field this pcason, is whHe, and it’s time to say
something. I don’t think a player is worth a damn if he's* not willing to fight to play every day. I am and .that’s why I’m doing this."
★ ★ ★
* Colavito. could not be reached here Monday night for further comment. The In-diahs open a two-game series with the New York Yankees tonight.
In his statement, Colavito said:	*
“General Manager Gabe Paul would love to have me say "Trade me,’ but I won’t' say that because that’s not
what I really want, although I think he would like to trade ,md.
“But /till, > feel I’d be better ofyeaving than sitting bn the bench the way I am. I don’t know what’s going to1 happen next, but this i» it. I've said what’s on my mind.’’’'
Manage Joe Adcock said, “I manage this team and when I "think Colavito can help by playing, he’ll play.” •Paul would say oftly: “That’s very’ eloquently written, but beyond that I’ll not comment.”'
Tbrres said to Rouse. “We’ll do drew a crowd of 13,654 and a' more business. I‘m gonna knock I gross gate of $100,488 plus $60,-him out within-10 rounds.” 1000 for television.
Rouse is the No 1 contender SMALLER CR0WD from Anaconda, Mont. He has _.. ...._.	, , .
been promised a( shot at the' T°" “me Garden is look-winner within 90 days.
FAVORED
Torres is a 9-5 favorite to re-
Bruins Add Muscle in Trade
H
By Tha Associated Press American League
Won-Lott Pet. Behind
Now York	12
Cleveland ...... 12
Washington _____ 12
!!tornto .
. 11
.Monday's Results Kansas City 5. California 2 ■ Detroit at Washington, rai , Baltimore at Boston, rain Only games scheduled.
Today's Oamos Detroit (Willson 4-2) at (Pascual 2-1), night Cleveland (McDowell 2-1) a (Peterson 0-2), night Baltimore (Bertalna 0-0 or Bunker 1-2) MUgB (Brandon 04), night
2) at Kansas City
California (!
(Hunter 3-3), nigni Minnesota (Chance 5-1) at ( (Buzhardt 1-1), night
Wednesday's Oamos , California 'at Kansas City, night Minnesota at -Chicago, night . Detroit at Washington, night “-e York, night

it. Louis .......*J5 •
Atlanta :........ 14
San Francisco .. 14 ptlladtfphla .... 13
Only games scheduled.
MH---------------a 1-2), night
Houston (Cuellar 2-2) at (Osteen 44); night Chicago (JenUns 3-2) at San/ Francisco (MartdS 5-3), night New York (leaver 3-1) at Atlanta (Bruce M), night
Wednesday', Oamos ■Ittsburgh at Cincinnati, night •hlladelphia at St. Louts, night
Black Hawks, ! Boston Close 1 6-Player Deal I
ing for a crowd of 10,000 and a gate of between $75,000 and $100,000 plus another $60,000 for national television. New York I will be blacked out of the television. Starting time is 10 p.m.,1 EDT.
Tiger’s record is 56-15-3, including 25 knockouts. Torres’ Bruins, weary of seeing small I record is, 39-2-1, including 27 forwards get banged aroqnd, knockouts. He’s been stopped I boasted added muscle up front' once.	I today with the acquisition'of 1
Tiger will get 40 per cent and Ph^ Esposito, Ken Hodge and Torres 20 per cent of all re-lFre<) Stanfield from the Chicago
BOSTON (AP) - The Boston
ceipts.
Miss Prentice Golf Champion
Par on Final Hole \ Brings 1-Shot Win
Black Hawks.
The Bruins gave up hard-hitting defenseman Gjlles Marotte, center Pit Martin and minor league goalie Jack Norris P obtain the three forwards in the' deal completed shortly before National Hockey League rosters were frozen at midnight in' preparation for the expansion draft.
Clemente's Big Night Spoiled by
By the Associated Press The Pittsburgh Pjrates* were marking time until Roberto Clemente’s next trip to the plate.
But Cincinnati’s Tony Perez got there first, leaving Clemente with a night to remember — and an empty feeling.
Perez’ run-scoring double in the 10th inning gave the National League-leading Reds an 8-7 victory over the Pirates — and nullified the biggest single-game, j spree of Clemente’s career.
ninth-inning, pinch hit. '
“We gained needed strength up front as well as size,” Miltj 'Schmidt said after his~ first DALLAS (AP) — Jo Ann j trade as the Bruins’new gener-Prentice, the tall blonde from al manager.
Pensacola, Fla./won the $1,6,800! “We hated to give up-Marotte,1-
P‘“‘l.CS..Qpen 0011	promising, toutf young de-[ Sla„ “ p|ayed Tan) piayw in Michigan> Hunter Me-
nament Monday.	fenseman, but we had to give up o-shantpr fnntifru rinh hie “	-	--- ’	-
On No. 18, she was 30 feet off	we want- home course ^fjteble'fash-
Schmidt added.	,on yesterday ,in the weekly
Home Course Profitable for Stan Brion in Pro-Am
AP Wiraphoto
EARLY SHOWER — Joe Ann Prentice gets a shower of champagne from an excited fan, Joe Campisi, as she putted out on the 18th hole yesterday in the Dallas Civitgh Open. Miss Prentice shot a closing 75 for a 72-hole score of 281, one stroke ahead of Judy Kimball. Campisi, a friend and Dallas restaurant owner, helped Miss Prentice celebrate the
the green and would have-been out of bounds except for the convenient cold drink stand. She chipped to within1 18 inches of the hole, sank the putt for a par and a .four-over-par 75 and 281 for 72 holes.
It was one stroke less than the pressing Judy Kimball, who had birdied 18 with an 18-inch putt. Miss Kimball wound up with a 73 for —
Tigers Sending Wilson
Jo Ann Prontlca. 32,471 Judy Kimball, II,WO Kathy Whitworth, 31,54 Cafef Mann, 31,240-...
Both Stono, 3975 .....
Mickey Wright, 3975.. Sandra Spuzlch, 3735 ‘.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Bombed and battered, the Detroit Tigers will send big EarP) Wilson against the Washington Senators tonight, in an Vfort to regain respectability.
The Tigers were rained out Monday night and may have needed the rest after seven pitchers were bombed for 24 hits and 16 runs in losing a doubleheader at Boston Sunday.
Wilspn, who has' iron four games and lost two, will start against Camilo Pasqual (2-1).
The Tigers will make up Mon-
Rochester Golfers rSHp Past Central
day night’s postponed contest gs part of' a doubleheader with Washington July 13.
FALL BEHIND The Tigers, 17-9 this season, are a game and a half behind the American League leading Chicago White Sox who won a pair Sunday for 10 straight victories.
Wilson, who won his last pitching start Friday from his former Boston teammates, came back Saturday to drive in the winning run against Boston with a ninth-inning pinch hit.
The Senators, who the Tigers also will face Wednesday night, are in seventh place with a 12-15 record.	jp •	«
In’Wilson, the Tigers haVe one of their wimdngest pitchers. Only Mickey Lolich matches his record of four victories.
THIRD STARTER The Tigers’ third starter, Joe Sparma, has won three. But last year's 20-game winner, Dennis McLain, has lost four
Fred Gladding has led, the bullpen with- strong late-inning Work but the rest the staff hasn’t done much.
Rochester reversed an earlier setback at the hands of Pontiac Central and this time defeated the Chiefs by one stroke in their golf match at Munici-nl course, 197-198.
Bert^Johanaon and Carl-Grif- against his three victories. Is each posted 37’s for Rochester which! is now 114 for the season. 1
PCH with a 9-5 mark had Dave McNelly. with 37. Today,
Central meets Kettering and ,to-0faow Waterford on the links.
Hills Golfers Win
Bloomfield Hills trimmed Britton and Clarkston In a triangular match at Oaklahd Hills yesterday. '
Brighton’s Tim Pearsall and Mike Lueker carded 41s to take individual honors. Htib’f BUI Scott posted a 43,
Betsy Rawls, 3314
Marlene Hagge, 3205 .
58-75—281 71-73—282
. _____70-72-283
. 71-71-73-49-284 . 73-47-49-76—285 . 49-70-72-74—2B5 . 70-49-70-78-287 . 71-70-73-74-288 . 47-73-72-76—288 . 71-73-71-74—2»9
'. ^7^7472^291 . 73-49-75-74—291 . 71-71-74-73-291 . 71-70-7377—291 . 72-70-75-75-292 , 74-72-71-75-292 , 72-75-72-75—294
Esposito, who ( packs 187 pounds on a 6-foot frame, tied for seventh among the NHL’s top scorers the past season. The 25-year-old center scored goals and had 40 assists for 61 points while playing on a line with Bobby Hull and Chico Maki.
Hodge, who will be 23 next month, is a husky 200-pound ored 63 goals in his final year of junior hockey at Catherine’s, Ont. In limited action with Chicago, he had 10 goals and 25 assists last season.
Stanfield, who just turned 23, spent' most of the last two sea-Louis in the Central League, but is considered by Schmidt as the sleeper in the
Skipper Golfers Stay Unbeaten * in League Action
Hot-shooting Waterford ran its jolting record to 94 in Inter-Lakes League -play yesterday and its over-all mark to 20-3 with a quadrangular triumph at Pontiac Country Club. .
Rod Skelton led the Skippers with' a three-over-par 39. The squad totaled 204, followed by Pontiac Northern (214), Walled Lake (215) and Farmington (219).
Russ Herron of Walled Lake also carded a 39 to share medalist honors with Skelton. Bill Carter turned in a 40 for PNH and Carl Hunt fired a 41 for Farmington.
Michigan pro-am event.
Brion pocketed newly $300 by winning the pro-pro division with Tom Deaton with a 68, tying in the low pro division with Mike Souchak with a 71 and finishing runner-up in the pro-am division with a 66.
amateur partner was Richard Barnett.
Taking pro-am honors were Paul Shephard of Meadow-brook and Bob Riccardi. Shephard, who had a 41 on his own ball on the front, picked three birdies on the backside.
"deal. He is a center and left| winger.
FINISH LAST
The Bruins finished last in the 1966-67 season. Chicago won the NHL championship, but was eliminated by Toronto in the Stanley Cup semifinals.
Marotte, 22, turned pro early in the 1965-66 season and was highly regarded by the Bruins. However, the club has an abundance of talented young defensemen.
Brion’s round included five birdies, three bogies and a double bogey, while Souchak, the new Oakland Hills’ pro, had two birdies in his round.	I • i •
Gene Bone, Glen Stuart and UriOn J UR-IOrS Brien Charter all tied at 72 in kl j the low pro division.	NGGu C-OmGSiS
Souchak arid the No. 1 GAM
Martin, a slender center obtained from the Detroit Red Wings midway through the 1965-66 season, had his best season last year, scoring 20 goals. Norris has played in .the Western League the past two years.
Orion Defeated
Gene Harry of Lake Orion and Larry Knchback of Clawson shared medalist honors with 43s, but Clawson won the match
Reverend Is 'Holy Terror
Clarkston Appliance defeated Buckner Finance 6-1 in the Waterford Men’s Softball League
-at-Bald Mountain between thalastnjgit, Buckner’s single run
teams, 225-242.
Lake Orion is 2-5 overall and 2-3 in Oakland A play.
2 Gridders Die
HILLSDALE (IT— A car crashed into a tree in Hillsdale Monday night, kUBng two Hillsdale College football players and injuring two other athletes of the school Killed were Jade Allen Henry, 21, of Flint, a football cad, and RonnMR. Turnqu'est,
26, of New York City, a guard.
Injured were Arvin Gyliard, 21, of New York (Sty, an end, and John Barnes, 19, of Benton Harbor, a forward on the college basketball team.
police said Henry was driving the small compact ear when it went ont of control.
was unearned as Rev. Harold Hughes pitched a two-hitter, striking out 19 Buckner batters.
Big hitters fix- Clarkston were Murray Snow^rith a triple and a single and1 Rev,, Hughes and Chuck Gavette who each had two hits. Clarkston’s record is now 1-3 while Buckner has an 9-3 record.
In tiie other game, Spencer Floor Covering whipped Waterford Merchants 184. Spencer pitcher Jim McClellan gave up three runs in the first inning blit then settled down and allowed only four bits for the entire game.
3? : ..	'■ .	’i,
Donald, tied Brion and Barnett with a pro-am 66.
A field of 68 pros and 119 amateurs, one of the largest, in the weekly event, participated at Tam, which will be the site of the USGA sectional qualifying June 6.
PRO-AM DIVISION
Paul	Shephera-Bob Riccardi ........65
Stan	Brlon-RIchard Barnett ........44
Mika	Souchak-Hunter McDonald .......66
Mika	Fox-Warren McLean ....r......; 68
Gian Stuart-Ray Bleiema  ...... .48
Stan	Brlon-Jarry Rogers .......... 49:
Gian	Stuart-Don Battles ...........491
Gian	Stuart-Dale Beans ............  69
■Mi	Jawor-Dr. R. C. Smith ......... 49
Souchak-Reed Halle ...........69
MR.	Van Loozen-id Lauer ...........69
Dick	Broosk-Sam Greeawalf	......... 69
Brian Charlar-Bruca Gilpin ........ 69
. LOW FRO DIVISION Stan BH.oh, Tam O'Shanter ..
Mika Souchak, Oakland Hills ---------, Bay Point* ......
Brian Charter, Ann Arbor
FRO-PRO DIVISION
____ Srlon-Tom Deaton .......
Mlk# Fox-Stan Jawor .............
Gary Whitnef-Oon Aired ......
The . Pittsburgh superstar dipve in all of his team’s runs with three towering homers and a double, moving into the league lead in both batting and run-production.
BIGGEST DAY “This is the biggest day I ever had — in a game that we lost,”. he sighed. “I’ve never hit three homers in a game before.. I wish we had won it.”
Clemente, whose batting average soared to .390 while his RBI mark jumped to 24, socked a bases-empty homer in the ninth inning that capped the personal ,, binge and gave the Pirates a 7-5 lead.
.★ ★
But Lee May’s two-run homer pulled the Reds even in the bottom of the ninth and Perez’ fourth hit — a booming drive to dead center field off reliever Juan Pizarro in the 10th — knocked fn the winning run, -While Cihcinnati moved three games ahead of the second-place Pirates, the Houston Astros ended a five-game tailspin by edging LoS Angeles 5-3 on Bob Aspromonte’s two-run triple in the 10th inning.
Balking Oriole Epstein Heads for PR Position
BALTIMORE	(AP)—Mike
Epstein, a talented baseball player with an offer to become m a professional wrestler, heads ."JJjhbme today for a public rela-^ !tions jobv
The Baltimore Orioles thought . .
Country Club Eyed as New Campus Site
Lake Orion has a couple of baseball teams that .are looking for opponents.
Both teams are made up of players in the 14, 15, 16 age group. Teams desiring to uie the Orion squads may do so by contacting Jerry Cobb at “
ROYAL OAK (AP)-Red Run Golf Clubj one of Michigan’s known golf courses, today faced tiie possibility it might be condemned end taken over as a fourth campus for Oakland Community College.
Club President Russell E. Knister notified the club’s 550 members Monday that the school had shown interest in acquiring the 128-acre country club site.
It was a complete surprise to me,” said Knister. “They Indicated the college does have the right to condemn property if needed.”
. £; * . *
Oakland Community College already has campuses in Au-burn Heights and Highland Lake and has a third campus under construction In Farmington.
Several sites have been mentioned as possibilities for the new campus, including,^the Detroit Artillery Armory area on Eight Mile Rd.; the former Montgomery Ward Steve in Royal Oak, a warehouse complex on Coolidge Road, Royal Oak, and a residential area near the central business district.
Hie golf club property reportedly is valued at over $2 Knister said the club'will “resist to the utmost any take over the chib.” *
Brothers Hit Jackpot
Brothers Paul and QjrviQe Sewell of Pontiac broke the $240 jackpot Saturday night in the Huron Bowl Moonlight Doubles with 1281 actual ^nd 1407 total pins.
most unlimited potential in baseball.
So did other dubs, who sought to swing a deal with uie Orioles for the youngster who couldn’t break! into the Baltimore Uhe-
up.	i
So did Epstein, who thought he was ready this season for the major leagues and balked at being ordered back to Rochester of the International League on 24-hour recall.
Harry Dalton,' the Orioles’ director of player personnel, said Monday the club expected big things from Epstein in the future and would trade him this, season “only if he could improve our major ieague dub with a player of outstanding caliber,”
Captains Lose, 1-0
L'Anse Slows Kettering 9
L’Anse Creuse delayed Kettering’s bid to clinch the Tri-Coun-r tv League baseball title yester-day by handing the Captains*^ 1-0 setback.
■* .. ★ *
It was a rare shutout for Kettering which has shown power in winning 13 of 16 games thus far this year.
In another league game scheduled for Oxford’s diamond, Romeo, was awarded a 74 forfeit after the inspires ruled the playing conditions were too bad to begin.
Brian Lieckfelt allowed Kettering only two hits in moving
L’Anse to within one game tit the league lead with a 5-2 record.	■ , .
Tiie winners only- had three hits; however, the big run came in the bottom of the final timing, when Tom Beverlin secured mi a single by Dave Farmer.
“ * "	★ ';
Bruce Mihalek took the loss after relieving Jerry Harkey in the fifth inning. n With the forfeit win, Romeo now stands 3-4 in league and 5-5 over-all.
KMMrtnt ..... .......004 088 4-8 !.. 3
L'Anw CrtuM ........ 88*8881—1 8 3
Harkey, MICHALEK (5) Mi Mlealli Lieckfelt and Swoffar, , *
C-*
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1967
ThhluNittoad-tta War a the tmt adrarfoim 1
\ go KING EDWARD
Amtrict't Ltrgtl Suiting Clgir
Clarkston Still in Lead
■	’	{ . .	* ’	. v	& k'1 iff! 4 ■ ■ I ¥| Ml'
Tight Race Continues on W-0 Diamonds
Clarks ton held oh to JKs slight pdge in the Wayne A Oakland League baseball race by nipping ' * i If or d - 3-2 yesterday, but Bloomfield Hills and Northville stayed within \ji {half game with, victories. /
Bloomfield had to go eight nings to edge second division
team; Clarenceville,»8-7, while North ville trimmed cellar dweller Brighton, 8-1.
In a mild upset, Holly romped over West Bloomfield, 13-2.
**Dan Fife struck out 13 batters including a key batter with two out in the final Dining.
John Getsan’s key single drove] Dennis Primeau with a homer led Northville's, 4-hit triumph. Dave Fisher had /a single and double for the losers.
Prep
Front
in a big Clakrston run in the third inningf RUNNER STRANDED In the final inning with two its, Herb Mick singled for Milford. Glenn Cascaden tripled him horned Fife then procceeded to strike but catcher Bob Book.
Bill Skelly who struck out seven got the win.
Holly put six hits together including a three-run homer by Torn Kundinger in the first in-
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life on a university c a m p u s is an unforgettable experience and it's a natural progression for the high school athlete .who is well endowed physically and mentally.
Besides the obvious educational benefits, college offers an atmosphere and independence Jhat both challenge and stimulate those who are young in years and in heart.
The first challenge for those college-bound is deciding where to go. This -can be particularly hard
By JERE CRAIG
ning. He had another double and showed four rbl’s for the game.
Sophomore Hank Norton, starting his first game fer Holly, gave up six hits, struck out eight but walked seven to get ike win.
Clarenceville scored four runs in the 6th inning and forced Bloomfield Hills to rally in the 7th to tie the score at 7-7.
WINNING RUN '
the 8th inning, Jeff Kez-larian singled, Greg Walch sacrificed but was safe on an error.1*.. +v,„ Sgf BIBS Kim Kezlarian sacrifice aid'%*M	school
Tom Kuznfk singled home the athlete, winning run.	1 Dan Fife add Bill Tipton are
*	*	*	, two exceptional examples. Both
BofTTalhoun doubled in two are eager to meet the challenge RBI in the 7th for the Barons of high-level competition in coland Brian Parrott tripled in Cal-jlege sports. In their houn to knot the game into over- though, file universities’ bidding time.	for their services was a strug-
Big hits for Clarenceville were'gle' of major proportions, homers by Mike Jordon and Bob pifo, a three-sport star at D*™30-	/ Clarkston High School, has
chosen the University of Michigan. Tipton, Pontiac Centrals crack hurdler, will attend Eastern Michigan University next fall.
WAYNU-OAKLAND STANDINGS
Clarkston » 1.Milford Bl'mfield Hill* 9 2 Holly Northvilla 9 2 Cloroncovlll# W. Bloomfield f S Brighton
Yesterday's Results ' Holly 13, Wsst Bloomfield 2 Clarkston 3, Milford 2 Bloomfield Hills I. Clarenceville 7 Northvilla 4. Brighton 1
CLARKSTON 3. MILFORD t
ACME QUALITY PAINTS
M. Saginaw, Comar Pika	FE 2-3!
Opun 8 to 5:30 Doily, Fri. *til 9_
FINISHING TOUCH - Rochester speedster Bob Woodruff is well in front as He carries the baton across the finish line as anchor man in his team’s victory in the 880-yard
Pontiac Pries Photo
relay yesterday. Waterford ran second in the event. The winners posted a time of 1:35.6.
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Mikes, Shrine, Brandon Suffer League Losses
while knocking St. Mike to a 5-2 mark.'
The big hit was a grand slam homer by Van Hen in the third inning. Tien also had a double In the 5th and scored twice in the game.
Royal Oak Shrine was also
| Marine City Holy Cross stopped St. Mike’s bid in the Macomb Catholic baseball league race by defeating the Shamrocks, 84 behind the 3-hit I pitching' of John Dietlin yesterday. 7	,
The .vpory gave the Marine!
City team a 5-0 league, record handed league setback which forced a tie with Holy Redeemer fix* the lead.
Shrine managed only two hits but gave up two unearned runs on six errors,in losing 2-0 to Divine Child. 1 '	/
Mike Fisher got both Singles for the losers who now are 6-1 in the league.
’nSST!
DEAD-ALIVE !
Another class C county team, I Orton ville Brandon outhit Har-I land but still lost a 2-0 decision, eoo ooVa > Mike Bray ton/led the winners bofnlBIO j with two of the three hits and i!23l Orchard Lakt Rd., Keogoi | j also scored one run.
1 Brandon is 0-5 in league and
Opm Mon. om! Twee. V KM. to 6 PJA.
2-6 overall,
Tim Megge’s lone single in the first inning was all Orchard Lake St. Mary could muster in losing a 3-0 encounter to SL Gregory.
Jim Carron’s homen with one man on base in the third inning was the winners’ big hit. -OLSM stands 3-5 in ' league play while St. Gregory is 8-1.
Is having money,when you need it.
We’ve been making people secure for over 50 years.
Central Splits Doubleheader
Checked on three hits in dropping the opener, Pontiac Central cracked out 12 hits in the nightcap yesterday to earn a split in a twinbill with Flint Southwestern.
- * * * u
The Flint squad tallied in thi sixth inning of the opener am took the game, 1-0, behind the pitching of left-hander Jerry Kramer who fanned 10.
In the nightcap, Clyde Duncan and Dave Houston cracked out two hits apiece and chased home two runs each to spark an 8-7 Central decision in the second game. PCH scored in every inning but the seventh and put down a last-inning rally by the losers preserve the win. Jeff Hale pjeked up four Hits in the second game, one of them a two-run homer in the seventh.
The split left PCH with a 7-5 mark in Saginaw Valley Conference play and a mark of 9-7 over-all. Flint Southwestern is| 11-3.
.. M2 INX—3 I
NORTHVILLE 4, BRIGHTON 1
HOLLY 13, WEST BLOOMFIELD 3
/esl Bloomfield ......000	020 0— 3	4	4
lolly ............... 711	(21 X—11	IS	•
El wood, FoukM.O) and Bullock; Nor->ti and Waltort.
Bloomfield Hills I, Clarancavlllo 7
larencevllle ........ 000	0*4 00—7	I	4
iloomflold Hlllt ...2M	200 11-4	19	3
MIKE NYE, Gail Armstrong (7) Kerry Riskln; Rogar Horshman, Calhoun (4), John Baulmann (7) and Brian farrott.
Skippers Gain Trophy Share
Waterford clinched at least a share of the inter-school allsports trophy with Kettering yesterday by downing the Captains in tennis, 4-1. ,
The JJkippers lost only one singles match and now stand 8-3 in dual record for the season. Kettering is 4-8.
WATERFORD 4, KETTERING 1 kinglet
Mehlberg (K) det Redds 4-3, 4-4; Arrington (W) dot Schilling, '4-0, 0-0; Haggard (W) dot r*1- • - - -
Benson and Saibarlw) dot Papklns and Morgan, 4-1, 0-1; Dobra and Read (W) det Ralunz ' —..........-
OLSM Defeated
Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows defeated Orchard Lake St. Mary 163-179 in golf yesterday. It was the last dual match for Orchard Lake, which finished the season with a 3-5 record.
Medalists honors went to with a 40.
Pontiac Central .
"lint Southwettori MARTIN a ucComtk ",
Pontiac Central .. .... 1X1 1214-4 12 Flint Southwestern 040 OM 1—7 10 s Richardson, QUINCE (2) and Tramp CARSWELL, Long (4) and McComb.
a 13, Central Methodist
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In both cases, the selections were made after a flood of inquiries (mail, telephone and personal visits) not only from the schools’ athletic officials‘ also their alumni.
At the F*ife residence, the family stopped* counting after reaching 250 pieces of mail. The Tiptons estimated their contacts at 200.
Recruiting two boys with the talents of Dan and Bill is a finely honed practice; not only does a recruiter boost his campus, he works hard to destroy the image built by . those rivals he can determine as offering the chief competition. PSYCHOLOGY
emphasized the psychological methods employed by the representatives who' contacted him.
“Baron” Adolph Rupp, the successful coach at Kentucky, scored a point with Dan when they took him into the locker-room for a picture of the Clarkston basketball whiz in a Wildcat jersey.
An attendant reached casually into a pile of jefseys just “happened” to. pull out the shirt with No. 33 on it. That the superstitious Fife’s favorite number.
When Dan told them it was “my number,” they informed him that no one wore it this season and he was welcomed to it next winter!
But both youngsters had the good fortune to have the help of astute loaches in making their final decisions. Wording within specific guidelines as far as standards to consider, they with the aid of Bud McGrath (Clarkston Cage mentor) and coach)
limited their visits to certain
if the Southfield ace doesn’t sign a large bonus contract.
EXTRA POINTS
Overlooked in last week’s report on the Central Michigan-Michigan State baseball double-header was the fine pitching of ex-Pontiac Northern diamond star Mike Burkiow, who held the Spartans to six-hits in gaining a spliUor CMU, 6-2.
Utica Stevenson will . begin full varsity sports competition in September as a member of h the Eastern Michigan League. ' Coaching the grid tefun will be Jim Thomas, assisted by Ralph LaParl and Bob Hill.
The basketball mentor will be Ed DeBaene. Tom Kroll will have the wrestling team and, LaParl will coach baseball.
★ ★ ★'
Changes in form plus . a couple surprising upsets have promoted changes all down the line in The Press’ Oakland County area top ten high school base-bail ratings. Kettering now has assumed the No. 1 hole prio> to last night.
However, the captains took a 1-0 loss io L’Anse last night.
The rankings lost records.
1.	Kettering (134)
2.	Southfield (10-2)
3.	RO Kimball (8-2)
4.	Clarkston (114)
5.	RO Shrine (6-0)
6.	Rochester (7-1)
7.	Utica (11-3)
8.	Waterford (9-5)
9.	Pontiac N. (7-3)
10.	Pontiac C. (8-5)
and won-
City Keg Pair Shares Purse
Elks' Lodge Doubles 37 Pins Behind
One Pontiac' duo nudged into the top five finishers in :the recently concluded 11th annual Pontiac Elks Lodge No. 810 Mixed Doubles Tournament.
Joyce Pfieffer aid Henry Ei-ter won $100 for their 1300-pin
The visits, plus their evaluations of the coaching staffs, the level of competition, the facilities and the educational ranking finally led to the selections and the end of the daily deluge of propaganda from the recruiters.
’ I ★ ★ ★
Incidentally, indications are Fife and Birmingham Groves’ Mike Rafferty will be joined at the Michigan freshmen’s baseball practice next spring by big-league prospect Ted Simmonsi
behind the winners from Port Huron, Bob and Lillian Hill.
The Hills claimed $150 plus trophies for the victory. Nearly 500 couples competed during the five weekends of action at the local lodge lanes. Nine lodges within ' the state and one in Bowling Green, Ohio, sent entrants to the tournament.
Eiter finished with the high, est actual series and tied for the high” game among the male contestants with 254-643 figures.
Pontiac’s Betzi Waisanen won the trophies for the women’s "high actuals with 232-606.
HUDSON'S
PONTIAC MALL
Is Now Accepting Applications FOR POSITIONS IN:
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y THE PONTIAC PKKSS, TUESDAY. MAY 46. 1967
Major League Boxes
irhW
SAN NRANCIKO
Williams || J J 4 J Mays el Santo 3b .	4 t o 1 Han 3b
f!"S*	* * * < Slab." 1b
Thomas rf 4 112 Brown rf Savage rf 1.0 0 0 Lanier ss Huiway c i 0 Jo Hiatt pH PhHHtn et 3-0 2 0 Fuentes 2b
Culp p
31 00 M
S*S& p “« ® » Sorra'lTph’'
Handley p 0 0 { 0 Sadecki - j ■ Uniy p
Total 39*14 9 Total 30 3 43 ... oot 00 3 3 0 4 — f San Franc!aco 010 0 I I S 1 r—1 LOB-chicago 7, San Francisco 0. 2B-H« »r. _ HR-Brown (2), Thomas (1), Williams (3), Banks (4). sa—Phillips, S~
Culn. Ponnvirh IB___UbfO Cows.
HOUSTON
1, Santo.
LOS AMBLES
CINCINNATI Harpar rf '\
Mazrotkl 2b Clndonon lb
Paglanail c. Vaalap 1 Mlkicblsn p Me Baan p Pizarro p •
toot
4	3 00 note ir J 3 4 7 Parez 3b
5	0 0 0 LMay 1b 4 0 10 Pavlatlch so 1 0 Arrtgo 0
C A 1 A
4 0 0 0
jin
BCt’
Coker ph DOitean p
0 0 0 Cardenas 00-0
----Nottebnrt a O , . ,
lit 0 0 0 000
#757 Total 41013 0 whan winning run scored.
JlWHUOh .... 3 0 0 OtoTtt 0-Clnclanatl . 000 003 lot 1-B-Maieroskl, Paraz. DP-PIttsburgh lob—Pittsburgh 4, Cincinnati 13. Ill Cwmonlit, Pares <2>, Shamtky, Arris HR—Clements T (6), L.Mey (3). SB Wills, Cardanas. SF-Pavletlch.
4 0 3 0 10 0 0
Kansas City 4. »-CamWi~(2j^ Sunday: Roof. HR—Mlncher (4). S-R.CIark.
HOME FIRST - The strain of the race shows on the face of Waterford’s Butch Fenlon who crosses the finish line in 10:12.5 to win the two-mile race yesterday in competition against Rochester and Avondale. Behind Fenlon is Rochester’s Keith Wattles who' placed second.
2 Share Lead in SEMA Play
Southfield and Royal Oak Kimball remained tied fair the lead in the Southeastern Michigan Association baseball race after posting victories yesterday.
Kimball (6-1) turned back Birmingham Seahohn, 5-1, while Tom Burkert fanned eight and allowed three hits in leading!
Southfield past Berkley, 4-1.
-Tom Scott and Kurt Ritter .cracked out two hits apiece to picked up a double and single to lead'the Southfield attack.
In another game, A1 Shepler
banged out a triple, double and ,	_____
single in leading Royal Oak ftf Dondero to a 4-1 nod «ver Mon-

C-r-8
Race Results
Wolverine Entries
. Border Black Bi'bok iww pui	Ragan	Way
Prlmaldo	Topay	Hal
ird—sues; canditlonad Trot, i mho Scotty R	Elbarod
Mighty Monarch Oao U	Colby
• Hustler
Reed Oust Ooney Way War Knot Cabo ' Sth—1900; Conditioned Paco,
Colleonl Lady Ballerina O. Jet-O-Mlna Sinful Sinner Wltconde* Clydeese Tout Suita
Hazel Park Entries
1—12400* Claiming, 4 Furlongs —-	“otfht Nona Wat
VI
larrts,!
d Tad Wright, j
Xt13 Miss Cease US Poacatul Baal xioo Fergle'a Fool ...... 0 Furlongs
113 Lucky JowOI
Highwatar » xio* «
MONDAY'S FIGHTS By Tbo Associated Prate PHILADELPHIA - Gypsy .jO, Philadelphia, outpointed ISO. Detroit, *10.
BOSTON - Marian Conifer,
(tainted- Levan Roundtree, 173, New York,
SAH >KANCl»CO - Jimmy Loiter. I55W, San Francisco, knocked out .Mel' Ferguson, 151, Cos Angeles, J. ,	•- i
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Cole Leads Norfhern glf ^grf to Slim Track Win
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Mel Cole won four events Pontiac Northern edged Far
Michael S. Hedge has been appointed public relations director of the Oakland County |
Sportsmen’s Road Racing Club, jn$°n an Inter-Lakes it was announced by Robert C. | *irac'c jjyfL ®-56 yesterday, Dickinson, club president. Gary; ttri The Road Racing Club, found- f ed by four sportscar enthusiasts I,.	.. _
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________ (A), Philipi (R), :10.1
HD LOW HUROLEi - Keiel (Hi ips (R), Willis (W). Kressbach (W), :
220 - Woodruff (R), Strandell (A), Klnnon (R), Pullins (W), :22.7 MILE RELAY - Waterford (Thomaa, Knight, Galloway, Marcar), Rochester,]
SHOT PUT - Kidwell (W),
), Pizza (W), Green (W*
-ONG JUMP — Keeal
■	|(W), Stafford (W), Horton .......
■	HIGH JUMP - Blskner (W),
I (W), Krauth (R), Stafford (W)
J ROLE VAULT - Biskner (W), Stafford
Martin (W) and
I Cole, who is probably the second best hurdler in the state behind Pohtiac Central’s Bill Tipton, won the high j jump, both hurdles and the long jump.
Northern, with a 3-0 league mark, received surprising per formances from Sandy Seay anc |Pahl Ross. Farmington was ex pected to sweep the 220 but Rosl M0 _ came in first. Ernie Crawford’s swra* < Ill-foot vault was also a big 440 ~ {factor for Northern to pick up1 second place points. **	1
SPLIT FIRSTS Waterford and Rochester took seven firsts but the Skippers had the second and ^hird place advantages. Laurey..Kes-sel and Bob Woodruff' paced Rochester. ^KesseP won three events and fan in the 880 relay.
.	2 MILE — Chuck Ftnlonr'...........
:i(R). Bill Martin IwrT Vallance "•‘13.5 (School Record)
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C—4
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1967
. Pennsylvanians Voting Today
PHILADELPHIA < AP)—Penn-1 question was the first test at the mary was the scrap in Philadel-
sylvania voters were asked polls for Gov. Raymond P. Shaf-again today if they wanted tojer, a Republican, since he was cadi a convention to revise theirjelected last November. Shafer 94-year-old state constitution.) has backed the constitutional Six times in the past they have convention question with a vig-turned down similar proposals.'opus campaign.
The constitutional convention1' Another highlight of the pri-
People in the News
phia for control 61 the Democratic party organisation. '
Previous opponents of constitutional revision claimed that changes would open the door to a state income tiut.
Imain message
Shafer, often flanked by former Govs. George M. Leader, a Democrat, and William W. j Scranton, a Republican, carried one main message to the voters — no income tax in a revised | constitution.
The primary in Philadelphia, the state’s latest city, was enlivened when the Democratic organization decided not to back incumbent Mayor James H. J. Tate. Instead it endorsed Alex* ander Hemphill, who resigned as city controller to run for mayor. Tate decided to run any: way, and vowed if he is nominated, he will take control of jthe Democratic organization and
By The Associated Press
The Book-of-the-Month club has paid 1325,000 for the right to distribute the memoirs of Svetlana Alliluyeva, the daughter , of Joseph Stalin.
y It is reportedly the largest sum ever paid by a book club in such a purchase.
Axel Rosin, the club president, said yesterday in New York the previous high was the 1250,000 it paid for rights to William Manchester’s “Death of a President.’*
Miss Alliluyeva’s memoirs are scheduled to be published joust Francis Smith, city chair-Oct. 16 by Harper & Row.	lm*n-
I Dist. Atty. Arlen Spector, Democrat turned Republican, is unopposed for the GOP nomination for mayor.
A convention would be empowered to revise four articles of the state constitution, dealing with taxation and finance; judiciary; looal government and legislative apportionment.
ALSO ON BALLOT There also will be eigfit other proposals on the ballot, toll amending the present constitution. Shafer has endorsed these
Masons to Hear Talk by Judge
GRAND RAPIDS (AF)N — Judge JSdWard S. Piggins of j Wayne County Circuit Court is guest speaker Thursday at / the annual spring reunion of1 the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite. More than 700 Masons from West Michigan are expected to attend the three day event.
Piggins is commander-in-chief of the Detroit consistory.
The' greatest thunderstorm activity in the world occurs in Java, where such storms happen on an average of 225 days per year. < ¥ flj
—BACKACHE—i Joint Pains
You tong to eete thoto pain*. *van temporarily, until the ceuse la cleered up. For pellietlve, or temporary, pain relief try DeWItt’e Plllt. Famoua for over 60 year* DeWitt’s Pil Is contain an analgetic to reduce 1)010 and a very mild diuretic to help eliminate-
DeWitt’e Plllt often succeed Where other! fall. If pain partiatt always tee your doctor. Insist on
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HURON
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at 7:00 110:40
IN M flint adveritorb.1
maraa?
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■ ASAULDAVID PRODUCTION U\
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thgH
Memop
IfiffigSfiMilBHMffi
Singer Finds 15 Years Makes a Difference Johnnie Ray, the American singer, arrived here in Singapore last night to a quiet welcome.
Ray’s last visit to Singapore, about 15 years ago, is still fondly remembered by many girls who are now motehrs. He was mobbed at the airport and his show at Singapore’s largest stadium was attended by thousands of screaming teen-age girls.
Speaking to airport niewsmen Ray said he felt that his kincl of music is “on the way put. ’
"But I try to please my audiences by keeping my music
fresh—new music for old songs," he said.	if,.
Actor Told to Evict Feathered Roommate
-Movie star Rod Taylor hat been told by his British landlord to get rid of Duck.
Duck Is the name of Taylor’s duck, which lives In with the Australian actor at his rented house in Orvington Square, Chelsea.
Taylor was livid over the landlord’s order when he came home last night after a day spent filming at Elstree Studios.
“I though this country was famous for its love of animals,” he protested.
“Duck It absolutely marvelous and perfectly house trained. I want to stay here with Duck, but if the landlord insists then we’ll both leave.”
Agents for the landlord were insisting all right.
The lettfer to Taylor reminded him of rules against keeping pets, and added: “The duck mutt go straight away, so the sooner you make a dinner of tile poor chap the better.”
McMasteris Imported Canadian
Ifc always been a great value Butnowift evenbetter.
*4.47 4/5 Overt Retail
$2.86 Full Pint Retail
proposed amendments also'.
The main organized opposition to the convention comes from those whoitill fear an income tax and tnose whose jobs would be jeonaridized by revision, such as minor judiciary officials.
The convention question was defeated by a 658,900-vote margin in 1924. The closest it came to approval was in 1963, when it was defeated by 41,672 votes. It had Scranton’s strong backing then.
Firm Reveals Income Dip
CHICAGO* (AP)—Sears, Roebuck and Cp.’s chairman blamed Mizzardy February weather Monday for holding Sears first-quarter income under that of tiie corresponding three months of 1966.
Sales were 4.1 per cent higher but income was 5.7 lower than in the record first quarter (Feb-ruary-April) last year. ft ★	★
Earnings for the .three months were estimated at $46,788,000, or 31 cents a share, compared $49,641,000 or 33 cents a year ai
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UNSTAGED HOLLYWOOD STUDIO FIRE — Wreckage of an outdoor set depicting ancient Rome lies smoldering at Univer-
sal movie studio in Hollywood today after fire swept through several outdoor sets and Adjacent brushy areas of the studio property.
Defense Dept. Bungling Charged on Rifles for Vieti
'A-Site Still I Not Def
WASHINGTON (AP) — A'the M16 rifle used in Vietnam.
LBJ Aides Seek Support of School Bill
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Johnson administration is expected to seek grass-roots support today tor its embattled school aid bill as more than 90 educators and school officials open a two-day conference on federal support of big city education.
Harold Howe II, commissioner of education, and Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey are making opening day speeches to the conference. Sources said they would reaffirm the administration’s resolve to press for desegregation and also ask support of the $6.7J>illion, two-year school aid bill.
* ★ ★
The measure has run into strong opposition from Southern Democrats and some Republicans backing a different version that will continue the massive] federal aid to education but shift the responsibility tor administering it the states.
President Johnson has said the GOP-endorsed proposal would wreck federal Aid to elementary and secondary education.
The conference was organized last January to discuss problems arising from federal grants and the Office j)f Education’s desegregation guidelines.
Changes Urged
FORESTVILLE (AP) - The Army Board of Engineers has recommended more than $1 million in improvements for the Forestville Harbor on Lake Huron. These include a six-acre anchorage, 2,240 feet of breakwaters and recreational fishing facilities. The federal govern-
One in four Americans will I be stricken with cancer in 1967 if the current rate continues, Iwith lung cancer the leader.
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WASHINGTON (UPI) - Rep. • Marvin L. Esch, R-Mich., re- •. ported yesterday the Atomic • House investigation ’ chairramf'• said today the Defense Depart- Mo., spoke as his special House “	^	t •
ment “apparently bumbled” by Armed Services subcomittee | ertharw^mn lil 8 fnr S ^ • not ordering larger quantities of (prepared to continue hearings ^ ^sS StSSshir.*	*	P J
on the weapon.	' j He said that was his interpre- *•
, tation of a letter signed by,-“The Vietcong say they fear -	- -	- 1
above all the brigades with what they call the “black gun’ ”
— the M6 — I chord said in an interview.
“So I don’t undertand the Defense Department’s explanation.
They say they’re meeting the requests of Gen. Westmoreland.
“But if this gun is accepted so well—and it has been—if it’s so good, it seems to me they should not be selling it abroad.”
The manufacturer, Colt Industries, sold 20,000 M16s to Singapore last year. The export had to be approved by the Defense Department
Robert A. Brooks, assistant secretary of the Army, told the subcommittee Monday he wasn’t consulted about it, but would have approved because M16 requests from Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of U.S. forces in. Vietnam, were being met.
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In December 1965 Westmoreland asked that all Army maneuver battalions in Vietnam be equipped with the M16. A year later the Army decied to replace all its 30-caliber rifles with M16s Delivery of the weapons to SingaporeNstarted last March.
Brooks said these “could be produced by normal overruns and minor overtime work.” TRAINING UNIT A ■ subcommittee member, Rep. Speedy Q. Long, D*La., said he was informed that the first training brigade to be fully equipped with the M16Jh stateside training was at Ft. Polk, La., this March. * / ,
Long said he couldn’t understand why it took until March to do that if foreign sales wqre' not interfering with supplies.
‘*1 don’t understand their reasoning for not getting the gun in ' rge quantities,” Ichord said.
★:
“They ^apparently bumbled] greatly by,'not picking up the.
■licensing rights as soon as| possible.’/
Brooks said the manfacturing, or cross-licensing, rights were hot acquired from Colt at the time because the M16 was originally intended for limited use.
Now, Brooks said, the government and Colt have reached general agrleement that will allow the government to let another manufacturer produce the M16.
James J. Ramey as acting chairman of the commission. But he said the letter fell short of the analysis he believes should be done on the issues of water resources and civil rights, and he promised he will pursue the matter.
+	*	* ■ j!
Esch wrote the AEC last] month noting that Illinois’ lack of an open housing law hasi drawn heavy criticism from civil fights groups. He called- at-j tention to Michigan’s provision! of such a legal guarantee, and' to the active civil rights pro-i gram at Ann Arbor.
Student Honored j
MOUNT PLEASANT (AP) -| Tom Krawczyk, a senior honor; student at Central Michigan Uni-, versity and captain of the baser team, was awarded t h e Robert C. Carlson Award Monday by the university.^ The, award is for all-around excellence in-academics, sports and extracurricular activities.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1967
♦ Marke
C—5

wmmmw
|^?ii
MARKETS
f* ■ ■	, . J M	y.
Glamor Stocks, Blue Chips Up
The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by, growers and sold by tHm in wholesale package lots Quotat" ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday.
Product ^
Apples, Delicious, Red, b.. .
Apples, Delicious, Rad, C.A., I
Applet, McIntosh, bu. .......
Apples, McIntosh, C.A., bu. .
Applet, Jonathan, bu. .. ...............
Applts, Jonathan, C.A., bu.........4.23
Apples, Northern Spy, bu.
Apples, Northern Spy, CJL> bu.
Apples, Steele Red, bu..........
Apples, Cider, foal.............
____VEGETABLES
Parsnips, Cello Pak.
NEW YORK (AP)—The stock market mounted a fairly snappy rally early Tuesday afternoon. Trading was, brisk.
Glamor stocks and blue chips r&bounded from Monday’s selling.
★ * ★
The Monday decline was markedly lower volume and this was seen as an encouraging techidcal feature.
Apalysts still saw the market ^ working through a consolidation phase following its recent
Rhuberb, hothouse, di, bch. . .... 1JS
Poultry and Eggs
_	. DETROIT POULTRY
DETROIT (AP)—Prices peld per po ir No. 1 live poultry:	■
Heevy type hens 19-21; roasters heavy — 27-28; broilers and fryers. r-““ - turkeys heavy breeder

hen* 17-1*
DETROIT BOOS
DETROIT (AP)—Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers (Including U.S-): ' Whites Grade A iumbo 34-37; extra large 30-32%; large 2t%-30%; medium 23-24; small 15-14.
Comment: Market about stdbdy.
CHICAGO BUTTER, BOOS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile Exchange—Butter steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 93 score AA 44; *2 A 44; *0 B 63Vi; 89 C 39%; carl *0 B 44; I* C 40%.
Eggs steady; wholesale buying, prices unchanged to Vi higher; 75 per c— “
better grade A whites 27; mixed _____
mediums 22V>; standards 2pl checks 21 Vi.
CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)—Live poultry: wholesale buying prices unchanged; roast* ers 25Vi-28; special fed white rock fryers 20-22.
Livestock
DETROIT LIVESTOCK
DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)— Cattle 400; ene lot 1002 Tb. high choice and prime slaughter steers 24.75; choice 950-1200 lb. 25.50-24.50; mixed good and choice 25.00-25.50; good 23.25-25.00.
Hogs 250; barrows and gilts not established at 11 a.nh. U.s. 1 to 3 300-400 lb, sows 17.75-18.75; 2 and 3 400400 lb. sows 14.25-17.75.
Vealors 100; high Choice end prime 37.00-41.00; choico 32.00-37.00; good 24.00-

Sheep 500; few lots choice an *0-110 lb. shorn lambs 27.50-29.( . I . and choice 24.00-27.50; cull to good slough-
Ampex Coro Amphenol .70
MMMIMPMBIIIIIMIIP Anacnd 2.25g • 4.00-10.00.	Anken Clwm
Armco Stl 3 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK	Armour 1.40
CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)—Hogs 3,000;!ArmsCk 1.20a active, butchers 75 to 1.00 higher; sows. Ashld Oil 1.20 50 to 75 hlglwr; 1-2 200-225 lb butchers!*—* r'‘~- 1 “
Market Mounts Snappy Rally
dramatic four-week climb. Some caution was traced to the tendency of interest rates to stiffen slightly again, raising some concern that the recent tight money period may be restarting.
The advance produced gains of several points for some of the higher priced glamor issues.
The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was up.4.62 at 887.03.
The Associated Press average of |t0 stocks at noon was up 1.0
at 326.5 with industrials up 1.1, rails up 1.1, and utilities up .5.
As the glamor stocks took off, IBM spurted more than 7 points, Polaroid 4 and Control Data about 3%.
it ★	*
Studebaker, showing belated enthusiasm about its merger talks with Worthington Corp. ran up more than 2 points.
American Motors once again seemed to be pacing the list on volume as it added a good fraction.
The New York Stock Exchange
( (AP) • Now York St Kted afternoon prices:
Abbott Lab 1 ABC Con .80
ifiiacp mo
.... Ind Ut AdMIllls .40b Address 1.40 Admiral .50 Air Rsduc 3 AirReduct 1
92	62V«	60	818b	+
142	26%	24	26%	+
14	84%	84	84%	+
198	29%	29%'	298b	+
AllegLu 2.40b AlltgPw 1.20 AlliadC 1.90b AllledStr 1.32 Allis Chal 1 Alcoa 1.10
AmBdcst 1.40 X300 I
I 958b 9488 — ;
AmHoma 1.20 Am Hosp .“ AmlnvCo IH AmMFdy .90 id Cl l.W
... Motors i
AmNGas 1.90 *— Photocpy Smelt 3« Std 1 T8.T 2.20 Tob 1 Jo AMP Inc .72 AMP Inc wl Ampex Cor
15 40% 60% 40Vh ..
48 8084 79	798b +
_______ _________________jd at 25.10-25.25;
id 1-3 1*0-230 lbs 23.75-24.75; 230-250 13-25-24.25; mixed 1-3 350-400 lb m
Atchison 1.40
i 1,200; calves n
airly act active, r

o 25 h
______......... _______________Jaadv; choice
*50-1,300 lb slaughter staere 25.00-24.00; choice 050-1,025 lb slaughter helfors 24.25-.,25.25; utility and. commercial cows 17.00-19.25; canners and cutters 15JO-18.50; utility and commercial bulls 20.00-24,00.
-— jft small simply spring siau^ht-
cholca and prime *0-1 •	‘	30-00.
y steady; several -100 lb v ‘
laR'corp”
115	38b	388	3% +
82 *8Vb *7Vb 97% -
Beat Fds 1.50 Beaunll :1*p BeckmJM .50 BeechAr .00b Ball How .50 Bandlx 1.40 Benguet ' BethStl 1.50a j wing 1.20 dsaCasc .25 >rden 1.20
t 51'A 5084 51V4 -t
45 31V4 30V. 3084 +
American Stock Exch, j
NEW YORK (API - American Stockl Britt My .1 Exchange selected noon^priras:, ^

AmPatro .3Sg ArkLGas 1.40 Asamera Oil AssdOil 8. G AtlasCorp wt Barnes Eng
Campbl Chib 144	7%
12 ,138b 13% ISVb — VbJ Bulova .70b
x7' 4084 4084 4084 + 8bi Burl........
4445-1443-14 I 4%	“~~
24 284	28b	284
3	2V4	2%	2V4
2 338b 338b 338b -28 1184 118b 118b if 11-14»11
270	138b	13%	138b	■+
30	2984	29Vb	2**"	1
2*	14<A	14	T
73	378b	34V4	:
Cdn Javelin
Ctrywlda Rlt Creole 2.40a Data Cont EquityCp .1 Fargo Oils
55
bl 13-14.
1 3384 3384
Fargo Bfl Felmont OH ’ fiyrjgr
. 3% 3 7-14	?%
... 118b 118b 118b 125 358b 348b 358b
,41f • 10 448b 44%
IBi • 5	*14	9Vb
x32	1% 11-141
14*	5
4	28b
32 1114 77 18% 17Vb T0% +1%
" li	in
151 118b 11% 118b + 8b 2	5%	5%	J%	Hut
102 33% 32% 33%
18	48b	48b	48b.....,
53	51%	54%	58%	+J%
34	04%	8284	84%	+184
72	58b	5%	5%
1	1%	1%	Ufe
2	184	1*
McCrory wt MeadJohn .4*
MichSug 0.1g Molybden Monog Ind NewPark Mn Pancoast Pet
RIC Group .j «■»
( Scurry Rain 17 208b Signal OIIA 1	214	33%
Sperry R wt «	98b
Statham Inst 2 39%
Syntax Cp .40	100	101%
Technicol .40	49	»%
UnControl .20	380	1%	--
Copyrighted by The Associated Pr
Stocks of Local Interest
Figures after decimal points are •IgMhs OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD ore representative Inter-dealer prices of approxi- arcSCTH matalv 11 a.m. Inter-dealer markets cooparm u" change throughout the day. Pric** 55 CorGW 2 50a - Je retail markup, markdown orjcoruvv zjuo
!ld Asked	“
. 20.* 21.4 cruc
AMT Corp. ---------
Associated Truck Boyne .............
Braun Engineering .............. SBHFSIFPH
Citizens Utilities .Class A ...2fc3
Detrex Chemical....... ........*1.4 Curt s Pub
Diamond Crystal .............  1$.
Frank's Nursery ...............Iffi
Kelly Services ................
Mohawk Rubber Co. ...	|U
Monroe Auto Equipment^
Safrad^Prlntlng .........
Scripto ......
Wyandotte Chemical
KernCLd 2.40 251 I
Kerr Me 1.40-	----
KlmbClk 2.20 Koppers 1.40 Kresge .90 Kroger 1.30'
—-r.icrouKmnu i f ..CrowCol 1.07t •-*	Crown Cork
M	CrownZe 2.20
55	258b	258b	258b	..
—D—
15	238b	238b	2384	+
25	318b	31%	3184	+
MUTUAL FUNDS
Affiliated FunS ...
Chemical Fund Commonwealth Std
Dreyfus ...'....
Keystone Incoma K Keystone Growth K-2 .
'f* ’J-? Delta Air l 4*0 4J OtnRGW 1.10 0.4 34.0 DetEdis 1.40 Del Steel M DiamAlk 1.20
.. 8.98
l Investors Growth1 . Mass. Investors Trust ..
Putnam Growth ........
Television■ Electronics. ...
Wellington Fund : .......
Windsor Fund .............
: 18.52 »-»i «dNa« 1 1U0 12J1 > DomeMhi JO . 4.71 14.051 DowChm ?•» • 24 10 06 DraperC 1.20 " 7 ,,	7 »s Dresslnd 1.25
::i2!ti 11*7'5^*,^ .17.04
Mil jffllRUVV
.13.97 tiilS
.19.44 21.13 East Air .30g ___	E Kodak 1.60a
DOW—JONES AVERAGES	|EG*^ .20 _
ITlSSrtrlets ......
45 Stock* .................. 314.29+1 JW End Johnson
BONDS	______ ErleLack RR
. ao Bonds  .................. 02.09—0.071 EthylCorp .40
10 Higher grade rails	2-»+J-]0 Evei^d .60b
10 Second grad# rails ...... 03.fJ-0.10i Eversharp
10 Public utillttes .... ......
,FalrCem .75a
25 94% *3% 94% +
5 34% 34	34% +
34 408b 408b 408b +
45 13	028b 028b +
12 30	30	30	'....
139 358b 348b 3584 +1% 0 »% 39	39
54 144% 14184 144^
210 17	14% 148b 4 %
257 74	74	7
3 348b 34% 3 45 258'. 248b 2
10 Industrials .
BOND AVERAGES ,________ Fair HIH .150
c«npf%- 5 m A»^.%d#Pre»i F.h^f, Ralls led. Utti. Fgn. L. Yd.fFedders *0 “
Net Change +.1	........ +.1|FedDStr 1.70
Noon TuS.	713	*44	13.1	*J-J	fe»jEPaM» .1-3*
Prev. Day	72.3	94.2	83.1	91*	j7.'1;FHtfOI 1.40
Weak Aoi	72.4	94J	04	91.9	074|FlreStne 1.40
Month Ago	72.4	94.7	14.1	924	5.4	FlrsKJyt	.511
Year AQo	74J	954	014	*14	80.7	Ffln«to*e	1
1447 High	71#	*14	US	fU
1947 Lew	70.1	*14	01.4	904	044	Ftl PLt	144
1944 High 794 10M	84.1	B||||g ||
196* Low	70.1	18.9	3*4
23 23	228* 1
—F—	,
122 1748b 171% 1) 9 116% 116 fl 45 248b 24	3
4 47% 47% 4
13 3484 34% 3 21 17% 17% 1 50 418b 47% 4 x5 298b 29% 1
79% 79% - <
FordMot 140 Fore Delr ,50 FreepSul 1.25 FruenCp 1.70
G Accept 140 GenAnllF .40 -Gen Qlg 140 GenDynam 1 Gen Elec 160 Son Fit 2.40 .
(lids.)	High	Lew	Last	Hhg.
179	53	528b	528b	+	%
N	278b	248b	27%	+	84
50	5484	54%	54%.....
52	31%	1084	21%	+	tb
(hds.) High Lew Last .	1.40V	28 65% 44% 45%
Pa PwLt 1.52	42. 33	32% 31%	__
Pa RR 1400 X141 44	43% 438b +1%
Pennzoll 1.40	14 100% 99% 100% 1
C ' lS
G PubUt 1.50 GTel El 1.20 Gen Tire .00 GO PecIflc lb Gerber Pd 1 Getty Oil ,10g Gillette 1.20 Glen Aid .70 Goodrich 2.40 Goodyr 1.35 Grace Co 1.40 GranltCS 1.40 GranlWT 1.10 GtA&P 140a Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt West Pint GtWSug 1.401 GreenGnt JO Greyhound 1 Grumn Aire Gulf Oil 2.40 GulfStoUt .00
Helliburt 1.90
175	248b	»8fe	238b	—
2	22%	22%.	22%	+
73	43%-
112	90%	W%	90	+
34	75%	75	758b	-
21	718b	71	71%	-
210	028b	81%	128b	+ ..
47	738b	72	738b	+1%
13	4%	6%	{% + %
44	30	2984	298b
X159	498b	49%	49%
■ 75	m	32	32%
50	58%	58%	58%
X10	2m	208b	208b
38	40%	67	48%
*4	55%	54%	5484
40	118b	1184	118b
22	40%	5*84	408b
62*	43	4114 •	ait/.
47 49%
26 278b 17 2»8b
Phil* El 144
PltPlete >40 Pitts Stool Poltrold .40 ProcterG 2.20 PubSvCol .*0
27% 278b + %
i 31% 3 -i 42% 4 1*2 1384 1 12 5184 ! 30 40	3
107 23% 1 224 30% 3 f* 41	4
43 28% i
Raynier 1.40b Raytheon JO Reading Co Reich Ch JOb RepubStt 2.50 Revlen t .30
RheemM MO	235	348b	35%	3
Roan Set .98e	71	*8h	*84
Rohr Cp JO	32	25%	25%	5
RoyCCola .72	5	358b	35%	3
Royal Dut lg	144	38M	38%	3
RyderSys .60	42	218b'	218b	1
HollySug 1 Homestk .1
InsNoAm 2.40
23 3284 32% 3284 -t
X37 44% 4 . 21 428b 4 125 30% 2 14	5
12 17% 178b 178b-— 1 14 50% 4*84 50%+18 67	7%	78b	78b — t
24 378b 37% 37% ..
51 473% 444%______ _____
10* 388b 30	30 — %
*'	“"l 3584 + 8b
111 308b 30	30% + %
I 3184 31% 3184 +
33% 338b + 8b
__ 408b 508b 40%+>%
16 '4184 41% 41% — 84 73 ’ 03% 03	438 ' '
22 5*	50% 5*
37 43% 42	43% +..%
33	878b	87	0784	+	84
13	23%	23	M%	‘	■’
*	0	.78b	T8b
>	36%	34%	34%
XI7	52%	518b	52%
—R—
271 53% 5284 53*4 + 84
StJosLd 2.00 SLSeoFran 2 St Reg P 1.40b
Shell Oil 2.10 Shall Tm .58g SherwnWm 2 Sinclair 2.40 IlngerCo 2,20 JmlthK l.80a SoPRSug .52g SouCalE 1.25 South Co 1.02 SOUNGOS 130 SouthPac t.50
33 29% 208b 29% +
1 53% 51% 52% +1
I 22% 22% 22% — 1 I 50	4*	49% + <
I 738b 73	73% + «
I 39% 3*	3* — %
i?SX 51
Staley 1.35 StdBrand 1.40 Std Kails 40 StOHCel 150b StdOIIInd 1.90 StONJ 1 JOg StdOilOh 2.50 “ Packaging ,..n Warn 1	—
StauffCh 1.80	32
SterlDrug .90	40
StevenJP 2.25	22
1*7
426 31% 328b 33% . .. 21 27% 248b 27% — % SJb
Changes Seen by 3 Top Execs
Technological Social Advances Forecast
NEW YORK (AP) — Thre« board chairmen of top businesses pictured American corporations today at the threshhold of far-reaching technological and social change.
Thdy said technology is shrinking the businessman's world. ITie expansion heeded for global operations highlights a corporation’s stockholder relations, they said.
★ ★ ★
Their speeches were prepared for a Lincoln Center symposium, kicking off a two-day 17Sth anniversary celebration of the New York Stock Exchange.
★ ■ ★ ■' ★
Joseph C. Wilson, Xerox Corp. chairman, told the symposium, “We must conclude that this is almost certainly the last century” in which men will live in societies ranging from the primitive to the complex industrial. COMMON CULTURE |
‘For increasing population, worldwide communications, the extraordinary increase in available—industrial—energy and the logic of economics will force the development .of a culture substantially held in common by all men,” he said.
*> * ★
He said the successful future technological corporation will have a global rather than national orientation and “will consciously try to combine the force of technology with the force of humanism.”
Birriy Mason Jr., Union Carbide Coip. chairman, said global business faces a host of problems involving nationalism, balance of payments, and political instability in the nation where the corporation is operating.
But the global corporation, he said, .spreads political risks “over enough countries so that the degree of over-all hazard is minimized. And all growth involves risk.
“We think the kind of risks
.............HP . involved in expanding our busi-
isi 4i% 40% 61% + %1 ness abroad are clearly justified ir* 64* “% 438* + %iby the opportunities we see xi4 648* 45% 44 — % there."
It 1484 14% 14% — %
26 4*	41% 40% — %
32 40<^ 4784 A - %!
X32 62 61tb 62	+1%
784	7%	7%
Littonln T.54t	77 106	104% 106	+1%
Llvingstn Oil LockhdA 2.20 Loewi Theat LonaSCem 1
34	7%	7%	7% ..
Long1st Lorflior
j	20%	J
0	29%	29%	29%	.
42	5484	56	54
144 13984 137% 13984 -t 31	23%	21%	23	+
29	398b	39	39%	+
—M—
120	59
’ 53%
53
X20 23% 23% 23% + 1 1 57% 57% 57% .... > X203 30% 37% 33% +1
Marathn 2.40	45 73% )
Marquor .25g	37 1
Maytag 1 McCall .4
Melv lb 1.40' MerckC 1.40a MarrChbp la
MiUb lb MidSoUtil .76 MinerCh 1.30 MlnnMM 1,30 AAo Ken Tax MobllOil 1.80 —"-ICO 1
Nat Airlift M
Dairy M0 Dirt 1.00 .... Fuat 1.40 Nat Gant .20
■Sri
69 21% 21% 21% +
. ...J 62% Ml
13	47% 4484 4484
14	49% 49	49%
129 79% 70% 7084 .30 V 2484 2484
11 47% 44% 448b
SO 28% 27% 2784'_________,
45 408b 39% 40% +1% X85 89	8784 89	+1%
11% 4
4 33	3284 3284
40	31% 31% 31%
175 248b 26	248b .	.
15 37% 34% 37% + % 151 125	12084 124% +l>'
It 24% 26% 24% ....
—N—
70 8084 80	00% + ’
. 34 47% 44% 47% +1. 23 34	35% 34	+ i
41	9984 9084 9984 + 1
50 34	35% 39% + U
58 47% 458b 47% +184 14 29% 2»% r.........

Tannaco 1.20 Texaco 2.60a TexETrn 1.05 Tax G Sul .40 Texaalnst .00 TexPLd .35g
TrantWAIr It Transamar t Transltron Trl Copt Jtg
TwnCen 1.20b
77.32% 31% 32
114 105% 179% 18484 +5 x*1 2384 23% 23% + 86 79% 76% 77% +1 58 1*84 198b 1*84 + 1 206,116% 113	116	+2
32 13984 137% 139% +2 .1 17% 17% 17% — 1 47 60% 67% 48% + 1
X117	688b	48	68%-
28	49	48%	41%	+
—(J—
85	29%	19%	20	+
132	55	54%	548k	—
16	25%	25	25%— .
45	57	54%	5484	+ %
43	39%	39%	39%	+ %
11. 70% 49% .70% + %
UnltAirLIn 1 UnltAlrc 1 40 Unit Cp .50^ UGasCp 1.70
USPIyCh 1.50 US Smalf lb US Steal 2JO UnWheln iff UnlvOPd M0 Uplohn 1.60
VaEIPw 1.28
WasbWat 1.16
)	3»%	37%	3*
JS	48%	8784	48%
12	Zt%	24	24%
It 248b 2584 24% .
X43	70	4884	49%	-	%
322	22%	21%	22%	+"'
3	34%	348b	34%	-
_______, ..r Issuance of minor *
X-HB2656, Alan. Permit state engage In foreign banking.
HB2000i Edwards. Give *1 .ommisslon'" ^*-*	-
Michigan I
I MM Powell. Permit home rule cities to'govern outdoor advertising. HB2991, T. J. Anderson. Amend state azardous Substances Labeling Act to inform to federal standards.
HB244S, Great. Make, an otherwlse-. jsllfled former pollcerttan eligible to apply tor I leans# as private detective. HB28I5, Sharpe. Forbid prosecutor or is law partner to represent any ptrty In Ivorce case In his county's circuit court. HB2706, Kehrss. Require license to
.) 21% 38	31% if
212 53% 52% 53% — 1 1 4284 <12% 42% + 1
a
...Jrl Cp 1.40 MPMMMHPfl White M	1.80	' 30	49%	49	41
WllsonCo	1.70	»	77	75%	71
WianOIx	1.44	44	29%	20%	21
“ oOtworth 1	48	24%	24%	2<
orthing	140	1J0	57%	55%	5(
X—Y—Z—
Srox Corp 1	125 303% 21
NEng El 1.34 NYCant 3.12a NImMP I.K Norflk Wst 4a
5 28	27% 27% .
• 180	*2 47% ‘
tfcfthrop* T Nwst Afrl .71
42 53% 52% 53% + % HP 13 50%' 58	508b 4
142	35 32% 32% 32% -
76 124	122%	W%	.....
12	52	51%	«	+	%
36	41%	41%	41%	+	%
34	75%	75%	75%
OhioEdts 1JO OlinMath 1 JO Glto Elev > Outb Mar JO
105 59% 50% 59% + <
’ 29% 21% 29
PennDIxie .40
174 12 ■
22	24%	asw	asm	...
44	24%	>4%	26%	+
593	24	22%	238b	+
Ml	»	70%	71%	+
87	34%	3584	34	+	..
47	398k	39	39%	+	%
114	20%	3	20%	•	-
44	43%	S%	41%
183	11%	17%	18%
Sales figures are unofficial.
Unless otherwise noted, rati
dends in the foregoing tobfo _____________
disbursements based on the last quarterly or semi-annual declaration. Special ag extra dividends or payments not da
gJPfef •<%"*«%« I"
a—Also extra or. extras ate plus stock dividend, t _.fll livldend. d—Declared or paid In Jus stock dlvldand. e—Paid last yea
— Payable to stock durlrn 1947, ast ■hated cash value on ex-dividend or m distribution date, g— Declared or paid t far this year, h—Declared or paid afh stock dividend, or split up. fc-rOt“— or paid this yaar. an «<—-— with dtvldanda to P-Pakl this yeai tarred or no ectk ting. r-Oocla c dividend. 1 estimated c.
z—Sales to fufl.
cld—Called, x—Ex dividend, y—Ex i lend ahd sales in fuH. x-dis—Ex disti ion. xr—Ex rights, xw—Without \
rlbuted. wl—Whan Issued, tid—Next day laltverv. ’
receivership
ponies, forest <
securities
State Capitol Happenings
THE SENATE
Received a resolution from 5 Brown, D-Detroit, asking tor a ...» ,, Flag Day massive march to show backing
. .4. soldiers Ir. ...fl Worked two hours in tl
, X—Given immediate effect
X-HB2122, Kehrat. Add fees tor iuctices of thi peace.
X-HB2I40; Suskl. Give servicemen furlough free hunting licenses.
X-HB2164, Callahan. Give Public Si Ice Commission regulatory powers o.~. nonmunicipal water companies with more
pistol.
betoatoc
NEW MEMBER, — Four Pontiac area youths took part in a ceremony in Washington, D C.. making Dr. William Haddon Jr., director of National Traffic Safety Agency, an honorary Michigan Safety patrol captain. Awarding the plaque in recognition of Had-don’s contribution to traffic-safety are (from
In an Inflated Market
left) Tommy Johnson, 518 Branch, of Bethune School, and Steven Campbell, 230 W. Walton, of Weyer School,, both of Pontiac; George Reichert, 5040 N. Rochester, Baldwin School; and Kenneth Proctor, 4465 Kempf, Waterford . Township, McVittie School.
Fake Art: Big Business
K By JOHN.CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - With so many industrialists collecting art for the sake of busihess as well art, it is understandable that! swindlers should move in. Fake] art is a profitable business-EVen those in-] dustrialists who are acknow-] ledged authorities on the sub-1 tleties of art, CUNNIFF and who collect for love rather than money, are considered quite vulnerable.
The most recent alleged swindle involves paintings purchased by Algur H. Meadows of Dallas, Tex., a highly successful oilfnan, who some New York dealer^ claim was swindled out of hundreds of thousands of dollars.
There is an enormous demand today for such as Miros, Derains, Chagalls, Modiglianis, Picassos- So great is the demand, in fact, that it far exceeds the supply. And so the stage is set. Clever swindlers might com-
mission a fake, obtain elaborate pedigrees, show the fake in re-spetcable places, and then put it on the market as the real thing. Desire overcomes, discretion and the fake is purchased.
The painting then might adorn the reception hall of a corporation, or more often "Will hang in spurious splendor in the industrialist’s home, to be admired by his insurance agent and perhaps only a Yew friends.
As authentic paintings hang they grow in value, because the art market is inflated with wilting cash buyers. Within the past year a small Renoir, 15 by 18 I inches, sold for $290,000 in1 Paris.
In New York, Parke-Bernet auction galleries reported in the last complete seasoa it obtained its greatest gross sales in the 29 years of its existence, some $23,-519,367. A Cezanne was sold for $800,000.
Christie’s, a London auctioneer, boasted recently of its success in obtaining important pictures from Americans, some of them industrialists, for sale in London. The reason, is said, was higher prices thaft in New York.
“It also reflects the way the art market booms even when money is tight,” said John Richardson,' U.S,* representative. “There is ^ every indication prices will go still higher. The moral is that art is often a safer investment than the stock market.”
★	★	*
And obviously,	as seen,	it can
be	as	poor	an	investment	as
watered stock. Nevertheless, the accumulation of art, fake or real, continues with the same enthusiasm- with which .a businessman bjuilds an industrial empire. There are compensations.
it	★	★
A major compensation is the opportunity to donate a painting to a museum, thus, obtaining a big tax deduction and all the honor that is usually given to a philanthropist.
Auto Picture Brightens
DETROIT un. - There was I week of April 17-22 when 172,-general belief in the auto, in- 996 care were built, dustry today that the rockiest 4nnrt,„ ..	. .. ■
part of ite 1967 sales road hadlw^°^*Lnp*Jon8 P^uctioii been passed	week appeared on tap this time
around with American Motors
Strong early May sales reports from virtually every segi ment of the auto market were reflected, in production quotas set in most auto factories.
The preliminary report for last week showed onto output in U.S. plants reached nearly 175,OM units, the best showing of calendar 1967. The old 1967 mark was set in the
adding a second shift today to bring its output of' its lowest American line to 2,400 a week, compared with 1,200 built last week.	,,	*■
★ * ★
While increasing output of its American line, AMC made some cuts in its production rate for its other lines so the 1,200 added Americans was not all plus, insofar as AMC production was 'concerned.
■lliwn ii iiiim   in mm I,
Judge StiJI , Stays in Step
Business Notes ! Woman Accused! Despite Injury
$f,000 in Gauges Reported Stolen
More than 60 b r a s s steam gauges were stolen from the construction site of the chil-dren’s hospital on Pontiac State Hospital grounds, Elizabeth Lake Road and GenesSee, Pontiac police were told yesteniay.
A spokesman for the Steve Kruchko Co. of Waterford Township, which was installing the gauges, estimated value of the missing goods at over $1,000. He said the gauges are used to regulate temperature.
★ ★
Becuase the building is not completed, the thieves were able to gain access without breaking in, investigators said.
Ford Motor Co. announced recently that its general auditor’s' office has been
HB2849, Baker. Forbid manutocturers, larehousemen and wholesalers to sell I jeer or wine at retail (notice given toi reconsider vote).
HB2291, Sharpe. Cut highway Weight ix tor pickup trucks b* 4,000 and 4,500
News in Brief
Mom’s Rummage Thursday, 9 to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin Rds.	-‘-Adv.
The theft of rowboat, valued, at $100, from a canal off Otter Lake was reported to Waterford Township police yesterday by Samuel Edwards of 426 Beverly Island.
John Gillespie, of M Coleman, Waterford Township, reported to township police yesterday the larceny of a camera and a projector, total value of $189, from his car parked at Pontiac Mall.
Duane Gardner, 25, of 471 Second told Pontiac police yesterday a color television set was stolen from his home by a burglar who pried open his front dqor.
mestic profit analysis manager on the finance staff.
DETROIT (AP) - Donald F. Kigar resigned today as president of Detroit Edison Co., effective July 1.
Chairman of the Board, Walker. L- Cisler, said Kigar, who has been president since 1964, decided to take early retirement for personal reasons. .
• Board members elected Edwin O. George to succeed Kigar. He is executive vice president for marketing.
Howard R. Stevenson, via* president for sales, will succeed George.
of Manslaughter Is Freed on Bond
A P o n t i a c woman charged with manskiughter in the death of her estranged husband was released on' $100 personal bond yesterday pending her preliminary examination 1h Pontiac Municipal Court May 23.
★ ★ *
Mrs*. Freddie Mae Cosley pleaded innocent to the charge when she was arraigned before Municipal Judge Maurice Fine-an.
She is accused of the fatal stabbing of Charles Jones, 38, of 351% Rockwell on Friday afternoon. They had been separated three years, she told police.
The stabbing took place at her home, 101W. Smith Blvd.
Tuesday's tat Dividends Declared REGULAR
Imp Tob Cm ....175	5-2* I
McKessonARob	.45	Q	4-1	i
Motts Sup Mkts	.09	S	7-11	J
Pet Inc . : .... .25	p	4.19	:
Strelee of Calif ...	.18	<
Unlv Marten ...	.15	I
Despite a broken ankle, cult Judge James S. Thorl returned to the bench yester without missing a day’s i from his fall in the courth 'Friday.
Thomburn was rushed to liam Beaumont Hospital, R Oak, by Judge Philip P when Thorburn missed a as he was leaving for li and fell down a flight of staii He was released from the pital Saturday, wearing a v ing cast, and aided by crutcl
Treasury Position
WASHINGTON (AP)—The cash posltto ■ treasury compared'with corn
t079.2tMtS.7I S 8,151,974,617.23 Fiscal Year July t—
135,757jtl,9S2.*2 113.341. It 5,110J1 withdrawals Fiscal Yaar-r'Tiirar1'71 123^9540042944 SOW *3*3^ 320,090,885,081.73 „ , , 13,108477,99041	13,533,020,923.42
li Xr'yludb* 044458448.78 debt not -6-2* ject to statutory limit. */
.STOCK AVERAGES Compiled by The Associated Press
Ind. Rails UHL Stocks • •+U--H*	+4 +1.0
462.4 188.3 1544 326.5 . 4614 187.2 1S4J 3254 468.7 1864 155.6 328.6 .4564 1794 159.1 322.0 . 4574 149.1 148.9 313.7 473.9 18*4 159.1 331.8 . 4134 1J9.4 151.5 292.8 . 537.9 213.* 1704 349.7
4tW York Stocks ol roqulp lb V3 4)
-rt js
Pfll- York St Aaroqul- H Allied :
Sm S#l_______
Borman Fd „
Clark Eq 1.20 Cant Tel .52 is 23% Cop Rnp 40b	4	»
Dana Cp 2.20	3,	43%
Hflto knill
‘SttTV

nine 40 78 24% 24% 24% + %
..... John 03d 5 St Uanard R .60 2 12% Servoma 40	1 39 '
Spar Cn 48	11%
Toledo Id 1.40 18 31% mr so 140* 12 *»• i Whirl Cp. 1.60	9 43%
Wlckes 1	7 M%
flUf W. W. 48 * 17*


C—6
Death Notices
Peuflne. end Beverly Femjemer. Funeral icrvlce Will. fee held Wednesday, May 17 at I p.m. at few Flumerfeld Funeral Home. Oxford. Informant in Seatlawn Cemetery., Lake. Orion. Michael
FISHER, PERRY C.; May
UN Rolandale; age Ml d_____
or of Miss Marie L. end Met ■erbere J. Fisher, Harold B.. George C., and Paul 1. Fisher; dear brother of Howard F. Fisher; ' o survived by twd'grandchildren
- ---------------Rtc(.
.... _e today i Elton Black Funeral Heme, 1233 Union Lake Roast Union Lake. Funeral seTv-
• Hunioon Funeral H
McAULEY, WAYNE D.; May IS, nth 2142 East Walton, age 24; beloved husband of Pamela S. Me-Auley; beloved son of Mr.' and Mrs. C. A. Sprouse; beloved grandson of Mrs. Gladys B. Bird; dear!
.brother of Mrs: K. E. Abbott and j -------
Gary J**£*L*Z2* snrvice j Announcements
Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 . Pontiac Prgii Want Ads
FOR FAST ACTION

te get yevr KILL HUM-
CASH WANT AO RATH ,
occompofliii order) "•
iS j$,
• 04 13.44. *72 1S.12-10.10. U.I0
IWpWGiitedMGlB	HGlp Woetdl mute ♦	[Help Wanted FeiMle 7	Help Wanted Female 7	Help Wanted Female 7 !
—	- — -.......... BLACK C
—	vicinity of Adams-Auburn.
word.,2324375, ___________.■
CbSTj GROUP OF KEYS VICINITY * 8? General Hospital. MY 3-7263.	1
LOST - NORWEGIAN ELKHOUNO,I mats, vie. Cedar wind Lake, May I 10. Reward. Children's pet. JO-
tor OM dealership, good/gay, fringe bene-fits. Apply Th person to Mr. Everett E r n a t, HOMER HIGHT, INC., Oxford. Mlchl-
LOST: BLACK AND TAN FEMALE ..... JnsTnh*^'R^*VRd.VleAn5L^ POT" STdCKWORK ANb b*UV-to AmviS »1-1SS* Ra Answers ery. must be II, days, and
Mon.-Frl. Sat. 11 a.m. to i p.m. Ages 20 to 35. Call «74-2210 for Interview - ASK FOR MR. MARTIN. .	'
4 WELL DRESSED MEN TO o£-liver advertising material SIS per evening. Car necessary. 42S-2448.
L • tlME B O I L 6 I N 0 CU£ lien, Holiday Inp of Pontiac, | IIS. Telegraph. , f 334-2771'I FURNACE AND DUCT . INSTALLER - "Chandler Heating Co. OR 3-5431 [GARDENER HELPER, ESTAtl Farms, Mr, Heckman, 363-2)03.
GAS STATION ATTENDANT must be experienced, full or pet flow, good pay, Sonoeo Statlpr
Telegraph at Maple Rd.________
GAS STATION - EXPERIENCED
PORTER
PART-TIME
Mornings only, * to 1 p.m
A TELEPHONE GIRL
I iwjra p
GIRL NEEDED TO HANDLE J3P-flee for email company In Utica. Duties,, will tai payroll. Invoices, ypgPJMypf* Rfd bookkeeping. Cell 731-3*88 tor appointment.
afternoon to evenbig shift, age 25 to 4Q, referencoe required. Apply Ponflac Mall, 317 N. Telegrept^
ROSE JEWELRY C0>
PORTER FOR NfW CAR DEALER-ship. Many flings benefits"Excellent opportunity tor the right person. Ask tor -Mr. Danis, Ml 44440. SUBURBAN OLDS - Bl ~
PORTER
dad at once tor ou dept. General
10 BOYS
VE NEED 10 BOYS TO WORK IN OyR MAILING-ROOM TUESDAY, MAY 16 AND WEDNESDAY, May i7, FROM 12:15 P.A
Clarkston. .Apply In. person
men. S2.00 to $2.38 pi
GRILL MAN
sod wages, p. hospitallzal
•nd Suburban. Clemens, UtlCu Included.. Bonded Gi
GUARDS ~
t-time, Immediate City “	 we.	Mr.
luard Services, Detroit — lo
l Home, ,020 E
today at 'the funeral h
POPE, HENRIETTA I	-.
1967; ,95 Seminole Street, age 03; dear mother of Miss Helen Pope.
S5 FREE FOR WATCHING A FIL-J ter Queen home demonstration.
• No obligation — 334-4957. i. A WIG PARTY IS FUNI TO PLAN your party call Ann Drlnnon at i; "House of Wigs". FE 5-3702. FE
kCID INDIGESTION? PAINFUL,! Gas? Gelt dew PH5 Tablets. Fast as liquids. Only 98 cents. Simms r Bres. Drugs. _________ ■ I
_... sc Community.	—
GET OUT -QF DEBT - AVOID GARNISHMENTS, BANKRUPTCY, REPOSSESSIONS, BAD C R E D I T
vicca; beloved Infant great-granddaughter of Mr. Elmer Davis and
, Mrs. Marie O'Alessandro. Funeral service was held today at 11 a.m. at the Lewis E. wint Funeral Home, Clarkston, with Rev, F. 4. Delaney officiating. Interment in the Baby land Section In the Cath-oiic section of Lakevlew Cemetery.
WEIR, DANIEL THOMXSi May 15, l*67i MS Scott Lake Road, Waterford Township; age 14; beloved son of Helen Weir; dear brother of Judy, Janice, Raymond, David and Richard Weir and Mrs. Diana Let-near. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, May 17 at 2 p.m. at the O. E. Pursley Funeral Home with Rev. Bernard Wright officiating. Interment In Waterford Center Cemetery. Daniel
- BERT FALKNER Mailing Room THE PONTIAC PRESS
$550 PLUS CAR “ SALES TRAINEE
21-30 Sdme College INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL
I WANT A PARTICULAR TYPE OF MAN
*700 MONTHLY GUARANTEED TO START IF YOU MEET OUR REQUIREMENTS
$600 MONTHLY SALARY
:orporat!on will train
•0*1ij

*• our office staff. Must be high "* school graduate and available tot n H mH	Immediate employment. Opportunl
end 'number of creditors"'°For those !L
that realize "YOU CAN'T BORROW rJrimn ™!omo • VSjnHS YOURSELF OUT OF DEBT."	Mr Carlson, 338-0359 9 a.m.- 12
fours ,9-7 Mon. thru Frl. Sat. *-*l FE F0181	,	I
(BONDED AND LICENSED) ’AVON CALLING"—FOR SERVICE ------• FE 4-0439.
$5100 UP-NO FEE FINANCE TRAINEE
28, no experience required. I
MACHINIST
TRAINEES
'reclsldh parts manufacturer lo ed In Walled Lake Has tmmfid openings for young people i mechanical abilities. Willing wort; to learn a trade. This steady employment with a c st»r»ng rate and fully paid fringe
VALC0MATIC PRODUCTS
Opportunity*?
SALES POSITION OPEN WITH A
________________ INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL
___ FOR RENT, RECEPTIONS. I IMP S. Woodward 'B'hem 642-8268
gf* Church, OR 3-5202, FE$7,200 FEE PAID
College Grods-Engineers
__________Management positions In all fields.
| INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL | ion W. Huron	334.4971
BOX REPLIES t accountanY for cost and general office work.
m
At 18 a.m. today there! 11were replies at Thej | Press Office in die fol-j flowing boxes:
j 3, 4, 6, 15, 20, 28, 31, j { 32, 40, 41, 45, 51, 53, 55, ! I 66, 67, 96, 105	I
resume to Pontiac
AGGRESSIVE SALESMEN WANT-ed. 2 new protects plus 3.reliable custom builders have made It it— essary for us to Increase i sales staff. Let ut show you r to make a minimum of $1,— a month. Call TED MCCULLOUGH SR., 682-1820. AERO REALTY.
HOLD
IT!
OTHER
FOLKS
DO...
COATS
FUNERAL -HOME .
| DRAYTON PLAINS________67441461
- GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME Kaepo Harbor, Ph. 66241200.
AMERICARE
surance. Since American Republic Insurance Co. has bean using ” ‘ new designation for Its policies
WE CAN OFFER salesmen, licensed for insurance excellent prospects mM
OONELSON-JOHNS
' Funerr* I-----
"Designed I
PLUS A GUARANTEE
Huntoon,
FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac tor 50 ytai
PE 2-01B*
Voorhees-Siple
FUNERAL HOME. 332-8371
Cemetery Lots
2-4 GRAVE, CHOICE LOTS, OAK-■—I Hills. $588 each, $800 for . 335-9735.	___________
Other folks make money from Pontiac' Press WANT ADS
try
If you haven't . . one. Hundreds of others do . . . daily!
CHOICE LOTS IN OAKLAND __
“ rial Gardens, Less than Vji Fleldbrook 9-2785.
AUTO
Mechanic
New car dealership need mechanics. Good working ,con-d i t i o n s, many company benefits. Apply to Service . 0LDSM0BILE, 550 Oakland Ave., 332-8101: ' , 1

■ WONDERFUL BREAK FOR wonderful girl — Mother — fa her ■ out to dinner, to the n modem' dining room at Sui Chief. Telegraph Road near Dli Highway.
AUTO SALESMAN Chevrolet- Oldsmoblle, new and used, sell In ■ rapidly expanding ““ — “—‘unity, 5-figure In-ce necessary.
R	- n Taylor
J1________Walled Lake, 624,4501
MI APPLICATION, NOW BEING TAKEN
MAN FOR WATCHMAN JOB WEEK* IB f- must be deputized and uni-ned. EM 3-2881 at 6 p.m.
MAN WITH SOME ELECTRICAL experience or will train. Artco Inc. JOtolndlanwood Rd.. Lake prion.
S FOR AIR CONDITIONING, irt work, boiler Installation, pipe Ting end general heating a—k tl Orchard Lk., Rd. 682-3T00.
N WITH MECHANICAL ABILITY
N DAIRY FARM,
----tessary. Hi
IS N. fee
SALESAAAN. TOPNOTCH NEEDED tor well known company, r*
Cell Angle Rook, 334-2471 Si
AAATURE YOUNG MAN
full time work In leading _____
town retail store. Must have some experience in sales. Op-portunity for advancement. Send qualifications to Pontiac Pr Box, 35. *
MECHANIC AND ATTENDANTS. Light experience. Top wooes, fringe benefits. Apply at Eton Shell, 14 Mile Rd„ Birmingham. MECHANIC 4- FOR SMALL Alfe cooled anginas. 3384727.
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST
_	86500-87500
Position Immediately available. Minimum requirements: gradua-^from (1) . Credited College.
i*nlverslfy, with spedelizatron in Bacteriology, Chemistry or Bl-oihS/. Experience preferred. Knowl-
ernmental fringe benefits li lion to salary.
The Personn Telegraph Oakland County Court1 Hi
perience preferred t
NIGHT BAR TENDER, WiEKEriD work also available. Call ft appointment. The Rotunda tty Inn. 682-0600. /
ORDER DE^K AND STEADY flee work, industrial Plant. For man over ,30. .Send completr M suma to Pontiac Press Box 18.
f GIRL OR WOAAAN NEEDING '-'nndly advisor, phone FE 2-5122 e Sjp.m. Confidential.
f| mead. Top wages
^n ^transportation. Call 3634)376
Pontiac.
It pays... |
It's quick, simple and productive. Just look around | your hoqje, garage and| basement and list the many items that you no longer use. Hundreds of readers are searching The Press's" classified columns daily for just such articles. Perhaps the piggy bonk itself would bring-more than the change that it holds I Try it!
YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID!
Wigs. FE 8-6216.
ARE YOU LOOKING FOR STEADY employment and a |ob with a I tore? General Telephone Co. openings now tor linemen and stellar repair man, liberal bi fits, credit tor previous experience, high % school education or equivalent necessary. Apply General Telephone Co., 317 Upton S' Milford. An equal employment c portunity employer. '
PARTS/MEN, MECHANICS AND mechanics' helpers needed immediately. Excellent working conditions with many fringe benefits. Apply In parson or by phone to Roy • Pazlit, KEEGO PONTIAC
SALES, Keego Harbor, -------
682-7380.
Wo can help you with a plan you ean*afford.
DEBT CONSULTANTS OF PONTIAC, INC.
814 Pontiac State Bank Bldg.-'
STATE lTcENSE^-BONDED Open Saturday M2 a.m. EXCITING SPRING FUN FOR; Scout groups, church, clubs. Ride through fields, woods, on hoi— drawn hayrlde. Followed by he cooked Spaghetti dinner. See n born animals — Lambs, pigl calves, «chicks. For -reservafh 682-1611.
UPLAND HILLS FARM	-
EXPECTANT MOTHER OR WOM-|C an, with child to look attar our)-home and children, desire person >/
family a
small sc..., VPHPMRIP
Call Mr. Ghavas, 334-4666.
ATTENTIONS
$50 Weekly-Pdrt-Time
Four evanlngs, 6-10/ p.m., marrlc. men, age 21-35, to merchandise and Install electrical/appliances. Call 6740520, 4 p.m.-,/- a p.m. tonight.
BRICK LAYERS FOR VENEERS.
Sj^yR
A. TQ 5 P.M. GOOD I benefits, apply pt urant Telegraph
FULL OR PART
r plus many fringe
Sf
GET OUT OF DEBT ON A/ PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD / TAILORED TO YOUR-INCOME
ON AND AFTER THIS/DATE, ...........
16, 1967, I will not be responsible for any debts contracted by any other than myself. Jim A. Jonas, 714 Mt. ’Clemens, Pontiac, Mich.
ON, AND AFTER THIS DATE May 13, 1*47 l will not be responsible for any debts contracted by any other than mytofl. Bill L. Martin, Hamlet, Pontiac, Mich.
CARPENTERS
EXPERIENCED ROUGHERS For this area. TOP WAGES!
”CARPENTERS '
Good roughters. Union. 476-0297. mtmmrn- 453-3482.
COLLEGE STUDENTS
Prepare for your summer Employment NOW. International corporation will train 6 young men for brand Identification positions: Salary of 8150 weekly. Must be-------
Appearing and able to converst telllgently. Phone Mr. Adams,
332-8181
An Experienced Ad-Visor Will Gladly1 Help You Word Your Want Ad
ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, MAY 16, 1967, I will not be responsible for any debts contracted by any other than myself. Ronald R. Austin, 6364 Wilson, Drayton Plains, Mich.
DRIVER STOC K-BO Y—F U LL-TIME work, $5* par wk„ apply parson Burtons, 75 N. Saginaw.
PAY DAY- EVERY DAY
Factory workers, machlno open tors, platers, common labor, ate.
■ Prestige Selling
COMPUTERS
ACCOUNTING MACHINES ' CASH REGISTERS
Salas experience not collage training essential. Must, hive background In Accounting (education or experience).
Salary and bonus paid during extensive training period. Openings in Pontiac and Detroit. No over-_r|ng (Petits 100
y paid.	1
- 1_______________________________
Quality control technician
an Intelligent, healthy, ambitious high school graduato, II and ever, can qualify Mr this position. Ex-parlanca Is not necessary. Muat be willing to work. This Is not a glamorous position, but It Is steady, iecura work with a good future leading Into supervision. We mam ufactora concrete ptoa. A complete package of fringe banaflts li aj “Ply at Lytoll —
Refrigeration^
Engineer
Duties Include the roptlr maintenance of refrigeration
equipment. , s License. Hours
AAA-1 CORPORATION
fee need 4 young women to com-Mir Stitt Tn Pontiac offle Mu*t fee 18-28, single and hk ichoel graduato. Salary of ttso p vk. Call Mr* Williams, 338413
GIRL WANTtO, RETAIL JEWEL-- iSb i tm 1	1 Hi
rtun
pie7 fetrn
OQ LIQHT BOOKKEEP-ing and office work. Must work 1 evening par weak. Sand resume giving ege, experience B starting salary axpactad, to Peat Office Box 435, PontT«c, Michigan.
WAITRESS; AFTERNOONS, APPLY
Pour' Corner*. Restaurant. Corner ~ Walton and FeiTy.
•MANENT PO-
HRIRi	...Jh°?rl-—
banaflts. Pled T Piper Restaurant, 4370 Highland fed., PE 8^741.
GRILL
COOK
AGES 30 TO 45
Full-time counter clerks tor dry.
Stoanlng plant, high school aduca-l Vary good opportunity tor the I fight person. Gresham Cleaners. Tad's (Ml Oaxhinq Ay*.	/	| madia.. .
Excellent wpitunB hours, ... .... days or holidays, day shift, hospitalization, |lfa Insurance and sick
ARE YOU A
Good experienced, typist, stono, secretary or clerk? we need sev-*	temporary as-
r*FE 3-8384 -
slgnments — PofTtisc’ Call MANPOWER
AVON CALLING WOMEN who
i Aag^Tn pi PONTIAC MALL
HOUSEKEEPER-BABY SITTER I live In, 2 school children. 673-1182 t I or OR 3-3239.
........successful,HOUiSkfelfelR, LIVE IN, 3 ....■
—- ..... good money In IhaTr dron, Bloomfield arts. TR 3-7300
apart time. Money back guarantee! ext. 5548 or 644-123*.________
mSeh HOUSEKEEPER, MOTHERLESS
totortlK, „rPB*’i4>W	hfi-T>...LIv. in. Cell .......
PO Box *1, Drayton Plains.
Gaby sittbI, MAYiikl rd:
Sashabaw Rd. area. 623-0993,
Ut »40»K.
, CARE
WAITRESSES-
A permanent lob, hourt, ‘’plus, tips, paid vacation <
Soldi MgIb^wieIb l-A
ADVANCEMENT TO BRANCH MANAGERS of several of our talas personnel hfes resulted In aPWIIttot In our general . sales . department at GnmaN'to Pontiac Mall. SaU Magnavox color f TV and storeo, Stelnwey planet, and Conn Band Initrumgnfa plus ' many other fin# lainlcal Hama. Soma knowtodoO at music is helpful but not nacaarary, we will train. Some sales experience ."I* preferred. Please contact,the manager at OrlnnetPe Pontiac
WAITRESS, APPLY IN PERSON, Avenue Bar, 137 Oakland Ave., , WANTED HOUSEKEEPER. GOOb neighborhood. FE 2-1044. Cat) be-**------* ~.nt.-7 p.m.
WANTED; RCdEPTIONIST, PLEAS-ant surroundings, shorthand and typing rtqulrad. Write Box 1, Ox-tord, Michigan.
(ANTED: PART-TIME SCCfeft* tary and housahold help. Must have own transportation. 682-5540. WOAAAN TO LIVE IN AND HELP mother with housework and —«--e 3:30.	.
Hslp WGJtEd M. or P.
APPRAISER TRAINEE
Salary negotlonable, only peopl. ... terested In making a'minimum of 310,000 yearly need apply. Hospitalization, plus many other company banaflts. Call Mr. Fo-ley for confidential interview. 676.3044._____________________
—, OR 3-1102.
BaGy SITTER, 7 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.', Alton, through Frl. Must have ref-erencea. Rochester-Hamlln Rd. area. Own transportation desirable.
Friday at our . Manufacturing Flint located In Rochastor, Mich. Excellent employee banaflts, good working conditions, compatltlve rates. Call 367-5300, Ext. 3641.
' Mr- W. J. Bala Parke, Davis & Company.
Box 118, G.P.0. Detroit, Michigan—48232
Birmingham _______________
BEAUTICIAN*, EXCELLENT I portunity. Recant graduatot terred. Bernard Hair Stylist,
7-3033, ask tor Miss Brvce.__
BEAUTY OPERATOR NEEDED —
t ET I R course,
AN FOR GOLF Rochastor arte.
immediately, paid vacations, 8 Insurance and pension plan. J Vermatt Roofing, FE 0-5115 or
SALESMEN WANTED, FAST AD-
SERVICE STATION, BIRMINGHAM — auto air conditioning, proofing^ mechanical ability.
ding, _____
l. FO 5-9041.
L HAND SCREW MACHINE
cpmptoto. 532-7429, Hartland.
STATE MANAGERS
Recent acquisitions, promotions ..I near future accelerated expansion program necessitates our. —
r type o
sales experience, *BHI.r .* -u-,,«is groups of High School Students, and possess College training would be most helpful. For Interview write Mr. R. C.^Stroma.^cara of The Pontiac
i part time man, perhaps In h 50‘s, not working, nor having 1 *“■* ------- ■- ‘iterviewlnji wo
STATION ATTENDANT
334-2471. Snelllng
TERRIFIC* OPPOR+UNITY R5K carpet and ' furniture salesman lo Hein tor manager. Exc. working conditions. Salary plus com-
i experience deslr-
H0USEWIVES
Earn S2 to *3 par hour In your spars time. Pick up and deliver Fuller Brush orders. For Intorvisw
______________ phone OR 3-5876.
BABY SITTER.	j	_____________.. .
__ 333-5004._________ IHOUSEWORK AND CHILD CARE.
SETTER,NEEDED IMMEDI- Live In. *56 Kettering. Pontiac.
FE S-341*.__________________
BARAAAIO. WILL TEACH. MOR-*•“ "■* *—Club, 2200
Equal Opportonlty ________
MAID-COOK. OWN TRANSPORTA-tlon. Available fpr Sundays and Holidays, Top wage. Ml 6-6437.
, *h»5y#0H l^l«ndAI Rd? f (
BEELINE FASHIONS—NEibS YOU FOR HOSTESS OR STYLIST— 0524131
BOOKKEEPER WITH SMALL OF-flea experience, and benefits. $
Ad sms. 334-2471.
C L ERK TO WORK IN MUSIC store. Hours 4 to *, Saturdays - 12 to 6. Ages 20 to 45. Mirada ^ogmMGi inrfn
CLERK-TYPIST-
RECEPTI0NIST
_____ ... _ ___.idly neighbor-
iiuui, office of a large finance organization, apply Immadiataly. No experience necessary, good starting
WAULED LAKE
COUNTER AND MARKER GIRL -21, full tlma — Apply Fox Cleaners, 71* W. Huron.
Dining Room .Waitress
Do you en|oy masting people working with children? Wa train you as a waitress to t In the friendly atmosphere of ... dining rooms. Night shift,, free Blue Cross and Ilfs insurance, cation and paid holidays, wages and tips. Apply In parson
°"y; TED'S"
BLOOMFIELD HILLS DRUG CLERK, OVER 10, GOOD pay, days, rat., permanent tlon. Lake Canter' Drug — Orchard Lake.
---------SECRETARY NEEDED
at once. Excellent* benefits. *390. Call Pam Fox, 334-2471 Snelllng G Snelllng.,
EXPECTANT MOTHER OR WOMAN with child wanted to look attar our hort* and chlldran, desire person who wants to h| ----
Of the famllv fringes. CsU Mr/OrayH* 334-4664,
experienc66 WaiYr6G$, F 6 R
dining roam, night shift. 5 p.m. 12 Rail's Drive In - OR 3-7173.
TRUCK MECHANIC
First class - union shop, day work for small fleet In Pontiac. Call 334-3312, ask tor Mr. Lyons.
EXPERIENCED f curate at figures. 3 Age not essen*1*1 Write Pontiac P
EXPERIENCED SALESWOM-an for lewetry store, ' “ ■ time, 4 eves. FE 4^557.
TURRET LATHE-SETUP MAN
‘ TURRET LATHE OPERATOR*
. NIGHT SHIFT
Shop foreman nights. Experlan with turret lathes and milling t sentlal. Apply Holly Tool B M. chine Inc. Ill Rosetta, Holly, Mich.
USED CAR PORTER, WILL TRAIN, starting salary, $80 wk„ sioo w' after 30 days. Standard A u t Sales, 109 BAST Blvd. S. 338-4033.
It >>ss!bimiea. Excellent f
Automobile Dealership. Excellent pay plan, many fringe '
Send resume and refer Box No. 7}< Pontiac Pret WATCHMAN AND /MAINTENANCE man, 873 per wk. Call V. Hollis, 852-1002.
WELDING SALES
Welders: Use Vour txptrlenct to sell the finest quality weldings, alloys, and fluxes to Industrial
sr cent company pi
ge. 22-30. Draft exempt. Must be lies motivated end eager to makV o n e y. Compensr*1"	—1
Only a small number cants will be saiectod-
available. 338-9079 anytime.
LEWIS KNABEL Personnel Director
tHE NATIONAL CASH REGISTER CO.
following! west BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP n<« <■>» accepting applications tor full time police patrol, ages 21 to 34 years old, high ichool education. For additional Information contact the West Bloomfield Township Police, 682-1535.
WOOL PRESSER. PART TIME, AM or PM, good pay, apply Uptown Cleaners, 45637 Van Dykt, Utica.
YOUNG SEMI - EXPERIENCED painter. Insurance benefits.
/THE 1964 CIVIL RIGHTS LAW PROHIBITS, WITH X; " /CERTAIN EXCEPTIONS, X-^DISCRIMINATION BE- /• >X CAUSE OF SEX. SINCE ;X SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE -X X CONSIDERED MORE AT- X TRACTIVE ■ TO PERSONS X; v OF ONE SEX THAN THE X-OTHER, ADVERTISE- |X •5 M E N TI ARB PLACED ;X X; UNDER THE MALE OR -X | X FEMALE COLUMNS FOR X-/ CONVENIENCE OF READ- X % ERS. SUCH bISTINOS ARE X X NOT INTENDED TO EX- X X CLUDE PERSONS OP %
^ Either sex.
Evenings Part-Time'	12875 W. Grand Blvd.,
Tien needed Immediately fortpert; -
iture, married andUShave good Detroit, Mich.
Help Wanted Female
$240 PLUS GENERAL OFFICE
MILL|NG~ifiA- Ph0rt? 873-5500 i
tlma, full paid' fringes, Brlney A; 1145 Sefea Rd., f
■	An Equal Opportunity Emplpytr
« co.., PONTIAC AREA EXPF iCED N;.V AND	guaranteed salary
USED CAR SALESMEN rLraro Ex«Jr*^'"‘f^b^K
Good pay plan, fringe'benefits, truc*<	customers furnished,
new car dealership and fa- Hu*1 be neaeMnarriev.' and OVar cllltlas. Ask for Tommy Thump- 52 — All expenses paid. See Mr. son, soles manager at SHEL- Dwyer at SeVoy Motel 120 So. TON PONTIAC-BUICK, 155 S. Telpgreph-Pontiac Tuts., May 13th Rochester, Rochastor'.	I from 1 to 5 p.m.
$3254460 GENERAL OFFICE
Receptionists, typists, accounting varied positions. Fee
$350-$500 1 SECRETARIES
Good skills, no ago limit INTERNATIONAL personnel
Full Charge Bookkeeper
NURSES AIDES
All shifts. Training program on a year-around basis, good working conditions. Experienrod- and inexperienced. Apply In person any weekday, from 9:30 to 11:88 a.m.| Seminole Hills Nursing Home, 532i Orchard Lake Ave., Pontiac. lURSERY SCHOOL KITCHEN' help, part time, call ,673-0007.	[
Beauty ft ; Operators
For Our New. Beauty Salon
THIS IS AN EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY WITH MANY FINE BENEFITS
INCLUOING 48 HOUR WEEK
PAID HOLIDAYS . VACATION
PURCHASE DISCOUNT
APPLY IN PERSON:
EMPLOYMENT OFFICE
HUDSON'S
PONTIAC MALL
Good handwriting essential. 40 hr. weak. Liberal dls-. count, p|ld Insurance and older banaflts.
PANTRY-SALAD LADY
Experienced. Hotel, restaurant or club work. Good wages. Paid vacations, sick laave. Pleasant working conditions. Apply In parson. Orchard Lake Country Club. Or-
BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED
All RH Positive All RH Nag. with positive factors
A-nag., B-nag., AB-nag.
MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER Pontiac	FE 4-**47
1342 Wide Track Dr„ W.
Mon. thru Frl., 9 a.m.-4 p.n ______Wad, t p.m.-7 p.m.
PART TIME «UlO FOR A60TEL 789 S. Woodward
COOKS, WAITRESSES AND DISH-washtrs wanted. Eatmore Restaurant, 929 W. Huron. Apply '
CARETAKERS, !
PERSONALITY AND „	....._
will win this position In this top office. $383. Call Pam Fox, 334-2471 Snelllng B Snelllng. _________
keeping, short hand halpful but
Pontiac Laundry, 548 S. Talegraph.
Ratl's Drlva-ln OR 3-7173.
SHORT ORDER COOK, GOOD wagts, hospitalization, paid M life Insurance apply at Big Restaurant Telegraph and Hi SUMMER CAMP COOK, CONTACT
SUMMER WORK BABY SITTING, light housewoark. 626-4931.
1ST. SHARP FOR WALLED i area. Will train tha right gal. Call Kathy S3ww. 334-2471.
WAITRESS WANTED, FULLitlME Apply |n par«ofl only. Restaurant, Keego Har-
WAITRESS, NEXT APPEARANCE — S?h's Restaurant — Keego 682-9857 before 5 p.m.
MlTRISS WITH SOME GRILL
raMay,Xwork"<Mlnlt lunch"* ~ Pike.
WAITRESSES, DINING ROOM AND cocktail lounge. Apply in parson, Roman Gate, 4616 N. Woodward, Royal Oak. ■	»
WAITRESS
Experienced only. OR 3-9353. WAITRESS WANTED, NO EXPERI ence necessary, paid vacation; Ap-
^'"Lk.’sr-300 Bowi'100 s-
some sales experience — .Call' tor interview- — Hag-strom Realtor, MLS — 4989 , W. Huron - OR 441331 -
REAL ESTATE SALES
a art expanding our bperatlons
higher Income In the Reel Estate profession. "Incentive pay with Profit Sharing." If. you art presently earning over1 S7380 per year, and Want to Increase your Income, it ||j|to_pey you to Investigate, this
KAMPSEN
luroifstraet
tt Hurt
FE 4-
SALESPEOPLE
Earn $18,080 and up per year, experienced In real estate or wo will train. Call FE 3-9471, ask for Mr. Schram or Mr. Phipps.
Instructioni-Sdiools 10
RIDING DAY CAMP. RIDING AND swimming Instructions. Also stable Ewing
Work Wanted Malt
A-V CARPENTER^WORK - LARGE
HAVE PICKUP, WILL WORK -Basement* and garages cleaned, trash hauled, unwanted articles picked up free or at Httle cost.
PAINTING-INTERIOR-feX+SfelQR-Reas. rates. Work guaranteed. FE 5-0163. FE 2-*~'*
PAINTING, LAWNWORK,
r TIME ODD JOBS OF ANY 5.. Exp. In mallno anH n,x t. 334-3421.
PURCHASING AGENT OR ASSOC I ^wto" functions. If years diversified |H|gb administrative end experience. MY 3-
RESIDENTIAL DESIGN AND PLAN-nine s erv Ices. Remodeling and 473-1479. After 4. All , day
new. 6 Salt s. : lETIWEf
Worlr Wanted Female 12
1 DAY IRONING SERVICE, REF.
Maxine McCowan, FE 4-3367 IRONINGS - WEBSTER, CROFOOT ~ FE 5-3496.
CALIBER —
__________Jeslred for an
axduslve club in Birmingham — Living quarters and other f banaflts. Write P.O. Box 13. Bloomfield Hills, Mich., 41813. Give resume work history.
HOUSEWORK — NEED TRANSPOR-
MIDDLEAGEO CHRISTIAN COU-
Long Like. Nam*, a
RESPONSIBLE COUPLE TO ASSIST . on thoroughbred WegamMegM^gW general farming, nouse. 58 miles t nished home an. ences. Press Box Si
KF;
334-241T Sne
pURi
Dearborn ol
SECURITY OFFICERS
— Born office needs. male and female security officers for Pontiac area. Must furnish blue p< type uniforms, part time wort min, age 21. 278-1*48, Dearborn.
SHOULD YOU
Make an employmant change? NOW IS THE TIMEI
Michigan Bell
i 1363 Cass Ave., rietroit Phone: 393-2815
WANTED DANCERS, MUSICIANS, Singers. Jerry Yates. Talent' Aaen-cy. 148 N. Saginaw St., Pontiac.
WORK N I G rt f S, MUST __ .. years of age, for Cashier. Apply In person. Champs Drive-In, MtoM terford. 5115 Olxle.
Soles Help, Male-Female 8;A
* 2 EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE
Salespeople to replace 2 who leaving tha State's — taka o currant prospect file — hottest flee In' tha area. Many proi tional opportunities. Cell EM 34703 —Hackett* Realty for Ihtorviaw. EM
you. EM 3-8703.
career Is awaiting
dealer experience. Phone 1417-5437.
HOUSEKEEPER, CHILD CARE
FURNACE CLEANING SPECIAL
Oil, coal, gas furnaces and duct Work with large power vacuum trucks. Free estimates. Limited' time otter. Orv's Furnace Cleaning Service. Days FE M542, eves. 5M-
LANDSCAPING AND BLACK DIRT, laying sod grass. Contact Mr. Johnson, FE 4-7607. 155 Grandview.
Garden Plowlag
PLOWING, DISCING, R6TO TlLL-ing, grading,^toP'roll, gravel and
CauvalascoaMlarsing 21
’, VACANCY FOR
Painting t:nd Decorating 23
l-l PAINTING, REASONABLE Free tst. Experienced 338-3570.
DESIRE INTERIOR 1 Waterford area. Free OR 34304 or OR 3-
Must have prevlou* experience.
Cell 646482*, 9 «.m. to 5 p.m.
FOUNTAINEERS ,	|
Girls — married or single/ Are you looking for summer work? Do you need money! for school or that extra! something for the house? If your answer to either of queetions is yes, then con' sider a [job at Cunningham's.
The fountain business is brisk during the summer months and extra help is needed. You will find the job most interesting and the Income derived from this work relationship, quite good. You will also have the opportunity of purchasing, at a discount, most of the items sold |n our stores. This is a sayings which the whole family can enjoy.
Our fountain stores in your neighborhood are now taking _ applications from people interested in working this summer.
Cunningham's Drug Stores In Your Neighborhood
FRONT OFFICE. GREET PEOPLE. I
GENERAL OFFICE. PERSONALITY and light typing fill this. $258. Call Kathy Shaw. 334-2471. SntHIng B snelllilg.
GENERAL OFFICE
Bookkeeping, typing, some sh band. Excellent and permanent
SUSr &g.m,'Ure App,y 404
GENERAL BOOKKEEPING AND
5“ »»*■	nyiw iukc area.
To do posting, aalos, and genaral office work. Must bo good typist. Trained for bookkeeping or bookkeeping experlneca helpful. Will -train enlv If Interestod in tong' —	4-2616.
URL WANTED TO WORK IN| cleanars, will train. Apply West Points Cleaners, 1015 TW. Long Lake Rd. end Telegraph.
. or F. BHilp WantiB M. or F. 8 Hslp Wanted M. or F. 8
HUDSON'S.
-Pontiac Mall-
IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR POSITIONS plf OUR NEW STORE
CAT PQ full time (40 hours) and part time (days or evenings). O/TIjEjO”	Men *,-women s, children's wear; also stationery, can-
dy, shoes, sporting goods, and other*. <7
CLERICAL-	t'm# ^ hours) in our new store.
FOOD SERVICE- t'me' ancl p°rt time. Hostesses , waitresses,
cooks*, counter service, and bus boys.
MAINTENANCE-Part time avai,abta For evenings. STOCK— Ful1 tinie and part tima available.
/	EV •
WRAPPING— Fu11 time ond part time employment available.
,	ENJOY SUCH BENEFITS AS:
Fine Earnings — Purchase Discount Paid Holidays — Paid Training Period AND MANY OTHERS
APPLY IN PERSON J EMPLOYMENT OFFICE
Customers lobby - Basement MONDAY Thru SATURDAY
Patimat PMfH— II
' MINT, PAPERING Tapper. OR S-7031 PAINTING INTttklOR aNB • Jg^lpr. Fr»e estimates. in-
FINANCIAL ASSI8TANCE TO OB-patents «nd process inven-• Apply lo Pentlee Press Box

QUALITY WORK ASSURED. PAINT-Ingt peperlng, yell washing. 673-
HOME-OWNERSPOLIClEs AT 3AV-ings up to. IS percent, Hempstead. Barret and Associates, 334-4724,
IHPBkaMs I .L.
to t#nt	||
i	to year old
abato LaSV ~ *
4187.
* URGENTLY NEED
IS Elizabeth Lake m.
Vi HOUSEHOLD OF FURNITURE wanted. Auctlonland. OR 4-3347.
cash for pUrnIIvrr and W
pllances, l place or houseful. Ptar-lOtri r E 4-/881.	-----
..fro*Oftt cli
Wonted Miscenoneous
THE PONTMO PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 16, iflef
WANTED POR I WEEKENDS JUNE *5Hage tor. S on baautlful take. Upper Peninsula. Pontiac Pratt
TOUNO MD Wlijft td'ilEt ft*. spactaWa 2- or 3-bad room house f^fu/nlehed apt. In Pontiac
i resume to Pontiac Pratt
Sfcmo Ihtat a—law	33
GENTLEMAN TO SHARE NEW 3-p,rklnfl-
«MN TO SHARE HOME: INQUIRE at M2 W. Walton Blvd. after 4
Real Estate
1 TO 50
tS, „
ERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS
WARDEN STOUT, Realtor ??JL2P3S! ____p« «>«
HAVE BUYER .WANTING 3-BED-*"**“ In fellzabr"- | ^ ^ r 3 floors i 817,000 -
•n^behind* ’*Mwnanfs*~ tr torctosuro. A^.y8a£64ao0f
teat Haases, Famished 39
COZY 1-BEDROOM home ON jCA. —. cpmplotoly furnished,, Hi, t-KMT —— children.
ihifeEPONi ~H5mB
relocate, will pay up ti
Coll Mr. Loop at O'Neil
:IMe oa *•■»» or fe tar
. LOTl-WANTBD IN PONTIAC-
YORK
—.—  -.call aarty for bow
dealt. No doting cads, currant rate of Interest, hackett REALTY — 7730 COOLEY LAKE RD. UNION LAKE. tattdWS. •
JACK LOVELAND
'CASH:
41 HOURS
CONTRACTS—HOMES EQUITIES WRIGHT
313 Oakland Aye.	-----
ASPHALT DRIVEWAYS ANO COM-merdel. Specialize In Seal Coating. Free estimates, no |ob too kggiEgi •'•) roofing dona.
bi£, also roofln
ASPHALT DISCOUNT PAVING CO. Spring special — wholesale - Free estimates, FE 5-74S7. DRIVEWAY SPECIALISTS. FREE Estimates. FE 5-47S0.
ZlKO - ASPHALT PAVING. WE spsclallza In black-topping and alio seal coating. Make old driveways
motes. 4420T34.
WE SPECIALIZE IN REPAIRING, ' g automatic
tg automatic and stons. Band ad-
BRICK, BLOCK, STONE - NEW and repair, specialize In fireplaces. 331-1770._______________
ADDITIONS-GARAGES Masonry. All kinds of alterations. Red Welch Construction Co.
C. Welch	Joseph Rayner
OR 4-0051	1 *™
ANDERSON-GILFORD, FE Milt.
Ihgbear-c6H*t*uction. "
• N: Perry. FE 3-7033.
s N. Saginaw G B f
references (ram previous lobs. Deal direct with todMH MU Building. MY 3-7371.
Carpentry
rooms, rough or finished; dormers, porches, recreation rooms, kitchens bathrooms. State licensed. Reas, Call attar 5 p.m.
I........ RECREATION
kitchens, free estimates.
CARPENTRY, NEW AND REPAIR. ■ Free estimates. 33S-778L INTERIOR P I N I S H, KITCHEnI “ gDidli|j^ 40 years experience —
-1 CEMENT WORK OF ALL kinds, free estimates. FE 5-4310. CEMENT WORK, ALL’KlNOS
CEMENT FLOORS FOR TARTICU-
CEMENT WORK OUR SPECIALTY. Nothing too largo or smalt. 23 years axp. Free estimation. 433-
Cement and Block Work
-Guinn's Construction Co.
FE 4-7477__________Eves, FE Mil
L T I-C0L6Ee6 PAtlOS, P6fif-
Dressmaking, Toiloring
EKTtV Wi DRESSMAKING
Driver's School
APPROVED AUTO DRIVING ■chant FE ' M444. Free Home
Dry Wall Service
COMPLETE DRY-WALL SERVICE, remodeling • and new, fret «stl» matte—427-3239.
Dock Sales - Servics
PERRY I
47S7447
BROWNIES HARDWARE
Septic pielIos, dry wells,
TRENCHING, DIGGINGS. S. Lucas Waterford Sowar Const. 473-0240 -
A-l NEW, REROOF -Csll Jack. tn. OR 3-9320.
CUTLER CONTRACTING
Licensed-Bonded 1	■ FE 3-4144
FENCE REPAIRS, OR COMPLETE lobe, fast service, 25 years experience In Pontiac, Howard Acker,
CLARKSTON ROOPINO CO One of the "Bast." - 673-7297 HARTFORD ROOFING AND SlD-*—---------- ---- 1243. FE
lREAL valub
*V»wlffTTi A SCHOOL TEACH-, ar who needs s nice 3-badroom homo near Pontiac Lake Read
NEED CASH?
another home? w,
•cam ■■■	.
takas at piNallRaalty. Inc. OR
tomaT cash far your eauL • will buy your homo tor
T&ir,n£5Q.!L‘d'.»'e!a
rry. II
Ray O'Nall Realty, Inc; 3520 Ponltac Lake Rood
SPOT CASH ■~—
P0* OUiCfC^CTIO., CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REAL-™	"“*■ ““ EVENINGS
TOR, OR 4-C35I (
VE HAVE BUYERS poE HdMli farms, cottaaos, acresge, lake and nw^Ptawsrtyr Call dSlsct, Jf In-teresled. Bill Jannlnn Real Estate 474-MOO or write,' 37411 Grand Rlv-Farmington, Mjchlpan.
WE HAVE A CURNT THAt NEEDS * 3-bedroom homo with be so mar' 325.000 range. Call or write confidence — Richard Moara McCullough realty, 34 Highland, Pontiac. 474-2222.
Salt Housts_	4<
Brown
Realtors B Builders since 1232 LUXURIOUS TRI-LEVEL |n- excfllen ——- m Waterford. Ext decorated with 2 1 3Vb ceramic I family room vail, tormel 1
E, RANCH-TYPE -----full baaamant.'gM haalTt-
ar«“„r«ssi'
SweSaed'pBrdSL. K,nn#,h ••
NEW XbEDROOM, 1235 MO N T H, Waal Bleomflald, 343-2237.
wEst of general HWEItAL,
4 roam brkk, IVi baths, gas heat. florage. baaement. 2138. «73«32.
Mat tikB Cottays 41 FOR A VACATION
Apt, slay* |lya._ Baautjful gro Cata’aki
Vacation
•Sir orlon. Privacy, raft, boat. Sleeps 7. MS par wk. 423-
QWNER IN MILFORD. 3-BED-am, all brick ranch. Full base-! snt. Ceramic bath. 753 Friar,
4-1845.	________
®v OWNER - 3-BEDROOM BRTCK
Rent Rooms .
42
SLEEPING rooms for gen-namah with kitchen privileges, (op-WonsO Call batora It aTm. or after 4:30 P,m. 324-0372,
FRANKLIN MANOR. BUSINESS-women's -residence. Attrietwf Ra^ablt^khchsns. FE 3-7028.
LARGE CLEAN ROOM, PRIVATE entrance. 34 Norton.
KOOM FOR LADY, WltH 6k WltH-out kitchen ——---------------
ROO
SAGAMORE MOTEL cuaancy, 848 par w.„. lea. TV, tela phone. 782 8.
Apartments, Furnished 37 toT%EAt%
Raamt jWiHi Board
at 273 Baldwin, cell 338-! BEtwEEN TEL-HUftON - MAlC,
BEDROOM EFFICIENCY, KITCH-enette, FE 3-2241, FE 2-4323.
Eoom
Rent Office Space
ROOMS AkO BATH. COUPUt only, 350 deposit. 474-1381.
2 AND 3 ROOM CABINS, ADULTS • r. 4374 Dixie, Prbyton.
2-ROOM APARTMBNT, PRIVATE
R. Price. FB 4-1024.
111)411 ludmwiBPumimni
—.	material. Free asti-
abia. 482-7514,
2MI, FE 3-4193.
47
Establish your am Medical Bum General Hospital.
ATTENTION DOCTORS B DENTIST
|„ |h)j Mg,,.
ig near Pontiac
_ ------------- CsK Ray oT
>r complete detallv. OR 4-2322.
ORION TWP., M24 NEAR 1-75
Minutes from everywhere, N building, .carpeted, paneled, conditioned, ample parking, li for CPA, MD, Mfgr. Rap., In anea, Lawyers, ate. Offices	„,J||
Suites, from M3 Including heat and! 2 bedroom lanltoriel services.	porch. Lsri

^Lovejy^toks front
and fireplace, baeemeMl 1 price 337,500.
Les Brown, Realtor
502 Elizabeth Lk, Rd. (Across from tht Mall) it FE 4-3544
Said Houses
^ HALL
0—7
*?|M Hqbbbi , ^l^ljaww^ >	49
GRACIOUS OLDER HOME
bedroom 1 ...Ing mam >
Brow
_—— — ...Jttd, iar« garage. Homo la vacant tor ai Largo Vi acre, lot road. Only 312,100, l closing costs only to!
Beautifully 1
■I RHODES
basement, new 2 JE?	Y** W
3to farms’ Unb,'"btt «
Warden RedtyfffidQB
3434 w. Huron, Pontiac 333-7157 Onfi' tljtoD, ^trrol ”* ***^"* FRONT HOME. 11 spaclaua
•rjilci,Ba kitchen, 1 largo bddrooms with plenty at closet space, ceramic bath, clean gas heat. 814,500 to-! tal price with only lO pet. down. Only l loft, to call tarty.
CLARKSTON AREA - clean and neat 2-bedroom bungalow, gleaming hardwood floors. Tiled bain, An-
HERRINGTON HILLS, 3 BEDROOi brick ranch, finished basement, g rage, owner. 8)7,200, FE 5-2831.
KINZLER
. NEW RANCH HOMES
All white aluminum axtarlbr wit attached 22x22 garage. 4 dallghtfi ---"“i gleaming oak floor-
HAYDEN
Northern High* area. 8iI,300.Te'|N>w Hoit,9S_10 per Cfnt Dll.
■ Irl-laval finished family i car garage 812,200 plut
CHEROKEE HILLS
J2S2 Voorhels. Open dally Sun. 2 to a. Owner eager to 24>adropm brick ranch. Sill V • Mrga. wall landscaped Cantrally> located to schools shopping. Early pastytlen. “■
CITY OF PONTIAC
2-bedroom ranch, lull basement, rage, quick possession, take i
CLARK
tile. Fireplace In recri — Oak "sari. Plaster..
Carpeting and
tlert room. Oak walls. Gas heal drapes, “ "■ ‘
.	______ Colonial, ..
thermo-seal windows, 2 ... ......
.r	garage. Your choice of several
£1	distinctive -elevations. 827 *“
i p,u*T^J;0pjwAcc^plTEow 01
| J„ C. HAYDEN Realtor^
,343-4404_10735 Highland Rd.JM
I HIITER
ledga-j IMMEDIATE POSSESSION -,h cer- mi, 2 bedroom and bath, el siding, .large lot. $8900, land i
SUBURBAN. While Lake Twp. Good
ilw WSsS
IjSUBLfRBAN - HANDYMAN'S SPE-
n wa could build our ranch orI. homssltas In • community at lino o E* sail v rnrrui	homes. Call today for details.
2,!A^itY,SPECIAL 'ALBERT J. RHODES, REALTOR
side city. 7 spacious rooms FE 8-2306 251 W. Walton FB 5-6712 ltl!h *nhh.Ct l.%H^J.J MU^IP^ UiTINGSBRV!^7'1
Sll ROSS
"VENICE OF MIOIIGAN"
BIG 4-BEDROOM Homes
Colonials.. .tri-level from $28,900 total house including lot
, . golt course v'. . 10 miles boating . . . city water . . . tennis
"“'LAKELAND ESTATES
slush carpatlng, draperies. 2 elec-Irlc ranges, I electric refrlgera-lors, washer and dryer am*
Extras. Owner moving to snd really a big value at to bank mortgage or Gl loar
BRICK COLONIAL
living room, full basement end paneled family roam with fireplace. 2-car garage. A wonderful! value at ^323,400, ^10^ per .cent II, [
OrJ0HN KINZLER, Realtor !
12, Dixie Hwy.	423-0335
Across tram Peckers Start
ullipl,- List tag Service_Open 9-3
MCE FR&NT - 2, POSSIBLY 3 bedrooms, welk-out basement; hot
3994*fLarnohi. 473-8233. °, op,ion*1 ,
LAKE
n PRIVILEGES
cleaner. 4-electrlc and gas yari lamps. 2 car garagt, Good tan 'dy beach. Nicely landscaped tal (Possession 30 days after closing Pull price 037,900, terms -even
LAKE PRIVILEGES: BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP: 3 bedroom brick with large carpeted living room,
size activity' room, Gas*' heal Fireplace fixtures and screen Included, brick plantar dividing llv-1 Ing room and dining all. 2Vi carl attached garage. Excellent neighborhood. Shown ||i-----■-*—t1
Price S24.500.
- excellent 3 bedroom! Underwood Real Estate
ier, walkout basamant, 625-2613 8665 Dixit Hwy.,Clarkston! ..4w*.w .A.i»it fireplace, |___If no answer, 625-5015
car oarage, i OPEN DAILY : bath, 1
I doors, attached 2'/>|
i by eppolntmi
1103
CLARK REAL ESTATE 42 W. HURON St. F 3-7080 Multiple Listing Service___
CLARKSTON AREA
heat. Out Ells. Lake Rd. to Ro lyn, N. to open sign or csll B. ( HIITER, REALTOR, 3792 Ell Lake Rd. FE 2-0179, alter 8-p.n
Charming 4-bedroom older bon In small community — sm< - barn — fenced back yard large lot — near school screened porch tor large famll OC .3570.
HOWELL .
Town & Country, Inc.
Highland Branch Oil Ice
PHONE: 313-685-1585
LAKE OAKLAND HEIGHTS
This Is a real sharp 3-bedroor home with an attached 2Vi ca garage. Yard is fenced, owne
YORK
j,giga,
Boss home}
MODEL: 623-0670
41 S, Telegraph Rd. FE 5-0591
Royer
Richard S. Royer, Rector WILL SELL OR BUILD
If you want a quick sale at your tame, lot, acreage, or farm — list
WE TRADE OR 4-03431 Hwy. Drayten Plains
HURON GARDENS
rV older homo with lull bai and garage. Conveniently near schools, shopping, a
IMMACULATE
s best v
i full v

STARTER HOME
Good investment for hand^ mi
Floor Sanding'
FLOOR AND WALL TILING Caramlc-vlfiyl-asbestot fork guaranteed	4734424
klTCHtN LINOLEUM SPECIAL Armstrong Linoleum from sas oo Labor-matarla^juarr
Janitorial 4ahricee
SPRING CLEANING -
WINOOWS and'walls. FE 2-7117.
-1 COMPLETE LANDSCAPING -specializing In broken concrete, retaining walla. Proa estimates. J. “ Wellman. 331-8314.
MtjRION
SOD, TOP
gravel. Del. INSTALLATION OF SPRINKLING
.....---------- —j auj0
Estimates given!
I. Price. FE 2-1034.
Sand—Gravel—Dirt
BULLDOZING- FINISI
A-10 STONE, 40-40, ROAD-FILL black dirt, mason stone. FE 8-2224. BEACH SAND, FILL blEt, ANY
Delivered. FE 44888.
bulldozing, Black die
dirt. 224-1731 or 3324448.
pBat humIs, t6p soil, deliv-arad, or picked up. Sun., holldayt.
3 ROOMS ANO BATH IN OXFORD.
Call after 4. UL 2-4342..
1 ROOM UPPER IN COUNTRY— iiiMtiHtflljr 325 weakly -425-3125 or 425-
IIVATE
PROCESSED GRAVEL, ANALYZED black dirt and top poll. Stt j&f Bulldozing. FE 8-4734.
TRUCKING. ALL STONE, ■ana products, road gravel. Tasted topsail, black dirt. Crushed limestone. 428-2543, S74404S.
6}TSirUiPE?;?!M
Liberty er ptwne 343-3748.
LADD'S OF PONTIAC
inclosed j qualified Gl»
3 ROOMS, FIRSTaPL(________
entrance, cerpetod. close . ... flee turn., porch and garage I 48 Norton Ava. FE 44417.
utlll-
ROOMS AND I baby welcome — r weak, 9100 dap. riHfBgiijaU-mdOj
Trep Trimminq Service
"DALBY & SONS"
_ stump, tree, removal
FE 8-3005 Mosquito Ipray FB S4885
YrEe trimming and removal,
Reasonebla. 321-1444.	'
al's tEEb tWTmmiMg, BUMOVAL,
free astlmatas, raetonabla. 428482V. 472-7148, FE 8-4248.
NEW RAILROAD TIES. ROUGH I hardwi ‘	* J J
434-7483.
TALBOTT LUMBER Glass taryica, wood or- *'■' Building and Hardware 1825 Oakland____________
Mail Poets
Moving and Storage
SMITH MOVING AND STORAGE.
4 -toe Eh
Painting and Decorating
A AAA PAINTING, INTERIOR-exterior. Free estimates. 3424374. A-1 PAINTING ANb PAPER HANGING .. THOMPSON ______________ FE 44344
Piaoa Taring
PIANO TUNING AND REPAIRING
Plastoring Service
PLASTERING REPAIRS Free estimates - 482-4432.
PlasteriNb. free CstiMAtE*.
D. Mayere, 3434825.
Plumbing & Heating
■I LIGHT MOVING, TRASH hsuied reasoluble. FE 4-1353. HAULING ANb RUBBISH. NAME —*‘P|ic*. Any Hme.FB 8-0025.
retee.FE 8-1344.
LIGHT HAULING, BASEMENTS, garagae dean. OR 34417. 4Z34847. IGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, nihbieh, mi dirt, grading — fronFand leading.
Trucks to Rent
to-Ton Pickups	lVS-Ton S
TRUCKS - TRACTORS ^ AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Semi-Trailer
Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co.
125 5. WOODWARD 44441	PE 4-144
mgam Daily including Sunday
TV Salts — Sarvkt
BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS, Walla cleaned. Reas. Satisfaction guaranteed. Insured. FE 1-1431 ■
Wisher Repair WASHERS-DRYERS
RESIDENCE WINDOW WASHING.
“*-----rates, can Clifford be-
p.m. 334-1230.
room apaRtmEnD*. 6n 1 Marshall. U00 a mo. no children. Atorriad couple only call 338-2482
12437 ME 4-4724.
BAIHj NICELY couple only, l tally, Dlkla Hwy.,
ADULTS ONLY, 4140 PI special rata to single year’s lease. 3354740.
t Business Property 47-A |
C. Schuett
3-7088 MA 3-0
Crestbropk
JB-LEASE, SOUTH TELE-h, reception room, conference
'^^dSI.?.,,dr^tontelfvh.tlFI37088 MA 3-0288
Knotty pine ^livinj
ramie tile kitchen* ____ —
Floored attic, full basement; don't welt. Priced at only 217.800.	l
C. A. WEBSTER REALTY	j
122-2221__f _______________ 428-2515
IN TIME FOR SUMMER block Hi Elizabeth L ' lieges, 3 I
4713 Oh
LAKE AREA
You will like this all-brick ranch home. Full basement, 3 nice bedrooms, excellent carpeting Included, beautifully landscaped lot with several fruit traae, 2-car garage, n Lose I ,,'°00 down wlth FHA torme.
sis Dan Edmonds
SEE THE NEW BEAUTY-RITE MODEL HOMES AT HUNTOON SHORES and LAKE ANGBLUS LAKEVIEW EST. 14 MODELS TO^HOOSE PROM. PRICE:
HoW To Gal Thera . . . Huntoon Shores - West On M82, right on Airport Rd., IVb miles. Open delly and Sunday, M. Lake Angelue Lake View Eel. . .west on Wallen, right an Cllntonvliia Rd., right on Coala Mesa. Open
. carpeted 1
lacked garage, redwood fenci 588, 482-4213._________
INK STILL WET
On this new. listing. ,
f.bopX
REALTOR
FHA PROPERTY MANAGEMENT SALES BROKER 325 Pontiac Trail, Walled Lake
- 624-4811
LCT us price your PRTNin5(
l«t ut design a home for you. C^l i anytime. 682-6120.
;_____AUBURN BUiLDERS___
j Mixed Area
JUDSON STREET, 4 Bedrooms .large living room, dining room am . kitchen, full basement, gas heal | aluminum tiding and 2 car garage. Just 111,140. with 11,703 down el 888
ris Houses	49
BEDROOM, PULL BASEMENT, 81,008 down, balance on land con-tract. 758-4184.
2-BEDROOM HOME, YIaS-around, Irame lake front, will go Poland contract or bank*torme.
2, 3
I ICE NB.. GILFORD
BEDROOMS, COMPLETELY decorated, large lot, Watt
- ... - BEDROOMS, Capa Cad, 81,828 dir* REALTY, FB 8-8114.
Cana's, FE 8-8443.
3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY
Drlvq out M-52 Just watt of Cass Lake Rd. to Candelstick. Directly
behind tha Dan AAaMInnh* inrinGaR
DAILY 12-8
am, family room and 2 car priced at only 818,220 plus alad In new tub with pavad I curb, guitar, sidewalks
GIROUX
V^iDF" W#4srid
'*>	^34.000 with "O" down (
; costs to Gl or $200 'E BUY	WE TRADE terms.
R 4-0343/	OR 4-8343
o™y»y..pt«inil, EVA HOWARD FE 2-6412
IRWIN	1 Miller Realty, 670 W. Huron]
garage, quick possession, ti
DRAYTON PLAINS
NEAR SASHABAW RD., - 2 miles S. of 1-78. 3 bedroom home, 2 car oarage, large yard Cyclone fenced, constructsJ	•"
DAN MATTINGLY
vtRY.NICE 4-460M APARTMENT. On Sylvan Lake. Working couple or middle aged ladles, preferred. 3135 -per mo. Utilttiea included. - 3)00 security dap. 412-3874.
- 2-BEOROOM. NEW. NEAR MALL Carpeted. Appliances. Air and sound conditioned, heated. Rtc. room. Adults No petqp Prom S135.
- BEDROOM, ELIZABE1 Williams Lake Rd., fully conditioned, washer a private Jji
2 BEDROOMS, FULLY CAR.-mioa, elr-r—-■—	-
refrigerator, apprwiani. aHW Lake privileges.
BEDROQMSr 1V» BATHS, A conditioned, private entrance, i tlo, laundry room, S175 per tr Located af Elizabeth Late a Williams Lake Rds. an a hill, dp *-L— DU 4-47SI.
APARTMENTS FOR RENT. Call OR F4182 aftor-4:38 pjn. AOOMS — MOOERN, 340 P|R weak. Security- 1 child weldonw ■ Broadway, Lake Orion.
J. A. TAYJjQR AGENCY
7732 Highland Rd. (M82) OR 441204 Eves. EM 3-9227 -	....
ROOMS, UTILITIES 9AIO, ID-
ROOMS ANb B A + H, LOWER, separate furnace and basement, refined adults, no pats. West side, walking distance to downtown, |75.
mO. ellllV 1«t. Writ* Pnntiar Prato.
Box 58.
- AMERICAN HERITAGE APTS. 3345 WATKINS LAKE RD. MANAGER'S APT. C-2
er and dry or, no peta or chIM S12S par month. 131 Onleda, General Hoapltal. FE 3-7424.
— —VHAPacNI' ■
NEWLY DECORATED, STOVE AND refrigerator and all uttmtas. D< call after 5, FE 2-7012.
ORCHARD Och;Et APARTMEN' Large Ttfrawi air cortd.
Sea manapar 17 Saknqr, Apt, 4 STEADY MFUABlR FAMILY FC^ n*wly .-decorated 2-bedroom and •ton house. Drayton Area. I child welcome. $135 . CaR between H
3 Bedrooms
LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS
MODEL OPEN
572 COLORADO 1:18 la S p.m. •— 4 day weak
WEST0WN REALTY
'	„ FE 3-2743 day.
■ After 7:38 PJn. — Ll 3-4477 BEDROOM, GARAGE, FIRE-place. In Pontiac. OA 8-2013.'* Sanders, Rep, “ .—
swimming mo) and rad « fence. 814,200. ffarms
,	Harvey J WILSON, Broker
OL 1-qopT *a1 0r*»en ~ L»P"r - 1-444---------f irst jnJyalue. _ .
Y0UNG-BILT HOMES
-really means bbttbr BILT
Russell Young, 134-3130
A REAL BARGAIN!
•broom ranch. Located an large
GAYLORD
Are You Tired of Looking?
Let ue show you this immaculate brick ranch homo with everything. Passible ,4 bedrooms. Lois of extras. In exclusive northwest area. Ownv says "sell." S3,580 down tg .4 ptf cant tend contract at 8113
elwooi ____________________________
TYaCHEO GARAGE, 1 BEDROOM home. 12,230. Model open 28754 Waltz. 454-2125 or- 434-1008.	~
Danlale Realty.
AUBURN HEIGHTS BEDROOM RANCH, 22 ft. roam with fireplace, full dining room, IW bath, full basement, aula, gat heat and Incinerator, pavad drive with 2 car attached garage, extra large 150x110 | Cheka location. Only 817,800.
TOM
REAGAN f Real estate 2281 N. opdyke _____________332-0184
Avon TOWNiRiF^mP MPP Rd. area. Spaclaua 3 bad-brick. Family room,., garage, r lot. S1M00. Owner Maying
___Make otter. WE TRADE.
NIX REALTY 481-0221	152-5375
BY OWNER. "5-ROOM HOUSE. 12
trOD^'mo*1^-*^ SSL
PE 8-3184.
OWNER, MEOROOM BRICK
ranch, large tot, nice area, S-
VA Mortgage, 473-1S54.
BY OWNER, NEW, 3-BEDROOM Kama, corner lot. fenciM. $12,500. $71 monthly. Near Fisher Body.
RENTING
: $78 Mo.
Excluding faxtt and Insurance /"ONLY
m Deposit
WITH APPLICATION .
1-BEDROOM HOME OAS HEAT
LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICA-TIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES.
PEOPLE WltH CREDIT PROBLEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH ~US.
OPEN DAILY AND SAT. ANO SUN OR COME TQ 290 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY
-For Immedifltfl^Aetion Call FE 5-3676 626-9575
FOUR BEDROOMS AND 'FULL basement In Auburn Heights area. Price 'includes 3 lots. Will sacrifice .for 38,500. Must sell-leav'-'" area. 852-3344 ter appointment.
E 'S-9493! t parcels. Excel-
ir approval. Stop 0 C8. MY 2-3121. FE
GILES
CiaudB McGruder Realtor
SELL OR TRADE
Two-bed room Heights for 1 Pontiac. Call
DOWNTOWN PONTIAC
PERRY PARK
Small 2 Bedroom bungalow. Living Room. Kitchen, bath, enclosed
GILES REALTY CO.'
Multiple Listing Service-Open Belddln Ava. ‘	, FE 5^)751
HQUY ROSE CENTER
DRAYTON AREA
MIXED AREA BARGAIN
3BEDROOM BRICK BUNGALOW -• TILE BATH - 3300 DOWN TO QUALIFIED BUYERS -	“
MEDIATE OCCUPANCY.
brick bungalow wlthl **WRIGHT REALTY CO.
la?'* T 383 Oakland Ava.	FE
'	~:30, CALL EM 3-41
FOR ALL KINDS
property'
iritis'’'family’"room^ with" liraplaceTI "■ :
attached _
kitchen with ...........—...
oven, refrigerator and

LAKiFRONlV
AFUik7::
PSV
NEW 3 BEDROOM RANCH
and aea waiH an good tendv beach. Priced $15,008 cash to mortgage.
' NEAR WALTON
RAY O'NEIL REALTY, INC:
1830 PONTIAC LAKE RD.
OR 4-2222
EE THESE 3 AND 4 BEDROOM Cotonlals. Tri-Levels Quad-Lavalp Bi-Levels. Duplication prices from 126,000. 90 par cant financing available. Lakeland EtteMs. On Dixie
r FE 40591.
SENSATION EXECUTIVE HOME
(4 Sensational Reasons)
1. Elizabeth Lake
..........2-story
YORK
SCHRAM
$550 DOWN
On this 4-bedroom home oil nett Road, full basement, large, family tlztd kitchen, brlck^|f|| place In comfortable living 2-car garagt, on large lot.
DIRECTIONS: Take Baldwin Clarkstan-Orlen Rd., left Eston Rd., right la Avalon.
NEW HOMES, RENEWED HOMES, farms, industrial, commercial, lakefronta, investment property. We
LAND CONTRACT
,550 down at S7! I its- you—Into this 3-bedroom]
Lauinger
REALTY *
1531 Williams Lk. Rd. el (M-S9)
674-0319
NORTHERN HIGH
3-Bedroom brick baeement, gee heat
Sr^ewMode
Price Starts af $11,750 On Your Lot
OPEN
Tuts,, Thurt., 5-8
ready to ynove Into. 3-car gt-
List With SCHRAM And Call The Van
..II JOSLYN AVE. < FE 5-9471 REALTOR____________ MLS
JOHN^GN
WILL TAKE TRADE
Large home on Orchard Lake A nue. Zoned Commercial, earner 180 x 100. Could be uied tor apt ments, rest home, lodge, Doctors Clinic etc. Plenty of parking space. Low down payment with balance flnenced by owner on land contract.
EAST SIDE
1 bungelo .at, full p n Land Contract, her* 4 call Carroll I
KENT
LAKE PRIVILEGES - nice 2 ... room home only 1 block tram Lake Pleasant near Lapeer. Priced 1— enough far 1 summer home.
j 3-BEDROOM HOME 01
•dree, nice 5-bedroom farm home I hardwood floor*, auto, heat, goad ~ Npw atom sided barn, 2 miles neighborhood. 313.000, " “ d—a
4922 OR 422-841!
HOMES, INC. At i
Floyd Kent, Realtor
t- -. 2209 Dixie Hwy. at Telegroi I PE 241123 or y> FE 3-7343
or, by appointment
FHA—GI—BANK TERMS 1 an M52 to Oolane 0 'block st of White Lake Twp. Hall),
483-5802, It busy 481-5400
New 4-bedroom, 1 Vi baths
INCLUDING
full basement, birch kitchen cabinets, formica counter taps, oak floors, kitchen pantry, 8 storage closets, alum, siding.
Lauinger...
REALTY
1531 Williams Lk. Rd. at (M57)
674-0319
SOME OF THE BEST VACATIONS
Are spent at home — whan you have all the-facilities tor Summer Fun, Swim, fish, wattr-tkl In br
, Live I
af Watkins
renovated cottage — huge (tone fireplace dormitory lyge^ upstairs
and sea your next summer'* fun spot. 117,J00.
HAGSTROM, Realtor
- Multiple Listing Service *08 W. Huron	OR 441358
OR 34222__________
STRUBLE
Gl - NOTHING DOWN
For quick sale — owner hat reduced down payment — 3 bedroom heme In Auburn Haights area with Rochester mailing. Square 17' living ream, large kitchen, part
■till,
SB*.
MS*.
------d slab
or carport.
NORTH CITY
1* bedroom aluminum sic city water, aewor, gat f living room, 7W kitchen ty af room far dinette
- sa Bought an beat of terms.
MILO STRUBLE FE 5-6514 FE 84025
3M1 Highland (M82)
supervised beach. Priced r duced SITtSOB good moi gaga can be arranged.
ROCHESTER - LIVEENOIS .... burn Rd. area — Help! Owner transferred, mutt sett mis unusual 4,bedroom brick bl-level, garage, hjnjtod acre. Listed at 322J00. Make NIX REALTY 451-8131
Rochest«r-Utica area
Family room In Rile nice 1-bedroom ranch with 2-car garage and large tot. 2144)00 with 10 par cent down.
SHEPARD'S REAL ESTATE
Rochester	4S1-050S
VON
Bunt to 1784.
Ing. Garage,, 1 Large living n inant with ItT
Walk-out 1.
recreation room. Lore or. npsrars and. nice landscaping. Only $17,200.
Just the placa to retire
This 4-room leg heme to lust what yewtop bean look Ing fcjrl
. It I
car Jnoto I___
175. In * good m IMi miles mom the ronnec mail. Only $14,200.
VON REALTY
GEORGE VONDERHARR, Realtor n the Mall ' ’ MLS Roam lie 482-S88& E buay^emae
C—8
•	r %.	- ssgi
THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1967\
Val-U-Way
5 ACRES
Late Angel u» Rd. An excellent l1"* *•*—? with large k 116 baths.
features a large living room, separata dining area, compact kitchen, full basement with gat fur fenced yard, alum, awnings, p at only tlttto an FHA tarns.
OFF SASHABAW
Ona at the nicest homes In .... area. 1 large bedrooms, ultra-modem kitchen, hat water heat, large n--1— —— sad -‘inlng area, 2-car » alum, siding, at only $l$,M0
living row
HV
with SSOO
R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR	FE 4-3531
845 Oakland Ave.. Open f to f
Waterford
4 BEDROOMS — IV* baths, thl. two story Cape Cod Is well located In Elizabeth Lake Estates wl<h
lake privileges. Finished batr-
—garage — all for $17,900. 1
WATERFORD REALTY
4540 Dixie Hwy.	473-1273
Multiple Llstlhg Service
Watts realty-	427-3447
19S4 MU at Bald Eagle Lake e
We build custom homes -
Wideman
BOATING AND SWIMMING
Season Is lust ahead. We have ideal 2-bedroom ranch home
LAKES. ONLY S
Frushour
LAKEWOOD VILLAGE
Words elona cannot describe tt beautiful 3 bedroom trMevel wl full basement, this brick and alut -home features a large carpet
Priced to sell quick at
Looking for a nice water ranch — with carpeted living fireplace, 2-car attached garage and with a nice location? WE HAVE ITII Thdre to 100’on
with a 14-X20- boat house l_____________
beautiful lot. $17,300 - Your home equity could serve as down
NEAT AND NIFTY
This 2-bedroorrf bungalow has -15’ living room, full basement, gas heat, blacktopped street, and th-rlght price. $1,900 fake , over th land contract and have''a monthl payment of $75.
JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor
5730 Williams Lake Rd- ML
674-2245
FE 5-8183
NORTH SIDE .
Three bedroom bungalow. Liv Ing room. Kitchen end dlnlni area. Utility. Gas HA heat. Va
SOUTH SIDE .
Three bedroom bungalow. Living room. Kitchen and utility. Vacant. About $$00 required.
LISTINGS WANTED
. Financing’ can be ar I MR. ALTON FE 4-S234
i. TERMS.
Silt Houses
DORRIS ILAZENBY
DAY II
THE COUNTRY Is I
■ M..... In town. If you're-1
liever In the Great Outdoors
ypu should consider this real____I
In an so-acre farm between Caro
and 'Kfijmleii, ,1-------------■-
bedroom bungalo
silo and saveral ____________  ...
$14,900 and we'll take your home In trade.
(WIFE PLEASERl' 12* by IS1 beautifully modernized	l—-
THRIVING COMMUNITY
FORD.. S lots with bull_ ____
still aveilable at a price range from $14,150 to $14,500 tor cemptoto package. A well constructed 3-bedroom aluminum sided ranch home, 27V*x34 with full basement, storms, .screens and aluminum doors. Marble window sills, outstanding
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
STOUTS
Best Buys Today .
SIX-FAMILY INCOME
NEW RANCHER
BEDROOMS-FULL BASEMENT 1§ BATHS—17' LIVING ROOM SEPARATE DINING-PANTRY IN KITCHEN . ,
13 bedrooms are large, 14* tm, sliding door-wan off m to patio, durabh gU ling on me exterior.
$13,950
On your tot or ours, 10 por cent down plus closing costa. We —111 guarantee sale of your homo ar — taka your equity or homo In trad*.
ROY lAZENBY,REALTOR
Open Dally from 9 to 1:3b p.m.
Sundays, l4 o.m. ».
4434 W, WALTON-OR 4-4001
O'NEIL
WHY NOT TRADE? WANT A PALACE? -
■s Buckingham, I
home, c|n be l
(narlMit triaii
you pif ti
ONE OF THE NICEST

apartments. Basement ar a. Tenants ci See It todayl
walk to work hen
SEE THIS BRICK BEAUTY
Idool location oft
> Rood, this
irata dining area, large :hen with largo amount d and work space, first ly room, basement, rec i fireplace, GAS hoot, car garage, estate sits
ALPINE SKI AREA
HILLTOP HOME situated on a beautiful, wooded and rolling 5-ACRE > , PARCEL. 24' custom kitchen with bullHns and dining area. Sunken living, room, carpeting d—es. Tito bath with
keep that riding pony.
OIATE POSSESSION - KI TER HURRY, A REAL BUY A1 $23,000. TERMS.
I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR
412 W. HURON ST.—334-4524 EVES. CALL 332-4490
[Why- Rent
Whsn You Can Buy
$150 Down
plus closing costs
Model Open
Daily and Sunday 1 to 7 p.m.
2910 Gants Drive. Just as 1-75 on Walton Blvd. 1st. | left 1 block to Genas Drive — Watch for signs.
PARSONSONS BUILDERS 33
WYMAN LEWIS REALTY
YOU THINK WERE KIDDING?
VACANT . . . Is this 3-btdroom
frlgeral
410,900,
■ Included. Selling- for
YORK
VB BUY	WE TRADE
)R 4-0363	OR 4-0363
4TH Dixie Hwy„ Drayton Plains
ARRO
E HAVE RELIABLE CUS BUILDERS WHO WILL BUILD ANY PRICE HOME ON YOUR LOT OR OURS.
ELIZABETH LAKE FRONT, 3 b room brid mm* mb “ plastered *
Including o
42' porch bra, ■uui.nni ana reatlon room with large I place and bar. Second kite In basement with cupboards lore. Gas heat. 1-car attached garage with summer kitchen. Loads of extras. Shads trees. Nicy sand beach. $37,500. Terms.

FRONTAGE & HOME
Located doss to Oakland University and includes 5-room 116-story homo, partial basement GAS "wto 24x24 gsrago. Properly app 67x517. A wonderful Investment
place for the children to play, ar garage, well landscaped cor-lot. Priced to soil at 124,500 t $2,400 down payment or your presont homo can be taken In trade.	4-12
GQ GET'EM TIGER I .
Ready to show the world i„ -made It? Show them In this thrss bedroom- brick beauty with atta"—' garaga and panatad family raJEH Let the atmosphere of th# beautiful landscaping surrounding you res" tot you live. Bulltlns, matching i frlgerator, full basemsnt r o s I makes this a wonderful buy. See today only S24.500, trade yo equity.	2
PAMPER THAT PRETTY WIFE
bv moving lr“
By Ktto Osan^l lwItM OppprlattlWts if
"STILL busyl My father must be giving me a taste of my own medicine!"
5
lots available. Plan to llvu on
1-4 Sat. «M Sun.
HOWARD T. KEATING CO. M W. 13 Mlto M ---------
lichen,
_____________J family __
place. Mg 216 car jarag one acre site which to
this dsluxe 1
» ■ sparkling ------
jteerful living
nmlng
talk
schools: Only $7,500 total prli easy G.l. forms.	*•,
Warren Stout, Realtor
1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 541 Daily till I
______Multiple Listing Service
’Ing room, family-a s separata dining .... basement, gat heat, attached garage, paved and lake privileges. Only
Ted McCullough Sr., Realtor PHONE 682-2211
ANNETT
Near Northern High
5 room Bungalow, full basement, new gas fumscs. Wall to wall carpeting and drapes.
Ottawa Drive Brick
Attractive 7 roOm home In excellent condition. Carpeted LR with fireplaco, combination OR and family room, ultra modern kltchon with
'BUD'
Realtors
upper floor, full basement, gas fired eteorH boat, auto-gas not water, additional lavatory and stall shower, 3 car garage, paved drive. $2,950 down, balanr- --land contract. Let us. shov
3 BEDROOM HOME APPROX. 5 ACRES
near Pontiac Airport; clean 116 story frame home wit bedroom down, 2 up, full dining room, automatic hoe. HU x 24' garage, ap-_.J smair evergreen I at $19,0000*
KAMPSEN
"IT'S TRADING TIME'
proximate ly 3
NICH0LIE-HUDS0N Associates, Inc.
40 Mt. Clemens St.
Fl 54201>
after 6 p.m. FI 2-3370
home that anyone would bo
'proud to own. IV6 baths, hot water hoot, plastered walls, birch kitchen with built-in appliances. Attached two- car garage with automatic door opener, paved drive. Located. In Pontiac Northern and Madison school districts. Qy all means see this one todaylll Only $25,950, TERMS OR TRADE.
SYLVAN MANOR
^ Four bedroom rancher, 116 baths, are on one floor. 26 x 15' living room with new carpeting. 12x9* dining room, 10x9* kltchon, utility room. Carport, paved drive. Offered at $18,500 with $800 down, plus costs on FHA Mtg.
IRWIN
LAKE FRONT
Nice 3 bedroom lake front. B Family-style kitchen with but— breakfast bar. Soft: walt-to-wall carpeting In living room. Hardwood floors. Gas host. Clean as • pin. Completely furnished with excellent furniture and accessories. 116 car garage. Call tor appointment.
BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP
with big fireplace. 2V6 car rage. Partial basement, pi $29,400.
JOHN K. IRWIN A SONS Realtors
313 West Huron - Sines 1925 Buying dr Selling Call FE 5-9444
MILLER
Aaron Baughey REALTOR
idvELY 3-BEDROOM BRICK RANCH In Carroll Acres will paled living team, 16 bath off i._„. bedroom. U'XtS' paneled family room "and attached garage. Large lot with 30' round, permanent swimming pool, r deep. Just S21.500 an. May terms.
LAKE PRIVILEGES with this 34m roam brick homo. New carpeting ... living and dining rooms, fireplace, auH porch, ceramic bath, gas heat, full basement, 2-car wage, 2 tots, Anchor fenced plus tots mors. Stf,-MR Tarim.
WEST SIDE INCOME In A-l repair, ft rooms, 4V6 baths. New gat furnace, new aluminum storms and scrasns. Vary dean with lots of carpet gad COMPLETELY FURNISHED -3mgd as 3-ua* but mm as a Off-street parking. Sea this money-
TIMES
I bedroom apartment;
excellent opportunity f
LAKE FRONT HOME
Hero to a nice homo on I Watkins Lake, 2 bedrooms w
75' canal frontage, $3,500, to por cent
Other ioo’ lots with lake prlvl $2,500. 10 por cent down.
Sislock & Kent, Inc.
1309 Pontiac Stale Benk Bid-.. 338*9294_________ '338-9295
WATERFRONT LOTS,- OXBOW owner at 145 Sholwell.
WHITE LAKE - LAKE-FRON1 _ bedroom, 2-car garage. Extras. Good beech. 887-5097.
Northern Property 51-A
HARRISON, NEW CABIN, $2500, $100 down, $30 por mo., also 1016 acres on trout stream, $3500. Terms. 402-3492 Otter 3:30.
and kltchsn. Big ... --------- .
of room tor pardon, priced . $10,950 on Gl terms closing costs
RAY O'NEIL REALTY
3520 Pontiac Lake Road Open Dally 9 to 9
Income Propnrty
LAKEFRONT
Ranch horns on excellent fis and recreation lake offered ypu at the price range of $16,500 and .when you con; tho appointments like «rx2B5' ... studio beamed ceiling living room, gas heat, brick fireplace, safe sand beach, radwood siding, a million dollar picture view ol the lake. I'm sure you«w>il make mis home as one of your must to
3 ACRES
With 2 bedroom shell home. Full basement with walkout feature, aluminum siding, most of tht materials will be furnished by sellers to complete this *-—■ cell for particulars and fir.. ... !"»* yw can buy this end with in a few years have vour private 2 acre lakd as a New offering to call early.
WHEN YOU $EBK OUR SERVICE YOU	.
JOIN THE MARCH OF TIMES"
Times Realty
!623.0600TeKrH,5,TC d.,1
4-H REAL ESTATE
2 FAMILY OUPLfX — Sri end bath down, 4 rooms
basomant, brick and stucco
slot). Price $13,500 - $5,000 down — $00 mo. Gl or FHA terms, available.
44 Dixie Hwy.	623-1400
Open ““ * |
Resort Property
FREE MAPS
of Mecosta County, tho Hi Water Wonderland showing to marvelous fishing lakos, swimming botches, deer ant . MB game hunting tends — where NEW completely modern cottages agg be bought on easy terms ......
$33 per month. SPECIAL: GENUINE REDWOOD 24*24 ...........
cottage and lot,
ERN, complete
well, pump, suPUMMtoMPMIII Copper plumMng, wired. From $34 per month at beautiful Merrll 1 -*•-4 mites north of Barryton on
Beautiful lots, taka front and -
from $10 per mo. on Townline Lake. WRITE TODAY tor .free maps, brochure,- plats- and full Information or phone 517-382-5597 for appointment. HENRY PHILLIPS, Owner, Berryton 143 Michigan.
TAKE OVER PAYMENTS. REPOS-sessed lots. Hlghland-Mllford area. Equity free. Rolling tend. S2S mo. 20 min. Pontiac. Open Sun. Bloch-Bros. 623-1333, FE 4-4509.
R 4-2004 FE 0-4234
Buzz"
BATEMAN
TRANSFERRED?
BATEMAN REALTY Will guarsnte isle of your present home Will Bateman Guaranteed Trade-li assist ypu Ih locating th 4 anywher
scaped to perfection. Sewer, tar, paved street. TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED.
Well cared for three bedroom brick with 2-cOr garage with automatic door opener. Carpeted living room and hallway. Ceramic tile bath. Eating area In kiltfwn and dining all. Pull basement with recreation room. 75x 150' fenced rear yard. Offered at 019,990. TERMS OR TRADE.
TED'S
. ALWAYS fRADING
WON'T
List long. 3 bedroom ranch In Waterford, 2V? car garaga, 2 acres of tend, family room,, close to schools, lakt privileges. Full price, $13,500. Nothing down to Gl's *’ 300 to other qualified buyers.
$1,000
tend contract. Out wm way, 2 bedroom homo In condition, full basement, somt niture Included. Payments only *90 por month. Pull price 09,-
FAMILY ROOM
Sharp 3 bedroom tri-level In Waterford, 216 car attached garage, paved street and drive, IV6 bams, gas bullf-ins, patio door off dining area. Let's trade equities at

IN ROCHESTER
This Income proparty i -3 furnished efficiencies .plus the
tower level Is a 3-bedroom------
haying a formdr*Blnlng* .......
fireplace and lull basomsnt. Properly also contains 2, vacant lots on which additional apartments may be built. $55,000, $13,500 down.
Lots—Acreage
ILEGES AND CLOSE TO COLLEGE) LAKEFRONT LOTS—ALSO OTHER BUILDING SITES.
WRIGHT REALTY CO.
382 Oakland Ave.	FE 2-9141
AFTER 7:30, CALL EM 3-4113 " *	" kinds of Properly
REALTOR PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" WHY NOT ?. ? ?
take a look at thl$ 3V6 A. p8rc with 240' ftp. on a busy hlg -* way. PossIbtRty of purchasing i additional 25 Atedioinlng th - Zoned light r— tod
IVOR
mo. For SS5,00
you can sit bacx ana weicn u money roll In.
-PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 W. Huron. FE 4-3501 OPEN WEEK NITES TIL 9 "
home of your choice nr in me U.S.A. Florida homes our specialty. No ci tor mis service. Cell tor -
WESTRIDGE
OF WATERFORD: Beautiful 11-room custom-built rancher near Our Lady of Lakes church and school. 6 rooms, 2 ceramic tile bams, ble fireplace end marble I grill. Large 2*27 paneled [teamed celling family room o targe specious site, beauttfullylMP “!£!!!' wjtb . underground sprinkling system. Ideally arranged tor family with Invalid, elderly parents to maid's quarter*	*-
actual cost at terms. Make yc NO. 93	I
DRAYTON PLAINS
SAVE MORTGAGE COSTS ........
comfortable well-located 3 bedroom with basement, gas heat, garage, glassed-in front porch.and carpeting throughout. It's nice and priced at only $11,500 with $2500 down and $90 per month. Batter not NO. 40
MAKE EVERYONE HAPPY
THE WHOLE FAMILY Will en|oy
this Immscuteto ^UtodliiaMMB
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP
5 acres approved for 41 unit mu tiple dwelling. Terms. .
AL PAULY
4516 Dixie, Rear
)R 3-3800	EVES. 423-0808
39,500 wim excellent
ful location. Prlctd at $17,500 with terms you can afford. Make your appointment NOW I NO. 11
ST. BENEDICT'S %
AND UONALDSON SCHOOL; lust around mo corner from mis 4 bedroom, 2 bam aluminum-sided home. Full basement, gas heat, gas Incinerator, 2 lots and fenced yard. Tha kids esn walk to school and shopping is close by. It's In excellent condition ond on excellent buy at $14,-950. As llttl# as $1500 down plus costs to|tatoM||todM|Mtof'‘l Todayl
handle. ___
MODEL HOMES
LAKE OAKLAND-SHORES: Colonials, Tri-levels and Rsnchors loaded with extras and custom features. Beautifully furnished end Deluxe quality ell the way. Duplication-priced on your lot as low as $19,950. Several new homos with Immediate occupancy |p mis subdivision, most
of them you can still choose -
own decorating colors. OPEN _
and SUN. 1-5 p.m. and DAILY 6:30 to- 0:30 p.m. Dlxlo Hwy. to Sato* baw/ right to Walton, 4fght to BataMan sign, left to Models.
TRADE YOUR EQUITY BATEMAN . REALT0R-MLS FE 8-7161
lake Propwft
A Mobile ’ Home Paradise
Loss man 100 miles from Po On the Rifle River. En|oy swimming, boatihg and fishing o of Michigan's finest rivers c
as little as $20 down, park your mqbilo home ond start Prices start at $995. For I Information end directions
C. PANGUS INC., REALTORS
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 30 M-15	Ortonvllle
CALL COLLECT NA 7-2»T~
Full price $1,000. Easy terms. 673-
CHOICE LOTS ON I Golf course, term; Call 425-3050, osk
kKE FRONT, available -tor' manager.
EXPOSED LAKEFRONT HOME
This carpeted 3-bedroom 4-^ear-*“ *•“— ■ bto -- treat*"
pletely finished. 2-car garage. 1 of sandy shore. Possession — I modiste. $27,900, $4,500 down.
C. PANGUS INC., REALTORS
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 030 MIS ... .	Ortonvllle
CALL COLLECT NA 7-2115
HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty
PONTIAC 1
2 nice Iota, jv . JPMVMPBMH and cloon 2-bedroom cottage, largo living room, fireplace, enclosed front porch. Only 012,500. Lind contract terms.
Everett Cummings, Realtor
2503 union Lake road EM 33200	3437181
LAKE FRONT HOMES -NEW Odiusad - J. U Dslly Co. —
LAKE FRONT
2-BEDROOM - FIREPLACE FULL WALKOUT BASEMENT GARAGE. $21,500. TERMS.
FLATTLEY REALTY
620 COMMERCE RD. 343-4911 PONTIAC, CLARKSTON, WOLVER-
- ---- 1	“99J, tit
i. beach-
mo. Fish, swim,
as. 15 min. Pont______
Bloch Bros. 623-1333,
Open 5 FE 4-451
TOWNSEND LAKE
MOBILE HOME LOT IN HOLLY: Norm Hill Drive, forms. C. L. Collins. Real Estate, Broktr, ME
PINE LAKE AREA
100x150' lake privileges building sites, Mil Individual or to bu"-'— Terms - By owner. 473-34M.
TODAY'S BUYS
1	ACRES, 990* frontage on I------
wood^ Rd. ^Independence ^Twp^—
2	ACRES, 1 mile norihwes Cterkston, 170* road frontagt,
110‘XISD’ CORNER LOT. In Clarks-
o Florida. 052-2012.
i N. OF CLAWStON -$4400 — soma woodtd same area — $7,000.
ROLLING ACRES ' ike — $795 per acre. -
Lots-Acroagg
Lkt Rd. Ortonvllle.
!LARKiTON >9 ACRE! WITH -r-prox. 1500 ft., road frontage. Fine
II tor ap-421-3135
CLARKSTON HILfk ESTATE
Approximately 116a
V6-ACRE WOODED LOT. Lake privl-’ leges on Door Lake. $4,950.
Clarkston Real Estate
154 5. Main	MA 5-5021
FRIED CHICKEN
G PROFITS In this national fron-chlzed business. Prims location. Recently opened. All now equipment. Paved parking. Total price $14,500. SEE IT.,
Warden Realty
GLASS TINTING BUSINESS WITH high profit mergeln, low overhead, prestige product, manufactured by E.- I. DuPont. Excellent growth opportunity. Mutt Mil Immediately. Will train and assiat you. Will orringo financing. Phono $52-1703, 1-5 p.m._______________
needs, wo have .. _. .... .. "Mlchlgans" Farm Keel Estate Headquarters Dean Rosily Co., Coldwater, Michigan. Okie A. Dean Farm Broker and Auctlonaar. Write or call 517-278-2377-days or 517-278-4137—nights.
ACRES IN ROLLING HILLS Estates, Clarkston area. $3900, terms. MA 5-1854.
SECLUDED 95 ROLLING SCENIC acres, fenced with 30 ai
Woods. Flowing Spring In ____
ol farm, Mvoral lake potentials, ranch, house built I 1953, I-'—*-building 24x00’ with attached 1 shed, 5 horse tie stalls, smell room, 40x44' polo typo barn, I and water In all Vulldlngs, for horses or boot cattle. 40 f No. of Detroit, 3 miles i Metemora Hunt Club, $79,000. appt. only — no Sundays. Rldgs-wsy Realtor, Pontiac 330-4084, .
YOUR HORSES ~ WILL SMILE
AND
SO WILL YOU
FARM HOME 1716 ACRES Neat 3-bedroom homo surrounded with beautiful Maple and, Locust trees. 2 barns and rolling tend. $27,750, $6,500 down.
C. PANGUS INC., REALTORS
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 130 MIS	Ortonvllle
CALL COLLECT NA 7-2015
BREWER REAL ESTATE
r with likt privileges.
Lauinger
ii REALTY
1531 Williams Lk. Rd. st (M59)
674-0319
Sale Business PrapBFty—57
COMMERCIAL 4 ACRES PRIME LOCATION
0 feet of prime frontage on l peer Road at 1-75 Interchani Give-sway prICs of lust $25,1 with $6,000 down on. land a... trod. It you ever wore presented wim a golden opportunity to invest In reel estate end watch your dollars grow dally,
Would be It. CALL NOW.
Warden Realty
COMMERCIAL
BEAUTIFUL ROLLING 7- AND 10-ecra homeiltos, Clarkston school district, one mite from expressway. Well restricted. $5,000-80.900
RUNNING
RUNNING
RUNNING
ACREAGE PARCELS
5 ACRES, rolling a
n bfecktof 1 all goa
I, slightly d, $4,750.
s, $5950, $450 down.
17 ACRES, SOS' of take frontagt, soma trait, near M-15. $14,950, $1600 down.
22 ACRgS, • breathtaking Via* across from stele tend, $13,000 Term*.
C. PANGUS INC., REALTORS
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 30 M-15	' "	< Orton
CALL COLLECT NA 7-2115
corner Dixie and M-15
GIROUX
INTERCHANGE SITE
Fxeollont .3400 w>mmsrclsl track
The Rolfe H. Smith Co.
244 S. Telegraph Rd, FE 3-7140
REALTOR PARTRIpGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" 540 sq. ft. Warehouse
equipment galore parking, for
Immediately wlndc““ Of I
■Iff

Sole or ExdtBffgt	58
WANT: , REAL ESTATE PROE-Isms
[IAVE: . . . Ability to.solve them
Tom Bateman, .Realtor FE 8-7161
m, cream ana nuM. Larga waxin cooler tod fraozor, west of Pontiac excelfent condition ond location. Cornier wim ample parking. Waterford township.
PRODUCE MARKET
Behmen Orion mk Oxford, 6 month operation at present, could be ar
---- If you wish. Real tsteh
—^------	118,958. 85,
you wMb. Real merit onto 8(8,1
BATEMAN
COriSMERCIAL DEPARTMENT -877 S. Telegraph RdA
338-9641	\
After 5, A Eves, cell 832-3751
it AUTOMATIC RIFLE. 8WAF FOR shellpw well pump. UL 2-5381.
2216 ACRES, SEMI-PRIVATE LAKE;
. CONTACT GUS CAMPBELL or URRf TRBFECK, 473-1215,
DAYS or EVENINGS._________
COMMERCIAL BUILDING, TO IN-handyman 9JI00 sq. ft. - 188, Hwy. M-S4,
Prapirtv 138 »
mt!lw!il
n payment o 41 FE SfeSOB
hlghwi 000 do-
. Rochester arts. Only Sl£-
STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE
2441 I. Lapeer Ed., Lake Orion 291-2000
EARN INCOME IN SPARE TIME
Emn _ excellent monthly 4 *9-7 hours weakly refllll ml lading money fr«“ In-operated dlspem **■ NO SELLING. I
experience
needed. ‘Irau
references, ifeiww iu ez,iuu cesn to Invest. To arrange local Inter-vtow, writ* (IncMi phono no.)
^	I.V.A., INC.
5741 CENTRE AVEwra-PITTSBURGH, PA.

I - GROC license: ■ silent «MI
Monty tf
iLkena
■, LOANS TO ftrOOQ
Isually on first visit. Quick, trli y, helpful.
FE 2-9206
Oakland" wan'co.
mt Pontiac Stele Bank Bldg--Friday 9-7 5m.
LOANS
815 TO 81,800
COMMUNITY LOAN CO._
E, LAWRENCE	FE 841421

FAST CRUISER
III h.p. Grey-, joupto or imoll ilelo sMqpIng, eating end ----------“““
tnougn lor woier sxung end very seaworthy. Excollont condition. Of-tored at 16 ok original cost, or will trade tor oqulty In real estate. FE 24544.
LINOLEUM RUGS. MOST SIZES, 83.49 up. Pearion'e Furniture, 210 E. Pike St- PB 4-7881._______________ .
ItTATlh i roto-tllli ir, cam oi
Sab Clothing
Soli Henseheld Geode 6S
16 WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY
3 ROOMS
BRAND NEW FURNITURE
REFRIGERATOR, ‘ GAS STOVE,
$277.
Ideal muRlpia silo. Land contract terms available or we will taka a trade. Should make excellent party store. Rental could *kgRg
monthl --------- .......
REAL!
ithta expenses. kLTY. 474-2239.
McCullough

Bartow, Florida. 33830.
RENT: TAVERN. ' Florida. By Wrlto .0. Box 425,
LITTLE JOE'S
Bargain House
Baldwin at Whlton, FE 2-4842 Acres of Fra* Parking 'III 9> Sat, ill-4 EZ Terms
torn. QR 3-9258.
2 chairs, rt wblnet, anl
dining sul
CUSHION SOFAr TAN, GOOD
andltlon, $75. 447-1724._
2 AAATCHING FIRlSlDE CHAIRS knee-hole mahogany desk, OR 3-9275, Mrs. AverllT,______
3-M0NTH-0LD
lg-zag In new cabinet. No attachments needed for hems, button holes, fancy patterns, etc. Guaranteed. Pay oft account bate'
' at $4.20 monthly or $42.00 cast
RICHMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER
445 Elizabeth Lake Rd.
•s phono 21 I Snopp, 5-
3 Rooms Furniture
BRAND NEW
$288	$2.50 Weekly
PEARSON'S FURNITURE.
E. Pika	FE 4-7881
Between Paddock and City Hall Opbn Mon, and Frl. 'til 9 p.m. 4-PIECE BEDROOM SET,
HOTEL-LOUNGE
24 rodmt largo dining rooi... ._
1,1	----‘-oklng Houghton
buslnr -------
Lake. Established b
PACKAGE ICE BUSINESS.- YOU
9412 or 482-2177.
SPORTING EQUIPMENT STORL One of tho largMt In tha. Thumb area. Shows good profit, 120,000 down will put you In business. PIFER REALTY. Phono area, 311,
444-3963.
9x12 Linoleum Rugs . $3.89
Solid Vinyl Tlfe .........7c ei
Vinyl Asbestos tile ..... 7c ei
Inlaid Ole 9x9'........... 7c ei
Floor Shop-3255 Elizabeth Lake
"Across From the Mall"
SPARE T|ME INCOME
comt. WINDSOR DISTRIBUTING COMPANY, 6 ■ N. BALPH AVE. PITTSBURGH, PA. 15202. Indudo
THE WINDMILL SERVICE STA-"on Homo and. business. Locsted i Holly, excollont opportunity tor
2oned light commercial c
HAGERTY ROAD — IN ONE l. THE BUSIEST AREAS NEAR WALLED LAKE. HAS BEEN USED AS DRIVE-INN, — LOT 144X350 WITH BLOCK BUILDING, 00X32 - PRICED TO SELL.
WRIGHT REALTY CO.
12 Oakland Avo.	FE 2-9141
Attar 7:30, Call EM 3-4113 Cash for all kinds of proporly
50 YARDS GRAY WOOL CARPET-Ing with padding. Rota silk bedspread, green sofa and matching chair. FE 2-4376 7-9 p.m.
Sole land Contracts 6 1 TO 50
LAND CONTRACTS
Urgontly n«ded. See us beta
WARREN' STOUT, Realtor
150 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 54145 Open Evts. 'If * —
ACTION
n vour tend contract, urge i nail call Mr. Hlltar, FE Ml?
Broker, 3792 Elizabeth L
Wanted Cewtracts-Mtg. 60-1 TO 50
.LAND CONTRACTS
Urgently needed. See us befoi you deal. '
WARREN STOUT, Realtor
150 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5414a °— ■— fl| 8 p.m.
$100,000
482-1820. Ask for
ted McCullough sr.
ARRO REALTY '
5143 Coss-Ellzaboth
QUICK CASH FOR LAND CON-tracts. Clark Raal Estate. FE m — FE 4-4013, Mr. Clark.
Wonted Ceatracts4Rtg. 60-A
NEED LAND CONTRACT! discounts. Earl Gsrrtlt. f
OUR OFFICE SPECIALIZES tfe
Meney te Loan	61
_ (Llcansed Atony Lsndar)
LOANS
815 to SI .000
liaurad Payment Flan BAXTER to LIVINGSTONE Finance Co.
UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905
SOFA BED, LIKE NEWi SMALL dinette satj' 1 small sofa; other mlsc. Itoms. 3324834.
SPECIAL
144 dressmaker Head, in new
cabinet.' Zig-zagger tor ntmt, but-collect°'balance Bnof 862.12 or monthly payments can be arranged on now contract. Guar-
'TlCHMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER
445 Elizabeth Lake Road
SIMPLEX IRONER.
USED TVs ....................... $14.95
Color TVs ..................... $199.95
.... Radio md Appllanct. Inc.
334-5477
I. $75. I
»■ FE 4-5134.
12" PORTABLE TV'S
. SCRATCH AND DENT ” SALE
$1.25 PER WEEK
Goodyear Service Store
1370 Wide Track Dr. West
• •	, • Pontiac _______
0" ELECtRIC STOVE; S' PORCH glider: 176-*|
SIGNATURE GAS RANGE, months old with timing cent glass front, boat offer. 673-7437.
|» ELECTRIC $fOVE> APT. SIZE refrigerator, raas. 425-2544.
3f" GAS STOVE, S10 ____________FE 5-7384
BEDS, CHAIRS, TABLES. PICTURE frames. Mlsc. 5 W. Highland Dr. Off Woodward
BRASS BED, DRESSER - VAN-
BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE salt, BRAND NEW. Urge mt small size (round, drop-leaf, (angular) tables In 3-, 5- and
BUNK BEPS
Choice of IS siyfes, trundle bods, triple trundle beds end bunk beds complete, $49.50 and up. Pearson's
CHEST OF DRAWERS (NEW) 111.95 up
Maple, walnut and white PEARSON'S FURNITURE HO E. Pike	FE 4,7881
CLEARANCE SALE
Living room sots, 849, brown, groan gold; odd chairs, 810 to 829; couches, 819 to 859, gold, Oretn, blue one rose; Salem maple ond table set 819; bedroom sal* In Water. a*»ni. Mahogany, sQlond, SSS to
$15; 6pc dining rqofn, $70; cabinet $30; drop-teof table, Buffet,* $19; tofelgorator, $35
STto
DAMAGtD IN SHIPMENT — 2 bedrooms, and 3 HMto
Little Joe's - FE .24142.
DRYER, $3S; WASHER, $13; APT. size refrigerator, $29;	* —
G. Harris. PE S-2744.
DETROIT JEWEL (
PRHMOAIRE REFRtOERATOR, good condition. $251 425-1409.
AS OR ELECTRIC STOVE -up. Used Maytag wmhers M $39. Good rtfrigwatorst from $31 Used furniture if ell kinds at bargain prices. LITRE ’ JOE'S TRADE-IN DEPARTMENT. BALD-WlfiATWALTON. FE 24842
iatt HaawliBM taatb 61
general ELECTRIC REFRIGER-
a-.farajiax W
rooo USED APPLIANCES. REA-aonabte. Michigan Agpllanoo Co. 3282’ Dixie Hwy. 4734011.
Full family 4110; holds 344 Ibo.
All porctlsln Interior with lot-tost friioiB shelves. . Reduced .to 8140 85 -down, 8150 week FRETTER'S APPLIANCE CO. ---“ ■ ~	PI MM
HOTPOINT 40" RANGE, 850. TRAV-
alor 27" TV, 820. Twin t J '---
complete, $5. 4244742.
HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL
» a month buys s rooms op
FURNynjRB - Consists of: pises living room outfit with 2ploct living nil suite, 2 (tog tables, 1 cocktail table, 2 table tempt ond (l) 9W rug Indigsd.
vanity lamp
_______ ^.t wm 4 4._________
chairs and table. All tar Off. Your credit Is good at Wyman's.
* WI MAN FURNITURE CO.
17 E. HURON'	FE 5-1801
.... PIKE ____________FE 24150
MUST COLLECT
n used Singer, zig-zag
^— —ilgn mV* . sowing. WEIEIinpMI lonons, iy new account at S3.74 monttri
“r’iCHMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER
equipped for hams, design pat tarns, plain and fancy sawing. 5 ytar guarantee ond lasaons.

WlT.
PFAFF
AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG
Sawing machine — deluxe feature* — maple cabinet, "Early American designs." Take aver payments
$5 PER M0.
\ OR $49 CASH BAL.
UNIVERSAL .CO.	FE 4-0905
SO Outlet efriger; rug 11 heusshplaSI
I' items. F SAVE Ml
neve your .old tu reupholstered. Hum) end colors. Praa «
SINGER ZIG ZAG
machine. Cabinet
-------c "Dial m op e I"
blind bsms, designs, \ butt sic. Repossessed. Pay off
$53 Cash i
or payments of $6 per mo.
WANTED TO BUY
LEADED GLASS LAMPS OR leaded glass lamp shadss. FE
WYMAN'S
USED BARGAIN STORE At our 10 W. Plko Store Only
2-ptece living room
walnut burnt ........
Guar. Wrlnger-washei Guar., elec, refrlg.
EASY TERMS
driW^e
Hi-Fi, TV & Radios
515 E. Walton, comer ut J
I, sacrifice. Orchard Laka. 343-
GOVERNMENT SURPLUS TRAN-
STEREO -CONSOLE, AMJmTTPB dip, maple cabinet. <00. FE 44018. SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE on color TVs
Choose from RCA, Zenith, Westtnghbuse; Admiral Buy now and save a bundle.
No down payment. $3.75 wk. FRETTER'S APPLIANCE CO.
H ~. Telegraph________FE 3-7051
WHITE-BLACK, COLORED TV ihnson TV	FE 8-4540
For Sal* Miscellaneous 67
.	1—A-l
Homemaker Special
iota. Choir, 3 Tables, 2 temps, 6-ileca bedroom, 5-piece dinette, $185, rerma. 82.S0 week. Call’ Mr. Adams. :E 4-0904, WQRLD WIDE (Nsxt
1-A ALUMINUM—VINYL SIDING Awnings, storm windows. For s ■Iffy guaranteed |ob, cell the >M Reliable Pioneer" Joe Val-1 OL 1-4423. No money down
9-XI2’ LINOLEUM RUGS $3.95 EACH 1 Plastic Wall ttla	lc ea.
M I >»nellng, cheap. 107S W. Huron
Coiling til B8.G Tilt.
I garaga dooi dwora. Cano's.
19" GARDEN MARK GAS MOWER,
32X21 boilBLE COMPARTMENT
4289 Wilton, Drayton. Plains.
BARN WOOD, SPLIT RAIL FENCI, RAILROAD TIES. FREE DELIVERY. FE 5-9120.
CAFETERIA TABLES, FORMICA
CONCRETE STEPS
i WITH SAFETY TREAD ACME STEP CO.	u
CRATE-MARRED AND DINGED 31
CUPOLA MISCELLANEOUS CON-
■Ck flrel igs. Else
Fer lute Mheelleneout 67
NOTABLBfc
aflTitfflll ylSr.~ia»r~Ai| hK
E^SSsiwM
balloow. _ Wars.lftdrBem t\~\% porclw* 11.55. Irregulars, samples. Prlcas only facton can glv*. Michigani Fluorsscant,393 Orchard Lit..
S3
Musical	_____71
lOOPIANOS, NEW AND USED -Wn*l«, consoles, grand*, player P^nos a specialty, fra* delivery
SMhMr-
„ - MOUSE OF STRINGS s,
3° blocks Mll,( *f HjRNRl Perk, lust 3 blocks west id 1-75 li um
THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 16; 1967
For Tho Finest In, * Top-Quality Merchandise Shop At
Montgomery Ward Pontiac Mall
ukes. m and* fit, •TORY ACLARK ORGANS
MORRIS MUSIC 14 *• »» FENDER JA2Z |
AmpMB-15 AMP
-jm.
hmmono-orgXFT
UMt7l.
hmimoMV (WttAL___________
wHkl^r^wHhoot amplifier.
LOWERY ORGAN SLUR TAG SALE
SAVE $50 TO *300. LARGE SELECTIONS. FREE DELIVERY N|rMONEY DOWN - SANK
GALLAGHER'S-
_ „ _ . ms s. telegraph
Oppn Evening* til 9 p.m.-Sat. tr1**
MUST SELL HAGSTROM GUITAR — Guild amp, 1 mo. old, also comet, clarinet. Sold leparately, best otter, FE 8-17*2. Q-
ed from Ut—new from *47* Shop u* before yoo buy.
GALLAGHER'S - /
1710 S. TBLEG
HOOVER COMMERCIAL
*125. VALUE — NOW *57.*0 KIRBY SERVICE l SUPPLY CO «7wm
IDML^LAWN^MOWER sharpen: if carpRts look dulL aim!
dreery, remove the spots ss they •PP«r with ■ Blue Lustre. Rent •lectric shampooer *1. Huron's
Mriiaa as e iL.u_	r
REW CONSOLE PIANO,' WALNUT "	'	..-SS73
IMILEY BROS.
»w / FE 4-4221 PIANO,MAHOGANY, BABY •QTand, *500. Accordion Scandall, 120 Bast, *300. MA 4-5540.
PLAYER PiANO WANTED, NEED
KIRBY VACUUMS
Excellent conditions, overhauled *« and’Sp* ~ ,t"lly guarantied.
Kirby Service & Supply Co.
3417 DIXIE HWY. / 674-2284 MOWER*, U$ib, ALL TORIES, ALL —mine,	taj -
Sontfe*7% it“
OIL PURANCES, FAIR CONDITION
Blvd. Supply ~~"T ' * "~FB 3-70*1 PICNIC TABLES 5 SIZES, LAWN swings, outdoor ornaments, gifts, gags and lokes. Uberel bill* Outpost. 3345 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9474.
Plumbing
Standing IMP ________
heeler, *49.95; 3-plece __ _____
S59.95J laundry trey, trim, *19.95; •bower stalls with trim, *39.95; 2bowl sink. *3.95; lavs., *2.95; tubs, *30 and up. Ptpo cut and thraadod. SAVE PLUMBING CD, 141 Bald-
?aauri
RENT: ELECTRIC SEWER CLEAN-ers, roto-tlller, power rake, Hos-, kin's Rental, FE 4-3039.
etc. 391-2070 after 3:30 p.m.
RUMMAGE SALE: WEDNESDAY, May 17, 9-3 p.m. Miscellaneous, some antiques. 4435 Walters Rd., between jphabaw and MIS, Clarks-
M AO E
5025 Elizabeth s-— — T pit
Lake Rd. Wad., Thur*. a S-4.______
Reason's
of ail usol_________ _______
'typewriters, adding machines — drafting tables, etc. Forbes, 4500 Dixie, Drayton, OR 39747.
STALL SHOWERS COMPLETE with faucets and curtains *49.50 vhlue *34.50. Lavatorlos complete with faucets *14.95, toilets *10.95. Michigan Fluorescent,' 393. Orchard Lk.; FE 44443. — 37,
TALBOTT LUMBER
’-4" Black and Oecker drill, *9.99 Appliance rollers, *7i95 • pr. 4'xOW* particle board, *3.75,4 -4'x*x4b" particle board, *4.95 <
the Salvation army
RED SHIELD STORE lit W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your needs Clothing, Furniture, Appliances
TRACTORS
Bolens B-1G-12 h.p. Simplicity 4-7-t*-12hJ».
LAWNM0WERS
' Lawnboy-Jacobsen Conet-Good-aH-Ecllpse-and others
USED MOWERS
Rotary pusher *25 — res
SALE On’alT a CU'
t A SPRING SALE cihES*	Rickan backer,
ft?1!1"; OuHars, amps, drums, 48*li.*GflJ|M*e(*» new and used. PI »
ampk, BASSAM»UHVr m.
MINIATURE SCHNAUZERS, *75 papors, 4*2-21^ 473-5404.
_ POODLE BEAUTY SALON Cllpplngs-AKC Pups—Stud Servlca Pet Supplies—402-4401 or 4*2-0927
PUPPIES, MIXED BREED, *5 E
___________*91-2949
PUREBREI
M -ONSOLL WITH BENCH
/SMILr
c—•
DANE, « AKC, ...I; fawn, black •» trained. MA *->78.
c-oii jej eu.
1955 CHEVY WALK-IN VAN TRUCK fid 14,000 pTU fur -extr* part*, u nper, *250. 1
1945 KARIBOU CAMPpR, VERY
POO. OR 3-0203. Rea*.
19*5 AVALAIRS *3* ALl ALOm. aircraft construction, fully sell-“"fainad- Dsolors personal trailer — Only tiMS.
Ellsworth Trailer Sales
4577 Dixie Hwy.	*25-4400
'744 TRIMLINE CAMPlR. CALl after 4 P.M. Sn04L	L
1944 APACHE..EA6LE, WITBTa!
lULe. WITH ADO-a-room, excellent condition. 790-0452.
iALE: SIAMESE KITTENS, ALSO ""DeSoto.
iatur^ Pups,
UNCLE CHARLIES' PET SHOP
OY POODLE STUD SlkVICl. 3354792. 3338568.
tOY COLLIES, AKC PUPI-LdLb-er stock, *35 up. Females I
Jacobson Trailer Sales
-- ■> Williams Lake Rd. OR 399*1 AW STREAM - 1944 30* INTRRNA-—Tart" bods. Air conditioned.
WIRE HAIR PON, TERRIER, STUD service, AKC, excellent disposition. 412-4*29.
Supplies—Service	79
FLO'S HOME-AQUARIUM. —l. Tragical fish - Suppll HarlzMt. Products.
1-3 HOUR AUCTION 7/fo 10 p.m.. Wed., May 17
Chain Saw
Low Easy Terms GRINNELL'S Downtown 27 S. Saginaw Street
' -Mattress Folding bed lamps
Ml O': SPINET CONSOLE-Grand piano, will psy cash. FE 4-0544. /	i
T / WURLITZlI AND THOMAS ORGANS AND PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS AND INSTRUMENTS
JACK HAGAN MUSIC
J9 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 333-0500 *193 .Cooley I --	------
if]Chest of drawers Fine Wing chair Power mower Expensive wool nig Tier table Exquisite end tables
PLUS - some rare end old i Drinking cup; rocker; < smoke stand; adlustabl* high chair and rocker; plus oddities and many goodies. Don't miss this auction. Tom Tyler, John Miller,
Mike Spak, Auctioneers.
Music Lessens
71-A
ADVANCED PIANO, VOICE AND
Office Equipment
1300 Crescent LI
R 4-3547
EVERY FRIDAY JRMIM EVERY SATURDAY ... 7:30 1
EVERY SUNDAY ....... 2:00 1
Sporting Goods — All Types Door Prizes Every Auction We Buy — Sell — Trade, Retail 7-day r-—ilgnments weler—
MB AUCTION Dixie Hwy._______OR 3-2717
SATURDAY MAY 20	■....
Pettey's Private Collection Durand, Old M-7t Comer Oak :lre Engines — 35 Clocks — Guns Lamps — Mata Is — Primitives Perkins Sale Service Auctioneers Swartz Creek_______Phone 435-9400
Sporting Goods
■ 81
THORNTON NURSERY Milford Road, Highland, Michigan, Large, selection of stock In field, balled or potted — ready to go. Evergreens of landscape size, shade tram, ornamontal trees, flowering i, ground cover, etc. -Open ly through Saturday.
RUGER 44 MAGNUM SPORTSTER ■ir 334-5507.
SET OF GOLF CLUBS.
FE *-4*13.
Sand—Grovoi—Dirt	■ 76
k TOP SOIL, FILL DIRT, MA-on sand, 10-A stone and crushod done. American Stone Products. IAA 5-2141.
Plants-Trees-Shrubs 81-A
LANDSCAPE EVERGREENS AND
, 425-5534. Cloeod ftndey.
1-A BLACK DIRT
State tested; also topsoil, and gravel, fltL Builders supi Bud Ballard. 423-1410.
2 WESTERN HORSES,
YARDS, *2*. 10 yds* *29. ., <17. 473-1410.
-rBCAjpK OtRT.SANO^ANDCLAY fill, wastwtf stone, crushed llme-stone. FE S-44S7, Ho Boyt.
AAA BLACK Dllt FOR SALE PE 54214	•
BLACK DIRT, TOPSOILS. WASH and stone, road gravel, and sand and dirt. Delivered. FE
DOUBLE 6 RANCH OPEN FOR business. S e.m. to S p.m. 473-7457.
FIRST LESSON FREE. AMONG the host Instructors In Midi. Beginners through advanced lumping. Cross-Country riding. Baby sitter available. Klentner Riding Academy. 1100 Hiller Rd. 343-0009.
HQRSES AND TACK FOR SALE
BLACK dlRT, TOPSOIL, . dirt, sand, gravel. Del. FE 4-0944, FE 0-9754.________________
DARK, RICH, ..FARM TOP SOIL, yards tor 015 del. Also loadin< FE 4-4500. '_________________.
Picked up, delivered and shredded. Will sell In cniantitles. Day 332-9251 Eve. 330-3500.
ROCHESTER
TUB ENCLOSURES, GLASS ONLY
Pets—Hunting Dogs
A POODLE CUPPING, 13-up. 040 sereeote. FE 0-0549.
1-A DACHSHUND ’UPS, AKC, — •	— •— Kenoele. FE 4-2534.
USED CLOTHING, MISC. HOUSE-hold Heme, Ironrlte Ironer, refrig., floor pollahor, 1 pup lent, 1 9x11 lent, stove, lantern, carpenter tools. Can be teen at 904 First St, Rochester, from 9-12 or 5-1 eves. or cell OL 1-1301
VERY SMALL TRAILER, SLEEPS | —painting, swo. mi *9733.
2-YEAR-OLD RED DOBERMAN 150. Cell 403-0400.
2 AKC POODLES, CHOCOLATE miniatures, male, female, ci JJ" ................	451-4517.
WASHED WIPING RAGS . low as 19 cents lb.
. 25 lb. boxas to 300 lb: bolts 1- supply 333-7001 500 S. Blvd. E.
WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS At
discount prices. Forbes |----
ar.d Office Supplies, 49 “ — ■ OR 3-9747.
WHITE PORTABLE1 SEWING chine, $20. 474-1101.
WIGS. 100 PER CENT HUMAN heir. *200. Mutt sacrifice, *** 841-4307.
Yard
i Vlctrota red
Hand Tools—Machinery 68
30" TORO. LAWN MOWER, motor mower; with wings, 51 orchard spreytr, FE t-9734 at
N TRAILERS, CAN BE USED -»< me road or ideal for storage. Blvd. Supply 333-7001 5M S. Blvd.
1941 CHEVY 1 TON STAKi, amp. portable weldor plus equipment, can be lean at 1353 . Auburn.
AIR COMPRESSORS, LUBRICATION equipment, hydraulle lacks, stae— cleaners, etc. Pontiac Motor Par ....... T‘—~ FEtdlO*.
BLACK BEAUTIES -mala AKC - - -474-0739.
: BLACK POODLES. BEAU-
AKC MALE POODLES, SMALLEST
T DACHSHUND, STUDS, AKC, ESTELHEIM KENNELS, 391-1009. ADORABLE, FLUFFY tERRIER
-----»• 492-1901.
___ . WfeEK OLD P(
0-3507,
minunirc. uick.il ui
Sacrifkt $50 each. 674-1510.
AKC DARK APRICOT POODLE pups, quality bred. 338-2901.
AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD STUD Service. Alter 4 pjn„ 474-2511. ALASKAN MALAMUTE, MALE.
Pi FE 4-3152
____ _____ . _ 2-5319, 1941
Wind Dr.
COLLlI,*FEMALE, BLUE MERLE T e an lease. AKC 9 mot.- mai shots S75. Utica. 731-1257.
Varnot's Greenhouse, 2441 Dr., Vi block off Dixie at Pontiac Drlvt-ln Theatre corner.
JJ
SINGLE
glnnar, SITS. Cali 8I7-4433.
Hr, 425-4702. PIGS AND SOWS 42S-2140
RIDING CLUB HAS OPENING . _ iral family memberships. Box s. .Indoor ring. Groom---------*“
Hay—Grain-Feed
KAY FOR SALE.
HAY — 1ST AND 2ND CUTTING.
I, 25c O bolt -- 420-3594.
JACK COCHRAN HAS SEED PO-tatoes. Call MY 24931.
HE BEST IN FLOWERS, . tllizers, certified seed potatoes.
CLARK'S TRACTORS AND .... •‘ rry. 100 used trackire, load-dozers, back hoes and trucks.
COMPLETE LINE OF. new and used
garden tractors, mowers, tillers
Hillson Lawn & Garden
4470 Dixie Hwy. Clerks ton 425-4937 --------dally 0 — - —--------- 1
CARNIVAL
1967
FROLIC
TRAVEL TRAILERS, 14*-14‘ TRUCK CAMMRSrr»1«V
■Jwy., ^Drayton
APACHE CAMP TRAILERS °1i.,Tna2a5utnMf US!
received 10 factory experiment* and employees trailers. All new 1947 modale on display I heated showrooms. Open dally I
AIR CONDITIONING
c*"'P*r tracks —
FE 2-4007 for prlcas and Infor tion. Master Radiator Servlca 2293 Elizabeth Lake Rd. ac from fha Mall.,
1-A OWIO* 2 BEDROOMS . . . *3.195 "TNY BEAUTIES TO CHOOSE FROM
RICHARDSON-WINDSOR * HOMETTE-LIBERTY-HAMPTON
COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES
PE 2-1457	423-1310
WID* HOUSE TRAILER, *150
AIRSTRIAM ClGHTWEIOHT
....
w" H W,7T few
Wally “Syarn's VxcItlnB^careventL
BOOTH CAMPER
ALUM. COVERS, CAMPERS, PART3> ACCESSORIES FOR ANY PICKUP 7330 HIGHLAND RD. — PONTIAC OR 3-5524
BRADLEY CAMPER
Quality built, aluminum covers t_. any pick U^,43»gKM^3259 Seebaldt,
CAMPING
Private lako, sate sandy bM
fkish toilets, hot and cold sh_
fishing. Hair mile south of Orton-McFoely. Resort .	114
427-3120 weekends
CENTURY YELLOWSTONE WHEEL CAMPER
STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC.
3771 Highland (MS91 FE 2-4920 MOTOR HOME RENTAL, SPECIAL ~|Md||P and. June, drive It don't
OAKLAND CAMPER
335-0434.
PHOENIX A..........
CONVERTIBLES . 4x1 sleepers PICKUP CAMPERS
14' to 19*
MOTOR HOMES ir —19* — M*
REESE AND ORAW-TITE HITCHES
5 Dixie Hwy.
PIONEER CAMPER SALES
BARTH TRAILERS A CAMPER* TRAVEL OUEEN CAMPERS MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS (l"-27"-15" covers) .
ALSO OVERLAND A COLEMAN 091 W. Huron	PE 3-39*9
TAR CAMPER MPG. CO. *
PICKUP TRUCK CAMPERS-
Tho largest display of new CM over pickup truck campers RTtti arts. Bargain prlcas on both ns and used. Example — New 194.. 0' models *79$. Used 1945 Apache
0' model with 4Vi* head roo-1
poly foam mattmeae, like $345. New 1947 cab high cover with channel steel framing, screened leloutie windows, 1219 while 15 last. See our dally — dels today. Open dally til 7 Sundays 1* a.m. to* S p.m. I COLLER, Vi mile sett of Li
SELF CONTAINED 14Vixil FOOT 5 sleeper Cree. Wall maintained. $1545. LI 44)197, Royal Oak. ■
By Dick Turner
97
1967 Boats on DIsploy
ME RCU R Y°ME RCRUISER^ DEALER
Cruise-Out, Inc.
Dilly 9-7 p.m.
45 E. Walton	PE S-4482
ILASS "D" - UTILITY RACING boat, all controls, plus custom can vas cover, also have a Mercury KG^ engine, all In axcallant con
Wanted Cjws-Trucks SPECIAL PRICES
.• For extra clean cars
DON'T BUY UNTIL You Vry Tony's Marine
Big discount on all 1944 boats and motsrs. Johnson molora agfl boats, Aerocraft canoes and ing boat*. Geneve 1 and o only S3J9S,. alaa Shall Lake Beats; 2495 (jreharg^ Lake Rd., Sylvan Like,
EARLY BIRD SPECIALS:
Johnson boats and motors Chrysler boats and motors Obo fibarglas boats Sllverllne-l-O's
Pontoons-Canoes-Prams-Sallboats
We would like to buy late . model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today.
FISCHER
BUICK
544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600
irldgeetonp Motorcycles
Many fin* used complete outfits of boat, motor and trailer at It pr" cant down. All Guaranteed.
, PAUL A. YOUNG, INC.
4030 Olxl* Hwy., Drayton Plains >R 4-0411	At Loon Lake
Open dally 9 a.m.4 p.m.
Mon. and Thurs. 'til 9 p.n Sun. 10 AM.4 P.M.
Wish somebody would call you on the phone, eh? That’ Sjlng custom easily fixed—send Junior oyer to somebody’s house NMij|jr~
i	Play!”
FAST CRUISER
i-Along with 13S h.p. Gri Ideal lor ceupl* or sm complete sleeping, eating a ■cllltles. Mbny extras Inch
an.Vo7
89Metoreycles_
1904 HONDA CL 140, *525.
1944 HONDA ISO CC, payment*. FE 5-3540.
>44 NORTON SCRAMBLER,
Tsk* over psyments. 4
- .. 0 FT. STEWART, 2 BED-raoms, Let No. 19, W. Highland Meblla Park. 2 Ml. hL of“—
Im OpniMrf. tua
957 PONTIAC CHIEF, 1X4)
fb sano.
944 MARUITTI, 10 x n
1944 YAMAHA 00 CC SCRAMBLER, Only 400 ml. Llk* new. Ceil 343-2371 offer 4.
1944 YAMAHA 100 CC TWIN, EX-,$325. 402-5543.
1945 RICHARDSON, IS'XSS', IN-cludes 4'xl* utility shod. All axe. condition. Washer-dryer optional. *52-3091._______________ '
BIG SPRING VALUES .
DETROITER -KR0FF
id roams, as k.-
y used at bargain
BOB HUTCHINSON, INC.
4301 Dixla Hwy. (U.S. It) Drayton Plaint, Mich. OR 3.1202
MARLETTES
50'-63' long, 12* te 24Y wide. Early American, Traditional or Modi lecor.
see available In 4 Star Park, ... ixtra erhage. Also eat the famous ight weight Winnebago Trailer.
OXFORD TRAILER SALES
OPEN M, CLOSED SUNDAYS mil* south of Lake Orton on M24
________ MY 24721_____________
RICHARDSON MONTCLAIR, 12x40, dtoto^room. *5,800. 451-4311
SPRING SALE
SEE OUR COMPLETE LINR OF
W WIDE . IN 5 DECORS. ----
HAVE 4 ONLY, DEMOS 4,. I GIANT SAVINGS. WEWfU. NOT BE KNOWINGLY UNDERSOLD. FREE DELIVERY UP TO 300 MILES. . FREE SETUP WITH AVAILABLE PARKING. PARKWOO0 — HOLLYPARK
Op*n-9-i»^9- t~—	7 days ■ week
MIDLAND TRAILER SALES
S7 Plxto Hunt. —	S3M772
Town & Country Mobile Homes
OFFERS
Spring Clearance Specials All 1967 Models
2 x 40 Front-r*ar bedroom,
» bath ......*.........0519
t x 40 Early American
2-badroom ............$529
2 x 40 Executive straight
5GLAS SPAR . STEURY - MIRRO 1 Craft - Grumman - Kayot Evln-' rude - Pamco. DAWSON'S- SALES 1 ' T Tipsico LAKE, Phene MMi
___________ GRUMMAN CANOES, GRAND RIV-
TAKE OVER I er boat sal*. 28920 Grand River, 1 Farmington. 4 block|*ast a* “
Junk Care-Tracks 101-A
4-OOOR PONTIAC1 SEOAN
COPPER, ■ starters and sen, OR ir CARS ... FE S-75SS,
BRASS; RADIATORS; —^—raton " —-
Hu?
JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS, FREE
Used Auto-Truck Purte 102
.17,000 ai
heater, aldctrle defroster, —— miles, S140S full price , ww,„.m.91 per month.
"It only fakes a minute" to Gft "A BETTER OIAL" ill
John McAuliffe Ford
43Q Oakland Ave.	FE i-4l0t
9*1 2-000R
r. M75. 473-7443,
1940 FORD GALAX IE, GOOD FRONT and, tor partt. -FE y73)7.
1945 PONTIAC	I
Steering. Brakes. Auto.
vw
CENTER
85 To Choose From . •^-AII Models—
—All Colors-—All Reconditioned— *
Autobahn
Motors Inc.
---- ---w oealer
Miracle Mil*
SEDAN rto. Red
New and Used Curs 106
Convert your engine to hi performance. Call ut tor Informs tlon. All makes. Terms. 537-1117.
EDLEBROCK 4-BARREL MANh fold; carburetor for. Ford er Mercury Flathead, 125. 673-8879 aftei
e, 46-1772. I CH, 900 CC. FE 5-6624,1
'66 SPORTSTER XL-CH, meny extras. *1300. bet. 3. Except Thurs. ....	.
M tXlUMPH BONNEVILLE, S995. for
Harrington
HAS EVERYTHING
your summer boetlng needs. Plan id now. Special tel* prices on:
Larson Boats I. 0. Outboards Grumman Canoes Aluminum and Wood Docks
HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS
'TSSSfA
PARTS FOR A 1959 PONTIAC, 389
Beni
CREDIT PROBLEMS
ikrupt, receivership, in Credlf — "
lust
BRIDGESTONE
Close-Outs
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
. HONDA JN LAPEER FULL SELECTION OP BIKES,
. |mj„ town dM|.
personnel. 6445S72.
MOTORCYCLE Insuranco
LOW RATES
Anderson Associates 1044 Joslyn FE 4-3535
roVal EnpiElo
Fastest 750CC available BULTACO
1964 Stot* Champlor '	ill m
Experts Service
I' Indian MlnFiliceV
SALE - SALEI
All used motorcycle* marked
New and Used Trucks 103|
142 WINCH TRUCK, MAY ' BE seen at 575 Lenox off Joslyn. S300. 474-24(7.
1944 XRMY JEEP, 4. - WHEEL drive, power take-off unit, i alternator, excellent condition, *310. 394-0224.
NEED-TRADE-INS
NOW'S THE TIME TO BUVl
Chrysler Lone Star,
1951 GMC DUMP TRUCK. g60D box. $295. 1943 Volkswagen pickup, double cab, akc. *650. OR 3-5200.
complete service of outboards — Mercury outboard! 3.9 to 110 h“ and Marc-Crulter authorized de er. Cypress Garden* skit (.
Grumman canoes dealer
Close out 196*
renoes ......... »1_.
(S ........... SI 59-* 169
Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center
1S210 Holly Rd.	ME 4-6771
Open Dolly and Sunday;
NOW ON DISPLAY
1967 Mercury outboards and Silver
LAKE ORION. MY 3-1600
1961 CH^Y'
5-3278.
1963 ’JEEP Ft 170,
On Display SLICKCRAFTS
FlbargUis I.D. and Outboard*
OWEN'S CRUSIERS
Sensational 30 sadan
CHRIS-CRAFT
Cruiiar* and spaed boats DEAL NOW
PINTER'S
SUZUKI'S NEWEST MObEL'
CC invader." 12-month or 12,000-mll* warranty, other modal* 50CC-U0CC. Rupp Mlnl-Biket as low at Haimate, lackate, complat*
smgygriSft
YA4WfArT2»-ee. 194t«L*CTRtC
Im^ tondltton-
THUNDERBIRD, STARCRAFT,’MFG JOHNSON. Boat* and Motor*. Cypress Gerdans Water Ski Shag.
170 Opdylw	Open 9-9
(1-75 at Oakland University Exi" PONTOON BOAT, 22’ DECK,
YAMAHAS
ALL MODELS AVAILABLE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
K. 8, W. CYCLE
, SALES t SERVICE fra* pickup on all malar repair 2434 Auburn	■ ■«
“■ Pontiac .... .
731-0290
Bicycle*
spring Special.
SPECIAL INTRODUCTION TO THIS AREA
12* TALLY HO TRAVEL TRAILER sloop* 4 or S. Gat your order in now. Only *795.
SPORTCRAFT MFG.
TAltE A CRANK ON YOUR NEXT WEEKEND
Memorial Day weekend is fust
Rent Trailer Space
VILLAGE GREEN MOBILE ESTATE - New and different, 2215 Brown Rd. N**r 1-75 and M-24, 335-0155.
Apache Mesa. Top goes up at the bad* crank out. Full screen door and a step to get M, at only *995.
TENT TRAILER WITH GA*LEl£c-trlc refrigerator, sink, dinette. Sleep* 4 plus 9x12 awning and screens, dressing tent, flush toilet end shower, *475. SOS-1494.
TRAVEL TRAILERS
GET SET FQF SPRING
GOOD USED TRACTORS, TRAILERS, TRENCHERS, PLOWS.' BIG SAVINGS ON NEW MASSEY-FEP-GUSON PORK LIFT LOADERS, ACKHOES.
Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co.
, OS (.WOODWARD B >4441 _ „	_PE 4-1442
Ellsworth Trailer Sales
’ Plxto Hwy.	425-4
TRUCK CAMPED. FULLY INjftL-■*—	’—^ aMtog. axttiz
845. Amco brake drum lather she* grinder, be# gnodel, $1-275 will sell for *450. OR *■'. H I- H Auto Sato*.
HERE IS A NICE ONE
WHEELHORSE TRACTOR, 7 H.P. WITH ELECTRIC START AND air ROTARY 4WWER. m3 MOP-EL. EXC. SHAPE, EXC .CONDITION.
COME IN AND ^
KING BROS. ‘
PE 4-0734
Pontiac Rd. at Opdyfc* Rd.
I JOHN DEERE AkO NEW IDEA 1 parts gators. Your Homellt* chain
---DAVIS -MACHINERY
III*. NA 7-3292.
[; ca n 1
WAG'N'MASTER—1967
NEW MODELS NOW ON LOT
AT JOHNSON'S
. Walton at Jotlyn
i 4-041»	/________PE 4-5053
WE CARRY THE FAMOUS
Franklins—Crees Fans—Monitor-Travel Trailers
Holly Travel Coach
1S2I0 Holly Rd. HMIy, ME 44771 — Open Polly >nd Sunday*
up- Also rentals. Jacks, Intercoms, tsWicsptng. bumpers, ladders, rac*ts. Lawry Campar Sales, 1325 S. Hospital Rd^ union Lak* 3-3411. Spar* tlr* carriers.
Boats — Accesserigs .97
3 HORSE EVINRUDE, 1945 MODEL, , weedless, SI21 343-9024.
10 HORSEPOWER MERCURY MO-tor completely rebuilt, 5125. 394-
RgiitTnrfhrSpuee^ 9
LARGE LOTS, NATURAL GAS Pontiac Mobile Homo Park SQUARE LAKE MOBILE ROM Park, has 3 spaces far rant,
■nmeg wt an sm no*.
IT ALUMINUM BOATS, SUM. Traitor* *120. 14'. canaas 0149. 900 lb. trailers $149. New fibarglas runabout, 33 H.P. Johnson electric, *00 lb, traitor, battery and box, $1349, Fibarglas runabouts *549.
BUCHANAN'S
*449 Highland	" 363-2301
13' ARISTOCRAF+, WOOD - FIBER-glass bottom, traitor, many extras.
Exc., 332-4442 after 5 P.M.__
14' SPEED BOAT, MARK 75 MER* cury outboard and traitor, *450. EM 3-0404.
13' .FIBERGLAS B -or with 25 Itp. I
14' GLASS, 40
Motorcycles
1445 S. Telegraph
> HARLEY DAVIDSON, 1200CC,
I HARLEY DAVISON. A-l. 473-
1*45 CB HONDA, ...
90. 0375. U L 3-I10S.
1945 HONDA SUPER SPOR1 -. tow ml.. Ilka new. Helmet and teogaga rack includad. tl75. 343-
1965 HONDA S-90,	240 MILES,
adult owned, perfect condition, extras, *250. fig Lorberta Lana,
1945 HONDA idlAMBLER, EXC.
1*44 DUCATTI. 100 CC 300 H *250. 33*9205. Or, 40-1241.
944 HONDA 305 SUPER HAWK, MM.JE>wltont condition. 2 haknatl. toll knob, hlgh reisers. 4*24343,
140 SCRAMBLER,
I. StO > up, 3354755.
HORSE POWER, fc start, Pamco ski equipment,
II electric. 482-2453.
FISH TYPE SAILER.
CHEROKEE- MOTOR ,1th 40 h.p. Evlnrud* mott relief. *93-4517.
1953 TRIPACER. FULL/PANEL EXC, condition. Flint, SU *4921. FAA APPROVED SCHOOL. LET our instructors teach you to Agl lnc„ Pontiac Airport.
Wanted Can-Trucks Alabama Buyer
G*f "A BETTER DEAL" at:
John McAuliffe Ford
0 Oakland I
DOWNEY
Oldsmobile
Used Cars
TOP DOLLAR FOR CLEAN USED CARS
3400 Elizabeth Lake Road 334-5V67	338-0331
Gale
McAnnallyV
I have Immediate carsl Now shlppln California, Texas i
EXTRA
EXTRA Dollars Pa d
FOR THAT -
EXTRA Sharp Car
"'Chock th* n tlwn gat th* bast" at
Averill
AUTO SALES
FE 24071	2020 Olxl* FE 44
151V LONE STAR RUNABOUT, 90 11 .Evlnrud*, loaded. Must appreciate. 412-7379 or
14' FIBERGLASS BOATT 40 HORSE Johnson, le» than 40 hr*. In water.
01SQ0. Call 33S-74B5._________
r ftikERGLAS LAPSfpAKi, 75 h.p. atectric motor, tilt traitor, ■■ftlf" ~~ trade. 334-4054. -
140 FORD PICKUP, Vj-TON V-8, standard transmission, exctlltnt running condition. As low as 05 down with King financing available. KINO AUTO 'SALES, M59 and ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD. FE 0-4000.
can flnanc* You. Evan If you have, bean turned down by others, w* have fine etlaction of good used cars. Call Mr. Dan at FE 84071 for Information, Capitol Auto Salas.
Need a Car?
WE ALSO HAVE A VERY GOOD selection of transportation -specials. These cars can be purchased - with no money down.
LUCKY AUTO
1940 W. Wld* Track FE 4-100* or FE 3-7054
OB.
OLIVER BUICK
194-210 Orchard Lak*
FE 24145 BUICK 1948 WILDCAT. RAWER' brakes, steering. Bucket teats, console. Vlnyl< top. Auto. Clean, UL 2-3775.
1963 BUICK 2-DOOR HARDTOP,
:-up, B Sava ,
I BOX, 10. FE
1943 FORD PICK-UP V8, 0050.
i TON TRUCK, GOOD
0597. Wa flnanc*. Star A
196* GMC CUSTOM SUBURBAN. 351
Power brake*. Power steering Heavy-duty equipment Mfi hauling, *2,195. 442-6451,
1967 GMC
i-Torf Pickup
Heater, defrosters, backup-lights. seat belts,^2‘ speed wipers, washers, padded dash and visor, traffic hazard lights, di*-rectional signals, inside rear-view mirror.
$1828
including all taxis
PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER
GMC
Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485
CHEVROLET 1944 3-TON STAKE,
perfect condition. 1*45 Vi ton GMC panel, going out of business, will sacrifice both. Mon.-Frl„ 9-5, SOR-
DID YOU KNOW?
The New Lew Price
1967 GMC
$1789.00
J#63
BUICK
SPECIAL WAGON
$595
FULL PRICE NO MONEY DOWN
Downey Olds
LUCKY AUTO
$1095 BIRMINGHAM Chrysjer-Plymouth
» S. Woodward ,	M* 7-3i
1964 BUICK .
$1447
SPARTAN
'DODGR
155 Oakland Ava.
1957 CAblLLAC, NEEDS MOTOR
4 CADILLAC, PULL PRICE: *397 - w* flnanc*. Star Auto, 962 Oak-and Ava, PE 04461.
WILSON
Cadillac
Used CARS Ask For Rich Kroll
MI 4-1930
6-wav pow ng. *595. I
19*1 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE, with full power, ebony black with matching Interior, tgettos* condition throughout — air' con-dttloning, t1098^full prlca, MS down,'
"Ik only takes a mlnuto" to Gat "A BETTER DIAL* at:
John McAuliffe Ford
M) Oakland Ava.	FE *4181
Houghten Olds
ROCHESTER
OL 14741
GMC TRUCKS and Campers Keego Sales and Service
Hank 482-7380
1 SEDAN MODEL INBOARD. 7S!F6 5-5988
HELP!
W* need 380 sharp Cadillacs tiacs. Olds snd Bulcks tor state market. Tdp dollar paid,
v MANSFIELD AUTO SALES
1104 Baldwin Ava.
1*40 SEVEN SEAS^BOAT, MOTOR
>9*3 CHRIS CRAFT INBOARD, traitor, 17-tt., lit* new. Sl^fS. Call 4*34173.
19*5 l*' SEA RAY, 40 H.P.JOHN-ton, tilt traitor, all ekl ahd. safety equipment. >1408. 423-1338.
194* 21' GRADY-WHITE 1SS GMC
I ----------- PuBV equipped. ...
' ‘ "JR 4-7320
STOP
HERE LAST
M <5cM
MOTOR SALES
New at our now locallqa W* pay more tor sharp- law mo
"TOP DOLLAR PAID"
GLENN'S
FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS 952 W. Huron St. '
E 4-7371	PE 4-1797
SPECIAL $1875 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP
EM ,3-4155 er EM 3-4154
Auto Insurance Murine ^ 104
Mini-Cost
Auto. Ins. tor Mod drivers • owners Ins. tor quality hot Auto risk Insurance winl-paymant plan (Budget)
BRUMMETT AGENCY*
Mirada Mil*______FE 4458*
Foreign Cars
KSWAGEN 2-DOOR, ... ..tor, 8795 at MIKE SAVOIE 'ROLET, Birmingham. **r '
1941 Vw; RADIO, CLEAN, *480
1944 M.G.B. mi TR-3 . .
1963	TR-4 . . , . _____
1964	Sunbeam 6T coup* .
I960 TR-3 ...	“
1967 FlatAS^GT'ccupa V GRIMALDrCAR CO, 9B
1962 Cadillac
Oovni* type, 4 dear, ebony bl hardtop. Extra sharp, shown condition, 899 or your old down. ASKING—
$1587
^SPARTAN • DODGE
HAND AT ALL TIMES
JEROME
1944 CADILLAC CONVfcRtllLi .
sacrltlc*. 3434433 or 343-5433-1944 CADILLAC I OWNER; BXCEL-tont condition. 4734159 off. 5 p,m.
WS .CAbtyiiP COUPE PEville. white with Alack vinyl top, air conditioning, low mltoag*. 4M-0S41.
HI32 until 4 p.m. Attar
AL HANOUTT
On M24 in Lake Orion i MY 2-2411-chevy,'runs
Opdyke Hardware
195*'CHEVY, S49 Mtors ’ _ PU M34> 1951 .CHEVY
C—JO
THE PONTIAC PJtESS, TUESDAY, MAY 10,1967
Now «d IMtn lift
Now Irlm Tim* to Sovo Oh o Newer Model MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 Oakland Ave.
. FE 44547
Imb corveTte^s*!^^ sfeeo,
a’dkINS, Oeklend^ve.. FE 2-6230 " W OllvlOLET WAGON, Vfc AU-tomatlc, lull Rriee *197. We fl-
Eldrldae, Pontiac.
* 1*60 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR, F
SALES, MJ* and ELIZABETH
LAKE Bead. FE MOM. _______
tMl CHEW STATION WAGQNiltJ ______ 338-8255
1961
CORVAIR
MONZA COUPE, AUTOMATICl
$295
Ni« oil IM Coift 10ft
IMS BELAIRE AOOOR AUTOMAT ._ S1»3 a* MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRCf LET, Blrmlnghem. Ml 4-2735.
-IMS imAala 4-DOOR maBotop, automatic with power, J1695 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blr.
1965
Chevrolet
IMPALA HARDTOP, BIG ENGINE, AUTOMATIC, POWER STEERING, POWER BRAKES.
$1395 '
1-YpAR WARRANTY. $150 DOWN. BANK RATES.
Downey Olds
550 Oakland FE 2-8101
TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS
IMS CHEVY 2-door I ‘	-----
■ “ automatic, —
IMS CHEVY IMPALA CONVERTI-ble. Full power. Good condition. 673.564*:	-
IMSVi CORVETTE, 425
IORSEPOW-* tires, side exhaust, r couple. 332-6542, aft.
IMS FORD COUNTRY SEDAN, f PASSENGER STATION WAGON. MWER
Equipped, automatic
TRANSMISSION. RADIO AND HEATER, ■ t, WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE MTS ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Aseume payments of M.M,. :redit mgr;
r HAROLD * ■“
U 4-7500.
1 FORD (UlAXIE SOt 2-DOOR,
1963
T-BIRD
HARDTOP, 1 YEAR WARRANTY, FULL 'POWER.
$1295
SANK RATES .	$150 DOWN
Downey Olds
550 Oakland	FE 12-8101
IMS FORb CONVERTIBLE. V tomatlc, radio, (water, i steering, brakes, baautHul I glow metallic finish with
"It only takas, a minute" te St "A BETTER DEAL" a
John McAuliffe Ford
630. Oakland Avo.	FE 5-4101
frEsh START
Downey Olds
550 Oakland FE 2-8101
1066 CHEVY CAPRICE 2 D OjO R hardtop, wanted must ba In good condition, with' average mileage. Prefer full factory equipment Including air conditioning. Call H. J. 4-1930.
1*61 IMPALA V-S CONVERTIBLE,
full dower, 0550. 646-5027._
1*61 MONZA 2-OOOR AUTOMATIC,
J395 at MIKE SAVOIE .CHEVRO- power steering, . tot, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. VAN CAMP CHEVY, T«62 CHEVY WAGON, V-S, AUTO- lord, MU 4-1025. made; A-l shape. 602-5700.
166 CHEVELLE SS 396 4-SPEED, vinyl top, $2,105. VAN CAMP CHEVY Inc. On j—- - — —■ FORD, MU 4-1025.
1066 IMPALA SPORT COUPE WITH ------- steerlnj},_red, Only $2,005.
:. On Mil-
1962
Chevrolet
IMPALA, AUTOMATIC, 0-CYL., 2-DOOR HARDTOP.
. $395
Downey Olds
550 Oakland FE 2-8101
. 1*63 CORVAIR SPYDER CONVER-
1066 CHEVELLE. 369 HORSE POW-— 4-speed, doug headers, astro IS, 62534.*'

1966 CHEVELLE, SS. 31
CHEVY MALIBU, 2-OOOR,
MIKE SAVOIE
Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-2735
4 speed, FE 2-732*.
)063 BELAIRE 2-OOOR, 0, AUTO-1 matlc, 0005 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. “■ 4-2731
1063 GREENBRIER ESTATE * on, 18 passenger, stick, radio, I ar, mbit condition. SUM f price, SM down, *36.52 mon "If only toko* o minute" to . Gel "A BETTER DEAL" at:
John MeAuliffo Ford
S30 Oakland Ave.	FE 54101
1*63 CHEVY BEL AIR. 44IYUN-dar. Standard ihlft. Radio, hooter, whitewalls, tinted glass, >700. FE 44124.
TM3 CftfcVAIR
1964;.
Chrysler
AUTOMATIC, SEDAN.
$1195.
I-YEAR WARRANTY. BANK RATES
Downey OJds
550 Oakland FE 2-8101
1*63 FORD GALAXIE CONVeRTI-bto, V8, automatic, radio, Iwotor, power steering, light metallic turquoise with white nylon top, mint condition throughout. S1.0M full price, in down. S49.92 per month. "It only tokos a minute" to Got. "A BETTER DEAL" at:
John McAuliffe Ford
10 Oakland Avo.________FE J-4101
.... m......I 2-DOQR
1645 at MIKE SAVOIE C.._. LET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735.
1963 CHEVY Station Wagon
{BILL FOX CHEVROLET
Rechtetor OL 1-7000 755 S. Rochester Rd.
196o IMPERIAL
$595
BIRMINGHAM
Chrysler-Plymouth
Kessler-Hahn
Chryslcr-Plymouth-Veltant-Jaep
6673 Dixie . Clarkston
5-2635
1966 IMPERIAL
white vinyl top.
King financing available. KING AUTO SALES, M39 and ELIZA-. BETH LAKE ROAD. FE 0-400* TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS W63 CHEVY impale 4-door, hardtop, VI, automatic, locally owned, and Is oMy $1095. On US10 at MIS, Clarkston, MAS-5071.
1*63 CHIVY IMPALA CONVERTI-
conditioning, green
^$3695 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth
160 S. Woodward	Ml 7-3214
wftfn, power, IS 0095.

1963 CHEVROLET
$795 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth
B60 « Woodward
1964 Chevy
Super Sport Convertible
Radio, healer, automatic, and pow-
1964 DODGE
Pole re, 4-door radio, heater, i telle, only
$995
BIRMINGHAM
Chrysler-Plymouth
060 S. Woodward	’’Ml 7
$1495
HOMER
HIGHT-
Motors, Inc.
On M24 In Oxford, Mich.
OA 8-2528
1*64 CHEVROLET| SUPE~R~5p5RT
1027 MODEL T TOURING CAR -
Can bo seen at 5701 Whlto --
Rood.
SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blrmlng-
1*64 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR l
TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1*64 CHEVY Impale Convertible,
m automatic, ----------------
B heater, whl________■ „...._
i trim. Only $14*5. On
matlc, $1095. at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham?"’'
’TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1*66 CHEVY lm£ala 2-door hr J' with VS, automatic, radio, I
Only - *13M- O" -US10 at
MIS, Clarkston, MA 5-5071.
1*66. IMPALA 2-DOOR HARDTOP. ?!tfS031,le wlth power, *13*5 et MIKE .SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735.
t»64 IMPALA WAGON 6 - AUTO-~	— ‘11 4-2735.
VACATIONING* 1945 CHEVY BEL-
1965 CHEVROLET
Impale Super Sport with p
equipment, automatic traiismis-•ton, radio and hooter, whltewi " tiros. Mil . price $1695, only i denm^end weakly payments
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD, INC.
. 464 8. WOODWARD AVE. ' •HW^NAM	Ml 4-7500
fHTjBBSvETTl-E5DPST
*»M^VAie ib60R; HARDtoP
CHEVROLET, Birmingham.
KESSLER'S
Soles and Service
146 DODGE CORONET 500, HARD, top, auto., power steering whitewalls. Many extras.
2 TOPS. RESTORED.
1958 FORD 6 STICK. N gear. New brakes. Good tl 602-5635.___________________
1*63 FAIRLANE 500 1-DOOR HARD-top, o, automatic 1945 at mike SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blrmlng-
1963	■
FORD
Custom 2-door, 8-cylinder, automat-
$495
FULL PRICE NO MONEY DOWN
Downey Olds
19*4 GMC CUSTOM SUBURBAN. i — V6. 4-speed manual tranem tlbn. Power brakee and etearli
1*61 COMET 6, STICK, GOOD SEC-
1*63 . MERCURY . 6-OOOR SEDAN.
BORST
v.n Ntorcurv. 47* S. W<
— Ml
1*64 FALCON 2-DOOR SEDAN WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER. WHITE-WALL TIRES, FULL PRICE ABSOLUTELY NO J DOWN, Assume
----, payments of S7.»2.
CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Porks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500.
MONEY
1*64 MERCURY MONTCLAIR door hardtop. VI, automatic,' po steering, power brakes,'power i dows. A beautiful royal blue ' matching Interior, lava. R( RAMBLER Sotos, 1145 Commerce Rd.. EM 3-4155.
164 MERCURY MONTEREY 2-door hardtop. Auto., radio, $995. By owner. Ml 6-5053._________
steering, brakes, these Pontiac Highway dept. cars. 7 ‘	|
trom, your choice tor full price. $81 down, am low as $36.82 per month.
"It only takes a minute" to Gof "A BETTER DEAL" at
John McAuliffe Ford
638 Oakland Ave.	FE 5-4101
1964 FORD ,
XL CONVERTIBLE, AUTOMATIC, POWER STEERING AND BRAKE LOW MILEAGE, ONE OWNER.
$1295
1 YEAR WARRANTY 150 DOWN	BANK RATES
Downey Olds
FE 2-8101
550 Oakland
1*64 for6 g
. A X I E, 2 DOOR
■ 1*45 T-BIRD, VERY CLEAN, 82,250 Opdykt Hardware ‘	‘ FE 8-6616
1*65 T-BIRD . . . $2,7*5. OPDYKE Hardware, FE 8-6686.
1*65 MUSTANG, bock, 390 1 “
I mission — ......
$1,595. Coll 425-23*1
PLUS 2. FAST-- 4-speed transrubber, sharp!

'I960 Falcon
2-door, like new condition, no n ey down, spot delivery, asking—
$269
SPARTAN
DODGE
Pretty Ponies
1965 & 1966 MUSTANGS
SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM
CONVERTIBLES HARDT0PS-2 PLUS p's FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From i$1295 As Low As $39 Down And $39 Per Month
HAROLD
TURNER
• FORD, INC.
464 Sl WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM	Ml 4-750
1*60 FORD WAGON ANfc 1963 FORD
941 FORD 9-PASSENGER WAGON — Full power. Only $9*. MARVEL MOTORS, 251 Oakland Ave., — tlac, FE 0-4079._______
weekly payments of $4.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FpRD, Ml 4-7500.
1*61" Falcon, s-cylinder, $iso.
1*61 FORD FALCON, EXCELLENT cond. $300, EM 3-2332.
1*6? THUNDERBIRD.A REAL , nice car. Can be purchased with no money down.
LUCKY AUTO
1962 FORD WAGON, 4 DOOR, RACK solid, new rubber and exhaust, 363-2093.
M2FORD GALAXIE 4-DOOR hardtop. V-8, automatic, 'radio, heater, excellent condition. Only 0495. As low as $5 down with King financing available. KING AUTO SALES. M5* and ELIZABETH. LAKE ROAO. FE 1-4080.
FORO RAtiCH IjfAgON^ 8495
OWLET,
hardtop, automatic with power power. $1555 at MIKE SAVOII CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml I
the goodl idge, loin
r month. SO,08o“mi'to w car warranty.
"It only takes a minute"
lurianj
' $43.54 5 year
■j . . BETTER DEAL' ■
,ohn McAuliffe Ford
430 Oakland Ave.	FE 5-4101
1965
Mustang
STICK, CONVERTIBLE, 4 ( FLOOR.
$1595
1-YEAR WARRANTY. BANK RATES $150 DOWN
Downey Olds
550 Oakland >E 2-8101
Now and Used Cars 106 ,'^3^7 PLUsTFincyL
Auto, coneoto. Decor 343-0044. ,
1966 FALCON
Chib Station Wagon with automatic transmission, radio and hestsi and whitewall tires. FuH price qnly $10*5, only *4* down er" weekly payments S14.fl
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD, INC.
464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM____-Ml 4-7500
1*67 T-BIrds, Mustangs, Galaxies. Low Down Payment. Credit no problem. Call Jot Wolse. JACK LONG FORD SALES, 4S1-*711, Rochester,
3 GMC SUBURBAN, AUTOMAT-
1*60 Ford — Chevrolet wagons 1107 0 or toss convertibles & cars $70 (3) 1*4$ VWs - Ford - Dodge S12»5 Plenty others and few trucks .
. Economy Cars 2335 Dixie Hwy.
COMET STAmpN .wagon! automatic, alr-condmohW. Only $3*5 with at low as $5 down. King financing available. KING AUTO SALES, M5* and ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD. -FE 8-6080.
TICK, SI
160 COMET 2-DOOR AUTOMATIC, radio, htotor, 024S at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmthghom.
1*65 MERCURY STATION WAGON, VI, automatic, radio, hootor, power steering, brakes, power rear window, beautiful Sahara beige with matching Interior. $1681 full price.
^'illfwHy take* a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at:
John McAuliffe Ford
630 Oakland Avo.______FE 5-4
1966 MERCURY
Colony Park 10 passenger station wagon with power equipment — tomatlc transmission, radio
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD INC.
444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM	Ml 4-751
MARMADUKE
By Anderson find Learning
"Barbie, drop the pill in first . then the meat, Billy!”
bw end Used Cert 10ft
BANKRUPT?
CREDIT PROBLEMS?
We Can Finance You—
Just Coll
1966
OLDS
LUXURY SEDAN, FULL PO' FACTORY WARRANTY
$2795
>150 DOWN	BANK RATES
Downey Olds
550 Oakland FE 2-8101 SUBURBAN OLDS
HOME OF
Qualify One-Owner Birmingham Trades
AT LOWEST PRICES S, Woodward_447-5111
Hew end deed Cere 106
THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING
1150 A^apto^a
1*43 PONTIAC HARDTOP,' REAL nice. 333-7542, Riggins, dealer.
1963 CATALINA
4-door hardtop, automatic, | steering, brakes, Only—
$1195.
1*65 PONTIAC OTO, ,340 HORSE-power, 4-speed, poshtraction, 3*0 roar exit. Excellent shape. 115*5.
1965 PONTIAC
Catalina idoor, radio, hooter derd transmission .only ‘
$1*95
BIRMINGHAM
Chrysler-Plymouth
S6Q 8. Woodward	mi 7
M .LIMANS 2-DOOR HARDTOP, power brakes, power stoerlng, vl-nyl top, 674-1561 after 4.
1*66. FONtlAC OTO.' TAKE 6vM
1966
PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE, INDOOR HARDTOP
$2595
m
Hew and Used Cars
1*66 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, OOU-ki>	whitewel’-	-----
FE SOtirifh ' r‘ r ^ ' rmw i,
Interior.
Hwa and Head Cm 10ft
RAMBLER - BUY YOUR NEXT ONE AT PBTIRSON 4 SON'RAMBLER In LoRsir, lari* Mtocttons -* ports, >«rvlco, c«n 4SMIH. ■
6IS-66M,
»,• cyl.
f PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR ardtop with 2,000 actual mihe, «nlsh, with block Interior, U power steering brakes,
i BETTER DEAL" et:
McAuliffe Ford
630 Q«ktond_ Ry». ;	.,Fi 5-4101
1*63 RAMBLER AMERICAN 2-
end original 04)00 miles — priced to Mill ROSE RAMBLER, 0145 Commerce Rd. EM 3-4155.	. •
1*63 CLASSIC WAGON. LIKE NEW.
day and Thuruiay nights Tell us .. . If you cm buy tor lets. VILLAGE RAMBLER,
wera; BlrmlniBliwi.____________
1*65 CLASSIC 2-DOOk. 6<YLIND¥fc Automatic, Excellent, n Owner, VILLAGE RAMBLER, Ut S. Wood-
1*65 AMBASSADOR wO1 cOnvert-Ible, l-cy Under, Automatic, JtoWBr steering' VuLagE RAMBLER, 666 s. Woodward, Blrmlnghmt. ,■ 1*66 COMPANY DEMOS' - PRICED
. WZV V.Li4A®'
BLER, 666 S. Woodward, Blrmlng-
Pino ot__... ■ _
Priced to Mil with m
""'VILLAGE RAMBLER
666 S. Woodward Birmingham 166 VOLKSWAGEN, SUNROO?, and sharpl Low mlloago, 1 owner. VILLAGE RAMBLER, MS S. Wood-word, Rlrminghom.
Downey Olds
550 Oakland FE 2-8101
PRIVATE OWNER!
ONE OWNER CARI EXTRA SPECIAL!
Yts - this Is lust What I said above 1 A 1*68 PONTIAC CATALINA 2 DOOR HARDTOP With o| sparkling snow whlto exterior, and 0 |of block Vinyl top tool Yes -this outstanding unit has only 21,-800 actual miles, and It's yours1 for only 12150. Remember - Thlsl is a one owner carl Cell 623-1106 Mt-i SJkiM'
1964 Pontiac.
Grand Prix, platinum with black vinyl fop, mag whMls, your old car down, ASKING*-
$1787
SPARTAN . DODGE
855 Oakland Avo.
FE.8-6528
1*64 TEMPEST, CUSTOM 4-DOOR, auto. 6, radio, heater, whitewalls, extra clean, $*25. 623-0763.
1*64 CATALINA 4-DOOR, DOUBLE POw*r, auto., *1,100. At 164 W.
HAUPT'PONTIAC
1*66 PONTIAC LEMANS 2-DOOR1 hardtop, 326 engine, radio, heater, stick shift, still under raw-car warranty, royal blue with black vinyl top. Only $2,281 full'.prlco, $88 'down and only 873.70 per
. "It only takes a'lnlnute" to i Get "A BETTER DEAL" at:	>
John McAuliffs Ford
18 Oakland Ave.__________FE 5-4181
SHELTON
, 1966
Toronado- _______
couPES^m - conditioned,
VOIE cU?VRO.LET, 8irminghaml
$3695
BANK RATES
Downey Olds
550 Ooklond FE 2-8101
DON'S USED CARS. Small Ad—3ig Lot
58 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM We buy ar will adiust your pay-. meats te less expensive car.
677 M-24, Lk. Orlen MY 2-2041
OPEN 9 TO 9 P.M.
Transportation Specials
.... OLDS v JPW 1*41 BONNEVILLE hardtop .
V962 CORVAIR 2-door .
1*61 CHRYSLER hardtop.
1*63 FALCON Auto.....
1*62 PONTIAC 2-door ..
1961 FORD Auto. ......
1*60 PONTIAC wagon ..
1*60 OLDS convertible ..
1*60 VALIANT Auto. .... *297
1*61 RAMBLER.American . $1f’
62 CORVAIR Monza ..... $11
BUY HERE-PAY HERE
WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING CALL MR. DAN AT
FE 8-4071 .
Capitol Auto
1*62 OLDSMOBILE STATION WAGON, f PASSENGER MODEL, AUTOAAATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITE-WALL TIRES, FULL PRICE $695, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments, of $7.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500.
1967
OLDS
DELTA CUS. DEMO. 2780 MILES, NEW CAR WARRANTY, .5 YEAR.
$3195 ■
BANK RATES,	LOW DOWN
Downey Olds
550 Oakland FE 2-8101
1*61 VALIANT STATION WAGON, new rubber, $1*5. Save Aula. FE 5-3278.	_________
1964—PLYMOUTH—4-DOOR__
WITH. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, POWJER EQUIPMENT,-RADIO AND HEAT-
ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly pay-' ---s at $8.92. CALL CRED-
PONTIAC ' TEMPEST- 4-DOOR, auto., 23:000 miles, tinted windshield, pesltractlon, redla, heater, back-up lights, whitewall tires, *875. FE 8-6928.______________________________
1963 OLDS STARFIR hardtop. A truly fine car at $1,1*5. BOB BORST Lincoln cury Sales, 47* S. Woodward
1965 OLDS
LUXURY SEDAN, i FULL POWER
$2195
NoMystery
™ About'Our Discount
-I _IT'S IN THE PRICE
3
»44 TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE, automatic. 111 295 at M.KE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham.1
equlpmant, automatic transmission, radio and, haOtor, whitewall tiras. Full price *13*5, only!
HAROLD
TURNER
ford; inc.
464 *.• WOODWARD AVE: BIRMINGHAM	Ml 4-7580
5 CATALINA 7-DOOR HARDTOP, :. condition. Call aft. 4:“ weekends, 3346522.
1*65 Pontiac, Bonneville, 4 passenger,
■i______________E l <
6*3-12*0.______________
1*65 CATALINA, DOUBLE POWER, decor, hydra., 15,000. Ml., ar~ 5:30, OR 3-7275.	_______
J965,PQNTIAt 2-plus-2
With vinyl roof, automatic, pot stoerlng, brakes, whitewalls, most like neWI Only—
$2195
HAUPT PONTIAC
■ On M15 at Interchange 1-75 Clarkston	MA 5-5
TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1*65 PONTIAC mfiktod|d|M
steering, brakes,
control, lew mileage, new car trade! *21*5. On US10 at M15, Clarkston. MA 5-5071.________________
1965
PONTIAC
HARDTOP, STICK
$1395
$150 DOWN	BANK RATES
Downey Olds
550 Ooklond FE 2-8101
Mansfield
Auto Sales FE 5-5900 . FE ,8-8825
WE 'SPECIALIZE IN LATE MODEL GM 1 -OWNER USED CARS
STATION WAGONS
TEMPEST, Custom, V-8 angina.
TEMPEST, Custom, 4 passe gar, has full power, factory sir co dltlonlng, white with blue Interior.
BEATTIE FORD
50,000 Mile or 2 Year Pbwef Train Warranty -
1966 Chevy
VVTon Pickup With custom cab, step bumper: V-S, radio, heater, whitewalls and tinted glass. Extra nlcel Only—'' ‘
$1895
1966 Bronco
Plckpp, with 4-cyl., 4-wheal drive. Radio, heater. Balance ol new car unit warranty.
,$1995
1963 leepster
Station Wagon, automatic, power steering, 4-wheel drive, radio, heater. Only —
$1395
1965	Ford
F250‘ tt-lon plckpp, VI, stick, llbarglas cover over back. Only
$1695
1961 Chevy
W-Ton with 4-Cyl. angina, slick shift. On|y—
$795
1966	Ford
F-100 Pickup, with 4-cyl. englm. radio, heater, custom cab, tu-- walls.
$1795
—On Dixio Hwy: In Waterford-^ Your Ford Dealer Since 1930 623-0900

09
Sale of Top Quality Cars
$f 75
1965 CHEVY
Blscsyne 2-door, with 4 cyl. automatic. Radio. Now Only—
' $1395
1964 CHEVROLET
Pickup, 6 cylinder, standard transmission, radio; long box. Low mlleags — Lika raw.
$1095
1962 CHEVY
power steering. Only —
$695
1964 PLYMOUTH
Sport Fury Convertible, v-8. automatic, power steering and brakes. Only—
$1195
$445
1965 CHEVY
Chevetle Station Wagon. V-8. automatic, -radio, whitewalls. Beautiful bronze finish. Only—
$1495
1965 CHRYSLER
New Yorker 4-door, power steering, brakes, automatic, whitewalls. Only —
$1995
1964 PONTIAC
Catalina Convertible. V-8. automatic, newer steering end pew-
$1345
$745
WE HAVE SOME TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS—
Starting at Only—
$98.50
1965 MUSTANG
OAKLAND Chrysler - Plymouth 724-QAKLANDAVE;.
Mansfield
Auto
Sales
1104 BALDWIN AVE.
FE 5-5900 FE 8-8825
BANK RATES
$150 DOWN
Downey Olds
550 Oakland FE 2-8101
1*61 Bannevllle convertible 1*63 Bonneville Vista
.....1*60 Corvetr coupe
$59*. .1964 Corvelr Monza coupe 1*63 Ford Galqxte
-----1*62 Ford station wibon
*8W- 1*61 Cadillac Coupe Deville $5** ItopTBIrd
NO CASH NEEDED-BANK RATES
OPDYKE MOTORS
2230, Pontiac Rd. at Opdyki
PE 8-9237
1*65 OLDSMOBILE 88 2-DOOR AU-tomatlc with power, S!7*S. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blr^nlng-
1965 MUSTANG
door hardtope,' you* choice from THREE, automatic transmission, fully reconditioned.
$1795
1965 FORD GALAXIE 500 LT snort couh. with a beautiful rr matching silk I
er, power steering, brakes, $1788 full price only 888 down, SI6.*5.per month. 50,000 mile—5-year warranty-
"It only takas a minute" fa
Gat "A BETTER DEAL" at:
John McAuliffe Ford
638 Oakland Ave.	FE 5-4101
*66 FORD 4-OOOR AUTOMATIC, with power *11*5. MIE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, f 1
*66 FORD,. 7 LITRE. 4-SPEED. Power steering, brakes, air conditioning. Reclining seat. Many other extras. 17,000 ml. Like raw. Best Oftor. EM 3-3111 After 6 p.m.
1965
OLDS
DYNAMIC 88 CONVERTIBLE, POWER STEERING, POWER BRAKES.
$1995
1150 DOWN, BANK RATES
Downey Olds
550 Oakland FE 2-8101
1*60 PONTIAC, GOOD RUNNING condition. 623-1167.
1*68 PONTIAC" 4 DOOR HARDTOP. Clean. Runs good $2*5. 1961 Dodge Pioneer, 2 dr. hardtop, V8. Auto, power steering, runs perfect, S275.1 OR 3-5200. H 8. H Auto Seles,
TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLOS 1*65 OLDS 442 with 4-speed, radio, haater, new whitewalls, $15*5. On USIO et MIS. Clarkston, MA 5-5871.
1966
OLDS
DEMO., 442, 4 ON FLOOR, GOQ MILES: NEW CAR WARRANTY
$2195
8-9238
LUCKY AUTO
- -1940 W. Wlda Track FE 4-1006 :	er ~ FE 3-7854
1*61 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR, -‘•■•'-le power, royal	m'—‘
$458. Call 474-2390,
1*62 CATALtNA REGULAR FUEL.
V-8, Exc. condition. $5*5. 335-4338. 1*62 TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE. Good conditions, Runs well. $375. FE 2-5243 or F6 2-6468.___
bank Rates
*150 DOWN
Downey Olds
5^0 Oakland FE 2-8101
1963
PONTIAC
2-DOOR HARDTOP, POWER STEERING AND BRAKES.
$895
FULL PRICE
10 MONEY DOWN BANK RATES
Downey Olds
550 Oakland . FE 2-8101
BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE.
..-- lxcellen'
after 5
Wg5
Mr-4-3
The Heart Of Our Business Is The Satisfaction Of Our Customers.
and brakes. Dark blue v
1962 CONTINENTAL
rh matching Interior. Gorgeous. >
1967 MERCURY
. Big si: ity. This
six, automatic, radio, I
$1495
,,r: $2195
1964 PONTIAC
Grand Prlx two-door herdtop. Automatic, power steering ^
and brakes. Silver b
h ell vinyl bucket si
1965 CORVAIR
--Monza two-door hardtop. Four-speed, radio, heater. This Is a one-owner beauty..........................
1965 MERCURY
Montclair Marauder two-door hardtop. Automatics radios heaters power steering-and brakes. Factory air. ..
1965 TEMPEST . .	,
Custom two-door. "326", V-l, stick Looking far something rosily nice?
1963 CATALAN A
Sedan. Automatic, radio, heater, pc owner, garage-kept beauty.....
$1295 ' $1995 : $1395
d brakes. A sharp one, I
1964 MERCURY
Breezeway sedan. Automatic, radio, heateV. p Ing end brakes. An excellent buy.....
. LINCOLN - MERCURY
1250 Oakland '
18 0n" $1195
steering, $
333-78S3
TAKE ADVANTAGE
OF OUR LOW-LOW PRICES
WE STIU HAVE NO SALESMEN
Deal With Owners Direct.
RUSS JOHNSON — XljN JOHNSON
$1495
1964 CHEVY
Impale 2-door hardtop, with V-l, automatic, power steering, brakes, whitewalls, radio, heater. Ivory finish. Only —
$1495
1963 CATALINA «
$1295
1965	RAMBLER
Classic Hardtop, BRAND NEW Factory ENGINE. Factory air conditioning.
$1795
1966	PONTIAC
Catalina Sedan, power steering, brakes, hydramatic, radio heet-
WI Ideal CONVERTIBLE. Automatic, double power, silver blue with black top.
$2095
1965 PONTIAC
Bonneville Convertible, with double power,« hydramatic, ‘ sifter
f Door sedan, with Bower Ing, brakes, whitewalls, heater. Municipal car. with a black top.
$1795
PONTIAC-RAMBLER Open Daily Til 9 P.M.
On M24 In Orion, fyJY ,3-6266
* THE frONTlAC PHKSS. TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1067
. C-^ll
^	—Television Programs—
Pragram* furnished by stations listed in this column ar« .object to change without notice
TONIGHT
6:16
6:30
10:30
11:00
(2) (4) News, Westher, Sports (C)
(7) Movie: “Eight Iron Men". (1061) Lee Marvin, Boner Golleano, Arthur Franz.
(SO) Superman (SO) Friendly Giant (56) Children’s Hour (2) News—Cronkite (C)
(4) News—Huntley, Brinkley (C)
(9) Twilight Zone (SO) FUntstones (C)
(56) What's New»
(2) Truth or Consequences (C)
(4) Weekend (C)
(9) Bat Master son (SO)McHale’s Navy (SO) Spectrum — PossU ity of creating a robot society is discussed.
(2) Red Skelton — Guests are George Gobel and Chad and Jeremy. First in a soles of reruns. (C)
(4) Occasional Wife -Greta is hospitalized. First in a series of reruns (C)
(7) Combat -JSaunders is worried about an explo-sives expert who was mice a doctor. (C) (It)
(9) Dakotas — Ragan accompanies a Sioux chief to the signing of a- peace treaty.
(SO) Honeymooners (56) Fires of Creation — Last in a series of programs on glass blowing. (4) Movie: “Lover Come Back" (1962) Doris Day, Rock Hudson, Tony Randall.
(50) Perry Mason (56) NET Journal (2) Petticoat Junction When a plane crashes at the Shady Rest, Uncle Joe suspects the pilot of being a spy. (C) (R)
(7) Invaders — First in a series of reruns, this drama tells of David’s first encounter with the aliens. (C)(R)
(9) Lock Up — Macdonald Carey stars in this mystery drama.
"(3) Close-Up - A1 Kaline (Special) — figer right fielder, A1 Kaline, is interviewed by spartscaster Ray Lane. (Q)
(9) Boxing (50) Movie: “Black Fury” (1935) Paul Muni, Karen Morley.
(56) NET Playhouse—The Battle of Culloden; the battle fought on British soil (1746), is recreated. (2) CBS News Special -The hippie world as it exists in San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury district explored, including die hippies' anti-establishment and anti-war views; (heir psychedelic experiments; and their use of drugs. (C)
(7) Peyton Place (C)	:
(2) Daktari — Clarence has amnesia. (C) (R)
(4) Girl From U.N.C.L.E. —'’ April and Mark are shipwrecked on a South Seas island. (C) (R)
(7) Fugitive — Kimball befriends a mentally retarded carnival roustabout. (C) (R)
(9) Expo This Week (2) (4) (7) News, Weather, Sports (C)
(9) News (50) JoePyne(C)
(2) Movie: “Force of Impulse” (1961) Robert Alda, Jody McCrea, J. Caroll Naish.
(4) Johnny Carson (C)
(7) Joey Bishop (C)
(9) Movie: “Curse of the Faceless Man" (1958) Richard Anderson, Elaine Edwards.
(50) Las Vegas — Sched-u 1 e d g u e s fa: Tammy Grimes, Uberacei Serling.
(4) Beat the Champ (7) Untouchables
QUALITt
REPAIRS
on all malm
HEARING AIDS
Loaman Available
PONTUO HAUL OPTICAL ft WMWftAlftOtaTBI
Phone 682-1113
TV Features
CLOSE-UP - AL KALINE, 9 p.m., (2).
NET PLAYHOUSE, 9 P-m. (56). ySf,
CBS NEWS SPECIAL, 9:30 p.m. (2).
EXPO THIS WEEK, 10:30 p.m. (9).
(9) Window on the World . <C)
:30 (2>(4) News (O . -Tomorrow morning
:15 (2) On the Farm Scene :20 (2) News (C) *
:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (4) Classroom (7) Kingdom of the Sea (C)
:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (C)
(4) Today(C),
(7) Morning Show :55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round .
:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) Romper Room :30 (7) Prize Theater: “The Third Side of the Coin” June Allyson, Hugh Marlowe.
:00 (2) Merv Griffin (4) Living (C)
(9) Bonnie Prudden Show ;95 (56) All-Aboard for Reading
:» (56) Of Cabbages and Kings
(7) Dateline: Hollywood (9) People in Conflict :59 (56) Children’s Hour -:55 (4) News (C)
(7) Children’s Doctor (C) :00 (4) Pat Boone (C)
(7) Supermarket Sweep
cc)
(9) National Schools :05 (56) Reason and Read 29 (56) Science Is Discovery i:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R)
. (4) Hollywood Squares ■ * <C)
(7) One in a Million (9) Hercules (50) Yoga for Health 1:35 (56) Children’s Hour i:59 (56) Let’s Speak Spanish I m (2) Love of Life (4) Jeopardy (C)	'
(7) Everybody’s Talking (9) Mr. Dressup (50) DickoryDoc (C)
:05 (56) Interlude
:25 (2) Jackie Crampton (C)
, . (9) Tales of the River Bank
:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (C)
(4) Eye Guess (C)
- (7) Donna Reed (R)
(9) Friendly Giant :45 (2) Guiding Ught (C)
(9) Chez Helene.
:50 (56) Modem Math for Parents;
:55 (4) News — Edwin Newman (C)
9:30
Atlantic Ocean currents are carrying sand away from Cape Cod at a rate that will make the famed New England sandbar peninsula nonexistent in 4,000 to 5,000 years.
AFTERNOON
00 (2) News (C)
,(4) Match Game (C)'
(7) Fugitive (R) ",
(9) Take 30
(50) Dialing for Dollars :25 (4) Doctor’s House Call 30 (2) As the World Turns (C) (4) Let’s Make a Deal (C) ' (9) Communicate (50) Movie: “We’ve Never Been Licked” (1943) Richard Quine, Noah Berry Jr., Robert Mitchum. 35 (56) Let’s Speak Danish 50 (56) All-Aboard for Reading
:5S (4) News (O 00 (2) Password (C)
(4) Days of Our Lives (C) (7) Newlywed Game (C) (9) Movie:	“Terror at
Midnight” (1956) Scott Brady, Joan Vrin.
:10 (56) Children’s Hour 2$ (56) Reason and Read :30 (2) House Party (C)
(4) Doctors (C)
(7) Dream Girl (C)
40 (56) Art Lesson :55 (7) News (O
(56) Of Cabbages and Kings
9 (2) To Tell the Truth (C) (4) Another World (C)
(7) General Hospital I (56) Numerically So 5 (2) News (C) , ,
9 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say! (C)
(7) Dark Shadows (50) Love That Bob (R)
5 (56) Interlude 5 (9) News 0 (2) Secret Storm (4) Snap Judgment (C)
(7) Dating Game (C)
(9) Matches and Mates (Cf
(50) Topper (R)
5 (4) .News (C)
0	(2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) (4) Concentration (C)
(7) Virginia Graham (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Captain Detroit (C)
1	(2) Andy Griffith
(4) Bozo the Clown (C)
(7) Outer Limits (96) Managers in Action 0 (2) Mike Douglas (C)
(9) Fun House (C)
(56) Living for the Sixties 5 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (Cy 0 (4) George Pierrot (C)
(7) News, Weather,. Sports (C)
(50) Alvin (C)
(56) What’s in a Word 0 (7) News—Jennings (9) Cheyenne (R)
(SO) Little Rascals (56) What’s New 5 (4) Carol Duvall (C)
Will on Board Is Rejected Denver Judge
DENVER, Colo. (AP) - A Denver probate judge refused Monday to accept, a will written on a 5-by-28 inch wooden board!
Judge David Brofman refused 4o accept the boanjj in probate as the last will and testament of George J. Green, who died Sept. 30 at the age of 53. The judge ruled the board doesn’t have the required signatures 6f two witnesses to the signature of 'the maker of the will.
★ ★ • *
The top of the board bears the inscription “The Flat Wheel Central Railroad Co.” \ .
THE WILL .
Underneath, written in pencil: “I George J,. Green, brass hat. Being sound ,of mind, here by request as my last will and testimony that all my real and personal propoty be devided equalty between four of the following relatives.
1. George C. Green—father— undoutly will remain single.
'2. John C. Green—brother— if he remains single “3. Ben Green—brother—if he remains single “4. Wayne Green—nephew-stupid jerk because married.”
* ★ ★
Judge Brogman ruled that, under Colorado law, Green’s estate—estimated at $9,500—will go to his father, George Green of Denver..
Medley
S Ship'i jnut	- - ■ _________
12 Range	38 Roulette bat
lSBeUck	40 Sped
MShakeepeereen	448audt child
character	4# Streamlet ,
15 Tidy	4SCorralatlvaof
17	Pierce, u with a 49 Narrow way
dagger	80	Athena
U Steamer (ab.)	81 Grtndaon o(
18	Commingle	Jacob (Bib.).
21	Poetic	82 Newapaper
contraction	paragranh
22	drafted (bar.) 53 Kaiantiu being
24 Biblical garden 84 Number
28 Eminent in	88 Father (Fr.)
wladom	DOWN
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maaaure	. 2 Mountain craat
28 Faatehing	3 la filled with
device .	great longing
MPfllar	4 Perched
31	Conclualon * 8 Animal’s
32	Oirl's name
38 Italian stream
8 Conceal
7	Knthusiaatic (pi.)
ardor	38 Marked with
8	Bud’i sibling	spots
8 Magician's (orta 38 steal tracka for 10 Once mpra	railroads
H Steals	88 Sounder
19	Neophyte	mentally	'
20	Requested.	39 Scottish hillsida
authoritatively 41 The dill
23 SmaU csndles 42 Apple center 25Keep in curtody 43“Emereld isle”
27	Within (comb. 45 Greek communo
form)	47 Now Guinea
28	Hodgepodge	seaport
38 Bridal path 49 Mouth part
LBJ to Be Speaker at Detroit Confab
DETROIT (AP) - A touch of the Texas White House will come to Detroit this summer as 4,50Q delegates to the National Association of Counties (NACO) Conference and their wives will hear President Johnson and eat barbeque.
The President will* deliver the major address, on urban planning, at the July 30*Aug. 2 convention at Cobo Hall.
Detroit Mayor Jerome P. Ca-vanagh is general chairman for the local program.
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					64		*		56			16
BAD CREDIT? GARNISHMENTS? HARASSMENT? REPOSSESSIONS?
Let us help you solve any of these pseMems.
We VM Mt snMs . T.	rnLem h..
Debt Consultants of Pontiac, Inc.
OPCN UT. I AM. ts 12 MON
9ASEI6ENT SUSPENDED CQUN6S.
Interior Remodeling Specialists
CARLES CONSTRUCTION
FEU-4468	(Financing Available)
,7s An a UammaA Michiyam Bmilder
Shot Kills Son
CASHEL, Ireland (AP) -Farmer Thomas O’Donnell fired his shotgun into a tree Monday when he thought he saw a fox that had been killing his chickens. His 11-year-old son, Jeremiah, fell from the tree, dead.
Steve and Eydie Struggle to Get By on 25 a Week
By EARL WILSON
NEW YORK — Steve Lawrence ft Eydie Gorme are getting $25,000 a week at the Waldorf Empire Room and if you think that’s a lot of money, it is . . . until you talk to Eydie about what hairdressers cost nowadays and I gather hers cost at least $35,000 a week and she loses $10,000 . .. then thiere are press agents and accountants agj ARRANGERS, oh, my goodness, arrangers!
I felt sorry for them only getting a lousy $25,000 a week, which is believed to be the largest salary ever paid at the Waldorf, and Eydie says, “We’re breaking It in for < Frank," meaning Frank Sinatra whom the Waldorf’s trying to get for next fall.
Johnny Carson, host for a big party for them later (in the. Louis XVI Room, with his wife and producer Stan IrwiiVapnjoyed all the kidding the couple gave off.
About singer Gordon MacRae'who’d.just left after a very successful engagement highlighted by a kayo from New York Yankees Ma"»gfr Ralph Houk: The previous tenant of their dressing room “left a couple of things behind—a wife and four kids—and a sigh,‘Yankee, Go Home!’”	>
“I called my doctor,” Steve said, “but he was out of town— Dr. Coppolino.” (Is this a sick joke?) Steve referred to Twiggy as die girl with two backs, which just shows what an expert he is on baths.
They then got around to introducing their favorite late night TV entertainer sitting there. As Johnhy Canon looked around anticipating toe worst, he got it: “And give my regards to Miriam and Randy.”
★ ★ ★
THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . .	*
Geraldine Page is out of “Black Comedy” temporarily visiting her ailing father in Arizona .	, Arp.toe Keefe Bras-
selles in SplitsviUe? . . . Efrem Zimbalist Jr. long-distanced model Samantha Jones (in Washington) from Le Manoir , Some of Sylva Koscina’s undraped Playboy photos were snapped by her husband Ramandtf Cecelli.
Kitty Carlisle says her recent return to opera was “just for my obituary—it would read much nicer as ‘Diva Dies’ than just ‘TV Panelist Succumbs’!” ... Max Asnas was asked by American Airlines to supply his Stage Deli food for their N.Y.-L.A. flight (but he declined—he hasn't the facilities).
TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: A local man who ran away from his wife was charged with desertion, says Bob Orben—but he says he was just leaving the scene of an accident,
WISH I’D SAID THAT: Everything has gone up. Yesterday’s penny-pincher now has to use a dime.
REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Talking about others and being a gossip is better than talking about yourself and being a bore."
EARL’S PEARLS: Many a man returns from Las Vegas chip-wrecked.
Woody Alien says he seldom drinks: “Once I sipped a martini—and I wanted to hijack an elevator and fly it to Cuba.” . . . That’s earl, brother.
— Radio Programs-
Sherriff-Goslm Co.
fro* Estimates 332-5231
WJR(760)WXYZQ270) CKLWfOOO) WWJ(9S0) WCAR(1130) WPONQ 460) WJBK(1500) WHFI-fM(94.7)
whh, uncle jay snow WCAR, News. Sacurelle WXYZ. News-cop#
4:34—WJBK, Sports
4:« WWJ, NOWS. Emphasis WJR, Baseball Fanfare 7:40—WWJ, News. Carlson WPON, Noon.) Music
WJBK, News, A , WCAR. Rein Rose. Newt Sports, Music WHFI. Dinner Concert
Reynolds, Musk:
8:88—WPON, Pontiac City Commission CKLW, Music V:88-WHF|, Jack Fuller 18:84—WJR, Nows, KaleWo-
11:84-WWJ, Newt, Sports. Overnight.
WJR,. Nows, Sports, Music WPON—ArlzoneWeston 11:34—WJBK, Concensus WEDNBSOAY MORNING 4:04—WJR, Music HaR WWJ, News, Cordon wcar, Nawa. Bin Doizalt WXYZ, Music, News, Mart
WPON^News, Music ( CKLW, News, Bud Dev its WJBK, Neft Books, Edit.
!:1S—WJBK, Bob Lee, Music
7:34—WJBK, Sports 8:80—WJR, NOWS, Sunnyslds 8:84—WJR, News, Harris CKLW, Tee Van WCAR, News, Sanders WHFI, Unde Jay wwj, NOWS, Ask Your Naighboy •
14:84—WXYZ, Breakfast Club
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:80—WJR, Nates, Farm WPON, News, Music WWJ, Review* News* M
WCAR, Dave Lockhart WHFI. Bill Boyle CKLW, News, Dave Shell wjbk. News. Edar.
13:34—WWJ, Marty XS4-WJR, Haws Music
WHFI,. Neon, Encore CKLW. News, pays Shafer
WXYZ,"bsive "Prince'Show. 2:34—WJR, Music Hall , 3:84—WCAR, News. Bacarella WJBK, News, Tolee
hint
TV
At 41 so
__	owA» ■ Per Da:
SWEET’S RADIO & TV
C
Junior Editors Quiz on-
HONEY
QUESTION: Why is honey sweet?
★ ★ ★
ANSWER: To live and work, both men and animals need special foods to build their bodies and give energy. We call the body-building foods proteins. Different kinds of fats and sugars serve as the fuel needed to liberate energy.
fa ..★	★
Sugar is a very important fuel food. We don’t need to eat a lot of sugar by itself, because such starchy foods as bread and potatoes turn to sugar after we have eaten them.
★	★ i ★
The bee doesn’t eat bread and potatoes. It eats honey. Honey is sweet because it has sugar. The bee needs this sugar as fuel. • *	*
But a bee doesn’t fly to a flower and come buck with honey. It is after pollen — which it moistens wtih honey and packs into carrying bags on its hind legs—and nectar, a total, sugary juice secreted by the flower.-
A bee has a kind of carrying-tank inside its body, (shown in white On top), In which it takes nectar to toe hive. There toe nectar is exposed to warm air which thickens ‘it and turns it to honey, a wonderful food for both bees and humans. The pollen brought back gives the bees toe protein they need.
HsoxcdL fldhmg^i
AIR CONDITIONING
FOR
AUTOMOBILES 8 PICK-UP TRUCKS
cm PI MMT
For Prices and Information Soo Bw: IlnHa in Operation
Miuttu
Radiator fiem/to
2293 Elizabeth Lake Road Across From Pontioc Mail
BUY, SELL, TRADE)
USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS!
i UP TO 50% OFF
I Asserted Chests	am cm I
I 949.95 to $79.95 ..   U I lo UT !
Metal Wall Cabinets
I 36xS0", Reg. $34.95 .....
j Box Springs, fall-twin om Am
i Soiled-damaged.........hi A '.** II
ALUMIMUM
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 18,1987
RCA VICTOR GH728. REG. *679**-SAVE *133
Th* ORTEGA. 295 «q. in. rectangular picture. Stunning Spanish- styling in antiqued Pecan veneers and solids. UHF/VHF. Automatic color clarifier.. 25,000 volts picture power/
*547
*589” - SAVE *133
$457
RCA VICTOR GH66S. REG. *629” - SAVE *133
The HURDAL 295 sq. in. rectangular picture. Beautiful Danish-style cabinet in genuine walnut veneers and solids. UHF/VHF. Automatic color clarifier. 25,000 volt picture power.
*497
RCA VICTOR 6H680. REG. *629” - SAVE *133
RCA VICTOR GH758. REG. *750 - SAVE *183 RCA VICTOR GH757. REG. *750 - SAVE *203
The DEKALB. AAaJestic French Provincial k
all-wood antique light walnut. Elegant c______ _______| ______
VHF. Automatic color clarifier. 25,000 volts picture power. Transformer-powered Mark II chassis.
*497
The ALEXANDRIA. 295 sq. in. rectangular picture. Charming Early American in genuine maple veneers and solids. Authentic detailing. Twin speakers. UHF/VHF. 25,000 Volt picture power. Deluxe chassis.
*567
The ABBEY. 295 sq. in. rectangular picture. Danish Modem decorator styling. Genuine walnut veneers and solids. Twin speakers. UHF/VHF. 25,000 volt picture power. Very deluxe.
*547
RED. SUMS. SMS $IU	HIQ. WUi UVI |1U
*497	*497
THESE ADVERTISED PRICES INCLUDE
mU DiUVERY, SIT-UP fO-DAY SIRYICE
gSS&rBSft
RED. 36T9.95. SAVE $133	RSG.$7IMAVHj
*497	*547	*567
$780. SAVE $183
*567
REG. 8881. SAVE $141
♦747
WI 88AYI THUS FOR IMMIRIAH DIUVIRY!
CO
Itta. 11,158. SAVE $275
*875
PUAMI
We appreciate your terest, but we must limit the safe of these RCA Victor Color sets to the general public.
FREE! 5 DAY I RIALINYOUR HOME
Try any of these RCA Color *et* in your homo -M certain you are pleased—or send it backl You must be satisfied.

TWO RCA VICTOR DISTRIBUTORS UNLOAD 1967 RCA COLOR TV OVERSTOCK AT
PRICES FAR RELOW THEIR COST
TO HIGHLAND!...GET *133 TO *275 OFF AS SAVINGS ARE PASSED ON TO YOU!
RECTANGULAR
LARGEST COLOR ISCREEN MADEiR

HIGHLAND BUYS OUT OVER 12,000 SETS . . . BEST-SELLIHG CURRENT 1967 MODELS! FACTORY-FRESH IN CARTONS!...
These two large RCA VICTOR distributors take a great less in this unloading . .. THEIR LOSS IS YOUR GAIN! Never before in Color TV history has there been an opportunity like this... and it's available only at Highland I Here's RCA big screen color dt a price evep/ family can afford! Choose from over 1,200 sets — consoles and combinations — in a wide variety of styles and finishes in ail-wood fine furniture cabinetry. All channel UHF/VHF tuning. Shown here are but a few of the bargains. Shop early for best selections. First come — first served.
THESE ADVERTISED PRICES INCLUDE FREE DELIVERY, COLOR ADJUS1MEHT,
1-TEAR PARTS and PICTIRE TORE WARRANTY, and DO-DAY SERVICE CONTRACT
•-ARSE 9-INCH
OUR
DI8COUNT
PRICK
SPUN-CASTING OUTFIT
.Professionally matched Balanced Rod and Reel
All needed Accessories including. Plugs, Hooks, Bait & Tackle Box Handy Fishing Guide 11.95 Value
galvanized
garbage
100 COUNT isLm
COLO
DRINKING' I
PAPBRCUPSi
King Size 32-Q»
STYROFOAM PICNIC V COOLER
15 02. CAN
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RESTORES POWER
SUPER
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SEAT CUSHION
OPEN DAILY
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IN DOWNTOWi
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SATISFACTION
GUARANTEED
PLENTY of free parking
			Choose ’ from ^ o	
		|	| ^1# , .	^ array of colors. You	At J
fXjjpo]			r ***** • afford to pass-up this bargain. . IllCHUT PIICEI 1	
	KuKwil	|C=^"wA*«>		
		TRANSMISSION-		
SUPPLEMENT TO THE PONTIAC PRESS Tuesday, Mmy 16, 1967
°f*N daily
SUNDAYS
DISCOUNT CENTER
> Print Cottons 1 Wash *n Wear Sailcloth
•	Stretch Denims
•	Assorted Colors
299 Vltf
Values ■
i DRESSES /%
f • Seersuckers \\j • Cotton A-ShapesN k* Cotton!Broadcloths] j^ « Kitchen Formal*
• Sizes 10 to 20 14 1/2 to 24 1/2
Volues to 5.9B ,
LADIES COTTON
FANCY
Assorted Prints • 2 Collared and some Zipper models
- » Sizes S, M, L VoluesJoJjj98
fabric buys
• in new • fashioir colors and designs PBKAIF PRINTS
Waistband. Sizes 3io 8 Regular 1.00
IT WILL REALLY PAY YOU TO STOCK UP NOW SHOP SAVE
MAY SALE
MAY SALE
Beautiful Blass DECORATED TUMBLERS
8-PIECE ^ MF JL
anchor	f*
HOCKING	Y
Guaranteed luxurious < your home.
Electric motorized spit, all-metal flood, chrome led* and grill. Easy rolling rubber tread wheels.
PW... Provides a OWn *o • beautify
VINYL

nuns
3/8” Diameter, solid brass cou guarantee. / OUR
New RoLA-Pak with cutting edge 12*' wide	,
[25’ Long
5*1
ROLLS ■
CHARM BRACELETS
MIX 'EM - MATCH 'EM
10O-FOOT CLOTHESLINE
ROUND, BUSHEL SIZE
5X3X3 FOLDING
No. 7 Pasfic wire or cotton braided YOUR CHOICE
Aluminum Frame and Saran Webbing
13-PC TOOL KIT 16-OZ. HAMMER
m o ur* non t err
ALL CORN ^
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k BROOM
DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL!
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BATTERIES
OSCILLATING
SPRINKLER
ASSORTED LOT
HORSEMAN
TRADE IN SALE
Reg. 6.00 Vali SPECIAL
50 COUNT ROUND
CLOTHES
AY SAL
VBOYS1 V PLAID WALK SHORTS
Sixes 3 to 8 In many stripped colors. Crew Neck styles
Trim-looking styles in	H
Tan, Loden and Black. Washable! Pre-shrunk. SIZES 28 to 42 Values to 3.99	>4
WALKING SHORTS
(HOKE OF ACCESSORY SIFT SETS .
»TIE, TIE CLASP AND PEN SETS	d
•TIE, KEY AND TIE CLASP SETS	J
•TIE HANDKERCHIEF, CUFF LINK, TIE CLASP SETS
AY SALE
fabric buys
• in new • fashion colors and designs
PERCALE PRINT specially priced
In Asserted Colors Ideel For Dresses, Aprons, Etc. SoU in 1 to Iff yrd. Lengths Regular 49* Value.
COATS AND CLARKS MERCERIZED
^SEWINC THREAD
^Assorted Colors A £ 5C Value Sold	^
In Pkg. of 12
MORGAN JONES TERRY BATH TOWEL
22x44"	•
Fringed Rose Arbot* Pattern in Rose—Gold -. and Bfue
Rose Arbor 15x26” ^QC Regular 59<r..,.^
MATCHED WASH CLOTH
Rose Arbor 12x12”	4 Qc
Regular 354.....	| J
^34" X 62" Fringed jlwM Different « i W^~ Patterns •Sun Days '-Multicolor •"Ship Ahoy”-Mu|tlcolor 1 Old Sea Dag"*Multicolor]
•"Sun GirrLMulticolor/l
Regular .98 Values
GARMENT
CANNON ^
-ss- wk
Assorted Color Check Patterns	WfUlSK
SAVINGS ON TOWELS
BEACH TOWELS
if
IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC
Up
Values
GIRLS
2-PIECE
JAMAICA
SETS
Fully lined shorts Sizes 7 to 14
STRETCH FOOTLETS
// Mode of popular'Hel' Jggl enca stretch nylon g|p Fits any foot. Wear instead of socks with summer shoes.
Vakm *o **•»»
LADIES KNEE-KNOCKER
SURFERS^
•Print Cottons •Wash 'n Wear •Sailcloth •Stretch Denims •Assorted Colors 2.98 Values
MESH
PANTIES
White and.colors Sizes 5, 6 and 7
TOP QUALITY
OUR
DISCOUNT
PRICE
KNIT TOPS
Some with zippr Assorted colors,
LADIES
BLOUSES
PLASTIC DROP CLOTH
MASKING
WALL
PAINT
3 inch PAINT
(LATEX)
EXTENSION
LADDER
complete with Rubber Safety guard Grand Opening Price
Built Cor strength, yet lightweight for easy carrying. .Ladder, is equipped with serrated rungs, rollers at top, automatic locks, and rubber feet for safety.
/
SCHICK
DOUBLE EDGE
STAINLESS STEEL
BLADES1
I PACK	Mk
! °FS	/■
SPECIAL j79C Value
BUFFERIN
____ BOTTLE OF 100
ggam TABLETS FOR HKi FAST PAIN H RELIEVE
iillotti
^REGULAR 1.39 SIZE

$1.00 VALUE
HAIR and SCALP CONDITIONER
CONTAC COLD CAPSULES
Pkg. of 10
ALKA-SELTZER
POSNER
BERGAMOT
CONDITIONER
Sail
(lehavetheWUM®
SWING&*
POPULAR MEN'S onn
0UTANE LIGHTER
299
6.95
Values
20 FILM ’ MODEL
U ttM 2
POLAROID NO. FOR SWINGER
only 1.68
SAGINAW 'pmriiKc"
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
WEW SHIPMENT
LIMITED
quantity
ONLY’jW
by JULIETTE
KODAK 126, 127 and 620 COLOR
and Opening	A
Price...	ICWV
FILM PROCESSING QOC
8 MM, 35 MM-20, 126K COLOR	M W 1
8 MM. 35 MM-20, 126K COLOR
PKG. OF 12 EXPOSURES
«H!m* I;	' -'aiffiMI
SUPPLEMENT TO THE
PONTIAC PRESS
Tuwdoy, May 14,1W7 v -.
NO MONEY DOWN
/WoNTGOM E R Y
WARD
w—iw
HOME FURNISHINGS
FESTIVAL
CHECK WARDS SPECIAL LOW PRICES!
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m
linn firm
*90
REDUCED
3-PIECE MEDITERRANEAN-STYLE BEDROOM SET
*299
Lavishly ornate in the tradition of Old Spain! this distinguished suite is
constructed of solid ash in a warm honey-brown finish_____accented by
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EXPERTS AS NEAR AS YOUR
*299
•	$ove time and trouble because you'll never ji&ve to defrost again
•	7-day meat keeper and two matching fruit and vegetable crispers
•	Huge 200-pound freezer section; removable egg rock; interior light
•	Covered butter and cheese compartments; adjustable cold control
Also available with automatic ice maker, optional and extra.
Wards Signature* refrigerator prices start as low as. *.$99
PECIAL! WARDS OWN DELUXE 15,000 BTU AIR CONDITIONER WITH A LOOK OF FINE FURNITURE!
•	Easy, to install with Quick-Mount adjustable kit
•	Keeps several rooms cool—up to 920 sq.ft. •.Doubles as dehuptidifier and automatic fan
Has aukaggy thermostat; freeh air and exhaust
•	Automatic Dual*Stat shuts off cooling and fan •Handsome Wood front blends with any decor
*219
DELUXE SIGNATURE® 17 CUBIC FT.
ALL-FROSTLESS t
2-DOOR REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER
*
*
® Tete-a-tete. Rods to sun or shade. Handy Bttle table separates 2 seats.. 64.88
® Lounge chair. Has adjustable back and convenient easy-roN wheels... 34.88
© Ottoman. Relaxing footrest or comfortable extra seat. Foam* cushion.. 12.88
® 7-ft. umbrella. Triple laminated fobrid Easy to crank open; puih button to lift. 29.88 Steel shell base for umbrella, only.. .6.95
© 5-pc. BBQ set. Table has big 54-in. parquet-top and oasy-roll wheels. 4 benches provide roomy seats..... 89.88
© Chaise loupgo. Extra-long 75*; bock adjusts to three positions........44.88
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Don't just dream of castles in Spain... live in one right at home! And enjoy something Spanish lords didn't have—the luxurious comfort of Ward-Foom* cushioning. This bold group derives its massive elegance from solid ook frames, carved wood trim and heavy tweed upholstery. 'WMiMMfcrfakMdaiAsNhM
you &t..
*399
MMUHTtWJt
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® 4-drawer chest @ Canopy bed (D Single dresser Q Powder table yC/lP» dgold (25 x 39* minor m Student do **ood now only 15.88) W l; du*t'	Princess dies! (not shown)
choice
49
Save*100on 5-Piece Monterrey Group
- JTfinrr nm nno
your choice: TV or Stereo
*119
each
1
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A • Sold seppsr drcutby v. - • Osar, steady picture r • AM dwwil reception ^ ; • Up-#n*Mwt»ep«wi
SUM 176 SO. M. COLO* TV FITS CART OR TAIL*
1299
room porta biKty. When move it, colors stay clearl Refiable perform-smart styflog to
trial
IS
Wards spring sale and linens that
SAVE $4 AND $6 ON WARDS QUILTED COT IN CHOICE OF LUSH, GARDEN-FRESH DECORATOR PRINTS
An exceptional vaiuo—a garden of carefree beauty to give your bedroom on elegant "custom” look. Words own Style House* graceful, throw-style bedspreads are quOtod right down to the floor with Dacron* polyester f*l and backed with fine cotton.
22.99 fu* size.......1R.99 2999 queen size.. ... .23.99 32.99 king size..... .26.99
Regular 9.99 coordinating print draperies, (not shown), 48*xA3*	. ......-P°*r 7.99
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IN SIX EXCITING COLORS!
4”
ttety* ■■—ierty I.W
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Regular 7^99 52x70* oblong tobledoth. .6.99
Regular 11.99 62* round tobledoth.9.99
Regular 12.9962x90* oblong toWedqlh. 10.99 Regular 12.99 62x90* oval tablecloth. 10.99 Regular 12.9962x104* oblong tabtedolh. 11.99 Regular 3.99 package of 4 napkins.2.99

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Tale Ore, flu er Otted t.-torty S.4V
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i
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«Mdl Words will give you the lining materialot no «K»r« cot*. JC&tfi Woltron it so light lor your dacordlbe needs. Woven of cotton, '▼	™
spun rayon and Antron* nylon, treated with ZE PEL* stoin repeHer,	1 ,
Rratelw Re howdy wod after tooth. 50 fnrtt raddaot cp|or».
•tuintatcMp.	110 mom
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$1 TO $S SAVINGS ON WARDS0WN SIGNATURE9 ELECTRIC APPLIANCES
12.99
6.99 16.99-
11.99 9.95
25% savings now!
Thick cast aluminum pans in avocado or coppertone
EACH PAN AND UD IS COLORFULLY LINED M NO-STICK, NO-SCOUR TEFLON* V
12.95 3-ql * pan w/M. *.**
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IN EACH SET: 12 dinner plates, bread-and-butter plates, cups, saucers and fruit dishes. Also a vegetable bowl, medium platter, covered sugar, creamer.
duchess
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It’s National Carpet Month! Save $7 on room-size nylon Colonial oval rug!
Wards charming Colonial rug is reminiscent of early America in style. But it’s modem in fiber—long-wearing nylon surface—over sturdy core. Reversible for double service. 102x138* oval fills a 9x12-foot area beautifully! Choose from warm, traditional blended colors: gold, moss green, brown or blue. 22x44* matching oval scatter rug. Regularly 3.79, save almost 50%.... Wf for hallways. Regularly 6.29, now........	4.19
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50
Heirloom-style rug looks exquisitely hand designed. Thick pile in a blend of reprocessed wool, combined with rayon for luster. Rich medallion pattern gives embossed effect; 4 warm colors; dive, blue/turquoise, gold or burnt rust. 42x66* rug, reg. 19.99..........17JO	66x102* rug, reg. 49.99....
10
W 114*
32x53' ter 3x9'
Wftfl&TIONAL CARPET MONTH
/ V lONTGOM E RY
WARD
FLOOR SHOP
Save on Style

tome
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installed with sponge pad!
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@ Astronyl—in DuPont continuous filament nylon pile—a our newest tweed cqrpet in a hi-low loop design. Choose from 4 smart tweed colors—so right for today’s decor, at a price so right for today's budget!
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No motmy Jo S-ymarHe
9xl 2-ft. nylon rugs
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room-mesn dock won i snot to noor.
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Densely-tufted polypropylene olefin fiber has soft natural look of’ grass-great indoors or otddoord Cd with shears to instal. Waffled rubber bade, no pad needed. Easy to deanl 5 hues.
WEATHERPROOF VINYL TWffD CARPET
Have carpeting onywhere with textured vinyl. Surface is non-skid when wet— perfect indoors or ouM Jus# cut with shears to instal. 3’ wide; in 4 colors.
4-ft. width, reg. 3.30 ran. ft.-IN
570
*«• *»•
141
The Weather
THE PONTIAC
PLOVER PAGES
125 NO. 85	★ ★★★★	PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1867 —48 PAGES TT'	10»
A	nn^i	Move to Hike	t
IMMOLATION IN SAIGON — A 33-year-old teacher who poured gasoline on ' herself, lighted it and burned to death is shown in Buddha position, foreground, as a wailing Buddhist nun is aided by a Buddhist lay woman and a monk at TtrNghiem pagoda in Saigon today. Before the immolation, the teacher, Phan Thi Mai, placed a Buddhist and Christian stable pn either side of her . _______________
Preliminary Figure oh Tax Spread Set
The Oakland County Tax Allocation Board yesterday set'a preliminary 1967 taxing authority for the county, school districts and townships amounting to 15.18 mills.
F^nal hearings on the tax spread Ore
Weatherman Says Fair Days Ahead in Pontiac Area
Today’s sunshine is expected to raise The mercury into the 60s by late afternoon.
ik ★	★
Skies will be partlycloudy tonight with
A NICE DAY
temperatures not quite so cool. A low of 33-to 42 is expected.
Fair with little temperature change is tomorrow’s forecast. Fair ahd slightly warmer is the outlook for Thursday.
★ ★ ★
West to southwesterly winds at 5 to 15 mites per hour will continue.
The low in downtown' Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 36. At 1 p.m., the mercury registered 61.
Points to Long-Term War
WASHINGTON (* - The Johnson administration gradually is gearing its money operations — including the national debt — for a Vietnam war lasting at least as long as the U. S. involvement in World War H.
A request yesterday to Congress for a permanent debt ceiling of $365 billion to carry ti«e government through June 38, 1969, was on one. of several recent moves in that direction.
They also include President Johnson’s request for a 6 per cent income tax surtax, sales of new “freedom share” sav-ings bonds pegged directly to the length
of die war and a voluntary program to stem tiie flow of investment dollars overseas.
World War II fighting began for the United States Dec. 7, 1941, and ended with Japan’s surrender Aug. 14, 1945.
The U. S. troop buildup in Vietnam reached major scale in mid-1965 and administration fiscal planning now runs through June 30, 1969.
FOWLER
The implication for the national debt was dear in Fowler’s appearance yes-
terday before the House Ways -and Means Committee.
“I am here to talk about financing a war. It is a costly war and it must be financed in a manner consistent with preserving sound, balanced and fruitful economic growth at home,” he said.
In recommending a permanent debt ceiling of $365 billion, Fowler said World War II provided a precedent for large debt limit increases to insure the ceiling “wouTdTiot be a Tonstrainf orT necessary wartime finance.”
^ The pi eseTrtTerTTpdf ary ceiling-of-$336
scheduled May 22 and 23 and the allocation board will set final rates May 26.
Local schools gained .05 of a mill in thS preliminary allocation spread at the expense of the county whose 5.40 mills rate last year was decreased to 5.35 mills.	'
Oakland Schools, the intermediate school district, received the same .18 mills allocation as last year and townships fared about the same, ranging to no allocation to Lyon and Springfield, where none was requested, to 1.40 mills ' for Bloomfield and West Bloomfield.
* *	★
If the preliminary rate total stands when the final allocation is made, it will mark the third consecutive year that the .traditional 15-mill limitation has been exceeded.
HIGHEST MILLAGE
The State Constitution allows use of the highest available millage when a governmental unit in one county overlaps a county Use. Oakland Schools extends into surrounding counties and this overlap permits taxing, authority beyond 15-mills, according to Richard H. Mc-Gram, allocation board chairman.
★ . ★ ' * .
Daniel T. Murphy, chairman of the County Board of Auditors and an allocation board member, said he is confident the allocation board will restore the .05 mills to the county in its final session. This would yield $153,000 in tax revenue.
GENEVA UR — More than four years of Kennedy Round negotiations have ft nally ended with agreement to cut tariffs an estimated -83 -to’, 35 per cent on world trade now worth $40 billion a year.
W-----k W------■---'--|--~
The accord between the United States and the world’s major commercial nations was reached just before midnight last night after four intensive day and
See Story, Page B-5
during which the negotiations appeared doomed at one point.—
The reductions Anally hammered out fell short, of the 50 per cent over-all cut that had been sought, but they far surpassed any achieved before in tariff negotiations.
The agreement affects more than 80 nations and is expected to result in a big increase in world trade.
William Roth, head of the U.S. delegation, said the result was of “tremendous world importance.” He predicted that ft would affect between $5 billion and $16 billion in U.S. imports and exports.
The United States exports $27 billion worth of goods a year and imports $19 billion worth.
The principal agreements included in i the final package were:
•	Tariff reductions on about 6,300 industrial and farm items in world trade, from live animals to waste and scrap. The cuts are reciprocal with every participating nation benefiting from new opportunities to export to the others.
•	A higher minimum world grain price of $1.73 a bushel for hard red winter wheat ready to ship at ports on the Gulf of Mexicp.. .
•	An international food aid program of 4.5 million tons a year, with contributions from other major industrial countries as well as the United States.
QCC Takes first in Accreditation Move
Oakland Community College has taken its first step to apply for candidacy for membership in what has been described as “one of the —truly outstanding regional accred-itating agencies of the nation.”
OCC President Dr. John E. Tir-- roll said the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools received this week a 40-page status study and a request from OCC for an accrediting team to visit the campuses.
This move was recommended last fall by Dr. B. Lamar Johnson, OCC’s educational consultant for accreditation from the University of California, Los Angeles.
“Our goal is to get accreditation by March of 1969,” Tin-ell said.
★ ★ ★
OCC opened its doors on two campuses to 3,860 students in September 1965. An estimated 6,000 students are expected this fall with the addition of a third campus hi Farmington Township.
Hong Kong Protest
Johnson generally praised OCC in Ms report last " September and advised the growing community college:
“Accreditation can be achieved only after an institution has been in operation long enough to present evidence regarding the nature and effectiveness of its program . . .”
OCC officials have established this timetable in the extensive process of receiving accreditation:
•	Fall 1967: Association team visits campuses as requested.
f March 1968: Team makes its report.
•	If the team report Is favqr-able, OCC would submit an extensive self-study report, followed by another team visit.
•	March 1969: Earliest formal decision regarding accreditation could be made.
Accreditation is necessary for students to be able to transfer to other colleges. Credits are currently transferred while the accreditation process is under way.
Reds Stymie Trial
II’L ONES
Highland Crash
imom
“Terrific act, Barry, but it’s still 3c a glass.”
HONG KONG (AP) - Hundreds of Chinese chanting quotations from Mao Tse-tung forced a Hong Kong court today to adjourn the trial of Chinese arrested in last week’s Communist riots.
Huge anti-British demonstrations were reported in Peking and Canton.
British colonial officials put 20,000 police and troops on alert after the Chinese government accused them of “fascist atrocities” in quelling three days of rioting that stemmed from a strike of factory workers over wages and unemployment.
Peking’s note to the British government in London demanded the release of nearly 400 Chinese arrested during the rioting in a Kowloon industrial district.
WWW
British authorities in London had no immediate comment.
SPECTATORS CHANTED
About 50 Chinese spectators crowded
into one small courtroom where some of those arrested go on trial today, The crowd chanted from Mao’s works while 300 Chinese jamming the corridors stamped their feet in unison and shouted for the release of the defendants.
Unable to restore order, Magistrate D. A. Davies adjourned court and returned the defendants to a cell block in the building. >*' *
About 250 of those arrested in the riots already have pleaded guilty and been sentenced to jail terms ranging from one to 18 months.
* ★ ★
The Communist New China News Agency reported that more than 40,000 Red Guards, revolutionary workers and government officials demonstrated against the British in Canton, South China’s chief city, while another huge demonstration filled the street outside the British Embassy in Peking.
billion will drop to $285 billion, the current permanent level, on July 1 unless Congress acts. The actual debt as of May 10 — the latest date for which a figure is available — was $328.4 billion.
★ T* It
In proposing the surtax, Johnson pegged its lengtbat either twr years — which would Carry it to June 30,1909 — or as long as the war lasted.
The “freedom shares” went on sale May Lto persons buying Series E bonds on the payroll savings or bond-a-month -plans. They pay 4.74 per cent interest— when held to maturity of 4% years.
News in Brief on Vietnam War Developments
WASHINGTON UP) — The Pentagon says a_ U.S. Air .Force jet may have crashed in Red China after being hit by North Vietnamese antiaircraft fire.
The unsolicited report from the Pentagon came yesterday, only a few hours after -the State-Department denied three-— week-old Communist Chinese charges about alleged U.S. bombings of Red China.
The Pentagon statement said an F105 Thunderchief was hit during a Monday attack on military targets near Kiep, North Vietnam, about 32 nautical miles northeast of Hanoi.
The pilot of the damaged jet was last heard reporting by radio that he was “heading out,” said the Pentagon. The statement said the plane’s course indicated the pilot was headed toward the North Vietnam-mainland China border.
The Pentagon said it had no word of the Thunderchief’s two-man crew.
SAIGON m — Hard fighting at both ends of South Vietnam was reported today, with 113 guerrillas killed in two battles with Americanvjnfantryraen in the Mekong Delta and 52 of the enemy and 16 Americans killed in three clashes in the northern sector. -★ ★ ★
Red rocket and mortar attacks com tinued around the clock in the northern provinces, and the Communists lobbed 60 mortar rounds .into the U.S. military advisory compound before dawn in downtown Hue.
WASHINGTON <*i - Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield proposes placing the Vietnam war squarely before the United Nations—an idea he says U.N. Secretary - General U • Thant scotched last year. ;
Mansfield said yesterday in a Senate speech that when he first proposed asking the U.N. Security Council to take up the 'War issue — in a Nov. 11, 1966 speech in Baltimore — he won backing from President Johnson.
He said Johnson phoned him after the speech and urged him to discuss the matter with Thant and Arthur J. Goldberg, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.
Mansfield said Thant opposed the proposal, saying he would prefer to pursue peace talks privately rather than having Vietnam taken either to the Security Councillor the U.N. General Assembly.
” In Today's Press
? Bloomfield Twp. I
./Nice place to live if you can 1 afford it - PAGE A-8.
1 . .1
Waterford Zoning $.
Final action due next week— § PAGE A-3.
Cagp League Pontiac group seeks pro bas-ketbali franchise — PAGE C-l. |
Area-News ........, ...A-l, A-9
Astrology .............. B-6	j
Bridge ...	B-6	§
Crossword Puzzle ......C-ll	1
Comics ................. B-6	g
Editorials .............A-4
High School ...........B-l
Markets ................C-5
Obituaries ............ B-4
Sports .............C-l—C-3
Theaters...............C4
TV and Radio Programs	.	C-ll
Wilson, Earl ......... C-ll
Women's Pages	......	B-7—B-9
i
Fatal to Youth
Oakland Highway Toll in ’67
37
A 19-year-old Highland Township youth died early today of injuries received in an accident in Highland Township yesterday.
Two other persons were hospitalized as a result of the mishap.
Norwood Caswell of 2224 Davista died about 1:50 a. m. in Pontiac General Hospital.
Oakland County sheriffs deputies said he was the driver of a car which went out of control On Milford Road and struck __aJutility pole about 7:15 p. pa.
Listed in critical condition at Pontiac General is Thomas F. Murphey, 21, of' 527 Livingston, Highland Township. He is being treated in the intensive care unit, according to hospital officials.
Jackie E. Lannirig, 21, of 5109 Rippleway, Highland Township, is in satisfactory condition, they said.
* * *
. Deputies said Caswell’s car went out of control on a curve just south of McPherson. The road was slide due to . recent oiling of side streets in the area, according to investigators.
Romney Praises Canada at
MONTREAL (A) — Gov. Romney of ada, and he hailed Canada’s “great con- visiting Expo 07 said Canada's rble as far better catalyst for peace in Vietnam Michigan said yesterday the United tribution” to world peace.	. one of three members of the Interna- than divisions of Canadian troops could
States should pay more attention to Can- Romney, leading a Michigan group tional Control Commission could be “a ever ^ »
TALKING LIKE A CANDIDATE - Michigan’s Gov. Romney winds up a visit to Expo 07 in Montreal with a press conference yesterday where he said he was prepared to run for president “if the party and the people of the
AP WIr.photo
United States want me.” On the question of his eligibility, he said the Constitution requires the president to be “a natural-born citizen. I know that I am natural-born because j my mother had only a midwife.”
The governor was booed by. w unidentified girl when he said that “just as the United States and Canada were at work in the Congo, the Middle East and Cyprus, Americans should not forget that both are at work today in Vietnam.”
The Control Commission, established to supervise the 1954 Geneva accords that ended the French-Indochina War, includes representatives from Canada, Poland and India.
- * * w .'A Romney, considered a contender for the Republican nomination for president next year, said: “For too long Americans have tended to take Canada and Canadians fbrgrantod.” He said, “Canada is just too dose, geographically and culturally, for us to see her dearly as the great and growing nation she
THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, MAY 16, jS67
Birmingham Area News
Tax Reform Package in Senate Awaits OK
Glue-Sniffing Ordinance OK'd
regarding juveniles and adults b e i n g involved in “glue sniffing,” said Schaule, in a report pointing put that the department had no authority to regulate the saleandinhalatlon of the glue, which releases toxic vapors.
In offering the cooperation of the chamber, Knowles B. Smith, executive director, said, “The voluntary control of the sale of this type of glue has been triet\ in the past with some success, But in recent months the problem has become acute,”
BIRMINGHAM-An ordinance designed to curb “glue sniffing” was adopted by the city commission last night.
The ordinance, which also con-trols the sale of model glue to juveniles, went into effect immediately.
The. commission act e d on the recommendation of Lt.
Political
: party decisions on a revised income iax plan in the State Senate probably won’t come for another keek or 10 days.
The .once-defeated program of t Gov. George Romney, revised by the-Senate Taxation Committee to^give lower income groups more tax credits, must be approved by Republican and Democratic caucuses before it reaches the voting stage again.
Speck Lawyer Loses Appeal
Sentencing May 26 for Slayer of Nurses
CHICAGO <PPD - Richard Speck’s life was oh the Brie, put there,: his attorney said, by the “implanted prejudice of human beings.” But the judge disagreed and today Speck, convicted of murdering eight nurses, still faced the electric chair/
One month to the day after a jury Of seven men and five women found the one-time seaman guilty mi eight counts of murder and said, “We fix the penalty at death,” Speck’s attorney argued yesterday for a new trial.
Judge Herbert C. Paschen refused the new trial and also denied a motion to arrest judgement. He said he would sentence the lanky 25-year-old on May 25 after hearing arguments on a defense appeal for leniency.
Speck, who appeared in his usual courtroom attire — dark suit, white shirt, dark tie, his long blond' hair slicked back-wards, went back to his cell a few steps from the electric chair.
★ ★
His attorney, pubiiedefender Gerald W. Getty; cited 54 “points of error” in the murder; trial which was held in Peoria because of “prejudicial” news coverage in Chicago following the July 14 massacre. DISAGREES Paschen, who had heard all the pretrial motions and. the trial itself, disagreed.
“These are points that have been thoroughly argued in pretrial motions and in the trial,” he ruled. “You have not convinced me that the trial was not fair and impartial. I see nothing here to warrant a new trial/’
- Getty said the state had presented “wobbly” evidence and had failed to prove Speck’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Wednesday or Thursday before tiie lawmakers can get together in private and thrash out any differences.
Seven state senators were k Montreal Monday for Michigan rendezvous at E x p o 67 ar weren’t scheduled to return the state until late today.
★ ★ ★
Once the caucuses begin it expected they will deliberate several days as the lawmakers expand on their individual be-i liefs of a tax program.
WEENED RECESS”
If the caucuses start this week, there will be the usual interruption for a weekend re-cess. At the same time a few leaders on the Senate Appropria-tions Committee will leave town on legislative business further delaying the private tax talks.
Sen. Harry De Maso, R-Battle Creek, chairman of the Senate Taxation Committee, has been waiting for more than a week to send a compromise tax package to the party caucuses.
Senate Majority Leader Emil Lockwood, R-St. Louis, said Monday the party caucuses can’t be called until all t h e members ate present.
* * *
He also kept alive word that a private joint caucus between membersofboth parties might be held for a complete airing of the revised tax package. (REMAINS SECRET The new proposal and exemption plan is being kept secret until the party caucuses take action.
Lockwood, who said after the initial defeat of the Romney program that “fiscal reform is dead for this session,” has since changed his mind. “I’m more hopeful now than [was a month ago,” be says.
However, he refused to predict what the outcome will be with the new program.
LITTLE CHANCE
PLANS 18,000-MILE FUGHT-Dr. Francis X. Sommer ofBarbourville, Ky., stands beside the single-engine airplane he’s hoping" will carry him and another traveler, Dr.
nonstop flight from New York to Paris. Dr. ■ Sommer plans to take off from New York Thursday and head over file Atlantic nr the first leg of his trip. The flight may carry
John Rieber. 18,000 miles aminduht^world--the two over Da Nang in central South Viet-
on the anniversary of Charles A. Lindbergh’s nam, en route to Hong Kong.
will compete for three board of in school district affairs. He has
Woodward Crossover on Schedule
Construction of a new-median crossover on Woodward near Opdyke in Bloomfield Hills proceeding on schedule and should be completed by Sept. 1, the Michigan State Highway Department reported today.
The new crossover will replace the one at Opdyke, which • according to engineers, dangerously angles traffic onto southbound Woodward.
The hew crossover is being built about 600 feet north of the present Opdyke crossover. Motorists wanting to go south on Woodward from Opdyke will first have to turn north on Woodward until they can turn around in the crossover.
★	★ A
Also under construction nearby is another crossover on Woodward just north of Long Lake oad.
This will be used by north-bound Woodward traffic wanting to go west on Long Lake Road.
Left turns directly onto Long Lake from Woodward will be
HANNIBAL, Mo. (AP) It has been nearly a week since Craig Dowell, 14, Joey Hoag, 13, and Billy Hoag, 11, were last seen, presumably entering one of the many caves that lead into a spider-like web of passages under the old home town of Mark. Twain.
There have been no substantial clues discovered since the boys were seen last Wednesday afternoon; carrying a shovel
Some lawmakers who voted-prohibited when the crossover
against the Romney plan privately say there is Utile chance of a reversal of the 23-14 vote.
Most Republicans, hoWjever, are hopeful concessionsmade to Democrats, who all voted against the original plan, will sway some new votes their way.
De Maso hopes the new program wiU reach a happy compromise.
is completed.
Hie jawbone of a Stone Age mouse found about 500 yards west of the Nile River near the Egyptian-Sudanese border has indicated that there may have been dense vegetation in the presently hot, dry area.
The Weather
FuU U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Mostly sunny and sUghtly warmer today, high 55 to <2. Partly cloudy and not quite so cool tonight. Low 33 to 42. Wednesday: fair with little temperature change. West to southwest winds 5 to 15 miles today. Thursday's outlook: fair and slightly warmer.
Arab Paper Cites Rocket Base Attack
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Egyptian "bombers attacked a rocket base in Saudi Arabia last week, the'newspaper A1 Anwar said today.
It said the raid was in addition to two attacks on the towns of Najran and Jizap which have been acknowledged by the Saudi government.
Al Anwar attributed its information to Gen. Abdei Salam Towfiq, chief of staff of the Egyptian forces in Yemen. The rocket base was not identified by Tewfiq, He said only it was close to the scmlnrbonlerr
Saudi Arabia is building an air base in Khamis Mishayt, 40 miles north of the Yemeni border. A battery of British Thun-derbird missiles is located at Khamis Mishayt, as well number of jet fighters flown by British pilots.
*	' ★ . i ★,
There has been no announcement by the Saudis, or other independent information, that the base was bombed by the Egyptians.


2^
NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are forecast tonight in the middle Mississippi Valley, northern Rockies and Washington court. Northeast will be cooler and the Southwest
Ask $500,000 in Ship Death
From AP Wire Story A $500,000 claim was filed yesterday in U. S. District Court in Cleveland for damages in the death of a Waterford Township seaman aboard the Daniel Mor-' roll which sank in a Lake Huron storm last Nov. 29.
The claim was filed on behalf of the estate of the late Ernest G. Marcotte, 62, of 2210 Rosewood by attorney Howard Bernstein. Marcotte was third mate on the ill-fated ship.
★	k	★
Bernstein also filed claims for two other crewmen aboard the Daniel Morrell.
Named defendants in the three I actions were the Bethlehem Steel Corp. and its subsidiary, [Cambria Steamship Co.
Z 3K
. kJ , Av	-	' 1y
Hunt for 3 Boys in 6th Day Without Substantial Clue
and flash lights near Murphy’s Cave.
As the search entered its sixth day, observers noted that women have been an important factor in the hoped-for rescue operation. Not only have they cooked and served hot meals at almost any hour for the searchers, but at least two of their number have joined the men in the dirt and mud, crawling over shale and rock, slithering through the narrow, cramped passages of the caves. •
Tiny Susan Devier, 23, squirmed through a previously unexplored cave Monday night and returned with the news that the cavern was empty. She is
Unawareness'i1^^ an<l * a“!
A TEACHER
When not exploring caves,
Dem Leader Hits 'Rom
education trusteeships in th Waterford Township School District’s June 12 election.
Four candidates; cumbent Michael G. Patterson, will vie for a three-year seat. The others are entered in a seven-man race for two four-year posts now held by Treasurer Donald W. Porter and Mrs, Dorothy B. Barningham.
Porter is running for reelection, but Mrs. Barningham is not.
The final four candidates to file nominating petitions were Dean A. Salley, 39, of 6229 Jameson and Robert L. Buchanan, 33, of 5180 Joangay for four-year seats; and Rudolph C. Li-38, of 2113 Pompey and Philip M. Hampton, 34, of 3191 Alco, for three-year terms.
Making his third school board
WASHINGTON (AP) - House Democratic leader Carl Albert of Oklahoma accused Michigan Gov. George Romney Monday of having “demonstrated his elemental lack of knowledge of American overseas economic programs.”
In a House speech, Albert referred to a Romney speech May 5 to the National Federation of Republican Women in which Romney called for ‘government whose foreign economic development programs encourage greater private investment, partnership and self-help.”	,	.
“This statement,” Albert said, ‘is not only an insult to responsible government agencies, but it ignores the numerous contributions^-international econ- -j nomic development made by countless numbers of private American organizations such as CARE, whose assistance, training efforts and technical and medical help are known all over the world; Operation Crossroads Africa; Hospital Ship Hope; Books, USA, and the internationally known foundations such as Ford, Rockefeller and Carnegie. *
Susan is Mrs. Charles Devier of Columbia, Mo. She teaches psychology at Hickman High School.
Ann Schallert, 23, also' is an experienced cave explorer. Her underground specialty is measuring and mapping. Miss Schallert works as a laboratory technician in St. Louis.
■—..★ * *
“She’s equal to any caver standing here,” a member of a caving team stated as four men and Miss Schallert descended into a passage for further mapping-
Earjy today, Dr. Stanislaw Vinz Of St. Louis University began modifying an electronic in-strument normally used to detect mineral ore deposits. PROFESSOR INVITED
The associate professor of geophysical engineering was asked to join the hunt for the boys in hopes his instrument might locate the shovel and flashlights the youths were carrying.
“I think the chances are very slim,” Dr, Vincenz said, “but we can’t miss any chances.
Gl Is First to Be Tried by	South Korean
SEOUL, South Korea (AP)— The first American soldier to be tried in a South Korean court; pleaded innocent today to charges of setting fire to a Korean home and assaulting a Korean taxi driver.
Air Force S. Sgt. .Billy J. Cox, 29, of Fall Branch, Tenn., entered his plea at the opening session of his trial before three
SGT. BILLY COX
judges in the Seoul District Criminal Court. He is the first American serviceman to face South Korean charges since the U.S.-Korean status of forces of agreement went into effect Feb. 9.
Wearing a light tan winter uniform, Cox seemed a little nervous but calmly denied both charges before the three judges and a courtroom packed with -about 15A spectators, newsmen and photographers.
He told the court he had left a Korean house, where he and his Korean girl friend were renting a room, about 30 minutes before tiie time when he is accused of setting fire to the house. PROSECUTION’S CHARGE
Prosecutor Lee Kon-kai alleged that Cox set the house afire in anger at the absence of his girl friend and said a house maid heard Cox lighting his cigarette lighter before he left the house.
Cox said the Korean taxi driver he is accused of assaulting overcharged him a nickel and tried to run away with a cloth he had bought for his wife in the United States.
Robert Schaule of the Birmingham Police Department. “We have had many incidents
Both the Birmingham-BIoom-f ield Chamber of Commerce and the Birmingham Youth Assistance Committee urged the adoption of the ordinance.
11 Candidates to Compete in Waterford School Race
Eleven candidates, all men,
[bid, Salley has been very active
served on several school groups
SALLEY HAMPTON
and was chairman of a school facilities committee and a committee on employment-b o u n d youth.
k k k
A township resident for y years, he is president of All
State^ Credit Bureau, Inc., tocannot purchase model glue unless he has the written consent of his parents or guardian.
Army Doctor Is Defended
Charged With Failure to Follow Orders
Columbia, S. C. (AP) - The defense in the court-martial of Capt. Howard B. Levy, an Army dermatologist, is trying to show there are “some orders which a doctor -would not obey and should not obey.”
Levy’s chief defense attorney, Charles Morgan of the American Civil Liberties Union, made the comment Monday in cross-examinng Capt. Ivan Mauer, one of three Ft. Jackson, S.C., doctors called to testify.
kkk
Levy, 30, of Brooklyn, N.Y., is charged with failing to obey a direct order to train Green Ber-medics. making remarks about tiie troops and trying to
serve in The court-martial entered its third day of testimony today with the prosecution still presenting witnesses. Both sides have said they will have 40 or more witnesses.
Mauer said he would not train Special Forces medics in anything but first aid if he thought they were primarily heing used _ as combat troops. But he and two other doctors at nearby Ft. Jackson, Capts. Garry Wasser-man and Del Lutzerheizer, said they had urged Levy to train the Special Forces airmen.
. Capt. Richard M. Shuster-man, . tiie prosecutor, also argued that the medics’ primary function is to look after the medical needs of fellow Special Forces troops. s
B. Smith,
, said, “The of
“It seems the only effective control of the sale of this material is by tiie adoption of a city ordinance which would regulate the sale of this type of glue by placing the responsibility on the seller.”
George A. Schmidt, chairman of the Youth Assistance Committee, noted-that surrounding communities have similar ordinances that “appear to be helping solve file problem.” Royal Oak and Southfield have “glue sniffing ordinances.
■ ★ * ★
Schaule said today that no major crimes have resulted in Birmingham from glue sniffing, but cited one example of the of the glue.
‘There’s one 20-year-old guy actually gets stupid when smells the stuff,” said ~ “He can be looking Iright at you and not see you. We’re afraid he’s going to walk in front of a car.”
The new law prohibits anyone from intentionally inhaling tiie fumes from any model glue “for the purpose of causing a condition of intoxication, euphoria, excitement, stupifi-cation or dulling of the senses or nervous system.”
The ordinance provides that persons under-!? years of age
Ferndale.
PHS GRADUATE Married and the father of six children, Salley attended Waldorf College in.Forst City, Iowa. He is a 1946 graduate of Pon-
tiac High School.._
Salley is a member of Community Activities, Inc., board of directors and is chairman of this year’s North Oakland | County Fair.
Hto 4s a past president at the Waterford Township Jay^ cees.
A 1954 graduate of Berea^Ky., College where he received a bachelor’s degree with a geology major, Hampton presently is employed with Johnson and Anderson, Inc., consulting engineers.
In addition, the seller must make a record of the name, address, age and phone number of the juvenile:—All the data must be available for inspection by the police department for at least six months.
State Senator Seeks Parade to Support
LANSING (AP) — A massive march to demonstrate Michigan backing of soldiers fighting in Vietnam has been proposed by a state senator.
He is the firm’s director of I ^en- Basil Brown, D-Detroit, public relations, vice president | ma<k ^e ^°P®sa^ . j* Seriate
*	. . . J	pAQnliitinn MnnHou niem
and assistant chief engineer. He also is in charge of coordination of all federal programs. PROFESSIONAL ENGINEER Hampton is a registered professional engineer in Michigan and West Virginia. He is married and the father of three chil-
Iriren--------------------------
A native of Shingleton in the Upper Peninsula, Lisac is employed as a maintenance engineer at Montgomery Ward and Co.’s Pontiac Mall store.
Married and the father of eight children, he attended Mather High School in Munising.
resolution Monday night.
★	k k Brown asked all patriotic,
fraternal, veterans and university groups to join in the march part of the observation of Flag Day on June 14. \
Brown, a Pacific Theater veteran of World War II, said his proposal is backed by several
Parades in Detroit and other major Michigan cities could show “massive support for our boys fighting in Vietnam,” Brown said.
★	★
Such a march recently held in New York City, he said, brought out an estimated 250,000 partici-
Brown said he would ask Republican Gov. George Romney to join in the march. He said he plans to contact every veterans group in the state to ask them “to march down Woodward Ave. in Detroit.” -
Such a Flag DUy parade, he said, possibly could bririg out
This marks Lisac's first bid one of the largest crowds in
I Police Action
1 Pontiac police officers 1 and Oakland County sher-I iff’s deputies investigated 1 some 80 reported inci-'I dents, including both 8 criminal activity and ac-I cidents, the past 24 hours. 1	kkk
1 A breakdown of causes i for police action:
8	Arrests—6
1	Vandalisms—12
I®	Burglaries—9
Larcenies—12 Auto Thefts—12 Obscene Phone Calls—2 Assaults—13 Disorderly Persons—2 Indecent Liberties—1 1 Indecent Exposures—1 I	Molestings—1
I Property Damage I Accidents—11 I	Injury Accidents—9
It—
Michigan history.
DROWN SUPPORT “There is overwhelming support throughout Michigan, as well, as other parts of the country, for our position in Vietnam,” Brown said. “The vocal groups on the other side of the question continue, however, to [drown out those of us support-ing our troops to this most dif-Marricd and the father of jficultwar.” four children, he is a 1951 |
for public office.
kkk
Also making his first try for public office is Buchanan, a Waterford Township businessman. OWNS BUSINESSES Buchanan is owner of Oakland Seamless Floor Covering and. B and D Building Maintenance.
of Pontiac High
graduate School.
Buchanan is treasurer of the j Republican Club of Waterford! Township and is a member of the Detroit Torginol- Dealers As-1 sociation.
kkk
Other candidates for the four-year positions are W. Cecil Stricklin, 30, of 3325 Angelus; William D. Motzny, 36, of 3078 Grace View; Lewis S. Long, 40, of 5657 Brunswick; and Charles W. Meyka, 37, of 3068 Grace View.
Also in contention for the three-year post is Leo F. Kamp-sen, 44, of 4689 Motorway.
Auto Parts Stolen From Parking Lot
Parts yalued at more than $200 were stolen from new automobiles on the McAuliffe Ford dealership parking lot, it was reported yesterday.
Taken were carburetors and air cleaners, Pontiac police were told.
★ ★ -
Investigators said entry to the lot was made by cutting through a wire fence.
Bloomfield Twp
velopment occurred until the 19S0s.
cording to population studies. ] In 1950 the population’ was 1 3,850 and today it stands at 38,- < 034 — a jump of 1,000 per cent. 1 But the boom which saw 600 i residences built last year will soon peak off.
★ .*■ * ★
Glen Hoots, 'building official, estimates that about 60 per cent of the land is now occupied. I About 10 per cent of the re-i
years 1932 and 1933, respectively.
This left about 25 square miles out of the original 36. Most of 1 that area., was orchards and i dairy farms, Hulet said.
Though much has been said ' about the growth of various S communities in thearea, few aui match the huge strides i of Bloomfield Township from j 1151 until the present, ae-
Hulet tdbk office as a justice; of the peace in 1933, which under the oid township laws made him similar to a trustee today. One of his first chores was to separate the assets of Bloomfield Hills and Birmingham which di-vided themselves from township rule and became cities in the
TIIE PONTIAC 1»KKSS. fFl-R&IkAV. MAY 16. I0fi7
PICTORIAL STORY ByEDBLUNDEN Top bad eveiyone can’t live in a place like Bloomfield Township. It’s got ererything — good schools, good roads, fine police and fire protection and dedicated public servants — and besides that it’s beautiful.
W it has one big drawback. It’s expensive!
Taxes on an average home (a $38,900 investment) are $950 per year.
However, those that can afford it find themselves in one of the finest residential aregs 1 anywhere. The opinion is virtually unanimous.
*’ ' * • *
The township is a place to five. It will be kept that way by strict zoning laws. Only a few spots in the township, on main arteries* Telegraph aid Woodward, are zoned anything but residential. DWELLING REQUIREMENTS And the strict requirements for construction of a dwelling are what give the township its characteristics.
For one thing, approximately one-half acre of ground is required in each of three types of residentiary zoned areas. Minimum floor areas are 1,250, 1,656. and 1,850 depending on the zone.
In all the areas, a minimum back yard of 35 feet and 25 feet in front are required. Under the circumstances, it would be difficult to get away with spending less than $25,000 for a home, explain township officials.
★ ifc ■*
Arno Hulet, treasurer and senior township official with 34 years of o f f i c e-holding, gave some background to the strong zoning rules imposed.
FIRST CODE
He said that in 1942, when the first code was established, it was the intention of the town fathers to keep the area residential in character.
To insure a higher quality of home, a minimum of $5,000 cost was established for new homes. “Everything was done by price then,” Hulet said. In terms of today’s money this would be about $20,000.
However, there really wasn’t much to worry about in those days, Hulet recalls, as little de-
mainder is unusable _ for one reason or Another.' Of the cent remaining, almost all of it has been acquired by prospective builders, he said.
At present there are 9,601 homes in the township, so there’s probably room for about 3,000 more and that will be it, said Hoots.
The trend toward luxury apartment complexes has also comq to Bloomfield and 760 units are occupied. This type of dwell-ing is faced with far more strict requirements here than many other areas.
The association also bring vio-lations to the Ik 11 e ntion ■of building of-“flcials, Hoots Indicated.
j W 1 lliam Maloney, asses-offers a few" facts that [indicate the ef-Iforf by persons BLUNDEN to get a Bloomfield Township address.
; ■ V * ★
Empty lots, suitable for a single building are practically unobtainable and those available are selling for high figures,! Maloney said.
For instance, such apartments] srr® cant be more tharr tvro storiesi If s on lakes nce uver $20,000 with one three-quarter acre site selling for $50,000 recently, he SUBDIVISION ASSOCIATIONS, |said. A lot not on a lake, with-Another feature-of townshipW-a^ sewer connection is going j life that tends to keep property for about $7’000 and with im'
.	.. .	provements the price is around I
at a high level of maintenance {16 000 hesaid
is subdivision associations, 114 in . . .	, . ,	, , L,
And the land is desirable.
It’s mostly softly rolling term-These groups have a limited 1 inal morrain hills, spotted with authority and subdivision re- | 33 lovely lakes and cut through sidents must obtain approval with an intricate system of of their officials before 8treams-making imprivements on There are no factories or in property, such as adding dustrlal developments of any buildings, swimming polls, jkind. Two large shopping
'ters serve the area, the Bloorp-Birmingham and Forest Lake.
A Historical Note . vr
____Historical notes on early Bloomfield Township:
When people “arrived^’ to tafce up residence here in the 1820s, many had little more than they could carry on their hack.
An early chronicler describes them; “They came* some with their families and household goods (the latter generally meager in quantity and small in value) 'pushing on toward the lands they had purchased, others witk no impediments but the knapsack and —perhapnrarue r.~?r
When they got there they could refresh themselves at three taverns near the spot that is near downtown Birmingham. These buildings were among the first built and belonged to John W. Hunter, John Hamilton and Elijah • Wilfits.
This center was given the name “Piety Hill” for awhile., But a historian writes, “It is difficult to explain why that name was first applied.”
*	★	v.'
A majority of the settlers came from New Jersey and New York State, and many of them reportedly found the area too dismal and went back,
Getting there was.no fun in those days and the father oLWrllets sailed on the schooner Neptune from Buffalo to Detroit, taking 21 days.
The Hunter family came by sleigh through Canada although how long that took is not recorded. _
field Miracle Mile along the: The township’s fire and police north portion of Telegraph and protection is imposing. There BiMirifieki Plaza at Telegraphy, four fire stations and round-and Maple. Stores are allowed the.cIock Uc atrols J at a few other places, mostly
intersections.	The „ township expenditures
*	*	*	for these services is high —
Three country cliibs_are with- $878,00 set aside out of the in the borders, the largest being recent budget total of $1,125,-Oakland Hills with two complete! •$•- The police department re-18-hole courses. The others are. cently spent $42,000 for a com-
A CLEAR, BABBLING BROOK — This stream is typical of the many crisscrossing Bloomfield Township. It is located at Franklin and 14 Mile and is the west branch of the
-Rouge River, Clear at this point, it-is the one that emerges in the Detroit River — cited as one of the most notoriously polluted rivers in the country.
puterized law enforcement system that is far in advance of most communities of this size, law officials point out.
Township officials estimate about half the homes have sewer and water facilities. Many subdivisions are in the process of installing utilities, due to the recent extension of Detroit lines. Beveral subdivisions find their well and septic tanks adequate.
Although most access roads are paved, some aren’t and side roads do present a broblem, especially during spring thaw. ‘DEATHTRAP’
One continuing problem to the H township is Telegraph. This old road continues to be a “death trap,’' and six persons lost their lives on the stretch in the township last year, or one per.hiile of road.
Exclusive Shops Abound In Bloomfield Plaza
Continuing modifications are made on the highway and the police department conducts a vigorous campaign to cot down on speeders.
New Fire Station Is Gracefully Landscaped
Lovely Homes On Valley Chase Road Are Elegant, But Typical
The community has been described as the home of industrial leaders. The younger generation promises to maintain that image.
Parents of school children are especially fortunate in being served by the Bloomfield Hills School District, where the most advanced educational practices are in effect, according to educators.
. This fall most of the school system will switch over to- a “nongraded” type of procedure. Each student will proceed with his studies at his own pace for
^ach-subjeeL------
MOSTLY RESIDENTS Some 8,200 students are enrolled in the schools this year. Most of that number are Bloomfield Township residents. About 10 per bent of township students, to the extreme north and east are served by other districts.
Three new schools are under construction at present, a high school, junipr high and elementary. Three more elementary schools are in the planning stage to meet needs of the burgeoning population.
ant of schools, points, out the district has been commended by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare for its college prep courses.
An indication that affluence breeds affluence is evidenced by a statistic supplied by Johnson.
GO TO COLLEGE About 75 per cent of gradu-
THE PONTIAC PRESS
PONTlAfc, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1907
Lftrca High Await	Friday Dance
By SUSAN OWEN Seniors at Utica High School are eagerly awaiting Friday.
The Hillerest Country Gub, in Mount Gemens will be the site of a dance from 9 p. m. to midnight, entertainment provided by “The Mergers.”
Suggestions from a prom theme were turned in to the
Spring Concert
GET HIM TO THE PROM ON TIME! — Kathy Cummings is ready, for Saturday’s prom trip to “Blue Hawaii’’ out she’s afraid that her date George Lekas won’t make it on time despite the help of tape-measure
engineer John Getzon. All are seniors at Clarkston High School. The prom is given by the junior class to hohor the graduating seniors.
Hawaiian Theme at Clarkston
By LINDA HEATH
One of the most exci t events of the school year at Clarkston High School is the annual prom given by the juniors'honoring graduating seniors.
This year’s prom, “Blue Hawaii,” will be held Saturday at the high school.
Entertainment will be provided by Dave and the Dividends.
1%' complement the Hawaiian theme, there will be palm trees, a waterfall, and other Polynesian decorations.
Prom chairman Salli Radoye is working in cooperation with junior class iaculty sponsors Bill Dennis and Max Inman, as Well as all interested juniors.
The music department is spon-soring its annual spring concert, “An International H o 1 i d a y,” with Charlene Rice, vocal instructor, directing Thursday at 7:36 p. m.
Many seniors have been honored by receiving various college scholarships. In the Michigan Education Higher Assistance Authority scholarship program, Chris Maier, Carol Quertermous, Chris Quinlan, Mark Richard, Joette Schultz and Clay Wilson all received monetary awards.
Honorary award winners in .Jhe program include Terry Dutcher, Linda Heath, Larry Klemm, Hugh Rose, Mike Schweitzer and Priscilla Wice.
Winners of the Regent Alumni Scholarships from the University of M i c h i g a n are Chris Maier, Joette S c h u I t z, Linda Heath and Clay Wilson.
Carolyn Trent receiveda scholarship from Michigan Business School Association and Jack Frost won a Michigan Technological Institute scholarship.
! You Want Atmosphere? Try Room 204 at Marian
By PATRICIA POLMEAR Step into Room 204 at Marian High School and you step into a world with an atmosphere all its
own.-----
From the gently swaying mobiles and collage-covered walls the ceramics and original tote-bags, the art room reflects the individuality and creativity of students and teachers.
Step into this room anytime, any school day and you will see at least one of more than 300 art students at work on some project.
For the gophomoreS, this mandatory course is an introduction to art and helps develop a true sense of appreciation.
....* * *
This vital cultural background offers a basis for tiie student that she may understand how to art
NEW TECHNIQUES For the junior or senior who elects a studio art course, this is an opportunity to develop her talents and master new techniques.
Sister Mary Andre, head of the art department, and Carol M c Q u a 1 d, sophomore art teacher, endeavor to give their students a sense of appreciation and understanding.
“To me, art Is the concrete, tangible expression of a human experience,” explains Sister Mary Andre.
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She also feels, however, that ‘everyone is born with some degree of artistic talent which must sometimes be drawn out. Some are better, usually because they are more skilled and thus more interested.”
FIRST YEAR Prior to this year, her first at Marian, Sister Mary Andre taught art at Immaculate Heart High, Westchester, 111.; She
earndd-her master’s degree in fine arts from Wayne State University.
Plans for reorganization of the art department are still somewhat indefinite, but there Is hope.
According to the new plan, freshmen will receive the art appreciation program and the remaining classes may elect art.
Brother Rice Choral Event Draws Near
By JUDY FRANGS Saturday at 8 p. m. is the time and date to remember as Waterford Kettering’s Vocal Music Department presents the annual Spring Concert.
This year’s performance, “A Song Is Made for Singing Again,” will donate all proceeds to the beautification of tin WKHS campus.
Peggy Underwood, soprano still be soloist in the songs "When T Have Sung My Songs” by E. Charles and “H Bacio” by Arditi.
A special portion of the annual concert is “Walk Hand In Hand,” sung by the Gleemeri, With Gleemen alumni coming up and joining in.
“The Battle Hymn of the Republic” will also feature all chorus alumnis joining with the present chorus to close the program.
GYM IS SETTING This program, directed by Janet Hunt, will be held in the gym.
Instrumental accompanists will be Gail Strader, Sonia Martin and Judy Baker, piano; Griff Yerhey, bass; Rex Hamil, drums; and Sandy Inglehart, chimes.
Kettering’s Art Festival is under way this week as the main lobby turns into a show-place for creative masterpieces.
Projects on display are from this year’s first-lhrough-fourth-year art classes.
Girls’ Athletic Association (GAA) and its letter club will host Mom’s Nite Monday at 7
Ancient Rome to Rise at Kingswood Banquet
By MARY STEWART	i Performing in the concert are
Ancient Rome will rise againTCaroTEalloff, Lynne Carpenter, as dancers, singerk, flowers and I Beth Evans, Vicky Farah, Ann festive Roman decorations fill Fitzgerald, Hilary Hackett and
By GARY MILLER
The Brother Rice High School’s Junior ahdSemorGlee Club- will present its annual, spring concert tomorrow and Thursday at 8 p.m.
Accompanying the 60-member Glee Gub will be the choral group from Sacred Heart High School.
The newly formed Brother Rice band, which made it’s debut at the Brother Rice mu-sicale will accompany the singers from the two schools.
Theme of the concert, under the direction of A. A. Callaghan Sr. and A. A. Callaghan Jr., will be “Sounds of Spring.”
Brother Rice’s annual Field Day took place last week. Field Day enables all four classes to compete for a trophy and the prestige that goes with it.
Greg Hengesbaugh has received an Art Scholarship from the Birmingham-Bloomfield Art Association. Earlier this year Greg took first place for his college in the Birmingham-Bloom-field Teen Center Art Show.
Brother McGovern, moderator of the school paper, The Chieftain, announced next year’s staff. Steve Mitros will be managing editor; Gary Miller, news editor; John Cruit, feature | editor; Sid Smith, sports editor; and Dave Lawson, business manager.
the Kingswood School Cranbrook Auditorium during the Latin Banquet Friday.
Hie faculty and Latin students will-be entertained by the skit, “Nero’s Golden House.”
Flaming a delicious Roman banquet to add to the enjoyment are Cynthia Sherman, Latin instructor, and Candy Angel, chairman.
The public in invited to attend a vocal concert given by Diane Mauch and her vocal students in the Kingswood Auditorium at 3:U pjn. on Thursday.
Thayer Hanson.
Others included vn the program are Jean Harlan, Diana Namisnak, Billy Pivnick, Lisa Purdy, Carolyn Thomas and Lori Valassis.
Bertha Seifert will accompany the vocalists, whose selections range from opera arias to folk songs.
ISunday, the Founder’s Day Luncheon and Tea will be held for the faculty and seniors ef all the Cranbrook institutions following the service at Christ Church Cranbrook,
Activities Mount at St. Lawrence
By JAMES PAKLEDINAZ
__The end of t h e year draws
nearer at St. Lawrence Hign School and students rush back and forth in many tasks.
Seniors eye the end of the year with appreherSion and worry.
Many affairs still await them before they throw the “shackles” of high school and step into the adult world. The coming weeks are filled with activities for the seniors, including the senior prom and graduation exercises. >
The last day of school for the seniors will be June 2.
s e n i o r activities committee during the past month. Recently, the f committee announced the theme chosen as “Distinguished Memory.” . The couple who turned in the winning suggestion will receive a free ticket to the prom,-★ ; * ★
This year’s sports awards edition of the paper will be written by the two journalism class MANY FEATURES The edition," given free annually to all students, will in-clude such features as sports awards, team standings, list of boys who received letters and interviews.
Varsity cheerleaders have been chosen. To qualify, girls had to know-three cheers, ono original cheer, plus stunts. Varsity squad for UHS will be juniors Cherie Burnette, Nancy B r i c k s e r, Kaye Nash, Linda Pawlowski, Michelle Pressley, Yvonne Reid and Nancy SchnelL Varsity cheerleaders for Stevenson High School are also ' u n i o r s. They are Cynthis, Browning, Jackie Freeman, Figgr^eTT^Tu r 1 e Hume, Linda Mabarak, Barbara Trum-ble and Karen Wojrowski.
A cooperative d 1 nner is planned and any GAA member may sign up in the girls’ locker room.
Dinner inusic will be provided by Griff yerhey playing selections on the organ. After dinner, one of the Girls’ Ensembles, the Nonette’s will entertain.
Next year’s officers will be named and the GAA presentation of outstanding senior will be announced at the meeting. STUDENT CHAIRMAN
Sandy Postle is student chairman of the program.
Preliminary elections for next year’s senior class board have been run,
Todd Baker, Mark Campbell and Jim Swartz have been named as competitors for the presidency.
Running for vice president are Linda Buddy, Tim Donaldson and Debbie Stireman.
Cindy Corkum, Nancy Cover, Noreen Ihrke and Joanna Newton are campaigning for secretary.
Treasurer seekersarePat Cahape, Janet Furr and Kris
Representatives Are Selected at N. Farmington
By KATHY KOURTJIAN North Farmington High School representatives for Girls’ and Boys’ State have been chosen.
They are Linda Haviland, Jim Haviland, Jim Benva, Randy Benva, Randy Harp, Tom Huber Benva, Randy Harp, Tom Huber, Uoug Lam.
Linda will spend one week m summer af the University of Michigan, and the boys will gc to Michigan State in Lansing.
Total income netted from the Student Council Work
scholarships for deserving graduating seniors.
The sophomore class held its annual dance last Friday evening from 8 to 11. The theme was “Only-Hawaiian.” The corsairs provided musical entertainment.
Hootenanny Due Friday at Rochester
By KARIN HEADLEE
Rochester High School’s Student Council will sponsor a Hootenanny Friday at 8 p.m.
The event will be held on the concourse lawn in front of the 'school. ,
Due to the location, seating facilities will not be provided. Students may bring blankets or any suitable Seating arrangements.
Tickets may be purchases from any Student Council member.
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Perfor m ing will be “The Roamers” — Phil Nye and Dave ek — both college students.
The 125 members of Rochester High School choirs will present “A Spring Sing-In” concert Thursday at 8 p.m. Frank Irish, music instructor at the high school, will direct the program.
Hie performance will feature the Triple Trio, several Soloists and the Madrigal Singers.
All participants in either varsity or junior varsity sports will be honored at an All-Sports banquet May 23 in the high school cafeteria.
...A.. A____A-
Speaking at the dinner will be representatives of Detroit Red Wings and Detroit Pistons.
Hal Newhouser, ex-pitcher for the Detroit Tigers, will be master of ceremonies.
Milford Prom Due Saturday
YEA, CENTRAL — Stacia Burns (front) and Beth Vershure give a a cheer for Pontiac Central High School. Juniors, Stacia and Beth are on next year’s Varsity Cheerleading Squad. This summer the squad will attend
Camp All-American in Hartland. The camp7 is sponsored by Michigan State University. ' PCH cheerleaders are chosen by the Student Council after rigorous competition.
At Pontiac Central
Cheerleading
By CHRIS BLAKENEY Cheerleading is an art. The task of producing enthusiasm in sometimes apathetic strident body takes originality and spirit. A cheerleader finds herself in position of responsibility and leadership which she accepts gladly. To be a cheerleader is to open the door to student prestige and one grueling practice session after another.
Because cheerleading is an important symbol of school unity not everyone can qualify for the job.
Sacred Heart in Guest Pole
By MARY GRACE ALTALO The Sacred Heart Academy ligh school choir will participate in “The Sounds of Spring,” a concert to be presented by Brother Rice Thursday and Friday at 8 p.m;
★ ★ ★
Six girls receiving scholastic awards from Phi Beta Kappa were Jane Johnston, Mary Helen Lorenz, Melinda Churches, Melanie Baer, Mary Vinson and Mary Ellen Quinn.'
Thursday, Dr. A. A. Vajsi, a professor at Oakland Community College, spoke to juniors and seniors on the relationship between love and psychology.
As a part of the Ecumenical movement in the Catholic Church, instructors in various faiths have spoken to the students concerning the problems of today and about their faiths.
Every year more than 100 Pontiac Central girls fry out. Usually not more than eight new girls are accepted. This year there was only room for Six.
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Through the years there has been criticism of the judging procedure so last year, a more democratic system was initiate ed. PCH cheerleaders are now chosen solely by the Student Council. •
PREPARE FOR JUDGING
Last w$ek six girls were selected for next year’s squad. They had been through numerous practice sessions with the old cheerleader's in preparation for their performances in front of the student council.
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In a preliminary tryout the student council judged the girls on the basis of pep, coordination, voice, poise, agility, and rhythm.
From the students’ numerical voting the top 14 girls qualified for tiie final tryouts.
A. ’ A A ■
In this performance the candidates were asked to perform an original cheer and do four jumps — the split jump, the toe jump, and stag jump, and the spread eagle.
6 SURVIVE JUDGMENT
Surviving this judgment were six girls who will compose next year’s Junior Varsity squad.
Juniors from this year’s squad automatically form the Varsity squad.
They are Marya Burns, Doreen Corpron, Maureen Cor-pron, Allesia , Daniels, Barb Johnson and Marilyn Quance.
AAA
The cheerleaders cheer at
football and basketball games plus cross-country, swimming and wrestling meets. During season they keep the halls filled with pep signs and stage several pep assemblies.
ATTEND CLINICS
In the past school year they have attended two clinics. In a clinic in Warren, the 'JV squad took 3rd place the first time a Central squad had ever competed.
AAA
They have -experimented with splits, flips, and mini-trap routines—all new this year.
This summer next year’s varsity squad will attend Camp All-American in Hartland for four days. The camp is sponsored by MichigaifState University.
A A A;
Pontiac Central’s forensics speakers brought their school more honors yet by scoring highly in the state competition. Willie Black; humorous reading, placet! second; Veta Smith, original oratory, third; Mike Lee, sophomore declamation, third; and Cecyiya Brown, irv-terpretive reading, although not placing survived three rounds of competition.
GIRLS’ STATE CHOICE
Cathy Crew, junior, has been selected the Girls’ State representative from Pontiac Central.
A A A
Cathy was chosen from a group of 15 Central girls recommended by their counselors. The final selection was made on the basis of an interview with a representative of the American Legion. Bev. Bacak was chosen Cathy’s alternate.
By TOBY MAKl
Juniors at Milford High School have chosen Flowers” as their theme for the senior prom to be held Saturday from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. in the high school cafeteria.
General chairman of the party is Wayne dent.
Cochairmen are Mark Cook and Toby Maki, who have been assisted by Candy Adam, Nancy Adams, Nancy Clark, Mike Mitchell and Joan Schmidt.
of out -garden swings will contribute to the pastel floral motif.
The refreshments, arranged under the leadership of Marjory Caravagio, will be served by watterscostumedin the dress of the “Gay Nineties.”
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The orchestra, Northville Dance Band from Northville,
will also be dressed in costumes resembling.those worn in the ’Nineties.”
Advisors to the junior class are Mrs. Arthur Mitchell, Mrs. David Laidlaw and Wendall Harrison.
FLOWERS SPEAK — The language of the flowers is heard differently by the sexes.. Wayne Hall (left) and Toby Maki-hang a; last-minute poster promoting the forthcoming prom with an air of perfunctoriness while;
Nancy Adams is exuberant at tiie prospect of the event. Juniors at Milford^ High School, all .are hard at work to see that Saturday’s gala honoring the seniors will he a success.
Y
I
TIIK TON I I AC I'UKSS. TUESDAY. AJAY 10, 1967
Deaths in Pontiac,Nearby Areas
Tool Company Chief Is Dead
Donna M. Harper
Cogs$litl, 82, Dies at Orchard Lake Home
Cogsdill held mere than 60 patents lor metalworking I tools. He had served as a member of the Industry Ad*| vlsory Committee of the War Production Board in World War II.—,----------
three brothfers, Frederick, Larry* ^ Harvey U ferry j and Brian; three slstert, Janice, . *	■ '	'
Service for Donna M, Harper, Janet and Beverly, all at home; MARLETTE — Service for 15-year-old daughter of Mr. and and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Harvey L. (Vivian) Terry,
Mrs. Claude H. Harper of 346 Harold McVeigh of Romeo and 55 of 5530 E	will be	, _	.... . .
wtel"e
Hnm«	*	|at the Marietta United Mission-Products, Inc., Oak Park, died
Donna died this moraine She	r c:.u_	Church. Burial wffl be injyesterday at his home, 4950
waaa student at Lincoln Ju^orj Parry C* Rshor Jterlette Cemetery by Marsh.Birthway, Orchard Lake. He High School.	I WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN-™?*®!”***1**^	t ,t
Surviving are her parents; SHIP - Service for Perry C.	ferry died Sunday. I Services ^U be U aan to-
two sisters and a brother Pa- Fisher, M, of 2380 Rolandalel Surviving besides her husband morrow at Christ Church Cran-tricia, Janet Louise and Claude wUl be 10 am Thursday at a daughter, Mrs. Clayton brook, Bloomfield Hills. Burial W. all at home	St. Patrick’s Catholic Qlurch/Innes of Snovwr; five sons, Paul, will be in Woodlawn Cemetery,
Union Lake, with burial in Holy] Arthur and Daniel of Marlette, Detroit, by Bell Chapel of the Mr*. Henrietta H. Pope;Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield. Keith of Pontiac and Ronald William R. Hamilton Co;; Birm-lElton Blade Funeral Home, of Kansas City, Kan.; eight ingham. .
Service for Mrs. Henreitta H. union Lake.	grandchildren; a stepmother; a
Pope. of 95 Seminole will be] M Fish._ riiprf Mondav He sfeter; and a brother. *
2:88 p.m. Thursday at the' Elton1	He;
Black Funeral Home, Union; wa* mf"lber chttrch- I Ray L Utley Lake, with burial in Oakland) Sumving are three sons^Har-.	'	*
! Hills Cemetery Novi	ioW B- of Union Lake, Paul I. LUM — Service for Ray L.
Mrs. Pope a' retired practical CSL Clhir Shores and GeorgeUtley, 67, of 4915 Lum Road, nune, died yesterady.	E- of Moab, Utah; two daughrjwill be 1:39 p.m. tomorrow at
Surviving is a daughter, Miss1®™’ Warie L. and Barbara J., Muir Brothers Funeral Home, One of the original members Helen Pope of Pontiac.	both of Un*°n Lake; a brother; ] im|ay city, with burial in Lum of the board of directors of the
pandchlklren; and nine Cemetery.	Oakland Hills Country Club, he
Gllfo M. SantcT Vicca | greatgrandchildren.	• ] Mr. UtteydMSimdayr^ also was a member of the De-
, ,	- . I	n	. was a We member of Euclid toir Athletic Club, the Bloom-
Graveside service for Gina! Wayne U. MCAUley Lodge 478 F&AM and life mem-field HUls Country Club Indian Jmp8’	PONTIAC TOWNSHlP-Serv-ber of Lum Chapter 436, Order jCreek Club, and Orchard Lake
JmE	«" Wayne » McAuley, 24, | of Eastern Star. Utley ran a Country Club.	1
w was tohe th^mnmmr nt2142 E- walton will be 1 p.m. I grocery store in Lum for 33} Serviving are his wife, Ftar-, Lakeview^Cemetery, ClarkstonitoiiMWtoW at BeU Chapel of
bv the Lewis E Whit Funeral William R. Hamilton Co., Bir- L,'m Cemetery.	A. White of Birmingham and
Sw» cSStm.	.mingham. Burial will be in Per-1 Jrvfofog are bisyrite, Pearl; JMrs.	Robert	E.	Fife	of	Bloom-
Sunday	ry Mount Park Cemetery, Pon- a daughter, Mrs. Phylfls Worthy field	Hills;	and	eight	grandchil-
Surviving besides the fathertiac. ---------- <H Waterford_TownAlp; hixdrtfl. '*	.
and mother a former Waterford! Mr. McAuley died yesterday ^^	.con^buU?ns may
Township resident, are grand-Ls the result of an automobile 7° sisterSi in^u^il^^Irs-	to the ,^n®ricfn
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leo E-Wident He was an emolove ^ara Sbarp o{ Im ay a Foundation for the Blind, Louis-Davis of WaterfoidJTowndiip,and grandchfi.	Michigan Qm-
and Mr. and Mr* Em^toSan- L	0( Emanuel Bapt)st *em_______________________lcer.l°u_ndatlon-   ......
M Vicca of East Defroit; churchofpontiac
Maria	State Audit Report
arid a great-grandfather. Elmer S’j,Mg points. Mr. and Mrs.	r
Davis of Pontiac.	" . CFA. Sprouse of Pontiac; I sis-,
|ter,.Mrs. K. E. Abbott of Pon-Daniel Weir fiac; a brother, Gary at home;
PFC. MICHAEL L> ELM Y
Pontiac Gl ts Kitted in Copter Crash
A Pontiac man, Army Pfc.j Michael L. Elmy, was killed in a helicopter c r a s h last week over the South China Sea off the coast of Vietnam.
Avon Marine Killed in Viet
An Avon Township couple, Mr. and Mrs. R. V- Snyder, 346 Wimpole, have been notified of the (teafir May 8 of tlteir son,-Marine Pfc. Richard A. Snyder, 19, hear Quang Tri, Vietnam.
The official telegram said he had been kilted by hostile ■ rifle fire. Snyder had been in the Margies since March 15, 1966, serving since last September in Vietnam.
His parents received a letter from tilth the same day that the notification of his death ar-i rived. It spoke of the weather —hot and raining, of a B-52 attack, and of his.view of Free-! dom Bridge leading into the DerJufitarizedlZone and the^^ dis=-plav of both North and South* Vietnamese flags there.
Traffic Club Installs Exec
PFC. RICHARD A. SNYDER
Suicide ts Ruled
—A-death in-Bloomfield- Hills yesterday -afternoon was role4 a suicide by Coroner Donald Smith.
Mrs. Joan Powers. 35. of Eastways, was found dead by her family from apparently self-inflicted wrist lacerations police said. ...J.:
anity Tests " Ordered in I Area Slaying
1 Two psychiatrists were ap-pointed yesterday by Circuit [judge Robert L. Templin to determine the mental condition of la Farmington Township man charged with murdering his wife.
L The testing of John Merlo, 25, by doctors Emanuel Tanay and j William E Gordon, both of Detroit, will provide only a preliminary evaluation.
I Their report will permit Temp-tin to decide if Merto should undergo further psychiatric examinations by state appointed doc? tors. Their findings would indicate if Merlo was capable of
standing trial__
—Merlo is accused of shooting | his wife Sheron, 18, while she ^■working in the Crest Beauty Salan, 27432 Eight Mile Road, Ion Jan. 6.
I He was arrested in Philadelphia two weeks later and returned to Oakland County.
Pfe. Eimy, who died May it! Pontiac Traffic Club installed was originally listed as missing Warner J. Canto of Huntington
in action and later reclassified Woo^f„■	a g“eral
■ meeting 1 a s tj
night.
]r"He is also! vice president|
killed as the result of nonhositle action;----
The son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond F. Elmy of 77 I Paddock.
Pfc. Elmy went to V etnam ta Tra”?port ■ , ■ „ u '	„	.	_ i Other newly
late February. He was stationed] elected mOcoh in Da Nang. He entered the include Genel
- , w . . .i, , Jand his grandmother, Mrs. Service for Danid Weir l6, of Glaiya Blrd *
805 Scott Lake, Waterford Township, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the D. E. Purstey Funeral Home with burial in Waterford Center; HOLLY — Service for Mrs. Cemetery.	rGeorge (Laura) Schlesser, 75,
Daniel died early yesterday of 201 College will be 2 p.m.
County Bookkeeping in Order
Mrs. George Schlesser
Friday at Fenton Baptist Church. Burial will be in Lakeside Cemetery by Dryer Funeral Home.
Mrs. Schlesser died today.
Oakland County’s bookkeeping procedures are in proper order, according to a report of the State Treasurer’s Office based on an audit of county books and records for the calendar year 1965.
„* * ★
Audits by, the state office made annually in each county and sent to the board of au<
morning after being struck by an auto.
Mrs. Basil Brown
HOLLY - Service for Mrs. v	a_____________ ___________HI
Basil (Leona) Brown, 43, of Surviving besides her husband ditors and board of supervisors. 303 Seminole will be 10:30 a.m. "e two daughters, Mrs. Nor-,	.
Thursday at Dryer Funeral man Inman and Mrs. William, As of Dec. 31, 1W5, Ort-Home. Burial will be in Lake- Buell, both of HoUy; her mother J land Comtyjtnd nvnflnbfo side Cemetery.	Mrs. Harriett Peek of Holly; I cash of *11,158,454 and Invest.
Mrs. Brown died Sunday. five grandchildren; and two menu of $5,771,373, according Surviving beside her husband brothers.	1 to the audit report. This
amounted to a total fund equity of $10,928,827.
The investments r included $600,'000 in U. S. government bonds, $81,200 in federal securi-debentures, $042,877 in federal securities — FHA mortgages, 82,053,000 in industrial securities, $495,296 in municipal securities and $1,891,000 in pub-tic utilities securities.
Other information in the re- j port included a 1964 tax levy collection of 96.47 per cent andi a per capita cost,of $36.26 for' county government based on the 1960 census figure of 690,583.	1
' army in September 1966.
Elmy, 20, belonged to the Central Methodist ChurcH. He worked at GMC Truck and Coach Division prior to joining the Army. He attended Pontiac Central High School.
Jonas of 6260 CANTO | Grace K, Waterford Township, vice president; Gus J. Couretas' of 606 Third, secretary; and] Philip Blaylock of 59 TregentJ treasurer.
His body is being shipped to Pontiac and will be taken to the Melvin Schutt Funeral Hornet
NOTICE Of PUBLIC SALE signed that on Thursday, May II. 1W7.

Elected to the executive board! are Dean Duffey of 918 Atlantic, | Milford; Meriyn Matthews of 151 Clive; and Gene Stanley of' 3272 Erie, Orchard Lake. .
The Pontiac Traffic Club mr handles transportation arrange-'
I.....|...I . shait'sarvica’ns ments for industries in Pontiac. '
Main _St„ Rochester, Oakland County.'	’
Michigan, public. sale of the following described goods wHI be held, tor cash
at, auction: The undesigned rosyws the The name O’Brien is derived Mden.toseriai no. 33m»5mis4)7i. mspec- from Brian, the Christian name| SL? KtryoekiaJrco^^M“ch" of the greatest medieval king gan, m. pt.c	„ <rf Independent Ireland. Usually
Mam street known as Brian Boru, he was killed in a battle in 1014. i_
THE CALMNESS OF QUR. SURROUNDINGS SPELLS UNDERSTANDING
^parks-Griffu^|
V * FUNERAL HOME ^
46 Williams St.
Outstanding in Pontiac for Service and Facilities
FE 8-9288
OAKLAND CHRYSLER-FLYMOUTH, >	.	724 OakloiMi Av«.
Pontiac, Michigan
are four sons, Basil and Alfred, both of Holly, Everett and Robert, both of Davisburg; a daughter, Beulah of Davisburg; her father, Glen Cross of Holly; her mother, Mrs. Gladys Remington of Flint; four sisters, including Mrs. Laura Shearer of Pontiac; three brothers, including Charles Parks of Milford andi Harold Cross of Pontiac. !
Parley Carr
TROY — Service for former resident Perley Carr, 73, of Hazel Park win be 10:30 a<m. Thursday at Price Funeral Home. Burial wUl be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery.
Mr. Carr, a retired employe of National Machine Products Go., Utica, died yesterday.
Surviving are bis wife, Emma; a daughter, Mrs. Russell Davis of Royal Oak; a son, William F. of Lansing; and three grandchildren.
Norwood Caswell
HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -J Service for Norwood Caswell, 10, of 2224 Davista will be 1 pin. Thursday at ardson-Bird Funeral ford.
Mr. CasweQ, a early today as. an auto accident Ship-
Surviving are his wife, Diana; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles N.' CasweQ of Highland; four sisters, -Mrs. Ronald Wim-brow of FowiervUle, Mrs. Edison Redman Of Highland, Mrs. Franks Currie of Milford and Betty Jo of Highland; two brothers, Jan B: and Jade R., both of Highland.
Michael W. Fernsemer
ORION TOWNSHIP — Service for ftfiduteTW. Fernsemer, 16, son of llr. and Mrs. Oscar F. Fernsemer of 915 Hemingway, wM be it p.m., tomerrow at Fhmunerfelt Funeral Home, Ox-Oxford, with burial in Eaitlawn Cemetery, Lake Orion.
Jfo died Monday.
Surviving are his p a r e n t s,
, Mil-
result of
the town-
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Pausing to admire table decorations at Monday’s luncheon are two committee chairmen of the Pontiac Woman’cClub.Fr&m the left are Mrs. William Bedard, Crescent Lake Road, and Mrs. Hazel Anderson, Rosshire Court. The luncheon was held at the Waldron Hotel.
Scholarship Committee Presents SI0,000 to
Officer Elections at Luncheon
New officers were fleeted Monday by the Pontiac Woman’s Club during the annual luncheon meeting in the Waldron Hotel.
A *	★
Those elected are Mesdames: W. E. C. Huthwaite, president; C. M. Pelican, first vice presi-
Founders Day Is 63rd Year for C ran brook
Sunday is Founders Day at Cranbrook and will mark the 63rd anniversary of the estab-lishment of the complex by Mr. and Mrs. George G. Booth.
Events will begin with a Service of Rededication at 10:45 a.m. in Christ Church Cranbrook.
* * ■* ••
. Heads, board members a n d officers of the six Cranbrook institutions will march behind the institutional flags.
~ John P.'DeMo; Headihaiter of Brookside School, will deliver ‘ the address.
WILL HOST
Following the annual luncheon, Mr. and Mrs. Henry S.
(he is the youngest son of the founders and chairman of the board of trustees of the Cranbrook Foundation) will host the Founders Day tea from 4 to 6 p.m, in Cranbrook House,
★	it it
At 4 p.m., Frederick Marriott, organist-director of Central Methodist Church, Detroit, will present a carillon concert from the church.
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Tea table hostesses will be: Mesdames Don E. Ahrens, Samuel E. MacArthur, William H. Baldwin, Richard C. Van Dusen, W. Edwin Mosher Jr., Gerald B. O’Grady Jr., Stephen F. Booth and Charles H. MacMa-hon Jr.
Calendar V
WEDNESDAY Menseftla Guild of ^ Lourdes, Lourdes Nursing i|
| Home, Watkins Lake I Road; Luncheon and card s l party, 12:30 p.m.
^Womag’^-Werld- Sefie»r |
| Pontiac Mall, 9:30 a.m.; I ; Mrs. June Sears, Wayne I i County Home Economist, |
: will speak on “Food Spoil- I ; age.”
iUWMMHlMilito!
dent; A. D. Stimer, second vice president; Hayden Henley, recording secretary; Charles Allen corresponding secretary; E. M. Rose, financial secretary and Joy Stephens, treasurer.
—Q t h-er s named- were Mrsr Clarence Myers, Mrs. William H. Bedard, Mrs. Fred Gotts-chalk and Mrs. Lee Hill.
■ -y ■■ ^	...
< Mrs. Huthwaite was named delegate to the state convention. She will also represent th e group at the Southeastern District meeting.
Mrs. H. N. Watson was the installing Officer.
. ■ ★ ,	★	*.
Committees were: bib's. F. A. Parks, Mrs. S.	M. Pierson, Mrs.
L.	C.	Cambrey,	Mrs.	H.	A.
Luther and Mrs. John Lyons and Mrs. John Radenbaugh.
Mrs. Lyons was presented with an honorary membership.
Guest for the day was Mrs. George Gray.
★	*	*
Chairman of the event was ^h4rsv HrMrAnderson. " ^
License Cost Will Go Up, Rules to Stay
LANSING <Jtl — If you plan to get married in Michigan, do it now. You can save $2.
★
But if you’d like to marry your mother-in-law, do it in some other state.
Sent to the governor for his signature Monday was a bill to raise the marriage license fee for Michigan residents from $3 to $5 and impose a special $10 charge if both applicants are nonresidents.
it	it	it
Rep. Raymond Kehres, D-Mortroe, sponsored the measure. ★	★	★ '
It is designed to help pay for accommodating out-nfStaters who flock to southern Michigan counties to tie the knot. IMMEDIATE EFFECT
The	House	joined	the	Senate	in. giving	the	bill	immedi-
ate effect. That means it becomes law as ^soon as Gov. George Romney signs it.
5* - * •-.*
The House also agreed with Senate action in deleting material it had written into the bill to permit persons to marry certain relatives — including inlaws and, with probate court approval, first cousins.
MARJORIE GIBBS
“Consumer Agent Receives Award in Washington
Marjorie Gibbs, Detroit consumer marketing information agent for the Cooperative Extension Service, received one of six awards to Extension workers in Washington today.
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Mrs.- Gibbs earned her superior service award for “responsive leadership in bringing autonomous interests of the food industry together, providing new resources for consumer education in the Detroit Metropolitan Area and professional leadership in her specialized task.”
Since 1960, she has worked with inner city families. She has enlisted and trained volunteer home economists to help mothers in food buying and meat planning.
A graduate of Wayne State University,- Marjorie Gibbs was home service department director for Pontiac Consumers Power Company before she assumed her present position in 1954.
mittee for OU scholarships.
Mrs. Cyril S. Perlman, outgoing chairman of the Scholar Shop, presented Chancellor Varner with a letter announcing the transfer of $10,000 from the Scholar Shop to the scholarship fund. *
Mrs. Noel Buckner, Orchard Lake, chairman pf the scholarship committee, announced the election of new officers of the Oakland County committee.
They are Mrs, Clement Jensen, Birmingham, chairman; Mrs. Norman Cheal, Bloomfield Hills, vice chairman;-Mrs.-Jack. R. Moeller, Rochester, secretary, and Mrs. Robert Cosner, Birmingham, treasurer.
* * *
Mrs. Cosner also was named chairman of the Scholar Shop.
The gift shop, stafifed completely by Volunteers from the Scholarship Committee, is open in 'the Oakland Center during the winter season and at Trumbull Terrace on the Meadow Brook Festival grounds during the summer months.
Mrs. Perlman announced that the Trumbull Terrace shop will be opened on June 14.
^The Macomb County scholarship chatr marr.'MrsrJohnMc-Ginty, Mount Clemens, announced that her committee has turned over a check for $10,000 to the scholarship fund.
This money was realizedfrom the profits of the committee’s fund-raising project, the Macomb Town, Hall lecture series held in Mount Clemens and Warren.
Sororities Plan Fair
Members of four sororities will join in presenting a fair Thursday from 7:30 to H p.m. in First Federal Savings of Oakland.
Boutique items and baked goods are among items to be sold to benefit philanthropic projects. Coffee and foreign pastries will be served during the evening.
Participating groups are Beta Sigma Phi, Sigma Beta, Epsilon Sigma Alpha and Pi Omi-cron National.Sorority.
Beverly Fox and Mrs. Wallace Williams are cochairmen.
Dinner-Dance Marks Reunion
Mrs. Lloyd Peltier of . Orchard Lake was crowned the “Mother-of^ the Year” Saturdai) during the seventh annual dinner for the Twins Mothers’ Club of Oakland County. The WaL dron Hotel was the setting for the festivity. Mrs. Peltier has 12 chil-dren and two sets of twins. One set of twins is 18 years old and the other is two and a half.
Edgewood Country Chib in Union Lake has been chosen for the ten year dinner-dance reunion, June 17, of the 1957 graduates of Waterford Township High School.
. Dancing, door prizes and a hot and Cold buffet figure in the plans along with a souvenir. booklet of all new and up to date names and addresses of classmates.
Ted Collom and Mrs. William DeRousse (nee Barbara Martin) are general co-chair? men.
Working with them oh various committees are: Harvey Gammage, Tom Birkle, Roger Reynolds, Mrs. Richard De-Shetler, Mrs. Robert Foss, Mrs. Larry McNeil and Mrs. James Knapp.
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1967
’ They’ve reached the top—of the	-jesm *mt «<•*•*
stairs and of club positions. Mrs. Ernest. Woman’s Club. Mrs. Jay Stephens, Ros-Hjtthwctite; West Jrotpwis-Road-flefLLjs shire Court* Jsjtreasurer and Mrs. Lee incoming president of the Pontiac Hill, Stoweil Street, the retiring president.
The annual meeting of the Oakland University Scholarship Committee, Inc., was held Monday in the Gold Room of the Oakland Center. About 125 committee members attended the luncheon meeting.
Chancellor D. B. Varner was the main speaker. He announced that more than $82,000 was raised last year by the com-
Programming Workshop Has Places Open
Reservations are still being accepted for the Program Planning Workshop on Saturday.
Sponsored by the ' Pontiac Area Federation of Women’s Clubs, the day-long session ajt Central Methodist Church is open to any woman in the area.
Constructive helps in planning programs, as well as lists of source materials, speakers, booklets and films will be offered. '
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Discussion groups will be conducted....by...Mesdames Hans.
Schjolin, David Saks, Raymond Rapaport, C. L. Coppersmith, B. B. Roush, James Campoli and Sol Newhouse,
Others on the program include Mesdames Lee Hilh. Richard Veazey, S. V. Sekles, Fred" Goines and Miss Lillian Davidson.
Members of the Parliamentary Study Club will be available to answer questions on parliamentary procedure.
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Although tiie event is scheduled for all day, individuals may attend just the morning or afternoon sessions.
For those planning to stay all day, luncheon reservations must be made in advance with Mrs. Saks, Mrs. Sekles or Mrs. William Furlong, Silverside Drive.
Further information may be obtained from any of the above* women.
Husband	Should
of Father to Wife's Children
July Vows Set
Kathryn Jane Shaw and Mi-ehael Bradley Gilkey of Detroit are planning July 29 vows. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Shaw of Farmington and Mr. and Mrs. W. Bradley Gilkey of St. Louis, Mo. recently of Pontiac.
*. * ★
The bridegroom-to-be is a junior at University of Detroit.
During the day, some 450 choruses and more than 700 quartets in the United States (including Hawaii and Alaska) the Canal Zone and participate in a coast-to-coast
effeyrt tp cal and
Coinciding with the birthday celebration will be Sweet Adelines’ salute to Canada in her Centennial Year.
Chapters from both sides of • the border will meet and sing at border cities, in an enthusiastic attempt to achieve “the most harmonious border incident in a hundred years.’
The Inter-Lakes Chapter meets Mondays at 8 p.m. at Four Towns Methodist Church.
★ Ip *
This active group of “women who love to sing” was char-teredlrrreei.
Last Saturday, they were guests of the Milford Chapter pf the Society for the Preservation of Barbershop Quartet sing-
The “Four-Tune Cookies" tune up for their appearance laith the 25- voice chorus of Inter-Lakes Chapter of Sweet Adelines, Inc. at Oakland County Sanatorium on the organization’s “Share A
Song” day, Thursday at 7:30 P-m- left to right, the songsters are Wrsl Norman Thompson, Mrs. Jack Berglind, Miss Helen Teeter and Mrs. Patricia Forbes.
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY:My husband spehds every holiday — Easter, Thanksgiving, Christmas, etc. with his ex-wife and Jheir three 13 children. •. When 1 I grumble be-1 cause I and my n two children by I: a' former mar- 7 riage are left c alone, he says, '<?
“Why don’t you B
vaitd **
get YOUR children’s father to come and spend the holidays with you and HIS children the way I do?”
I want to-be fair, Abby, but ! also want to be treated fairly. Where do you think my husband’s loyalties should lie?
ACHING HEART DEAR ACHING: How old are - hischtldren?'And-how“oid-are yours? A man who marries a woman with young children (under 10) should assume the
role of a father to those children. And if he has young chil-dren of his own (and if their mother hasn’t already replaced him with another “father”! he should see them occasionally, too.
But a man who is seriously trying to make a second marriage work should concentrate on being a father to the children of his present wife. Running back and forth (usually out of a sense of guilt) confuses the kiddies and enbitters the wife.
DEAR ABBY: I feel that a 17-year-old girl should be allowed to shut her bedroom door if she chooses. .
My mother and f live alone in a four-room house and I am not allowed to shut my bedroom door unless I am studying. My mother claims that I am “shutting her out.” .
—Abby.-Hoverriymother'very" much, and I am not “shutting her out.” I just want a little privacy.
My mother is very fair about almost everything except this. Please print your answer. If you
say I’m wrong, I’ll promise to do as you say with no more arguments, When I try to discuss it with my mother we both end up stretching our vocal cords. Thank you.
SEVENTEEN
DEAR SEVENTEEN: I think you should be allowed to shut your bedroom door whenever you wish.
DEAR ABBY: Do you think a girl is ever justified in proposing marriage during Leap year?
E. L. D.
DEAR E. L. D.: Positively! During Leap year, and during any other year. However, in all fairness to the girls who do the asking, I should add, no man ever marries a girl because she asks him. He just marries her sooner.
- £ ★ „ ★
CONFIDENTIAL to La Verne " and Luigi on Nurlli Sallair: You two could give the world a lesson on how to succeed in marriage without even trying. Yours is a beautiful example of total commitment through unselfish love.
Singing Group to Celebrate Birthday
ing in America, at the Multi-Lakes Conservation Club.
Next Monday, as part of the celebration of Michigan Week, they are scheduled to sing at the Michigan Precision Moulding Building in Walled Lake. -
Installation of officers for the coming season took place Monday night.
Mrs. Martin Beneteau is presi-
dent; Patricia Forbes, vice-president; Mrs. Norman Thompson, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Irvin Melville, recording secretary; Mrs. John Hoye, treasurer and Mrs. Walter Poh|, publicity chairman.
Local warblers who would like to join the group are invited to contact any of the above women.
“Sweet Adeline” will celebrate her 20th birthday on
On that date, 17,000 women (members of the organization known professionally as “Sweet Adelines, Inc.”) will raise their voices in chorus and quartets, f o-r audiences in hospitals, homes for the aged, civic assemblies and charity benefits.
The Inter-Lakes Chapter will celebrate “Share a Song Day" by providing an evening’s entertainment for the patients at the Oakland County Sanatorium.
They plan a program of songs by their 25-voice chorus and some good ol’ barbershop harmony by the Four-Tune Cookies Quartet. The concert will begin ' at'7:30 p.m.
PROMOTE HARMONY
THE FOyTIAC PRESS: TUESDAY, MAY lfi, 1967
Raps Indians' Platoon System

AUFD filACf

Sports Group -Make^NABL Bid for Team
Application Decision May Receive Okay of League Saturday
By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Pontiac’s representation in minor league sports is expected to be expanded this weekend with the approval of a city franchise in the. North American Basketball League.
* * *
■ It was learned today that the Pontiac sports group which operates the Pontiac Firebirds in the Midwest Football League has made franchise application in the NABL. The league which holds its annual meeting Friday and Saturday in Columbus, Ohio will make a decision on it at that time.
Commissioner of the 8-team circuit, Harry Bomers of Muskegon, said several applications have been received and that Pontiac and Fort Wayne, Ind., are the two cities most likely to be awarded franchises.
The eight teams currently hi the league include Columbus, Chicago, Grand Rapids, Lansing, Muskegon, Holland, Battle Creek and Benton .Harbor. MAKE APPLICATION Paul Parks, veteran Pontiac sportsman who is president of the Pontiac Firebirds, and Phil Sauer, downtown businessman who is one of the football company’s stockholders, admitted the company has made application with the hope of even-t u a 11 y “giving Pontiac year-round representation in the athletic leagues of the Midwest.’
“With the hope that some day in the near future we may have a sports arena in the city, it is conceivable for Pontiac to have _ basketball and hockey franchises on a minor league scale for the indoor winter-spring calendar and baseball and football for the summer-fall sports.’’ !,
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The Firebirds, assuming a new name in the MFL this fall, have been highly successful on the field and at the gate.
“This indicates somewhat that area sports fans are receptive to this kind of athletic competition and it would certainly help the city’s prestige to have representation in these sports in the Midwest.’’
There is no indication who would coach the basketball team should the franchise be awarded. The Pontiac group has looked into the possibility of using Northern’s court for it home schedule.
■ TODAY'S
Slugger	Colavito Rocks Tribe's Teepee
Torres Favored to Regain Title
NEW YORK (AP) - The first three rounds are expected the story tonight when Nigeria’s Dick Tiger defends his heavyweight title in a return 15-round bout with ex-champion Jose Torres at Madison Square Garden.
If Torres doesn’t knock him out or soften him up in the first three rounds then I don’t think he’ll win,” Roger Rouse said today.
You better' root for me, Torres said to Rouse. “We’ll do more business. I’m gonna knock him out within 10 rounds.’
Rouse is the No. 1 contender from Anaconda, Mont. He has been promised a shot at the winner within 90 days. FAVORED Torres is a 9-5 favorite to re-
gain the 175-pound division crown he lost to the 37-year-old Tiger on a unanimous decision ' 15 rounds at the Garden last Dec. 16.
Die '31-year-old Puerto Rican was a 3-1 favorite when he wag soundly whipped by the older, shorter and lighten Dger.
The Veteran Nigerian had been dethroned as middleweight pounds) champion eight months earlier by Emile Griffith.
The first Torres-Tiger fight drew a crowd of 13,654 and a gross gate of $100,488 plus $60,-000 few television.
SMALLER CROWD
This time the Garden is looking for a crowd of 10,000 and a gate of between $75,000 and $100,000 plus another $60,000 for national television. New York will be blacked out of the television. .-Starting time is 10 p.m. EDT.
Dger’s record is 56-15-3, including 25 knockouts. Torres’ record is 39-2-1, including 27 knockouts. He’s been stopped once.
Dger will get 40 per cent and Torres 20 per cent of all receipts.
Miss Prentice Golf Champion
Par on Final Hole Brings 1-Shot Win
By Thy Associated Press American League
«M Lost Bet. Behind Carcase ......... n	t	.720 —
Detroit  .....:. if	9	AM, tW
Kansas City ....	U	14	AM	Sn
Boston .......... 13	14	.411	6
New York ......	12	13	.410	6
Cleveland .......	12	13'	.430	6
Washington ...	12	IS.	.444	7
Minnesota ______  11	IS	.423	v/t
Baltimore ....... 11	15	.423	7%
California ...... 13	18	.412	I
Monday's Results Kansas City 5. California 2 Detroit at Washington, rain Baltimore at Boston, rain Only games scheduled.
Today's Games
Detroit (Willson 4,2) at Washington (Pascual 2-1), night
Cleveland (McDowell 2-u at New York (Peterson 0>2), night Baltimore (Bertafna 0-0 or Bunker 1-2) at Boston (Brandon 0-4),' night California (Santord 1-2) at Kansas City (Hunter 3-3), nigM Minnesota (Chance 5-1)
(Buxhardt 1-1). night
Wednesday's Gam .California at Kansas City,
Minnesota at Chicago, nigt Detroit at Washington, ntgl Cleveland at New York, ni Baltimore at Boston, night
,	National League
Wan List Pet. Behind
Cincinnati ...... 22	10	, AM	—
Pntsbuigh	T*	TO	313—3
Chicago ......... 1«	11	,593	3W
St. LOUIS .......	IS	11	377	4
Atlanta ........  14	14	300	4
San Francisco	..	14	15	.483	4VS
Philadelphia	... 13	14	.481	4VS
New York ........ 10	15	.400	Ito
Los Angelas	...	10	18	357	10
Houston .......... 9	21	.300	12
Monday's Results Chicago 9, San Francisco 3 Cincinnati 8. Pittsburgh 7, to innings Houston 5, Los Angolas 3,10 innings Naw York at Atlanta, rain ' Only games scheduled.
Today's Gam**
Pittsburgh (Fryman 0-1 (Queen 4,1), night.
Philadelphia (Ellsworth 1-2) touts (Washburn 1-2), wight ~
, Houston (Cuellar 2-2) at Lot (Osteen 4-2), night Chicago (Jenkins 3-2) at San Francisco * (Marichal 5-3), night
New York (Soever 3-1) at Atlanta (Bruce fell, night
Wednesday's Games Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, night' Philadelphia at St. Louis, night Houston at Loa Angeles, night ,NeW York at At lento, (.light * Chicago at San FrancRco
BP Wlrephoto
EARLY SHOWERS— Joe Ann Prentice gets a shower of champape from an excited fan, Joe Campisi, as she putted out on the 18th hole yesterday in the Dallas Civitan Open. Miss Prentice shot a dosing 75 for a 72-hole score of 281, one stroke ahead of Judy Kimball. Campisi, a friend and Dallas restaurant owner, helped Miss Prentice celebrate the
DALLAS (AP) - Jo Ann Prentice, the tall blonde from Pensacola, Fla., won the $16,800 Dallas Civitan Open Golf Tournament Monday.
On No. 18, she was 30 feet off the green and would have been out of bounds except for the convenient cold drink stand. She chipped to within 18 inches of the hole, sank the putt for a par and a four-over-par 75 and 281 for 72 holes.
It was one stroke less than the pressing Judy Kimball, who had birdied 18 vyith an 18-inch putt. Miss Kimball wound up frith a 73 for 282.
Black Hawks, Boston Close 6-Player Deal
BOSTON (AP) - The Boston Bruins, weary of seeing small forwards get banged around, boasted added muscle up front today with the acquisition of Phil Esposito, Ken Hodge and Fred Stanfield from the Chicago Black Hawks.
The Bruins gave up hard-hitting defenseman Gilles Marotte, center Pit Martin and minor league goalie Jack Ndrris to obtain the three forwards in the deal completed shortly before National Hockey League rosters were frozen at midnight preparation for the expansion draft.	•
ninth-inning, pinch hit.
“We gained needed strength up front as well as size,” Milt Schmidt said after his first trade as the Bruins’ new gener-1 manager.
“We hated to give up Marotte, a promising, tough, young defenseman, but we had to give tip something to get what we want-ed,” Schmidt added.
Tigers Sending Wilson Against Nats Tonight
Jo Ann Prentice, t2>475 Judy Kimball, Sl.r3 Whitworth,
___-ol Mann, 01.241
Beth Stone, MS ............
Mickey Wright, 0975,. ... 40-1 Sandra Spuzich, *735 ..... 704
Ruth Jassen, $402 ........ 7W
Shirley Englehorn 1402 Susie Maxwell, $505 ...
Sandra Hayhie, $304 .".
Betsy Reims, $384 .....
" irle Llndstrom, $386 irgle Masters) $286 . ...jrilyn Smith, S2I6 Sharon Millar, S247.
WASHINGTON (AP) Bombed and battered, the Detroit Dgers will send big Earl Wilson against the Washington Senators tonight in an effort to regain respectability.
The Dgers were rained Monday night and may have needed the rest after seven pitchers were bombed for 24 hits and 16 runs in losing a doubleheader at Boston Sunday.
Wilson, who has won four games and lost two, will start against Camilo Pasqual (2-1).
The Tigers will make .up Mon-
Rochester Golfers Slip Past Central
Rochester reversed an earlier setback at ihe hands of Pontiac Central and this time defeated. the Chiefs by one stroke in their golf match at Munici-pal course,197-198.
Bert Johanson and Carl Griffis each posted 37’s for Rochester which is now 1H for the season.
PCH with a 9-5 mark had Dave McNelly with 37. Today, Central meets Kettering and tomorrow Waterford on the links.
day night’s postponed contest as part of a doubleheader with Washington July 13.
FALL BEHIND The Tigers, 17-9 this season, are a game and a half behind the American League leading Chicago White Sox who won pair Sunday for 10 straight victories.
Wilson, who won his last pitching start Friday from his former Boston teammates, came bade Saturday to driye in the winning run against Boston with a ninth-inning pinch hit The Senators, who the Tigers also will face Wednesday night, are in seventh place with a 12-15 record.
In Wilson, the Tigers have one of their winningest pitchers. Only Mickey Lotich matches his record of four victories.
THIRD STARTER The Tigers’ third starter, Joe Sparma, has won three. But list year’s 20-game winner, Dennis McLain, has lost four against his three victories.
Fred Gladding luurJecL the bullpen with strong late-intting work but the rest of the staff hasn’t done much.
Hills Golfers Win,
Bloomfield Hills trimmed Brighton and Clarkston in a triangular match at Oakland Hills yesterday.
Brighton’s Dm Pearsall and Mike I^ieker carded 41s to take individual honors. Hills’ Bill Scott posted r 43^-
67-71-44-75-2*1 ... 72-44-71-73-2*2 ,840 . 69-72-70-72—283 71-71-73-49—284 7347-49-74-205
69-	70-72-74-285
70-	49-70-78—2*7
73-70-74-72—291 7349-75-74-1-291 71-71-74-73-291 71-70-73-77-291
■ ______ 72,70.75.75—292
Gibson, $247 ....... 74-72-71-75—292
°Huggu. $205
'. 72-75-72-75—294
Skipper Golfers Stay Unbeaten in League Action
Hot-shooting Waterford ran its golfing record to 90 in Biter* Lakes League 1>iay yesterday and its over-all mark to 20-3 with a quadrangular triumph at Pontiad Country Club.
Rod Skelton led the Skippers with a three-over-par 39. The squad totaled^ 204, followed by Pontiac Northern (214), Walled Lake (215) and Farmington (219).
Russ Herron of Walled Lake also carded a 39 to share medalist honors with Skelton. Bill Carter turned in a 40 for ?NH and Carl Hunt fired a 41 for Farmington.
Orion Defeated
Gene Harry, of Lake Orion and Larry Pinchback Of Clawson shared medalist honors, with 43s, but Clawson wen the match at Bald Mountain between the teams, 225-242.
Lake Orion is 2-5 overall and 2-3’in Oakland A play.
2	GriddersDie in Crash
HILLSDALE 01 — A car 20, of New York City, a guard, -crashed	*■ mn«-—Injured were Arvin Gyltard,
dale Mooday light, killing two 21, of New York City, an end, Hillsdale College football play- and John Barnes, II, of Betters and injuring two other ton Harbor, a forward on the athletes of the school.	college basketball team.
Killed were Jade Allen Hen- Police said Henry was driv-ry, 21, ef Flint, a football tag the small compact car mid, and Ronald R. Dnrnquest, when it went out of control.
NEW YORK m - Rocky Colavito wants to play more, so he can earn back the money the Cleveland Indians cut .from his 1967 contract.
“That’s * ail I want, a chance to earn back the money they cut me,” the slugging outfielder said Monday in a 1%-page handwritten statement to baseball writer Russell Schneider of the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
PLATOONED
Colavito, 33, who has been platodned with Leon. Wagner in left field this season, is.
earning a reported $55,000 as against an estimated $67,000 in 1966.
“Our hall club Sis a much better chance of {coring runs with both Wagner and myself to the line-up at the same time,” said Colavito, who is hitting .297 to 15 games, 10 of which he started. “They are making sure 1 get no chance to earn' back my cut.
“I’ve giyen this a lot of thodght. This situation hm been bugging me for quite a while, and it’s time to say
something. I, don’t think a player is worth a damn if he’s not willing to fight to play every day. I am and that’s why Fm doing IhtsT’
Colavito could ,not be reached here Monday .night for further comment. The Indians open a two-game series with the New YorY’Yankees tonight.
In his statement, Colavito said:
“General Manager Gabe Paul would love to hqye me say ‘Trade me,’ but I won’t say that because that's not
what I realty want, although I think he would like to trade me.
“But still, I fed I’d be TiefieFofFTeavmg than sifting on the bench the way I am.
I don’t know what’s going to happen next, but tids is it. I’ve' said what’s on my § mind.”
Manager Joe Adcock dud, 1 “I manage this team and 1 when I think Colavito can i help by playing, he’ll play.” i
Paul would say only: S “That’s very eloquently writ- | ten, but beyond that I’ll not I comment.”
Bruins Add Muscle in Trade
who packs
pounds on a 6-foot frame, tied for seventh among the NHL’s top scorers the past season. Die 25-year-old center scored 21 goals and had 40 assists for 61 points while playing on a line with Bobby HuQ and Chico Maki. «
Hodge, who will be 23 next month, is a husky 200-pound winger who scored 63 goals in his final year of junior hockey at St. Catherine’s, Ont. In limited action with Chicago, he had 10 goals and 25 assists last season.
Stanfield, who just turned “ spent most of the -last two a
wns with St. Louis in the Cmi-birdi ^ b ie, ^ a tral League, but is considered hU	wW,»
by Schmidt as the sleeper in the deal. He is a center and left winger.
Clemente's Spoiled by Redlegs
By the Associated Press The Pittsburgh Pirates were marking time until Roberto Clemente’s next trip to the plate.
But Cincinnati’s Tony Perez got there first, leaving Clemente with a night to remember — and an empty feeling.
Perez’ run-scoring double in the 10th inning gavestoe National League-leading Reds an 8-7 victory lover the Pirates — and nullified the biggest single-game spree of Clemente’s career.
Home Course Profitable for Stan Brion in Pro-Am
Stan Brion played Tam O’Shanter Country Club, his home course, in profitable fash-ion yesterday in the weekly Michigan pro-am event.
Brion picked nearly $300 by winning the pro-pro division with Tom Deaton with a 68, tying in the low pro division with Mike Souchak with a 71 and finishing runnerup in the pro-am division with a 66.
His amateur partner was Richard Barnett.
player in Michigan Hunter McDonald tied Brion and Barnett with a pro-am 66.
A field of 68 pros and 119 amateurs, one of the largest in the weekly event, participated at Tam, which will be the site of the USGA local qualifying next Monday.
FINISH LAST The Bruins finished last in the 1966-67 season. Chicago won the NHL championship, but was eliminated by Toronto in the Stanley Cup semifinals.
Marotte, 22, turned pro early i the 1965-66 season and was highly regarded by the Bruins. However, the club has an abundance of talented young fensemen.
★ ★ *
Martin, a slender center obtained from the Detroit Red Wings midway through the 1965-66 season, had bis best season last year, scoring 20 goals. Norris has played in the Western League the past two years.
Taking pro-am honors were Paul Shephard of Meadow-brook and Bob Riccardi his partner. Shephard, who had a 41 on Ms own ball’ on the front, picked three birdies on the backside.:
Brion’s round included five double bogey, wMleSouchak, the new Oakland Hills’ pro had two birdies in hty round.
Gene Bone, Glen Stuart and Brien Charter were all tied at 72 in the low pro division.
Souchak and the No. 1 GAM
Reverend Is 'Holy Terror'
Clarkston Appliance defeated Buckner Finance 6-1 in the Waterford Men’s Softball League jtast night. Buckner’s single run was unearned as Rev. Harold Hughes pitched a two hitter, striking out 19 Buckner batters.
Big Mtters for Clarkston were Murray Snow with a triple and a single And Rev. Hughes and Chuck Gavette who each had two hits. Clarkston’s record is now 1-3 while Buckner has a 0-3 record;
In the other game, Spencer Floor Covering whipped Waterford Merchants 193. Spencer pitcher Jim McClellan gave up three runs in the first inning but then settled down and allowed only four Mts for the en-^re game.
OUR ______i-Richard Barnett ......... 44
Mika Souchak-Hunter McDonald mm
Fox-Warren McLean ..............61
MP Stuart-Rty BMama Stan Brlon-Jarry Rogers ..
Glen Stuart-Don Battles ____
Glen Stuart-Dala Bears* ..
' ■ Jawor-Dr. R. C. Smith
Mika Souchak-Reed Halla ..............or
Paul Van Looien-Ed Lauer ..........   69
MMi Broosk-Sam Greeawalt .............69
Brian Chartar-Bruca Gilpin ...........49
LOW PRO DIVISION
Stan Brion, Tam O'Shantor .......,.,. 71
Mika Souchak, Oakland Hills ..........71
Gana Bona, Bay Pointa ..............  71
Stuart, Cascada ................71
Chartar, Ann Arbor .............71
PRO-PRO DIVISION
Stan Brlon.Tom Deaton ............... 4*
Mike Fox-SMn Gary Whltner-Di
Orion Juniors Need Contests
Lake Orion has a couple of baseball teams that are looking
Ram Checks Qualifying at Indy 500
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI)
-	Rain again hampered operations at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Monday, but not before 30 cars, including 26 not yet qualified,' made in onto the track for practice laps.
The final two days of qualifications for the Memorial Day 500-mile auto race are this Saturday and Sunday.
-	In the only serious accident of the day, Chuck Arnold of Gar-dene, Calif., suffered bruises and was “shaken up a bit” when his racer crashed into the wall on the northwest turn during practice lap.
The car owned by Richard Compton was damaged extensively when it Mt the wall twice and spun twice.
The rain washed out qualifications Sunday, after a record 25 cars made the line-up Saturday on the first day of time trials. That left eight spots open for qualifications this weekend for the 33-car field that will start thehotidayclassic.
* ' t ★
The fastest speed Monday was 162 miles per hour by A1 Unser, Albuquerque, N.M., in a car he qualified Saturday at a speed of 164.594 m.p.h. to place him on the outside of the third row.
for opponents.
Both teams are made up of -players in thg-Jii 15:16 agel So did Epstein. who thought
group. Teams desiring to sched-----------—-----------------jtt **“
ule the Orion squads may dp so by contacting Jerry Cobb at 391-
The Pittsburgh superstar drove in all of his team’s runs with three towering homers and double, moving into the league lead in both batting and ruffe, production.
BIGGEST DAY
‘This is the biggest day I ever had — in a game that we lost,” he sighed. “I’ve never hit three homers in a game before. I wish we had won it.”
Clemente, whose batting averse soared to .390 while his RBI mark jumped to 24, socked a bases-empty homer in the ninth inning that capped the personal and gave the Pirates a 7-
5 lead.
★ * " ★
But Lee May’s two-run homer pulled the Reds even in the bottom of the ninth and Perez’ fourth Mt — a booming drive to dead center field off reliever Juan Pizarro in the 10th — knocked in the winning run..
WMle Cincinnati moved three games ahead of the second-place Pirates, the Houston Astros ended a five-game tailspin by edging Los Angeles 5-3 on Bob Aspromonte’s two-run triple in the 10th inning.
It Shephera-Bob RKcOt’dl .
Balking Oriole Epstein Heads ' for PR Position
BALTIMORE (AP)-Mike Epstein, a talented baseball player with an offer to become -or a professional wrestler, heads 69! home today for a public relations job.— •
The Baltimore Orioles thought the 24-year-old slugger had almost unlimited potential in baseball.
did other clubs, who sought to swing a deal with the Orioles for the youngster who couldn’t break into the Baltimore lineup.
Brothers Hit Jackpot
Brothers Paul and Orville Sewell’ of Pontiac broke the $240 jackpot Saturday night in the Huron Bowl Moonlight Doubles with 1281 actual and 1407 total pins.
he was ready this season for the m$jor leagues and balked at being ordered back to Rochester of the International League on 24-hour recall.
Harry Dalton, the Orioles’ director of player personnel, said Monday the club expected big tilings-from Epstein in the future and would trade him this season “only if he could improve our major league club with a player of outstanding caliber.”
Captains Lose, 1-0
L’Anse Slows Kettering 9
L’Anse Creuse delayed Kettering’s bid to cHnch the Tri-County League baseball title yesterday hy handing the Captains a 1-0 setback.
It was a rare shutout for Kettering which has shown power in winning 13 of 16 games thus far this year.
In another league game scheduled for Oxford’s diamond, Romeo was awarded a 7-9 forfeit after the umpires ruled the playing conditions were too bad to begin.
Brian Lieckfelt allowed Kettering only two Mts in moving L’Anse to within (me game of the league lead with a 5-2 rec-
..VV
Die winners only had three Mts; however the big ran came in the bottom of the finM inning with Chris Gerling beating out an infield Mt. He was forced by Tun Beverlin at second. A walk followed and then Dave Farmer singled home Beverlin with the winning ran.
★ it ■ dr'' -1 Bruce Mihalek took the tew MtCTreUevbig^wryTIariceyl: the fifth ining.
With the forfeit win, Romeo now stands 3-4 in leapm and 5-5 over-all.
Ktttertof . ......MMM S 3
L'Arw Ctuum ........ MMN 1—1 t S
Harkty, MICHALEK (11 BRi Mlcullj LtockMt and Swoftor. Jj -
Gainers Top Losers
Changes Seen tyiJep^xee
Market Advances Irregularly
Technological, Social Advances Forecast
NEW YORK (APHThe stock market recovered today, staging an irregular advance. ,
Some of the more, volatile issues rose 2 points or more.
Gainers outnumbered losers by a comfortable margin.
IBM gained 2 while Control Data and Polaroid rose nearly 3.
Pfizer rebounded about 2% from a loss Monday. United Air Lines pushed ahead almost 2.
Gulf & Western Industries rose more than a point as did Ward Foods, both in active trad-
Active fractional gainers were E. G. & G., Thiokol and Pan American Sulphur.
Brokers saw die market as still going through a consolidation phase following its rise to more than 900 in the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
# f "t
Openiqg blocks included:
American Motors, up % at 11% on 35,000 shares: Westing-house Electric, off % at 53 on 34,000; RCA, up V* at 52% on 4,500; and Standard Oil (New Jersey), up % at 63% bn 4,200.
VI 			 - t						 	 		’• 			k	y	F	(1	tv	[f]	H	i	I	1	ts
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1667 ' ^ J	M	A	h	IL	13	if	L	11	1 1	PS	fen	C—9'
MARKETS
The following afe top priccs covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by toma in wholesale package lots Quotat‘->ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday.
Produce
Apples, Delicious, Red, C.A., bu ...
Apples, McIntosh, tap. ...........
Apples, McIntosh,-CjiU bu. ......
Apples, Jonathan, bu. ........... _
Apples, Jonathan, CA* bu. ........ 4.25
Apples, Northern Spy, bu......
Apples, Northern Spy, C.A., bu. . Apples, Steel* Red, bu, ..........
Beets, topped, bu. .
iGETABLES
Poultry and Eggs
■■■■I .	■ brofi-
« 3-4 lbs. witftep 11-20. DETROIT BOOS
DETROIT (AP]-Egg prices peld per dozen by first receivers (includlM US.): White Grede A I umbo 3334; extra le— 30-32; large 25-30; medium 22-24; email CHICAGO SUTTiR AND BOGS CHICAGO (API-Chicago Mercantile Exchange-butter steady; wholesale buy-*“T Aprlces^unch»ntgd 23 score A AJUi
* C 59 V*; c
unchanged; 75 per cent or bettor A whites 27; mixed 26%; medium* 22; ■ standards 25; cheeks 21%.
CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)—(USDAI—LIv* poultry: Wholesale buying prices ^unchanged; roasters 2JVi-2l; special fed white rock fryers 20-22.
Livestock
DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT <AP)—(USDA)-Cattle 2200; steers and heifers active 25 to 50 —“ higher. Full advance on choice prim* cows active fully 50 cents hi Slaughter steers High choice and, (..._ loop to 1.200 pound 24.50. Choice TOO to 1250 pound 25.50 to 26.50. Cows utility 18.50 to 19.58.	. „
Hogs 400, borrows end gilts mostly 1.25 higher. Sows .75 cents higher. U.S. 1 a*' 2 200-225 pounds barrows and gilts 23.
strong; load prime 1,313 lb slaughter steers 27.25; prime 1,200-1,400 Ibt 26.75-27.00; tour loads at '27.00; high choice and prime 1,150-1,450 lbs 26.00-26.75; choree 900-1,400 lbs 24.75-26.00; high choice
m
..J| cows 16.75-19.00; t 15.50-18.25; utility MPMRs 20.0D-23.50.
; hardly enough for market
and prime !
26.00-25.50,
American Stock Exch.*
Exchange selected noon prices:
Sales	R.
(hds.) High Lew Last Chi. AerolatG .50*	7 32% 329k 32% — to
AmPatro	.35g	6	13%	13%	13% ...
ArkLGas	1.60	9	41	40%	40% — ’
Asamera	OH	51	4%	4%	4% — 1
------ - - *1 2% 2% 2% + 1
20 2% 2% 2V4...
2	33%	33%	33% + '
30	11%	11%	11% — ’
392	7%	71*75-16	+	'
33	1%	1%	1% +	1
24	10%	10%	10% + ’
Cdn Javelin Cinerama Ctrywld* Rlt Creole 2.60a , Data Cont EquityCp .169 Fargo Oils Feimont Oil Fiyflger .ion Frontier 1.41f Gen Plywood
Goldfield Gt Bet Pet Gulf Am Cp HoernerW .82 Hycon Mfg Isram Corp Kaiser Ind McCrory wt MeadJohn .48 MichSug .log Molybden Monog Ind NewPark Mn Pancoast Pat RIC Group Scurry Rain Signal OIIA 1 Sperry R wt st*m*mm»
Syntax Cp .40
CwrliJlSed by Tite Associated Preu 1967
Stocks of Local Interest
Figures after decimal points are eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD art representative intar-dealer prices of approxL mately 11 *.m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout the day. Price* do not Include retail markup, markdown "
commission.
General Motors lost ’A at 82 on 6,100 shares.
American Telephone gained % at 57% on 7,700 shares.
On Tuesday The Associated Press average of 60 stocks fell 13 to 325.5.
Prices advanced on, the American Stock Exchange. Century Geophysics advanced about 2 points. Fractional gains were scoredbymany issues including Hitco, Signal Oil "A,” Great American Industries, Magellan Petroleum, Polarad Electronics and Lerner Steves.
The New York Stock Exchange
:p .10g u 2.40b
BrlggsS 2.40* Brlst My .80a Brunmwk BucyEr 1.60a Budd Co .80
CampRL ,45a Camp Soup 1 Canteen .80 CaraPLt 1.34 Certerw ,40a Case Jl CaterTr T “
CWiens Utilities Cla» A ......26J	U0
Detrex. Chemical .............28,4	*Mi	Cudahy Co
Diamond Crystal ..............'8.2	184	*•>■»«■ Put,
Prank's Nursery ................TM	14.2
Kelly Services ...;.......... 26-0	f'.O
Mohawk Rubber Co. .............24J	24.7
Monro* Auto Equipment ........22.6	2L2
North Central Airlines.........—
Safran Printing ......
Script* ...............
Wyandotte Chemical ...........33.4
MUTUAL funds
Bid At
Affiliated Fund :...........8.98 ■
Chemical Fund _____________ • .MSI
Commonwealth Stock ......  .11.28	1241
Dreyfus ............. ‘'—
Keystone Income K-l ....... .. .
Keystone GftkMti K-2 ,.......7.16	.782
Mass. Investors Growth ......12.78
Mess. Investors Trust .......17.04
Putnam Grew#! ................IMF	-j-.
Television Electronics ......1048	1145
Wellington Fund .............13.97	‘
Windier Fund ................1944
10 Higher grade fails . 10 Second grade rails .
10 Public uBIRtoe.......
10 Industrials ,........
■—D—
Dist Lag
—E—

FordMot 2,40 Fore Dalr 48 FreepSul 1.25 FruehCp 1.78
Gam Sko 140 G Accept 140 GenAnflF 40 GenDynam l Gen Elec 2.60
O PubUt GTel El 148 Gen Tire .80 Ga Pacific lb Gerber Pd 1 Getty Oil .tod Gillette 140 Glen Aid .70 Goodrich 2.40 Goodyr 145 Grace Co 1.40 GranltCS 140 GrantWT 1.10 GtAliP 140*
* Nor Ry l West Flnl fSug 1.60a snGnt .80
Polerow .40 ProetorO 2.20 ^imbwCol .90 Publklnd .341
STS
HewPeck^S Holld Inn 40 HoMymo 1.20 ttomeetf .Mb Honeywl 1.10 Hook Ch 140 Howe Fin 1 Houst LP 1 HowmetCp 1
29 48% ‘ 17 50% 1 X23 47 i 6 71% 1 13 66% 4
int Nick 2.M Inti Packers Int Pep 145 Int TAT 1.50 ITE Ckf lb
nerCe 2.20 KIM 61 ■MpC 1.80a SoPRSug ,52a SouCalE 1.25
South Co 1.02 SouNGtS 1.30 SouthPsc 1.50 South Ry 240 Spartan ind Sperry Rand Square D .70
SlOIICal 24 SMDIlInd 1. StONJ 1.60a
SfdOllOh 240 Xt3 66% 65% 66% .. "	•—	14% 14% 14% ,.
LlbbMcN ,23f L IggefNUUl Uftonln 144t LivIngsM Oil n LockhdA 240	X33
mglsLt 1 wlllard 2
114	113% 114	+ s
67%	65%	67%	+ 1
37	MM	36%	...
61%	4i%	m	+i
23% 23% 23% ... —If—
24	28%	28%,	28%	-f i
11	13	12%	13	...
38 7%	7%	7% + ’
23	33%	33%	33%	...
37	51%	50%	51	+	'
19	12%	12%	12%	+ ’
10	71%	71	71 152
51 105% 104% 105% ft] l4 1% m + L
10% 59% 60	+ %
..	J6%	54%	56%	+1%
78	17%	17%	17%	+ %
11	20%	20%	20%	....
6	29%	29%	29%	....
33	56%	56	56%	+ L
30	23%	21%	23%	4-1%
13	39%	39	39%	+ %
-M-
102 59 1. 531/4 1
___InMar 1
MayDStr 1.60
USSSb'Z
McKess 140 Moatfte 1.90 Melv Sh 140
41 73% 72
23 30	29%__________
12 13% 13% 13% + % SI 21% 21% 31% + % 86 35% 35% 35% — % 5 35	34% 34% ...„
40b 151 41% 40% 41% -flM
....Can 49b
NatCash 1.20 ■;D*try 140
....Fuel 140 Nat Genl 40 Nat Gyps 21 NatLead .750 Nat Steel LSD ’ Net TOO .80 Nevada P .91 Nawbrry .15a NEngEt 146 HYCent 3.12a Nlan-MP 1.10 MerfRcWst 6* NA Avto 240 NerNGet 240 Nor Pec 240 NStePw 1.52
OhioEdls 1.: OlInMath 14 Otis Elev 1
<1 2614 10 23%
PanhEP 1.60 IpEMWiti Pea CoeI 1
SsXt’fs
P* RR 1.40* Penranii ijo PepsiCo 140
30	02%	M	42%	+
2	11%	11%	11%	+
no 205% 210% 215% +5 28 87% 87 tnk + % 8 23% 23	23	+ %
*	8	7%	7% — %
6	36%	36%	36%	— %
xl6	52%	51%	52%	-taA
. ---Bn—
187	53%	52%	53%	+
7	30V4	30	30%	+
/32	37%	37%	37%	..
*70	71%	89%	71%	-H
3	14%	14%	14%	..
30	16%	16%	16%	4
X33	L
120	50%	50%	50%
17	43%	4	43%	f
31	39%	39	39	-
58	30%	30%	30%	-I-	I
17	36%	36	36%	4-	%
20	32%	32	32%	4-	%
i	49%,	49%	49%	+
59	1910	19	19	—
304	33%	32%	33%	+__
10	27	?•%	27	—	%
13	37%	V	37%	—	%
ITS	26 ,	25%	25%	+	%
111	61%	60% o61% + %
91 57% 56% 57% + % MOMBjHgM 63% + “
$1 Packaging Stan warn 1
StluffCh 1.80	14 41. 47% 48%
SterlDrug .90	34	45%	45	45<A
StevenJP 2.25	20	40%	48%	48%
Studabak .250	270	64	41%	63%
“s •*-	10	63%.	63	63
55	32%	31%	32%
12 51% 51	51%
,9 25% 25% 25%
—T—	1
10	32	32	32
72 102% 179% 112% x53 23% 23% 23% Texaco z.6qa	67	77%	76%	76%
TexETrn 1.85	16	19%	19%	19
Tex G Sul .40 152 116 113 JI15% Texeslnst .80	26 1 39% 137% 139%
Textron 1.30	II	67%	47%	67%
Thiokol .40	482	27	26%	27
Tide Oil 1.10g	6	78%	77%	77%
TlmRB 1.80a	x6	42>A	42	42V,
TransWAIr 1	06	87%	77%	78%
Tranwmer 1	151	40%	39%	40	.	.
Trinitron	42	14%	13%	14%	+ %
TH Cont ,21g	00	25%	25	25	—
——Km- 60% 60	68% +
■X—Y—Z—
Xerox Corp 1	76 380% 297 299% +1%
YnglGht 1.80	45 32% 31% 31% T
Solos figures are unofficial.
Unless otherwise noted, rates of dtvL ends In dho foregoing table are' annual Isbursements based on the last quarterly r semi-annual declaration. Special or xtr* dividends or peymants not doslg-
StoLhlg toeK5tos.ere l-WtW#d *
a-Also extra or - extras, b—A....__. stock drvidond. c—LIqu Mating ‘	paid In 1062
paid
1% iMMli
____ring 1987, eStl-
_____	on tx-dlvloond or 1—
distribution date, g—Declared or paid for thli yoer. h-Doclared or peU of...
split up. k-boctorod
_ —MB ___________ an accumulettva issuo
with dlvWMids In arrears, n—New laeu*. p—Paid fhto year, dividend omlttecL tie. torrid or no action taken at last dividend mwiing. r—Declared or paid In 19M plus stock dlvldknd. t-Paid In stock during 1966, estlmetod cash value on ex-dlvktond r ex-dlstrfbetton z—Sales to full. ■ dd-Called. x-Ex dividend. v-Ex divl-end and saw to full, x-dla—Ex dutrlbu-.Jon. xr—Ex rights, xw—Without warrants. ww-WHh warrants. wd- When ***-' ributed. wi—when Issued, nd—Next eilvefv.
NEW YORK (AP) - Three board chairmen of top businesses pictured American corpora-‘ ay at the threshhold of far-reaching technological and social change.
They said technology shrinking—the—businessmans world. The expansion needed for global operations highlights a corporation’s stockholder relations, they said.
-pd*"- ★ ....
Their speeches were prepared for a Lincoln Center symposium, kicking off a two-day 175th anniversary celebration of the New York Stock Exchange, r ★ ★ *
Joseph C. Wilson, Xerox Corp. chairman, told the symposium, “We must conclude that this is almost dertainly the last century” in which men will live in societies ranging from the primitive to the complex industrial. COMMON CULTURE “For increasing population, worldwide communications, the extraordinary increase in available—industrial—energy	and
the logic of economics will force the development of a culture substantially held in common by all men,” he said.
★ ★ *
He said the successful future technological corporation will have a global rather than national orientation and “will consciously try to combine the foree of technology with the force of humanism.”
★ ★ ★
Birny Mason Jr., Union bar-hide Corp. chairmen, said global business faces a host of problems involving nationalism, balance of payments, and political instability in the nation where the corporation is operating.
But the global corporation, he said, spreads political risks “over enough countries so , that tiie degree of over-all hazard ‘ minimized. And all growth involves risk. ,
‘We think the kind of rides involved In expanding our busi-abroad are clearly justified by the opportunities we see there.”
News in Brief
Mom’s Rummage Thursday, to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin -r-AdV.
The theft of rowboajt, valued at $100, from a canal off Otter Lake was re-ported to Waterford Township police yesterday by Samuel Edwards of 426 Beverly Island.
John Gillespie, of 96 Coleman, Waterford Township, reported to township police yesterday the Jarceny of a camera and a projector, total value of $189, from his car parked at Pontiac Mall.
Duane Gardner, 25, of 471 See-ondtoldPontiacpoliceyester-day a color television set was stolen from his home by a burglar who pried open his front door.
State Capitol Happenings
NEW MEMBER — -Four Pontiac area youths, took part in a ceremony in Washington, DJlv making Dr. William Haddon Jr., director of National Traffic Safety Agency, an honorary Michigan safety patrol captain. Awarding the' plaque in recognition of Had-don’s contribution to traffic safety are (from
left) Tommy Johnson, &lk Braneh, of Bethune School, and Steven Campbell, 230 W. Walton, of Wever School, both of Pontiac; George Reichert, 5040 N. Rochester, Baldwin School; and Kenneth Proctor, 4465 Kempf, Waterford Township, McVittie School.	—
In an Inflated Market
Fake	Art:Big Business
By JOHN GUNNIFF AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK - With so many industrialists collecting art for the sake of business as well as art, it is understandable that swindlers move in. art is a able business.
Even those dustrialists who are ackinrw-ledged ties on the tieties of art, CUNNIFF and who collect for love rather than money, are considered quite vulnerable.
The most recent alleged swindle involves paintings purchased by Algur H. Meadows of Dallas, Tex., a highly successful oilman, who some New York dealers claim was swindled: out of hundreds of thousands of dollars.
There is an enormous demand today for such as Miros, Derains, Chagalls, Modiglianis, Picassos. So great is the demand, in fact, that it far exceeds ,the supply. And so the stagie is set.
Clever swindlers might com-
mission a fake, obtaih elaborate pedigrees, show the fake in re-spetcable places, and then put it on the market as the real thing. Desire overcomes discretion and the fake is purchased.
The painting then might adorn the reception hall of a corporation, or more often will hang in spurious splendor in the industrialist’s home, to be admired by his insurance agent and perhaps only a few friends, hang lecause the art market is inflated with willing cash buyers. Within the past year a small Renoir, 15 -by 18 inches, sold for $290,000 in Paris.
In New York, Parke-Bernet auction galleries reported in the last complete season it obtained its greatest gross sales in the 29 years pf its existence, some $23,-519,367. A Cezanne was sold for $800,000.
Christiejs, a London auctioneer, boasted recently of its, success in obtaining important pictures from Americans, some of them industrialists, for sale in London. The reason, is said, was higher prices than in New York.
Auto Picture Brightens
DETROIT Wi — There was general belief in the auto industry today that the rockiest part of its 1967 sales road had
THE HOUSE Sent to the governor: x—Given Immediate effect X-HB2122, Kehres. Add tees tor iuctlces I to* peace.
X-HB2160 Suskl. Give servlcem* --tough free hunting licenses.,
K-HB2164. Callahan.' Give PUbllc —pgVvers1.
%nl*s with n
^regulatory
r Issuance of minor w
HB2800, Edwards. Give state Insurance
llchlgan firms doing -mall business In late.
HB2485, Powell. Permit hem* rule Ties to govern outdoor advertising. HB3991. T. J. Anderson. Amend stale Hazardous Subftancas Labeling Act to conform to federal ttandarda.
HB2445, Great. Make an otherwise-qualified termer policeman eligible to apply tor license as private detective.
HB2888y Sharpe. Forbid protonrior or ‘Is low partner to represent any party In Ivorc* case In hit county's circuit court. HB2706, Kehres. Rsqulr* license to. carry or transport, as well as purchase.
Defeated:
HB2869, Baker. Forbid manufacturtr*. arahouseman and wholesalers to soli ■or or win* at retell (nonce given to iconsIder vote).
HB2291, Sharp*. Cut highway weight lx tor pickup trucks bo 4,ooo and 4.500 Minds,
HB237, Rah Its. Provide penally at up to 81,0()0 ond on* year tor steeling trade secrets (notice given t» reconsider veto).
Strong early May sales reports from virtually every segment of toe auto market were reflected in production quotas set in most auto factories.
The preliminary report for last week showed auto output in U.S. plants reached nearly 175,600 units, the best showing of calendar 1907. The old 1907 mark wag get in the week of April 17-22 when 172,-996 cars were built.
‘ Another strong production week appeared-on tap this time around with American Motors adding a second shift today to
Business Notes
| Ford Motor Co. announced reticently that its generitrauditor’s office has been expanded aiul Richard Cook has been appointed general auditor.
Cook of 3766 Q u a r t io' n,. Bloom f i e 1 d Township, was COOK formerly domestic profit analysis manager on the finance staff.
DETROIT (AP) - Donald F. Kigar resigned today as president of Detroit Edison Co., effective July 1.
Chairman of the Board-, Walker L. Cisler, said Kigar, yrho been president since 1964, decided to take early retirement for personal reasons.
Board members elected Ed-win O. George to succeed Kigar. He is executive vice president for marketing.
Howard ft. Stevenson, vice president for sales, will succeed George.
'It also reflects the way the art market booms even when money is tight,” said John Richardson, U.S. representative. ‘There is every indication prices will go stilf higher. The moral is that art is often a safer investment than the stock market.”
And obviously, as seen, it can be as poor an investment as watered stock. Nevertheless, the accumulation of art, fake or real, continues with the same enthusiasm with which a businessman builds an industrial empire. There are compensations.
A major compensation is the opportunity to donate a painting to a museum, thus obtaining a big tax deduction and all the honor that is usually given to a philanthropist,
TAX DEDUCTIONS Through inflation, a painting that cost $200,000 might very well be valued at $300,000 when donated. This amount is deductible on taxes. And seldom, almost never, does the Internal Revenue Service find toe donop has lowered the value. .r Not all these paintings are intended as fakes by toe artist.' Some painters closely copy a major artist’s Style; a clever change of the signature thei identifies the close copy as that of the major artist.
* * *
Middle-income persons sometimes are deceived by the tag “attributed to” or “in the manner of.” In this instance the seller might try, to absolve himself of guilt. He has, however, implanted toe probability and tins buyer succumbs.
So troublesome is the busine& of fakes and so skillful its prac-tioners that legislation seems imminent. Bills already have been filed.
_________________ EFFECT OF FAKES
One thing is certain: for-- William W. Belknap, then geries tend to destroy the very United States secretary of war, market they take advantage of. was impeached in 1876 fpr ac- Since fakery frightens purchas-cepting bribes. Belknap resigned ers, even legitimate art suf-and the charge-was dropped. Ifers.
bring its output of its lowest American line to 2,400 a week, compared With 1,200 built last week.
While increasing output of its American line, AMC made some cuts in its production rate for its other lines so toe 1,200 added Americans was not all plus, insofar as AMC production was concerned.
Successhjhln^sthg
By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “About a year ago, I bought Cerro Corp. and since that time the stock has gone down in price. Earnings last year were $7.10 a share and 1 believe they will be much better in 1907. Why should such « high-earning stock sell at 37 when many stocks earning far less sell at twice the price? I thought profits were the name of toe game.” W.C. A) They mo$t certainly are, but it would be more accurate to say that it is toe market’s appraisal of future profits that is the name of the game. When investors like la stock and visualize strong growth, they will pay a premium based on their estimate of future results, sometimes for yearn ahead. This premium — or lack of It — Is measured by the price-to-earn-ings ratio, or multiple, which is toe major determinant on stock’s level.r
Cerro’s mining operations are in Peru, a country where political risk exists in some people’s opinion. Among other, activities, the company produces lead and
zinc. In each of these areas price weakness seems to be developing. The stock’s multiple been generally moving-downward since i960. It currently indicates the market’s lack of confidence that recent high earning , levels will he maintained.
Q) “I bought Series E savings bonds from 1948 to 1957. Never needing toe cash,
I left them alone. Recently, I was told that the bonds no longer earn anything after they have retailed maturity. This seems wrong to me. Should I cash these bonds and buy new ones?” T.G.
A) You have been badly misinformed about Series E matured bonds. Your holdings, were automatically extended at maturity and bonds Issued prior to June 1, 1949 havg had two ten-year extensions. Your bonds are now accruing interest at the rate of 4.15 per cent, compounded semi-annually, end I advise you to hold them. (Copyright, J967>
THjE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MATl^ lfler
Death Notices
iummunpt Mtgmw. y.»,
^	lwp»
Mi Mind $on of o$c»r f.
Ellen M. Femsamer; tel grind ton of Mr*. kethartn* chaud and Mr. and Mr*. Harold McVeigh; dear brother of Fred-; trick. Janice, Larry, Brian. Janet, Pauline, and wvdrto Pemeemer. Funeral sarvle# will to teM —'—May IT at 1 pjft. at
■ FISHER, PEMf¥.;.f,l May UTW; 13*0 Rolendaie,- tea *4; dear fate ar ot AM** Marta L. and Ml** Barbara J. Ftater, Harold t„ George E„ and Paul I. Fisher; dear brother of Howard F, Fisher; alto survived by.two orwidehlMren and nine greahgrandchlldren. Recitation at me Ro*ary win ba at 7:30 p.m. at tte Elton nmiaat pit, tw.untan.
Road, Union Lake. Funeral . let will to told Thursday, May II at » a.m. at St. Patrick's Catholic,
unuren, union uti...inter m
Holy Sepulchre Cemetery........
Fisher wilt lie in state at the fu* nerel home.
HARPER. DONNA
beloved daughter of Cfaud Sally Mae Harper; dear

Ing. Donna will lie In
................... . m ut
beloved husband of Pamela S. Me-Auley; beloved son of Mr. end Mr*, C. A. Sprouse; beloved grandson of Mrs, Gladys #,Blrd; dear brother ot Mrs. K. E. Abbott and Gary McAulay. Funeral service will be held Wednesday. May 17 at t p.m. af tte Ball'Chapal Fu-Perry . Me-
* funeral home.
dear mother of Miss Helen Pope. Funeral service will be held Ba— day, May II at 2:30 p.m. .. — Elton alack Funeral Home, 1213
Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Pros# Want Acts
f Oft fast ACTION NOTICf TO ADvnTtsns ADS eiCiivto SY 5 P.M.
... it PUStlSHID THI"
klOWING DAY.
2 MEN EVENINGS, PART . married, over 21, call 33 • 30-7:30.
tt< FREE FOR WATCHING A FIL. Queen home demonstration. obligation — 334-4957.
WIG PARTY tl PONT TO PLAN your party call Ann Orlnnon at "House of Wigs". FE 3-3702. FE
FOUND: OLD CHIHUAHUA,. IDEM-
l6sT: *la£kaWB
.j^hshund, Sunday, vlcta"" 3 Joslyn and Brawn Rds. At
4 WELL DRESSED MEN TO 0 liver advertising malarial $15 p evening. Car necessary. 42S.2848.
10 BOYS
WE NEED 10 ROYS TO WORK IN OUR MAILING ROOM TUBS-DAY, 7WAT » AND “WEDNES; DAY, May 17, FROM 12:15 Tp 4:15 P.A£ MUST BE 1» YEARS OF AGE. APPLY IN PERSON MONDAY OR TUESDAY TO:
BERT FALKNER_j
Mailing Room THE PONTIAC PRESS
EXPERIENCED CRANE OP-eretor. 315-014!.	„
EXPERIENCED ' FURNITURE Rif.
FOR STOCKWORK AND DEUV-
GAS STATION — EXPERIENCED tune-up, drlvewey end wrecker men. S2.00 to $2.50 Rer hour. Time end a half over 44 hrs. Service — Maple and Lahscr
GRILL MAN
Night shift, good wages, paid hour, meals, hospitalization mR other tenants. Apply Big Bey Rat-tauront Telegreph-Huron.
GUARDS
Pull and part-time. Immediate City and Suburban fob openings. ML Clemens, Utica .and BlrmJngha-IneWdad, Bonded Guard Service 441 E. Grend Blvd., Detroit — l
8]Hb»	fmmle
'PORTER
PART-TIME
manent poeltton, esterlehce n
afternoon to evening shift, age 23 to 40, refertncea required. Apply Pontlec Melt, 3S7 N. TategrephT
ROSE JEWELRY CO.
ship. Many fringe lent opportunity ft Sen. Aik. ter Air, L.
SUBURBAN OLDS -
i. Many fringe benefits. Exeel-
— —r.	it*
PORTER
Needed at once for our new-car dept. General porter work. Ask for Howard Lewie, Service Manner tor Tom Rademacher Chevy-Olds, Inc. Clarkaton, Apply In person
A TELEPHONE GIRL
JO to 1333 par hour,, 4 to water morning. Call Barb, 43 10, 2 p.m.-S p.m. tonight.
AAA-1 CORPORATION
JMr'aSST Pontiac office, i Must to IS-26, single end high chool graduate. Salary ot SI50 per vk. Call Mr. Williams, 338-0359
Qualify control technician
Air intelligent, healthy, ambltloi high echpol graduate, IS and oval can qualify for^ this position. E).
Ce wiping *to "wwrta^SteTs not^a glamorous position, but It,Is steady, sscur#- work^wlfh a gate leading Into supervision. We ufacture concrete pipe. A complete package of fringe benefits included. Apply M Lolland Coleg rove
land Hills Memorial ^RHMNW ....a Pope will lie In state at tte funeral home.
SANTAVICCA, GINA MARIE; May 14, tf47; 2451 WMtoMad, Ar* bor, to loved Infant daughu. .. Ronald E. and Judith A. Santa-Vlcca; beloved Infant granddaugh, tar oI Mr. end Mrs. Lee B. Oevll end Mr. and Mrs. Emedlo Santa-Vlcce; beloved Intent great-grand-
the
.... Lewis E. Wlnt Funeral it, Clarkaton, with Rev. F. J. may officiating. Interment In Babyland Section In tlw Cath-sectlon of Lakevlew Cemetery.
•ANNOUNCING ANOTHER, r AID INC. office, 711 R Ing, branch of Detroit's -»-v’ Debt Aid, Inc. to serve Pontiac Community.
GET OUT OF DEBT - AVOID GARNISHMENTS, BANKRUPTCY, REPOSSESSIONS,. BAD C R E D I AND HARASSMENT.
‘	- helped and saved thoi
wop la with credit prat ;s consolidate your debt Mr payment you can a mlt as to amount owe
R I ...._„r .of creditors. Far thou
that rone "YOU CAN'T borrow YOURSELF OUT OP DEBT."
WEIR, DANIEL THOMAS; May 15. 1fS7< *05 Scott, Lake Reed, Waterford Township; age 14; beloved •on of- Helen Weir; deer brother of Judy, Jentao, Raymond, David end Richard Weir end Mrs. Diane LaF - hear. Funeral service will be held WSdneeday, May 17 at 2 p.m. at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home wltn Rev. Bernard Wright —cMMnB^HMHMrfteOAEa
Center Cemetery. Dental will lie in stele at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours t:30 a.m. to
HOLD
IT!
OTHER FOLKS DO.. r
Other folks make money from Pontiac Press WANT ADS If you haven't . . one, Hundreds of others do . . . daily!
AT NO CHARGE.
sr
BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the following boxes:
3, 4, 6, IS, 20, 28, 31, | 32, 40, 41, 45, 51, 53, 55, ! 66, 07, 96, 105	I
Funeral Directors COATS
FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS	47441441
J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME Kaago Harbor, Ph. 412-0200.
" DONkLSOhwbiWw Funorai Homa "Daalgnad tor Funeral*"
SPARKS-GRIFFIN^—
, FUNERAL HOME ’Thoughful Sarvlct" FE HI
try
It pays..
It's quick, simple and productive. Just look around your /home, garage and boiemenrand list thr many items that you no longer use. Hundreds of readers are searching The Press's classified columns doily for just such articles. Perhaps the piggy bank itself would bring more than the change that it holds! Try it!
VOUtl BE_
GLAD YOU DID!
JUST CALL
332-8181
An Experienced Ad-Visor Will Gladly Help You Word Your Want Ad
Huntoon
FUNERAL HOME Jarvlng Pontiac tor SO ytai 79 Oakland Avt.	FE 2-010$
Voorhees-Siple
JLOTStN WHITE CHAPEt-CEME-
tary.-blocklNQ. H-l. 8*7-45*6._
CHOICft LOTSINOAKLAND HILLS Memorial Gardens. Last th price. Flaldbrook 9-2785.
her ou( to dinner, modern dining room . Chief. Telegraph Road n
ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING
CONNIE ASSELIN MAY SPECIAL
^^UltorMtylad S4.»5. ----
! S-42U
$550 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEE
INTERNATIONAL P
$600 MONTHLY SALARY
international corporation will ti 6. men, ages 13-26, to comp our office staff. Must ba N school graduate and available for Immediate employment. Opportunity for advancement to '*1000 per mo. bracket within 20 days. Phone Mr. Carlson, 338-0399 9 a.r “
$5100 UP-NO FEE FINANCE TRAINEE
21-31, no experience required. J
$7,200 FEE PAID College Grads-Engiheers
INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL'
ACCOUNTANT general office
AGGRESSIVE SALESMEN WANT-ed. 2 new projects plus 3 relief-custom builders have made It r essary ^for ^uj ~to ^Incrassa j
to mate a minimum of 11. -a month. Call TED MCCULLOUGH SR.. 682-1820. ARRO REALTY.
This Is the great new name hospital, surgical and medical . surance. since American Republic Insurance Co. ha* baan using this new designation tor Jts policies Its services, new business has creased over 25 per cent.
WE CAN OFFER a professional salesman, licensed for Insurance excellent prospects e*ch week PLUS A GUARANTEE
fe wIIlKimlsb quality leads v
'OU'MAY HAVE EVERYTHING TO GAIN BY TALKING IT OVER. oFr personal interview see BUFORD JOLLY at Holiday Inn, 1801 S. Telegraph, wad. May 17, 10 a.m.-l p.m. and I p.m.-r - ■
AUTO
MECHANIC
New car dealership need mechanics. Good working con-d 11 i o n s, many company benefits. 'Apply to Service 01DSM0BILE, 550 Oakland Ave., 332--r 8101-
I WANT A PARTICULAR TYPE 1 OF MAN
ms MONTHLY guaranteed TO START
IF YOU MEET OUR , ----REQUIREMENTS------
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
673-9674
rte-taac-i
The Rulumla Country Inn. 3234 Pina Lake Rd. Orchard 1	-
IER, MARRIED
MACHINIST TRAINEES
Precision parts manufacturer _
ad In Walled Late has Immadlata openings for young people with mechanical aUllflat. Willing ‘
Refrigeration
Engineer
Duties Incjud* th* rape!/ ar maintenance of refrigeration ar alf conditioning eaylpmant. “ ■
rates. Call J67-S3
,s License. Hours i., Monday through ur Manufacturing i Rochester, Mich. — heneflts^yood
Mr. W. J. Bala Parke, Davis, & Company Box 118, G.P.0, Detroit, Michigan — 48232
. This
d fully pi

VALCOMATIC PRODUCTS
2730 w. Maple Rd.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
WATCHMAN JOB WEEK-lust be deputized and
_	at * P-m.
MAN WITHSOME ELECTRICAL
FOR AIR CONDITIONING,
MAN WITH MECHANICAL AeiLltV to deliver and Install enars and appliances, own hand tools and : ence. Call FE 4-3573.
MARRIED MAN ON DAIRY FARM, milking experience necessary. Nice horn*, good wages, 3985 N. Roches-
MATURE 8 full tint* 473-1179.
AAATURE YOUNG MAN
full tlrte work In leading _____
town retail store. Must have some experience In sales. Opportunity for advancement. Send qualifications to Pontiac Press
MECHANIC AND ATTENDANTS. Light experience. Top wages, ifcn8®	ApP,y af E,on
Shed, 14 Mile Rd„ Birmingham.
AIR
%
AUTO SALESMAN Chevrolet - Oldsmoblla, new
used, sail In a rapidly expi_______
area, axe. opportunity, 5-figure Income, no experlenc* necessary. Contact Jim Taylor
Walled L
5, 624-4501
APPLICATION NOW BEING TAKEN |H ushers, concession and part-i day halp is or over. Apply
DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES 2028 E. Hammond FE S-780S bG YOU HAVE
A DEBT PROBLEM?
. OP PONTIAC, INC.
$14 Pontiac State Bank Bldg.
PE 34333
STATE LICENSED-BONDED Open Saturday 9-12 a.m.
ikcifiw S> ft I h a PUN For Steut group*, through flalqa,
-----ronowaa oy
R dinner I*.
caivesl chicks. For' rtsirvsfions! 482-1611.
UPLAND HILLS FARM EXPECTANT MOTHER OR
who wants tote* msmter of the family and deslrts a good .home, small salary plus many fringes. Call Mr. Gravas, 334-4666.
GET OUT OP DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM VQU.CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME
PE 44436__________
ON AND APTEft THIS DATE, M 16, 1947, I will not b* rtsponti tor any debts contracted by i other than myself. Jim A. Jen BitorfiteCtamana, Pontiac, Hi
n myself. B1 at, Pontiac,
SS
■contracted by any
WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY _. Professional Color. Pro* brochure available. 334.9079 anytime.
•v THE 1944 CIVIL RIGHTS v! A LAW PROHIBITS, WITH A. >: CERTAIN EXCEPTIONS, X;
DISCRIMINATION BE- X-^ CAUSE OP SEX. SINCE v! 'X SOME OCCUPATIONS ARB ::: CONSIDERED «40p AT- % Ift TRACTIVE TO PERSONS » J OP ONE BIX THAN THE $ ft:OTHER, AOVERTISE-ft: ft MB NTS ARB PLACED ft UNDER THE MALE OR ’ft
iamars'.isu
___■ PERSONS OPv:
EITHER BEX.
ARE YOU LOOKING FOR STEADY employment and a lob with a future? General Telephone Co. ha* openings now for lineman i ' '
encs, high school education equivalent necessary. Apply General Telephone Co., 317 Union St., Milford. An equal employment portunity employer.
ATTENTION	v
$50 Weekly—Port-Time ^:
Four evenings, 4-10 UL BRdR
men, ag* 21-35, to m_BRMPVIL.
Install electrical appliances. Call 6744520, 4 p.m.- — 4 -
BRICK LAYERS POI Flint, Bay City, slaau pay OR 30462 attar 4 U4 ftOY, 8 A.M. TO S P.M. GOOD wages and all benefits, apply at Big Boy Restaurant Telegraph and
CARPENTERS
Good reughtar*. Union. After 4 p.m
COLLEGE STUDENTS
Prepare tor your summer employment NOW. International corpora-lion tell train A young1 man for brand Identification positions. Salary of $150 weekly. Must bo noat appearing and abl* to converse Intelligently Phone Mr, Adams, 338-
DRIVERSTOCK-BOY—FULL-TIME
work, ,350 par wk., apply r-
Burtons. 75 N. Saginaw,
Evenings, Part Time
3 man needtd Immediately for part-tlm* evening work. Must b* neat, mature, married and hav* a good work racord. Ca.'l Mr. Millar, from « p.m. to 7 p.m, FE 44S87.
lure, married and hav* k racord. Can <744520, 4 >.m. tonight.
BXPBRltNCib MILLING N china opofdtor, day shift, ov tlms, full paid Blue Cross • fringes, Brlney Manufacturing C
nof sete ""
EXPE :jced NEW AND USED CAR SALESMEN
Good poy Plan, (ring* be \ now car dealtrshlp am. . 1 cl lit la*. Ask tor Tommy Thomp-
ton *p<5ntIaoWjicK
ftadiaatte, —2‘-
MEDICAL > TECHNOLOGIST
*0500.874(10
Position Immtd lately available. Minimum . toqulramant— i—j -lion from (1) a Cradl or Unlvartlly, with a-.
In Bacteriology, Chemistry otagy. Experience preferred. edge of La,, mathods and technique, Serology, and Organic Chemistry helpful. Excellent gov-ernmental fringe benefits to tion to salary.
Apply now to:
The Personhal Olv.
1200 N. Telegraph	Pontiac
Oakland County Court House MEN INTERESTED IN LEARNING heating and, air conditioning, parlance preferred but not n sary. vary good opportunity tor **» right man. asGiio.
AN FOR GO Rochester ai
Immediately, paid vacations, paid insurance and pension plan. Jack Varmatt Roofing, FE 34115 or Mi 3-9590.
SALES POSITION OPftN WITH
ARE YOU A
Good axparlencod, typist,
sacratary 6r ctarkh W* neu______
seal of each tor temporary as-
AVON CALLING WOMEN who want to ba
spsre flm*. ?«qn*tobac£ guarantee make* Avon Cosmetics ver- —— In demand and easy to a Interview call >1 4-0439 <
PO Box 91, Orayton Plains.___
BABY SITTER, MAYBEE RD. AND
BABY S I T T E R-HOUSEKEEPER,
BABY SITTER.
ately. FE 5-3419.
BEAUTICIANS
Full and part tlm*. Take over established following. Call Jell of Birmingham 647-6546 Mr. Paul. BEA.UTtCIANS, EXCELLENT O P-, portunity. Recent graduate* preferred. Bernard Hair Stylist, r-tma fgf M[8* Bryca.
BEAUTY OPERATOR NEEDED -also shampoo girl. Albert's > Coiffures, 3901 Highland1 Rd. (MS?).
tie* tor amah company In.Ullca. Duties, wHl bit payroll. Invoices, account* payable and bookkeeping. CteTSt-afio tor aapototmenL^
DWLiWEim^yAIL JpBK
9rism.
IM> WwM Ndwfa ';	7 IdIw W>^ MsJtofBENrfB ' 8-A
WAITRESS. AFTERNOONS, APPLY jn P^sn only.. Mo phone call*. Four COman Restaurant. Comer of Walton and’ Firry.
W A t T R E S i,' PERMANENT PO-sitlon, capable of assuming responsibility, axe. pay with fringe Vigfnu/lM Piper Restaurant, 4370 Highland Rd',lWlBftS!F ^
GRILL
COOK
hospl-d sick
Excellent working hours,, i date or holiday*, day ship falizatlon. life Insurance < pay banaflti. Appjy^in para
PONTIAC MALL HOUSEKEEPER-BABY SITTER -^school children. 473-1118
HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE IN, MUST nd clean. 3339394, from 3:30ptti.
HOUSEWIVES
Earn S3 to 13 par hour In your spar* time. Pick up and deliver Puller Brush orders. For Interview phone OR 3-5876.
KELLY SERVICES
' W. SWinaw----------33348
Equal opportunity Employer
MAiD-codk, owS TRANSPORTA-....	--ftjsbto tor Sundays and
Top Wag*, Ml 44437.
BEELINE FASHIONS—NEEDS^OU FOR HOSTESS OR STYLIST-________852-4131
Ing firm, prefer man 4S or ________
with some direct sates experience, complete training program, salary plus commission. Car necessary. EM 3-415Sfor Interview.-------------
SALESMAN. TOPNOTCH NE___________
for well known company, $5,400. Call Angle Rook, 334-2471 Snalllng
A Cn.llln.	"
SALESMEN WANTED, .
H—ament for right men, call 335-tor appointment.
SERVICE StATION ATTENDANT and light mechanic work, most be over 21 and hav* local ref.
SERVICE STATION, BIRMINGHAM — auto—air—conditioning, am proofing, mechanical ability, time. FO 6-9841.
SMALL HAND SCREW MACHINE operator needed ■ In small Must be abl* to set-up ar , complete. 832-7429, Hartland.
STATE MANAGERS
Recant acquisitions, promotions and near future accelerated expansion program necessitates our nee" toa Salas Management material, portunity for several high bar men over 30, to reprwaU .... training division of the Howard W. Same* Co. Experience unnecessary In our type of . work, how-ever Intangible sales experience, ability to address groups of "m School Students, and possess lege training would be most helpful For interview write *Mr. R. C. Stroma, car* of The Pontiac Press Box 42.
50's, not working, nor having l
NIGHT BAR TENDER, WEEKEND worJcalso_avallablfi.CallJoran appointment. The Rotunda Coun-
try lnn. 6*2-0600.__________
ORDER DESK AND STEADY OF-fle* work, industrial Plant. For man over 30. Send eomp‘~'‘ m sume to Pontlec Presa Box
1 THE HANOVER INSURANCE CO, is Interviewing tor Casualty insur-ance adlustor tor Flint, Pontiac area. Previous experience deslr-
all Mr. Brock
Detroit Ml 6-2600
Own transportation. Call 3634376 after '
PARTS MEN. MECHANIC! AND mechanics' helpers needed immed. lately. Excellent working conditions with many, fringe benefits. Apply In person of by phone to Roy Pazlk, KEEGO PONTIAC SALES, Keego Harbor, Michigan. 682-7300,
>AY DAY- EVERY DAY
Factory workers, machine operators, platers, common labor, etc. Apply bet. 4 a.m.4 p.m. Employers Temporary Service 65 S. Main, Clawson -2320 Hilton, Femdai*
27320 Grand River, Redford
NO FEE - PAY DAILY
Prestige
Selling
COMPUTERS
ACCOUNTING MACHINES CASH REGISTERS
Salary and bonus paid during tensive training period. Open!
In Pontlec and Detroit. Nt «... night travel. Fringe benefits 100 per cent company paid.
1 above criteria, number of appll-ms win no selected.
L^WtS KNABEL Personnel Director
THE NATIONAL CASH REGISTER CO.
2875 W. Grand Blvd.,
Detroit, Mich.
Phone 873-5500
An Bquel Opportunity Employer
STATION ATTENDANT
Full time. Afternoon shift. Roy Bros. Standard, 4219 Walton, Dray-
ton Plains.____________
STOCk AND SALESMAN. WILLING
RRIFIC OPPORTtiNltY f5R
arpet and furniture se--------1
) train for manager. Exc. ig conditions. Salary plus fission. Call Mr. Saxton c
CLERK TO WORK I
to 6. Ag*i e. 334-6000.
20 to 45. Mirada
MOTHERS HELPER TO LlVt IN, Pgr Birmingham Arte, 4474174.
NURSES AIDES :
Att shifts. Training program on a year-round basis, good working conditions. Experienced and Inexperienced. Apply , In person, any weekday from 9:30 to 11:00 a.m. Safninql* Hills Nursing Horn*, 532 Orchard Lak* Ave., Pontiac. NUftsbRY SCHOOL KITCHEN
WAITRESSES
tent job, hourly v VPRMRL paid vacation and pltallzatlon. Apply Bto Boy Res-MP^ant - .TotaBraptoHuron, and Dfatte Hwy.-SHvaflk. Rd.
AOVAHCEMEXT TO B RANCH p—MANAGERg «ef savaral —f our sites personnel has resulted In . ——	' pnerat tales
Drimera, Pon-
W ANTED HOUSEKEEPbft.'OGOG
typing required. Writ* Box 1, Ox-ford, Michigan. ,
WANTEDt pftRT-TIMt btfiftP r Hnuaohfrtd we. mm
transporfetlon. 482-5540.
Hefr Wqjrtrt M. or f. 8 APPRAISER TRAINEE
Salary negotlonaU*. only peopl. ... teresfed In making a minimum of *10,000 yearly” need apply. Hospitalization, plus many other company bantflfS. Call Mr. Foley tor confidential Interview.
,	674-30*4. v' •
BEAUTICIANS.
I I BOOTH' RkNtftL modern ^ahop to ttie Tel-nurun area. *45 per wk. Including suppita*. 412-1513 after 4.
High School gradwte, ag* 2P’ 50 with clerical background. Good handwriting essential. 4ft hr. weak. Ubtral discount, paid Insurance And
CLERK-TYPIST-' , RECEPTIONIST
ganlzatlon, apply immediately. No
.LIBERTY LOAN CQftP.
1224 W. MAPLE ROT WALLED LAKE
coSk;
■M 34*11 of £M 3-2f49 after'Tl
COUNTER AND MARKER GIRL — ov« 2t, tuB flmo ‘	—
Dry Claanert, 719 W. Hu
Dining Room ; Waitress

dining rooms. Night shift, free Blue Crass and life insurance, — cation and paid holidays.
Wages and tips. Apply In pti
TED'S
BLOOMFIELD HILLS
DRUG CLERK, OVER IS, GOOD pay, days, rat., permanent position. Like Center1 Drug' ““ Orchard Lake, Pontlec.'
EXCLUSIVE SECRETARY NEEDED at once. Excellent benefits. $390. Calf Pam Fox. 334-2471 Snelllng * Snalllng.,
EXPECTANTMOTHER OR WOMAN wanted to look
SHORT OR'DER COOK, GOOD wages, hospitalization, paid lunch ------------------ —tf-Mfr km
EXPERIENCED WAI' _ dining room, night- shift, s p.m. 12 Rael't Drive In — Or 2-7173,
TRUCK MECHANIC
334-3512,
TURRET LATHE . SETUP '’MAN
TURRET LATHE OPERATORS-NIOHT SHIFT
Shop foreman nights. ExRerlen with turret lathes and milling < sentlal. Apply Holly Tool 3 M ■HH H| •" RoaittW, Holly, Mich,
USED CAR PORTER, WILL tRAIN, starting salary, $80 wk., Sioo wk attar 30 date.1 Standard A u 1 Sates, 1Q9 EAST Blvd. S. 338-4033.
Also young
soectlon. dan——Wf ment possibilities. Excellent pay.
WELDING SALES
Welders: Use your experience to sell the finest quality weldings, stloys, and fluxes to Industrial accounts. It was our own customers
who com# up HR Ihw ------------
"The skill Is In .... ....
1. An opportunity for extroordl-nory Inca—
3. And
___________(H6)______________
WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP eccoptlng eppllcatlons '—
location!
___in cent*
Township
M_____part Time,.......
K>od pay, apply Uptown
_____.... 45637 Van Dykt. Utica.
731,7570,	i
YOU NO'..SEMI -‘ EXPERIENCED
Htlp Woiittd FbihoIb
$240 PLUS GENERAL OFFICE
Filing, phoning, light typing INTERNATIONAL PERSONNE " ..... 334-4971
$325-$400 GENERAL OFFICE
22. — All oxpensa* paid. Sea* < Dwyar at Savoy Motel 120 fategraph-Ponttac Tuts,,, May 1
$350-$500
SECRETARIES
liooo w. Huron .
EXPERIENCED BEAUTY OPR. OR 4-1922
EXPERIENCED	T Y PI S T, Ac-
curate at figures. 3 days per week. Age not essential. No smokers. Write Pontiac Press. SI. EXPERIENCED SALESWOM-en for lewelry store, full or part time, 4 evea. FE 4-3SS7.
Full Charge BookReepbr
Extenslv* axptrltnce preferred.
— KEYPUNCHIRS
Must hav* pravlous experience.
GANTRY-SALAD LADY
Experienced. Hotel, restauran club work., Good wagol. Paid cations, sick leave, pleasant working conditions. Apply In person. Orchard Lak* Country Club, Or-
charll Lake,__________..
I*ART TIMb MAID FOR MOTEL 789 S. Woodward
PERSONALITY: AND A SMILE will win this position In this top of-
SALESGIRLS WANTED, PAST AD-yancament tor right girl, call M 5130 for appointment,___•
Apply 406 Rlker Building._________'
SECRETARY. EXCELLENT SHORT-hand and typine Skins. GoOd pay Pin opportunity for advancement.
PRESS OPERATORS, EX-
SHORT OROllllcOOK. FULL OR part time. For evening r*-— ' — Reel's Drlte-ln OR 3-7173.
SHOftT ORbER COOK. EXPERI-ancad. Apply In parson. Clark's Restaurant 1308 N, Parry.
peauty
Operators
For Our New Beauty Salon
THIS IS AN EXCELLENT
----OPPQBTltNITV _
WlfH MANY PINE BENEFITS INCLUDING 40 HOUR WEEK
PAID HOLIDAYS • VACATION PURCHASE DISCOUNT
APPLY IN PERSON:
EMPLOYMENT OFFICE. .
HUDSON'S
stu ESTATE SALES
2 full-time, ambitious salespeople needed. — must have tome..sales..experience —
Celt for Interview -Strom Realtor, MLS • OR 4
*4900
REAL ESTATE SALES
•re expanding our operations ---- are In ntof of capable and ffftomdua salesmen interested In a higher. Income In the Real Estate 'proteaslon. "!ncontlvo pay with Prct-i It Shoring." If you are presently earning over 87500 par year, and want to increase your Income, It “ pay you to Investigate this tunlty. Call Mr. a. Kampsen - J personal and confidential Interview,
SALESPEOPLE
Earn *10,000 and up par year, experienced In reel estate or we will train. Calt PE 5-9471. ask tor ,Mr, Schram or Mr. Phipps.
(nstrucfions-Schools TO
Academy, 1I0B H
Work Wanted Male
Riding ■ 3434009*
11
BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED
.. RH Positive All RH Neg. with positive factor* k- .	t
A-neg„ B-neg„ AB-neg.
O-neg. -
MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER
in Pontiac	fe 4-9947
COUPLE QN SOCIAL SECURITY who wish to make extra Income llll	“■ “"'nj,
washers wanted..
CARETAKERS, HIGH CALIBER — experienced couple desired fc' — exclusive club tn Birmingham — Living quarters and other frlnde _ beneflte, Write P.O. Box 186 -Bloomfield Hills, Mich., 48013. " rosumo work history. JANITRESS-WITH HUSBAND
Long Lake. Name, address, na. to Pontiac Press Box 4.
RESPONSIBLE COUPLE tO ASSIST on thoroughbred horse farm and general farming. Wife to clean nouse. 50 miles .from Detroit, furnished home and wages, refer-
334,2471. Snelllng 8. Snalllng,
SECURITY OFFICERS
Dearborn office needs male female security officers tor . ... tiac area. Must furnish blue police ty^te, unlfori^is^ part time work
if 278-1940, Dearborn,
SUMMER WORK BABY SITTING, light housawoerk. 626-4931.
. SHOULD YOU
ke an employment change? NOW IS THE-TIME!
Michigan Bell
1365 Cass Ave., Detroit Phoner393*2tl5-
'. SHARP FOR WALLED 'i. Will train the right gal. I Kalhy Shew. S4-2471.
WAITRESS WANTED, NO EXPERI-.necessary, paid vacation. Ap-In person. 300 Bowl, 100 s.
WANTED DANCERS, MUSICIANS, Singers, Jerry Yates. Talent Agen-cy. 148 N1 'Saginaw Sf„ Pontiac. WOftK
Sales Help, Male-Female 8>A
2 EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE
Salespeople to replace 2 wh
TX«RPE»rrSR^WO»K=»-tskR or small. FE 8-2198.
HAVE PICKUP, WILL WOftK'
Basements and garages ---
frash hauled, unwanted picked up free or *t III
articles
Odd jobs, 1
PURCHASING AGENT OR ASSOCN ated functions, 19 years diversilied purchasing, administrative and ...	■ experience. MY 3—
RESIDENTIAL DESIGN AND PLAN-
RETIREE:	GOOD ACCOUNTING
background. Payrolls etc, Auto, dealer experience. Phone 1-887-5437. SPECIALIZE IN CHIMNEYS, 82 A
Work Wanted Female 12
DAY IRONING SERVICE, REF. Wexlne McCowen, FE 4-3867 IRONING^ - WEbSTER, fcROFOOT —1. FE 5-3491. ,
HOUSEKEEPER, CHILD G
DDLEAGED. CHRISTIAN
Own transportation. 338-0746.
FURNACECLEANING
SPECIAL
>rk with9 large power vacuum ucks. Free estimates. Limited ne offer. Orv's-Furnace Cleaning rvice. Days FE 8-8542, eves. 588-
Credit Advisors
LANDSCAPING AND BLACK OIRT, laying sod grass, Contact Mr. Johnson, FE 4-7607. 1S5 Grandview.
LANDSCAPING, SHADE - shrubsr sod, seedlngr~PE—
Garden Plowing 18 B
GARDEN PLOWING AND YARD "'»"lng. Reas. OR 34203.
Ilonal opportunities! Call —Hackatt Realty tor Interview. EM
3-6703,...............-----------------
MAKE REAL MONEY
In Real Estate —Free classes starting Tuesday evening May 23, at Hackett Really 7750 Cooley Lk, Rd. Enroll by calling EM 3-6703 today. A real career is awaiting
Convalescent-Nursing
Painting t:iid Decorating 23
A-l PAINTING, REASONABLE. Free est. Experienced 338-3570. CUSTOM PAINTING, EXTERIOR end interior, 674-3975.
. A DTE S DESIRE INTERIOR painting in Waterford area. <Fre4 estimates. OR 3-8304 or OR 3-
Help Wqnted M. or F» BHelg Wanttd M. or F. 8 Kelp Wanted M. or F.“ 8
FOUNTAINEERS
Girls — married or single. Are you looking for summer work? Do you need money; for school or that extra! something for the house? If 'C8pc*^i«m| your answer to either of “	i questions is yes, then con-
sider a job ot Cunningham's.
The fountain business is brisk during the summer months and extra help is needed. You will find the job most interesting and the income derived from this work relationship, quite good. You will also have the opportunity of purchasing, at a discount, most of the items sold in our stores. This is a savings which the whole family can enjoy.
Our fountain stores in your neighborhood are now taking applications from people interested in working this summer.
Cunningham's Drug Stores In Your Neighborhood
FRONT OFFICE. GREET PEOPLE.
“rHr.r°!5inUM!-®
Ii Snelllng._
GENERAL OFFICE. PERSONALITY! —" nght typing fin this. S2S0. Kathy Shaw. 334-2471. Snalllng1
GENERAL OFFICE |
Bookkeeping, typing, tom* short-' hand. Excellent ana permanent po-
2rd#mi,ur'
OiNiftAL, BodKKBEPINp AND salat flrl tor accountant's office and gift Shop. Walled Lake area.; To do patting, tain, and general Ottice Work. Muaf be good typist. ] Trained tor bookkeeping or book-— J---y helpful. Wjlt
GIRL WAN.____________HI . ......
cleaners, will train. Apply V Point* Cleaners. I0«S W. I Lak* Rd. and Ttltgri**.
fTODSON'S
-Pontiac Mall-
IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR POSITIONS IN OUR NEW STORE
QJ A T PQ Full time (40 hours) and part time (days or evenings). OriJLiLO*' Men'$' women's, children's wear; also stationery, candy, shoes, sporting goods, and others.
CLERICAL- ^	W hours) in our new store.
FOOD SFRVTCF- Ful1 tim#'and p°rt time- Hostesses,waitresses,
, cooks, counter service, and bus boys,
MAINTENANCE-Part ,'m® av<J'*0^• f°r evenings.
STOCK-
Full time and part time available.
WRAPPING ^ time and part time Employment available.
ENJOY SUCH BENEFITS AS:
Fine Earnings — Purchase Discount Paid Holidays — Paid Training Period AND MANY OTHERS ,
APPLY IN PERSON EMPLOYMENT OFFICE1
Customers Lobby — Basement MONDAY Thru SATURDAY