The Weather r IMm f THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition Indicate Police ' Expect 'Break' in Boat Death W. Bloomfield Board Plans Crackdown on ’Floating Bar1 Lake A “break” was expected today in the case of the hit and run boating death on Cass Lake Monday night, an informed source told The Pontiac Press this afternoon. It was tin first indication that police were on the trill of . any positive information that would lead to arrests. Meanwhile, the West Bloom* field Township Board is foiaf to crack down oa what a law officer called the- “floating bar,” of Cass Lake. Last night, trustees petitioned for an emergency hearing before the State Boating Control Committee to^ftnprove conditions at the lake, where a 20-year-old Keego Harbor youth was killed Monday .night. ★ * V* • . Alan L. Akerley, 2184 Park Circle, was struck by a hit-and-run power boat while swimming in the marked-off-“safety” area at Dodge State Park No-4 shortly after 9 p.m. According to a statement given by Akerley’s companion, Sheila Brennan, to Prow, color RicMrt B. Condit, the SMT knt Mtwd the liter making Both Viet Nations May Testify UNITED NATIONS, • N.Y. participation in the debate was North Vietnamese represents- Vietnamese should be, asked too. (AP) — Diplomats predicted to- brought up by Soviet Delegate tives to take part in the debate. Morozov said the United day the U N Security Platon D. Morozov, who intro- NO OBJECTION States could .“do Without the wnniH invito" h«ih Nnrth duced a 'reSo,ution to have the Chief US- Delegate Adlai E. assistance of these flunkies,” id Jnyite noth North ana coun^i geek information from, Stevenson said the United States but he. agreed to pun back his South Viet Nam to take part in North Viet Nam relating to the had no objection to inviting resolution and krt Nielsen draw debate on North Vietnamese at- U.S. complaint and to invite North Vietnam but the South one up. tacks on American warships Stay on Alert for Red China and U.S. retaliation. \ * • t " - Council President Sivert A. Nielsen of Norway suspended debate so he could sound out delegates to the^H-nation body •' on the proposal to hear representatives of the two- Vietnamese governments. Nielsen said he believed tW couki convene the council agate tomorrow to report result*. ★ * jk If the Communist North and pro-Western South both send spokesmen, it will probably produce a heated debate on the roles the United States, North Viet Nam and Red China play la South Viet Nam's war. The debate opened yesterday at the request of the United States, which asked" for an urgent council meeting to consider “the serious situation created by deliberate attacks of the Hanoi (North Viet Nam) regime on United States naval vessels in international waters.” ★ ♦' '»• The question of Vietnamese TELLS OF ACTION- United States U.N. Ambassador Adlai Stevenson explains to the Security Council this country’s reasons for its attacks on North Viet Nam bases. The Soviet delegate stalled during his speech and labeled the U.S. action “aggressive.” * Officials Feel Peking Will Confline Itself to Propaganda Drive 'WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States pressed its military buildup in Southeast Asia today as officials watched for any due Red China might ignore President Johnson’s warning and start its . troops marching. Many officials here doubted they would. They expressed belief Peking, would, in general, confyne itself to ihounting s propaganda attack, which is already under way. MOSCOW (UPII - The Soviet Union- tonight condemned the American air strikes against North Viet Nam as “aggression” and warned toi United States not to “go too far.” The government newspaper Isvestia said the American action “threatened the widening of the conflict.” in Viet Nam. two or uree passes just outside the safety marker buoys a short time earlier. Miss Brennen, 125 Chewton, Bloomfield Township,-said the boat’s spotlight was flssbsd on bathers each time and directly on her and Alerlqy before the craft bore down on them. * * # • The conditions police have un-Covered were reported to township trustees last night by the man who has been heading the investigation, Lt. Donald Kratt, (Continued on Page 2, Col/1) General Denies U.S. tJ Were£epvayjpg Thundershowers DueToiiight/friday Scattered thundershowers are expected to amve tote tonight and Friday with temperatures a little warmer, the low 62 to 68. Tomorrow's high will climb to die mid 88s. -•1 • t /* - ★ ★ Pleasant is the outlopk for Saturday with skies clear and torn-. peranires cooler. / • ★ . * Jr /'Fifty-four was the low record* ing in-downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The mercury had soared to 82 by 2 p. m. In Today's Press GOP Barry renews unity drive - PAGE A-15. Dems . Mackie pushes FDR Jr. for VP - PAGE B-12. Satellite First state weather capsule launched — PAGE D4. Area News...........A-4 Astrology ............D-1I Bridge ...........D-U Comics ........ i.D-11 Editorials......;...A4 Food Section . B-2-B-4 Markets ....... ... D-18 Obituaries '%?:*..... .D-U Shsrt Story ......... Sports .........D4-D-7 Theaters B-12 TV-Radio Programs D-U Women’s Pages B-K-B-M WASHINGTON (UPU-Oen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, flatly denied today that US. destroyers took part in convoy duty for South Viet Nam forces in the area wMre the Red torpedo boat attacks occurred. Wheeler made the statement in pnswer to questions at a Joint session’, of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and armed services committees' which approved President Johnson’s Viet Nam resolution. ★ *f ★ He later repeated the statement to newsmen. Sea. Wayne Morse, D-Ore-gon, told the Senate yesterday But as a forerunner to attacks on the U.S. destroyers, there was a known bombardment by South Vietnamese naval vessels on “two North Vietnamese islands within three to five or six miles of the /main coast of North Viet Nmfc.” He said the “dear implication” of that incident was that the U.S. Navy stood guard, while the shelling took place. *- * * Wheeler termed that charge “absolutely false.” # FOR PREPARED Wheeler said the fleet and plane buildup )n the area was “ptirely precautionary” to be prepared for any eventuality. Morse‘ contended today “We are at war in Southeast Asia.” He told newsmen after the committees acted on the resolution that this esuntry, North Viet Nam and Communist Chins were equally responsible for the present armed, confict. “The only solution now is to take this to the conference table immediately,” he said. • * . ★ ★ v Morse indicated he also would News Rash WASHINGTON (II r Unemployment dropped Jar-tenths of 1 percentage point to July to 4J per cent, the Labor Department said today, the first /-time the Jobless rate has been below i per cent in nearly fear and a half yean. SMcUt Wr m*'. OfW •mm. .* Lines tor *1. 300 Oowt, Primrose Lanes. oppose the ddministration’s resolution later fo the Senate. House and Senate committees quickly approved the resolution and leaders scheduled it for Senate action later in the day and for house action tomorrow. There was was one vote against the resolution in a Joint meeting of the Senate Foreign Relations tad Armed Services committees and Sen. Morse cast it. In the House Foreign Affairs Committee, two Republicans reportedly voted “present,” but not one voted against. Twenty-nine members approved it. Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara and Geq. Wheeler appeared first at the Joint meeting of the Senate committees. From there they crossed the capitol to testify before the House committee. In urging the resolution, Rusk asked that Congress leave Cqtn-munist aggressors “in no doubt whatever” of the \mlty and determination of the i American people to defend Southeast Asia against Red aggression. Festive Parade to laujfch Fair Pipnacle of Efforts by County 4-H'ors The ‘ Communist Chinese charged the United States with aggression against North Viet Nam and declared “U.S. imperialism” has gone over toe brink of war. They said the “Chinese people will Absolutely not sit idly by without tending a helping hand” to prevent North Viet Nam from befog “subject to STRENGTHENING BORDER — Repeals indicate a movement of ground and air forces from Saigon northward (arrow) toward the border between South and .North Viet Nam in the wake of the American attack on Communist patrol boats. Jets Sent to l Bomber C to the other. But the FBI would neither confirm nor deny the reports. In Honolulu, Negro comedian Dick Gregory said today be had relayed to toe FBI - three weeks ago s letter which told where to find toe bodies. Arrests Are Rumored Near JACKSON, Miss. MV—Federal and state authorities intensified their investigations today into the slaying of the (hree. civil rights workers whose bodies were unearthed after an exhaustive 44-day search. Rumors that arrests were imminent were heard from one end of the state Sir Cedric Dies at 7J; Was Star of Stage, Screen NEW/YORK OR - Sir Cedric Hardvricke, the English-born ac-Gregory also said he had ghr- ^ *ho spent a lifetime on the en the FBI a tope recording stage and screen, died early to-containing names of the killers, day at the age of 71. Sources close to the FBI Mid fa am ^ dMth wgs listed today a former psychiatric pa- as emphysema, a lung ailment, tient with a penchant for Writing Hardwicke had been hospitalized letters wrote Gregory the letter, for about three weeks before his * * i * death to University Hospital at The, FBI refused to comment 4ajn, J on this or any other aspect of-, the case. But the White House reportedly hM tree told that gff.d. the three-page, typewritten let- ter—as well as tope recordings His _ Broadway appearances that Gregory said h6 received— wefeJn,8‘lc*1 *hows as “Shadow were valueless ar*d Substance”; Don-Juan in * * * Hell” with Charles Laughton, Hie three bodies wen found two days ago in an earthen wa- tershed embankment la a re- J^^J*** costf™d mote ana near Philadelphia, ft"*®*; , long-running “Majority of One, teaming him with Gertrude POSITIVE HHSNTIFICATION Berg. Andrew Goodman, 20, and Mi- \, * * .*• chad Schwerner, 24, both white His test show on Broadway New Yorkers, wen positively was test season’s “Too True to identified, the FBI-said. Be Good." * x The ptonaele of a year’s‘efforts by some 1,300.4-H’ers will be launched with a festive parade through Pontiac Monday — a prelude to the annual Oakland County 4-H Fair. w ^ ♦ w 1 Once again it’s the time of. year when hundreds of visitors will pass through the metal quonsets and barns at the 4-H fairgrounds,’ on Perry just south of Walton. The five-day event will begin 11 a.m. Tuesday, „ when , entrants la the home economics competition troop into the exhibit halls with their flowers, vegetables and other products. These, as well as exhibits including photography," rabbits and poultiy will be showcased and judged Tuesday afternoon. * * * Featured in the evening will be the f)oat contest, presentation of this year’s'4-H king, and queen and the traditional freckles contest. KING, QUEEN •Reigning over the fair this year will be Tim Phillips, IT, and Janet Lessiter, 18, fellow members and officers of the East Orion 4*H Club. Wednesday will begin, as will toe other days of the fair with a 7:20 a.m. flag-raising. 'It will close with a pie-eating contest All beef judging fill be held Wednesday, beginning at> 9 d.m. Visitors will be able to view clothing, swine and vegetable jddging as the day prog- English halter and flower identification competition are also scheduled for Wednesday. EVENING PROGRAM ' In the evening, a demonstration of tractor operation will be featured, along with beef showmanship. Thursday ‘some of the 4-H’ers staying to the recently-expanded main dormitory will finish grooming their sheep for the morning judging. Demonstrations of " western halter class and dog training skills .will highlight the day, to (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Secretary ef State Deaa Rusk termed the situation explosive In the -aftermath ef the “very successful” American air strikes against Communist North Viet Nam’s patrol boat armada. “We cannot be completely sure about what the days ahead of us may hold," Rusk said, and the administration braced for a siege of trouble in Southeast Asia. - W W Sr As a precaution, the United States rushed more planes and ships — including the giant carrier Ranger and 12 destroyers from the West Coast — toward the crisis sone. CLEAR WARNING And the President delivered a dear warning to-Red China, or any other national with a nervous trigger finger. Addressing thousands of persons gathered at toe Syracuse University campus, John-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) SAIGON, South Viet Nam (D-About 30 U.S. Air Force B57 jet bombers, capable of carrying nuclear weapons, today Joint! American , and South Vietnamese forces standing witch to meet any attack from the Communist North. it it it The fleet of high-flying, twin-engine planes sped to Saigon unhmalded while a steady shuttle of transport planes completed ovenight a buildup of troops and materiel in the area adjoining the North Vietnamese frontier. ________ But U.S. officials reported tonight there were as the jet armada moved into the country under cover of darkness. it it it They said one bomber crashed north of Saigon, and that two pilots probably were killed. Air traffic enae to a virtual kalt today. Hit general feeling fo Saigon was that, If nothing important happened fo the next 24 hours, the Gulf of Tonkin crisis probably would be past. The alert status in South Viet Nam’s capital was nowhere near what it would be if an attack were considered imminent NO ANNOUNCEMENT There was no public announcement of the arrival of toe B57s but they were seen by a correspondent on a runway apron occupied yesterday by six supersonic F1Q2 Delta Dagger fighters from Okinawa. ★ ★. * Hie Fills were said to kave landed, it Da Nang, a base on the South China Sea 288 miles northeast of Saigfen. (^entindM on Page 2, Col. l) - READY FOB FAIR —These youngsters from the Drayton Plains 4-H Chib display their special activities in anticipation of. next week’s 4-H Fair. Dtscussing their sewing project (from toft) are Diane 0k dtj and Patricia Agbrgianitis as Bfuea Montney zeros in with his camera, and Tim DttvaD and Ben Holland ‘inspect their tomato crop. Mrs. James DuvalTand B. C. Cromeenes are the club’s teader*. * M ■ Report Clue in Boat Death THK PONTIAC PHKSS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 0. director of the Oakland County sheriff's Water Safety Division. : % € , “This Cass Lake at night is juat a big-floating bar," Kratt said. “We didn't realise this situation had existed to this extent until we talked to all the residents on the lake." Alae helping to Mag die probiem late focus has been the all-night surveillance of the lake by police officers since Akerley’s death. . ‘‘We’ve seen water skiing, drinking, running wide open without lights, the.use of profanity and many other indecent acU," Kratt said. . # • a a „• Walt Bloomfield Supervisor John C. Rehard called the evidence “flabbergasting.” AfONKEY BUSINESS “There’s ill kinds of monkey business going on on that lake after dark," Rehard commented. “ThereVevtdejjsce of all-night parties, driaklsg Jousts out an the lake and ah fcfatof of acts of reckless driving and •thy things. “It’s gotten beyond the point where the number of patrolmen out there can keep it under control. It’s worsening'by the-day — or, rather, by the night," Re-hard said. a. a., a * Kratt noted that the Sheriff’s department has 37 men to patrol 600 lakes. PUBLIC ACCESS But the problem is worse at Cass Lake, be said, because “it is the only lake that has so (Continued Prom Page One) many marinas and public ac- County DemsSet Parley Sept. 12 at Waterford CAI Oakland County Democrats will bold their fan convention oh Sept. 12, the same day as their opposite numbers in the Republican party. * * * The Democratic hieeting win begin at 7 p.m. at the Community Activttiea Inc. Building in Waterford Township. Those semblad will pick 1M delegates to the Sept. 18 state convention in Lansing . Sander Levin, county Democratic chairman, said a number of party officials and candidates are expected at the sea which will be followed by a fund-raising Jamboree. • . to to At the same time county Republicans will meet in convention at Southfield High School to select delegates to the OOP State Convention Sept. 19 at Detroit’s Cpbo Hall. He Idle is patrolled eight hours a day and the department tries to keep an all-night patrol on weekoads, Kratt said. ■ * to to ' *• He estimated that 80 per cent of the home owners around the lake had been contacted since Akerley’s death — “we used over 101) men to do it.’’ PROHIBIT BOATS His suggestion is that the township prohibit' boats from carrying alcoholic Beverages. West Bloomfield Police Chief Melvin Wills said another poosIMjUty is to take aU motor boats off the Idm after dark. Township Attorney Joseph T. Brennan it to incorporate these ideas into an ordinance which the officials will propose to the boating control commission. Car Accident Kills City Pair A Pontiac couple was killed this morning when their went over the curb on Orchard Lake Avenue and 'struck Both were in their,BO’s*, police She was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital following the 7:39 a.m.‘ accident. Her husband died al 10 The deaths brought the city’s traffic toll for tbs year to nine. Police are still investigating the accident, but said it appeared Cissell was traveling east on Orchard Lake at a high rate of speed when he skloswiped a truck near Franklin Boulevard. OUT OP CONTROL His car went out o! control more than a block away, near Chapman, and hit two street signs and a tret in front of Oliver Buick Sales. Police said the Cissell car caught the bumper of the truck It sideswiped. The truck driver, Jimmy Traylor, 43, of 57 Lull, Was not injured. The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Sunny aad* warmer today, Ugh 34 to 30. Partly cloudy and warmer tonight, law 93 to 18. Scattered thundershowers late tonight and Friday, cooler late Friday, high 19 to 85. Southeast to south winds at 19 to IS miles becoming southwest tonight aad northwesterly late Friday. Outlook for Saturday: Fair. Teddy If PeeNec Lowest temperature preceding f dim.' One Year A«e In Ponttec Highest temperature s». Lowest tempereture M- 0*Lttp*."toJnieliB v*l#e^y ** Mein tempereture yr..... 7S.5 Weather: Mostly sunny/ Sun sets Ttsursdey to 7:«r p.m. ^ ! Sutl rises Prldey *t 5:32 e.m. Highest end Lowest Temperatures tpSTboto le « Years ”, 104 In It M ITtor Moan rises Prldey et 4;«f s.m. wednesdey's Tempiroture Ckrt / Alpine 4d 43 Fort Worth |M M Oswiussm Tsmpiretvres - t e.m.....-.....|4 It e,m. .to 7 e.m. H if m. 71 li.ni to 1 p.m so Sff*Repfds U 54 Kwses VC&’ *5 74 Houghton to 54J.ee Ampfes 04 47 Merguitto 64 J7 Miami BVech *7 74 Muskegon S7 56 MihepUkee 75 S7 t e.m. 64 I p.m. S3 Traverse C. 74 S NdW Yort It 41 11 (as retarded dewntew) Highest tempereture 77 Boston ten Lake c. w ft Chicago jff 41 a. Francisco 71 57 Cincinnati /»0 ft S. S. Mario .ft 47 /Mean tempereture ..ee.5 Weather: Pertly cloudy PTnvor - jr ft ft Seattle 72 5f Detroit / 77 53 Tempo 72 71 Duluth Z 7t » Washington It ff NATIONAL WEATHER — Scattered showers and thundershowers are expected tonight in the southwest part of the niffon and frofli the coast to the central and southern Rockies. Showers are expected in the middle Mississippi Valley. It will cooler from New England to the middle Atlantic states and from lbe central Plains to the upper Lakes. It wilMte warmer fnpm the lower Lakes Jo the Tennessee Valley. % WHO’S HYPNOTIZED?—Is it the chicken or 20-ytar-old Peace Corps candidate John N. Van Camp, whose project will be poultry during his anticipated two-year stay in India? Voitn, a graduating senior at Oakland University, is the son of Mrs. Lawrence Van. Camp, 71970 Lassier, near Romeo, and .the late Mr. Van Camp. Personal Diplomacy Draws OU Senior in Peace Corps By LEE OLSON Area News Editor John N. Van Camp is a firm believer in‘the person-to-person emphasis of the Peace Corps. The graduating senior- from Oakland University said, “I think the Peace Corps type of foreign policy is much more effective than other types of foreign aid programs." John, 89, expects to leave in November for two years in India where he will be able to “practice what he preaches." Though his major project will be poultry ; this will not preclude him faun talking convincingly about life iirthe United States and the universal desire for world peace. DEBATING TEAM And “convincing” J< be, for he was a member of a championship debating team at Romeo High School for three years before entering Oakland University. Son of Mrs. Lawrence Van Camp, 71979 Lassier, near Romeo, aad the late Mr. Vaa Camp, the Peace Corps can- 30 B57s Land in Saigon (Continued From Page Otto) (Continued From Page One) A U.S. Embassy spokesman discounted two Saigon rumors, whioh Uso lacked confirmation elsewhere. a a One was a story that Ho Chi Minh, president of North Viet Nam, had been replaced by a pro-Peking subordinate in the North Vietnamese Communist P«rty. TWO SQUADRONS The other was that two squadrons of Soviet-made MIG fighters had been flown into North Viet Nam. ' The spokesman said ke “had nothing to back ap” the rumor about Ho Chi Minh. He pointed out that U.S. and South Vietnamese intelligence officers maintain a close liaison and said they found nothing to support it . - * to to..-.' He said he had no information about MlGs. Note undelivered The spokesman said a United States note protesting North Vietnamese torpedo boat attacks Sunday and Tuesday against U.S. 7th Fleet ships has not yet been delivered. “We fire In touch with several channels on this matter,’’ heated. The United States does' not maintain diplomatic relations with North Viet Nam. developments throughout the country. A spokesman said Taylor-bad a slight cold and canceled a field trip scheduled for tomor- didatepicked India because of his claw personal ataoclatioa One channel for deliver protest could be the three-nation coiirol commission overseeing the Geneva agreements that divided Viet Nhm 10 years ago. ' * A RED RETALIATION / The spokesman said American and South Vietnam^ military forces are prepared to meet any Red retaliation for the U. S. aerial counterattack yesterday a gains/ l^orth Viet Nam’s torpedo boats and shore installations. A buildup of trpops was re-x ported completed this morning. The reinforcements were cantered in the 1st Corps area, adjoining North Viet Nam. £ " .The United States is considering bringing in more airpower if it is needed, he said, but there are no plans to increase 5,0Q0 recently announced. ' ★ * * U S. military personnel in South Viet Nam now ranges between 18,300and 16,500. -r., CLOSE TOUCH ------a—_ _ ] FUEE M FAMILY SAMPLE toi Lewtfr U.S. Ambassador Maxwell D. Howe Co.. Dept. SIS. St Touts 2, Taylor .kept in dose touch with RM®- |* MiM, tomorrow anight. Broomfield Says Crisis to Be Issue Rep. William S. Broomfield, (R-Mich.) agreed with other key Republicans in Washington 40-day that President Johnson’s fight - if - we - must" p o 11 c y has dampened but not smothered the Vietnamese crisis as a 1964 campaign issue. Rep. Broomfield said he backed Johnson’s action, but “it does not take the Viet Nam is*, sue out qf the presidential election “Viet Nam is going to be discussed," be said. “We have been maintaining right along that the administration hasn’t been doing enough to win the war.” Rep. Bcoomfidd has been one of the backers bf an amendment to the foreign aid /hill which would allovrmore money.for defense of Viet Nam. V ^Minority party members in of.the4 Congress made it clear they had dents (ran that country. A number of them have been guests in the Van Camp home for varying periods of time during the last four or five years. ★ a a John took the Peace Corpgex-amination last November, turned in his questionnaire in February and learned he was accepted in May. * INDIAN HISTORY Outside of his friendship with several Indian students, his only other knowledge of the country is through twu courses In Indian history, Which were part of the area studies program each student is required to take at OU. And as for poultry, which will be his major fiekjt, la India, he does* know** something ‘about chickens having raised several hundred on the . family farm, “But I intend to know a lot more about them befote I leave," said John, explaining, that he is going fo start reading books and pamphlets on care, feeding, incubation and other aspects of chicken raising. ♦ ’ .it\ He also expects to be further briefed in poultry during Peace Corps training which starts next month. He will be attending classes at a nearby university from 7:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. daily for eight to 10 weeks. MAIN SUBJECT His main subject, however, will be Hindi, language of the province where he will, be stationed, He will be living in Uttar Pradeasch, near Nepal. Jahp said he has “always wanted to see the world,’’ and that after his Peace Corps assignment is over be wants to eater the Foreign Service. Besides India, he said “Africa sort of fascinates me. it wn' my second choice of places to go. So maybe I’ll try to refuito a consulate there someday. ■+/*-. -W: . Wherever he reel, J o h p ’ s ready smile ancMaelightfui ^gjtt of gab” are aure to stahd/nim in good stpdd as a goodwill ambassadorfor the Unitea ‘no dnoice” but to unite behind the/ President in. replying tof Communist aggression with/e-taliatory attacks on North-Viet-namese coastal installations. But there was a strong “at this time" qualification in tbefc/ comments on whether the war in Viet Nam was entering apolitical sidetrack. ~/ ' Former- Vice Presideaf Richard M, Nixon, in town for discussions with presidential Nominee Barry Gold water aad other Republican leaders, told a reporter: 'yityrteo early to take Viet. Nam out of the campaign. I hope, the President’s action presages more decisive moves, but what has happened is only part of the problem. The major problem is guerrilla War — on that we need a plan.’’ DOCTORS WILL TELL YOU a gentle laxative is best Six Are Seeking College Post t candidates have applied for the post as head of Oakland County’s proposed community college, according to G e o r g e Mosher, chairman of the board of trustees. Mosher said two applicants would be interviewed at tonight’s closed meeting of the (yard. The college board has set the hiring to a chief administrator as Ito first job toward creatioa of the two-year insti-' tution. , Aiding the board’s search for a man to head up the proposed school is Dr. James Lewis of the University of Michigan. Lewis is helping with the recruiting and screenffig of applicants. Mosher said the university official had contacted four of the board’s six candidates. At a special meeting Tuee-day evening, the college trustees authorised the paying of expenses of any applicant who is asked to come lore far aa Also, the site committee issued a set . of criteria for the location of the future community college. Site size was set at 150 acres in an.easily accessible location. Preferred site locations were given as Troy-Royal Oak, Pontiac and the Farmingtoh-South-field area. Birmingham Area Niws Registration Time Mere for Public School Pupils Festive Parade to Launch Fair (Continued From Page One)\ close at 6 p.m. with the livestock sale. Dairy judging and showman-ship will draw the attention of visitors Friday, along wf’ hlbiting of the talents in the trail class ai dancing. Saturday, last day of tne fair; will feature thr horse action classes in-the morning and tjw horse club contests in the evening. The main show ring has’been leveled, graded and enlarged this year to allow better handling and presentation of the animals. U.S. Braces for Trouble J (Continued From Page One) ! son declared yesterday: “To any who may be tempted to support — or to widen — the present aggression, I say this. There is no threat to any peaceful power from the Uaited States of America. But there can be job peace by aggression, and no immunity from reply. That is what is meant by the action yesterday.” Secretary df Defense Robmt S. McNamara detailed the flam-, ing havoc Wrought by the bombs and rocketa/of U„ S. carrier planes in-pnaliatkxi; for Red PT/ boat attacks on U. SvAbstroyers. in tipTGulf of Tonkin. JkfcNamare said reconnaissance flights ejmfirmed the air strikea, wej-ef “very successful” and thgUfie immediate crisis in tiie gujr'was over.. ! V The defense chief, in interviews on television last night, mdd the. reconnaissance flights drew po ahtiaircrMr fire such as shot down two attacking U.! planes and damaged a third yesterday. /. BIRMINGHAM - It’s almost time for students here to sharpen the pencils, dust off the notebooks and get back irtto those study habits — but first comes registration. Students enrolling in Birmingham Public Schools for the first time this fall have been urged by Schools Supt. Dr. John Smith to register as soon as possible. At the primary level, parents -ef children who will be five before Dec. 1 have been asked to contact the elementary school to their area. All school offices will be open 3:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. ' ★ # ♦ Junior and senior high-school students entering or returning to Barnum, Berkshire, Derby, Groves or Seaholm schools have been asked to pick up schedules and pay fees Aug. 31 to Sept. 4. If necessary, late registration can be accomplished Sept. 8. PHYSICAL EXAM AU seventh grade students at Barnum, Berkshire and Derby junior high schools, as weU as incoming 10th graders at Groves and Seaholm high schools, must have a physical examination before participating in the school’s physical education program-' ‘ ★ ’ * * ■■ Students have'been urged, to pick up the appropriate exami- nation forms at their schools prior to 8ept. 10. • BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Children will get special attention at the. new Bloomfield Township Public Library when it opens this faU. Miss R. Rebecca Lamb, currently an employe of the Detroit Public Library, will join the staff as childreu’s B- A resident of Harper Woods, Miss Lamb studied at Wayne State University and received a master’s degree in libfgty science from the University of Michigan. . *. * . - ; ... In her new*-position, Miss Lamb will have the responsibility of.buUding the juvenile book coUection, organizing a children’s library service program and working with PTA’s and similar community groups. Crash N«an Lansing Kills Dimondale Youth LANSING" (AP) - A Dimondale youth was killed and three other persons injured Wednesday night in auto crash fivr miles south of here. The victim was Robert Young, 18, passenger in a car driven by Merritt GUIUlknd Jr., 21, Eaton Rapids. j i.iFUgMITUftesrORE ’ Specials In Summer Fiirnitura ALL-STEEL Folding Umbrella Table Graceful wrought-iron styling tobies hs 42-inch diameter, double braced, fo d» for carrying and storage. Only 1.2 to at this price. Doluxo TVt-FOOT Garden Umbrella V,- 349.50 value - features crank-lift elevator■ that opens and’’ closes the umbrella effortlessly. 8-rib frame work of aruyt-resislant steel, annodized olum.inum pole, glue or green Golors. Wilt fit above toble- SIMMS 25 SOUTH Saginaw Street STORE THE PONTIAC PRESS, , THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1964 Soviet Sternness q Cover-Up? MOSCOW (UPI) —I A stern Soviet warning that further action by thf United States against North Viet Nam could lead to , “broad armed conflict” was viewed by diplomatic sources today as tough talk to cover up Kremlin embarrassment over the crisis and hopes for peace. Hie sources said the Soviets feel they have nothing to gain in ® clash in Southeast Asia, whdre Communist China controls the #xal Communist parties, and a great deal to lose in their efforts to ease cold war tensions , with the United States. The warnings of general war, they said, went hand in hand with hopes that there is no further action in the U.S.-Vietnamese crisis. Soviet calmness over the crisis was underlined by the Dallas Eyes Training of Extra Policemen DALLAS, Tex. (AP) — Police Chief Jesse E. Curry’s staff is considering, traihing 75 additional Dallas policemen in riot-control tactics. • The move would double the size of the present crowd-control " force. fact that Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev was out of Moscow on a trip and that many of his cfyief aides store vacationing-yet none appeared to be making plans to come back to the capital. it .it ' + Soviet reaction to the U. S. was cautious in the early hours, with only factual reports of President Johnson’s speech and no comment. By last night, however, Soviet propaganda outlets were broadcasting a harsh warning. It called the UJL bombing of North Vietnamese bases “an aggressive act.” "Such actions, further rash' steps or provocations in that area, could cause events capable of* converting the incidents that took place there into a broad armed conflict with all the ensuing dangerous consequences,” the tatement added, ★. * ★ “The responsibility for such consequences would naturally devolve on the United States of America. DENOUNCE ACTION “Competent Soviet circles resolutely denounce the aggressive actions of the United States in the Gulf of Tonkin, which lead r SHOP SIMMS T0NITK, FRIDAY and SATURDAY hr DKEP DISCOUNT PRICES WEEK-END DRUG SPECIALS G PRESCRIPTIONS Filled at SIMMS SIMMS"* J to a dangerous' exacerbation of the situation in Southeast Asia, tense as it is,” it said. Before their split with Peking, the Soviet* regularly pledged aid to.Communist nations under attack. But Moscow’s position ittKhis regard has become uncertain since toe creation of “ a rival center of Communist power in the Par East. I 1 ‘ 4 ' Hie change has left the Soviets with responsibility in the area but no real power “to control events there, the sources said. Only At SIMMS-Brand New MONEY-SAVERS Specially Purchased For Pontiac Folks All American Quality Made Men’s and Bo»’ Clothing SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT Latest Styles—Sizes 6 is 18 Boys' Sport Shirts love more than 'A .on machine wash ivy styles. 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All prices subject to'stock on hand and wo reserve the right to limit quantities.', ALADDIN ssnu Outing Kits $6.95 value — s»yled as shown —’ red plaid carrying case contains t -qt. thermos bottle with bx-on stopper, cup top and. plastic snack bon for sandwiches. Case is 4* 1216x9 Vh inches. Now you save nearly hdlf on this bandy item. SIMMS!®, Where YOU Buy Thus j • Unusual At The LOWEST PRICES! I A-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1964 Special Events Planned for Lapeer LAPEER — A fun - packed twor days of special events are to please crowds num-bari&g about 20,000 during La-peerDays next Wednesday and Thursday. y, ■* • * * Gov. Romney, State Highway Commissioner John C. Madde and Secretary of State James M. Hare will be among the dignitaries to march in the big homecoming parade Thursday morning. Otter attraction will to-clude a pet and dawn phrade /Wednesday morning, a base- ball game, hike and tricycle I races, coronation of,the Lapeer Day Qneen and a pavement dance, all on Wednesday. Besides the gala parade, which is expected to have some 120 entries, Thursday's program will include a welcome by Mayor W. E. Rowdeh at 10 a.m. The parade will follow at 10:90. ★ ★ 1 Included in the line of inarch will be flopta entered by area service dubs, industries, churches, business firms and compmlty groups. Bands and marching units also will par,, ticipate. " * . w ★ Acting as emceOowill be local bank officlal Robert Grazier. FORM AT SCHOOL The parade will form at the high school on North Main at Nepessing, proceed through the main busffies$ district to Saginaw, then north to Oregon and on out to the Lapeer State Home and Training Sdiool. It will continue through the state- home grounds for the patients to enjoy. the parade awards for entries will be on the reviewing stand .in front of the courthouse. * * * A concert by the Lapeer High School band will be presented at 1 p.m. on the reviewing stand. HORSE 8HOW The Lapeer Ki warns Club will stage a horse show, plus trick riding events and contests at 2 p.m. at the Lapeer County Center Building lot. The Sarnia Uonettet Sen- sational and Sarnia Highland band will provide entertainment at I and 4:21 pan., respectively. A featured attraction at S'will be a balloon aacebsion at Cram-ton Park, East Nepessing Street . • • * * + Whirly Bird (helicopter) rides will he offered both days. A carnival also will,be set up on North and South Court streets. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE The entire program is sponsored by the Greater Lapeer Chamber of Commerce. Following ia a list, of events for bojbt days and for thoee who insist on "not missing a thing,” the Red Cross first aid lent will be on the courthouse at Youth enter ,:30 a.m.—Rides open all Day mnm - evening (Whim. Bird at Aanroak ' fjiwr . 10:00 a.m.—grroen — American Acede* - my of /paiie 10:30 •Jit.—eat and Clown Farad* 10:45 a.m.—Judging at Owfi 11:00 a.m.-^de nim. Baoditand 1:30 p.m^-Organ — American Acadt-2:0b p.m. Baseball earn* — imiav •YanilW!' table receives all stations in in be used enywhere in U.S.A. *rs superb performance every-n m on and off switch, With front view channel selector. nIw lUollensak TAPE RECORDER Built for long-term reliability, has 4 speeds, push-button tape drive cdptrol, fast, forward and rewind. External speaker output. mico-phone, tape and reef. Pontiac Moll, Phone 682-0422—Downto wn Pontiac, 27 S. Saginaw, PE .3-7168 Wr fMVms rLmI 1 ajfip ^1 vi JflPl. > ■ ■ mm \ \ NEW CHURCH — John DeLind wielded the shovel yesterday at groundbreaking ceremonies for the new building that will housa tiie Episcopal Church tf the Resurrection near Clarks ton. Locatad oh a four-acre site «t Clarkston-Orion and Perry Lake Roads, the church is scheduled for completion early next year. Participating in ths.oeremony (from left) were Bt. Rev. Archie Crowley, Suffragan Bishop; Rev. Alexander T. Stewart, vicar of the church: and Rev. Canon Allan Ramsay, executive director Trf administration for the diocese. At right is Ivan Rouse, organist-choir director of St. Andrew's Church, Drayton Plains. Novi Sewer | For Orchard Lake * Seen Ready prjnf New C harter by Sept. I Teen Is Bitten by Rattlesnake Serum Rushed to Aid Livonia Boy Scout LANSING (AP) - The State Health Department and state pit^oe cooperated in rushing anti-make bite serum to help a 15-year«U Livonia boy scout bitten by a rattle snake Wednesday. Ronald Chope was rushed to Lapeer General Hospital, where he was .listed in satisfactory condition Wednesday night. He was bitten on>tbe thigh at the D-Bar-A Boy Scout Ranch near Metmora, where a lake * dredging project apparently has stirred up makes, the department said. The boy wu bitten about 2:SFp.m. State police rushed the.serum from the health department laboratories here to the Capital City Airport—where it was put aboard a plane about an hour after the incident. This was the second snake bite experienced at the reach in nine days, the department said. The bite is rardy fatal, and not often serious. Exhibitors Preparing for 4-H Fair Scores of 4-H’ers across the county are warming up for next week's annual fair, with winners of the "semifinal” contests getting their demonstrations ready. * * . * Walking off with honors for their "Food and People” exhibit in the Preliminary Demonstration Contests w^e four members of the Oakhill 4-H Club: Marilyn Denton, . Rosemary Theriot, Sandra Brooks and Nancy Mills. Otters who won an exhibition place at the fair Include Jeree Bachelor, of the Hl-Le 4-H dab, who will shew her “Exploring Foods and Nutri- Also performing Thursday afternoon at the fair will be the following list of demonstrators, in their respective categories: Dairy Foods (Senior)—Nancy Mills, Oakhill: Vegetable Use-Beryl Austin, Oakhill; Dairy— L. C. Scramlin, Oakhill; Dairy Foods (Junior)—Judy Hillman, Galloway Lake; Sheep Demon- stration—Bonnie Rose, East Orion. / Dog Obedience — Barbara Junod, Skill IN' Craft; Cherry He-rBrenda .Long, Milford; ChUdi Care — Card Wudarckl, Oakfnll; Bread-Gall Kllbourn, Ortonville; and Conservation (Wild Flowers) — Jeree Bachelor, Hi-Lo. •• •- '*< t The fair will begin Tuesday at (he county 4-H fairgrounds, on Perry south of Walton. NOVI—Public works construction is booming, according to Village Manager Harold Ackley. The village’s $1.5-miHion sanitary interceptor sewer is being installed "about as rapidly as expected,” he said. IS When the work was started ia February it was slated for completion ia September. Ackley now estimates ft will be finished by Sept. * The Huron-Rouge Interceptor will accommodate new development on 14 acres in southeast Novi and Novi Township. Initially able to serve 10,000 customers, it will replace a fete septic tanks in the arpa. ★- ★ , ★ ' Subdivision developers will he expected to build internal sewer system* to tap into the interceptin’. The Oakland County Department of Public Works proj;. ect is to be paid for entirely through connection charges. CAN BE EXTENDED X The sewgr lines can. be ex-tended to the future to serve about two-thirds of the. village. Alse progressing rapidly is the drainage construction on Beck Road. The 124.000 project to Improve the ntile stretch between Grand River and U Mile was started Jaly 11. Now about . oneKjuarter complete, it should be finished lata, this month or early in September, Ackley said. * ★ . A contract for the sealcoattog of South and West Lake Drives has been awarded to the Ann Arbor Construction Co. and the work is to begih immediately, the manager said.. < ■ ♦ ★ ■. ★ The firm’s $5,500 bid for the 1.25 miles of sealcoating was the lowest of four. ORCHARD LAKE A new charter for a new dty soon will be rolling off the presses and into Orchard Lake homes. The' charter is expected to be distributed early next week, five and a half months after a nine-member commission was Charged with writing it. A public meeting on the document will be held a month later. "We want all residents to look it over and become familiar with -it,” commission chairman S. F. Leahy said. "At the meeting we’ll discuss it mid answer any questions.” te .★ * Residents will have until Sept 9 to scrutinize the proposed charter. AD will he urged to attend the session that night at $ in the West Bloomfield High Sdiool auditorium. .DECEMBER BALLOT - Balloting on the charter will be early to December. 1 "We want to get comments from the residents to see if we want to make any changes before submitting it to the governor,” Leahy said. The proposed charter must be approved by the governor 70 days before an election can be held oniL ' Orchard Lake residents decided March 3 by a 204-124 margin that they wanted to change their village to a dty. INFORMAL RULE Those . backing the cityhood move had offered it as a means of maintaining the informal gov- AR£A0m$ eminent of the residential community. V They wanted, they said, to preserve the community as a separate entity, Keeping all of its attributes intact. The line of reasoning then was : h a r-t e r commissioners would be' given little time to write (he document and therefore would have to rely heavily on the existing village charter. Leahy said today . era had not actually compared the proposed charter to the old one. "We tried to write a new charter that we think meets the objectives of the residents as we understand than,” Leahy said. Commissioners, he noted, worked toward devising a document that also would be easil understood. The Michigan Mt League reviewed the proposed charter and commented favorably on It. “They suggested only a few changes which will be incorporated toto the final draft,” Leahy said.. 2 Meetings Set by WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN-SHIP—School board members have scheduled two special meetings for this month. They will convene Aug. 17 to open bids on a core junior high school for the district. Expected to cost nearly $1-miilion, tiie unit will be constructed on the west side of Orchard Lake Road about a half-mile north of Maple. An Aug. 31 meeting is planned for review of the list Of teachers qualifying for tenure under the new state' law which will -become effective Aug. 2|B. Both of the special sessions . twill begin at 3 p m. Club Sponsors Party WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP A The Ladles F\in Club is giving a parly in the) store building on the corner jrf^Ormond Road and Jackson Blvd. today at 8 p.m.. It is open to the public. Steam Engines to Be Featured IMLAY CITY - "I think I can — I think I can — And the old-time steam engine made the hill. “—History and tales of old-fashioned locomotives will be recalled this weekend at the Live Steam Engine Convention here. Sponsored by the Saginaw Valley Steam Club, the three-day event opens tomorrow at the Imlay City Fair Grounds and runs through Sunday. The daily programs,.all starting ait 10 a.m., still feature slow races, tugs-of-war, demonstrations,.baker fans in action, n steam paw mill in operation and engines on teeter totters. STEAM ENGINES There will be 20 steam engines on the grounds, various shapes and sizes and many dating back 4 good many years. Utica District Residents to Got School Analysis UTICA — Residents of thej Utica School District will soon | receive q condensed version of; the Citizens’ Advisory Committee’s 60-page sdiool analysis report. The four-page pamphlet is being issued to better inform district homeowners about school problems. It is the first step in the campaign for passage ag a millage and bond issue in December. BARREL RACINGW A hard-riding cowgirl puts on the power at a turn to a barrel < race, one of 13 events open to the public at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow at the, Rafter M. Ranch, eight miles north of Rochester on M150. The contests will kickoff a two-day rodeo at the ranch. The Aug, 8-0 rodeo is sponsored by the Sheriff’s Posse in behalf of the Leader Dogs for the Blind building fund. BACK-TO-SCHOOL PORTABLES! "Emerson 16 82 Channel UHF TV This up-to-the-minute portabli area, UHF and VHF, and can bi Super distance chassis delivers i where. Built-in push-buttor -personal listening jack fir MISS TEEN UJLA. - Nancy Spry of Van Nuys, Calif., Wifi reign over Michigan State Fair’s special Teen-Age Fair Aug. BKr Sept. 7 to Detroit. The “fair of the fair” will feature exhfoits W events planned for young ppople including nonstop record hope, hootenannies, fashionshows of hot soda, drafters and surfij^g. ~ V Rochester Elks Ponder Next Move for Lodge ROCHESTER - The next move to the Elks’ quest for a. new lodge will be deckled at a meeting of the general membership tonight. ^4 j. Hr . #* V- j A request for a liquor license I for the proposed hall on Ludlow has been refused by the MIchL 1 gun liquor Control Commissionj GRINNELL STERO PHONO This complact portable makes an ideal gift! Has 2 extension side ^speakers fir 4-. spaed automatic record c ;/VV-.v;r.y-" F ** V " 7TT$T^ Tfjja ^O^NtIaC PHESS. TMjjKbUAy, AUGUST tt, 1-UG4 'Man intheStreetis in Favor Jo Nam Action By lie Associated Press Random^intervlews with men abd womb in the streets of America's cities show overwhelming support for President Johnson’s action in Viet Nam. • * t Jk It was about 25-1 for the president in the Associated Press survey made Wednesday. A sizable number thought he had waited too long. Sample comments: ■ ; San Fraoclaco — “Looks bad — bad for the young* fellows, not for an old goat like ine,” James done It earlier. It might be a good thing to carry it mrther. I great aa many people imagine; Lou Covert, personnel analyst. may have waited too long before taking dny kind of action' language the Communists, understand. I don’t know why we Lyons, retailer. don’t thlhk the risks are as Memphis — “I’m of the opin- gnd now It may be too late,” waited so long to do it,” Wayne Faulkner, salesman. Indianapolis —• “Anything President Johnson says, is right. I think his action could lead to pdl-out war. I’ll go tomorrow If I’m needed,” Larry Gunckle, 11. * ★ ♦ • Atlanta — “Our foreign policy of the past few years has been Child Drowns in Canal ALGONAC (AP) - Louis Fusinski, 2, drowned Wedneo-day in a canal Behind his home in adjoining Clay Township, The child wandered unnoticed from a yard. New York — “It’s tune we took a stand. Either we do it now or We’ll lave to do it later, both at the risk of nuclear war,” Larry - Milan, assistant credit manager. DOUBTS RISKS St. Louis — “We should have Dios in Mexico City ^ Mexico city (AP) — Aquiles Ellorduy, lawyer, journalist and firebrand politican for many of hisrtjr years, died Wednesday of a heart piftnent. ion that they’re finally going to fight and get through with it. I don’t Think we should do like W! did in K6rea. We should either get through with it or get out;’ Alice K. Hoffman, retired. New Orleans -r “I don't think we ought to be dragged into a shooting war, but the President Wilda Dykes, restaurant manager. Philadelphia — “I’m frightened. I feel that Johnson djd the right' thing,” Belle Gubem housewife. ( ONLY LANGUAGE ’ Chicago —.‘^That’s the only! an. open'invitation to such attacks. At this point we have no alternative than to retaliate,” R. E. Sibley, bank employe. Person^ with a history o< hay fever, asthma or other allergies-should consult a physician immediately when stung 1ijf a Wasp. Our Entire Stock SWIM SUITS $700. $}OpO $1400 Sportswear. Third floor ladies' Poplin JAMAICAS 2*99 2 for ^3 Poplin Jamaica: sanforized washable. Choose from push, blue, greed or block. Sizes ID to 18. L> ■ Sportswear... Third Floor Arnel Pleated . Slipovers & Cardigans " -„ Misses and Women's Clearance of Misses. .SKIRTS Mohair Sweaters DRESSES "’'Better DRESSES $200 ■&' *Q°o .ai $400 ' Regular 17.99h> 24.99 >12 $T4 $18 Arnel pluoied skirts proportioned length in your choke .of white, blue or pink.- Waih ‘n weor. 16-18.' Mohair sweaters, 87% wooC'-V% Azlan and 4% nylon. 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Fifth Root; w -Ambassador 8-Transistor Portable RADIO Reg. 12.99 *10 ,00 Includes, battery, carrying case and earphones. .Fully guaranteed. Shop ond compare. Chorge Yours. Rodios... Fifth Floor ’-£ 1 48 Wert HilPOB Street THE PONTIAC PRESS * * * */ •• • t ■ i Pontiac, Michigan THURSDAY, AUGUST $ 1964 > . MBKttBir 3CT5uS.nl "sa* Uttor *^rtSL?&r*tw bMutini .MM ClrooUtlon W»IH«T Hit-Run Boat Tragedy Shocks Community Memory fails us in recalling many acts as dastardly as that per* petrated on Cass Lake Monday overling when a boatload of lawless riders invaded the “safety” area Tor bathers and ram m e d 41 helpless swimmer. Death came as the slash* ing blades of the boat’s propeller inflicted ghastly wouhds on the victim. . k ★ ★ **★ ■ Abut Louis Akerley never had a chance. The boat had made several rounds and the victim , and his companion were in the full glare of a spotlight as the craft bore down on them. In dying, the young man rose to heroism, as he desperately pushed his friend to safety before the boat struck and then sped on into the night. ★ ★ ■ dr * This is the second such occur* rence an an area lake this summer. Although the previous otke did not result in death, the victim is still hospitalised as result' of multiple body lacerations. Whether or not the pilots of the two crafts actually Intended to hit the swimmers is beside the point. Their Irresponsible disregard of all safety rules and Impediment of the lives of others makes them potential mnrderprs — morally if not **Wv. ’ Law enforcement agencies are prosecuting an intensive search for those who brought grave Injury to ono young man and doath to another. Wo urge that such efforts bo continued unremittingly until the culprits are apprehended and punishment to the full extent of the law meted out. We urge, also, that those having any knowledge that might have bearing on the tragedies reveal it. to the police, both as a" humanitarian and a public duty. runner. He Is known to be President Johnson's preference at this time. Also, of 836 convention delegates polled by Hie Associated Press, 341 favOred Humphrey. Ksnnsdy ran second with 230 votes. Orily factors dimming the Senator’s bright hopes airs the leading part he played |t pushing the civil rights blH“ through . the Senate and tho fact that , Johnson has a leaning toward a Catholic candidate to balance the GOP ticket. ★ ★ -'if. One of the most astute politicians on the American scene, it is a safe bet that Johnson at this moment hit not Irrevocably picked the Humber Two man. Nq one knows better than he what the shifting winds of politics can do to decisions made too far in advance. LBJ Kills Six Hopef uls With One Verbal Stone Few things happen, least of all in politics, without reasons. The reasons, however, may prove to have been good or bad depending often on the outcome of the action taken. \ ★ . ★ . ★ President Lyndon B. Johnson’s act|pn in eliminating a half dozen potential vice presidential nominees was an eyebrow-raiser. A presidential nominee—such as Johnson Is almost certain to bo — has traditionally enjoyed the prerogative of naming tho running mate he "Wants. But there is no precedent for an acknowledged nominee to name in advance those he does not want. ★ ★ .... ★ In scratching the names of six vice president possibilities, insiders think the President moved nate his attorney general, Robert F. Kinnkdy, without subjecting him to individual rejection and before sentiment Tot KINnidy could snowball into embarrassing proportions for thjj^Pre8ldent. * Supporting this theory is the fhet that hone of the others dropped had been given deep consideration for the office. Polls had shown Kennedy running strongly both among rank-and-file Democrats and among delegates to ihe convention. Also, other members of his highly political family were urging his selection. ★ ★ ★ As a result of LBJ’s jtnove, Minnesota’s Senior senator, Huaxgr H. Humphrey, emeves as the front Pentagon Plans Ready for Crises By ELTON C. FAY WASHINGTON « - Crisis has become a way of life in the Pentagon. The Red patrol boat attacks on American destroyers in international waters off the North Viet Nam coast are only the latest in a series of alarms that have been sounding with growing frequency in almost two decades of cold war tension. With |he exception ef Korea, the Incidents have been Communist testing of free world determination. In one, the Cubes missile showdown, nations hovered os the brisk of atomic war. Always there was the chance that an Incident and its reactions could flare into major war. And this is true of the naval clashes between the United States naval vessels and the patrol boats of North Viet Nam. Red China, powerful ally of the Viet- ’ namese Communists, is close — and watchful. ■■ • dr . W The Pentagon has files packed, with plana for coping with contingencies. The plans have existed and been constantly revised for years. They cover a broad spectrum of probable, possible or remotely conceivable emergencies. ' *1 CONTINGENCY PATROL Thud, it may be said that when the Defense Department ordered the close-in patrol by surface ships in the Gulf of Tonkin off the Red Vietnamese coast, it considered and put into a contingency plan things that might evolve from the patrol. The planners certainly were aware the destroyer petrels might drew Red reaction. They assessed toe capabilities of toe North Vietnamese to react, alone or in concert with their big neighbor to the.north. When .the destroyer patrols were started more than a year ago, a carrier was kept steaming near the mouth of the gulf, ready to send her planes to help the destroyers if they encountered shooting trouble. ★ * When the Tonkin Guff situation taovedv from a contingency,situation into a sea battle, the plan went into operation. A quick ■radio message from the destroyer brought fighter plane help from a carrier. Id Tuesday’s engagement, planes-were in the area above the destroyers, Maddox and C. Turner Joy, on President Johnson’s orders, when PT boats darted hi through a storm and a three-hour battle opened. In toe opening incident Stmday, toe Maddox radioed its call for air help from toe carrier/ without coding It because of the extretoe urgency ef the situation. This is accepted procedure in inch critical moments. Boto/military and civilian chiefs in Washington Were informed of the attack al-most before the echoes of gunfire had died away. This is made possible Under the elaborate worldwide communications system, maintained as part of the over-ail command and control setup. With this system, all interested officials, from the President on down, can communicate with commanders in the field anywhere — instantly. EXPANDED AND IMPROVED A “command and control” system has existed since the beginning of World War 'll. But' with 'improvements in equipment and the deadly danger growing, out of missile warfare perfection, it has been expanded and improved. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara uses the communications network to make, his own personal, surprise tests to see if everything is working. ' The system also requires that the whereabouts of each military official in the upper and operating echelons be known constantly, including the President. The Paper Tiger Strikes Back David Lawrence Says: GhihaTDirected N. Viet Attacks WASHINGTON - The Red Chinese government has started a war against the United States. President Johnson, as com-mander-in-chief of the armed farces, has ordered military action in retaliation. He has' asked Coop-ess to pass a resolution authorising him to take Vail necessary measures to re-J pel any armsdl attack against| the forces of States and to LAWRENCE prevent further aggression.” The resolution also would authorize the President “to take ail necessary steps, including the use of armed force,’’ to help those nations covered by the Southeast Asia treaty which request assistance to defend their freedom. Since American naval vessels iron attacked during the last few days In international waters by North Vietnamese on American naval vessels were really acts'of war. The responses by the United States in the air and on the sea were natural acts of war in self-defense. ... , STATE OF WAR The resolution before both houses of Congress amounts to a declaration of a state of war as existing where thrfTirfer) ed States Have menaced. The next move is up to the United Nations. In' the meantime, the United States will go ahead with, any military measures deemed necessary to protect its position. . • ★„ '. * ' h The procedure is well established by international law- The U.N., of course, will endeavor to set up at once a machinery of mediation in the hope of bringing about a settlement of the dispute. . * % Why did Red China decide to test American firmness at this time? Was it believed that, because of the presidential political campaign in this country, the incumtent administration h$s|UM4rtake any steps _ to war and that toe rival jlglitial party itself would not dure to demand such drastic action? If Red China’s government is seeking now to test American resolutness and has had any idea that the United States would be hesitant to employ military force, tills misconception has been dispelled. (CwnW, 1*M> Ntw YM HtrtM Tribune SimSUH. me) Bob Considine Says: by Red China — the grievance is not only against the .gov-' eminent ef North Viet Nam but also against the Peking - government. United States Ambassador Adiai Stevenson, in his speech yesterday to the Security Council of the United Nations, said the attacks on the shipe were • “part of a larger pattern with a larger purpose.” The United States has acted to repel wbat it calls “deliberate aggression.” ,. •■ — , EMPLOY MEASURES Under Article 51 of the charter af^the United Nations, an individual government, alone or ^^cooperation with other governments. may employ pleasures of “self-driense,” and these may he carried on “until -the -Security Council has taken measures necessary ttr maintain international peace and security.” The 1J-N. Charter also provides that any member nation which exercises its right of self-defense must immediately report Sack measures to toe Security Council. The United States government ' now has complied with the provisions of the charter by formally Submitting the matter to the council The two unprovoked attacks U.S., British Navies Seen as ‘Powers* Aiding Fidel MEXICO CITY-Fidel Castro’s former, brother-in-law. Dr. Rafael Diaz Balart, who says toaf the bear d e d prophet of Cnkan com-munism is a “genius of destruction,” tokl us today that' Castro is being kept in power partly by the CONSHHNE United States and British navies. “The chief function ef the two navies in the Caribbean now seems to be to frustrate all efforts by Cuban exile groups to attack or land on Cuban soil,” the former classmate of the dictator charged at the duplex apartment of Gen. Manuel Benitez Valdez, Batista’q,exiled Havana police chief. “It b a mess. TbeUidted States generally has been' noble and wonderful in lb efforts tp free Cuba. The influence it exerted on the OAS to issue diplomatic and economic sanctions a gal not . Castro b^a step in toe right direction. The CIA b doing a good and brave job ia Cuba, The Better Half Verbal Orchids to - Helen Nook Lake; 81st birthday. of WatiJdL I to be Ae best-dressed spectatorat my bankruptcy bearing.7’ T ? .Veijce of the People:* ? * , Says VOP te Fitted With I could crawl up a Wail cvetx #ina I read a snide, prejudiced letter in the “Voice” column and very recently one appeared signed “Knows the Truth.” What irony! If thirf writer really knew thetruth, such a letter would never have been written. Truth makes us free— free of bigotry, hatred and misunderstanding of our fellow man. Once truth is fully recognised by our pseudo-saints and associates, their defamatory .remarks will be quieted and their efforts to stir up dissension will come to an end. * ★ After having read numerous documentaries on the insanity of the Hitler regime and of the atrocities performed in attempting the annihilation of an entire nation, I highly recommend this literature to these smug individuals who believe they know the truth. If they are so sure and still cast aspersions, then they would be the same type who, if Mary the Mother of Jesus had lived in Nasi ' Germany, wonld have placed her Babe in her arms and marched them off to die in the gas chambers along with the thousands upon thousands of other innocent mothers with their babes' in their arms, and with little children dinging to them. Stm we have bar Rockwells, opr Neo-Nazis, „ our hate peddlers trying to fan that spark of hatred into a flame in this beloved country. * ★ H mg will know the truth, read and study and learn for yourselves and stop listening to the,,venom spouters. The libraries are full of books to enlighten you. WEEPING FOR THE DEAD OF THE CONCENTRATION CAMPS Feeli Newspapers Should Be Secular , In view of the recent muttering* of a “Disgusted Adolescent,” and because of area sermons and other “preachers,” I object to —ing religious and moral philosophies plastered about. If St Paul only had had The Pontiac Press, the New Testament would be considerably thinner. If modern apostles must spread our important (?) views, let’s use more than our pen fingers and leava the newspapers secular. A GRUMPY TEEN-AGER ‘Why Is It Rainbow 'Seldom Appears?* * ■ Nearly 4,ON yefetf ago God placed the rainbow in toe sky to. remind all mankind He would never again destroy the earth with a flood. A* a child, the rainbow nearly always appeared in bright, vivid colors, but in recent years I have seen very few. Could it be that we jjave become wicked that God is not reminding uft so often? I am wondering if many children today know the meaning of the rainbow. JUST WONDERING Says Right-Wing Extremists Dedicated too. Bat then another arm of the government steps in sad says wa mast Rot harass Castro.” Diaz Balart charges, that a major effort to bring about a unification of all Cuban exile r groups in the IT.^ at the New York office of Rep. Victor An-fuso (Dem.) in INI was frus-„ trated when the State Department requested two prominent Cuban leaden not , to attend. # .★ 'it' He believes that with US. encouragement, and a training, base somewhere in the hemi-sphere, a Cuban liberation force of 100,000 could be amassed, ARM EXQJS ‘ ' He believes the U.S. should arm that force, “jutt as Russia armed Castro,” and that armed invasion is the only answer to Castro. ★ ’ ★ He sees no hope of a counterrevolution from within Cuba. ’It would bo a butchery. Ihe people weald be mowed down by Rassiaa tasks * jast as they wen in Bada- ’ pest” The Cuban exile believes Cuba will be a major campaign issue k) toe U.$, this year, and he welcomes the prospect. ★ M- j * The dialogue between President Johnson and Sen. Gold-water, he feels, will give the' American public fresh knowledge and an opportunity to analyze tho major dilemma of the hemisphere. It is fortufik^T that we have patriotic Americans, so-called ‘right-wing extremists,” who refuse to join our most vociferous politicians who cooperate with evil forces. These so-called “right-wing extremists” are neither hate or war mongers. They are dedicated Americans. Does history, condemn our Saviour because ha would not tolerate the money changers? Does history condemn George Washington, Nathan Hale, Paul Revere, and a host 01 other patriots who refused to tolerate tyranny and taxation? ★ ★' ★ The extreme right did not give billioni of taxpayers’ dollars to Communist Russia and other atheistic dictators. They did aot sell captive nations down toe Volga River at Teberaa, Yalta, Potsdam and Geneva. Hoy did not betray . Nationalist China when, upon orders of high officials in Washington, the ammunition was dumped into the ocean to make toe nationalists defenseless before the Communists of China and the Moecew stooges. They did not fire Goa. Daaglas MacArtour. They did not withhold aid from Polish, East ■ Berlin and Hungarian freedom fighters aad forbid Franco to come fo their aid. They did not withhold the victory from our Army aad allow Russians to enter first aad plunder Berlin. They did not forcibly return 5 million refugees behind toe Iron Cartaln to face certain death. They did not witoboH air and naval support at the Bay of Pigs. They are not giving away wheat, salad oil and feed grain to our enemies. They are not * coddling homo-grown Communists and Red agitators. They are not ridiculing the House Committee of Ua-American Activities and smearing and suppressing all anti-Communist efforts of patriotic organizations. . 7 •; V • ' ", Cato you blame the Right-Wing Americans for trying to return this government to the dignity and respect that it once held? S. OLSHANSKY . > BLOOMFIELD HTTJ-S ‘John Coleman—an Asae^Ho Waterford* It was with regret that I read that John Coleman will be leaving Waterford Township. He has been-a great asset to our school system and I have heard many creditable remarks made by our students and citizens about this man. -As a township board member he has worked only for toe betterment of our community. Waterford will greatly miss this civic-minded person. EUGENE C. PUGUSE SIS GRANDVIEW AgreenOothing Stores Rush Season Three cheers for the “Lady of the Lake” writer about the" dotolng situation in our stores. Last February I tried to buy a pair ****** kB/I could find were summer clothes. A month ego I tried to buy extra tennis dresses for my girls and aO I could find were winter clothes. I refuse to buy winter costs 0*1-dresses in .July. When you have growing children how do you know whether toe dpthaa will fit when winter gets here? ’ . _ ^ * * Lope Santo will stay oat of toe stares natfl after llaaksgiving. I wU ate b«y toys forChristmas fo July «kTOr. OAKWOOD MANOR RESIDENT l :W«n>f. • v r. " ' * - ,■ ■ ,•■, V* .7 •*:1"rV ■!* .'."■■I- v icmv tnriTCT 4 -vuil " Oar Waldsrf oatkliafMt f| 4N sssks Plain; striped 13 PRS. I top. Of 100%. combed cotton, Silts IOlk-13. WsUorf Jr. i| mgalar Sir yl lays’ aaaks English rib, 13 PRS* styles.*!!. fMR’a Ila ipaatiaa Campus Elastic, band f 3 FOR leg. Dbl. crotch tlast>c waist. S-M-L-XL DOLLAR DAYS Rtf. Ota mg Du4.i(htful •ya Rtaka-up | 2 FOR | pencil or liquid eye liner. Your choicel .Save! Plus US. tax Tati* rtf. 3 far 1.19 train gsits Feddy Bear* ll FOR | cotton panties. White only. sEHHRtR. Sites 2-3-4. Ml purpou Ai big 22x36” yl lafaRh* . 2/1.20.1.31 S| U-shirts c^°n' | 2 FOR | side shirts. 1 1 6 mos. to Itt yrs., slip-on 6 mos. to 3 yrs., > Tsddlsrs’. Jrv., bays’ yPv/y U-sbirts * *jl 1 S Foil | Reg: 3 for 1.351 1 9 eg a | crew neck dot- L* rwi I ton knit s White. 2-3-4-6 6x.^£ovingsl FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY! EVERY DEPARTMENT FILLED WITH GREAT SPECIALS FOR HOME AND FAMILY Bovo No 00.! Rig. 8.N MEN’S SUCKS Rags 2.N wash ’a wear BOYS’ SLACKS 2 styles. Sanforized! • C ■■ Perfect for schooll M *^K% 6-20 reg„ 6-16 slim.fc %J 3.00 , Wash — drip dry 'n wear cotton. Sanforised* for guaranteed fit. Ivy ‘ j belt loop style. Color fast black, 'f olive, tan, brown. 29-42 in group. Babatts, tsddlsn' 2.99 vFALL DRESSES Sotidfl Plaidsl Oain-N $ P ♦y trmis! Many 9tylosl / hr 9-12-18 mos. 1-3 yrs. ■■ Mf Mon’s IDsN quilt oyloo SKI JACKETS Reversible jackets, m Dacron* polyester fHI. W 1 n Hoed. S-M-L-XL. 1 fell . *Rog. T.M. DuPont Corp. ■ JW Sovo! Toddler boys’ 2.99 SUCK SETS Many fobricsl Boxer ft CP or beltedl Many col- J fir ors. Buy a pair! 2-4. ■■ w Mm’s 3.98 twbt Ml WORK FARTS Sanforised* cotton lun- ^ .. nel loops, daap pock- . $ ■ ■ ets: Colors. Sises 29-50. Work Clothes Dept. MM Hsplsr 2.99 IttN. BOYS' SLMtS 2*5 A huge selection of fabrics, styles arid colors! Elastic ba;k for belter fM 3-7. Come in today and savel SiYt! Boys’ 3.99 OrioR SWEATERS Washable Orion* aery- m lie in S-button stylo. gQ Stripes, solids. 6-12. ‘Reg. TM. DuPont Corp. • MM Come Marly for dig selection nag savings! Rag. I.N ROYS’SUBURBAN COAT SALE Warm, hi*stylo coats of reprocessed wool/nylon- melton, rayon quilt lining, wool interlining. Puli Dynel* -«nodacrylic shawl collar, MM flap pockets. Colors..Made to lastl Yours at big savings. 8-16. -f MM Harry! 5.99 Is 12J9 valies si fabikas savings! DRESS CLEARANCE Hundreds of styles and fabrics! Buy to wear now arid next Jim $ ■* year, tool Assorted solids, colorful printsl Jr., petite, misses', JA art naif sites, in groupl Come early for the best selectionl MM MM Wow! Famom noma I.N FALL BLOUSES Cottonl Roll sleeve, r a t a II ere d. Solids, J tor *|1 stripes, prints. 30-38. ZH 1.97 as. Sale! Misses’ reg. 3.N WOOL SLACKS Sovo 1.991 Sid# zipper, MMM tailored for perfect fit. ■ M ■ Dark tones, 8 to 16 ^ Better summer haodbags CLEARANCE $2 *$3 Imported, straws! Imitation-leather plastic! Whitel Bonel Fashion colors! Yours at Dollar Day savingsl Pita US. ton,'* Misws' 2.99 1. 3.99 FALL SKIRTS • Here's value! A big 'se- Pdb lection of 9tyles, fabrics, * M , colorsl Sites 10-18. School sot savings! 1.00 NEW BLOUSES Cotton Dacron* rfk polyester. Solids in J fsr^Jl prints. '3-6x, 7-14. *■ . “ Girls’ teg.2.25 whit* LINGERIE All easy care fabrics! RdU Slips, petticoats. Bouf- * M . font, straight. 4 to 14. . Pre-school special! 3.N GIRLS’SKIRTS Dacron* polyester/ A earn cotton in solids, ‘ Xtsr*/ plaids. 3-6x, 7-14. " ■ Salt! Girls’ 3.9B la 4.99 FALL JACKETS .. Lightweight! Big value! 8 Solids, plaids. Girls' « M sites 4, tQ 14'in group. Isms I4x la grtiy ’ . w Infants’ 1.3# crib size BLANKETS Cotton. 36x50*. Cel- f} ors, nursery prints. M tsr * Jl Buy several today. *B “ Oleeranee sale! 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Savingu ■■ ^ REG. 5.99 BEDSPREAD SALE Cheese-from our entire stock of 5.99 spreadsl Heavy weight cot- g ton tuhingl Fancy everlayl Ever popular heirloom style! Re-decorote oyory bedroom in the house at whopping big savingsl MM Mrr*s rsf. 1.99 satiSR SPORTSHIRTS 2-2 50 Short sleeved shirt* in . one and two packet styles. Assort-ad plaids. S-M in the group. Rays’ Ml zip-sat RAINCOATS 8.00 Ideal year around water repellent coat. Black, olive or tan. Zip Outlining. 6 to 18. Tats’ ’a firls’ 2.99 fall DRESS SALE 2-*5 Cotton back-to-school dresses in the latest styles. Solids, plaids in group. 3-6x, 7-14. Rig. 1.99 SRRiRisr cool LINGERIE 2-*3 Slips, gowns, petticoats, pajamas. White, pastelsin easy-cere fabrics. 32-40, S-M.-L Missss’ 2.994.99 SWEATERS 2.00 Slip-ons or cardigan styles in flat or bulky knits. Many fashion colors. Sties 36-40. "xl Trans-uassn special COTTONS 2-7 Your choice from a wide selection of nOw thru fall styles. Siies 12-20, 14V4-2414, 46-52. m Rsf. 5.99 tsitRrsd print DRAPERIES 5.00 look! 48" wide, 84" longl Assorted fabrics , in a host of eolorful prints. Savel '■ OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday' DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS ■• . . .v'l-«f*‘;;v;■ 'v-'i."'* ■’ "■nwld£ - ‘ ; " ' *‘ ' • •' ■ . A—8 :.. . ./•.••■• 1 • THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST «, 1M4 “TT*-"" ." ■■’•,'•—Sr-----: '•'•1 ---------n 1-----—, Jrm'\-----s—. • —T — ----r- ;------- News From Around the World iM kl •: S ■ §i; Nope Is Abandoned tor Five Missing in Fre CHAMPAGNOLE, France (AP) - Hope Was abandoned today for fir* men still missing deep in the Mt Rivel limestone Mayor Andre Socle told newsmen “Ftor us Mt. Rivel is now a mount of tragedy7’ Three different attempts to reach tiie missing men from the side and above ended in faihlre, or wen abandoned. Two small vertical sounding drills continued to pierce the mountain In the hope of finding some trace of a track containing one of the men entombed by a cave-in It days ago. But officials said it was top late to pull anyone out alive. the huge underground labyrinth on July 27. Nine were rescued unhurt Tuesday. NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) Greek and Turkish Cypriots fought a two-hour gun battle Wednesday night in downtown Nicosia. One Greek Cypriot fighter was killed and four others- injured, U.N. observers* said. It was the heaviest street fighting since December, when the civil war erupted. A U.N. spokesman said there were no reports of Turkish casualties'^ BOMBAY, India (AP) -Three more people have been killed and S3 wounded in food LAST CALL FOR BIG SAVINGS ON SUMMER SUES notry miss out Yankee Slashes Shoe Prices THONGS 5 19' SPECIAL GUYS Mod* in JJ.S.A. CHILD'S TENNIS SIZES 5-1 a / High or Low Youthi'-Men't-Boys' price riots at Ahmedabad, capital of Gujarat State in western Officials said police fired oh a mob of 0,000 demonstrating against spiraling food prices. Earlier in the day demonstrators beat a policeman to death. TEL AVIV, .Israel (AP) - An Israeli soldier was reported killed and another missing after a one-hour border clash early today between an Israeli patrol and a Syrian detachment. An Israeli military spokesman said a patrol making a routine border inspection crossed by] memory of Hiroshima’s nucleari Some MO,000 persons died hi mistake into Syrian territory. dead as this rebuilt city of half the attack when an American . ** I a million people marked the plane dropped the bond) over HIROSHIMA, Japan (AP) — 119th anniversary of the U.S. the center of the dty on Aug. t, Residents laid wrepths today in I atomic botyb attack, 11045._______ *! Perform Surgery Without Rare Blood MUSKEQON (AP) — Six-teen-montindd Paul Raney was reported “doing real good” at Hackley Hospital today despite lung surgery performed without a blood transfusion which doctors had hoped to administer. Blood, a rare I negative type known to be available from only 10 persons in the country, was flown here from Jamestown, N.D.,* for the planned transfusion. But it was found to be noncompatible with Paul's. The surgery was performed Wednesday. The ran blood was taken from John Fidge, 44, of Alfred, N.D., whose was the only one among the 10 known I negative types that appeared to cross-match with toe child’s. But it was found after arrival tost the two bloods were noncompatible and surgeons went ahead without a transfusion. Delegates from 40 foreign nations to the SodaUst-eponspred ban-the-bomb conference attended toe memorial services. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) - Britain told toe UJf. Security CoiincU it is willing to discuss Soviet proposals for establishment of a permanent UJf. peacekeeping force. But toe British said a primary consideration must be agreement on “equitable sharing of the costs.” viet Union to pqy its 956-million \ assessment for pest peace-keep- ' ing operations. The Soviet Union proposed that a permanent peace-keeping force be responsible to the Security Couhdl, where it has a -veto, and that the personnel and commarid structure include representatives of toe Communist, Western and nonaligned nations. The United States has not given Us reply but has let tt be known that it would like, the So- DONT SCRATCH THAT ITCH! IN JUST IS MINUTES. rritVvrrrTrnTYirnTTnTrrrrrrmTrTrrrrrrrrw^^ TrrrrrrUTrrrrrrrrrrrrrTyrrriTnrrrirTTTrnnnrrrr 4 COMPLETE FLOORS OF HOME FURNISHINGS - . Elevator Service to All Floors AT MORI REASONABLE PRICES S. 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Shop early for these excellent values.* illustrated also sole priced for this event. . * n “you must be satisfied—this" ive guarantee” Phone FE 2-423J FREE PARKING WHILE SHOPPING AT WARDS - BRING limiitiiimtimiiH y r“E I Saginaw St. downtown PONTIAC ; umtttmn^umjjj^ • V*T vv •• :Jl i r ^;v^- ;^V . THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1964 ..;A=±. '' Tonite, Fri. and Sat. 9A:M. Until 9t*.M. SAVE *30! NO MONEY DOfN MW On SeanEuy Puyment Plan x v • Heat exchanger ii guarantee/10 year* • Anti-rust treated cabinet,'attractive finish A high-quality furnace at this amazing low pHu! 75,000 BTU capacity. Honeywell ps valve with 100% cutoff for your protection. Rubber-cushioned blower motor. 100,000 BTlf capacity,regular$ 159.... ... .M2^ GUARANTEE, Free * repair."er replace-awiiL* nt-nur. option, it. WeMiifaiarlQs^ la 1 year af aale. Pay regular eerrent price Mr| : neat 9 . year*, subtracting ; 1/ltth.of the price far ! each nsmhllag .fall year ! on psraiase. After fbst Craftsman 22-inch, Rotary Mowfec. Reg. $79.99 3-H.P.. 4-cycle engine. No-pull •tartSr. Aluminum boosing. 9 catting heights H to 3Win. . _ - — -CALL FE 5-4171 OR- - - -;MAIL THIS COUPON TO SEARS | '* BATTERY GUARANTEE If defective sad will' net bold a charge: (1) FREE REPLACEMENT within 90 days. (I) After 90 days, we will replace battery, charging only for the period of .ownership. | Charge is based on regular price lost- trade-in. at time of retain, prb-rated ROEBUCK AND CO. You Can Count on Us... Quality Costs No More at Sears Yes. We Invite You to Compare Quality, Features Friers, (guarantee and Service . . . Then Buy At Sears OPKN UNTIL 9 TONITK "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE Solve Dry-Air Problems with Power Humidifiers Cheek Sears Low Price! . With humidietatcontrol lay NO MONEY DOWN on Scare Easy Payment Plan Bring springtime freshness to rooms,-protect furniture from cracking, help cut fuel costs! Humidifier adds up to 14 gallons a day.Essy to install in furnace system. With copper tubing. Save! ' - New Fabric Extends Tent Life! llxll-foot Sleeps 4^omfortably^ 8988- NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan . DuPontV^EW Spunbonded Polyester fabric gives you new longer lasting qualities water repellency, rot, mildew, fade resistance and strength retention. Anodised aluminum frame. Nylon screened door, windows plus a sewn-in floor seals out insects. •Tent Fly Extra ' ' Sporting Ooodt, Perry Btmt. 30-gallon *600” Series Gas Water Heaters Check Sears low price 53,000 BTU capacity 6988‘ **‘Take-With*» NO. MONEY DOWN on Sear* Easy Payment Plan “Flame .with a 'brain** adjusts .to either '32,000 or • 53,000 BTU input, depending on your hot water -needs.- Heats up to 44.5 S gallons of water 100°F in one hour. New tunnel' tyjpe draft diverter for a trim appearance.. 40-Gal. Size ..... 79.88* Plnmking Dept., Perry Btmt. Never Before At This Low Price! *139 Gas Space-Saver Furnaces INSTALL Through Sean- I Telephone.........................................JJ, I We’ll handle allthe details.'Call FE 5-4171 — ^ — ^ ^ J ALLSTATE Heavy-Duty Motor Oil in fill*****: BATTERY SALE 24-Mo. Guarantee, 12-Volt IWatMf #350 Fits: *55-*64 Chev., Pontiact 1AU *56-’64Dodge,Plym., Rambler............ AOmcb. > HavtMr ' #38 That 1956 to 1964 Ford aad Mercury 1144 SAE P#wer Rating on every betteryT......... y*' 30-Mo. Guarantee, l^Volt ' *Nm #31 Fitai *55-*64 Chev,, Pontiac; *56-*64 Dodge, Plym., Rambler.... #16 Fits; 19S6 to 1964 Ford and Mercury. Hurry, sale ends Saturday. All-pa rpose Grease Guns 10-qt. Cans' Reg. $2.99 Reg. $4.98 * 20-in. Self-Cleaning Rotary, Catcher , Extra blade cleans housing — better air Reg. $89.99 flow, efficient catting. 3-H.P. Craftsman mQ qq engine.Key-lockno-pull starter.- t Hardware Dept., Main Basement Reel Power Mowers 18-Inch ■ 21-Inch 89” 99”. X., $99.99 nth tiff.99 Stt-HP* 4-cycle engine bee recoil starter. Six blades. 2i$ J (y Charge It Doable Detergent aad Super-additives clean as they lubricate — control acid, rast, sludge. Meets, exceeds auto manufacturer’s maximum severity lest*. Buy now—save! Bulk Oil (In Your Container) Reg.' 24c.qt. 18e $1.99 6-Qt. Kit.... 1.66 SAVE *51 Sears 7.25-HP Tractors With Recoil Starter Regularly at $499.00! . Takes all attachmenta *448 With Elqg. Sun, Reg. $579............. $519 Engineered for year-round use. Powerful 7.25-HP Briggs and Stratton engine has “Easy Spin Start.** Multi-Speed Torque Selector for on-the-go changes. $99.99 Steel Lawn Building, 5x7*.... .1.89.99 Fencing Ptgt, Perry St. Basemen? Sale! Custom. TraUer Hitches' Reg.$?.98 . 8“ ciwra.lt Heavyweight steel bar and ball.. All o.isssiary mounting braekeu ere included. Harry Galvanized Guttering 9F Regular $1.39. 4’’ “K” Typo Clear Vinyl Twin Front Car Mats toady, handsome clear vinyl protects 'V*8- $5-19 original, beauty of sule nSrpstlug Fils Ml : O 99 cara.Dadpedfarsaiuuithdce»flcorwclIs. . all 84.19 WMa$e.. .. i , , 1,9? Charge It 10* Length Check the condition of your guttering now. Replace , worn-out, rusted, leaking' eavestrough, rainpipe and ‘ accessories. 28-ga. “K”-type guttering now, 91c! Aluminum and Painted Gptterftig Available Pudding if of r-f nf r.. Pir—r ft fftirnrif 1 w m S: % > / ’■Wee "out SEARS A^IO THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST «, 1^64 News Briefs From Washington Money Bill to Finance^26 Federal Agencies Clears Senate WASHINGTON (AP) — The second largest annual money bill, a 113.5-billion appropriation to finance 26 federal agendas, ha* cleared the Senate and gone to (be House carrying $5 3 billion for the National Aeronautics and Specs Administration. All efforts to cut the agencies’ funds were rejected during Senate consideration Wednesday. . ♦ , * . The House actually acted on the appropriation first, but knocked out the funds for the space agency because Congress had not completed approval of a separate space authorization. A conference committee of both chambers is expected to adjust the differences end send the measure to the President. Only the $47-biIlion defense appropriation carries I taoney. WASHINGTON (AP) -P dent Johnsoo hasn’t said officially that he’d like to be nominated lor president, but Democratic National Chairman John M. Bailey — like everyone — Is so sure, he’s announced who will do the honors at the Democratic National Convention in Atlantic City. .w a • a ■ Govs. Edmund G. Brown of California and John Connally of Toms will be the co-nominators at the appropriate time, Aug. 26, Bailey— said Wednesday night. The length and number of seconding speeches have not yet been determined, he added. WASHINGTON (AP) — By an almost straight party-line vote bridge Collapse May Result in Tax Increase BIG RAPIDS (AP) - A city tax increase may be in store here as the result of top collapse last Week of a 50-year-old bridge across the Muskegon River. City Manager George Granger estimates “as much is,, a mill and a half” may be necessary to finance replacement of the structure which fed under the weight of a dairy truck loaded with 4,000 gallons of ice cream, w ★ W Driver Dale MacTavish, 46, of Cedar Springs, escaped Injury ht the mishap. Granger tokf the city commit sion a new bridge would cost up to $200,000, depending upon condition of midriver footings. of 5$ to 29, the Senate has accepted Plane Salinger as the Junior senator from„ California — at least temporarily. Republicans have challenged flw legality of the former White House press secretary’s appointment by Gov. Edmund G. Brown to complete the term of Sen. Clatr Ehgle, who died last Thursday. Engle was a Democrat, as are Brown and Sating- r r* ; • • a Republican George Murphy, who will oppose Salinger in the November election, filed suit in Doe Angeles to nullify the appointment. Aug. 17 was set for a hearing. Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen said Salinger is not a California voter and the state’s law requires anyone appointed to' a Senate vacancy to be a qualified elector. ENTERED RACE A native of San Francisco, Salinger lived in nearby Virginia in recent years. He quit his White House post last March 19 and went to California the next day to enter the Senate race. . * ★ * In the vote to seat toe onetime aide to President Johnson and the late President John F. Kennedy, California’s senior senator, Republican Thomas H. Kucbel, Jumped party traces and sided with the Democrats. So did Republican Sen. Milton] R. Young of North Dakota. WASHINGTON Iff - Nearly $2 billion has been distributed to benefits to soft coal miners and their families since toe United Mine Workers’ Welfare and Retirement FUnd was established in May 1946, said an annual report released today. * * W Pensions to miners 60 years of » and older accounted for aMhealth care for miners, pension I another $7S0 million, the trust i At toe dose of the fiscal year, I arson the pension roU$. The $» I in addition to Social Security ist $1 billion. Hospital andjers and their dependents cost I fund report said. | June 90, there wen 64,658 min-1 monthly pension they receive is I benefits. AUtrs sunn nsfim < gp nmy ggm DESIGNS SUNDAY l ie 9 OUR BIGGEST SHOE SALE IN 26 YEARS YOU WILL SAVE ; 50% to 75* on All Nationally Known Shoot for Men and Women DON’T MISS IT—BE HERE THURS^m and SAT. —ALL COLORS ' —ALL SIZES DIEM’S PONTIAC’S POPULAR SHOI STORE ! 87 N, In Seginow St. You Can Count on Us...Quality Costa No More at Sears Sears ALLSTATE Guarantee PROTECTS YOU IN 2 WAYS ...And Each Way Is Extra Liberal 2 EXTRA ALLOWANCE in Addition to Our Regular Trade In Allowance If Tread Wears Out in -Guarantee Period £ Guaranteed Against All Failures for the Life of the Tread . . , NO LIMIT ON TIME OR MILEAGE. 2 Great ALLSTATE Tires Guardsman Supertred V \ • or- Silent Guardsman 6.50x13 Tubeless Blackwall Plus Fed. Tax and Old Tire 7.50x14 Tubeless Black *17* 8.00x14 Tubeless Black 119* TUBELESS WHITEWALLS 6.50x13 Tubeless White *18* 7-50x14 Tubeless White *20* 8.00x14 Tubeless White *22* 8.50x14 Tubeless White *24*' 9.00x14 Tubeless White *26* *pius Fed. Tax and Old Tire NQ CHOICE OF TREAD DESIGN ATTHESE PRICES! Two tuperb tread designs each giving 4-way skid protection .. . safe stops and start* every time. Both made with 4-ply nylon cord for longer wear. Firm, wide shoulder* and P-95 additive help prevent cornering squeal. High quality at the lew prices you expect at Seats!' Drive in tonight for yours—shop 'til 9 p.m. Auto Accmttories.Perrr St. Basement NO MONEY DOWN Buy Your Allstate Tires NOW and Pay Later—Use Seara Convenient payment Plan Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back : SEARS Downtown Ponliuc Phono FT, 5- 1171 master- YOUR CHOICE master- GE Celebrity 1C” Portable TV Sears Medium*. Duty Magnesium Extension Ladders ' neg. 27s® $32*50 “ • 16-ft. - Charge It Lightweight end easy to lots. Has automatic spring locks, robberfeet, serrated flat steps. Includes rope and pul)ey. Shop, ’til 9 p.m.! * ? 20’, Reg. $39.50 33.88 24’, Reg. $48.50 41.88 Other Siaea op to 464*1. Redneed!. The “Right” Decorator Color for your.Home , Hundreds of Take* Home Color Chips FREE They’re here ... beautiful 1964 colors! Help your* self to the free chips. Select your color on the spot or at home,’then let vs custor&mix your paint on our Shade-O-Malic color machine. Stop in Ionite! THE PONTIAC PHKgS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, A—n 300,000 Chinese Soldiers Sdid to Be in N. Viet Border Area TAIPEI, Formosa III- Communist China sent about 200,000 troops to its border with North Viet Nam recently and now has an estimated 900,000 soldiers in the area, Nationalist Chinese r military sources reported today, day. Nationalist officials believe the troop movement and restrictions issued last June by Peking' on sea travel in the Hainan Strait were connected wt|h' the attacks by North yifctnaiheafe torpedo boats on U S. worships this week. The sources said the Communists also moved an air force division of more than 7# fighters to Haikow, on northern Hainan Island. Most of the planes were Seviethaftt MIG-17* and MIG15s, they said. Earlier, the. sources, said, at least six Red Chinese submarines were sent to Yulin,^a southern port on Hainan. They said 'the Chinese Communists flew in the fighters after constructing an air field for. Jet planes in Haikow. < . The sources believed the restriction on travel in the Hainan Strait was probably to prevent foreign ships from spying on the construction project. I'A Junior Editors Quiz About ANIMALS You Can Count on Us . .. Quality Costs No More at Sears Store Hours: 9 until 9 Monday, Thursday, Fri. and Satorday QUESTION: “Hippos" means horse, but why la it used in “hippopotamus?" ★ ★ ★ • ANSWER: “Hippos" is Greek for horse and “potamus" for river, together they mean river'horse. It does seem ridiculous to compare this ungainly creature ... one of the ugliest of animals, with the graceful horse, to which it is not closely related. Both belong t* the “ugulates," animals with horny beefs or hooflike nails. Bnt the horse, with one hoof fo a foot, belongs to the “odd-toed” ungulates, while the hippo with his 4 hooflike nails, is part of the “even-toed” group, like the pig. However, the hippo has very horselike ears, even if small, and his heaVy head with square muzzle has a certain grotesque resemblance to a hone’s head. Hippos love to die in water with only the ears and eyes showing. Seen like this, a hippo does resemble a horse, and the resemblance grows as he shows the top of his head while pulling himself up a river bank. Hite is no doubt the basis for the name “river hone." The huge she and extremely tough skin of the hippo tamus mean that these animals have few enemies They seem to enjoy their lives as they lie wallowing in the river water, .the best place to be to the hot, tropical t African country* which is the hippo’s home. ★ dr \ ★ P1 FOR YOU TO DO: Find out more about the ungulates, and make a list showing which belong to the even-toed group and which to the odd-toed group. Besides horses, pigs and | hippos, where do rhinos, tapirs, cattle, deer and sheep, fit'to? Foundation Disbanded Donates Last $96 Million* NEW YORK (AP)—The James Foundation announced it has given away its tost $96 million and will go out of existence Dec. 91. The fund was founded in the will of Arthur Charles James, who once owned a seventh of all the railroad mileage to the United States. He died la INI, leaving $21 million to the fund, which was to operate for 26 years unless its trustees ended if sosaer. The fund grew and grew. Over tiie years the fund has given away $42 million, in addition to toe $96,950,000 to the final grants. a . * ■ •* '.dr ' _ , The last gifts went to $2 institutions to amounts ranging-from $100,0(010 $6.5 million. SCHOOL DONATIONS Unko Theological Seminary of New York got the most. Harvard University received $4 million. Amherst College, the New York Children’s Aid Society, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art received $3.6 million each. a yAai •. Three million each went to Columbia University, Hampton Institute and Tile University. ' •^4 Clean-up is so fast and easy . . . simply wash tools, hands and splatters In ordinary tap Water. Needs no priming on painted surfaces in good condition . . . save time of applying undercoat. • "Bonding Paint for Exterior Surfaces Durable Epoxy Concrete Patch Ufs Gutter-Grip on Metal Gutters owat 21? 2-inch Varnish-Enamel Brushes Sears Pries Now Re*. »1.% 7, '*'*• Ckarf II Repair* cracks, holes in concrete surfaces. Buy now. ot sear* low price. Shop ’til 91 Use at . point base on mete guHers.' Prevents rust am keeps paint from peeling. Save Gives beauty and protection to porous masonry surfaces. Stops seepage. Asa’td colors. ith free of bruin mirks. Ta-pored 100% nylon bristles. The Chinese Reds lost June barred nil foreign warships from the strait and said advance notice of merchant ship movement to the waterway wtoe required. •7 ■ . . Meanwhile, UJ. military a thorities said no orders hv been‘issued placing more tot 2,000 American servicemen < Taiwan on spec ial alert. Master-Mixed Acrylic LATEX P4INT Either Interior or Exterior SAVE •!“! ReguMy*6« gallon .' ;.... / . 7,./, {j Charge It, Interior Flat Latex cover* any color In just 1-coat, even black! There’s no distasteful paintjramell when you apply it or when U dries. Dries beautifully flat in a remarkably fast 20 minutes. Cleanup’s a breeze, tool Hands, toolsv splatters Wash clean with soap and tap water. Choice of 23 colors... Latex Houae Paint, the ideal paint for all exterior /surfaces . .. and so easy to apply. Needs no priming on painted surfaces in good condition. Apply with a brush or roller even in damp weather err after a heavy rain. Resists mildew .discoloration. Mistering, peeling. Choose from 18 colors. PwM toplOMMl, Wsis tlaWMMl v Polyurethane Satin garnish Reg $2.98 9 ]** Charm I* Easy to use, durable, loo. Simulates the hand-rubbed finish of fine furniture. I'jidereoating for House Paints Reg. $5.49 4** Gal.. Craftsman 1/3-HP Complete Sprayer Kits 89S8 Regularly at $99.95 Piston-type sprayer NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan No extras to buy! Complete With sprayer, sprayer cart, air chuck, viscosimeter, massive 9xl2*fl. utility cloth, paint pail, lSO-ft. roll of masking tape and instruction booklet.'Outstanding buy! A "I- pf A—la Democratic Tradition THE F0NT1A<* PKEaS. THUH^DAY/ AUGU^T q, 1904 Tennessee Primary Is Today NASHVILLE, Term. JAP) -Tennessee Democrats, with a tradition of electing U.S.' Senators, and Republicans, who have carried die state In the last throe presidential elections, select two senatorial nominees each today. •k . O’ ♦ , Sen. Albert Gore seeks a third term, but his token campaign against three political unknowns has beat overshadowed by a fierce three-man Democratic fight for nomination to the old Estes Kefauver Senate seat. Gov. Frank Clement, Rep. Ross Bass and businessman M. >1 Bullard seek the two remaining years of the late senator’s term. ♦ ' * ★ Republicans, who have never elected a senator by popular vote, have their first statewide primary in recent history to select their nominee. ♦ ★ 4 County general elections are being held concurrently with the primaries, and two local races hi rural Fayette County will test the Negro’s voting strength. A Negro, the first to seek public office in Fayette since Reconstruction, is running for tax assessor and a white farmer with wide Negro support is a candidate for sheriff. Fayette County has a Mo-1 ratio of Negroes over whites. . | THE CHOICES For nomination for the Kefauver seat — now held through appointment by Herbert S. Walters,’ Morristown Democrat — Republicans will choose between Howard Baker Jr., son of the late congressman; former University of Tennesseeadministrator Charles Moffett and young Maryville attorney Hubert Patty. ★ ... 4 4 Dan H. Kuykendall of Memphis is unopposed for the GOP nomination to oppose Gore. In the other Senate rnce, both Clement and Bass are undefeat- ed for political Office. Clement I and is midway through his third was elected governor at 32,. term. Bass is winding up his youngest in Tennessee history, 110th year in Congress. Auto Accident Fdtal MIO 9*4, • 1M1 Chevrolet 4-Door,. seriall noir*“' gwwfoBd!»»fdT rymy*,ujfflujniJIig address being where the vehicle I* stored NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ■ y given at eeuWlc — w the White Lake 1 demonstration that involved dumping refuge In front of dty hall, and told a gronp of clergymen Monday that “as Christians we might have te when he sank a ju It was the first peaceful night since the rioting started Sunday,' and Negro youths were intent on keeping it that way. * * * Even .routine horseplay was I store.the communication that waif ’severdd Monday night when a delegation of clergymen, civil rights workers and neighborhood youths storined from the mayor’s office declaring “solve the nightstick.” This meeting produced agree-. Earlier Mayor Wwlaa met | ,,tb . committee at thaw ! a* law order and ceo-sad white clergymen to re- j (tanning “the use of unneces- ruled out for fear it wouid attract the attention of roving police and spark another night of violence. , ‘COOL IT!’ \ A good-na|ured ‘wrestling match between two teenrage youths halted abruptly when a civil rights worker ordered: “Cool it!” .' I sary force on the part of po-lice.” * * * ■ A four-hour meeting of clergymen at Christ the King Roman; Catholic Church followed to map j plans for rehabilitating the area. J High on the list are plans for | j an improved recreational pro-1 gram that would mean reopen-; ing community rooms that were j closed because of damage to] facilities and the inability of the j city to staff them. I Renewal Project Aided-]"**. “ ***' j y ■ • J “9-mile industrial” renewal pro- toptay-good-luck gesture to to- I "WASHINGTON (APlc-A grant | was announced Wednesday | sert a new coin under the fbre-; of $301,584 and a loan of $590,584 gT7he urban Renewal Admin- mast when it was stifled into that will enable St. Clair shores,1 istration. I place on a new sailing shfo. Another Side to Cuba Crisis Only History Will Judge Real Hero By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) - U* disclosure this week that a television reporter played an important role during the 1982 Cuban missile crisis has put me In a delicate position. The story broke right at coming what I was doing out in my backyard with a shovel and flashlight. NOT THE CASE Those who jumped to the conclusion that I was frantically trying to construct a fallout shelter may be surprised to learn that such was not the case at all. digging a hole in which to hide any secret memoranda that might be entrusted to me by “Mr. X,” the Soviet intelligence chief who saw fit to contact Seal! instead. And finally there is the matter of why I tried to charter an airplane to fly me to the Sandwich Islands. Appearances to the contrary, f was not acting in panic out of a desire for; self-preservation. I limply felt that I should be time my services might be needed as a go-between. * To the best of my recollection that was the extent of my participation in the crisis. Was I instrumental in preserving world peace? Only history can judge. 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Inch ««ry mu b. filled hi com-i limn ol n» or Mr and conctil. m4 mm at MQlnrtti of Wnmn »alidu«J by Wm.ro Ann Son r Company, in adver- ptnonnrl. Ku° 4: Cowan cloaaa Angaal M. 1964. rfr. ayiTnn. «4lklal j.Taata, If anr. ara' am IncInM in 1 kWa anilabl* in At gnaaa. S' haSJT" * “* m “ ANoc valid ufctfa prohibited br tar. , £ ____sd-cripp tread design! • Extra mileage, axtta safety with “Miracle Rubber(Polybuta-diene)! > a New improved 100% s.ytHts Du Ant nylon tire cocdl AT Adjestabla End Wrench Enflne Cleaner 33* T1 Reg. He Rog.44e Reg. 142 Rag. 1.19 Vinyl lawhrtiont S Oaar |W CSp HUkrataa plated! aka. Clou*. A r lengl Brewal eal J%"«4VI May 9»ea» Soval degrade, engine.! Ttigg* prices are good ie aH Weston Ante Company Meres 162 N. SAGINAW ST. Phone FEdoral 2-9253-R. I. Kinney, Manager Store Open MONDAY and FRIDAY Until 9 P M. , For Your Shopping Convenience No Money Down-Use Our HandyXharge T A—14 / THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST S lft64 Famous Marxist Head of Vietminh Is Chief U.S. Foe in Crisis. (EDITOR’S NOTK-Once a cabin boy, once a cook, ones, perhaps, a visitor to America. Note ho is ruler of North Viet Nam. But just what tort of person is Ho Chi Minh? In an ultimate portrait of both Ho and North Viet Nam, veteran reporter John Roderick examines those and other timely By JOHN RODERICK TOKYO (AP) - A shadowy but famous Marxist ruler in Southeast Asia suddenly has become the direct adversary of the United States, his torpedo boat nests the targets of American bombs. Straggly-bearded Ho Chi Minh, one-time cabin boy, cook and Soviet follower, is regarded by many in his Democratic Republic of (North) Viet Nam ' — and by quite a few in South Viet Nam — as his country’s greatest patriot, the undispted leader of Indochina’s war for Independent from France. Behind* his benign. exterior hides one of the most single-minded. skillful and ruthless OonanunMs. From his headquarters hi North Viet Nam, he leads a force in the south that calls iiseif revolutionary fighters of the National Liberation Front, better known as the Viet Cong (Vietnamese Communists). Its driving force is said to be about 35,000 men trained as guerrillas by Ho’s northern Communist regime.' These are the enemies of the expanded forces of American advisers to the Republic of South Viet Nam, which is' fighting to break the Communist stranglehold threatening its existence. INDOCHINA WAR OFFSPRING - The tyro Vietnamese republics III BLOOMFIELD Wtag Lake Ana , Charming SW - Farm colonial, a magnificent faaaily homo. Imagine an 11x19 family room MgklipaW by a meaahrn brick Hraplec* adjacent to a igicli*i paved (treat, schools, Olrmliudiam Pam Of-flea, Midwest phono. Plica le- $99,900. Coll Now 624-5678 Sleep like Log Larptt wlHaf Ctaraaal Canp. tablet Steps Stesuek Basle I Ifleetes antastftKW ■tlfoaa tablets raliavt sas dea to mm ALBEE'S SUMMER FESTIVAL 01 NEW NOME DESIGNS SUNDAY! to* that face each other acrosa the 17th ParSUgl are the troubled offspring of the Indochina war which Ho Chi Minh brought to an end in 1954. By crushing the flower of French colonial armies at Dien Bien Phu, Ho’s guerrilla army of 110,000 men that once totaled 700,000 men during the seven-year war. Ho expected to dictate terms to the defeated French, but French and Soviet pressure, forced him to postpone total control of Viet Nam in favor of a divided country. ♦ ♦ ★ 't* Five years later, convinced that unity could never be achieved on their terms, Ho’s Communists began the guerrilla campaign against the south, then led by Ngo Dinh Diem. * ■ ★ a Even before Ho’s torpedo boats attacked U.S. destroyers in the Gulf of Tonkin this week, there had been increasing talk in Asia and in tite United States of the possibility of American attacks on North Viet Nam as a means of baiting aid to the Communist guerrillas in the south. HO SCOOTED Ho previously had scoffed at this possibility. “How can they talk about marching to the north whan they cannot oven control areas in the immediate vicinity of Saigon? This is sheer stupidity,” he said in an interview in April. ♦ ♦ A . Despite his derision, Ho is probably deeply worried over the effects of an American-South Viet Nam strike at foe north or the possibility of open warfare between the north and the south. His anxieties are not over the damage which might be done to his almost nonexistent industry or to the remote possibility that bis armies might be defeated : by' those of foe south. He reserves his real fears for his giant neighbor, Communist CMna. > Should the Vietnamese mili- tary situation deteriorate, Red' China’s Mao' Tze-tung might well carry, out his repeated promises to come to the aid of North Viet Nam. HD, remembering Viet Nam's* history as vassal and satellite of the old Chinese Empire for 1,000 years, no doubt fears his polite Chinese friends even more than he does his1 anti- Cc NOT REAL NAME Though foe name of Ho Chi Minh is famous throughout the world, it Is not his real one. No one quite knows what this man of many aliases was called when he was born in Nghe An, in North Annam, in IBM. Son of a Vietnamese nationalist, be left Viet Nam in 1911 as a cabin boy aboard a French merchant ship, is said to have spent some time in foe United States, worked as an assistant to the great French cook Escoffier in London, and from Germany readied Paris, where he got a job retouching photographs. ★ a* a ’ * But his tastes were predominantly for politics and reading. Soon be joined the “League for the Rights of Man,’’ the French Socialist party, and met such French socialist leaders as Leon B|fim and Marcel Cachin. Known as Nguyen Ai Quoc, be spent much time in European jhils for his Socialist views. In 1919, with Cachin and others, he became a founding member of the French Communist party and wrote a book that soon be-, came famous, “French Colonization on Trial.’’ Smuggled into Indochina, it inflamed foe passions of young patriots and made Nguyen Ai Quoc a household name there. VISITS MOSCOW . He went to Moscow in 1933 as a delegate of the French Communist party to foe Peasant International and remained in the Soviets capital a year studying Communist techniques. His next stop was Canton, in China, where be was secretary to Michael Borodin, foe Soviet advisor to Sun Yat-sen’s emerg- ing Kuomintang. There he met ‘ ChOu En-lai and many Chinese Communists then collaborating with the Kuomintang in its drive to unify China. In Canton; Nguyen Ai Quoc formed an association of Vietnamese revolutionary youth, the forerunner of the Communist party yrhich he created in 1931 at Hong Kong. By that time, the Kuomintang and the Communists had quarreled, and Nguyen Ai Quoc had been forced to flee, first to Moscow, then to foe British colony. During World War II, the Allies in Chungking used the revolutionary movements In Indochina to gather intelligence and carry out sabotage against the Japanese. Nguyen Ai Quoc, known as a Communist, landed in jail in South China but he soon persuaded his'captor, Gov. Chang Fa-kwei, that his group could do a better job than the Nationalists. To get him out jail and supplied with the funds he needed from Chungking, Nguyen did a simple and easy thing: He changed his name to Ho Chi Minh, “Tile Enlightener.” A A v A No one in the Nationalist capital knew the name, so they took Giang Fa-kwei’s word’ that he was the, man for. the job'. UNDERGROUND SUPPLIES Thus, when World War II ended, Ho had- an underground army- supplied, equipped and encouraged by the United States and its Allies. He was able to enter Hanoi—no longer, on foe face of it, a Communist, since he had with shrewd forethought abolished the party months earlier. Ho knew that in foe struggle which would follow, he could lead Viet Nam not as q Communist but as a nathWmiiat HD kept up the fiction until 1951 when he formed the Lien Viet -(United National Front) in which the Lao Dong (Communist Workers’ party was to be the leading element'. AAA During the long years of war against the - French, Ho was cold-blooded in liquidating those who threatened his power or that of the Communists. At the time of victory in 1954 he was in absolute control. Then came the division of the country. ECONOMY POOR Today, 10 years later, the north is reported caught in the grip of economic hard times, with black marketing, corruption, food shortages, unemployment and low wages. ' A ' A... A ' That seems to to no accurate information Available on the size of the North Vietnamese military establishment, but the general view is that it has grown considerably since the victory of 1964. American intelligence sources fay the army numbers 350,000 men, the navy 1,000 and the air force,.300. At ■ A . A South Vietnamese sources say there may be as many as 500,-000 in the army. Nationalist. Chinese officials put the figure at closer to 300,000 or 350,000. The Chinese Nationalists say the regular complemented militiamen and the ages of Spangler Arlington Brugh Interviewed Film Star feels Pretty Good About BOYLE By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) -‘T seen them all come and go, and I’m still hanging around,” cheerfully remarked Spangler Arlington Brugh, the famous movie star, who will be 53 Wednesday. T feel pretty good about life.' There’s nothing1 much that bugs me. I’ve always successfully avoided anything that bored too much. “I’ve always just been e guy who tried to keep my ' nose dean, do my job and avoid conflict as much as possible. I’ve tried to do things that would make me happy and not hurt others. ONLY THING “The only thing I worry about is what’s my next picture going to to.’\ Tanned, blue-eyed and still strikingly handsome, Spangler Arlington Brugh can look'back on a career that has few if any parallels in filmdom. As a boy back in Beatrice, Neb., to wanted to- to a doctor like Ms father. As a youth he lugged a battered cello to California and hoped to become a But a talent scout saw him in a college (day and he went to work for MGM in 1934 at $35 a week. He stayed there 26 years, i And Spangler Arlington Brugh the longest period any top star did become a top star, has ever worked for any one He was mobbed by crowds of studio. I up to 5,000 people. A nevvsmaga- London Guides Fight Robots LONDON, (I) — A revolt Is on against automation in Windsor Castle, jhe ybwer of London and Henry VH’s palace at Hampton Coot' The rebels are members of the Guild of Guide-Lecturers, the bowler hat and umbrella brigade who show tourists around London’s ancient monuments. The object of their displeasure: “robot guides,” recorded commentaries with earphone* that the ministry of works wants to hire oat to the rubbernecks. Major Roy Battcock, the Guild’s chairman, complained: “We have been asked to sell vouchers for foe apparatus on coaches where we are acting as guides and have bqpn offered a commission on each sale. f ’IDEA DISTASTEFUL’ "The whole Idea Is distasteful and quite unbecoming to foe dignity of foe profession.” The ministry said foe robot scheme at present is need only in tie state apartments at Windsor, Queen Elisabeth’s premier palace aid glides are not allowed to lecture fas foe apartments anyway. But the guide-lecturers, most of them retired army officers, say the ministry plans to extend the scheme. They believe it Could put them out of business. “We are going to discuss the whole question of robot guiding at an emergency meeting soon,” said Battcock. side once described him as most admired matinee idol since the late Rudolph Valentino,” One poll in 193$ rated him as more popular than Clark Gable. His weekly salary climbed that year tp $3,000, his weekly fan mail to 7,000 letters. A list of threading ladies he played opposite makes a roll call of Hollywood’s most beauteous stars, past and present. In 30 years Spangler Arlington Brugh earned millions of dollars, appeared in nearly 70 films and starred to »television series. During all that tiipe he avoided public scandals, was wen-liked by his fellow workers — and never won an Academy Award, Today he and his second wife, actress Ursula Thiess, live quietly with their two young children on a 113-acre farm near Beverly Hills where they are raising 17 quarter horses," 52 hens and tyro roosters. “We’re not trying to, corner the poultry market,” "he said. “We do itte outdoor life, and we’re not very socially inclined. , “I’ve always considered acting a damn good job, and a good living. It has let me "lead the kind of fife I like,” ? m nk m usic! GRINNELL PIANOS are owned by more Michigan famiUoo than any other piano! The 'Rhapsody' spinet shown, has acoustically designed open louvres. In flvo finishes: cherry, mahogany, walnut early American maple, Frond-Provincial cherry. Priced from $695, bonds included. piano Gdnnell's Rents! - Purchase Plan allows you to rent anew piano. If you buy, all payments apply. main job is to maintain order. AIR FORCE According to the Nationalist Chinese, the air forte has as many as 5,000 men and 139 planes, including 58 MlGLS’s, six of them from Red China, 12 LA17 fighters and 3 TU4 bombers acquired from Peking last year. The Nationalist Chinese list; tiie navy’s strength at 87* small craft including 30 gunboats, four transports, a minesweeper, eightjoroedo boats and assorted olhr small vessels. A regiment of marines established to 1963 has 10 landing craft, 00 motorized boats and 25 other amphibious ships. U.S. intelligence believed'foe North Vietnamese had 11 PT boats and about 30 motor gunboats. » The Nationalist Chinese say some 2,000 Chinese Communist military experts are assigned to North Viet Nam to train the Viet Cong guerrillas. In addition, North Viet Nam, sends more than 1,000 military personnel to Red -China for training each year. UNEASY BALANCE In North Viet Nam today there is an uneasy balance between the pro-Chinese faction and the pro-Soviet headed by Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap, the victor of Dein Bien Phu who is minister of defense. Le Duan, JFK Probers Examine Curb DALLAS, Tex. (AP) - A chunk of Dallas street curbing has joined other evidence assembled by the JVarren Commission during its investigation of foe assassination of President John F. Kennedy. While FBI agents watched Wednesday, city workers used water-cooled saws to remove a section of Mato street curbing near the triple underpass. Investigators speculate that one bullet fired at President Kennedy from the Texas School Book Depository building passed over his car and struck the curb. v A motorist who watched the Kennedy motorcade told investigators he had felt a sting on his face and noticed a chip to the lurb. . Officers theorized he had been : by a sliver of a bullet or \ tit the concrete Poona Exec Succumbs PEORIA, m. (AP) - Murray M. Baker, a native of Alton, HI., and a financier and philanthropist credited with bringing Peoria’s two largest industries to the city, died Wednesday at the age of 92. \ party secretary-general,' I dose friend and protege of Ho’s and thus keeps the old man’s influence .alive and constantly felt. He and Premier Pham Van Dong are regarded by most observers as more favorable to the Soviets than to the Chinese. He has maintained this precarious balancing act not only domestically but to foe world Communist movement as well. In the early days of the Soviet-Chtoeae quarrel be sought frantically to patch things up, recognizing that he needed the assistance of both countries for his industrial program. a ★ * There are signs, however, that the pressures from Peking are increasing and that even the pro-Soviets are beginning to bend toward their next door neighbor and its hard line. Bni Ho refuses to corog^ down in either side in the ChMb^oviet quarrel. “If South Viet Nam and its U.S. lackeys insist on attacking the Democratic Republic of Viet Nam, we dull not sit idly by with folded hands,”, the Chinese warn. And they add: “We always keep our word!” OMINOUS if Is one of the ironies of pow- er politics, particularly of foe Communist variety, that three words may ring just as ominously to the finely lobed ears the old reyoiutionary in Hanoi as they do to those of his enemies. Which came first: the go or Gbnlon’s Gin? Golf dates back to the 1 Jth Century when t a ball stuffed with feathers was used. In , 1848 the "guttie"—a hard, moulded ball that was the direct forerunner of our modern gdlf ball — was introduced in Britain. InLondon, 79 years before this innovation, Alexander Gordon perfected his formula for a special gin. Today, golfers the world over relax at the Nineteenth Hole and enjoy die delicate flavour and distinc-tive dryness of Gordon’s Gin. Some claim that Gordon's offers con* . siderable consolation as they total their score. No wonder it's the big* geit seller in England, America, the world! $244 Mat H emstm IF II. I. A DISTILLED LONOON DfiY GIN. K)0% MEUTRM. WtttTt 0ISTIUE0 RON MMX 90 Ft OOF. (MOON'S MY CMOS, ITI, IIKKN. U Pontiac ^Aoll—Phone 682-0422 Downtown Pontiac—27 5. Saginaw—FE 3-7168 PLASTIC WAI New, plastic tile at a low price, i to do either tub areas or TUB AREA o 40 $0. Ft. Til* • 1 Gal. Mastic * 10 Ft. Co# • 1 Spiwodar 10 ft. Strip* • 1 Cl**n*r V LL TILE ?« In unit packages, 1 « full baths. A FULL RATH AREA • 70 S*. Ft. Til* • 1 Cl*an*r • 20 Ft. Cap. - • 1 Spraodar * O R95 • 20 Ft. Strip# • 10 Ft. Bat* | «# • 2-Gal. Mastic W VINYL ROBBER TILE • MM Vinyl and Rubbnr 4 Oft • AH Calais ■ m • O-kyW | V U. CERAMIC FLOOR TILE • Pantiansnt'floor AJBa and wall til. |JK1C • Comm. (rod. **■ VINYL SANDRAN 'SSsL $149 •M**yCal*n ■ * ARMSTRONG INLAID TILE by 9- 0C | 9” by 9” SOLID VINYL'TILE Reg. 21c 1 EC 1 First Quality | FORMICA COUNTER TOP Discontinued 4ft n£ sq. Patterns 29 . ft. ■ Plastic Finish LINOLEUM RUQS 1 9* by 12' Shop Mon., Thurs. and Fri. 9 till 9 Tuts., Wad. and Sat. 9 till S! fsss'ta 2255 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. FLOOR SHOP Hoover Spin Washer I Dryer HOOVER Vacuum Sweepers -From $34M FREEZERS MID*5 to See Thu, MSS DOWNCAST—Wives and daughters of crew-. men are downcast as aircraft' carrier U.S.-7th Fleet in the Far East. The departure Ranger slides out of her berth at Alamada was described as routine, despite the present Naval Air Station yesterday en route to the Viet Nam crisis. Navy Ships Leave Mr fat East Grim Wives Watch as Husbands Sail SAN DIEGO, CaHf. Wt-Few were the faces that weren’t tear-stained or grim as a knot of Navy wives watched the U ships of Cruiser-Flotilla ii mu'i for the troubled waters of the western Pacific. “It’s i bad feeling,” said Mri. Thomas Pate, whose husband, a boatswain’s mate second class, was one of the 4,000-man department yesterday to join the Seventh Fleet. He departure, scheduled mouths ago, would have been routine last week, but a battle between UA and North Viet Nam forces in the Gulf of Tonkin yesterday cast a Shadow ever the leave-taking. “Anything can happen over there," said Mrs. Wallace Jones, wife of a gunnery officer aboard Pate’s ship, the destroyer USS ‘It’s ominous.” Mrs. Jones brought two sons tp the docks to Say goodbye to their fathers Mrs. Pate stood with her four children sis her husband boarded the Parsons. CUBA CRISIS . “I feel exacULas I did when my husband wilClIled to sea in the Cuban crisis,” Mrs. Pate said. « ' “Who knows What will happen before they get back? It gets worse and worse.” Other ships leaving in Flotilla U, were the guided missile JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED -HIGHEST PRICES PAID— We Pick Vy > FE 2-0200 cruiser Columbus; destroyers' Morton, Bausell, Richard B. An-, derson, Agerhoim, Porterfield, Wedderburn, Richard S. Edwards and Hopewell; guided missile frigate Counts and guided missile destroyer McCormick. oryatationed in San Diego a wuy ‘ Sailor: for sea nifty know they can expect regular six-month cruises in the Far East. Youth Killad in Crash EATON RAPIDS (AP)-Rob-ert Young, It, of'Dimondale was fatally injured Wednesday night when the car in which he was riding collided with another at an M-W intersection Mine miles north of Eaton Rapids. HJSLIt AUCTION Oq Aim. It, MM atjjbU a.m. it 1M S. Waihinflton, Oxford, MiA., • 1*5* Ford, ttrlal number MdFTlfMJf, WIN «• wM at Public Auction for cash to ttw htnhast bidder. Car matt t» inapectad at above PUBLIC AUCTION On Aimiet 11, MM at fiat a.m, at N. Park ilvd., Laka Orion, M§Ca l— CtwvrelaL eertal_ number ICMyilMM. * hlghert bli at above ad emdala. Michigan, re the vablcla T» at dad. Aufuit t and 7, MM hStop In I FToday ON ALL 1964 MERCHANDISE-FOR THE SWEETEST PERL »EE SWEETS Automatic WISHER and DRYER *299“ Lew, lew Prtee This new HOI VICTOR, FULL PICTURE NKW VISTA TV RCA VICTOR COLOR TV MR SAME DAY TV SERVICE CALL in - WE SIRVMgWIUT WE SELL! 90 Days discount Same mm U 49 p* As Cash RADIO and APPLIANCf, Inc. always 422 W. Huron ||334-5677 . Open Monday and Friday nights 3 DAYS ONLY! STARTING TODAY! FINAL SUMMER 1,000 prs. of SLACKS \m Values to *16.95 NOW 3 or *14.99 (*5.89 pair) That prk« is no typographical error. Wo aro raduc-ing our Dacron 6 wool and Dacron-blond summer slacks to a fraction of their original price. This is your biggest (and last) chance to save. Big selection, too: All sigos from 29 to 44 waist.., plain fronts and ploated . . . bolt-loop bnd beltless stylos with adjustable waist. All popular shadas, many with roadyto-woar cuffs. Hurryl First coma, first served. CUFF ALTERATIONS FREE! a part ol Pontiac since 1931 SMUN’S STORES FOR MEN AND BOYS Use One of Osmun’s Individualized Charge Plans 1EL-MM STORE ONLY * Thurs., Fri., Sat. ’til .9 \ * THE PONTIAC PRESS, TltURStilVY; AUGUST 6^ 1964 7 Gold wo ter, Miller Schedule Another Meeting Tomorrow ^ £ BarPyl . WASHINGTON (It — Republican presidential nominee Barry Goldwater renewed his drive for party unity today at a .ciosdd-door session with Republican vate breakfast were at hand. * GoldwateT’s press secretary, A)l#‘ier “"N wltfc M* Tony Smith, said most of the water ami Us vice preshHattel 100 legislators invited to the pri-1 running mate, Rep. William Miller ef New York, to scheduled tomorrow for ether GOP Congress members. The 21? Republican ’members of Congress — 178 representatives and 34 senators — were invited in two groups to hear the party’s nominees and ask them questions: Yt % 1 w . New York's two Republican senators, who have said- they cannot; at least for the present, support Goldwater, .both were epected to attend. A spokesman said Sen. Jacob K. Javits had accepted an invi- j tation to attend today’s session. An aide to 'Sen. Kenneth JB. Keating said he expected to be band for Friday’s meeting. Just back from a week s vacation in California, Goldwater kept to himself Wednesday. Aides said he spent the day at. his Washington apartment. Today’s agenda takes him back to the Senate and the whirl of presidential'politics. * * . For - one thing, aides said Goldwater is due to move Into a new office prepared for him at the Republican National Committee, the operations center for | his campaign planning ‘ And he plans to be on the Senate floor for the vote on a resolution backing President Johnson’s* stand In the crisis touched off when North Vietnamese patrol boats staged two raids on UA. destroyers ip international waters. Goldwater Tuesday night declared his support for Johnson's decision to wage retaliatory air strikes against ' Communist bases and patrol bouts. A spokesman indicated Gq|d-water will vote for the resolution.. PUBLIC SALE „ J:Sa a.m. an Avevtt to. IOM. a 1*03 Chevrolet Impalt Snort Coupa, aerial ~lber 31A4F1530I5, will ba MM at putt-Ml* pt am Woodward, Ferndale. hTrtared ! C Woodward, Ferndala, I •' » bolno wharo tha lav ba insptetod ---MEMO TO MEN AND WOMEN"""" JOB HUNTING? □^^INTERNATIONAL Ng TK7PEHOONNEL OEWVICt We represent an unlimited number of local, and national firms, seeking qualified applicants m ail fields of employment. Starting salaries for these positions range from 53,000 to $ 1 Si-000. If you are interested in.investigating these opportunities —\! THB PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1964 White Pupils Get Tax Funds for Segregated FARMVILLE, Va. (It — After a highly organized, all-night operation, Uiie white children of Prince Edward County have been given tax fund* to help provide p r i v a t e,Segregated schooling this fall. The public schools of the county, closed since 1959 to avoid court-ordered integration, are scheduled to reopen this fall, but apparently with few if any white pupils. The county’s governing body the new QUICK-CLEAN OVEN by ’fttytpmnjb An Electric Raise With TEFL0R®-C0ATED Slide-Out Oveu Walls! an unscheduled meeting Tuesday night, voted to authorize the use of $181,000 in county funds so the county’s white school children could attend ' schools of their choice. Parents were notified about midnight * that the funds would be available, and applications were filled out during the early Freedom Dems Open Convention JACKSON, Miss. (AP) - The convention of the Freedom Democratic party, a predominately Negro group backed by civil rights organizations, was scheduled to open today in FASTEST, EASIEST, MOST ECONOMICAL WAY TO CLEAN AN OVfN EVER INVENTED! The walls' and’ floor' of this oven slide out for no strain, stand-up cleaning. And tho walls ore coated'* with non-stick DuPont Teflon, so even stuck on spatters wash off at the sink with soap' and water. , title of Miss America. The governor is a candidate for reelection. Jhe spacecraft proved a winner when H carried astronaut L. Gordon Cooper around the earth 22 times last year. It is on display in front of the State Capitol. CONTESTANTS MEET WINNER - Miss Mgan, Sally Jane Noble of East Lansing, I Gov. Romney, a'pair of contestants, met inner yesterday — the Faith 7 space cap-i. Miss Noble soon will compete for the • FLUORESCENT BACKGROUND LIGHT • OVIN CLOCK WITH SEPARATE TIMER • TIMED APPLIANCE OUTLET • RIMMED NO-DRIP COOKTOP • PATTERNED OVEN WINDOW • PLUS MANY OTHER FEATURES Bill Petrusha&Sons FAMOUS NAME APPUANCB Tel-Huron Shopping Conlor FE 2-0666 The group, which has not secured recognition by the national party and which has been ignored by the state organization, says it will send s delegation to the Democratic convention to challenge the regular Democratic party for the right to Mis- cheating on his reports to give poor families lower meter involved LI million gallons. It was discovered that a Robin Hood meter reader bad been WESLACO, Tex. (UPI) — Either the Weslaco water system has a king-size leak or someone is stealing 22 million 'Ready Operators Not So Ready Now 3 COMPLETE ROOMS By DR. WILLIAM BRADY A Western reader writes: "It juft makes me sick to see this picture in pur paper yesterday—that grinning mother in the background looks as though shf were really doing something dever. There was no obituary notice in the paper today, so apparently all the children survived the atrocity. "When our sen, now almost vice, and if Jnst one child’s life lg saved, it’ll be worth-. ttJ”' (Mrs. R. S. L.). The child’s tonsils may have become smaller In the past three years. Most young children have large tonsils—a stats which indicates, I think, that the child has a fair degree of natural immunity against the respiratory infections. Please notice I do not say “resistance.” And immunity is a specific State—for instance, a child or an adult may have a fair degree of immunity against diphtheria and little or none against' staphylococcus or streptococcus or pneumonococcus infections. As the child reaches school age, he or she, under favorable circumstances, will have acquired a considerable degree of immunity against the C R I (Common Respiratory Infections)— “colds” to ignoramuses and stinkers—and the tonsils will be a good deal.smaller. By “favorable circumstflices,” I mean the chance to enjoy outdoor life—which varies with the level of intelligence of the parents- V the parents are obsessed by fear of cold, damp, d r a f t s, insufficient clothing, ither, wet City Manager Cedi Massey was equally puzzled. He doubted that anyone was stealing. . the water because “nobody pould steal 90 million gallons.” OnMX FIGURES Trie mystery popped up when\someone cheeked the figureswt the water works and In Early American Motif Sofa and chair hav# foam zip-pered cushions, arm caps, semidetached foam backs in authentic wing bock styling. Colorful, durable fabrics. Maple finish cocktail table, 2 and tables .and 2 colonial table lamps complete the grouping. having ear truoble. Ear-aches which caused him to cry all night Nothing quieted him except recking him and he’d go to sleep in my arms, bat as sa« as I put him down he’d wake aad stmt crying. “Our doctor lances the ear tor ear-ache—he lanced the baby’s ear about once a month and it seemed to relieve pressure so that the baby had no more ear-ache, for a while. “When the baby was nearly 3 years old, the doctor insisted nb tonsils and adenoids must cohto out, because of the ear- SHE’S TMANKFUL “But I gagged my feet—and how thankfuM am I did. As I said, he is auhost 6 now, and Tac the past tmwe years he hasnT Hbad a single ear-ache. Periodically I take ntmto the doctor for examination. and the doctor has never since lqen-tioned bis needing his toraib out. So I wonder just how inP portant it was then. A mooting wan called to deal with the problem, because hi dry Texas, water is • precious commodity. The* only suggestion was one by Mayor Joe Stephens, who said “Maybe we should get^a divining rod.” SIMILAR PROBLEM Last October the city had a similar problem, but it only In Early American Motif Glowing spicetono maple finish double dresser with minor, matching chat! and spindle bed. Tha chest and dresser feature genuine Westinghouse Micarta Tops that resist stains and hoaf. In addition you get innertpring mattress, box spring and two boudoir lamps. MAY BE PURCHASED SEPARATELY sudden changes hi feet and $11 that um so profitably marketed by the patent medicine men of the sl9th Century and the leading qhgcks today, the children will by arrived of the right and privilege of living outdoors. In Pathahlet No. • “Tonsils,’’ (for lUek send me IS cents and stomped, self-addressed envelopfeL I plump for (a) no surgery Inmost instances, (h) tonsillotomy, not tonsUlectomy, when theston-sils actually obatnict breath- COMPLETE DINETTE 6R0UP /it Early American Motif Round table includes 2 extra leafs and is topped in warm maple-grained mar-proof finish ... 36x36 inches opens fo 60 inches. Four washable chairs are covered in pretty Colonial print end are' skirted. \may be purchased separately looms ALBEE’S v SUMMER FESTIVAL OP NEW NOME DESIGNS SUNDAY 11* I PERSON TO PERSON CREDIT • He Down Payment \ , IL ★ Buy with confidence at WKC duringmpdel change over period at WKC you make n& payment until 30 day* after you return to wotk! ' ' , v, ■ ■ ; " ■ LBJ DEDICATES-This was die scene yesterday in Syracuse, N Y., when President Johnson dedicated the Samuel I. Newhouse Communications Center pt Syracuse University. The building at top is the School of journalism Building 108 NORTH SAGINAW THE POftTIAC PRKSb THUlSDAY. AUGCST fl. 1964, A—IT Park Near Port Huron Closed by Low Water PORT HURON (AP) — Lake-port State Park, vnorth of Port Huron, has been ordered closed te campers by the State Conser-vation Department because of low water levels. Two of three wells in the Lake Huron park have gone diy. ifbile the park is closed |q campers, its beaeh and picnic areas will remain The salary of the President was increased from $49,600 to $100,000 Jan. 19, 1040. Ha also receives $50,000 for expenses. Judge Won't Strike Hot Designation tOIT (AP)-U.S. District Judge Thaddeus Machrowicz refused Wednesday to upset a Michigan Supreme Court decision’ allowing Joseph B. Sullivan to be designed as “former- assis- tant attorney general” In thai Sept. 1 Democratic primary election. Sullfran is a candidate] tor Wayne .County prosecutor. 1 The Defense Department appropriation bill this year seeks funds for. an armed forces personnel of 2,687,000 and 687 military installations | urged aQ Republicans “to sup- Drowin in Gravel Pit T pah.. . all candidates selected Kv mnvpntimi nr nfiRnni-, k„ NILES (AP)-Philip Penna, by wn^ntioo or primary by|lf Wedm^y ^ , “e»y0P- | gravd pit three miles north of Nilas. State police said he ap- ■ „ L1:. Only ant of evory ntoa wild- parently had gone swimmlr* Committee of Young ^Republi- cat oil wolla drilled strikes oil. | them alone, cans gave unqualified endorse- Last year the average cost of ... ment Wednesday nigh* to the|drilling each deep well was Puerto Rico became a com-Goldwater - Miller ticket. and 1888$,$84. - i mooyealth on July 3, MB. Unit of Young GOP„ ... Urges Ticket Support . DETROIT «(AP)—The executive board of the Wayne County '5 Cities Remapped WASHINGTON - Los Angeles San Francisco, Seattle, Denver, and Washington are tinder-going geological remaining aimed at assigning suitable land Uses In urban pUmning and lon-ig- entejro BITTER BUYS! BIGGER BARGAINS! BUY NOW { SAVINGS AT THESE STORES Plenty of free parking • Most stores open *til 9 {vary Night! *WALK LESS * SHOP EASIER ★ SAVE MORE offering you fre*h new seasonable merchandise at all timeoy'O'Wige selection to aotiafy oil your needs end trained salespersons te give you the most in oesvice. O CHILDREN’S SHOP o SHOE BOX o BILL PETRUSHA I SONS APPL. • WINKELMAN’S • JIB SHOP • CAMERA MART * * • JAYSON JEWELERS • KRESQE’S • ONE HOUR VALET • OSMUN’S •WRIOLEY’S • UNITED SHIRT DIST. • CUNNINGHAMS • SANDERS CANDY • MURRAY SISTERS • EA. Aft: tonite. Friday Saturday trim good looks in sportswear pantt $497 $5 97 Stdck your c wardrobe of big sov ingsl- Stretch pants with sleek perfectionist fit Stirruped ' styles in vetitcol stretch blends; 10-18 Famous maker bulky tout cardigan sweaters, mtiges 34-40 •hep every night mender thru Saturday to 6 p.m (AJinl(ll/mCivif TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Telegraph at Huron Road* 1 MV SUCK SUE 1,000 pairs of SLACKS Hwnyl' Thu it Mm MmM) buy at. Mm HIDHlMf. ChMM bom: Dacron-Woel. Docfon-bUndt. All .i... from 29 to 44 wait* HaMmM *r pltotod ntodalt. plui Dakt-typ* »tyl«. Many pm-cuftod. rpady to waa> An MmMai / STARTING TODAY 3*$14* $8.89 PAIR FRKE CUFF ALTERATIONS O (values to $16.95) tfirtafftntUfUmlUl TEL-HUR0N STORE 0M.T SMUN’S stoats roa min a soys Thun, Fri, Sat. 12$ FJ. Fashion Loaders for 35 Years ENTIRE SUMMER STOCKS FROM ALL FIVE STORES AT 6IVE-AWAY PRICES! MACSH0RE CLASSICS All cotton broadcloth • roll ilctvt. Contrast •titching on Peter Pan collar and front bib. Button font, In-Or-Outer Blouse, mjeem in whit* with either rad, navy or bottle green stitching. * mo Open Every NigM 'til 9 TEL-HURON children Use Veer Security Charge // CAMERA MART FILM SPECIALS GARBAGE CANS WRIilLEYS Georgette BIKINI TRIANGLE HEAD SCARVES 3 Days Only $|/Y "CHARGE IT" AT ^iFliifll Week of Clearance* H ( DISCONTINUED STYLES FLORSHEIM l SHOES $1400 O E t DISCONTINUED STYLES NATURAUZERS l and FUNSTERS $0901 T«lM<1lli.tt J S ( DISCONTINUED STYLES JUMPINp l. JACKS SA29 SHIM Mem. i.99* j ' WOMEN’S CANVAS e Summerettet $188 $288 $488 ^ e Sun Steps • Kedette* t alue* te $.99 f AMERICAN GIRL 099 C99 l Values to 10.99 V ’ V I NEW STORE HOURS- 1 FOR BETTER SLIDES KODACHROME ft 8 MM FILM Only SECURITY 0HARQE ACCOUNT. SERVICE Tel-Hvren Shopping Center FE 4-0259 "Oakland County'* Largest Shot Store'’ 120-620-127 K0DAC0L0R FOR 0EAUTIFUL PICTURES 89*" BE SMART ... SEND YOUR ORDERS TO The CAMERA MART ff "TEL-HURQN SWOPPING CENTER" ^I^^^TELEOIlAPjLJFontiac^Ji^^^^^^F^SM^ W- •* Pr THE PONTIAC PltgSS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, .1964 i CALLED BIGGEST THREAT G*Mw«tor Mid that th# ^■•W^noMneet our .?*■ our economy by THE NEWS d XO BR1H® irtyirthe 'im*' yas the vice*: \&>ia »«ve*:. ft V their; |u jfeftfcnijj Hfoerccnt. scran PHILCO "'*« 23” TV-STEREO Theatre Combination sSSW" DELUXE STEREO I loLprrlnir Conbihation ym\m Ifran 10“ IgggPfj FREEZER CauxaiMt wrifkl rtyW. fc— minmi m4 Immm hid. Hi*iv di«, luHff ■ kl h*. MV «S19li mIm. *126 3 3 ’/a-Gal. Jug Butty Crocker Whit* CAKE MIX ^GndtSrtSs SALE DATES mro., /4iur. 6 thru Wad., ig. 12,1964, IncludiMf Sun., Aug. 9,1964. lonfe THE gpNTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST A, mi >4-02. Bottle B-i •««flra lib Ifflp ID* * YOUR CHOICE* SPARTAN-303 Cant Hunt's—300. Can Pork SReans Spartan — M3 fen" Whole « I Cream Style I Hunt's _ Saute 8-oi. Can TOmatO Paste 6-os-Can IseH Spartan —303 Can Cut ■ I ^ g V“M" “IQt PEAS-IAt "® i,ch Table Salt Little'Friskie Dry POttlNl Box PAW PAW ^ TASTY * Sparton'i Flne«t Rayette .., Aqua Net CAT FOOD B & M CORN RELISH ;. 25c MATCH" tomatoes Quart Can No. 2% Can Red Heart BEEF W 4E0t FOOD ~ vv for Viatic Vat Kured DHLS Hamilton Grade A 3 DOZ. EGGS *1°° Nabisco LORNA NONE COOKIES 10tt-oz.39‘j Personal Size ■■ *% Liquid Ivory Soap 5- * JOY - 58 *(jiOMET SUNDAY Sunday S *td • Sunday • tNI 20 E. WALTON Mos.tlmi8at.0WI LAKE ORION H 3515 SASHABAW. Msn.ttwSat.ITdt MinrMWeSM.B>IB t- ®«f jcetchjip 14 cup fight corn syrup Using rotary beater or elec- MELONS AND CRANBERRY flesh. Soak overnight to salted water (I tablespoons saR per 1 quart water);, drain. Cover with fresh water and cook until tender; drain. Heat eager aad vinegar to boiling. Add apices tied to cheesecloth bag. Add rfoL Cook, mcovered, until transparent about 41 minutes. Remove ipicehng. Peck watermelon tightly into hot, sterilised jars. Pour boiling eyrup over watermelon to vrith-in 14-inch from top, making sure vinegar solution covers MELON VARIETY - In the fM rigid corner to a Persian melon filled with seedless grapes. Similar to cantaloupe (just behind it), but larger, it has thick and mildly sweet orange flesh. Center to the Casafae, a furrowed and wrinkled chartreuse-yellow globular melon with a pointed stem. To the right of this to a Santa Claus or Christmas melon which to ripened in storage and appears near holiday time. On the stand to a honeydew and at the top watermelon. | 1 can (6 ounces) frozen concentrated grape juice, thawed 3 cups fresh cantaloupe belle 'l Soften gelatine in 1 cup cranberry juice. Stir over low beat, until gelatine is dissolved. Add grape juke concentrate end remaining cranberry juice; mix well. OiiH until thickened. Fold to cantaloupe balls and pour-into 114 quart mold. ChUl until firm. Unmold and garnish with additional melon balls, if desired. Makes about 8 servings. Cranberry Hpneydew Delight 1 medium-sized honeydew melon 1 can (1 pound) jellied cranberry sauce 14, cup limejor lemon juke Cut melon to lurif crosswise. Scoop out melon bells. Reeerve shells. Cut e design on the edge qf melon shells, if desired. Cut cranberry sauce into *4-inch cubes. Arrange melon bells and cranberry cubes ip melon shells and sprinkle with Ume or lemon juice. Makes about 4 servings. Cowberry Watermelon Compote 4 cups watermelon fingers 1% cups cranberry juice cocktail, chilled Arrange watermelon fingers to serving dishes and chill thoroughly. Serve with a pitcher of chilled cranberry juice. Makes 4 servings. ( ' Watermelon makes an Interesting ice to serve with the meat coufoe or es a light dessert. Watermelon Ice « ' 1 quart waterineion pulp and - juke 14 cup Sugar % cup orange juke % cup sherry Few drops red food coloring Stove watermelon pulp or, press through fine strainer. Add sugar and mix. Add orange juice sheny.'ihbf. Add coloring. Pour into refrigerator ice-cube tray and freeze. Serves 8. Pineapple Sauce These warm summer days take meal-time outdoors. It’s easier for mother and relaxing for the whole family as well. With a minimum amount of indoor preparation most of the cooking can be done outside. The secret ingredient to these Hawaiian hamburgers to herb-seasoned stuffing, which contains a special combination of herbs that i 1 v e s the added touch to the hamburgers. This stuffing is so convenient since it comes packaged and ready to use. Cooking the hamburgers over a charcoal firfr brings Out all the natural flavor and goodness. Serve these hamburgers along with grilled bananas And a tall cool pineapple drink. Hawaiian Hamburgers 1 can (Jtti os.) condensed tomato aoup % cup water ltt lbs. ground beef 1 cup packaged berb-seasoned stuffing 14 cup chopped onion 1 teaspoon seasoned salt Freeze Beef Stock for Later Use A sauce to no better thap7 the stock it’s made with ucoordtag Chef of the Howard Johnson Kstaurant and motel chain, who suggests this easy Way to keep stock on hand in your freezer. ’ *.7 * Make stock/ of meat bones (usually obtainable free from your butcher), herbs, onion and celery, simmering tor two hours. Strata the broth, pour into ice cube trays, place to freezer. When solid, may be removed and wrapped individually ttf be dead as needed. 1 can (814 oz.) pineapple chunks' Blend soup and water. Combine 14 cup soup mixture with beef, stuffing, anion, and seasoned salt Shape into patties. Broil on charcoal grill, tarn-tog once, It to 18 minutes or until done. * Drain pineapple chunks. In saucepan, combine remaining soup mixture with pineapple chunks and beat Serve over grilled hamburgers. Makes 4 to 6 servings. ' Grilled Bananas — Peel three firm bananas.,Slice to half lengthwise and moisten to a little lemon juice. Grill along with hamburgers. * Chilled Pineapple Cocktail -Combine 1 quart pineapple juke, 1 quart cranberry juice cocktail and 1 quart grapefruit juke. Chili: Serve to tali frosted glasses or pineapple Adis. t> CAMPBELL’S 1 Pork and Beans Del Monte CATSUP 16 om can 14-om. Bottle FRESH PRODUCE U.S.D.A CHOICE m stem 69) U.S.D.A. CHOICE . IMm (TEAK S3) U.S.DJL CHOICE - Hm STEM 99) U.S.D.A. CHOICE Rolled Rump or RotUseria ‘Aik . ROAST.,... 89 it. Hygrade Corned Beef 49 Point Cute Freph Home Croon CORN Sweat and Tender Mich. Red Haven A AAc PEACtiES 3 lb* 39e V.s. No. 1 Mich. • in 1A# POTATOES...... JL.4SP 'Nabisco Oreo COOKIES........... £ 49* It't New - ‘ ‘ l Borden's Moola Koola.. °ca*“29' SPECIALS n Mortons. * V dll , CREAM PIES . . . . ., .V.S? 19m. Sealed Sweet . . J ORANGE JUICE..... 6*1" Cheft Choice TRENCH FRIES.......... NATIONALLY KNOWN HUMS AT MONET SAVING PRICES DAIRY SPECIALS Hamilton Grade A Medium EGGSf...3-$1“ Allsweet \ MARGARINE feljt ClE BE3E3E3 QvalityMARf&T 'JSJL 1116 W, HURON St. open mon. Thru sat. 8 to iQ; sun. 9 jo 10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. AUGUST 6, 1964 •I'. B—> Wheat Germ Cookies Are So Nutritions ' Does the demand for snacks increase around your house when the kids are home for sum- . mer vacation? If it does, stock up with these summer - fresh wheat germ cookies-spicy fruit, drops and fruit-and-nut bars, both of which are made to stay moist enough but still firm during sticky hot weather ahead. They are real good eating, taste-wise and health-wise—the wheat germ adding extra nourishment. ’ : f While the kids 'will feast on them at snack time, they can "also be served with ice cream sodas (as shown), as a refreshing heat when the bridge club meets at your house. WHEAT GERM SPICY » FRUIT DROPS | IV*-cups sifted flour * 4 teaspoon baking soda I 1 teaspoon salt 1 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 1 teaspoon ground cloves Vi teaspoon nutmeg I 1 cup wheat germ I 1 cup raisins | 1 cup chopped xiates | 4 cup chopped nuts 4 cup shortening ! 1 cup- (firmly packed) brown sugar , ' . { 2 eggs I 4 cup buttermilk or sour milk | Sift together flour, soda, 1 tablespoon orange Juke Make crust. Combine wheat germ, flour, browij sugar and butter or margarine; mix well. Press la even layer over bottom of greased S-iach square paa. Bake la moderate oven (350 degrees F.) 10 minutes. ^ Meanwhile make filling. Beat eggs and vanilla; add brown sugar, flour, baking powder and salt; beat well. Fold in coconut and pecans. Spread over partially baked crust. .Make frosting. Combine confectioner’s sugar, orange rind and juice; blend until smooth. Spread over warm cookies. Cool and' cut into bars (about 1x4 inches). Yield: 16 bars. FOR SUMMER SNACKS — Wheat germ fruit and nut bars and wheai germ spiqy fruit drops are tasty and nutritious additions to the snack larder during vacation time. Broiled Appetizers i Spread party rye jlices with mixed peanut butter and crumbled crisp bacon. Top each slice with l teaspoon cherry or black cherry jam; broil and serve. salt and spices. Stir in wheat germ, raisins, dates and nuts. Cream shortening, brown sugar and eggs until light and fluffy. Chill about I. hour. Drop by tablespoonfuls onto a greased baking sheet. Bake inmoderate oven (350 degrees F.) until browned, 10 to 12 minutes. Yield: About 5 dozen. WHEAT GERM FRUIT AND NUT BARS Frosting 1 cup sifted confectioner’s 1 teaspoon grated orange rind Crust Vk.cup wheat germ 4 cup sifted flour 4-cup firmly'packed brown sugar 4 cup melted butter or margarine Filling 2 eggs 1 teaspoon vanilla V4 cup firmly packed brown sugar 2 tablespoons flour ,4 teaspoon baking powder 4 teaspoon-salt 1 can <34 <4nca$. flaked coco-< nut Vi cup chopped pecans Bubbling Punch Looks Gayer With Garnishes Looking for gay garnishes for the bubbling bowl of summertime punch? Here are f 1 v e, colorful easy-do'toppers: melon balls, lemon, orange or lime slices, small scoops of sherbtt, fresh mint, summer blossoms or well-washed ivy leaves. Two reminders for punch-tenders: ' 1. Ice dilutes flavor and cubes melt faster so, if you can, freeze your own block of ice in a bowl, mold or pan in the freezing compartment of your refrigerator. 2. Deep' a good supply of canned ginger ale on bandit’s the ideal bubbling base for whatever punch you conjure up. Ginger ale in* cans stores well, cools quickly and cans are disposable. Shrimp Puts Color in Slaw Cole slaw acquires a' new look — and delicious flavor — by mixing the shredded cabbage with ripe olive wedges, chopped shrimp and salad dressing given a rosy hue with catsup. Easy to fix, “Olive-Shrimp Slaw” is also, mighty easy on the palate these warm days. Olive-Shrimp Slaw Vi cup ripe olives 1 can (44 os.) medium de-veined shrimp or 1 cup cooked deveined shrimp. 2V4 Cups shredded cabbage 4 cup salad dressing 1 tablespoon catsup Salt Lettuce Cut V4 Clip olives into wedges. Rinse, drain and coarsely chop shrimp. Combine in bowl with catsup; mix lightly with cabbage mixture. Add salt to taste. Serve on lettuce-lined salad ^plates. Choice of Wine Very Personal, Says Experts For the many Americans who are intrigued ^y trine blit shy away from it because of its seeming complexities, the popular wine growers of California have produced a new booklet entitled, “America’s Twelve Favorite Wines, A Best ’Cellar’I List. The twelve wines, selected on the basis of their appeal to the American taste, are listed on an ea$y-to-read chart with a de^ scription of each wine. This | makes It possible for the beginner, embarking on the wine.experience, to distinguish one wine from the other — mid each is as different as tea is from col-fee. The no-nonsense guide offers valuable advice about the so-called rules of wine service by recommending that you trust your own taste and “drink any wine you like, any time you .like, with any food you like, or I without food.” • Let Starving Cowpokes .Make Cooky Snacks ' Do you have some hungry cowboys riding in from Itbe range? Treat them to some .Crunchy Delight Cookies. Your cowpokes prill love making them with you as assistant cook. Get everything ready in'the chuck wagon' your kitchen, and 'then let the children do the mixing and bakifig. They’ll enjoy measuring the ingredients, chopping the peanuts and crushing those delicious round shredded wheat biscuits. , They add such flavor and crunchy goodness — your cowr boys and girls will blaze a trail to the kitchen to make themselves some homemade cookies. What a great idea for a rainy day — or any day for that matter. When the cookies come out of the eves, cool them and pack a big box for the trail. Or, serve them with punch in the corral — the backyard. Reach pardaer! Reach for another Crunchy Delight Cooky. Craachy Delight Cookies 4 cup shortening, soft 114 cups firmly-packed; brown sugar 1 egg y«.?up milk * 14 cups sifted all-purpose flour 1 teaspoon salt 4 teaspoon soda 4 teaspoon baking powder 1 cup. crushed round shredded wheat biscuits 4 cup chopped peanuts Beat shortening and suggr together until creamy. Blend in ! egg and milk. Sift together . | flour, Salt, soda and baking . powder; add to creamed mix-hire, mixing well. Stir in crushed cereal and peanuts. Drop by teaspoonfuls onto I greased cooky sheets. Bake in preheated oven (350 degrees) M I to 15 minutes. SAVINGS ADD UP FAST AT SAVON WHERE EVERYTHING’S PRICED LOW! Sure, we’ve go* *ome «“**“•» ****** ■pedal bargains too, but that’* only putt of the «oty bare because if »«your total food HU that counts. And Savoo’s policy of "Lew fritet Every Day •• Everythinf gives your budget a lift you’ll love. Shop Sevoo, you’ll see! 0trrific Savinfi Ql Ktatty See*k Cff»! FARM MAID GRADE A LARGE EGGS 128* With Coupon At Loft DOZEN 12c J0 jbynamtle! 2 FOR 35c VALUE Lady Linda Whit* Bread § 12c Were! VITAMIN FORTIFIID Town Pride Evapjlillt 12$ / Limit! Throw JooL! OJf i2c! CONDENSED Campbell’s Veg. Soup 12 Limit: Thriso ■ C i2d mf Pa, nut WITH CHLORINOL! Comet Cleanser Effective fee—s> Mm.. A—. IS. RfeM tmmnd fe Si C—-DJSu~! [votes SUM CUT MV Pot Roast 38« GENEROUS SHANK PORTION PETERS. MICHIGAN GRADE I Skinless Wieners 6RADE "A" FRESH CREAMERY Dairy-Mdi Butter POPULAR FLAVORS! BANQUET OR Horton Cream Pies ASSORTED FLAVORS! QUAKER MAID SHERBET OR Hollywood. Ice Cream NU>. Pk* 39* 59* 25* FIRST Mil CUT *<£l49* Lean Pork Loin Roast “• U.S. eOFT. INSPECTED . 4% A Plump Young Duckling “• 38* THE MEAT OF MANY USESI FRESH OfoOfc Cherry Red Hamburg 08* CORN-FED YEARLING STEER 00 00 Sliced Beef Uver “ 38* Jowul Price y.l! . CALIF. VINE RIPCNID Cantaloupes 4-99* Great On Cerent! FRESH, PLUMP. JUICY Blueberries ~29c Pontiac Mall 42S S. TELEGRAPH 0|Uy 9-9. Ear. 0-9, Sau. 9-i GlenwoodTIaza Drayton Plains 29 S. OlINWOOD . 4M9 DIXIE HIOHWAY •aRy 9-10. Sot. 0-10. 8»W Mf M, Sat. 0-9, Sm 9-4 THE Pi 'ONTfrAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1964 Keep your Information on Frozen Foods Up to Date I the modern homemaker who Wants to make the very most of the convenience and economy of her freeser compartment will . do well to keep up" to date on Just what frozen foods 'Will do , .. how long to keep them, how to unfreeze them and whether to refreeze than. Here is a set of itp-tothe-minute freezer facts designed to remove sane common cobwebs of misinformation. ★' 1 it A-j/'- [ Frozen foods are not as perishable as you may thjSc. Kept at the right temperatures, they will' last for years. Frozen concentrated orange Jnice held at 0 degrees will M as good in three years as It wifs the day yon bought it. And most other modem frozen foods nre totally unchanged nt the end of a year of proper storage. You can refreeze your frozen foods- Millions of doubtful wo- men have long been undv the erroneous impression that iood, once defrosted, cannot be frozen again. , . * * ' •* ' As long as the contents of a package of frozed food remains cold to the touch, it can be refrozen with perfect safety. There may be a slight toss of the quaQty of flavor, but there is absolutely no danger1. There’s no peed to worry ■ about frozen foods thnwing while you do your other errands. ‘Unopened cartons of frozen food can stay out of the , freezer for a couple of hours •in 40 degree to M degree F. temperatures without thawing. In mid-summer, of course, foe. time ' element changes somewhat, and you will dd well to get frozen foods into ihe freezer within the hour., ■ •- * ■- i You can choose your own way of defrosting frozen foods, depending on the item .and your personal schedule. Generally, the preferred method is to move the product in its unopened con1 tainer from the freezer to the refrigerator shelf. ★ W Sr . ■ There, at the rate of about six hours to the pound, the food thaws slowly, without dripping or drying out. v If yin are in a hurry, you Pancakes Give Pep to Sailors Mom can be busy baking Cereal Flake Pancakes on the Coleman stove set up on the dock or sea wail while dad is busy launching the boat or making it shipshape for the day. Early mohung rising Is sure to whip up appetites so a hearty breakfast is a must. Start the meal With chilled orange Juice. Have some ready-to-eat cereal, and cold milk to satisfy those ravenous appetites . until foe pancakes-and sausage Can be cooked. Serve stacks of piping hot cereal flake pancakes with sausage, topped with syrup, honey, or any other favorite —topping. Add n cold gloss of muk, coffee, if desired, nnd you hove a satisfying breakfast font will keep .everyone on his tiptoes throughout the Cereal Flake Pancake* 1 cup pancake mix 1 cup milk legif 3 tablespoons melted shortening or cooking oil ' 1 cup corn flakes or whole wheat flakes Combine pancake mJx, milk, egg, and melted shortening or oil in mixing bowl; stir until dry ingredients are moistened and batter is fairly smooth. Stir cereal flakes into batter. ( Pour ft cup batter onto a hot griddle for each- pancake; bake until underside of each pancake is browned and top is full of bubbles. Turn and cook until second side of pancake is brown. Yield: About 8 pancakes. Pink and Green Filling for Tasty Sandwich •- Dilly shrimp-cuke sandwiches have that eool come-on for summer eating. Delicious on rye bread is this mixture: % cup cream cheese blended until fluffy with 1% teaspoons lemon Juice, Mi teaspoon dill seed and ft teaspoon salt. Place fat refrigerator for » wig}e to subtly blend seasonings. Tran add 1-3 cup each of birr-cold, chopped cucumber and cleaned, peeled shrimp to complete filling for 5 sandwiches. CEREAL FLAKE PANCAKES - Modem sailors need to be alert at all times. For safety’s sake, eat a good breakfast, such as Cereal Flake Pancakes, to be alert all morning. Chef's Salad Olivette Summer Luncheon Salad Think Cool-Sip 'Cooler' It may not actuhlly cool you off on a warm day, but you’ll 'think cool” while sipping ^ach-Banana Cooler.” It’s a flavorsome mixture of canned cling peaches, banana, milk and lemon juice whipped in a blender and served in glasses over pineapple sherbet. Even the canned clirlg syrup is used in this recipe to make sure that nothing tasty goes to waste. Peach-Banana Coaler 1 can 11 lb.) cling peach slices chilled 3 ripe bananas, cut into chunks 1 cup milk 1 tablespoon lemon Juice . Dash salt I pint pineapple sherbet Combine peaches and their syrup in blender with banana, milk, lemon Juke and salt. Whir until well Jblended. Place small scoop of sherbet in each of 5 or 6 glasses. Fill with peach mix-fore. Makes 5 or 6 savings. A bridge luncheon with “Chefs Salad Olivette” highlighting the menu will be one your friends will remember — no matter what their score may be! Large pieces of ripe olives lend distinction to this hearty salad. Their,, rich, handsome color and nut-like flavor provide appetising appeal in a host of salads as well as in sandwich spreads, meat and fish casseroles and vegetable dishqs. Chefs Salad Olhfette 1 cup ripe olives 1 cup cooked ham, cut into strips 1 cup Swiss cheese, cut into strips lft quarts salad greens, shredded 3 medium-size tomatoes Dressing Cut olives inlo large pieces. Toss lightly with ham, cheese and salad greens. Cut tomatoes into wedges; add to olive mixture. Toss with Dressing. Setve at once. Dressing' ft cup salad oil ft cup tarragon vinegar 2 tablespoons water ft teaspoon salt ft teaspoon dry mustard ft teaspoon garlic poWder Coarsely ground black pepper Dressing:Combine all ingredients in Jar. Cover and shake thoroughly torWend. Makes 4 or 5 luncheon servings. Deviled Eggs a New Way For variety, instead of the usual deviled egg filling of mustard and mayonnaise, try this combination. To yolks of six hard-cooked eggs, add; ft teaspoon Italian salad dressing mix, ft teaspoon freshly-ground black pepper, ft teaspoon horseradish, 1 tablespoon Spanish (dive oil, saltto taste. Blend until' smooth, fill the cooked egg whites with the mixture, piling lightly. Sprinkle with paprika. ■ SENSATIONAL AUGUST PAINT SALE! STIU IN PROGRESS! Flat, Swmi-Gloss or Gloss Enamel Interior Paint Vinyl Latex Flat White aficfl ,000 Full-Bodied Colors 50% WOOD PANELS Prc-Finiithvd. No Mill Raiacffc 4x7 .T.6?'. 3" 4x8 . . In »had*» of light Oak finkh, 4C Walnut, Light and Dotty light :: Reg. 6c Mahogany. , ^Rgg, gc and us, WALL TUI OFF , SPECIAL! Any 9x12 Flopr Can Be Covered With INLAID VINYL V Mica Counter - Topping Oitcanlinuad 20c *9. .. . lef ... 2cS ... 3c i;ii •Vinyl Asbestos Tile Groom Proof M AE A S»oin-!«•••'* MOSAIC TILE SHEET 01 Mosaic IMOta mmm All’thaptt and KZ •lie*. Soma with si Gold. * W W ft 9X12 UNO RUGS 3.95 CEILING TILE 11xl S Wain...... 10c Sq. Ft. -----4 11e Sq. Ft. lie'Sq.ft. 12x12 Plain..’... 12x12 Acoustical as* PONTIAC'S -LARGEST TILE CENTER Our Own Installation Work Done by Experts Ogo* Man. and Fri* tit Ml p.m.-j Tuai* WaA, Thun* Sat. Vi I PAL * 1075 W. Huron St. Phone 334.9957 If You Don’t Buy From Us, We Both Looe Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! Jam and Jelly Serve Well in Many Recipes Some of the best dishes can be put together, right at the table, with an assist from the jelly or jam Jar and Its convenient “Twist-Off” cap. Take' a thin slice of pound cake, for example, and add a spoonful of tart currant Jelly. Or make a dessert of crackers, cream cheese, and grape jam or Jelly. Try currant Jelly or orange marmalade with Mast or fried chicken. For a change at pace from mint, substitute • sweet. jelly such as grape with lamb. Try almost any kind of preserves with beef nnd pork. You’ll find they’re nil good. And don’t forget one of the best foods of nil time — a crusty piece of breed spread with butter and Jelly or jam. If a recipe calls for a pound of cooked meat, you nre safe in using two firmly packed cups, Rough Texture of Batter Bread Resembles Country Loaf Specialty breads have a way of perking up an otherwise pedestrian meal. If you’re a beginner at the art of meal-planning, you probably haver several main dish favorites that you rely upon for home-style and company meals. Take a look at the following recipe, for Thyme Luncheon Loaf and see if’ it doesn’t look good. It’s an easily made no-knead batter bread. Batter breads have a characteristic rough texture which many people find more interesting and more “homemade looking” than the traditional kneaded loaves. They can be baked in a round casserole dish or in regular bread pans, as shown. Thyme Luncheon V**f lft ^ups warm water (106-118 degrees) 1 package or cake yeast, active dry or compressed 2 tablespoons margarine, softened 2 tablespoons sugar lft teaspoons salt 1 teaspoon leaf thyme 2ft cups unsifted flour Melted margarine large warm bowl. Sprinkle or crumble in yeast; stir until dissolved. Stir in margarine, sugar, salt, thyme and half the flour. Beat 2 minutes at medium speed on electric' mixer, or ISO vigorous strokes by hand; scrape sides and bottom of bowl frequently. With spoon beat in remaining flour until smooth. Scrape batter down from sides of bowl. Cover, let rise in warm place, free from' draft, until doubled in bulk, about one hour. Stir down batter by beating 25 strokes. Turn into greased lft quart casserole, or a greased 9x5x3-inch bread pan. Bake in moderate oven (375 degrees) 45 to 50 minutes or until done. Brush top of loaf with melted margarine. Makes 1 loaf. can defrost the pa<$age mere quickly at room temperatare, or even by bolding It under, baked goodo can aha be defrosted by heating slightly hi a moderate oven. Jf you forget to take the meat out of foe freezer ahead of time, you can cook it without previous thawing. Just allow extra cooking time. Large frozen roasts, for example, may take half again as long to cook as they would if they were defrosted first. *' A ★ ★' Frozen foods are no more perishable after they are. defrosted than their fresh equivalent. Add to Filling If you have a few leftover string bea*ns fold , them to chopped celery and finely chopped onion for a nutritious sandwich filling. Moisten the mixture with real mayonnaise or salad dressing. New Soup Idea Need Just a touch of garlic flavor in a vegetable"soup? Add one or two tablespoons of Italian corn oil dressing to foe pot shortly before removing from heat. . Peanut butter and bacon sandwiches are good served with freshly-cooked applesauce. tibht SIKI lUIEI Open Weekly 0 tal-Fri I Sal. I toll 608 W. HURON STREET NEAR WEBSTER SCHOOL Alt price$ subject to market change Mellow Ripe BANANAS TO ACCENT YOUR SUMMER SALADS IIP NO. 1 NEW MICHIGAN j POTATOES 25 LB 99 Grade A., Small CABBAGEir EGGS imW ftUMMtma KKBZetf IHtTtldllLSW Hi GIAPfS- 191 TNHHBctR CORN ™ 49! 69. BEEF 2*69* FRYERS 251 HOT Does 3*89* sliced m 7 m BACON 4*1 ASSORTED ___; . lack HUTS 3* Spat IBS g c r*&-- uio A . Herrud Franks, .•>* - ; • are the tastiest in town .,. packed with tender, nutritious meat for that’big protein lift. They supply protein goodness in its most natural form. Neat time the kids clamor for hot dogs, give them Herrud . •. they’re vacuum packed! Herrud Franks are the tastiest in town • .. packed with tender, nutritious meat for that big protein lift. They supply protein goodness in its most natural form. Next time the kids clamor for hot dogs, give them Herrud •. . they're vacuum packed! Herrud Franks^ are the tastiest in town .. . puma With tender, nutritious mpat for that big protein lift. They supply, protein goodness in its most natural form. Next, time the kids clamor for hot dogs, give them Herrud . > • they're vacuum packed! ; The franks with the BIG PROTEIN LIFT! The franks with the BIG PROTEIN LIFT! > • * ■1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST g, ]M1 What's Hiappenedto theOldAmencdnDfearn? MOTHER LIKES HIM — Pierre Salinger gets a kiss from his mother, Mrs. Jehanne Carlson, in Washington yesterday after being voted in as Democratic Senator from California. The Senate vote was 5S-29. Antipoverty Bill Heads for Vote by RUTH MONTGOMERY "i WASHINGTON. — For'a hun> dred years the United States of ] America was glorified around the globe as they great “melting pot’’ — a land where all nationalities and creeds .coy Id live together in productive harmony. During those years, our polyglot society was so effectivelyMONTGOMERY melding -that by the second gen* eration an immigrant’s child could scarcely be distinguished from a Mayflower descendant. Or was it melding? Although no one considered America perfect, we seemed to be working together toward a common goal: equality of opportunity. Now, suddenly, we are split six ways froth Sunday. ★ * * i Negroes demand equality .ilhow,” The ethnic minorities "are exceedingly restive at their infinitesimal representation in. the higher echelons of government. WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Johnson’s antipoverty bill, heavily lubricated to silence a potentially dangerous 'states’ right squeak, rolled today toward a House showdown. Although the battle still was far from over, managers of the President’s top-priority bill felt the odds had tipped slightly in favor of approval for the legislation tomorrow. Bat the best sign that they “1 scrambling for every vote was the decision of House Democratic leaders to 1 voting on the $962.5-miuwn measure until after today’s Tennessee primary. They hope to get six or more votes from that nin$-member delegation. The bill, similar to a $947.5-nrillion measure passed last month by the Senate, would set up several new programs. CCC TYPE These include a CCC-type “job corps” to give youths new training, experience and earnings and provisions to help finance locally initiated antipoverty projects and offer new assis- tance to farmers and small businessmen in “poverty pockets.” The renewed confidence of ' Johnson,’* -lieutenants stemmed 1 from the belief that a major * concession offered to southern < Democrats at the start of de- 1 bate yesterday would attract 1 enough support to push the bill ] over. ’ Rep. Phil M. Landrum, (D-Ga.), the hill’s sponsor and floor manager, announced he would offer an amendment giving governors blanket veto power over any local project to be financed by federal funds. task' for “sternly rebuffing a (Margaret Chase) Smith lieutenant’s suggestion that each state delegation give her one vote on the first roll call” at -the recent Republican convention. It would have been “a pleasant gesture to half the population, perhaps even politically wise,” she wrote. . Have we really come to’this? Are American women actually so small-minded that they crave to have such a meaningless bone tossed in their direction? We doubt it. We also suspect that if Gold: water had bowed to the reported suggestion, many commentators would gleefully have interpreted such a voting pattern as an anti-Goldwater move by Republican women. ETHNIC GROUPS • And What of the ethnic groups? Some Polish-American leaders have yarned that their people , may take .a walk from the Democratic party this fall. Their resentment is reportedly two-pronged: lack of patronage, and fear that the civil rights bill will give their blne- the basis of, sex,'religion^ race and ethnic origin?. on That basis Under such a criteria, white Protestant women would be entitled to the most and best jobs, with white protestamt males second., . ■*"■>> • Catholic women and men, of whom there are ti^mUlion in our 1M million population, would get a goodly share of the jobs. However, since most of the ethnic groups are of the Catholic faith, the appointments would have to be rationed among Italian?, Poles, Czechs and Slovaks, as weR as the Irish. I Negroes, totaling 10 per cent, would Tie entitled to one job out of 10,.but carefully divided between those of Catholic and Pro-teutant faiths. The Jewish population* estimated at more than 5$ million, would have its quota of appointments, split between men and women. Then, if Baptists and Methodists laid claim to the lion’s share of tlfe Protestant, allotment, we would really needp a computer. Surely, the time has come to think of ourselves once again as Americans, and to recall the . immortal rallying cry: “United We Stand, Divided We Fall.”. (DMribuM by Kl«s FMtorHjybSIcaN) 78 North Saginaw * DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Open Friday Kvonings HI 8 PM. This Ad In Effect Both Store* 4348 Dixie Highway DRAYTON PLAINS \ xOpan Thun, thru Sat. 9 A.M. to 9 Mi' Open Sunday 9 A M. to 8 P.M. PRESCRIPTION FILLED BY US QUALITY DRUGS LOWEST PRICE 148 North Saginaw Huron Street 4895 Dixie Highway TOT m THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. AUGUST 6, .1964 B—7 .Botah ist From • Bonwif's By MADELEINE DOEEEN Margaret B. Kreig in her new book “(keen Medicine” devotee a chapter to Dr. Siri von Reis, a Harvard Botanical Muaeum Research Fellow whom she calls “The Betas* 1st from Browit’s.’t: Dr. von Reis is probably Auxiliary Views Film The Pontiac Area Junior Chamber Of Commerce Auxil-* iary met for a dinner meet. ing in the Waldron Jlotel on - Wednesday evening. Following the dinner, Roger Upham of Consumers Power Company gave a demonstration on moutb-to-mouth resuscitation and showed a film explaining heart massage. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Clyde Haskill presented a Sparkette award to Mrs. r Roy Linn for outstanding service to the group. Plans for a September dinner meeting were made. StudyClub to Meet The next meeting of the newly organized Hawthorne Extension Study Group will be on Aug. 11 at 1 p m. Mrs. Harry McPhail will open her West Princeton Road home for the meeting. • Chairman Mrs. Bennie Gwinn will discuss the preserving and freezing of foods. All local homemakers are welcome. the only botanist in die world* according to the author, who was a high fashion model while preparing a doctoral thesis. * * * * * With her husband, Arthur Altschul; investment banker of New York City, and their four-month-old son, she is visiting her parents, Mr. tand Mrs. Gustav von Reis of view Road and her sister Mrs. Karen Newlander, also of Westview. „ ; —w ' ♦ " “It was a ease.of being in the world of Christian Dior and Balenciaga by day and delving into the literature of cohoba snuff at night” writes Miss Kreig. ‘ “Dr. von Reis has never been to the Amazon jungle and has no burning desire to go, but as a graduate student she became fascinated with the study of native drug plants of the New World,” she continues. ★ * . * This dedicated young, woman is a graduate of Grosse Point Country Day School and University of Michigan, with a major in botany. In 1957, she earned her master’s degree in biology from Rad-cliffe College. ★ * * Her doctoral thesis “The genus Anadenanthera: a taxonomic and ethndbotanical study” represents several years’ research upon a group of trees in the legume family. ' * * * - She combed through 450 sources and corresponded with some <0 authorities in plant chemistry, pharmacology and experimental psychiatry. - ' •; ] / . FIRST WOMAN While stucjying for her Ph.D. degree at RadcUfie Siri was the first woman to hold the position of teaching fellow in economic botany at Harvard University. * ...... “The search for plants mfl medicinal value is'approached through folk-lore and ‘old wives’ tales’ she explains. “There is the rodless poring ’over notes made by botani-al experts all over the~worid and concerning all families of plants.” * ★ a . Aside from her interest in Ehrling to Conduct and Play at Festival Sixten Ehrling will serve as both piano soloist and conductor for the Detroit Symphony "Orchestra’s concerts tonight, Friday ahrf Saturday at S:30 p.m. in the Howard C. Baldwin Memorial Pavilion of Oakland University: As part of the Meadow Brook Music Festival, Ehrling will conduct from the keyboard Hendemith’s “The Four Temperaments'’ at all three performances. ★ ★ a His program tonight and Friday wiU include Berloiz’ Overture to “Benvenuto Cellini” and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7 in A major. Saturday’s program will include Rossini’s Overture to “Semlramidc” and Rimsky-Korsakov’s “Scherazade.” AMERICAN DEBUT . Ehrling made his American debut with the Detroit Symphony in 1951 and was immediately signed as guest conductor for a six-week period in the ’62-’6S season. During the engagement, he was appointed permanent conductor by a unanimous vote of the Symphony’s board of directors. . ★ AT ★ ■ Born in Sweden, the 46-year-old Ehrling is well known in thircountry for his recordings of toe Sibelius symphonies and the violin concertos,of Beethoven and Sibelius. His vast repertoire includes more than 500 symphonic works, encompassing music from the early classics. to present day works. Ehrling is widely noted for his .interpretation of modern orchestral compositions. Extra seats have been added to toe pavilion and tickets will be available at the univeM sity for all remaining performances. . SIXTEN EHRLING MEADOW BROOK MUSIC FESTIVAL TONIGHT, FRIDAY • P.M. Soloist: Sixten Ehrling, Piano PROGRAM BERLOIZ) Overture to Be “Benvenuto Cellini” Allegro dedso con impeto. HINDEMITH, Theme and Four Variations (The Four Temperaments) Theme Variation I, Melancholic Variation II, Sanguine Variation III, Phlegmatic ' Variation IV, Choleric INTERMISSION BEETHOVEN, Symphony No. 7 In A major, Op. 92 Poco sostenuto; vivace Allegretto Presto Allegro con brio SATURDAY, 1:99 PJH Soloist: Sixten Ehrling, piano PROGRAM ROSSINI, Overture to “Semiramide” Andantino \ Afiegro HINDEMITH, Theme and Four Variations (The Four Temperaments) \ (See Above) \ INTERMISSION RIMSKY KORSAKOV, Scheherazade The Sea apd Sinbad s Ship ^ The Tale of calendar Prince « The Young Prihce and the Young Princess The Festival at I PonlUc Pmi PM* Dr. Siri von Reis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gustav von Reis of Westview Road, is.thi subject pf a chapter in Margaret Kreig’s new book "Green Medicine" published by Rand, McNally and Company. The book concerns the search for plants that heal.' * f— --------—■—— New World narcotics, the botanist from Bon wit’s has’devised a unique method of drug plant exploration that'absorbs all her professional time now. * ■ Sr Why would such a delicately chic young woman spend part of her time^in the Harvard University Herbarium, turning over its 2,000,000 sheets, one by one, asks Miss Kreig in her book? PILOT STUDY To this, Dr. von Reis answered “No., systematic herbarium search of this magnitude has ever been carried out anywhere before. It is a sort of pilot study and perhaps eventually all of the major herbaria will be included, with toe data assembled in some central location for correlation on IBM equipment. “There is a mingled fragrance of plants, papers and preservatives peculiar to herbaria ... not just the odors of cinpamon, cloves or lemon grass, and- the hope of discovering data useful in mod-em medicine.” * ..The National Institute Of Mental' Health is now sup--porting Dr. voo Reis’ project and.that.of Dean Heber W. Youngken Jr., who evaluates her drug plahi leads in his laboratory at the University of Rhode Island College of 'Pharmacy. Renewal of a" two-year grant ,* from the NIMH has been applied fqr. Primitive peoples found drug plants useful in treating digestive ailments, acute pain cuts and wounds, pulmonary diseases, skin problems, fevers, and circulatory difficulties, to mention a few. . dr ★ - Native medicines were made from leaves, bark, root, fruits, sap or latex, stems, even flowers. Wmmm mm® No Top? We Should Stop! Our Depravity's Showing By ABIGAIL VAN BCREN DEAjjj) ABBY: When I first heat'd about the topless bathing suits for women I thought it was just a lot of talk. But.yester- htomh day I was ■ shopping i n one our finest department stores, and actually SAW roe for sale! Is is ble that our A m e r i c a n, women would even consider wearing a topless swimsuit in public? If soj we have indeed reached the foWest point in our so-called civilization. Even lower than the decadence which preceded the fall of toe Roman Empire. Have we become so numb to-indecency that nothing is sacred any more? * # ■ We are at the same time striving for world peace. Who cares if Khrushchev pushes toe button? What’s left to save] MOTHER OF GIRLS * + + % PEAR MOTHER: The bottoms. DEAR ABBY: My mother-in-law has five grandchildren, two otarhich are my children. Ever since I -can recall, on the mornings of their birth- / days toe would give me some cash and ask me if I minded buying them a present from her. She said it was hard for her to get around etc., etc. I have always bought the gifts and said nothing. The last time toe asked me if I minded, I said, “Yes, I DO mind,” and I told her why. Abby, F have driven from one end of this town to the , other while she personally shopped for birthday gifts for her ojher grandchildren—her daughter's children—and if she ,can ’ask ME to drive her around while she shops for THEM, she can ask her daughter to drive her around while she shops for MINE. She told my husband, and he is furious with me/ Was I wrong? STANDING ALONE ■ * ★ w DEAR. STANDING: You were justified in feeling that you were not being treated fairly, but you’d have been wise to have said nothing. The daughter versus the daughter-in-law competition is as old as the marriage law, and you won’t win that battle . in one round. DEAR ABBY: There is a boy in my neighborhood who used to like me, but he hasn't paid any .attention to me for a whole year. Would it be all right if I called him up and asked him what I did to make him mad at me? I have asked all the ' kids he is friendly wifi) if they know why he hardly ever says “hi” to me, and they say they don’t know. Maybe if I could taflc to him I could get him interested in me wgain. I am 15 and so is he. HUNG UP ON HIM * ★ * DEAR HUNG UP: Don't call him. And unless you want to kill any future interest he -may have in you, don’t ask his friends any questions about him. -Forward females, finish tost. DEAR ABBY: I read your column daily. May I. comment on the “baby sitting” issue: When young people refuse to “sit”, for their parents, or demand payment - from their parrots for this service, it is -the PARENTS who have failed, not the children. They should have been taught respect for their elders ; at an early age. A CLERGYMAN AND FATHER OF 3 Troubled? Write to ABBY, care of .The Pontiac Pram. For si personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed eiK . velope. For Abby's booklet, “How To Have A Lovely Wedding,” send 50 cents to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. Telephone, Thanks for Nice Visit By The Emily Post Institute Q: My brother and his wife live ip toe suburbs. I occasionally go out and spend a weekend with them. It never occurred to me to write a bread-and-butter letter after these visits, but I understand my sister-in-law thinks me very lax for not doing so. I know a bread-and-butter letter is customary after a weekend visit, hut isn’t this unnecessary between members of one’s family? * ★ ★ A: To write your sister-in-law a bread-and-butter letter would be unnecessarily punctilious. However, not to show some appreciation for the extra work your Visit entailed. is very ungracious and you really should, telephone her a day or 'so later to let her know that you arrived home safely and tell^ker how much you enjoyed your visit with her and John. Q: I have only, roe tablecloth that fits my present dining table. This doth, however, has only six matching napkins. Very soon. I expect to. have, eight people in to dinner and don’t know what to do about the napkins. Would it be better to use paper ones rather than have two odd napkins? * f’ * A: Paper napkins would not doTor a dinner party. I would suggest thatyoirand your hus-■ band use two odd napkins. | If at all similar to the otoers, it is unlikely anyone j will notice that they don’t 1 match. Q: When a table is set with place cards, do guests, after .finding their places at table, sit down immediately or do' they stand behind their chairs until die hostess is seated? * W it it I - A: They may pit down im-; mediately, but as it is qis-. i * tomary in some communities | tor guests to wait until the f. hostess is seated, to avoid embarrassment, a stranger Should wait to see what others f. are doing before sifting down. [ The Emily Post Institute [■ cannot answer personal mail, I but all questions of general * interest, are answered in this 1 column. DIAMOND FASHIONS ADORINGLY YOURS... AT ROSE JEWELERS Lot us show you a few selections from Hie magnificent array of Rosa Royalty Diamonds. Diamond beauty to chorish forever, to oxprass your leva this yoar and for years'to cams. Cheese the diamond she's always wanted at our low Rosa Price. ROSE] ROYALTY PERFECT DIAMONDS. FLAWLESS ... 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EXCISE TAX ILIR B—8 Homosexuality -It THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, W4 Roommate Has Problem Nr dr. qboroe w. crane CASE T-438: Edith B., aged -II, «h one of my psycbol-logy atudeaU on our downtown campus at Northwestern University. About the middle of die semester, Edith asked tor • personal interview. Owing our| session she! wanderedi around foH half an hour, OR. CRANE afraid to .mention the-thing Btoomfitld Miracle Mila Villaga Yam Shop SIKIAL! Custom Mods Slip Coven Average Chair $17.95 Average Solo $46.95 FABRIC FAIR MIIUCLS MILS SHOPPING CENTER MEET to EAT BIKER FOUNTAIN in the lobby of the ftikar Building 15 W. Huron St. CHILDREN’S SHOP MIRACLE MILE that really troubled her. V She had Informed me that fhe had a roommate and* it was this other girl Who had caused Edith to ask for the 'Interview. BLURTS OUT Finally, in desperation and embarrassment, Edith blurted out: “Oh, Dr. Crane, she is one of those THINGS!”. What Edith was trying to ssy was simply the fact that she t h o u g h t her roommate was a homosexual. For the girl had tried to pet and kiss and fondle Edith, much to Edith’s shock and horror. HOMOSEXUAL PROBLEMS Many people, even in this late year of IgOf, still look upon a homosexual of either sex as being very abnormal. The majority shy away' from such victims and treat than with almost as much Mrs. Lola F. Sandage of Nichols Drive was graduated this summer from Michigan State University with a master of arte degree in school administration. Future Bride Is Honored Sharon Fidler, Saturday bride-elect, was honored at a recent garden, shower and buffet at the home of Kathy Murphy on EastMadlson Avenue. Cohostesses were Mr a. [tale Harvey and Ma r> Kloka. * * > Mrs. Dennis Pawley of First Avenue also honored the daughter of the Roy Fidkgrs of Third Avemle at a reent shower. • ★ h . it Darrell Frazier, son of the Virgil D. Frasiers of West New York Avenue, is the future bridegroom. hoitor as the lepers engendered back in the Biblical times. “Unclean! Unclean!” Was the cry that lepers were then forced, to make in order to keep normal folks from.com-. ins in contact with them. But' modern psychology urges everybody to take a scientific view of human deviations from the normal. FORMS YARDSTICK Remember, too, that whatever 51 per cent of people engage in generally forms the yardstick for “normalcy." Being “abnormal” usually means you are statistically in the minority. Yet maay good acts, as measured by this statistical yardstick, are abnormal. For example, it is thus abnormal for anybody to go to church on Sunday, since far less than 50 per cent are in church each Sabbath. It is likewise statistically abnormal to go to college, since only a minority ever spend any time on a campus. It is abnormal to be unmarried after the age of SO, for the majority marry b e f o r e that ago. Obviously, I am showing you that there should be no hysteria about such words as “normal” va. " ‘ ~ Homosexuality is just one stage in the usual emotional development from Infancy to mature adulthood. At birth, we enter Stage No. X which is the “egocentric,” wherein everything revolves around ourself. That Is the time when an Infant has no cpncern for others but is solely interested in being fed, diapered and kept warm. SEES PARENTS 8tate No. 2 arrives about-kindergarten age, wherein the child admits his parents as important planets “ revolving around himself as the center. Stage No. 3 is the “gang” or normal homosexual level at which boys prefer their own sex and girls have little use for boys. It runs till the mid teens. But when we get into senior high school, maybe 85 per cent of us enter Stage No. 4 (heterosexual) in which we look to the OPPOSITE sex for romance. LOWER STAGES The other IB per. cent rest one or another of lower stages, is' many, brilliant adults never leave the selfish egocentric level, so they become psychopathic personalities. 4 * * Other confirmed spinsters and bachelors get “fixated” on their parents, while millions of people remain permanently attracted to their own sex. Role of UF Chairmen Is Alice Hollingsworth of. East Kermett Road was recently graduated from Wayne State University with a degree of bachelor of arts in sociology. She is with the Oakland County Friend of the Court office. Numerous Ways to Use Spray Starch Convenient new spray-on starch—so handy to spray-as-you-iron — has many clothing care talents beyond the ironing board. 8pray-on starch is a- star “clothes coemetic” for many wardrobe .Items your iron will never touch. . Try these “pushbutton magic” tricks. ★ * */■ * — Seersucker Skirta:. A puff of spray-on starch will erase “sitting wrinkles” In straight, un-lined seersucker skirts without flattening the seersucker “pucker.” Just turn skirt wrong side out. Place the clean, com-pletely-dry seersucker skirt on the Ironing board. Spray lightly with spray-on standi, brush out wrinkles with your hand, then hand up to dry. Don’t iron, just smooth out the wrinkles with your hand. t * t — Veil Whimsies: Use spray-on to perk up limp hat veiling and silted veil whimsies. Just nuke a form of crumpled tissue paper. Stretch the veiling over It. Spray-on starch and allow to dry. k » f r — Fabric Gloves: A whisk of spray-op starch keepe white fabric gloves cleaner longer. After washing gloves, roll up In a towel to remove excess moisture. Shake out, spray ev< with atarch and dry. n W if — Cotton Socks: Spray - on forms a dlrtguard on white cotton soeka, too. It also helps keep them neatly, trim, prevents sagging. Spray freshly • washed, dmp-dry socks and dry. * * * — Canvas Sneakers: Spray-on starch helps keep canvas sneakers clean between washings. Spray freshly - washed sneakers evenly and allow to dry. After each wearing, brush off the atarch and the dirt cones with it. Respray before To prepare for the 1964 Pontiac Area United Fund drive, 53 newly appointed district -chairmen for the Waterford area met with campaign leaders and staff members at a at Pine Knob Resort. ★ • * ' Purpose of the meeting was to stress the Important role district chairmen will play in' the ten day campaign which bdgins Oct. IS. They will be responsible for appointing some 500 solicitors who in turn , will be contacting residences and neighborhood buaineasei in their assigned areas. SET GOAL Goal for the Waterford area women’s campaign, which is under the direction of Mrs. Adrian Iah has been set at 511,026.87. List year Waterford women railed 115 per cent of their goal . Mrs. Merrill D. Petrie, women’s campaign committee chairman, presided at thevor-ientation meeting. *' >*— Bruce J. Annett, general c a imp sign chairman waa guest speaker. Also present were Donald Frey, executive director of tho Pontiac Area United Fund; Virginia Loveland, women’s division secretary; and Mrs. Richard Veaxey, publicity chairman for the [964 woman's campaign. » ARE^ CHAIRMEN Area chairmen assisting Mrs. Iah are Mrs. Nad Tria-sell, area I; Mrs. Ray L. Allen, area II; Mrs. J. D. Board-man, area HI; and Mrs. Norman Cheal, area IV. Bride Chooses Sheath Style for Her Gown . The former Sharon 6 Kay Young chose 4 white sata-peau sheath for her recant vows to John Bandy in the Orchard Lake Community Church. A satin rose held her veil pf tiered Illusion. Phalaenopaes orchids, Stephanotis, and pink miniature roses Tamed her bouquet. Attending the couple at the double ring ceremony performed by Rev. Raymond Rosche were Mr. and Mrs. Michael. Dailey. A buffet luncheon la Pine Knob Resort followed the rites. . */ * "it. The newlyweds ere touring Vermont, Maine and Quebec and will reside in Farmington upon ffieir return. Their parents are the Hugh Youngs of Hamilton Drive and Mrs. Robert Jackson of Graves Road. WNFGA Group Has Luncheon Cranbrook Branch ' board members of the Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association were recent luncheon guests in the home of Mrs. Edwin O. George on Barden Road. ★ n it' Mrs. C. E. Dalton, chairman of ways and means, re-’ veiled her committee’s plan for the major1 hind raising project. Proceeds from the sale of a hand made needle point bag will be donated to the new Bloomfield Township Library, Pontiac State Hospital Horticultural Therapy, and for scholarships. Status in Plaitic Surface - spongeable plastics are today’s status “linens” — in preference to the lavish, todtous • to - launder traditional* of the past. Waterford area chairman for the 1964 Pontiac Area United Fund,, drive Mrs. Adrian Ish (left) of' Woodbine Drive visits with Mrs. Bernard Seiber of Riviera Street and Mrs. Paul. E. Ish fright) of A qua tin a Street prior ’to the’ Wednesday orientation meeting at Pine Knob Resort. Mrs. Seiber is a 1 district chairman from area I and/ Mrs. Ish will be serving in the sam capacity from area IV. - J -. rmr Old ? iJoSSPHWE loMUA/V Halibut have large mouths and sharp tooth and devour smaller fish. . They -say that nothing succeeds like success, The success stories of others inspire us tp attempt self-iihprovement. They give us confidence that we, too, can accomplish what others already have accomplished. This is why I want you to see a few letters front women who have reduced so happily. Some of you may need a helpful push in order to get into your fall clothes. The following letter may do the trick. “Dear Mrs. Lowman: “I had a career before my marriage. After 10 years of marriage -r- and 30 pounds of added weight—I found it necessary to return to the business world for financial reasons. ’ *** /# *• “Even though 1 am still, skilled at my work, I found,it impossible to get a job. I am 45 years old. I,took a good look at myself- and decided that an improvement in my appearance just might make a difference. About this time along came your eight-week BIP routine which I followed for ten weens add lost those extra pounds. GAINS SELF-CONFIDENCE “Believe it or not, soon afterwards I landed a very fine position. Of course thismay have been a coincidence but I do not think so. I believe that while my improved looks may ‘have helped, the important element in my success was a subtle but feal gain in aelf-confidance. “Without realising U I was much more'confident. This changed my personality. Also, I just plain had more pep. “It may also be that any employer who is awqre of the health hazards of overweight may hesitate to employ a woman who was as much overweight as L” We never know judt hWw much .our appearance may affect our happiness or how overweight may affect our success as well as our health. Plan which give; you a loss of about 20 pounds in eight weeks, send 25 cents (plus 15c tar first class mail and special handling) with your request for the BIP KIT. This is foe complete course and includes my unusual weight chart. You can plot your weight on it dally and watch your beauty line rise as your weight line drops. Address Josephine Lowman, care of The Pontiac Press. A bachelor of arts degree from the College of Arte and Letters, Michigan State University, was awarded to Edward W. Johnson who makes his home with his sister and brother-in-law, the Ward J. Rathbuns of Fart Street. He is a member of Delta Phi Delta art honorary fraternity. Honeymooners Return Home From Niagara . At home on Brabb Road, Stony Lake, Oxford Township, after a Niagara Falls honeymoon, are Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Wayne Converse (Linda Gall Woody), For the recent candlelight ceremony performed by Rev. Norman Sanders in The First Baptist Church of Oxford, the bride choee a gown and train of imported Chantilly lace over silk organza. An Ulurion veil and small white lace Bible topped with miniature yellow roses completed her ensemble. ATTENDANTS Attending the daughter of Mr. a»d Mrs. Barney Woody of Minnetonka Road, Oxford Township, were Sharon Mer-sino, Jean Barger and Sandra Cox. Elroy Converse assisted his brother as best man. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Converse of Oxford. Other attendants, were Jerry Phillips, New York City, Gary Winterton and Conrad Mia-enar. ★ * ★ After September, the couple will live on campus at Central Michigan University where he is completing his education. Locals Score in Bridge Donald Bowen and Ronald Fiscus of Pontiac placed second in the Goodrich Pairs at the recent Summer National Bridge Tournament in Toronto.. Other area bridge players who scored well in the tournament were Henry Georgia and E. L. Guy ot Pontiac and Dr* Charles Patrick, Dr. Rob-ert Segula and Donald Stephenson, all of Waterford Township. Aluminum Foil Line your paint tray with aluminum foil aid you won’t have a messy clean-up job- WOMENS WEAR Mi) * \£' ^vKw- -•?'''Wy.;-17 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6,1064 m fww'm B—9 Mqljy Birmingham and Bloomfield Hills Residents' Are Vacations By SIGNKKAltLSTROM letters coming to Mr. and Mrs. Eugone ShgKfrom daughter Christy tells About the wonderful time she and three friends, Jackie Paulus of Glengarry Circle and Mary Krujfp and Martha Batey of Detroit are having in Europe touring the various countries in a'rented car. ~r~r- , *" • * *. The girls who graduated from University of Michigan in May left with a U. of M. chartered flight for Spain. * * * ‘ Trom there they have motored to France, Holland, Belgium, England and presently are In Norway after having stopped in Denmark and Sweden. They will be returning late Plan Wedding September vows are I planned by Willena Drake, daughter of die Wilgus ! Drakes of Adams Road, j Orion, Township, and j Charles Trevor Ebersole, j son of the late Mr. and j Mrs. Trevor Ebersole. He j resides with his aunt, Mrs. j % Waldo j. Steward .in Roch- j p ester. SPECIAL PURCHASE IMPORTED MOHAIR BLENDED SWEATERS M Reg, to 14.98 9 i98 For luxury loving, budget conscious .coeds . . , exquisite hand knit cardigan of wool mohair and nyon yarn in important cable stitch. Italian imports in white and yummy shades for foil. Sport Shop - Main Fleer hf August but still have time to-get an eye view of some additional-European countries. The-Shads have also had news from their eon Sp. 4 Kenneth J. Shad who has been transferred from Army service in Korea to Taiwan. News come from Harbor Point that the Don Ahrens are at the Colonial bn and some of their young families are nearby. Travelers are talking about the perfectly beautiful new home the Walter Fishers have built. Mrs! Fisher with their two young cNldren are there for the summer and Mr. Fisher commutes o v e; r weekends. Wash That Old Baseball Glove Here’s how to wash a dirty baseball glove: use thicl^ soap or detergent lather to lightly scrub the leather until dirt is loosened. T|*n wipe the glove witB a clean damp doth. - ^ ........ t FASHION SHAPERS for BACK TO COLLEGE & CAREER STRBTCHE8 " LIKE CLASTIC A new blend of Dacron, .Colton and Lycra® Spandex give* H these Unique properties) the famous solf-fHUng cups that lake themselves In, let themselves out, provide Its "fltobllHy". Washes and dries in minutes. Let it be your constant companion storting today. Just Foundations — Second Floor »3“ FOR BACK TO COLLEGE and CAREER let Arthur's put you in KNIT FASHIONS THE BLAZER LOOK by Butte Three - ways smarter... this double, knit ensemble with Its own short' sleeve over blouse, blazer jacket and slim skirt. Brass button double breasted jacket Is smartly ribbed. Red with black. Sizes 12 to 18. f3998 THi SPECTATOR MATCHED LOOK hyLoftio A perfect blend oil brushed wool and mdbalr in separates all dyed to match. swu - Sleeveless, Twtie pull-over # Long sleeve Cardigan ir Motchad • arrow derts AM Weal flepttal Skirt V Rich fo I shades: gold, emerald, orange or black. Sporttmoor - Meta fleer Near the Wishers are the Bernard P. Costello .Jr/s, Mrs. Costello is Mr. Fisbdr’s sister. AT OLD MISSION Mr*. Ralph Polk with ton Stephen is enjoying their sum- mer home at Old Mission for afetnyeeks. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Alt-schul of New York and young Artlyir Jr., are visiting the Gustav von .Reis, Mrs. Alt-schui’s parents arid her sister, Mrs. von Reis Newlander. 48 N. Saginaw St. Downtown Pontiac PARK. FREE 48 Years of* * Qualify Furs Spanish missionaries who followed the epoquistadods bto Latin America helped spread the aorient Inca language of Quecbua/ Tha t learned the laegnaga, then imposed it oo tribes that bad never spoken R. SUMMER % SALE - now in ^ progress! AUGUST FUR S ALE at Pre-Season Prices The Arthur's label is your guasantaa of Fashion,Quality and Craftsmanship What an opportumty to bt^sRUhur's fur at "Special Pre-Season Pricet?*. All the new silhouettes of f'964-65. Choose from the -widest, most wonderful collection we have eVei^fiffered. Invest in *a sur now when prices are lowest and remember, Fo\is a perfect anniversary, or Christ- ^ mas gift. You cfcmtell a fine fur. by its Arthur's label. Each must meet our high, standard of matchod skins, deep pelts, ex* \ ceilent workman-hip and each has selected a practical quality, e Arthur's liberal credit ^>.10% deposit will hold * | your selection ' storage until yotk bare ready for it. —SUMMER DRESSES— KlIKET Were to 17.98 ..... .1........ *S Were to 22.98 ..i..... *11 Were to 25.98 ....... $13 BETTER Were to 29.98 .... . *. . ........ Tf Were to 39.98 ..............; Weddiif Dresses '... V2 off aid More Drops Solon - Second Floor to 7.98. -WINTER COATS-UNTRIMMED Were to 69.98 14 ‘54 ..___________ FUR TRIMMED Were to 9119 *64 *84 Cool Salon-Second Floor HANDBAGS- 288 J88 SPORTSWEAR- MMTS ^ off 2-PcC0-0RI Reg. to 917, 1^88 Sportswear-Main Floor YOUNG FOLKS- (ilRLS *299 *489 *799 Others to $2249 Finger-tip lengths of full length, cqots of naturoMet-out-coplets, bubble capes and in let-out or piece minks with contrasting and self trimmed colors. Broadtail, Black-dyed Lamb, Shirred Muskrat, dyed Persian in both block and grey. MINK STOLES •259 *359 *599 Minks designed lj00a«Mh ” SiaOawMh MaOaa zZ $488 — $|88 scaJKA’ awaah *1.00. wart ’ SUWawaak Thursday. Friday and Cvattingi Until 9 P.M. SHaWS 'MICHIGAN $ mtSJ JEHtm SAGINAW STREET IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC X ‘ THE PONTIAC FRteSS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1964 THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY OPEN DAILY 10-10 SUNDAY 12-7 TOWN or COUNTRY U S. MAIL BOXES SANITARY PLASTIC KITCHENWARE Your Choice 3-pc. mix-bowl set with marked measurement; U.S. Postmaster approved! Ranch type, lli/2x-11-qt. measure-marked water pail; rectangular SVix8Vi>” black enamel or ahuninum - painted dish pen. . rural style. SPECIAL! NEW 36 DRIP-DRY PRINTS CREW SOCKS FOR MISSES, BOYS Usually 79c -98c per yard, during this sale save on 3 yds. for 88c. 10 0 % cottons, dyed - ground, drip-dry prints. 1-10 yard lengths. SLEEVE BOARD For Misses: Nylon reinforced heel, toe. Soft combed cotton. White. 8 Vi-11. Striped- rib elastic top. Nylon reinforced cotton. White, colors. 7- 10V4. " Buy 4 packages at this .. •,. . u ______ savingfxluncheon- Umit four size. White rainbow* P«r customer. 6” spiral colors. fluted, white. >~ In plaid and white. 60x75”, Charge It at Kmart! • ' ' j Irons sleeves easier, faster. SAVE NOW ON HEALTH AIDS! 40-«t. Mayfair Mr 26 HAND TOOLS BARGAIN PRICED SAVE 50‘! NAME TOOTH PASTES! LEADING LADY FACIAL TISSUES ExceHent selection Mudes: hack saw frame apd blade; hack saw blade idt; coping saw; With 4, blades; compass' saw; sabre saw blade kit; 5-pcl utility knife kit; block plane; carpenter's^ square; sliding T-bevel; 12” combination square ; 8’ steel tape rule; 8-pc. screwdriver set. “Ameri- | cap tools made by skilled American craftsmen.” J K-mart '• yzr 7 Extra-soft, absorbent t i s s u e s . . , with; “wet strength.” 4^0 sheets to a box. Chodse white, pink or yellow. Limit 7 boxes! GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD W3 B—12 THE PONtlAC BItis^, THURSDAY, AI^GUStV 1964 ■ f “You’ll Enjoy Food That Tastes as Goal as It looks” 'RESTAURANTS BIRMINGHAM 725 ». HUNT!* BLVD. Comedian Indicted for Incontf Tax Evasion LOS ANGELES W~ Comedian Ben Blue lias been indicted by af federal grand jury ip Los Ap^ele; teles on six counts of income tax evasion. ' X Authorities said yesterday the 63-year-old comic and former nightclub operator failed to pay a total "of $39,334 ip personal and corporate taxes for the years 1956-60. Daughter Scores aS Acti 'Terrified' Mother Con Relax PIED (™J§£ ] | PIPER RESTAURANT Friday Spoofal Fish Fry SUNDAY CHICKEN All You A £■< Can Eat DINNER Fisherman's Platter All You 1 50 Conihtlng N Oyittri. • «jai Can Eot 1 Scallops, Shrimp and n (0 ■'■■W..- Fish. Plus Potatoes ■ •nd Colo •low. „ OPEN SUM. 11 - 9 4370 M-59 PONTIAC FrL-Sat. 7:30 'M 1 A. M. FE 8-6741 Jf you want to make Iff Triday the big Day of the week then come to the Waldron for that really something /xtra! FRIDAY EVENING BUFFET SEKVED HON rOUI-TBIITT ON - ?ur famous Bar Round of Beef, reel: tasty Fried i Chicken, Breaded Fried Shrimp and Roldan Fried j Perch. Plus fourteen varieties Of home-made salads and an unusually fine iced relish •ray. All You 0M lot $v Back by Popular Demand " FrL and Sat, Evenings JIMMY ROUJNS at the plane and slnflni DOTTIE VIEAU ml the Mane and j PIKE _ ■■ and PHtVY ADDITIONAL PARKING NOW AVAILABLE ON MILL STRICT By! AP Movie-Television ! HOLLYWOOD—How would a mother feel if her 16-year-oldr-daughter left home for a life In the big, bad city? “I- was terrified,” says Mrs. Lucille Cole, mother df actress Elisabeth Ashley. “I told everybody at the office where I work in Baton THOMAS Rouge that she was still studying at Louisiana State University. I was so upset that I couldn't, bear to talk about it without breaking out in tears.” She can talk about it now. And she did, while visiting daughter Liz on the set of ‘‘Slip of Fools.” Miss Ashley is the electric brunette who scored on Broadway as Art Carney’s daughter in “Take Her, She’s Mine,” then established her -stardom with ‘‘Barefoot in the Park.” W between* she played George Peppard’s * sometime wife in “Tim Carpetbaggers,” and was termed b yseveral .critics as the only worthwhile element of the movie. EXPLAINS FLIGHT Liz explained her flight from Louisiana: “I felt it was something I had to do. I envisioned myself as a character out of a Hemingway novel — Lady Brett Ashley, perhaps, with a bit of Madame. Bovary. I wanted to be a wild, tempestuous, larger- than-life character, and New York seemed like the only place for SMILES NOW—Mrs. Lucille Cole (left), who was upset when her daughter, Elizabeth Ashley, left home for an acting career in the big city, is all smiles as she visits her daughter oh the set of “Ship of Fools” in Hollywood. Liz rose to Broadway eminence^ then received the inevitable call to. Hollywood, where she starred in “The Carpetbaggers.” After her plane fare, she had $lw in savings from modeling. She didn’t know a soul in New York. All she did was write ahead for reservations at the YWCA, “It was nice there,” she recalled. Liz got work right away as a model, then gave some thought to acting. She was accepted for study at the Neighborhood Playhouse and then faced her greatest challenge. Losing her Dixie drawl. 1 couldn’t get jobs until I did,” she explained. *1 took some coaching and worked hard with a tape recorder, and I managed to get rid of most of my accent.” BROADWAY EMINENCE The jobs began to come, and she rose to Broadway eminence, receiving the inevitable call to Hollywood. She came on her own terms. ‘Of course the studios wanted to sign me to contracts but I wouldn’t think, of it,” she said. Imagine having someone else decide what roles you are going to play! I wouldn’t think of it. Why, it’s A denial of my rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” % Committee Chairman W. Dawson Sterling said Wednesday more than 500 business companies here had participated in the drive, expected to be concluded soon. Funds will'be divided between a Dallas memorial plaza two blocks from the site where Kennedy was assassinated last Nov. 23 and the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston. ONE OF THE WILDEST AND) FUNNIEST GIRUHUNTS IN MANY A YEAR!” "I amThomasina-a most unusual cat... they say I’m enchanted, and 1 AMI" ■' Walt Disney— ■ . W THE THREE LIVES OF ■ ’ Jtiomasitia mbmMcGOOHAN susan HAMPSHIRE HURON Technicolor* J3* '-agggggs* j Look tafthe Walt OISliEVjor %> hna.tm Starts FRIDAY AT- 7:00 AND 9:00f P.M. She dodged only two questions I with “no comment” — Concern- 1 ing her romance with George j Peppard and her opinion of “The Carpetbaggers.” About all she ( would allow is that the public ] likes the movie and she likes J George. JFK Dallas Drive Nets $200,000 Plus! DALLAS,, Tex. (AP.) - More than $200,000 has been contributed to the John F. Kennedy Citizens Memorial Drive in Dal- Killad by Pickup Truck * MUSKEGON (AP) ^ A 75-year-old Muskegon woman Rtnich and killed by a pickup truck Wednesday while walking on'a bridge over the Muskegon River in North Muskegon. She was Mrs. Frances .Bouwsma. r2Z3KEEGO Marlon, David Brando Niven Shirley Jones Fontiac’t POPULAR THEATER WNfchyuStaNMNMllMkMilMk SwtNtyiAMtaMW It l* I* It M*. NOW! “SUNDAY IN N.Y.” Friday and Saturday 3:30 P.M. to 7:30 P.M. TEENAGERS W$ UP T0 2I COUPON £3 YEARS OLD ST II HOW! at 7:00 a mb BBBBt GORGE PEPPARD AlANLADD BOB CUMMINGS MARTHA HYER ELIZABETH ASHLE! LEWAYRES MARTIN BALSAM RALPH TAEGER ARCHIE MOORE WMMsyr Casta System Leads India Lovers to Suicide ALLAHABAD, India (AP) Two young lovers, the boy a member of India’s ranking Brahman caste and the girl an ‘untouchable,” committed suicide today because their parents refused to let them many. Police said the couple hanged themselves and left a letter ex-plaining their parents denied them permission to wed., sWtitilAwiAWNaew* iA ■ .•)-♦ TOlUiy* THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY^ AUGUST 6, 1064 found around tl Puentes on the coast. Meylsch : about $300. Diver Finds Ocean Treasures MIAMI, Fla. treasure still Atlantic Ocean 'and Martin Meylach can prove it. The Miami weekend happy enough to wi under a doubter’s found 17-pound silvt Meylach won’t say how roughcast, circul " precious metal he sand and coral arc tegrated wreck of the tury galleon Tres A sample ingot inches across and each one contains silver. LABORATORY^ANALWIS ' Hie boatyard operator, 36, and his partner, Eton Thomas, 28, say laboratory analysis showed a random chip of an ingot was 95 to 99 per cent pure '/silver . ■ “We found that wreck two years ago and we ‘dug’ it almost every weekend,” Meylach said. “Sometimes we were skunked. Sometimes we were glad to settle fen: a shoe buckle, a bit of hardware or anything still recognizable after 231 year on the bottom of the sea. “Otter divers came and worked the Tres Tuentes too. They went through that site .with the proverbial fine tooth comb — even tunneled it. Then, after they told us they were through, we took one more crack at it, and bang. We found the goodies.” Raid Cracks Gambling Ring Said Largest Mutuels Combine in Qetftroit DETROIT (UPI) — Detroit police and internal revenue agents raided a near northside office yesterday and. cracked a gambling^ ring they called perhaps “the largest single mutuels combine in Detroit.” Authorities said the ring grossed about $1,250,000 annually- Eleven persons were arrested, and four more *ere being sought. The alleged leader of the ring, identified as Julias Simmons, was expected to -torn himself into police today. His attorney contacted authorities witt that promise, Rackets Squad IJ. Robert Bnliock Police said all the men arrested and those sought were from Detroit. He said they would be charged with conspiracy to violate the state gaming laws, and the federal govern-ment could also bring tax • charges. „ Twenty-four officers partid pated in the raid. They hid to break down two doors to enter the building. They found the U persons cowering in room. . • % ’■> m \ Confiscated intbe raid seven cars used , gambling parapherntlln, I adding machines and more tl 8,500 mutuel race bet tkbits. Bullock said toe mid was in the planning stages for' about .two months. He added that six; of the ring members were currently involved in otter gambling cases before Recorders Court, all stemming from a similar raid Jan. 21, 1964. Tres * Puentes was in a tangled the Florida bottom on said. and digging around them to uncover timbers and — they hope — relics. , - *• “The Spaniards came back with native divers and salvaged all the treasure they could reach with primitive equip-said. “They probably But I have the the world they WARWICK, RJ. (A -15-year-old boys were alive Wednesday night trapped by a cave-in some feet below ground — where they had dug out an underground 'toom* \ * * A third boy was rescued after two npurs of frantic rescue work. He suffered head cut\ apparen when {Raised by shovel. \ tr Aa ★ Three other boys had just left the tunnel entrap when the cave-in occurred Nduring a drenching rain, One of them, Bruce Charon, 15, saidNhe fell backward as sand pouredvover him from the opening, but op-aged to dig himself out. \ The victims were Michael J. Kasek Jr. and Frank J. Lapro-china Jr., both of Warwick. Nearer surface William E. Underwood Jr., 13, also of Warwick, was several feet nearer the surface than the Kasek and Laprochina boys when the.heavy, wet sand came tumbling ipto the labyrinth of the tunneling. it ''dr ★' “I didn’t think about anything in particular," he said later. “.But I sure was scared. I was trapped in a kneeling position and couldn't move.’ Some 50 firemen, policemen and volunteers worked feverishly to reach the boys. A power shovel and two backhoes were brought in before the rescue was completed. UP TO CHEST - The Underwood boy said he was buried up to his chest and the other two boys were buried completely. * ★ .♦ \ ' A fireman, Dudolph Kingma, was one of the first persons at the scene. The Charon boy had extended one foot down the hole in an effort to have the Underwood boy grab on to it, but left for help when he realised Billy was too far down. ; Kingma dug Billy's arm free but when sand kept dropping in as fast as be could dig it out, he pot an oxygen mask on the boy's face and got a rope underneath his dtoaldars. boy was buried completely for a time. HELD MASK ON *T held the mask on with my left hand and prayed,” the Underwood boy told rescuers. ★ * a He finally was brought to the surface after two hours and 17 minutes of rescue work. Treated at a hospital, be returned to the scene in time to see workers Plan rarum for Hopefuls in Waterford A candidate forum, sponsored by the Greater Waterford Community Council, will be held at 8 p.m. Tuesday at Pierce Junior rib* School. Candidates seeking nomination in the Sant 1 primary election for township, county, state and national offmes have been invited to speak let the meet-yopr-candidate session. Each candidate will be allowed a brief period to present background information and reasons why be seeks e5 flee. Following the candidates’ talks, a social hour is slated to enable face-totee discussions with the office Calls from candidates are being taken by Mrs. Norman Partner and Mrs. E. L. Windeler. The public not only is invited to attend, put urged to do so to become better informed prior‘to voting, said chairman Millard James. DETROIT (AP)- UAW kingpins had better watch out for HER. UAW’ stands Jor^ United Auto Workers, HER stands for “Help for Equal Recognition" and being organized within the UAW by its estimated' ljp.000 women members. ★ HER’s immediate objective is election in 1966 of a woman to the UAW’s 25-member inter-, national executive board, which runs the union. After mat, a bigger voice in union' affairs. A driving force behind HER is a shapely blonde who knows how to captivate men. She has to. .She’s one of five women among 1,500 men employed in the Rockwell • Standard auto parts plant at Newark, Ohio. VITAL STATISTICS She is 34-year-old JoAnne Wilson, whose other vital statistics include a 36-24-36 shape and a' 5-foot-4H height. She is a tool room attendant, who- keeps track of the many tools used in her plant. Mrs. Wilson and Elizabeth Jackson of Detroit were named cochair men of a national steering committee organized this year at the union’s Atlantic City convention to get a women’s 1966 election campaign under Way for the 1966 convention, k :♦.* 4 . It was the Ohio blonde bomb-sh&h that gave the women’s movement momentum. Indiviually women within the union had been voicing demands for “recognition” within the UAW hierarchy. .When the caucus supporting UAW President Walter P. Reuther and his slate a. Wil-Davis, , for the declined to at-someone on JoAnne Wil- ther caucus Shd gained women unionists prompt attention. Mrs. Wilson got approximately 500 out of 1,500 votes. \ * * * Political campaigns are nothing new to Mrs. Wilson. She missed the Democratic Party’s nomination, for mayor of Newark by only 45 votes in 1963, and she won a spot on her local union’s bargaining tean^. JoAnne thinks she may give the mayor’s job another fling in 1965, and she has, until now, a secret political ambition: to some dny run for governor of Ohio. OTHER ACTIVITIES When she isn’t keeping tab on tools at Rockwell - Standard, she’s keeping bookS on the 50 apartments she and her husband Donald own, tending to her duties as vice president of a weekly newspaper at Heath, Ohio, of reporting for her union newspaper, or helping , her father run his real estate business. Incidentally, she now holds a real estate license herself and often considers shucking the $105-a-week factory job she’s .held for 12 years. * * ’:*• But that would cotone, she vows, “only after HER wins women the recognition they deserve.” When JoAnne finds time for her hobby, she listens to hillbilly music, and she even went home from Atlantic City via Roanoke, Va., to take In a “concert” there. Ed Sullivan Treated for Intestinal Disorder STATELINE, Nev. (A— Television personality E0 Sullivan is in a hospital for treatment of an intestinal disorder. A spokesman for a casino in Stateline, Nev., said Sullivan became ill yesterday after his midnight show. He said the-illness was not believed to be se- TEST CAPSULE DROPPED - A model of the space capsule to be used in the Gemini program leaves a CU9 cargo plane 1,500 feet above Camp Gary, Tex., as part of a study of landing' impact. The 4,008-pound capsule was successfuly landed in .the target area 30 seconds pfter thispicture was taken. Believes South Won't Accept Humphrey Mackie Pushing FDR Jr. for VP Bid LANSING (AP)-State Highway Commissioner John Mackie, believing that Sen. Hubert Humphrey is- unacceptable to Southerners, is waging a one-man grass roots campaign to win the Democratic vice-president ial“nomination for Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. “I’m doing it witt his (Roosevelt's) knowledge but not at ids direction and possibly not witt his permission,” Mackie said Wednesday at his Congressional campaign headquarters in Flint. * * * Mackie said he understands the three most likely running mates for President Lyndon B. Johnson are Humphrey; Eugene McCarthy, another Minnesota senator, and Roosevelt. VACATION AHEAD - Mrs. iohn F. Kennedy smiles as she links arms with brother- * in-law Prince Stanislaus Radziwill, who greeted her at London airport yesterday. The widow of the late president is making her first trip outside the United States since the assassination. She will cruise the Adriatic with faipUy friends. , \ r “Assuming> those three are being considered by the President and any one of the three may be acceptable,” said Mackie, “then the deciding straw may be public opinion. PUBLIC'S VIEW If the public liked FDR Jr., Is might carry enough weight for tte President to say, ‘Any of the three is okay but I’ll take FDR Jr., because the public likes him.’ ” Roosevelt "certainly would accept the nomination if It were tendered,” said the highway commissioner. it it it Mackie called Humphrey “a tremendous- guy and capable,” but added, “I understand he is not acceptable to most of the Southern states. I think FDR -Jr. would be. “Mil understanding is that there has been a poll' in the Southern states that indicates almost 100 .per cent opposition to Sen. Humphrey.” HUMPHREY LEADS Mackie acknowledged that Humphrey is the apparent leader in. the race, but said the race could broaden if the Minnesotan is unacceptable to some groups. Mackie cited Roosevelt’s name, acceptably to all states, long record of congressional and public service, and liberal outlook as qualifications for the second spot on the Democratic ticket. ★ * *. Roosevelt and Mackie have exchanged letters, telephone calls and personal visits since first of the year, said Mattie. “He, like myself, doesn’t want to have this appear in any man-net whatsoever that we are trying to force anything on the President.” MEETS FDR JR. Mattie's highway work brought him in contact with Roosevelt, who is undersecretary of commerce for transportation, controlling unit for 'the Bureau of Public Roads. Roosevelt was the principal speaker at a testimonial banquet for Mackie earlier this year. * * * Mackie, an alternate on Michigan’s delegation to tta Democratic National Convention later this month In Atlantic Ctly, said he plans to talk to delegates. * *. * “If at the convention a ma- Dealers Yet Must Sell1.25Million New Models By CHARLES 6. CAIN AP Business News Writer DETROIT - The U. S. auto industry has launched a massive sales effort to reduce its inventory "of 1% million new 1964 models before the 1965s hit the dealer showrooms about Sept. 23-The seven-weeks pales campaign will be a time of “wheeling and dealing” with car buyerg in a good position to get some healthy price reductions on the ’64s. \ • it \ W * . ■; Records indicate the current inventory of ’64s iS a new high, about 25 per cent over the average model-year end inventory. Auto sources say that part of this is due to recently settled 91-day strike by the Teamsters union which lied up some 115,- 000 new cars and trucks in East Coast auto plants. Flow of those cars to dealers resumed shortly after the strike was settled on July 24, but the additional vehicles placed an extra load on dealers and their salesmen. CURRENT PACE Most industry sources feel the lVi-million inventory "will be pretty well disposed of by mid* September, if sales hold their current pace. Dealer profit margins will be shaved somewhat as buyers go from dealer to dealer seeking the best buy. \ . * ' * ■ *>" One key question in this year’s model cleanup is the auto 'labor talks now Under Way in Detroit-If there should be a strike, pro- duction of 1965s in volume would be held up, perhaps for a considerable time in at least one company, and the 1964s would thus'become more valuable property. ( ‘ * it it ‘ Feeling among auto observers is divided, but at the moment, the majority appears to believe there will be no major .strike; they believe there will be some local plant walkouts, as there were in 1961. SIZE OF JOB The size of the selling job that lies before the auto industry is reflected by 1963 figures Whitt showed that 717,000 new. cars were sold between Aug. 1 and Sept. 20. In 1955, sales set a late summer record* of 1,046,000 for a similar period. . Thus it seems possible deal/ ers could carry over a minimum of 250,000 new 1964s — probably more—into the ‘65 selling season. t * * *• One effect of the Teamsters’ strike is that some customers, irked by the delay in getting the car they had ordered, canceled dumped onto the market in early fall. Almost every auto company executive is.confident the '64s will be disposed of without too much trouble and without deflating the auto market Intensified advertising campaigns,' both on tte national and local level, are being used their purchase and settled for- to let customers know the mar- some other make- That' meant salesmen on the dealer level faced the additional task of selling a car which was practically tailor-made for one 'individual insofar as its options and accessories went. Another aspect of the heavy inventory of ’64s is concent by dealers about what would happen to used car prices of 200,000 of 300,000 of the ’64s were ket is favorable for them. Most of the ads emphasize prices as the primary attraction. The general theme of the sales campaign is—why wait for a :65 when you can get a real good deal on a brand new 1964? Most industry leaders are convinced the sales campaign will pay off and the transition to ’65s will be made without too mutt trouble. jority of delegates privately preferred FDR, the President would know this fact,” Mattie. Conversations earlier, he said indicated many Michigan dele gates favored Atty. Gen. Robert \ F. Kennedy for the nomination before Kennedy was eliminated from tte race by President Fear Boom Backfire for Humphrey By JACK BELL WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Hubert , H. Humphrey’s vice presidential nomination boom is traveling so fast some backers are beginning to fear President Johnson may they , are trying to prsuaure his choice of Johnson has made it clear to all ooocernsd ha alone expects to choose the ascend place nominee. Hs has prodded state delegation Man to produce statements retifytaf his undeniable political right to make his own Worn past experiences the Democrats with whom he deals almost daily know that the President is not a man who takes kindly to the application of pressure on him. IBs belief that preparations in that direction woe being made by Mends of Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy was reported to have contributed to his decision to elimi? nate Kennedy and several others from consideration. Humphrey said today- In an interview that he isn’t turning a spade to work up delegation PRESIDENT’S DECISION The Minnesota senator added: “This matter is entirely in the President’s hands. Hs has never discussed it with me. He will make 'his own decision and the convention will honor it.” Humphrey conceded he had met recently with business groups in Chicago and New York. But he said this did not constitute campaigning for tte nomination. ★ * * “Old friends of mine invited ms to mart with some of their bosineeo friends,” ho said. “I told them tte same things I have been saying for years. I have boon a free enterprise man ever since I went to work in Humphrey's drug, store.” The penator was a registered pharmacist Humphrey’s supporters now count seven democratic governors as fawning him for the nomination. Gov. Richard J. Hughes of New Jersey was tte latest to join this group. OTHER SUPPORTERS Others on the list as supporting Humphrey tachide the governors'of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Nebraska, Iowa, Kentucky and Missouri. They think he is second choice in the California delegation if California Gov. Edmund G. Brown is not tapped. North Dakota, South Oakota and Montana delegations .also haW yielded indications of supporter Humphrey. r r HRS® ■T'V* wmm. m wr. mmm !¥ THREE COLORS m ' .'. V ,.;V^ octane/ MST0HIU9WM> 8 different octane-strength gasolines, •different prices, to give you the best gasoline llryour car it the fairest price! To make your car run best ' while you pay less, Sunoco**** ; the octane in New lQ0...a ( Now more car owners than ever before can get top performance and savings, too, with New 190. If you use regular, you ought to try new 190, priced below Sunoco’s regular grade! StoprtSbnoco-gourithcortfidence Snak# Came In to Play * 0* Chupeh's Services W - Dr. McFerran Grow®, pastor of Kendall 'Piex-,_ _ bytprian Ouirdi, sat down at ! gan’s worta” «*re riaii THE PONTIAC PRESS. THCHSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1964 * ONE COLOR D—I the organ before services to begin and looked a big i right in the eye. The soph£ slithered off and] about claims and benefits fie a youngster helped Dr. Crone no problem’here at the borne retrieve it from inside the or-1 office of New York IS. a nonprofit health tad medical insur- Claims Not Problnm at Multilingual Office NEW YORK (II ~ Questions ance plan for the elderly. i Staff members can reply in Trench, German, Spahish, Greek, Portuguese. Italian, Syrian and Polish, Apd, although no sick Centurions have in* one scholarly staffer and speaks Latin. . nailed reals The Navy commiMC^M ft* first submarine, '* 64 years ago. Seniors' Pi# in the Sky Became a Big Smash IRVINE, KyJ * - It cost $25 for Inline High Senior Butch Bryant t^ smash Principal Joe Ofir In the face with a chocolate pie. The senior class was trying to raise money with a pie supper! and the principal volunteered to become a target If anyone would contribute $S5 for the pi*. [] INNS END-O-SUMMER WE’VE CONCOCTED SOME DELIGHTFUL PREPARATIONS FOR YOU FROM OUR STOREHOUSE OF SUMMER LEFT-OVERS DESIGNED TO DELIGHT YOUR SAVINGS APPETITE! LOOK! Values to 1,99 MEN’S SUMMER HALF-SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS Coot sheer summer weight. 4tolf sleeve style. Tab . and spread collar*. Sixes 14 to 17... |48 Regular 89* 3-PC. GARDEN TOOLSET Includes trowel, fork and cultivator. All with wooden handles. 27* REVOLVING SPRINKLERS OSCILLATINQ SPRINKLER High impact plastic EQfi senetrortlew with re- . ■ ‘ volvinfl hood-. Wit Cevots tip to 1500 A Ate •4£SXt£ Z.o8 is foot plastic hose OwlsU pteets see- WA* strscUsw WUh beats III* HEAVY LAWN ROLLERS 225 lb*, of fro* wtioel ' t%9% %8.88 1 Values to 2" GIRLS’ 2-PIECE TENNIS DRESSES Asserted colors. . Trims, chocks and solids. Most all sixes from 1 to 14. Check the lew, lew price ... Men’s Short Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS Woven cotton and knit stylos. Solid colors and prints. Sixes S-M-l. 76* Clearance! 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Beck zipper. 34 to40......... 199 LA0IES’ COTTON SHIFTS 4 < , , m UDIIS’ HALTERS, PUT TOPS T“- 2 -‘3 :.#» 88* LADIES’SUMMER SKIRTS LAOIES* SWIMSUITS 5.99-5.99 OQO Fsbei J r«iMe 088 to 7.9ff \ 9 x Sports Editor. Pmtiaf Press The Detroit Lions wanted to give wdr “remodeled” defensive urtit a good test in the opening exhibition game against the Washington Redskins Saturday night at CharMNL N.C., but the quarterback who wm prepared to do that, Sonny J urgen -sen, will riot be in the lineup^v Jurgensen. whom the Redskins obtained from the ^Philadelphia Ekgleg ' in exchange for Noma Snead, injured Ms left knee in scrimmage yesterday ' and a I medical report disclosed that the former Duke star will be | sidelined for at . least three weeks. The team physician said Jurgensen suffered a partial tear gf medial ligaments. Another injury Redskins’ f coach Ml McPeak is upset Tossy's Osmss (Tarry *4) St I THB POV VUC PRKftS,' THUBSDAY, AUGUST 6. 1964 Beathard to Start at QB. for All-Stars FOMSLI 9UCCEMOR - Ford Friok (left), has ait-nounoed hi Will not seek another term at commissioner of beeebetl end Joe Cronin, American League preekleot has been named as poasibie»uccg|>or. Also being mentioned are Judge Robert Cannon of MUwnikee and Republican Sen. Kenneth B. Keating of New York. • ,, , - * ' c . ■ Tigers Thwart Chicago Bid Homer Wins in McAulifft Frustrates Chance for lit Place Frick to Retire From Baseball NEW YORK- (AP) - Ford Frick, under whose guidance the major league baseball map underwent vast changes and expanded from coast to coast, has afrnaqnced his retirement as baaeMtfwqmrnisetoner when his present, term"e*Bfres next year. * ■ Frick’s statement, not unexpected, came any advance notice Wednesday when the 69-year-old former newspaperman who rose to the his 2*h heme run of the sea-sen with a maa ea to break up a Li, lMnaing tie and send the Tigers to a 3-1 victory. • Chicago has bean one-half game behind New York and Baltimore for the pest two nights ang two victories over the seventh-place Detroit club would have provided thorn with a nice cushion — all alone in first. But, they lost both night games, and today finds them stiS one-half gmo in bock of the Yankees and the Orioles. The game was deadlocked at Ui# and of nine innings, with both sides haring one run. Detroit and Chicago settled down to a pitchers duel for the next 'three innings until the 15th. Don Wert opened the inning with a single to left of Juan Pisarro, who went the distance and absorbed his sixth kps. INTO FIFTH ROW McAuliffe worked the count to 1 and 2 before be drove the ball into the fifth row of the lower deck in right field. It was the fourth game in the last five' between the two teams in which Tiger home runs have produced late-liming wins over the White Sox. \ ■ • Pizarro allowed only seven * bits in the 12 innings uad would have wea la the rega-lation nine except for an unearned ran by the Tigers in the sixth when Jerry Lump* reached base aa an error by Pete Ward, advanced on a walk and scored on Al Ka-line’s single. The White Sox collected nine hits off three Tiger pitchers and the victory went to Juan Navarro, who worked dm last three frames, yielding ‘three hits. It was his first win of the season, j The Tigers meet Chicago! again tonight before returning to Detroit for a weekend series with the Kansas CHy A’s. HOCKEY FIGURE DIES -Art Ross, 78, the first coach and later general manager of the Boston Bruins hockey team, died in Medford, Mass., yesterday. CMICAOO Lump* 2b TlWtWr rf-cf*Vo* Thom** cT 5 0 0 0 Sword 2b 5 0 10 .Kiaw. rf 5 0 2 1 Ward 3b ' < I 4 • hwwiibf lb illliwww lb aooo ■nan a s o 2 • Rob-wn it-ri 3 T 2 0 Fraahan « 5 0 0 0 Hanaan a* 210 0 Wart no 5 III Landtt ef 2000 MM MHO M 5 1 I 2 McCraw ph 10 0 0 sBsi iiffiSrvafill Havana p lootMeHOrtway cIlf 1 • • . Piiarro p 5 0 0 0 Tata Is 4M 2 I Tatats , 4210 1 Oatrat .........Mi OtUMO *M 2—I Cbkaao ........... IN Mf III Mi 0-1 : n>aM. afHBPwr i. cmm* i. LOS-OOrnH 4, CMcaga U. ' Smoke Clears at Guo Club- ’ R$NO, Nev. (AP)-r-Alex Kerr of Beverly* Hills, Calif, wu named world champion and Steve Hansel of San Antonio, Tex. junior champion in 20-gauge competition tonight of the ltfl World Champion Skeet Shooting Tournament. Kerr emerged victorious when the smoke cleared after a 15-gunner sudden-death shootoff as Hie tourney ended its fifth day in Harold’s Gun Club. ' ' The shootoff was forced when 15 , contestants shot perfect 190x100 scores' * * * The winner from Texas fired a near-perfect' 09x100 to win the junior division title. Runnerup to Kerr was William Rogers of Atherton, Calif., while William Sesnon of Los Angeles took the Class AA title. An Illinois entry copped the five-tnah team title over rivals from Massachusetts and the U.S. Army in the day's fingl shootoff. The three teams posted .total scores of 493x500 to go into the shootoff. ft < ft ft The first leg of the Western-Open, a 12-gauge event employing 250 birds through Saturday, gets under way tomorrow with 199 targets. No. 1 position in baseball told The Associated Press: . ft - * ft “It’s just what I have said all along. Now Pve just made it official.” Frick has been commissioner since Sept. 29, INI arid has a contract through Sept. 21, 1965. He, however, said he Was ready "as soon as the chib .his successor and 29 dub owners by letter Tuesday night. Til stay on as loi want me to — that end of my tom," he said, they Want me to stay around and work with the new commissioner for awhile, I’ll be happy to do that too.” SPECULATION STARTS Speculation as to his succes-»r ftnmediately centered around Joe Cronin, president of the American League; Senator .Kenneth B. Keating of New York, and Judge Robert Cannon of Milwaukee, who has been counselor to the Major League Player Association for the past five years. Granin praised Frick by saying “the commissioner has had the best interests of bsseball at hes&rt all hb career.’’ As for Gtpnin, who rose from the ranks of player to manager to club official to league president, was elected president of the American League Jan. 31, 1969. The Hall of Famer is in the second half of a seven-year term. ft ft • -* In Washington, Sen. Keating said, “I have heard nothing about the basebpll commission-erahip from anyone except newspaper reparian.” He declined further comment.: Judge Cannon was not im-mediately reached for comment. - Under Frick's 13-year tenure as commissioner the baseball map, which was cbt off at the Mississippi River, stretched' to the West Coast with the Boston BrayeS moving to Milwaukee, the St. Louis Browns to Baltimore, the Philadelphia Athletics to Kansas City, the Brooklyn' Dodgers to Loir Angeles, tte New York Giants to San Fran-ciscoand the Washington Senators to Minnesota.' ' Pros After Records at Tam O'Shdnter CHICAGO dh-Tam O’Shan-ir’i 36-35—71 par was ready Into mourning Thursday' golf’s greatest shooters it in the first round of Open. 199 teed off 6n the 1,619-yard layout, scene of some of the game’s most fantastic tournaments during the late George S. May’s promotions, Which ended in 1957. EXPERT RECORD SCORE , Some of the top played, shooting for winning money of about $11*000, foresaw such par-powdering that the 72-hole Tam record of IN, set by Byron Nelson in 1946 and the course mark ef 63, shared by Ltoyd Mangrutn told Gene Littler, might be broken. “Given good weather, I wouldn't put anything past these fellows and 1 think chances would be good for a crack at 2N,“ said eighth leading money winner Mika flouohak, who fired a M in Wednesday’s pro-am. Defending champion an d master titlist Amol doubted that a 63 matched. 'But! tent chan 268 recor ing the c first fins championship in 1957. And it easier now." Lew Worsham, whose deuce wedge shot in 1953 c 72nd hole won the World with 271, said that 271 “Is a -good .winning target—the greens are bouncy in some cases.” “Under ideal ■ conditions,” added British Open champion Tony Lema, who la seeking his fifth tourney victory of the year, “possibly both the IS and 269 can be cracked. 1 think the course is a good test of golf.'* National Open winner Ken Venturi was highly analytical. ”1 think the records of 63 and 209 are safe. Because -of the heat and moisture, there is soft grass on top of hard ground. You con’t get the proper spin on your shots and a tot of times they fly on you. ft t ft/T-if *'■ In Wednesday's protHm Sou-chak eagle-deuced the 434-yard 19th. Hig long drive left him needing to play a low second ■hot under tree limbs to the green 100 yards away. He punched 6 6-iron. The ball rolled into the cup. Jock Rule, A comer from Cedar Rapids, Iowa, also had a 68 with an eagle 3 on the 414-yard second hole. He planted a 2-iron two feet from the pin. TO FACE PROS — Quarterback Pete Beathard of the University of Southern California wilt get a chance tomorrow night to lead the College All-Stars against the Chicago Bears. Draft Choice Who Shunned Lions Named # Graham Lists Starters for Clash With Boars Friday Night CHICAGO (UPI) - Coach Otto Graham said today Pete Beathard of Southern, California would sty* at quarterback Wednesday night who} his College All-Stars clash with the Chicago Bears at Soldier Field. Beathard got the,nod over two Other All-Stars who performed smoothty in training camp — George Mira of Miami and Jack . Concannon of Boston College. Floyd Cancais Bouts FALUN, Sweden (UPU-For* mfer heavyweight championi Floyd Patterson has cancelled two exhibition boxing matches on the advice of doctors. Patterson was to have per-* in the tourist 'villages Mora and Naas but with- . of the recurrence of an oftPhgck injury. ALL-STAR STRATEGISTS — Coach Otto Graham" (left) talks things over with co-* captains of the College All-Star team St * Soldier's Field, Chicago, yesterday. Quarter- back George Mira (center) and Reilly will lead their teammates as they on the Chicago Bears tomorrow night. Skin^QB Out Against Lions Bears to lake Jurgensen Hurt Aerial Route in Scrimmage Cards' Coach Doubts Stary Strength CHICAGO UP—If the Chicago Bears live up to the role of solid favorites over file College All-Stars in Friday night’s game at Soldier Field they probably will do it in the air. First Exhibition Gam* Saturday Night By BRUNO L. KEARNS Porta! Proas to latest in the ngm one ior the right night. Graham brake with tradition ia reteasing his starttog lineups. an annonneemeat he habitually withholds antii the day of the game. This time, however, a rash of injuries has trimmed Ms roster, knocking many of his athletfes out of contention for starting assignments. Tony Lorick of Arisons State Willis Crenshaw of Kansas Graham’s selections.to game as his naming unable to make It an call, on a few listed his starting pass catchers as Paul Warfield ,af Ohio State at flanker, Chuck Logan of Northwestern at, the split end,, and Ted Davit of Georgia Tech at the tight end. The interior of file starting offensive line consists of tackles Lloyd Voss of Nebraska and Ernie Borghetti of Pittsburgh, guards Hatch Rosdahl of Peryi State mid Dick Evey of Tennessee, and center Ray Kubala of Texis A&M. V.. ? -Tentative starters listed* by, Grahhpi for defense are: George Beals of Missouri and Ed Lotba-mer of Michigan State at aids; Tom Keating of Michigan yid George Bednar of Notre Dame at tackles; Wally Hfigmgg of Iowa and Dave Wilcox of Oregon at linebackers; and George' . Ross of Auburn, perry Dunn of Mississippi, Mel Renfro of Oregon, and Jerry Richardson of West Texas State at Defensive backs. League presidents Cronin and Warren Giles ofthe National League said they would ask that an Executive Council meeting be called in Chicago on Monday, to present recommendations to: a joint meeting of the majors league to consider procedure to be followed in selecting Frick's successor. Top Womftn Bowlers COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) -Mrs. Jeanette Bopp of Milwaukee averaged 299 in league play during the 1993-64 season and Mrs. Rita Modzelewski of Wyandotte averaged 299 to erase the old record bf-‘296, the Women’s International Bowling Congress announced Wednesday. : , . ' >: - Although the Bears won the National Football League title last year by ball control fobfe ball, Bill Wade will be tempted to limber up His arm with a few bombs against the college boys. “The All-Stars may have trouble with. their pass defease,” «Ud Wally Lerta Wednesday at fie camp of his St Louis Cardinals at Lake Forest, 111. Lemm should know for his Cards scrimmaged the AU-Stars last week. The Cardinal coach also thinks the collegians may not be able to mount a strong, pass rush on the Bears’ quarter-1 back. ■ -1 ft ft ft . greEn Bay, Wis. un—The* Green Bay' Packers worked: against St. Louis defenses and, then wound up with their first “two-minute” drill of the season Wednesday hi preparation for Saturday night’s exhibition with . the Cardinals in New Orleans. ' ft ft ' In the. two-minute drill, the Packers attempt to move the length of the field for either a touchdown or a field goal. It took than only seven plays to move to the opponent’s fivt from Where Paul, Hornung* booted a 13-yard field goal. The drive was sparked by Bart Starr pasaes to Harming, Max McGee, Ron Kramer and JUi Taylor. e/.u TODAY’S PACKER LECTURE Vince Lombaidi, coach of the NFL Green Bay Packers gets plenty of actidh into his lecture in preparation for the exhibition season. Listening are (from left) Gary Kroner, Boyd Dowler and Ron, Kramer. Dowier and Ron Kramer. Golf Entry for U. S. Arnie, NicklauiPicked NEW YORK (UPI)—Jack NiaUaus and Arnold Palmer, who scored a brilliant personal andOeam triumph in last year's competition, were named today to represent the United States in the 12th annual International golf championship and Canada Cup matches at Maui, Hawaii, Dec. 3-6. The tournament brings together two-man teams from 34 aho compete for a team title as well as Mividual Nicklaas worn the individual cumpetitfoa last year at Pwls with a iccreJU*7 tor the 63 hales to which the tmnameat was limitony lbg. Palmer waa fifth in tnTnlivldual standings with and together he and Nicklaus won the team crown with a 482 total against 415 tor Spain. ^ ■ The quarterbacking duties ! will thus go to veteran George I Iso and rookie Dick Shiner. ! Jurgensens last me#ting against the Lions was in the Ml- ] aui NFL playoff bowl in 1962 and in this game he suffered! a broken shoulder. The Lions will take a 47-player squad to Charlotte and three | new faces among the veterans I and seven rookies will see moat j of the playing time. Game time Saturday night is 1 I p.m. and it will be broadcast•; by radio and also videotaped for replay on Sunday at 1:$$ p.m. , ■ The Lions will leaye Friday, afternoon. * CMcaa* (| (gilH (ilUanrm |» r *4). night I trarraf 1*7) i THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUfiljST 6/ 1964 D—3 Orient Golf Champ in WORLD ENTRY—Yong Yo Hsieh, one of the top golfer* in the Orient, will make his U. S. debut in the Carling World Op^p at Oakland Hills, Aug. 27-30. He is the Hong Kong Often champion this year. Unvejl Trophy for Tourney, at Cranbrook The unique trophy which awaits the winner of\the forthcoming Carling World Golf Championship to be ployed at Oakland 1011 Country Clisb late this month was unveiled here today in a special noon ceremony at Cranbrook Academy. Mrs. George Romney, wife Of Michigan’s GoveriW,\aflitolll* designer William MAMcVey, and Harrison W. Wilder, president of Oakland Hills eral chairman of the ment, participated in i ing on the steps of Cranbro Academy of Art: Qranbrook was selected as the. appropriate site for the event because McVey formerly was an instructor at the Cranbrook Academy of Art. * / it ir A y * Internationally known for his accoinplfohments as a sculptor, Mrvey now resides in Cleveland.'1 Hf is head of sculptor at the Cleveland Institute of Art and has been visiting sculptor at /Ohio State University’s School / of Art. ! / %L. / \ i VICTOR’S AWARD-To the oflpe World Open golf imCnt at Oakland Hills will^go this silver trophy unveiled, today St Cranbrook school./, / Y —; ■; x ■ I Coach GenevWoodling of the Baltimore Orioles broke tq with Mansfield in die Ohio State League at age 17 in lMO. «. Oakland Hills Is U S. Debut Yong Yo Hsieh Sot for Tournament One of the Fat East ’s top golfers, Yong-Yo Hsieh, will make his United States debut in the $200,000 Carling World Golf Championship at Oakland Hills Country Club, Aug. 27-30. * ' * ft The 30-year-old Hsieh has won the Hong Kong Open the last two years. He birdied four of the last five boles to win,:, the 1963 championship. This year he was 15 under par with a total of 269 on rounds of 65, 70, 68 and 66 to tie with Allan Murray of Australia. The 5-foot-9, 122-pound Hsjeh holed an 18-foot birdie putt to tie Murray on the 72nd hole. Then Hsieh dropped a 25-foot birdie putt on the third overtime hole to wia the sudden death playoff with Murray at the Royal Hong Kong Golf dlub, which is just a mile and a half from the Bamboo Curtain. Hsieh hails from Taipei, Formosa. He has been-the professional at the Taiwan Golf ft Country Club for ten years. Re is no stranger to international competition, having played in the Canada Cup six times. it * ft ■ Tickets are on sale at 30 De-troit-Fontiac area outlets, as well as at Oakland Hills and other golf clubs. Season books, priced at $20, are good 'for admission on all four days of the tournament, plus' the three previous days which are being held for official practice rounds. * * * Daily admission for the practice rounds Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, Aug. 24,25,- and 26 will be $2- Admission to the -first two rounds of the actual tournament Thursday and Friday, Aug. 27 and 26, will be $5, with the tickets Saturday and Sunday, Aug. 29 and 30, priced at $6 each. „ *» .. Pontiac Still Best In U.S.? Skating Coach Is Worried Qualifies for State Playoff Big Inning Carries (JAW to Win A seven-run third inning carried UAW Local 594 to a 10-1 triumph over Elks No. 810 last night at Beaudette Park and the victory boosted the union crew into the state Class C playoffs. The union squad won the series, 2-1, end will now join three other American League teams in the Michigan Softball Association playoffs — 300 Bond (A), Ayro Realty (B) and S#m Reeves (!>)..' Berry Door moved into the fiaals of the National League’s upper bracket with an 11-1 and BncknSr Finance took a 14 lead in its two-of-three-se-ries with Lytell - Colegrove with a 164 rant. Jake Mazur struck out 12 and held the Elks to three hits and he banged out a pair of singles to share the offensive load. Shortstop Mel Taylor dubbed • first-inning home run to send the union squad ahead 14, and the winners added seven in the third on two doubles, three singles and two walks. Third base-man Earl McKee picked up two safeties In the rally. Sr ft ■ • ft ' Berry Door packed out 13 hits in the easy triumph over Orchard Lanes. The winners posted seven markers In 'toe ■ Death Takes Member of OjyiRpic Committee MUNICH^ Germany, 2 “*17 TUK or TUOCLiSS WHITEWALLS $1 Extra WHITE $12.50 CUSTOM RETREAD 666 Mt. Clemens St., Cor. East Blvd., Pontidh Open I A.M.4 P.M. Daily-Phone FE 44918 U.S. R0YAL TIRES Engineered to keep your tpnre in the trunk Big Surprise in Net Meet MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, UB-Mickey Srilagyl, of .Milwaukee became the surprise of the 11th annual Jayilea International junior tennis tournament Wednesday, scoring a pair of upsets In 18 and under boys singles to move into Thursday’s quarter-finals. *' * * Szilagyi defeated fifth-seeded Bobby Goeltz, Washington, D.C., 24, 64, 64 after taking out ninth-seeded Miguel Lingre of Mexico, 6-2,64. Top-seeded Jeff Brown of Carmichael, Calif., had some* trouble, but gained the .quarter-finals by beating Darrell Snyder of Winfield, Kan., 34, 64, 6-1, and Bob Hubbard of Baton Rouge, La., 64, 64. ft it it ; ’ ' Also moving up was Chuck Darley, Rochester, Minn., who beat both Ted Russel of Albuquerque, N.M., and, Jim Novitsky of Hamtramck, Mich., by identical 64,6-2 semes. Mias Gillespie atoo was the 1962 women's Champion. Harold Tuttle of Youngstown, Ohio, won the seniors’ championship for men 00 or older with six victories and one loss for a ringer percentage of 64.9. Hie juniors’ championship went to Gary Roberto of Lucao-ville, Ohio, with six victories, one loss and a 67.6 ringer per centage. The world champ ino-hip pitching begins at S;30 p.m. today. Each competitor will play every other competitor once, the title being decided on a games won-lost basis. They will pitch three games a night from tonight through Monday night, and five games next Tuesday night, when the championship will be decided. Aitkerimd H0NNEYWELL PENT AX Dealer Thu Finest in Single Lana Reflex OpMi Mob.. Fri. 'HI 9 EXPERTS CAMERA SHOP 57 W. Huron St. H 5-6615 Take Advantage of Our Offer!. 9 DAYS LEFT! Hour tire fails when it’s this worn. U.S.Royal will replace itwith a brand new tire free. This Special Introductory Offer applies to passenger car replacement tires PURCHASED AND REGISTIRfD BETWEEN NOW and AUGUST 15th. 31 W. Montcalm TIRE CENTER Ff 3-7068 WwW, FISK CUSTOM MS 4-Ply 100% NYLON Tubeless & Tube Type [ * 6.00x13 11J|* . I • 6.50x13 .... *.14.88* flifc Truek Tiree " •-riff 100%Xfflom •* MOUNTED FREE'- M MOiXEY BOWK 6.00x16 .. 6.70 x 15 6.50 x 16 7.00 x 15 hUckwdll, tub* tjpt, plus UK P~6 M. MAC,] THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, (AUGUST 0. 1006 If You Are Pressed By, Bills or Other 5 ries-NOW You Can Oft Up TO s *3000 CASH I On 2nd Mortgages ■ and Larid Contracts ■ If you have an immediate ■ emorgency, perhaps our . ■ Homeownar’s Loan Plan • /' ia the answer to * your proklam J for Information FE 8-4022 : FAMILY ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION ! |)1 National Bldg. 10 Wait Huron S Phillies Rcjp Houston Twice Ailing Mays Sparks Giants By The Associated Press , *S Wouldn't be playing," said Willie Mays. “I’m doing it only to help the manager." The San Francisco Giants’ star center fielder showed up at Shea Stadium Wednesday night nursing a heavy cold and when Manager Alvin Dark made out his line-up, Mays wasn’t in, it. But five minutes before gametime Willie decided to play. The Say-Hey Kind then clouted two home runs — tils 30th and 31st of the season — and the Giants coasted fo a 4-1 victory over the Mete: . ‘ • Sr * ★ - ' “These guys are trying to get Dark fired," Maya said. "I’ve got to help the man." Mays caine jo his manager’s defense the best way Jie taie* how — with his bat. Dark's position as manager was reportedly shaky following racial remarks attributed to him whidh appeared ia Long Island newspaper. Dark denied the quotes to reporters Tuesday and then held a club meeting to ex lain his position to the players Wednesday. ANGRY AT REPORTS Mays, angry at the reports FISK WINDSOR 100% NYLON TIRE 6.70x15 Tub* Type 7.50x14 Tubeless Abb * •BUukwMs, tub tUu *ui tub* tjpt, plus mu W rtctppMt tir*. FISK CUSTOM US Qwality 100% Nyle* | Tubeless 6k Tube Type 6 • 6.00x13 ISM* I • 6.50x13 .il.88* I • 6.70X15..........13J8' I • 7.10x15 .14JI' I • 7.60x15.........15-88* I • 6.00x15 _ISJI* I • 7.50x14 .._13.88* [ • 6.00x14 ...... 14JS! • 6.50x14_______ 13.41* BlmthwIU. MU tffpf mU MtUtt. jfSm lc* at raaaaaaii* Un.WkUtwilli tlitkUy ktfknr. 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Extra Special savings at this'low, low price. ^ »..T.Tf7e Rh.....1.17 2.38 I’M*, a* law at.... 2.47 Tiatlag light...............2.47 Aap. aid OH Uaafa ....3£I6 Cawatasslaa Mw..............3.96 76c Dash Tray ........... 77c %|H HITEit* Door Mirror cm ......... 97c ftwlaalie PMd. ft.... 27C Irak# PMC, ll-Oi...67c Vacua ni Paal Hum Tutu . Chraaw Isehisg Cat Cop 2.47 Chroma Prams* Cap.... 1.27 Satotf Equipment HSsHahHmMb.. 97c sums star Cam......1.71 ... 97c ■raha Sprtag PHan.....1.17 Nahhar MnBm...........77c na xh. FISK AM WELTERS World famous FISk brand . , , quality aUr _ niter* tMat aa saw equal orifl- *897 sal equip- i' \ I Qi|m||fl> Iwwflk 1.94 2.96 that Dark might be fired, took out his wrath on the Mets. His fourth-inning homer tied the score at 1-1 and before the inning was over, San Francisco, had taken the lead on hits by Willie McCovey and Tom Hall- McCovey tagged his 15th homer In the seventh and Mays clubbed No. 31 in the eighth. The power show whipped the Mets btit didn’t help the Giants in the National League pennant race. Despite winnings San Francisco fen two games, back oLthe Philadelphia Phillies who swept a twi-night doubleheader from Houston 4-1 and 3-1. St. Louis topped Chicago 4-2, Milwaukee downed Cincinnati 6-3 and Pittsburgh edged Los Angeles 4-3 in other NL games. - * ★ - * Richie Allen's leadoff homer ip the ninth inning gave the Phillies the'second game after three runs in the opener. Allen tagged reliever Hal Woodesiv-ick’s first pitch in the ninth for his 19th homer. Pinch hitter Cookie Rojas drove in Tony Taylor with the winning run in the seventh inning of theopener. Taylor, who had knocked in the first Phillies’ run in the second, tripled and scored on Rojas’ sacrifice fly Philadelphia wrapped it up with (Wo in the eighth. •* •*, ★ Bill White’s 14th homer, a three-run shot, helped the Cardinals trip the Cubs. Bob Humphreys, who relieved starter Gordon Richardson in the sixth, hurled four innings of shutout ball to preserve the victory. Eddie Mathews’ two-run homer, his 15th of Uk year, started a five run Milwaukee spupt in trie eighth inning that gave the Braves their victory. Leo Cardenas and Don Pavletich hom-ered for the Reds. The Dodgers nursed a 3-2 lead into the ninth but Jim Pagliaro-ni’s leadoff homer against Ron Perranoski tied it. After Dick Schofield singled. Bob Miller replaced Perranoski and walked Bob Bailey. Roberto Clemente’s base hit scored Schofield from' second winning it for the Pirates. Drought Hinders Ducks WASHINGTON (Aft — The Interior Department announced Wednesday that drought affecting major duck nesting areas across North America, will lead to smaller flights this year in the Pacific and central flyways. The department noted that the breeding conditions in Michigan were below average this year. QUALITY MUFFLERS Mets Deny Casey Not Coming Back NEW YORK (API - The New York Me** denied today an Associated Press report that they had made a decision concer ' Casey Stengel’s return as manager in 1965. And the San Francisco Giants were mum on the report that Alvin Dark would be dismissed as manager of their team. ★ .6 W Casey’s contract expires at the end of this season. Dark’s contract expires Sept. 1. M. Donald Grant, chairman of the Mets’ board of directors, commenting on an AP report that Stengel and the Mets will readi a parting of the ways at the end of the season, said: “No decision has been" made. There has been no discussion as to whether or not Casey will return next year. We will not discuss it until the end of the season when Casey will come to George Weiss (club president) and tell him what his‘plans are Huron-Airway Posts Victory. Two-Gam* Knockout-Starts Sunday Huron-Airway put the lid on the regular season in the men’s Class A baseball league last .night with a 64 triumph over lftarsmbrook. Four hurlers combined in the two-hit shutout with starter Steve Wilson picking up the victory. Center fielder Ron Murry singled in the first and the fifth for Cranbrook’s only safeties. John- Lucadam’s -qi n g 1 e chased catcher Charlie Joha-soa across the plate ia the opening for Airway, and the wiaaers-added their final tallies in She fifth and seventh frames. H-A (16-2) will now move into -the playoffs with the Clippers <11-7), Cranbrook (94) and Pontiac Business Institute (144). PBI and Cranbrook will open the two-game knockout seriqg Sunday at 9 p.m. The Clippers will meet H-A Monday at 9 p.m. After two teams have been eliminated, the remaining two will enter a three-out-of-five series to determine the city champion. The winner will represent Pontiac in the state playoffs. 1 • Estw 3b Lviadam. Wagner, ________ .... Wilson 3 SO, J W. a-SR H WU 1 W, R-e« 0-0, Picmann 7S) M, Saekett (4) 3 SO. R.ER . Winner rruii- Coach Mel Wright of the Chicago Cubs compiled a 2-4 record while appearing in 52 majdr league games between 1953 and 1991. for next year. This ha always been the procedure." NOT YEg OR NO Asked whether he would say that Stengel can have the job as long as be wants, Grant wouldn’t say yes or no. A printed statement was distributed /mong the reporters before the start of the game bet-ween the Mets and (Bants which, in effect, said the same thing. The statement concluded: "Casey has always insisted on being free tq. decide on the fol- • lowing year at the end of the season, and the same procedure will be followed this year.” Dark’s status remains unchanged. Horace Stoneham, owner of the Giants, who makes the decisions, has been silent and probably will remain so for some time. ■ *, * '*> r Dark, who had expressed his views in a Tuesday press conference on the controversial racial issue in which he had become involved earlier, had a short meeting with his players in the privacy of the clubhouse “ before the game Wednesday. “I let them know what I always believed and what I will continue to believe," he said. ‘That’s all I can do. “The players did not ask any Golf Champ Moves Ahead WAUKEGAN, 111. (8 - The women’s Western Junior Golf Tournament moves into quarter-final and semifinal round (day Thursday with defending champion Janis Ferraris of San Francisco obviously the young -lady to beat. Miss Ferraris, also 1963 national junior champion, scored the easiest triumph in Wednesday’s eight-match second round at Glen Flora Country Club’s par 37-36—73, 6,064-yard course. Miss Ferraris, 17, eliminated Jacqueline Fladoos, 16, Dubuque, Iowa, 7 and 6. Her quarter-final round foe Wednesday morning was Carmen Piasecki, 15, South Bend, Ind. Pfckyoutsize BRAND NEW 1:70 x IS 7:50*14 8:50*14 FalUny Whitewalls Plu* T»x . *34 OMmmIiS* ‘U Dual Exhamt.............ISM Paittiac 'SS Siagla Sxhaatt... SJS Paatiac ‘34 Dual txhaart, MI..1S3S Paatiac 'S4 ■ Daal SxNavtt, right. .1S3S Paatiac ST 1S3S \ Meaey i\ last ailed stalled Free TAILPIPE SPECIALS Far FarUa, Otavralat*. Umarf AUTO CENTER GIENWOOD PLAZA Special STMMRD ENGINE REBMKRS .. .*96*1 7. *115 M. This includos .. Rings, Rod Boor* ings, Main Boaring, Grind Valvas, Fit Pins, Daglaxa Cylinder Walls, Gaskets, Oil and Labor! s tiLso"—, „ : FACTORY REBUILT ENURES 696 AUBURN RD. MMM1 tlt-MU .f.. w: V»V*f THte pontmc pksss, Thursday, Averse <*, iw -'vA •■ ■mmm ;>,. .■ Ip i D-A Chance, Lee Shackle Orioles By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dem Chance, who shares Tils escapades with Bo Belinsky, now has hooked onto a guy to share Us shutouts. -Chance usually works alone on the mound hut needed a collaborator Wednesday night and found rookie Bob Lee a willing accomplice as the two mmhinwj efforts in the Los Angels’ 1-0 shutout over the pennant-hopeful Baltimore Orioles. [ * It was the Angels second successive shutout against the Orioles, their ninth, in the last month anf their 18th of the sea-, son — tops in the American League. And Chance and Lee have had their hands in an even dozen. Lee, who got to be a reliever with the Angels because he didn’t want to be a reliever with Pittsburgh now has shared six shutouts with his Angel teammates. pitched scoreless ball-for 231-8 innings over a 10-game stretch and lowered his earned run average to a brilliant 1.58. CONTENDERS LOSE The defeat didn’t cost the Ori- Orchard Lake Golfers WDGA Team Winners The Orchard Lake squad finished on top in the Blue Division of the Women’s District Golf Association season team play following an outing at Dearborn Country Club yesterday. Huge Boxer Scores TKO Twp Olympic Hopes Win betroit Matches DETROIT (UPD—Giant Buster Mathis, the 285-pounder from Grand Rapids who hopes to win the heavyweight boxing crown in file Olympics, scored an impressive victory last night during the Mayor’s Athletic League bouts. Mathis caught Detroit Golden Glove champion Willie Williamson with a roundhouse left at 1:26 and scored a TKO the third round to take his match. Ron Harris, a Detroit Olym-. pic hope at 135 pounds, shewed style and punching ability in a three round deck sion over Assi Gabriel, aa Ivory Coast Olympic boxer Both Mathis and Hartifc are members of the U. S. Olympic team. 7 More than 4,000 fans watched file bouts, staged , along with professional boxing and wrestling for the benefit of the Olympic Fund and the Detroit Police Youth Program, held at Cobo Arena. Army Sergeant Leads U. S. Pistol Shooters CAMP PERRY, Ohio ill-The Army, Navy and Air Force are shotting it out for the 1984 pistol championship here with Army Sgt. 1. C. William B. Blankenship Jr. of Richland, Va., well on his way to a fifth strai#it championship. He had a total aggregate, of 1,766 out of a possible 1,800 after Wednesday’s center tike matches. Close behind is Navy PO 1. C. Donald L Hamilton of Pembroke, Mass., with an aggregate score of 1,780.. The Orchard Lake team posted a point total of 5614 in four season tournaments. Dearborn was. second with 56, Lochmoor third and Oakland Hills fourth. Members of the winning team are Mrs. Ted Guething and Mrs. F. M. Adams of Birmingham, Mrs. Charles Weir, Mrs. W. L. Mosher Jt. and Mrs. Ferd Broock of Bloomfield Hills and Mrs. Sylvester Leahy of Orchard Lake. The Forest’ Lake team captured first place in the association’s Red Division. On the team are Mrs. Sally Werner, Mrs. Albert Yost, Mrs. R. Downey, Mrs. William Clark and Mrs. Carol Dunham. PGA Reaches TV Accord on Tourneys CHICAGO CAP) -v The Professional Golf Associaubnof America, including all its pity* ep, And the International Golf Sponsors Association reached a Complete agreement on television programming Wednesday., The agreement ended months of bickering, challenges, threats and behind-the-seftne maneuvers. The TV issue came to a head in Phoenix last February. ★ * * The International Golf Sponsors Association had balked at the contract because of a clause which stated television rights belonged to the players. At one point the Phoenix Open was called off and at another time the players'threatened to. boycott the tournament even if it was staged. Eventually, however, the tournament went off as scheduled with the controversial clause remaining ' in the contract. *' ★ The agreement, coming after two days of meetings, was announced by PGA President Warren Centrell and IGSA President James L. Hyde Jr. of New Orleans. It provides .that the PGA, through its New York television office, will market the rights to FGA-co-sponsored tournaments. The proceeds will be shared between the tournament sponsore and the players, who will add their share to, the tournament purse. dies in the pennant .chase as 81. three leading contenders lost foa the second night in a row. . The first-place New York Yankees remained one percent tage point in front despite a 18-1 beating by Kansas City and the third-place Chicago While Soi stayed a full game off the pace after a 3-1,13-inning loss to Detroit. * * Elsewhere, Harmon Killebrew •hit his 38th homer as Minnesota belted Boston 6-1 and Cleveland walloped Washington 88. Lee allowed only one hit and struck out four over the final three innings after Chance, who got the victory for a 128 record, kept the Orioles scoreless for six innings despite allowing eight hits. The Orioles stranded 10 runners, including two each in the second through sixth inning. Tony Oliva and Killebrew hit consecutive homers in the first inning and Bernie Allen connected in the second famifig for the Twins, and that was more than enough for Camilo Pascii-al. Pascual, 11-8 with his first victory, since July 11, allowed^ only three hits, one a homer by-Carl Yastrzemski. ' Chico Salmon and Leon Wagner hit back to back homers in the fourth inning, powering the Indians to their victory over the Senator!. Lee Stange and Gary Bell combined for the shutout, allowing seven hits. 2 Slam Aces in Area Two Detroiters have found hole - in - one success on Pontiac area courses. James Binder, 46, aced the 135-yard, No. 8 hole at Pontiac Country Club Saturday using an 8-iron, and Leo Mellen banged a three wood shot into the hole on the 198-yard, No. 2 at Tam O’Shanter. yesterday. 7*n Sunset uounr at a popular price • EASY APPLICATION • FUME-PROOF PROTECTION • GOOD DURABILITY • REAL ECONOMY wMto and O Popular Colors PONTIAC BLASS COMPANY 23 W. Lawrence St. Pontiac—FE 5-6441 Hral mm NOW-Take your air-conditioned living accomodations with you when you vacation..lenjoy them when you drive! ...RENT A DODGE MOTOR HOME ft* Mp MMr dun Ooes awy will scMto, tooktot hr hoWs, ttlr petal art 0> iMraa tor if vacation*^ Up M MkM psaplt cai dMf MR. Knchw te Om (Mar | hm) rtfifirator, ofemt taa, 31 ptas if M ttfrealf uyfcr, kRehnwan art Mss. Mfe Ms shower, sink art tafc-erater toflet Drives as mcUp ■ a car-artomtic tram-MssMl pm mmriM power Irakis. HONE U HIP, FOR FULL FACTS AND UAL INFORMATION. NATIONAL AUTO LEASING CORPORATION 334 livemois • 1 Block North of B Mil* Rood • Famdala 20, Michigan -rcr MATTKWS-HAI6IEAVES ; M AmnI The Money Saving Sale You’ve Been Waiting For! Sell Them AVE!...... We Will/ "T*" run— *% MMftfMatthows-Hargroovos Chevy-Land ha* a very special money saving deal-waiting far you an a new 1964 Chevrolet Car or Truck if you coma in during our 6th annual RED TAD SALE! Our entire Award Winning Sale* Staff will be ready to serve you and eqva yaw 1 money on the spat Mere are seme of the benefiti you will geit when you buy now... 1. Lower Dawn Payment, because of the bigger trade-in values, or increased discounts. 2. Much Larger Trade-In 631 OAKLAND FES-4161 •- i > mm i -y* THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUQUS^T 6,1964 mm mm ! I- FtoprV M.ii Now Carry VEMCO I WSTMIMOITS ,L SHOPPING CENTER PONTIAC MALL « Coach Dick Sister of the Cto-cinnati Reds decided the 1950 he hit a home run against the Brooklyn Dodgers ,1a the final game. 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Jefferson 123-1900 Jefferson Beach Marina 24400 E. Jefferson PR 8-7600 St. Clair Shores Major League Boxes KANSAS CITY SSI Ua (* »»M Ciety _ ... nicti'dwn » i o i • otem lb i.t* Santa lb 00 00 Charles » its Marti rf 1 0 2 0 Colavlto rf 4 14 Mintta cf 4 0 9 9 Gentile lb 210 -------g ( e 0 Bdwarda c 3 11 4 S 91 A talk It 1 I * i 4 111 Tarf'b'l pMf 11d Trash « 4 11* Pang.* 4 SO I ph till 22 1 7 1 • Aina, w, f-H MOP-By A 2:11.'A—22.7M (Edwards). T- Cun'ham. 1 ESS. Koch p 10M Moran lb Phllllpt ph 1 M • Alvli 2b Savers nit i o o o stangs p Hunt ph i i a * a-n - tall a Telal* e-Wjjnjr. LOB - Washington *•—Ct'anai, Howser. HR—Salmon ( WP-OarWi. pb—inAmiay. T—l:is. CHICAGO ST. LOUIS *brbM ebrl >‘ttltant Jb 4ioo Javlsr » ll •urke rl 4 12$ Brock |T S 1 Hr* m Egg fj BSS iillRSjr^ it c SOI* McCarver c 2 9.. tat*aky ph< ) o 0 0 Bvchak at 4 f B 9 Mime 2 0 0 0 Rlch'dson p 3 0 0 0 Ststoart ph 1 0 4 0 H'mphr'ys p l"1 buhl ip 1900 Clemens ph 1 0 0 0 Tatah HIM Tatah LOB-3?hicego ITT ffltlBm 1. 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SB—Vantrjemakl, Oil -a—Rolllni. T —. . .. . 9 * « ■*»# I eamt CINCIN Maya cl Carfy M CUM pr-lb Marks M DLaHoi 2B UpnMtar p Ballsy ph 0 0 0 Boros 3b 0 0 0 Tslfourls p jjjkrp. Ph _ I'M Bolling 2b 10 0 0 TWah 14 * 11 I Totals Boros reached first on Torn B—Tgrra, Wanks, I LOB—Mil* Mathews (1 SAN PRANCII Night O isco 1 Hart 9b 4 9 M Klaus 2h 4 0 2 DVanport 3b 0 0 0 0 Hunt lb 3 0 0 Mdsr if Mid Kran*pool ib 10 0 B -------|U * * * 'hrTpher rf t J I ■Hot cf 44 9 Mays cf McCevsy H m 4 1 0 0 McMillan si 4 0 2 1 Thomas ph 4 f 1 0 Fisher p 4B10 Hickman pi DP—San Francises 1. LO HR^Ways .. .. McCovty IS. SB—Canada, Klaus, f—Hunt, SF-Chrlstoph ar. IP H R BRBBtO HarbaL grid r * * * T ' PHILADELPHIA Oalnas if 1110 Oonsahz, ct 11 isaa 1 e 91.1 HermstTi lb 10,21 Aspro'nta 1b 4 0 9 9 Amero ph-lb T . . Hardy id 4• 1 0 Cailhan rf Ml LHIIi ss 40 1* Allan lb 4 12 OrMo c 4000 Covlngtan H 110 ■* 0 Dalrymph c 10 0 . Taylor 2b }00} , . __________M9M0I11-1 E—Covington, Raabucfc, Alhn, EU--- LOB—Houston f, Philadelphia f. 3B—Spangltr. HR—Allas Of)., SB— LOS ANOELRS 1 0 Pi I.Rob's'n 3b 4 nmm i . I $ $ Rodgers c 3 0 0 • Torrts 3b —^ 3 01$ Clinton pr - Btotorons pr 0 0 0 0 Satrosno 3b 0 Bunker p- 3 0 0 0 Knoop 2D “ Johnson ph •il BOB | I I Tatah 14 0 f 0 TWah lT=it®S7"i!)pi—Baltimore X Los Angeles '. LOB—Baltimore 10, Los Angelas 7. 20—B. Robinson, Bowens, Often, Torts. SB—Aparlclo. Yank Rower Wins Europefinals Spot Heavy Foot Brings Pay at St. Pete SEATTLE (AP>—Bob Schroe-der of Detroit kept a heavy foot on the throttle Tbursdiy to average 112.735 miles per hpur in the St. Petersburg, Fla., speedboat Miss Budweisei; and be fihst at the pay window in the 125,000 Seafair Trophy Raoe time trials. Fifteen unlimited hydroplane*, including Gold Cup winner MU|s Bardahl, are here for the Sunday race on Lake Washington. It will be a 45-mile dash of three 15-mile heats. Most of the boats have pi the once-yearly test that qualifies them for ail races and time trials here are run merely for added prize money. Schroeder picked up $150 as first to run three-lap trial. Young Billy Schumacher of Seattle earned $100 when he followed’the Budweiser with _ three-lap run at 104.583 In $ Bill, whit* la based at Lompoc, Calif. Bemie Little of St. Petersburg, who owns the Budweiser, announced he had purchased the Seattle, boat Tempest, renamed it Mias Michelob and entered it in the Seafair race. Yachters Led by Californian 4th, 5th Races Held in Olympic Trials What is the best thing to do when you are greatly overstocked? SELL! CUT PRICES! MAKE DEALS! WE WILL NOT REFUSE ANY DEAL WE ARE OUT TO SELL 258 NEW FORDS, FAIRLANES, FALCONS, THUNDERBIRDS, AND MUSTANGS! BRIN6 YOUR OLD CAR IN NOW IT WILL NEVER BE WORTH MORE! Our talesmen have been told to write every deal and this ie your BIG CHANCE tp save! And: ^what a tremendous selection you get! These cars hove a history of selling fast . . so if you want Jo be choosy, bottor hustle to McAUUFFE FORD! •—AST oftBlO 630 OAKLAND AVE. FORD, INC. FE 54101 CHICAGO (PI — Gary Comer of Chicago and Joe Duplin Hi Boston won Wednesday’s fourth and fifth races in the weeklong series to determine America’s Star Class yachting entry in the Tokyo Olympic Games in October, However, leader on points for all five races in Urn Lake Michigan competition was San Die-Pete Bennett, with 5,038. Bennett placed second in both races Wednesday. A fresh northeast wind and rough waters prevailed over the 12-mile Olympic course. Comer, sailing his Turmoil, won the fourth race Wednesday morning in 2 hours, 19 minutes and 28 seconds. Second was Bennett in.2:19:28jnd Malin Burnham of Son Diego was third In 2:19:18. The fifth race Wednesday afternoon was captured by Duplin’s Star of the Sea in 2:07:54. Bennett’s time in this race was 2:09:00, while -Chicagoan Dick Steams was third in 2:10:04. The five-race, point standings: Bennett, 5,038; BiQ’Buchan, San Francisco, 4,791; Comer, 4>78S; Steames 4,824; Burnham, 4,465; Robert Lippincott, Riverton, N. J„ 4,227; Jim Ding Schoon-maker, Miami, Fla., 3,985; Duplin, 3,913; Don Bever, Vermillion Ohio, 3,512; mid Tom Black-aller, San Francisco, 3,424. Scullers After European Title Now Yorker Paces Singles Division AMSTERDAM, Hotyand (PI Don Spero, the 24-year-old American sculler from the New York Athietkf Club won his heat in the singles sculls In the European Rowing Championships today and qualified for the finals in the event. Spero, the U. S. Olympic entry and U.S. national champion, was timed In 7:19.30. The former Cornell student defeated (xermany’s Achim Hill, who was secood in 7:2547- RIGHT AND WRONG — In water skiing, bend your knees and keep your head up as the skier is doing in large photo. The wrong way is demonstrated by Skier in insert. 2 Title Games on 'D' Schedule in Junior Play Two title scraps are on today’ schedule in the Junior Class D League. Arnold Drugs will take t. Michael at 5:30 p-Vfor the National League crown, anfi Auburn Heights Boys Club wOl' meet Pontiac Boys Club for the • - — m at 7:30 American League title pm. Fraternal Order of Police wrapped up the Class E Interna-tional L League title yesterday with a 2-1 victory over the Eagle*. Jerry McKeever scattered five hits to take the dedska. Northside Kiwants donned the Class E Americas loop Pioneer Camper Sales Ur "RUeutr Mri "Civtroe Wtgmt" TRUCK CAMPERS FORD CAMPERS M* Hilldiff Dr. ' Fa MM 0(1 M-M, W. n ENubtlh Lake Rd. crown with a 124 victory over Foodtown Hornets, and the Merchants wan the National League title wtth a 124 triumph aver Diny’s Satellites. Chock Hailey paced the Merchants with three singles. In Class F playoffs, Pontiac Boys Chib trimmed the Hawks, 44, in tiie National title game, and LeBaron knocked off the Titans in eight innings, 54, in the American Widget division. Moose dumped the Yankees, 54, in the ‘F’ American and the two meet today for foe title. The Colt 45’s downed Met Chib Panthers in ‘F’ International and the two irill decide the championship today. ^ ~ JUNIOR BASEBALL PLAYOFFS Chicago Sailor Leading Trials Star Class Skippers After Olympic Berth CHIQAGO (AP) - Dick Stearnes of Chicago held the leMine total points Wednesday without.finishing first in any of three of eeven races in the final mw ft. Olympic Trials for star dass skippers. Stearnes finished third in one race and fifth ta another Tuesday to take over the lead in the standing* with 3,206 point*. James Schoonmaker of Miami, Fla,, winner ct Monday’s: race, was second with 3,061. Marlin Burnham of San Diego and Tom Blackaller of San Franoisco climbed in the standings by capturing Tuesday’3 races. Burnham took over third place with 3,026 points and Blackaller was. sixth with 2,713. Bill Buchan of San Francisco, placing second and ninth Tuesday, was fourth with 2,757, followed by Bob Lippincott of Riverton, NJ., witft 2,728. Two races Wednesday and the Trials will end after single races Thursday and Friday. Paul Bunyan Days Wafer Ski Program The German led early in the race, then Spero stepped up stroke, took the lead at the 1,5 meters mark and stayed in front to win easily. Gaft Kettmann of Switzerland won the first beat of the sing!? scmils. . «, * The United States finished second in its heat in the purs without coxswain event. The American team of Thomas and Joseph Amlong of the Vesper Boat Chib of Philadelphia was timed in 6:57.79 and trailed the winning German entry, docjced in 6:56*77. The Amlong brothers recently won the National Championship in New York. Thomas is a lieutenant in the Army and Joseph is a lieutenant in the Air Force. The German pair of Michael Schwan and Wolfgang Hotten-rott led from the start. The United States passed Holland at the.1,500 metiers mark and finished just ahead of the Dutch.' ieoM I tip own 12. Foo<* champ! .11 Oil Pontiac Pol lea____ I Laagua champlon»h SforiSriBB Kiwanlt i: (American Laapua Pontiac Merchant* • (National Laagua (____ Clan P Moose 1 Yankees 4 (American League —seme teams meet today for chatnpnn- gli 45s 1 Mat Club Panthers S (International League — same teems inset to-debtor championship). * UNITED TIRE SERVICE im NAMI 07 TNlSI NATIOMAUT AOVIRTISIO PREMIUM "DUAL" WHITIWAUSI A SAftrv nai roa ouv nsvie mays to mpsacii 22.95SSS23.95® 25.95 nstenssssrsi 25.951 ^\WAR DECLARED! TIRI5—ANY SUED ___________| * 555? I «9sU* m m SeV.vl open Mon. thru Fit I to A, 6et.Ho 8 - Mooed Saa. A water rid show la conjunction witi) Paul Bunyan day* will be heM at Union Lake Sunday afternoon. The Cast Lake rid club will highlight the program which includes kite flying by Padge Adler and barefoot «Mh»g by Jerry Voerheee. A colorful eoetaped water ski show will also be held, along with rid Jumping exhibition. FAMILY BOATING Headquarters SAVINGS Complete Berihg Oetfits NEW USED ^BIRMINGHAM \ BOAT CWm 1265 S. Woodward SAVE! Swin Fist Snorkels 50% ALL FOOTBALL EQUIPMENT » STOCK! WELDEN SPORTING GOODS 698 W. Huron FE 4.6211 UNITED TIRE SERVICE Phone TE 4-1551 . W. Huttenlocher Agency, Inc. W UU> BUILDING, FDNIUO; MICHIGAN “WHERE PRICES ARE DISCOUNTED—NOT QUALITY” 1007 Baldwin Ave. BONOS — FIRE — AUTO — MARINE LIFE — HEALTH — COMMERCIAL 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 7 Yotr Best Tin Bay..! “NO LIMIT” Guarantee- Tj'HK PONTIAC PHK.SS. THURSDAY^ AUGUST «. 198* AFL Champ Signs Two; Raiders Declared '‘Ready SAN DIEGO, Calif. B 4 The San Diego Chargers signed [two mor« players Wednesday as they prepared for their American Football League exhibition Saturday with the Denver Broncos. Fullback Keith Lincoln and halfback Paul Lowe, birth Charger veterans, turned 1 n their contracts. That leaves six players 011 to sign. Uacobi gained 341 yards in the championship game last year when the Chargers beat Boston Sl-lg. He got a salary Lowe was the second leading rusher in. the league last year with 1,010 yards gained. * * .* SANTA ROSA, Calif. W-Offensive tight end Jan Barrett of the Oakland Raiders was declared fit for action Wednesday for Sunday’s exhibition opener against the Kansas City Chiefs. Barrett’s recovery from i Eight More Qualify for Putt-Puff Berth Eight more newsboys quali-. Tied for the Pontiac Press Carriers’ jPutt Putt tournament % begin next week at the course on Dixie Highway. All carriers are eligible to enter the tournament and those scoring 130 or less in qualifying will rater the tournament proper oh Monday:' Those who qualified include Frank LeClair with 119; Leigh Dushane, 121; Randy Reight and Gerald Walton, 126; Ron McPherson, 127;srDave Crawford, 129; Gene Bauer and Skip Up-cott, 130. Qualifying continues today and tomorrow at the Putt Putt puUel hiuscle in his left leg left four Raiders on the injured IJst for the contest at Oakland’ Frank Youell Field-The Raiders went -through their last double workout Wednesday in preparation for. the Chiefs. $37,240.20 Twin-Double Ducat Holder DETROIT (AP) — A $37,-240.20 twin-double came up at the Detroit face course Wednesday, but the bettor holding the lone winning ticket didn’t put in an appearance at payoff with ‘ows. The ticket is collectable, however, any time in the next year, The payoff was a Michigan record. The previous twin-double high was 111,303.80 which three fans won on opening day last Friday. The payoff is on the fifth, sixth; eighth and .ninth races. Wednesday’s record was completed when Indian Nation won the ninth, paying $18.00 for $2.1 Regret won the fifth at $53.40, Bo Bo Girl the sixth at $16.80 and Speeding West the eighth at $4.20. The winners numbers were 8-3-4-7, and Danny Gargan, 20-year-old jockey from New York, rode three of the winners home. Grid Tilt Sold Out AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) - The 1964 Texas • Oklahoma football game, scheduled for Oct. 10 in the Cotton Bowl, is a sellout. The University of Texas Athletic • Department announced Wednesday that for the 19th consecutive year all 75,544 tickets have been sold. The game will be televised nationally. Nicklaur- v . GOLF wtr-Acrrot/Ar CM/fis ©MlPC 6HOT& PTOM 5 io »5 peer of-p ikb coast-to-coast, U. S. and Canada. Budget Plan available. CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATES 435 SOUTH SAGINAW • FE 2-1010 MUFFLERS • PIPES • SHOCKS $ SEAT BELTS AUTO STORES Cordovan 100% NYLON TIRES! CawwrtoidCiBtf ta Cowl..MM Bait linCemmImlaAemkel -AoMy gives batter Tin Veins tee w$do..!Comparo eapvhet far PRICE .."QUALITY.... SAFETY —Urtf Nfta*—1MT Gear®* hSMi M Star IMt" Urn a FoMvo 30,000 Mfo 2m 1ST 22"* Iff? MhU ua NO MONET DOWN -JbUwJIslIDjiMM. ■ ADJUSTMENTS— |^ «■«!««*< «reeaa#p*w***e *AI Mew Shewa am Phi ML li m( Ywr OU Tirwi Kw Ywr Ci cots PACK ICE CHEST UA 20 J & R AUTO STORES Opee Mon. and FH. Evenings 'HI t P. M. 115 N. SAGINAW THIS IS/- ,n 1964 MODEL CLOSE OUT SALE ON | NHTIACSTEMPEST Let The Pontiao Retail Store Show You How To Save Money! 15 Friendly Salesmen To Serve You Better! UnEMMSI Choose From A Good Inventory Of • Gram! Prix • Bonnaville • Star Chief • Catalina • Brougham • Tempest • Le Mans Be Sure To Visit Our NEW DISPLAY LOT at Mt. Clemens St. Corner of Wide Track Drive THERE MUST BE A REASON: Others Talk Deqle, but The Pontiac Retail Store Makes Them! Tkfc Potrfiftft Rdaifi Store- 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7951 READY FOR BARBECUE? —Despite the appearance, this sea gull is not on a spit waiting to be barbecued. An arrow became lodged in the lower part of its body. The only one not concerned by its presence was the bird, which flew away when would-be rescuers came hear. It was spotted on a Vancouver, B.C., beach yesterday; Buxom Blonde Switches to Trucking NEW YORK (AP) - The buxom blonde crossed her dungaree-dad legs, tilted the peaked cap to shadow her baby-bine eyes, and explained why she switched from teaching music tri driving a trade: “I was get* ting stale.” She is Miss Jeanle Manning, SI, ! feet 3 inches tall, 133 pounds, and 93-25-36. Wednesday was her first day on the job with the National Auto Renting Co., and her first assignment was «*Mwg a Mon, 30-foot trade from the main terminal to a garage warehouse. ♦ • W h She has been doing this on trial solo rims for the past week and had her hectic moments. In the Midtown Tunnel from Manhattan to Queens there bad been an accident in the tube, and she “sldmmed the side of the tunnel,” swerving the Mg truck DIN OF HORNS Another day, on 10th Avenue, “I lost the second gear. So while I was figuring where it was, ail around me was traffic and ti» din of horns. But I found it” A native of Kingsville, Tex. the young woman’s real sur name is Meurer. She was been in San Antonio and was graduated from the Texas College of Arts and Industries with a degree in music. , * * * She came to New York six years ago with theatrical aspirations. That’s why, she said, she changed her last name. * * * For three years she taught music and English in Oceanside on Long Island. But she also worked in an electronics factory, a dance studio, a handbag factory, and cocktail lounges, playing the piano. ROUGH LANGUAGE Ail the girls who tried out for the Job had been asked about their reaction to possible rough language from male trade .drivers. Said Mias Manning: “They’ve all been wonderful. The other trade drivers and the cabbies always give me the right of way. And I haven’t heard one harsh word.” . * * * She says her boy friend, a psychiatrist, worries about ho* First Owosso Manager OWOSSO (AP)—Neil Jackson, former city manager of Alpena and Rogers City, was* named Owosso’s first city manages today ait a salary of $13,500 a year. Owosso adopted the council-manager form of government when its new dty charter became effective-July 1. Pre-Inventory WALLPAPER BARGAINS OVER 500 PATTEUIS IN STOCK Stylo Perfect CLOSE- s * Oil* OUTS tf" CLOSE-OUTS tort* Parted .49c ...69c ». f. --:69c a. K ....•9c a.v. I-Z Du ....99c a.r. Vartar ...$1.19 ». r. ACME QUALITY* PAINT $ N. Saginaw, Career Pika ft. PI 2-3309 Wa Deliver and hi turn “he worries me.” i “But every day I’fn on the road He won’t try toi analyse why have to check ih with him by I am driving a truck,” she said. > phone to. tell him I’m O.K.” THK RuNTlAC PRESS, THURSDAY, ^AUGUST 6, m* Weather Detector First Michigan Satellite Fired COPPER HARBOR (AP) — Michigan’s first weather-detecting rocket was fired successfully Wednesday in an unannounced launching on the Keweenaw Peninsula In Upper Michigan. The launching by a University of Michigan team was ..almost simultaneous with a statement that the firing—aimed at patting the state In the .meteorological rocket network—would be held next week. ★ * A ■ The Michigan Department of Economic Expansion, financing the project, announced Wednesday ihe first launching was set for Aug. 12, then said later it had just been told of the launch. A slender Areas rocket was fired with a payload of meteorological instruments and transmitted signals .for 14 minutes back to ground, equipment, said Art O’Connor of the Economic Deportment. He called the launch a success. MORE DATA The project will determine the feasibility of gaining more weather information for the meteorological network by adding* a firing station at mid-continent. Keweenaw Peninsula is the northernmost portion of MichL gan. Four other. experimental launchings are planned by Sept. 4. Most of them are set for Wednesdays at noon. The launch equipment is essentially portable, but a permanent installation could be built at Keweenaw Point That would give the 5-year-old network a station between present installations at Wallops Island, Va., and Fort Churchill, Manitoba. station cost Such a station would ’host about $150,000 to build and $100,000 a year to maintain, sa% < project officials. The University of Michigan and Michigan Technological University have received a $52,-$50 project grant from the Economic Expansion Department, which seeks to diversify and add to the state’s economic base. U. of M. spokesmen said the rocket blasted off at 10:07 a. m. and soared to e height of 41 miles before plunging into Lake Superior 20 miles east of. the launching site five minutes later. * * * . The Areas measured temperature, air pressure and density and wind velocity and radioed back to file ground until the rocket was destroyed on impact. No attempt was made to recover it U. of M. officials hailed the firing'as a significant step toward demonstrating that the peninsula would be a useful addition to the network. Convjct Two in Assault of Kenya Prime Minister LONDON (D — Two members of a small British political party which apes the Nazis in some aspects were convicted today for assaulting Prime Minister Jonw Kenyatta of Kenya in London last month. Hie men were convicted on a charge of misconduct. Kenyatta was assaulted as he emerged from his hotel during the Commonwealth .prime ministers’ conference! H 111 | il | f Ipp? PIP BIG BOY — David Eisenhower, the grandchild who used to room with the former president, now stands shoulder to shoukaPwifc-Ifce: lie’s 16 and attends a New England prep school. T AS Mirtrtcx END OF MODEL CLEARANCE SALE BIG PICTURE LIGHTWEIGHT PORTABLE TV Fashion-knit long-tloovod shirts, coordinated corduroy boxer tangles in a wide selection of styles, colon! Sixes 2 to 4. Type "A"! Suffix "A" Clear glass,, lovoly twirl design, bonded edgel fi, BAG OF ORANGE SLICES or SPEARMINT LEAVES SCUFFS SPARTAN COUPON Colostial 'Fireworks' Expected Next Week ANN ARBOR (AP)-Tbe sky will be filled with the year’s biggest celestial fireworks Monday or Tuesday night, says University of Michigan astronomer Hazel M. Losh. The annual Perseld shower is expected to ipiBch its peak then, with as /Xumy as one shooting star or meteor per minute, she said. SEE WITHOUT GLASSES! KMSSIotom SI Detroit Qptommtrie / . Centmrm DONALD L 60LDEN, A 0. DHtkr Heat Wave Grips South" Central U S. SEN. KENNEDY’S OPPONENT — ’Tt^ going to be tough,” is the Way Howard Whitmore Jr., Republican nominee in Massachusetts for the Senate seat aow1 held by Edward M. Kennedy, sums up the coining campaign. . By THE ASSOCIATED PRE The worst beat ware in several yarn kept its intense grip on the south central states today. Oklahoma sizzled in the heat. The record breaking 100-degree reading at Tulsa Wednesday was the highest temperature recorded there in more than ten years. Ada, (Ada., also marked up 110 degrees and Hennessey, • Just northwest of Oklahoma City posted a mark of 111. • ♦ ★ Or. • Oklahoma City’s 100 was the. highest so far this year. It broke the record of 106 for Aug. 5 set in 1929. Violent thunderstorms lashed southeastern Texas and at least one tornado roared through toe area late Wednesday night. The tornado injured five persons and destroyed one house in toe Keith Lake area between Port Arthur and Sabine Pass. WIND DAMAGE f Tuscaloosa, Ala., had winds uup to 70 miles per hour with 1.02 indies of rain. Winds' 'caused some damage to house trailers, boat' houses and trees in the Shreveport area. One-hundred-degree temperatures were recorded Wednesday in the Dakotas. But later heavy thundershowers whipped across the Dakotas in advance of an eastward moving cold front. The Weather Bureau said continued dry weather was having an adverse effect on corn and some other crops in sections of the Midwest and Southwest. Showers fell today in New England, across the western mountains and through most of the Gulf states. /•.. Nf .★ * / Early morning temperatures ranged from toe Me in the northern Rockies to around 90 in the Port Worth-Dallas, Tex. THE PONTIAC PRESS* THURSDAY, AUGUST 6. 19(H b—0: — — v ' . * : . . / ' _ Lansing Man Dies in Chicago Restaurant CHICAGO (AP).Donald V. Haptonstahl,, 49, of Lansing, Midi., died of apparent natural causes Tuesday night in a ^own-town restaurant. ■> George Williams, owner of the restaurant, told police Haptoo-stahl was dining alone when a waiter noticed' his head was slumped on the table. Grand Rapids Okays Renewal Fund Request GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-City Commission has authorized ' preparation | of an application for federal aid to help ap urban renewal project 'bedded by St Mary'a Hospital here. *' The project would cover a medical care crater foraged ))1 of the 29-county Catholic Diocese of Grand RApids. • Eighty miles of bookshelves are required for toe four mUUdfc | volumes contained in tbs central building of the New York Pub-Up Library. There are three million books in 80- branch libraries tothe city. . . YOU WILL LIKE OUR RUSINISU MITHOOS IMPERIAL--CHRYSLER—PLYMOUTH—VALIANT sales BIRMINGHAM s««via • » CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH # 912 S. Woodward Pliooo Ml 7-1211 D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. AUGUST 6, 1064 Execs Calmer Crisis MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Produce num Apples, Duchess. bu> Apples, Treniperent, bu.. Waiting for Viet developments KSFlflBCly SciyS* Stock Market Simmers Down Sorry, Fellows' Pimm.,_____________ Peeches. Red Haven, bu.. Peaches, Sun Haven, bu. .. Watermelon ............. VBOETAtLES s, green, b s, Ky. Wee NEW YORK (AP)—The stock market simmered down early this afternoon as further developments were awaited in the Viet Nam situation. Trading was moderate. The ability of the market to weather the emotional selling of yesterday morning and come back with a vigorous recovery left an impression of "resilience” on many market ob-servers. ■ - kis The list was a little higher ini early trading, but minor declines by a few pivotal stocks muddled the trend as the session'wore on. The aerospace defense stocks, which climbed yesterday because the tense military situation gave hope of a beefing-up of 'warmaking equipment, declined as traders took profits. JIGGLED ROUTINELY The rest of the list jiggled routinely, with airlines, rails, retails and motors a Uttie higher and utilities, steels, oUs, chemicals and building materials easing.' The Associated Press average of 00 stocks at noon Was up .4 at 315.9 with industrials up .4, rails'up .7 and utilities off .3. Losses of dose to a point were shown by General Dynamics and Douglas Aircraft. Boeing and United Aircraft were frac-1 tional losers. Prices showed an irregularly higher tone on the American Stock Exchange. Trading was quiet. Corporate and U.S. Government bonds were narrowly mixed in quiet trading; Note to Cabinet Aides Spoofs VP Elimination WASHINGTON Uf» - With a grin, Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy said today he had written a note to fellow cabinet members to this effect: mf * ★ ♦ 1 “I am sorry to have taken so many nice fellows over the side with me." . This was a reference to President Johnson’s pro- Carrots, box. bchs. Carrots, Cello Pak Carrots, topped, bu. Cauliflower, dz. Cowry, Pascal, dz. .. Celery, Pascal, crt. Miry, '“bJ WSn Corn, " The New York Stock Exchange Cabinet member, and nobody who sits regularly with the Cabinet, will be tapped as vice presidential te. Kennedy and other Cabinet members, ineligibles all, spoke at a .sort of school for Democratic congressional candidates, advising them how to present the issues and put their best foot forward in the drive for Democratic victory in November. Kennedy called for the election of Johnson, saying this is. the way to carry out programs “begun in 1961,” when the late. President John F. Kennedy took office. * * ELIGIBLE FOR VP \ Looking over the audience of about 200 candidates and thfeir families, convened by the Democratic National Committee for the opening of a three-day session, Kennedy said, at 6m outset: “I am a little bit hi’awe of you when I think of ay own position. "You are not members of tHo Cabinet, and you don’t ineet regularly with the Cabinet, and therefore you are eligible for vice president." , * * / When the President's decision came out, Kprfnedy said, a lot of people asked him how he felt. LITTLE/PREMATURE At first, he said, “I thought of saytog that I thought the. President was a little premature in ^eliminating Dean Rusk.” But he decided against making that comment, his said, and instead sent the little note to Cabinet members, generally. Selling fairly Heavy on Futures Market „ By SAM DAWSON ' AR Basinets News Analyst NEW YORK—Business executives are likely to take a calmer view of the Viet Nam military showdown - than do ffXtiffiofiaUy more emotional stock traders. The stock market’s quick drop after the U.S.-North Viet Nam naval encounter was its normal reaction i uncertainty. DAWSON Business^executives are more prone to keep an eye on the economy itself and find scant reason as yet for overhauling their plans. ★ * ★ Neither stock traders nor business management like,uncertainty. And the possibilities they might read into the dramatic developments in Southeast Asia will give both pause. VOLATILE TRADER But it’s the volatile stock trader who will react first — either selling some stocks in a flight from uncertainty and to cash in on paper profits, of buying others on the chance of a pickup in orders from a shooting war. • ★ * ■•*.". . The economy, is too strong, however, for what is still a brush war -*• and could prove to be only a minor one — te upset it. ' . Much of the excitement In the stock market comes from the in-and-out traders. They look for the quick profit, move fast to cut a feared loss. When they don’t know what might happen, as was the case Tuesday, their instinct is to get out of the market while they’re still ahead/ /V * *. * * ‘ And many of them have a -good chance just now to take sizable profits. The market has been climbing most of the time since November. Many stocks bought last December or January have sizable paper profits for the taking, and now are to the six months range for long- Papers, Union Meeting Again CHICAGO (AP)—Selling be-came general and fairly heavy In the grain futures market today and early declines on the Board of Trade ranged to about five cents a bushel. Wheat wai i, to 1% cents a bushel lower near the end of the first hour, September $1.41 E; com J to 1% tower, September $1,19%; oats Ik to % tower, September 63% cents; rye % to 1% lower, September $1.2$%; soybeans 3 to 4% tower, August $251%. DETROIT (AP) — Representatives of Detroit’s daily newspapers and two striking craft unions which closed them down by a walkout July 13 were to .resume negotiations today, following their first meeting Wednesday since July 20. • * ;. * '* The 24-day-old strike against the morning Free Press and evening News called in support of new contract demands by Local 10 of the Plate and Paper-handlers Unton and Local IS of the Printing 'Pressmen and Assistants Union. Principal disputes reportedly center around premium pay .and size of work forces. ■ t'. ■ ' * ..!*■•* Three bargaining sessions were held Wednesday, broken only by recesses, for lunch and dinner.. Overnight adjournment came shortly before 11 p.m. Federal and state mediators sat in on Wednesday’s meetings. term ' capital gains accounting for tax purposes. NUDGED NERVOUS Even before tills week’s naval encounter, many traders were reported cashing, in their longterm profits. Others were reported nervous lest the tong climb might be due for what they call a correction — meaning a price drop. Ibe naval fray nudged the,nervous ones idto action. Business takes a longer view. A shooting war in Viet Nam, if It doesn’t spread into-a much wider conflict, won’t upset the general prosperity. Nor will it enhance it. A few companies may hope for more defense orders. Most U. S. corporations will expect orders and sales to qtay on the' present course—some companies helped by existing defense orders, many more prospering from high consumer demands.. And except in times of a world war, consumer purchases are far more important to American business than is government spending. And a peacetime economy can bring mucH greater prosperity than a frenzied war economy. * ■ * , * The ups-and-downs of the stock market In the tense days just ahead could be far less significant for the economy to the long run than the headlines may make them seem. And* most business decision makers are well aware’of this. '■ Seeks Discrimination End in U. S.-Aided Programs LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -he National Urban League disced today a list of hundreds of federally aided programs to which it has asked President Johnson to end racial discrimination. The list covers more than 140 cities to 24 states. Whitney M. Young Jr., executive director of the league, submitted it to the White House two weeks ago. He called the situation intolerable and said it must not go on. * * * ZS The league report contended the aid is of doubtful legality under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, which prohibits disbursements of tiu dollars to institutions which bar some taxpayers because of their color. Federal funds are gotag/to hospitals, schools, public housing projects and other programs to which Negroes are barred either wholly or to part, said the league, Which concluded its ' inal conference today. FUNDS There was no estimate given of the total funds being allocated but the league said it apparently exceeded one billion dollars annually. “The right of every taxpayer, whatever his color, to benefit from programs supported by his ought to be incontestable,” Young said. ■ ■ W h it All southern states were Included to the list atong with many northern anc\ border states. Among the latter 1 New York, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Ohio and Nebraska. * * * The report cited discrimination in more than 600 public housing projects; in more than 60 hospitals receiving federal Hill-Burton aid; in federally-aided retraining programs; school lunch programs and funds for general educational purposes. It also cited segregated National Guard units to 10 southern states. COLLEGE PROGRAM More than half of some $160 million pfcid out under the tcot lege housing loan program and $2.6 million through the National Science Foundation went to southern-universities which excluded Negroes, the report said. Young, in his letter to the TriKE .... Bin-DIcator .,v ____ Braun Ungliwrlna ........ Champion Horn* fnllEm . Citizens UtltMaa Class A . Dlsmond Crystal ......... ettiyi corp. -........... Mohawk Rubber Co. ....... Michigan laawilais Tuba U Wyandotte Chemical MUTUAL RUNOf t4.3 17.4 12.4 14 Affiliated______ Chemical Fund ^ Keystone Income “' Keystone Growth Mass, fir—1— ' Nat Change . „ Neon Thurs. M.4 1015 M.2 Prey. Da» 02.4 109.5 Kf . <2.5 103.5 Ha 12.4 mj» 17.1 News in Brief i Marjorie Bartiet, 411 Gateway, Waterford Township, told police yesterday that the rear window of her car was smashed by a stone. Damage is undetermined. Vandals damaged twe Rochester High Schoql driver’s training cars yesterday. Three tires, including the rims, were taken from one car. The floor mat to the other was ripped out. The total damage was estimated at $120. Rummage Sale: Saturday, '16 a.m., 2935 Otsego, off Scott Lake Road. ■>Ny —adv. Special for August, Open Bowling, 4 lines for $1, 300 Bowl. Primrose Lanes. Rummage Sale: Friday, $-9 p.m., at Veteran’s Hall, 570 Oakland, —adv Good Rummage: 2$S. Shirley,! 3 days. FE 4-5866. -^adv:1 Garage Sale: flat., 9 a.m. 544 W. Auburn. UL 2-3987. —adv. Rummage Sale, August 7, CAI j Bldg., 8:30-1:30. —adv. White House with the list, asked Johnson to obtain “compliance.” Cutting- off federal aid considered a last step to be taken only if compliance fails, the league said, 'W/-• * The conference heard Carl T. Rowan, US. Information Agency director, call Wednesday ' $it on “my follow Negroes” tree “the civil rights movement from the taint of street rioters, looters and punks who terrorize subwayz.” “Demonstrations — with possible, rare exceptions — have sOrved their purpose for the time being,” Rowan said. Area Teens Suspects irP Holdup Try \ Two runaway teen-agers from Waterford Township are being held to Fayetteville/ N.C., following an abortive robbery of a snack bar and the shooting of its operator. :; it' * it Fayetteville Police Chief L.F. Worrell said James Simmons, 18, of 6120 Van Syckle, and Bonita Stimson, 15, of 6106 Waterfront, are being held, on charges . of attempted armed robbery, assault with a deadly weapon and larceny of an auto. A hearing in Fayetteville’s City Recorder’s Court w a s . scheduled for today. The snack bar operator, Hardy B. Parker, was to satisfactory condition today with a groin wound. He said he was shot as he struggled with Simmons for possession tlng condltlon | the Red Vietnamese is known to troyers, too, were leaving for croyere. 46 VESSELS . I have been provided by Red Chi-1 officially . desribed routine, | Red China, the big neighbor, I - The patrol boat fleet was esti-i na. .. | six months operation in the ( is quite capable of seeing to mated to consist of about 16 t$r-i The possibility or perhaps j westehi Pacific. It was, said that. j pedo boats and 30 motor gun- probability that China will draw i one spokesman, coincidence. * ' * * | boats before the first of the two op some of her estimated fleet j REASON FOR BUILDUP Secretary of Defense Robert attacks on the destroyers — and j of 300 patrol boats to put the | ^ threat of a replenishment S. McNamara said Wednesday] resulting hot American reac- North Vietnamese force, back. ^ actua) 0f the Red that in addition to the damage j tion. fluencing some of the deploy* patrol boat force of course is ! to the North Vietnamese bases L .The U.S. Navy is reasonably mod of U.S. units into the 'onjy ,a part 0f the reason for for the, craft, about 35 of the sure that three and possibly Southeast Asian area. buildup of U.S. military power boats were damaged or dev four torpedo boats were sunk in BE8T WEAPONS. in Southeast Asia, trqyed. That was in addition to | the two engagements tills week. Carrier.based aviatlon and nere are other menaces three of four believed sunk in Damage presumably has ^ ^ ^ looming up in the background of ’ the tightening tension in South- NORTH (D) 6 VA73 4A10 9832 4X14 WEST EAST 4Q963 4K1054 VII WJCJ10M ♦ T ♦ Q JS 4QITIIS *J SOUTH • 4AJ78 . VQIf 4X11 4k A10 X North and South vulnerable North Eart Sooth Wool 14 It TAU Pui 24 Paw 3N.T. Pass Pass Pass Opening load—V I. , Eventually South Tost three | spades 'and a diamond in addi-{tton ' to the. initial heart trick j and another rubber had been ] tossed away. If South had just taken time out to do a little thinking at trick one, he would have noted the spade danger. Be would have noted further that there was no heart danger, and would have Non the opening heart lead with thence. * After that, the play would have been quite rapid. South would have gone after diamonds. East would gain the lead, but South, would make at least three no-truny>. destroyers are the two best weapon systems against a PT boat, as has been demonstrated in these recent days. , *.■ ★ ★ ■ Hie huge carrier Ranger sailed out of San Francisco Wedhesday wijh 12 destroyers casting off lines later in the day for departure from San Diego. In both instances, Navy public By OSWALD JACOBY / South was one of those , payers who hates to waste time before playing the first Card from the quit*- JACOBY that toe time to think is before you make a mistake, jnot after it is too late. East didn’t see any future - for his side unless/it should turn out that South had a rather weak suit for hi) bid. Therefore, East doned his heart raft and led back the four of spades. Nop South really did take time out. He/ thought and thought and thought a trifle longer. Then he played die six West won and returned the deuce. ' *. 4 *, * At ologor * * Forecast WCnRDJbu?*# Q—The bidding has been: North East South Wert 14 Pus IV Pass 3V Pus 4 N.T. Pass sw Pass T You, South, hold: 4A1I VAQJ10S8 4KQJ *2 What do you do now? A—Bid Ave no-trump to aah (or kins*. ' TODAY’S QUESTION Your partner bids 'six hearts j to ahow two kings. What do you do now 7 1 east Asia, among them the possibility of air attack by Red Chinese planes .or of submarine menace to the warships and supply ships in the Asian seas, i This is aside from the buildup of! ground forces which may beI needed, if open aggression comes. DRIFT MARLO By Dr. L M. Levitt. Tom Cooke and Phil Evans . So, since Barry doesn’t want to have any top secret intelligence briefings, I thought., DStMKDAM SAYS W&ORT6R GO TO W 819 HOOTENANNY DANCE AN' CELEBRATE VMt GOLD MUGSE" Leslie Turnor AtTWgmsnmjp JBNCTW Hooretrtiwv D^ics«» ^jSSLSSLf. By Dick CavaOi 0 / HCWCODLONCXJ O/1 euB66THfifoa&cr l VJGHZ k HOLB IN ftL TueoBGKruneaiiSt? JM V iveeExroF'soua Afc-7 NWEB&d OFOU7B2 W 7 DWWWHBNMXJ • 1 NBV9Z6rrCDWNT g y” 6f¥CB. ^ 11 . SSLs K . ti ^-•bUliiaLboWRwER.tUdR — By SYOMIV OMARR For Friday I wla* m , ... . Aitralaav / ARies (AA*r. ti to —., mmm /highllghla^chango, Creative ^activity, • import*) n itrnm communications, -—iTb# tactful In Roollnd with Realize many areroatfoao today. fait* a eoa from ARltli mo*o*q*. 'CANCER (Jun* 2) to Jrty..2»i Take special cart wtwrobudg*' tar pichNW. New Moon ot chort associated win -eying. Leave no loose LIO (July 23 to Aug. ! ■ —r *lgn coincide* - wfT art One who I bo olvan careful, virgo (Aug. i, PM — tent that you Investtgata varkwg. poapl; biiltles. Being tied down to wily om method lo a mlr*—- «■““ *" •****-hamuna. Tab* ■ LIBRA, (Sopt. 21 to OCt. 22): • p highlighted. You can gel-- —hip. Opportui entertaining, being entertejned. -* scquFiq (Oct. a. to Nov. jv OBSERVANT. _ : SAGITTARIUS (NOV. K to Tim* I* AtXOMaUSH. ThetR . . . now pieces fall Into pattern. "Tbaro is oooortunltv for orofft. YOU m«y oibo enSSnoanraEMOTIONAL FULFILL- n emphasizes money, project*. iTSadflC. Tak* nothing *'MKMN wS^U Rtotll: I* you can idatay decisions oltocttng . legal matters — dp a*. Tab* *. j*u !**•. snake off lethargy. Your afflhide bi servatlve view regarding heel Lately you have beenputhlng at work and ptaY Nbw. atrh steadier face. IF FRIDAY J* YOUR RIRTHOAY . youijM attracted^to frgtfr mrab ?ytklS r«w?0nobN people overlook. -• ♦ * * GENERAL TENDENCIES: New Moon PM* THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1964 Deaths in Pontiac Area MRS. ROSCOE D. NEWMAN ,.,£tiRrvfce for Mrs. Roscoe D. Wan N.) Newman, «. of M Gingell will be 10 a.m. Saturday at First Assembly of God Cburcb with bs«r|*l in Ferry Mount Park Cemetery. Her body is it the Voorbees-Sipte ' Funeral Home. '"-Mrs. Newman, formerly employed in the cafeteria of .Hickory Grove School,' Bloomfield mas, died Monday after a nine-month illness. She was a member of the Baldwin School PTA and First Assembly of God Church. Surviving besides her husband are her father, Henry Hopkins of Corbin, Ky.; .two eras, Duane of Pontiac and Jack D> at home; and three daughters, Mrs. Charlene Barnard and Mrs. Georgia Mack|e, both of Pontiac, and Cheryl Newman at home. Also surviving are five grandchildren; four sisters, Mrs. Minnie Stidham of Pontiac, Mrs. Inez Lamb of Metamora, Mrs. . HaM Sutton of Ypsilanti and Mrs. Doris Wellman of Pleasant Plains, Ohio; and two brothers. , THOMAS 0. PRUITT Service for former Pontiac resident Thomas 0. Pruitt, 00, of Caro will be at 1:10 p. m. Saturday in Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. His body will be at the funeral home •t 7 p. m. today. Mr. Pruitt, assistant superintendent of tiie Michigan Thumb Jlirea for Detroit Edison Co., tiled yesterday after a long illness. He was a member of dip Caro Presbyterian Church, Blue Lodge of Gibson City, m., Royal Arch Masons Chapter 5, Pontiac Council Chapter 3 end Pontiac Commandary No. S. . Surviving are his wife, Myrtle; a sister; and a brother. BARBARA J. THROESCH Prayers were to be offered for Barbara J. Throesch, 2-month-old daughter of Mr. end Mrs. Holland Throesch of 344M Auburn this afternoon in the Hun-toon Funeral Home with burial following in. Oak Hill Cemetery, Barbara died Monday after brief illnern. Surviving besides her parents are her grandmother, Mrs. Dorothy Crossiey and two brothers and a sister, Wilbert J„ Ronney E, and Dorothy Anq, all at .home. MRS. ROBERT BARGERT TROY - Service for Mrs. Robert (Andrea L.) Bargert, 40, W 246 Lovell will ha 11 a. m. tomorrow at the Gramer Funeral Home, Clawson. Burial will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Bargert died Tuesday after a brief Illness. She was hostess for the 1964 Troy Arts Festival, past president of the Presbyterian Women’s Association of the First Presbyterian Church, member of the Republican Club of Troy and the Stiles School VTA. Surviving besides her husband tore three children, Kathleen, Barbara and James, all al home; her mother, Mrs. Mat-talon Whigham of Enterprise, Ala.; two brothers; and three -sisters. , . GEORGE J. KIRN KEEGO HARBOR - Service ’for George J. Kirn, 73, of 3614 Orchard Lake was held yesterday-with burial following. Surviving are Ms wife, Jem* hie; a son, George A. of Orchard Lake; a brother; and a sister. Wn^LIAM F. SCHRODER ROCHESTER — Service for William F. Schroder, 79, of 231 .Romeo will be 1 p.m. Saturday at Pixiey Memorial Chapel. Interment will be in Attica Gemetopv Attica. Mr. Schroder died yesterday after a long illness. *LHe had been an employe of -Higbie Manufacturing Co. until his retirement, bi 1956. Surviving-jkfciwo daughters, Elizabeth E. ancbMrs. Andrew ‘Notand, both of Rochester; stepson, Carl W. Knaack of Pontiac; and eight grandchil-,dren. JAMES D. STEVENS ROCHESTER — Service for James D. Stevens, 29, of 3611 Dearborn win be 16 a.m. Monday at tfae Huntoon Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will fol-'fow in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mr. Stevens, a gas station employe, was killed yesterday wtpen hia car ran off a Waterford Township road and hit a tree. Surviving are his mother, Mm. Goldie Grapevine of Phoenix,* Ariz.; .three Mothers, Ramey of Pontiac and Max and David, both of Phoenix, Arix.; and two sisters, Doreen Frank and Mrs. Eloise Hauler, both of Pontiac. MRS. FRED H..THAYEB WIXOM - Service for Mrs. Fred H. (Flossie) Thayer, of 2855 Loon Lake will be 1 pjn. Monday at the Walled Lake Methodist Church. Biftial will follow in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. Mrs. Thayer died early today after a long illness. Her body will be at the Richardson - Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake, from 1 p.m. tomorrow until time of service. Surviving besides her husband are three daughters, Mrs. George Campbell of Pontiac, Mrs. Joseph Stadnik of Wixom and Mrs. Francis Buckeridge of Logan, Utah; seven grandchildren, and nine great-grandchildren. Erhard Wires Johnson He Understands Action BONN, Geramny (AP) - The West German government announced today that Chancellor Ludwig Erhard has cabled President Johnson, expressing his understanding far the American military action in Vist Nam.. notice or waucsAta. ga^ State Pollc* end the ownars have not ill public Salt. Thu Ml* It Mato Mlcu Heedqyer rlaon Road, net lAnetag. w August 30. 1*44, beginning at Compiafnt ’no!° 27-BG4J S—Takrtroy speakers aa< Complaint Nas 27-171043 Complaint No. I31S1MI 1—Linoleum knit* Complaint No. P-sjW^S. 1—Yard omamant, lockey atatui Complaint % tMNHk _ 1-Can at Sprue* spray paint Complaint No. V MM 1—Sladge hammer I—lea mud with ropa attached : Oay and GET OUT OF DEBT ON A'fcjUl' you can afford. SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 70* PONTIAC ITATI BANK BLDG. ■ FE 10454 Pontiac** oldest and largest budpet assistance company.___________ LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY WITH Dox-A-OM Tablets. Only- ft cents pt Simms Sfsthsrs-Drugs.- Pay Off Tour Bills Hume or off let Appointments City Adjustnwnt Service ft.4 0 A N 6 FOR party’s, waddings, ate, FE 1-0411. D A I N T V M A I D SUPPLIES. 71* Menomlnaa. PE 4-7*05. WAimms witNBisil 16 A66i-“ - m— m iw4 «t LOST - | LABRADOR RETRIEV- pIPSSS phone OR MW. LOST MQHDAY NEAR MALL. PAIR lady's white shoes. PE 4G1W. vicinity or lw ird. STILL L6tT - BLACK Alio WHITE cat. Sasn by savsral In Oaswral Hospital arts. Reward. nMB4. • WILL PARTIES WHO FOUND WA-tor aklls at Loan Lake fishing alto, pIppsp call PEBI314._________________ 2 MEN FART TIME 4 to S evenings par. weak, guar-antaad SMporjpe., call between 3 and 7, 4514424# r I Mik WHO SINCERELY WANT to Increase their income. Car nac-taaary. PE F07I7, t-7 pjn. AFTER 6 P.M. * PART-TIME $200 t appearing a dart immadlati tor bifarmdlsn I p.m. to t p.m. ' ' xw. ' AGENTS-COLlECTOdS AGES 11 TO 45. PERMANENT POSITION. WO EXPERIENCE necessary; we train you. POTENTIAL EARNINGS. EMST year, imw or. more, fringe BENEFITS. GOOD CAR NECESSARY. MR. POTBURY • —. FE S-44SR *J8 AJW. T0 11 NOON. ALIGNMENT AND BRAKE ME-chanlc wanted, only the experienced need apply, high income for the right man. Contact Mr. Milan-tine. K-Mart Tire Service, Glen- , wood Plaza. - ■ • ALUMINUM SIDING APPLICATORS APPLE PICKERS. FARM WORK- Prlvata housing provldsd, o ARC WELDERS $2.78 RERV HOUR Structural Steel Loyout Men $3.15 Per Hour \ PAID VACATIONS AND HOLIDAYS OROUP INSURANCE PARAGON BRIDGE AND STEEL . CO. Arehitectural Draftsmen At least a years tuajm aw cammarclal' arawds. Sand resume to Clifford ji. tWIafd Aasodatm —w Maple Rd. Blr- flOnwU'-AT6Ei, i MflTTO tor lea**, b* your own boas at «to Rlkar Bldg_ all air oandlttonad. FE 371*4 mk tor Tiny. BEWARE TOY DEMONSTRATORS ‘Z’SS V what « I* fair ft bllgatloh c TOY CHI ' Tha original Toy Party Plan. Wn guarantee your porcantagaa . and bonuaos a* wall as Bit toys. . E 6 6 K i( l I FYlri 6Ays per ---------SSH 66ok ANb KITCHEti HELP. SU-psr Chief, Tatogrsph at Dlxls. COdK-IHORT ORDER WITH .ALL- —' “iTRpi Kant's Pitot Light 1 COUNTER'“GIRL."' PiRfoNALITY and nantnnss essential, will train, full Him. nullify dry claanlng Claanars. S34 s. tousles (i Dining Room Wgitresses DISHWASHER WANTED TO WORK EXPERIENCED W A I TRESSES RM Mm and part RIM — — _ Country Inn. 4138480. s—., . MM ...... Over Sifjaar^pin* Cons Nursing Ham*, EXPERIENCED WAITRESS FOR dining ream, 'Rail'* Drivo-ln, OR 37173 attar 4 p.m. EXPERIENCED DINING POUNtAlN HELP WANTED, AFT- FULL TIME SALES HELP WANT-4. apply from 7:3# a.m. to 11:3* i.m. Ask ' “ jgetifwarm i IMP Pip must L nu uu ,iiiii and Ilk* children. Own transporta-, tton daslrabl*. Call batwaan 4 and has ttw following positions oppn. Dining roam waitress, ceteterla countar tody, carry out solos lady. Free mesls, uniforms, paid vsea-' benefits. Apply HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE FOR ganarbl attic* swriL Cashlar *x-nerlence phelpful, writ* Box Its HOSTESS. APPLY IN PERSON FOR HOUSEKEEPER, ROOM, EATH and TV. S days, sleep In. S35, FE 4-7341. housekeeper RJA M6YH1D-toaa homo. 4 children, llvoJn. ref- orenens. Ml 344M. ____ HOUSEKEEPER MOTHER-toss homo, I days, Dva to. 354- * KEY PUtJCH OPERATORS LIKE PEOPLE? Our friandly neighborhood .off hoods girl who likes to talk w as?-. Gpod salary, paid t OPENINGS "FOR SALESWOMEN IH Lake Orion, Oxford, Rochester, and Woman. MonagemOnt Positions open to**-*] PART TIME WOMAN, KM. AND Real State Sotesman nMted model to show, MW#. StoRtotolWIn-. CALL IVAN *. SCHMAM. FE 5*471 SALESLADY •,» LL BEDROOM tumlhifSk _»ood »alory ana com-mlsslsn, Pfdtond Iml. Mr. Law-tofc EW1 Talaeraph, EL 4-1233. -SALES WOMAN, NADON'S • MIRACLE mile center SALESMAN TO SELL . BEAlJ 3Jtol”opporiunity. Pontiac Male Writ* MrToitlto 143S Woodward, Dwtrolt or WO 1-H31. TlLlhMbMI IbLIittb* WWSiR from our ufflep, salary atos «««-mission. Call 33344*1. **k tor I TOP SALARY FOR EXPERIENCED cosmetic gbi. Ganaral drug Currant references, Lak* Cantor Drug. 2347 Orchard lAk* Rd. . TYPIST AND GENERAL OFFICE FE 54441. ' ________ Woitrtw $1.2$ Hour Part ttm*, nights, no sxpstisne* necessary Apply to person oflsr 4. Doll's Inn, SCSI Elizabeth Lsk* Rd. WAITRESS, DAYS, STEADY, ALSO part time. Merer* Goff end Country Club, 2M> Unton L*kl Road, Waitress We need Two neat, to work in,our busy snack bar, '■ starting on a part time basis.. Paid vacations, many company benefits, apply personnel dapartmtnt between 9:30 a.m. and 9:00 p-m. x daily. Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL MW .WAITRESS WANTED NO IXPjRl- WOMAN ’ COOK WANTED. APPLY at Knapp* Dairy Bar, Rochester, WOMAN WITH BANKING, Fl- WOMAN WITH GENERAL OFFICE skills fir 1 bM bulldsr-davslopar office, Farmington, madam a 1^ „ ™~ut(m*d ofttc*, buHdtog, real ■^apir^^ar^rajaeU^ APPLICATIONS NOW BEING AC- BLOOD DONORS , URGENTLY NEEDED H POSITIVE N BLOOD SERVI _____ 1JIL-4 PJW.) F CASHIER AND CAR BILLER, Wl+H bookkeeping experience, fringe banaflts ana goaJ salary to m3 CASHIERS -CONCESSION HELP and usher*. Apply 1-4 pjn. Mirada Mila Drlve-ln Theatre, I1M 3 Tel- EXPERIENCED SHORT ORDER cask tor grlll and preparation Rad's Oriva-ln, OR 37)73 MANAGER'S POSITION SSLfiSSff* *ytwro- GENERAL INSTITUTE H. Woodward Femdale CALL COLLECT 543-9737 IBM TRAINING ^ Keypunch,^ machine puter programming. Ml tawd of fmcatlan approved. Free --------- jOnrk|. Free parking. MEN WOMEN COUPLES TRAIN TO *R MOTEL Maneoere-Clerka-NIght Auditors DAY AND fVirCLASStS LEARN DOZERS. GRADERS cranes, field training. Key Treln-mg.-'ITM) jamas Couiens. *444404. SEMI - DIESat TRUCK DRIVER -------- sctaol. Key Training, .IMS is. Srtr-“ •«*_^*=* WErfc jlwWUHm* 12 cle*nin^and walljnashing. Switchboard PBX Receptionist-Typist Free placement aaalatanca CALL. WRITE VISI 865-1250 M.T.I. BUSINESS SCHOOLS •*^Weoaaa>i?Tilpdi».rf a MR •wilding Ssrrlct-SRppBx 13 WOMEN , • ____ TRAIN At SUPERMARKET CASHIERS CHECKBRMTOCKMAN FREE PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE w,wr Market Training Inst. 14410 Woodwerd I blk. S.bf MIN I 11 4-POOT HUSKIE WANTS WORK OP any kind, hta car and toota tor moat any jap. SIJP ad hour. UL P^fYW Work Wanted EtraOk^________________12 1 WOMEN WANT WALL WASHINO ■ and Rauaaciaanine. 4*2-4***. DENTAL ASSISTANT: SOME EX YOUNG WOMAN WANTS OAV baby-sitting, pretar Joalyn and Far- BUHP'BBF'"pOr 'tIarTno deem end removing. 2*3-7774 or Wally 4S44441. " ■ 'SALE - Me NO NAILS, i CENTS lumper. 107-1100 or *«)-IMIl , TRU-EILT BUILDING PRODUCTS CO. MNLOiRS tUPPUES AND STRUCTURAL STEEL CINDER AND CONCRETE BLOCK TRANSIT MIX CONCRETE iwinBEE Syria* IS ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE-RE-pairing and rewinding. til I. Pike, Phone FE 4-3W1.______ FLAGPOLE SERVICE, PAINTING PrastnaoMf B ToMortog 17 DRESSMAKING, TAILORING AND alterettene. Mr*. Bedell. PE 4*053. BROKEN CONCRETE FOR RETAIN-Ing wall, paving brick tor patio, fence poets. Oakland FVM and Paint Co., 4S Thomaa St. Phono FE 5-41W. COMPLETE LAWN SERVICE DAN'S LANDSCAPE 3*3-1 t-A ALUMINUM SIDING, STORMS, awning*. vinyl aldlM. installed or material*. Quality-low cost. FETWG . VALLELV OL 1-4*33 ALCOA, kaiser siding STORM WINDOWS, DOORS R E MODI LlNGendADDiTiONS . Kraft Siding & Roofing FREE ESTIMATES PE 4-2440 KAlilft Xlcoa aluminum sid-ING, AWNINGS, OUTfERS. STORM WINDOWS - DOORS, PA-TIOS. ROOFING. SUPERIOR PE 43177.___________- AIR COOLED ENGINES REPAIRED. Reasonable. Alia chain saw work. EM 3-7S44. pickup and Delivery. I J Veer guarantee. Free B.iix...i. FE 5-7451. aIIhalt Paving is our g«4i- 33*5m 0* »»» ■ FES-MM. __/EWAY SPEi_____ FREE ^ESTIMATES KAR4-IFEBATTESYC0. Generator*—Regulators—Sterter* Batteries $5.95 Exchanat block laying and cement »CAR GARAGE, MW__________ Incl.OH Doori. Concrete Floor! aLl ^pes OP HOME REPAIR, roofing, EMM, J”“‘“ “ 1 CONTRACTOR FOR . FvIrV-thing. Enie uimber 4 Modernize tion Co. le Deemed end hawed to dg Elf type* of realdentlal end «“ mere lei remodeling and bulldl Oarage*, reefing and *1 Fra# dealgntng an-1 — Hywaf floore.'gtnyrel.cerr R. McCollum. PE 5-4541 SUSPENOEO-ACOUBTICAL TILE •lafwtiflBjrar fffiilM, KJttHtRk Eavestrougfcing BROWNIES HARDWARE.. OOR SANDERS - POLISMEI.. WALL PAPER SjTEAMERS DRILL? **“" t52 Joilyn Jn|iRE^spoir^ MOTOR EXCHANGE CO. ENGINE REBUILDING— ALL CAMAMO TRUCKS EXPERT TUfwUW j 403 S. SAGINAW * FR 3-74 PONTIAC FENCE, CO. . ............. SI year* ______ 332-4*73. R. G. SNYDER. FLOOR LAYING, Homs Improvements Porchei, eddltlom, slept, general ramedellng end cement work. Guinn Construction Co. « 5-9122 iRStflwt Priwtiwf Printing, Romeo, PL 1-i dgltyemd, .—j..— erwHu old lewm. Patio*. Free eitlmates, Breece Lendicaplng, PE ------"PE MW- ing. agmit. CAN TAKE ONE PATIENT, VACA-Miner or permanent. The beef of everything. 425-C2V1. AA MOVING, Sufi >ifUL~ ttati, 4! Bob's Von Servics MOVING AND STORAGE REASONABLE RATES PehpWng B PtCGfUMg A-l PAINTING and PAPE* HA&.NO, rtADY INTERIOR DECORAt'6R, Papering. PE BGS4S. deling. 412-413] ■RTORANI ERNIE'S SfcRVICE decorating and remc EXPERIENCED INTREK exterior painting, work guaranty. IS years experience PE 2-3*53. PAINTING AND CAULKING t. Orvel Gldcumb, 473-04*4. ItOOMk, ADULTS ONLY. D*AY-ten Plalnv 473-4SS0. PURN. APT. 37 46OMS AN0 RATH FOR COUPLE PAI NT ING, PAPERING, warning. Tugper, OR 3-2441, PAINTING AND V No lot) too imall. I JJt* leievinon-Raoio Service 24 HAVE YOUR RADIO ANO TELEVISION REPAIR WORK DONR WHILE YOU SHOP Trsbm^awvlc* tiling. Pontiac A CALIFORNIA DRIVE-AWAY Planning to go wssfT Drive on* ( our iharp life model cart. We.wl ^ MOTOR S HOMEOWNERS BMJS ANNUALLY Scales Agency, FE S-Mll, PR SMALL CHILDREN TO ROOM Mb hoard, full time or aart time. Wallpaper Steamer PI • a r isndari, aollehart, ha senders, furnace vacuum cleenei Oakland Fuel A_JP*int, 434 C chard Lake Aye. FE t-4150. Leke-Telogreph at I ReeBfewdSItBNg J. D. Candler Roofinq Co. Residential and Cammardal All typas of Roofs and Decks Guitars and Conductors WO 2-0512 sldlllg, M, Mpn.-3at. FB 3-3SS3. REBUILT AND GUARANTEED-TV’S $12.15 IIP, Obel TV and Radio. 3410 Elizabeth Lake PE 4-4S45 Tree TriRWleg S L K. DALEY TRIE SERVICE ‘ «»WB Tree - stump r spraying, FE 5-C. WILLIAMS 4 _ _ ksh: ’fMl" AW> primming,^jhjrgry Bui 4 LARRY'S TREE TRIMMING A Ramcval. FE 2444f orFE 3-4034. Montross tree service . Tr— rtnovB$—trimming. 335-7850 OAKLAND TREE SERVICE. TREE trimming and ramovlng, Fra* astl me tea. Phone 3344315.____ Tessner Tree Service Ml types of tree work. Fra* astl-HML Topping, cabling, — ■fc, fertilizing. 437-2722. TREE TRIMMING AN6 A#M6vAu Lew rMee. 3344B44. "Sig§j8£BI!aU TALBOT! LUMBER Gist* Imtallad In doors and dows. Complete building servlci Cewet Wert CEMENT WORK^.......... PATIOS Cement Work '• Licensed «mant xontrector. FE 5-9122 CIMitft WORK, REASONAhLB-. Free estimates. OR 54440 after 4. WkAHkl ^NETRWTtON CU. Poured wells-besemanti. FE H551 FOUNDATION, FLOORS, ■ IRBRite. EMS4SM-________ LABOR ANO MATERIAL, wi fi tLPR 4MH.0* *m. tlmelei. Ph. I INTERIOR-Ek gJum- PAINTING IMIDE ANp OUT. Gu* Free Est., work |U«rHtild IS yr . exp. PESGW._I-. A PIANO TUNING WIEGAND't PE--- Tuhi^kHBM^jTN^; WesleriEi leivke PLASTERING. PEER ESTIMATES. your price. Any tlnw. F LIGHT HAULING, CLARKSTON Waterford area, Na-ISM. LIGHT ANb IemW TRUCKING, LIGHT TRUCKING, ANY RlNp Bet UleC^bp 41 LAKE FRONT 3 BEDROOMS, tB weekly. OR »72B. ERGE ROOMS. NEAR GENER-[ Hospital, bacheler or caupN, liWIfcr- CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM, KITW *n ^privileges. N* drinkers. FE LARGE ROOM FOR AAARRIED COU- FE mSI* *^lyl1**** K <#“ r*d LARGE sleepino room Fb* ences. deposit, alto Sbedmam u ROOMS. BATS UTILITIES, adults. It* Canter. FE 5-3422. ------------------------WWW. w*lklhgE distance. 251 I ROOMS ANO BATH. NO dHlL- CLEAN, COOL ROOM, PRIVATE entrance, shower-bath, hem* cs>ox-Ina If ^IreS,^ employed men ciVely HOME, privileges: Good food. FE S-TtSf. . ROOM ANO BOARO FOR JETTED l-to-wbll carpeting. *32-50 I wMk with $100 deposit. Adi only. Inquire ITS Baldwin A Call 33B-4SS4. ROOMS AND BATH, NOR side, child welcome, S3S per w with an $75 dapoalt. Inquire 173 Bawwbt Av*. Call 3M 4M4. II IWiK).V.'.S ROOMS,..PRIVATE bath and entrance,' utilities, aatk- st. Clair. BwMK Wx«', 7*33 MW AT WILLIAMS ‘ tki Hotd» h#> Offict. OW H381. >R Riift, REASONABLE, M6B-am haw stor* or office building on Oakland Avenue, 1 mil* from downtown Pontiac, FE >-*431. MODERN attractive T" mant. utilities *nu nlshed. No pet*. PE _____miidr»iL>EJM^r1 WebIM HgereIigM Bge^i jH AUCTION SALE EVERY SATUR. day at Blue Bird Auction. We'd buy fumDurt, foot* and appliances. OR 5-4147 or MEIr»ee_74tW» CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP. C«*S. 1 PtbCS " son's. FE 4-73*1. LET US BUY OR SELL IT FbR deluxe kitchenette APART- and. AAororwt,. . mixed - a rooms and bath, $1J per week with *30 deposit. Child welcome. Inquire at 171 Baldwin Av*. Call 33B40S4. “-^y welcome, *25. PI 4-7353 •PRCIENCY ||l APARTMENT^ uMl " amr Cese- Elliabeth Lake Road Estate Ofitai. Left 10SS. 4*2-4333. ONE privileges. Located trance*. *7X13*. AyrtiNGRts-URlEnilskii M LET US SELL WHAT YOU HAVI w* will pay cash. Hall's AucNai MY3-I»7|7mY 3-4141; WM(T8C‘~iAS AND ELECTRIC stoves. Highest prlc*s. UTffLE JOES BARGAIN HOUSE, FE $tttl. 'set*of twin or bunk beds. OL St • BEDROOM APARTMENT I house, 3 children. Can pay *40 *45 aermonth. OR 3-22*0. Pontlsc, unfurnished, t childrm 4 end IS, reaaonabl* rant. *“ S-IM4.________ ■. 3- OR 4-BEDROOM HOME ON LAKE PROFESSIONAL MAN WIShES IO rent office In dSmRM* NgWH* Might b* Intereeted In suMs Infl. Reply PontlbC Pf*R> Eftfli. Shsre living Qirarttrs 33 1TO50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE, PAR-CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS >ROP-ERTIES AND LANDJTMTMCTS Urgently need tor Immediate aalel WARREN STOUT, Realtor OS N. Opdyk* Rd. PE 5-41*5 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Ale' Y6U M6VIM6 T6 ««HB 434-0575. Raaivilu* Realty. CASH 41 HOURS LAND CONTSSkTC— HOMES muities WEIGHT M2 OAKLAND AVE.~ PR1 MM* GET RESULTS trlgerel **5 mo oft South Crook* Read- BLOOMFIELD HILLS MODERN IN EVERYDiTAIL" Adults only__________« tHi FGhYai^bleau has NpyA- cancy, however, we ere eoder application* tor future occyw yes N. Cess Lake Road, PE S WEST sT51 LOWER, 2 I rooms, all utllltlas fumlshad, month. PE 4-2521 befara 5. ROOM ANO/OR b6ar6 tisvy Oakland Ava. PE 4-1*54. 1PACIQUS RQOM ON CASfc LAKI 1 or t man, SIS waak tMRi*. » doubl*. 4*2-4553. im__________________ AT MOfcGON LAKE. SAL£WIN — I-7S Expressway. ymL ________ ATTRAdVlVtl SGEPROOM RANCH, | ett*ch*d garage, lull basement, aluminum siding, storms and screens. 114,5*8 with MK'. down. Owner. OR 4-1730.______ AUBURN HEIGHTS store on Oakland Avenue. SB x Ideal tar tor'--------~“£-------- FE 5-S431. RtRt Offki Specs NEW MODERN STORE OR Ol flee an Oakland Ava., near Caa Montcalm, VtiOf. reasonabl*. -FE 54421. TELEGRAPH RQAD ye, ate. 5 minutes from court-use. Good parking. Writ* Pon-ic Press g*« 71 Rtnf BbsImee hvfsrty 4Vk 30x7(1 MODERN BUILDING IN THE r Fontainebleau Plan. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor PE 3-7183_______ OR 44)437 COMMERCIAL BUILDING. era Mat of fleer space, mtoiau Orchard Lak* and Tatograph. DOWNTOWN ROCHESTER CORNER .. t HAYDEN, REALTOR ' EM 3-4404 10731 Highland Rd. (MW) SYLVAN SHOPFiNG CENTER 3 x lit Air Conditioned Stem, xcallant parking and traffic 3301 *»rAW 435-11*4 down. Ft 3-GEDROOM Clarkston area, MA 3 3-be6R66m. large lot, nEar ling i _________ _ ______V m .... basament, 2-c*r garage ..... storage. Baautlful yard, nicely " naad. roar yard fenced with redwood, out-door frill — W. H. BASS carpeted, 3-car garage, 100x250 tof, Rocha*4” — *’*“* r OL 2-0741. 3-BEDROOM BRICK, FULL BASE-ment, gas heat, S2.M0 down, take oyec awreems, PE ***“ 3-BEOROOM HPME. WEST SIDE, E-.‘“ 3-BEDROOM BRICK, 2 YEARS ttLD, in Watkln's Hills. *: ■wt H—SGt, PErElrinB 39 2-BEDROOM - *71 OAKLAND, *NO utilities. Yerd and flaraga used tor car tot 071 par month, 071 deposit. FE S-707T. _____ ATTRACTIVE LAKE FRONTS, MOD; 3-BEDROOM, 1W-CAR GARAGfe, near Clarkston, MA 5-2HB., . 1 3-BEDROOM RANCH, dLAlKSTbil . ____________________ after Labor Day. EM 3-21*1. HOUSE TO "LEASE SEPTEMBEA «^«,JV'°cm£y"u month. 343-0514. Bert M—bee, Uit BEDROOM HOylJ adult couple only. 2-EBDROOM HOUSE IN KEEGO, adult coup la only, no pats, tocaj references, deposit required. Ml rSEDROOM, NEWLY bECOKATED Commerce ere*. EM 3-0835. ^BEDROOM HOUSE, 2 CHILDREN welcome. 343-74W. 3 ROOMS AND-BATH, NO PETS. FE 4-541*. reg^ fencsid yerd, 133x150 extras *11 JO* tow dawn pal FLATTLEY REALTY >24* Commerce , **3 W*1 REALTOR PuRtRIDfifc "I* THE BIRD TO SEE** I- ANO ~4GEDROOM hAMI FE »-274*. 4-BEDROOM HOME, Wt.3T .jlbj living and office quarter Wi NEED tilling*. Call ua today, g** tor quick Mid and top market DON WHITt, INC. EMI Dixie Hwy. Ptiona *7--- * Listings Ntedtd Customers waiting, W**f Sid* af Pontiac, only. Hockett Realty EM 3-6703 LISTINGSwaM Ed M.„^. „ >Bal VALUE, *2*^1 4-BEDROOM MODERN, NO DOOS, ■vellebla. 1S41 WhWa Lake Road. ROOMS WITH REcARAtiuN mom, STS dapoalt, S1SS * ~**M> W3EB, ______________BB j----r “IMALL Trucks to Rent Vk-Ten pickups tVk-Tan Stake* TRUCKS - TRACTORS ANO EQUIPMENT Duma Trucks — Saml-Trallar* - Pontiac Faim and Industrial Tractor Co. S2S S. WOODWARD FE *4441 ..PE 4-1442 Open Pally Including Simdqy 4-ROOM, TERRACE, BATH AND W, no smalt chfidran, near Central High, PE 21403. is WALDO, ATTkAitlVi NEWLY ----- Elin dwelllno with BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Wall* and window*. Rees. Satistac- i HBHPA .Iff ' ROCHESTER WINDOW WASHING Co. ol 'MEUOMNraiM<»; dantlal, JanItor-tRrylea, WEED CUTTING, POWER EQUIP-mant. By hour or lab. PE 4-1 IT. —6 MOwiJfO. CTgWT 'HAULlNd. LOWES WELL DRILLING, I ____ 15 mTln of Pontiac — *<~— *?5,000 pheVreng*. you call and Ml u* sail yours to ana of ours? WW, DIXIE HWY., DRAYTON aim 4 Valencia EAST BLVD. AREA, IN SO>V NOTICE! have acreage aercels tor . _nall or large — w* l““ buyers, call IM today! Clarkston Real Estate 5*34 S. Mein________MA 5-5*21 ilLL twaW M IUVCAIl Gwrgejllalr tor qukk't* — WANT TO SELL? Aj*ErtRIQEt»FGri i BEDROOM UPPER, HEAT, E. East S|ud. OR 34*07. I OR S ADULTS, IN ROI gas heat, Bara) dantlal • District. Reetto?**tW*Elizabtth Lak* Rd. FE 4-SSS4. BOULEVARD HEIGHTS NICl NORTH SIDE HOME. i'T baths, 4! B. Palrinaunt, no — children or pate FE F24S7. SAM WARWICK HAS IN SYLVAN Lake 3-bedroom Wick, carport, taka privileges. West Bloom find school district. $135 an lees*. 412-2*20 or 4*2-1714.______________ WAILED LAKE MODERN COTTAGES ON LAKE In Birch Owe.. Sleep up to It ' e. .mm BIO LOVELY COTTAGE, HOUGH- Camp situs, McFseiy Resort, Or- HUBBARO lAkE'fRONT, MOD- Bg;ftr- LAKE FRONT, 1 BEDROOMS, MOD-em, near Union Laka — •“-* . *443 Mandan. 2*3-74# - a LAKE fEONT COTTAGES ON EAST Twin and Tea lakes, Lewiston, FE S-1S3S after S, ____C ^etomenlSrY^iiphj end’ lunior'hlgh, ^bS6room ranch, shaded tot, an 2 Mue. >12,000 OR 3-42*3. 3-BEOROOM RANCH . MU*. 10 FEE CENT DOWN l oedroom ranch heme, with l-c*r gersgs, bar an* fireplace ----------- HAMMOND LAKE mm Tip I lance*. 1V> baths, gat hast. I*,*50, * C. pJJnGUS, Realtor 423 Mill If., OrtonvMI* CALL COLLECT NA 7-3115 A CONTEMPORARY RANCH and family vreor lerge let. *24,500. this good veiu* to.... housemahspitzlcyH FE 1-1331 f Ml 4-7423 or stop ei MeGM - 1 to i p.m Middle Belt end Square Ldke Ri I DOWNTOWN LAKE uurnm*' WALTERS LAft AREA i to-well carpet- ____jtodpaw etsrme . all plesiered walls. _________1 recreation.roem and par. PncM . at only HI4R j Clarkston Real Estatb s S. Main MA.SwP WASHINGTON PARk. VBEdRoSM 5-bedroom, IV* baths, lerge aeted living roam, dor,we" basement, recreation row_.______ flrtolece, modem kitchen, 2 Therm eaene picture- windows, planter boxes ecross front, lerge oek tres grave, l-*cr* fenced, attached garage. *23,*50, full price, terms. SILVERrtAKE AREA IM acres, Oiroem aftok^randi. oah IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY light 3 bedroom eltbrlck. horns Narth Pontlec * CALL 333 /5S5 MICHAEL'S REALTY INDIAN VILLAGE 3 Bedrooms Dining room, lerge living row with fireplace, porches uptlaii and down. Two-cer garage, alum num tiding. . 16 Utica Rood - Phone 3324403 _________ LAND CONTRACT" 5-room bungalow aveilabl* In I ton Plains. Toe condition, tached garage, l price, $12,500 i balance, $75 monrn.. warden Realty end screens, nicely li ner tot, evergreens, 2-car ----- aaraea. 037,210 lull price terms. J^L^NEI REALTY 7e 44550 BARGAIN, 5 LARGE *-*-*• “—ilac*. patio, 402-4137. brick, fireplace, petto, attached ga- BASIC BILT 1,1, or 4 bedrooms Aluminum siding, rough plumblna electric cornel*to. full Miamam. nothing dawn on your tot. wl“ furnish materials to finish. _ ARTHUR C. COMPTON Si SONS LESLIE R. TRIPP, Rioltor 75 West Huron Street PE S4141 (Evenings PE 44270) MIXED NEIGHBORHOOD Only 07,*00 J ised WATERFORD HIGH Mdraomswt bethw^biwjn HILLTpy REALTY________07BWS4 NO CLOSING COST ■ -Mi ' 3 bedroom ranch, newly iiecuiato* carport. lM a|. paved etreef. vacant. Prtca 0*,500. $74 manttiiy. RORABAUGH WEST BLOOMPIKL6. Whit* Lake Araa 1 1/3 AdiES. >, i or 3 bed-it,*00. 424-3111. Dan Edmonds WRIGHT RANCHER ____„OOM RANCHER BASEMENT—AUTOMAT 1C - LARGE LOT - lOO'XIOC' LAND CONTRACT. . SIS Oakland Av*. FE 2-0141 Eve*, after I - “ Welled Lake ARRO Trade Yours for Ours „„„ stairway, - - _____ large clothes ctosots, drapes, storms, 2'_j4 acres, 2 bedrooms, den, living room, dining room, bath, full base-nant, garage, and large tool house mi tor oniyiiAsao. STILWELL ITHEISEN chaster, Mich. OL 1-ilSO DRAYTON WOODS led tot, early American , 4 bedrooms, dtnqw n 1 family room with final !*carpetlng and*«lr*iml! t ORTONVILLE. YOU POLKS, WHO R 2-S714, 1, kitchen DRAYTON Near Katterlng High, living room, dining n with packet dips toPVR Scar garage.^Exceptlonally HILLTOP REALTY 423-5234 elizaeEth lake estates I .bn —t-1-.!-- ImjgIw UiGHmf REAGAN MSItTOadyk* Road “IS THE BIRO TO SEE" 1-BEDROOM HOUSE, NEW- ■«enH*c. BMM-L FEB-1W. buildings, T"h. c. newingham UL 2-3310. SROOMB i acrE USWib S-537S wllttl'k price $4,500, $1,000 t 30 FAIRGROVE 140 WHITTEMORE 2^ gredous home* wl$h _ FurnltuS* --- Sim. B. Mitchell. Willis M. Brewer Real Estate *4 E., Huron, FE 4jni or 0*2-0141 $40* DOWN, 2-BEDROOM A N D_GA 20M JAMES ROAD, 07,SW 6AJU*. . bedroom. Anchor tone*. Lot 43x144. PE 14347. eOSO CASS-ELIZABETH RD. lTOTS. $9#990a at anly $7,500. WE TRAOI Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REMJ.Y MEANS BETTER-BILT RUSSELL YOUNG,W. HURON BEDROOMS, 255 . Ft bi-leVeC 3 GAYLORD LINCOLN HRIGHTS —4-bad room bungalow. Very deelrabto area — Separate dining room, * closets. BK-iMBinA ftrealece, good tor large family or chib. Offered at StaStb. Tarms. Call MY 2-1*21 •r FE BOOTS. LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD Broodway and Flint, Lak* Orton MY 2-1021 Ot FE **403 T ^ GOT *3007 ; •siiy. New carport v comer let 115'x-newly geafipWE. US’, til* ba Ctoaa to achum. n«s SOJOS, SSSJ4 month phi* Insurance. HAGSTROM REALTOR 4*00 W. Huron St. OR 40350, — nlngS call 4a2-*flg.___________ HALF ACRE. a aftomoens. Li 2-4*77 Eva* MODEL OPEN 47 DAILY . • 14x11 r RarRRb, f m t toil taaamant. baautlful yar* (Anchor fenced). *11*00. Assume a Gl mortgaga at 4V$ par cant IntafPit. s, part basament, gat ha east suburban tocatlen. Will VERY SHARP S-BSDROOM bungp-■ow, tocatotf an beautiful canal rent tot with boat, deck and aarim-nlng, large endosad parch, payed itreet. $7f»0. T*rm*. {jjj* ’ PHONE 682-2211 '5U3 Cait-Ellztbelh Road MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE CLEAN FREWLY Iding. Dry paaamant family ream. Ah *x-t SIMM. Immadlat* 2- BEDROOM HOME WITH prlvll*i*S an BrMf* Laka. maaalv* atah* . fireplace, tor thee* cold wittier eves. Clarkston schools, *7,300. 3- BEDROOM HOME on M Sere. Clarkston school*. Haul* wall Mat and convenient. 111.5*0. LARGE SGEOROOM home with - walk-out basement. All roam* are larger then average. Situated MLS acres. Them to am a 2-bodroem house an the property, which rank tor MS par mo. SSl.fSB. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 425-2*15___________Eva*. US-1453 sis.aoo, MM d*wn. Bloch Brot NO DOWN kAYMINt HO PAYMENT FIRST MONTH Filll basement, I bedrooms, V kitchan and family mam, brick treat, medal at *7* kinney near BELAIRE HOME BUILDERS FE *-2742, 1:30 to 5 p.m. EVENINGS AFTER 7, LI 2-7317 JOHNSON HANDLE HEIGHT. A nowly decorated home with beeament. Vebr Borage, lake privileges, large W, may ba purchaaad an land contract w to on* bedroom dawn andlhraa ua arrangamant is lust Idaal tor the large, family. It's a. bargain I Only **,*00. Calf Mr. Van today. OR S-0S33 or FE S-71M. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 520 Pontiac Lk. Rd. Oaan f to * E 3-7103 MLS OR 3-4033 attached plastered garage, shrubbery. *• PONTIAC REALTY 37 Baldwin PE 5-4275 Owner 3 ba Baraga, badhtonuu to basement, 2to-car NloiJULAKE B beach. IRil„ ■......... | HAROLD R. FRANKS, JUdlty 250] UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3200 30S-7W RETIREES ATTENTION' Clover 2-bedroom modem, mant, shade, 2 tot*. Prlvllr Crescent Lak*. Sacrifice very reasonable term*. DOROTHY SNYDER LAVENDER 334-2*1*_____3344400 ■ M7-5417 ROCHESTER, BY OWklR, 4-S1P- MILTON WEAVER, REALTORS IIS W. University OL 1-4142 UMBERS rWYATT REALTY with third potontlai, family ream, attached 2-car garage, Ito bathe, owner leaving state, went* oulckf _ spotlight X' ^ LAKE FRONT 1 Neat 2-bedroom ham* with paved I reed access, fine beech. Priced! |iS|. wEh WUK^fBST ■ . . . ___ EMBREE 8, GREGG, Realty ^LjiousE. a wm colum- 1545 UNION LAKE ROAO MJWag™ 3«ys EM >43*3 Eves. EM 3-3705! HAPPINESS HOME The proudest, happiest, most can- will ot you. A giant sired tot with; ■had* trees and fruit trees gator*. ■■japcMchingly land- Templeton E-FRONT BI-LEVEL m view et Sylvan — y enclosed porch, wil ■—tl. Wjll-ti I orom. S^Swgi sllntod gymbm. SST'MtSnTJ5n"to bTSS -.sa. u&jx? - » ‘K.h^h'tm,b^'*^!| K. L. Templeton, RealtoV thing until you've seen thitl .Ift a 233* Orchard Lake Road 4*2-0*00 steal at *27,*5*. ' - ^ --- NO NICKEL NEEDED A Ol .buy* fhl* beaut with n.. dawn But Ina. closing cpMs. 3-bedroom ..charmer with f*gg*d extre-lerg* Jot. Cto*e to Avondale schools tar cMM safely- Immediate ——-tom. AH the-werk'e dene. Itbnmad shrubs and price. Don't dream . v Buy thto anal ' REALTOR partridge , "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" iMl ta. HUiWW- ■“ 4 HIOHLA^CKTI ID TOWNSHIP, 1 - BED- **,706, 335-71*4, $1 *.m -7 P.m Clarkston araa. Call w rouey aner 4 call Clark Wheaton FE 4-S2S4. A. JOHNSON 81 SONS FE 4-2533 STOUTS: Best Buys * Tcxiay ^ Brick Btawty Solid 3-bedtjjjm^bric -s^ory •lace, >1K - Zero Clown *250 clbting costs t» bedroom rwrch home In Lake Getatoftvttnty ri beeament with new fur wSrqiMMVGMitJ* — Total Prica at *7,*50. Like Large Rooms? •an planning with 40-foot taring, ining and kitchen araa, S mae-ir bedrooms, spacious bam with >rner tub, walk-ln closets, welk-jt basement, hat water M>s*-mrd heat extra tot Included I only SIMS*. m-eni Northern wmH bo*lt-m b«ttt*r M* 1Whc#t Val-U-Way WATERFORD TWP. ‘ 3-bed room 4-room heme, toll basement, gas heat, aluminum aiding; attached garage- K*d< ctoah aid neat. Only *400 down. \ ' * , ORION TWP. Newly redecorated ready to.reeve into fhl* 3-bedroom ranch, family style kitchen end dtatog artto gat heet, Bear garage. Only *300 down. VILLAGE Of COMMERCE R. J. (Dick) VALUEl REALTOR FE 44S31 345 Oakland _9FlG£Z After 2 — FE B441S *r PE »MM . Mixed Area: 4 ROOMS AND BATH, newly decorated. Large living end dining rooms. 1 bedrooms. Gleaming oak ftoora glassed partita toll toMW. new gas furnace. Oarage. Only HOME AND INCOME er 1-unlt RI arty. Fireplace, ful‘ ------ separate furnaces. . 47417*4, 3434147. UNION LAKE oms, ssoodan nears, I gas heat, 2-c*r garage. HILLTOta (JEALTY* 473-52341 ment. 'gas' heet, cyclon* fenced UTICA. CUSTOM 2- BEDROOM. landscaped lot. A choice buy. Ill-brick renctv 2-cer garage, bant-1 2M with terms. > . large' kitchen, excellent location, J Call Mrs. I -wi.. - ---731^5*3, - -' dan 1 nn no 1 HERRINGTON HILLS. A sharp S - 'room-Brick, carpets*'caramk V family Nze kitchen, ft .....it, gas heat, cyclon* landacapad tot. A choke to MILLER REALTY $ I THE PONTIAC ERKSS, THURSDAY, AUGUST ft, 1964 ANNETT Lot 160x280 S-reom ham* with basement and automatic heat. Good garden space or pMyground ter children. Near Oakland uhlvertlty. 510,950, reason Ird. Ossetpent, automatic $8,500 TElRMS Attractive aluminum aided buno lew' on large corner la» *4 roe" and oath, aiao atalra (a ’ (loan attic, Canvanlant ctaaa-ln west w urban location. PHONE TO SEE! BLDG, Lot.'. too,JOO with 20V90. block buildln Privileges on Scott Lake. Good hapta site. Only $2,000. WEST,,.. Lot 110,121. perfect tor ranc heme. Crescent Lake privilege ONLY $1,450. Humphries gHWjMn Mat, spring fed, keeps 1 and bes IN toot 5rtimi!ill^rep5ce, pegge oak ttaars; DR. kitchen, bed roam and bath an 1st floor 3 bedrooms and bath on 2nd — — “at. water ^as 1 aand 6-Family Brick Claae In lacatlen, Hue S. and bath and ana 4-room and aatat bamn. I if teib-ptr mot FE 8-0466 DORRIS ALUMINUM SIDED 1 BEDROOM RANCH HOME H3.tS0 located In Clarkaten Estates, an area a* wel.i DOLLAR VALUE PLUS RAM-1 ■LINO RANCH HOME. SI2,300. Could net be duplicated far SJ1.300. Over 1,500 square teat of living area, with hid basement, ttvfpg ream II feet > 24 foot with ma“ slve fireplace, dining ream 11x1 ultra modem kitchen 14 foot . 13 foot; bedrooms, IS foal X IS foe so foot , 15 feel end IS feat x f. Draperies, carpeting and fleece fixtures Included. zW-c*r dt-• • “ ‘—Mopped r quick LAKE ORION INCOME PROPERTY. Live In 5 very gracious and comfort able rooms ot your awn and receive income from 3 nicely fgyRjgjgi 0onmink *•*■*—*- y 3 blocks n a as d by ti II city BEAUTIFUL WEST SUBUREIAN BRICK RANCH, $15,910. Compare Shape telling appointments: - brick, bhRMaggad drive and ' aN city convonwncas, wool c ing, Dlshmaster, vent fan and _^BP In oven and range. Family kitchen .St Stef x a foot Mat your 9*—to Norma, 3 bright, chi 1 complete Mme,______________— acoustic calling and asphalt loor. Lot IS tootx tit foot floor. Lot frails’ with valvaty jreen lawn, boautltul shrubs, rad- ^pTdrRS__________________ of home. Located an South. Shirley. Easy FHA terms. besom anti aluminum skiing,- mar-ble window slllsi plastered wallt; modem -*“■ “— counters. I very bright cheerful MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE "BUD" Brick Ronchtr Delightfully ettrectlve 3-bedroom brick ranch heme with approximately ana acre grounds close Hfldto paneled rec----------NNUiid 2-car garage. Priced at $22,900. - “Bud" Nicholie, Realtor 4f Mt. Clemens St. / FES-1201 Y After 6 P.M. FE 4-8733 •A-l BUYS KETTERING HIGH Ing, feeremlc beth. ____________ MBs recreation ream. Large Borage. Priced to sen. $1,700 WATERFORD REALTY D. Bryson, Realtor Van Welt « - 4540 pixlo Hwy.____OR 3-1 GILES ' SYLVAN LAKE EBONY— 3-b4-room brick ranch, 22-fo61 living » room with 12,12-toot dining ell. Slate vestibule, entrance clooet. Ledgerock fireplace up and down. Ceramic fib bath. Full basement. Recreation ream. Flush lights, dimmer control. Phone outlets. PM and Stereo built tn, attached 2-car ' ers leaving city. Must°ee(l?rTerms. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION — Mt M24 plus-frontage more Raid,. • asm { GILO REALTY CO. FE 5-4175 221 jBaMwiit Ave. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE «t Ids Homes DORRIS PRETENTIOUS RAMBLING RANCH HOME •MKtti'lftwMy 15,000 ft. of living im. T very rooms IRWIN _ _ _ e tumlture; email enough ter homey elrt. US —- modem weIPpMnned kitchen. Mein betb.mPm e masterpiece. Vt an B—- family aR b par- __________ ____I, 12x21, 3 bright MtMfSMTMbaplt, Outstanding basement. Seer garage. Sweeping pemer *-*1 I I00x150. Profes- CLARKSTON AREA - $13,150, 3- 1 large covered patios, block from grade achool. I on let 100,150. A hftme r proud to ehow. Plastered OFP ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD - kitchen. Full basement and Scar garage. Vary nice family h Basement could be finished a very nice recreation room vary little effort. NORTH END — We have 5 CABINS AND LOTS GALORE have cabins itf— near Gaylord, city. A 3-0—- AM priced ____________ | pietely furnished. Lots, lake fronts, suburban, EHy have you. All are real nl„ _________ Ing iimo. W# have. 1 on White Oft Ice open Sunday Via d MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR 2fl W. WdttdnI ~ REF2N3 MILLER EXECUTIVE HOME In axcdlbnt a dltlon. 14x1S carpeted living res with cut rack fireplace, carpal ST. MIKES AREA, 4-BEDROOM __ use at Income. Now rant Ing for SIM month. 1W bathe, full basement, fenced yard. Prlcad for toil sale at $0,950. Terms. 3 BEDROOMS NORTH SIDE - Cl paled living and dining rooms. Fi basement, gat Itoat, floored eh age attic, Scar garage. $10,150 I NORTH SIDE, Family roam, vanny m oetn, i at closets, levoly kitchen ana a sio.too. Sus a- sharp 1 bedroom irpetlng, glassed front baiement, gat heat, tool shad, ge-— Completely fenced. Only rase. Coi $11,900. 3-BEDROOM RANCH IN Waterford. Only lVk years eld and something you'll Ilka. Large 11x17 family with curb, Miller Realty FE 2-0263 LAKE PRIVILEGES—Gt TERMS LAKE ORION 2 houses, 3-bedroom homo end 5- room bungalow el tutted an Ih tat with Me privilege*. Let tt Income from the bungalow pay t< your horn*. Call for appointment. Smith Wideman Futt'prtoion/yb$ 500 DOWN - That la bA this Int-B| * Ski ( Pay- ANOTHER WITH - Only $500 3-bddreom ranchar wtm l» „.... near williams Lake. Large 100x110 lot. Real large 2Wear garage. Aluminum storms. Patio In the rear. Cnoic* neighborhood. Balance easy FHA payments. I EAR DRAYTON PLAINS — A Dutch Colonial home that offers you a tot. of comfortable' living tor only $12,300. 33 ft. living room 3 large bedrooms, fireplace, gas heat, Good clean condition. Largo 43,152 tot. Paved street. RI-LEVEL — Just across street from good lake. 7 Large rooms only 3 years old. 12,15 family oak floors, plastered walls, attached 2W-cer garage. Large ISOx 155 tot. Priced low at $14,500 vour family wfil leva living “— L. H. BROWN, Realtor 509 Elizabeth Lake Road Ph. FE 4-3364 or FE 1-4110 S certainly dl ful semi-bunt Walton Blvd. Ito APPEAL PLUS c too this booutl* ' at WHItamt L I arlv...... petlng, beautiful modern^Yl'tch nice tile bath, double concr drive and your friends will wild about the Knotty Pino paneled potto with o V complete mar’— kitchen attached -to the per Words cannot deecrlbo all tha Ing appolntipantl. $14,950 Is l^ONJIJHINO piss ihd%tM »th. Outsti TRI-LEVEL - $15,900. For you are recoMpB4r^< comforieb The ip comparable surrounding homes. NEW HOME Unbeatable $11,975 Our medal located on Quillen, atf Saehjbaw i Read, ■ w™-, , Walton Blvd. 77x3$ with marbto window aim, plastered walla and aatoct oak ttaars, aluminum aianns and screens, built-in* ki kitchen, beautiful ceramic bath, full basement, gis heat. Mod-41 $12,975 on tot 100x130 or on your tat. 311,771. , _ DORRIS l SON, REALTORS 434 Dixie Hwy. 7 OR 403f' MULTIPLE LISTING, lERVICt O'NEIL 2 BEAUTY RITE MODELS 2 OPEN EVERY EVENING 6-8t30 SUNDAY 3 40 7 Ire. Bftto OR 3-202$ MODEL Ih curved bey window. Tho a I lag. I ed. Gas h law Ol TRADING IS TERRIFIC HUNTOON LAKE PRIVELEOES Two - badraam bungalow ranc... NIC*, large kitchen with dining garage. Full prlc* $20,900. ’ 1lM IDEAL LOCATION Near School. Owner hat met and I* ottering thl* 4-yeer-trl-levol home tar ial*. Parfact the family map with tchool cl dren. 4 bedrooms plus main bath on upper level; living room. an-with din Ing meet and V pn towar toyal. Ygfc fMSbfll wooded corner the commands ar* entrances wing, formal Ih The baautlfu 3 bedrooms, ■ IVb bathe,, breakfast nook, attached garage. Located to the Clarkston area hoarJ-7*. It* a terrific buy bt only $17,700. PRICE REDUCED-Ttonttec We kins Estates. OutMandlng 3-bsc room ranch, located IjJpjEj tot. Attached garage, bullt-to kitch an, 3 spacious Mdreoms, buNtl gas panelled recreation room wtth b plus many more lovely feotun Don't miss tha buy of tha yai Only SUMO down plus closing cos RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 3520 Pontiac Lake Rd. Open9 t« OR 4-0427 “-I4I NICHOLIE Frushour StrublelJ Room to Spore I clarkston Area location. Only 3 blocks tram Pon- • tiac Mali. Neat brick home with] dining room, fireplace >1n living room, new ^a^hHvwce, full -bese-j EAST SIDE dtnlng J””8it5»n. FutV basement"* Oil HA heat. Veddnt. ‘bout $300 moves you to. d ves. call Mi. Allen, FE 4-513$. NICHOUE HARGER CO. u City Locotion' Crescent Lqkt Areo JACK PRt/i$fOUR ■r MILO STRUBLE N30 Elizabeth Lake Roa TMALtPlS HIITER CLOSING COST DOWN - On excellent 2-bedroom home, at num storms and Kroons, to_ . yard, near Northern High, $7,WO, LOft, LOW *srf3 I PAYMENT — bath, oak ftoari like now. $4,900. Rile excellent . »*s£t£Slj 49 TIZZY RHODES \.£ rage, large fenced to FHA terms, 3130 down tog casts, BBS par month. < SUBURBAN LIVING — Beautiful room Brick home, 4 large tv rooms, largo living room, separi dining room ehd den, big kitch. with breakfast nook, enclosed perch, 1 baths, full basement, 3-car garage, paautitul grounds, 33 acres of rolling land. $51,000 — Terms. - -ROOM HOME - Gas, water and sewers, comer tot. Neck lop street, 1 block oft Baldwin Ave. idea) for young couple. Only $4,500. ■ Terms. ' INCOME — 3 apartments, older I-room home, good condition, full baeament. gas heat, shows good returns. $13,500. Termi. 3-FAMILY INCOME -r 14 rooms. North Parry near wide Track Drive. $9,400, $2,300 down, balance ■ on lend cbntract, SS5 par month. VACANT - Lake-front lot, Scott Lake, $3,300. ALBERT J.. RHODES, Broker FE 1-330$ 25$ W. Witten FE 54712 KAMPSEN Your neighbor traded Why don't-you7 $350 DOWN BRICK RANCH breezeway to 2-car garage,' 100x400. Priced at $22,506. w SILVER LAKE FRONT ITl $0 nice to live at tha lake enloy year ‘round tun and rah tlon to be had In thle tovaly bMi room, gas heat, attached 3_. oarage, you can maintain the 75x 150' tot and (till have time f— tun. We're looking tor a trade BARGAIN-BARGAIN 4-room bungalow In oxccltont a dltlon, full basement, gas he SS'xIM' tot. Only $4,500. Terms. CLABK GARDENERS AND HORSE LOVERS Maimr ■ — — feet deep rabbit! • with 22-tt. living and dag. Prlcad r kiddles 00 an SRFmt DRAYTON AREA — LONG, LOW BRICK AND ALUMINUM - 3-bedroom ranch with large carpeted living room, end dtohig ell, brick fireplace, ivy bathe, Ihermepen* and Anderson window*, full basement, 2-car attached garage. * ** 110x127 wtth nice landscaping IS ACRES NORTH OP PONTIAC • CLARK REAL ESTATE -3101 W. HURON ST. FE 3-7SB Multiple Listing Sr~J‘~~ BIRMINGHAM LARGE NEW COLONIAL ! 147-toot tot, gavgi-* nCnfi Weir, Manuel & Snyder 19$ $. Woodward. Birmingham, Mic... 4444310 PHONES 544-2323 "SMITH" CLARKSTON VILLAGE 2-story brick home In excellent tmmm, 3 ■ ' _____ ___________ .. ahcpplng, schooto and church, S2UM. By appointment. 94 ACRES ring 'stream and frontage d rnvdt. edlecent to Wltd-Aroa to Oreva- %HR 7 ACRES Near 1-73 and Dixit,- vary 4 and rolling, 14,113. Term*. Rolfs H. Smith, Realtor ■ . er * I PE 3-7141 BATEMAN Trading Is Our Business 4-BEDROOM BRICK RANCHER, 1W both_ 2-car garage. Beautifully carpeted room, with natural fire ly landscaped and $ yard. BulIMn rang* an electronic air purifier complete. Yours for I Sl,l50 down plus costs. A REAL BUY IP YOU ACT NOW; fuR Wear ' ;. Close in wait 1 an Meat starter __________ I only St,25* with luet urban Mvlng lust 1_______ _ at lint $20,9M °wlthV<$2,tWSdo» plus casta. ACT TODAY. IDEAL FAMILY HOME 7-ROOM BUNGALOW, on 2 wa landscaped tots. Full basement, It take privileges. An Ideal possession. $19,950 wH plus costs. This won’t OPEN DAILY 4:3$ 40 •: Furnished Models At prices you con afford - starting M $10,500 on your > lot. Lots of custom features and many plans. MSI opposite city airport.' Turn toft an Whittier at Big Salama- Slflh- r'l'- » SOLD SOLD: SOLD SOLD '■■•Y , .. ‘ Bateman ' ANYWHEREY 377 S. Tatogrgph Real OP*n f t Tstl WS By Kate Qsann “Freddie told Patsy he couldn't go steady on $1.50 t week allowance. He wants her to.aak for a raise!” Sab Houses ROCHESTER Hvtog ream, dining i, full basement, gat new, paved drive 2- _____ .haded tot wtth fancad backyard, .paved streets, sidewalk part of "LAPEER COUNTY totllul 4 rooms. Capo Cod, large hg room with (pan stairway, I a an oak floors, up - to - daft -amimed -kitchen with 2-hole earn, >car attached ga-llnlshed roam above, tot, nicely ainnslbto party. If °° CLARENCE RIDGEWAY KENT ESTABLISHED IN 1714 NORTH SUBURBAN — t prtsswty. ------------- Carpeted II COUNTRY LIVING Floyd Kent Ini;., Realtor DM Dixie Hwy. at Tttopraph E 2-6123 Open Eves. MA 5-174 NEW CUSTOM BUILT HOMES MODEL OPEN DAILY 1 TO 8 3485 PLAINS DRIVE CORNER W. WALTON BLVD. “YOUR PLANS OR OURS" $13,950 ON YOUR' LOT - Over V“ square M. Three er with attached.two-car garage, all birch kltohan, V **—- ing, Corton kitchen - septic allowance FoTnew Homts—, KAMPSEN TIMES • SPACIOUS RANCH high daylMit beta atton. $13,500, S400 _ DRAYTON AREA Extra nica 3-bedroom rancher. Gat .heat. Carpeting and draper to*. 2-csr garage. Lot taa'xSOO'. sio,tso. North Clarkston ar*a. Excellent, $400 down phis costs. . 5-ACRE PARCELS North Ctorkstoh ‘ area. Excellent high building stter — Good soli and soma wooded. A buy if $2,750 ***■ TIMES REALTY 6psn * TO 7 BI7 DIXIE HWV. MLS *7441374 WEST BLOOMFIELD Lively brick, and shingle l„_. home. Large, (lying room, dining* room, kitchen with breakfast area. 3 bedrooms and til* bath. UMnty room. Large. Veil landscaped tot. 2-csr gang*. Prlcad at 312.710, Terms. ' SYLVAN VILLAGE ’ Priced at $15,500. FHA, $ DRAYTON PLAINS lohn K. Irwin 3,1 W.J^UcE 1733 " Phont FC 5-9446 v Evenings Cell FE 24503 HAYDEN NEW HOMES 3 BEDROOMS TRI-LEVELS RANCHES 33* Let Included G« IVs-Car Oarage Family FROM $10,500 With 11,010 down on your lc ours illy 7-7, Sun. 2-5 1YOEN, Reolt B HlBhtond Rd. (MI7) PIKE-EAST BLVD. AREA CITY OF PONTIAC Mistd Area WHY RENT? * /Lake Front Wooded Lots /Just rttoatad Ter sal* by owik. /at Scotch Union Lafca. Only 11401 ’ *a« with aasy terms. LAKELAND AGENCY FHA approved ' IALLED LAKE SUBURBAN ACRE — With room modem heme. Lets- of_____ garden mace, zoned agriculture, and repaired. Payments toss than rant. W* ar* VA management and •alas brokers. Better hurry at they art going fatt. JAMES A. TAYLOR, Agtncy REAL ESTATE — INSURANCE 7732 Highland RaMUjpf Open 7 to 7 _______OR 4-6304 NORTH PONTIAC AREA ALL APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED IMMEDIATELY WIDOWS. DIVORCEES, PENSIONERS AND RETIREES. EVEN PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS ARE O.K. WITH US FEATURING CHOICE LOCATIONS . ■_ GAS HEAT . SEPARATE DINING. AREA.. CALL ANYTIME DAILY; .. SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. REAL VALUE 424-1575 Sylvan manor ATTRACTIVE 3-BEDROOM b home with IVb baths, carper heat, 75x130 It. Mndacapaa k of state owner says "MUM _ Sl.400 down plus doting coats. HUGE 4-BEDROOM Brtcfc ranch with tto baths, bHiChbd c--- gal heat, lovely large tot, — bus at the door, owner movtad to California, 71,430 down pig* dost— SCHOOL DAZE, move right to 7 lovely 4-room .home, close to bend Ids end Done toon schools, < IwreEwPreyErty ^B financing. TROYRejtty C*.. Adthr wm. Ur*|i 4-BEDROOM LAKE FRONT. W1 to basement, private taka, ov MA 5-3474. No Sunday cam. A CAi^LAKl FRONT 1 Raman Brick ranch i aesad, Rreptoebi $— 3 bathe. 5csr garage, tree, perfect Sandy Ward's Pdtht 34UM0. ELWOOO REALTY MUjlE MIIW rage, fenced yard. MY >1374. SI Ub-AcreafE CALL US FOR LAKE SUBURBAN AND FARM PROPERTY CRAWFORD AGENCY r 3-1143 . 'MY 3-4171 lake FRONTS cranberry CAKE — Batata ah* tot. situated high above take. 100 feat on water, 435 feet daap. ideal tor IHM canetructton. Only S7.7WL $1,000 down, 147 per 14,734 MASS PLEASANT LAKE — Yeer-eround 1-bedroom ham* pH — hail fliam, Tamtiy —____ Tar retired couple. Only $11,7*1. Terms to suit. Immedli’* saselen. DUCK LAKE - EbbwtHW hy (to| -AST “ JS month. CEDAR ISLAND LAKE I L OK) M P IE L O TOWI Square Lake • Telegraph »e^ye*?2£ :h°.CE t ACRE . L^I* unTvenitty. rm for S month*, S3.00S teal. Art qytckty hr Alee near 1-73 Interchange. $1,200 - SIAM. Beautiful rolling country- BUY NOW llUUTER TROY REALTY LARKSTON AREA r S ACRto pavement. At SMB par* acre. L CLARKSTON AREA “ Sacra ho(Tto*lte_ 730 with SIAM down. Clarkston Real Estate MSS S. Mato ____________MA 3-JS21 HI-HILL VILLAGE FINE COMMUNITY TO LIVE IN. Rolling homesltes on winding paved etraats wlth excellent drainage and 8#startI,Vour HOME NOW A ham* Will serve a*4h* down payment for your now Itoma. Start now* selecting an* ol the many BMMtmil site*. Large as 110x160. LOW AS $200 DOWN LADD'S, INC a! l sneer Road Parry (M14) « VW7I er OR S-1B1 4»*r 7:30 c 1. Sunday n* ^4117. Land of Plenty ’Ih 1134’ comar I— tar truck farming, (wan and near schools and shopping, tlSAM ar' 80 Acre Farm North of Ortonvllto, good , modam WALLED LAM ____________ MA 4-1373 " OR $24-1554 • LAKE LIVING 13$-foot lake front let, ter 'round living lust off the main way. $4,750 an term*. C. PANGUS, Realty 422 Mill St., Orienvllto _ •CALL COLLECT NA 7-1115 C PANGUS, Realty CALL cSuKT**" *NA 74S13 \mm' aia tiding restrictions. Phone Riverside 34JSS. Ire Cedwell, Merton, Mich. YIN ACEI>3wm< t(dive lidtrtetHh>, Excellent netoh-borheod. Only 10W mltos from Pontiac City Limit*. Schobl bus, i front. Good land priced it onl] SS.7M and name your own terms Ptwha FE 2-4S1I. Ask tor Mr Brevm Sr. EvenlnQS cell OA 424)1 UPLAND DOWNS—CUrkston school oi£T iweaw oufidStg sltm and in acre ftstate sites. 3 miles to 1-73 expressway. Good restrictions — Heme bulk Iton wMl Increase ’ value. High, acanlc... relHng^ r wooded parcels avallabto new. Conveniently located near good $3,500 to $7,434 Easy terms. 4-4307, OR 3-1373. BtodrBree. i. FE SWIMMING Sand beach, 3-b*droom madam cat-tag* with fireplace. A real nice summer home, cornplately *■—-I shad Full price S47M with 11,750 down. HURRYI DON WHITE, INC. Dixie Hwy. DENHAMS ACRES — rolliiH) or wooded —S 2,500 to $4,500 — easy tenrn. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE $443 Dixie, CUrkston *35-1413 ■ Eves. 433-1433 SYLVAN LAKE, ON WATER. ----------- $23 dawn, $23 month. Blech Bros. FE 4-4509 OR 3-1275. WATERFRONT Building let on canal — Ing Sylvan Lake, 40 ft. watts rEal HVaYJ naT«56 1734 MIS at Bald Eagto Laka WEST BLOOMFIELD J23’ X145' lot. black topped reed, dwrthes, shopping, schools, MA74 ta WXTER FRONT LbtS ON SYLVAN Lake-Orchard Lake to Maddy Lana, North to Lake. 10 par cant — 2W-ACRE CAMPING SITE NEAR Rapid River, inside tha Au Saubto State Forest border. Only SI73 with MMdWjl BW* -------■ ADAMS REALTY . LOTS NEAR PINCONNING . Saginaw Bey. cleat to Expressway. 611-1407. 260-FOOT FRONTAGE ON TROUt stream. Electricity and 27-toot trailer on property. Northwest of Har-rlsen, $5,500 cash terms. MY 2-37S2. CABIN Alio 20 ACRES NEAR BEST OFFER, COTTAGE ON LAKE beach, dock, ctoe* tr “ decorated. EL 7-B7S4. CASEVILLE, MOVING OUT OF state, mutt sell, sajMO, 7201 Pol-’* Charity Dr. Send Point, 444-1734, ROUND LAKE 13 MINUTEj TO Pontiac, mar 1-75 X-way. No me-tors allowed. Lata SS'xtSt', $771 Bras., E 4-4507, OH $HN. EARL SUGDEN REALTOR Oaya, OH Ice—MO 4-3S25 -■ Day*, Otttca-MO 44341 Utl-AtWifi SYLVAN 4I2-23M______or *25-17*4 s.7 impr6ved VACANT ACREAGE 10 ACRE HOME SITES / $4950 ■T# - „ $6450 37M Down PARTLY WOODBO Excellent tocatton comer of WhH Laka'edn Ormond Rd. AL PAULY, Realtor 43)4 Dixie, rear OR 3-3tM Evening* PE 3-7444 M AhRES NEAR M39 AND OXBOW Lake, 1 mil* from Pontiac Lake Stefa Park, to mltos fremPantlec, Attractive View of HAMMOND LAKE AT ORCHARD LAKE AND MIDDLE BELT RDS. eautthii Iwma* ham new SI m to S3i Am. step «t mod Uddte Bait and Squat* Laka I ^duSPEMAN-“piT7LEY' — SUITaOlf TOT Oil II parcels. $14000* 1 WATERFORD HILL ' r let tor salt FE 1-3773 Country Estate ‘sd ground* attracthre a and Kar garage, IT'S HEREll it the parcel you have been we I for — a beautiful farm colon ... over 5..acres, electric fenced ,2-acre parcels for pasture, 3 b stall bam, with toft, garage, 1 nl Priced at *37, Sofa Bust—» Pr»fErty 57 24 x -6Q Feet Clear Span Commercial Ruildiiig with frontage jm 2 reads to growing community. SfJM, SM STX13II’ LOT, IDEAL FOR RE5TAU- 2SM0 SQUARE FEET Zoned Mfg., to Pontiac . SHEPARD REAL ESTATE 311 N. Main, Rochester FE 1-3473 REALTOR PARTRIDGE ”l> TNI >mo T I tlful modern Ront $50 per month. Includes heat, wat— J Cell Ryeh, $$5-4S25. AUTO PARTS STORE writ $14* TMt mb •ting bus) it SUN pi "warden realty ' BUILDERS AND DEVELOPERS I , Save With PARAGON Custom Homes end l-sfory home apaitment retirement hemee q. 1200 i cantor hallway, price unbeetabto, hbva a NO INTEREST ftnanca plan, pkto adubritabtf tor faat starting, aver "■ years axparianc*. mw aparattog 27 states, task several but Mars far .... PARAGON „ DISTRIBUTOR SOX NO as Penfto< er mKS N II handle de FLORIDA MOTEL. 13 uktlj $3-3371. FOR SALE New ond Used ' LAUNDRY and MEV&iANlN* EQUIPMENT tradIjn program Financing available NORGE SALES CORP. 20700 Hubbell Detroit 37, Mich. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 347 3. Tttograph FE $-9441___ PE 4-3713 GROCERY-MEAT SUSINESS IN north doing good buslmaa. Far salt or toeit. fe 2-1571. INVESTIGATE DOG 'N SUDS ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN jGjBg -Helkuylnn MARATHON OPOYKE AMD HEMPSTEAD Itf OAKLAND _ Be In. business tor yourself, paid training pregram, ne layoff*. Fl-nancing avallabto to.. ramnelbto parties, be yaur awn baa*. Phono Mr. Carter new. Tati free. Entar-„ prise mi -Ext. 342 or Livenla MARINA MICHIQAN Business Soles, Inc. JOHN LANDMESSER, BROKER 1573 S, Telegraph_PE 4t3M fully furnished, Fanttwuea Hvtog high Muff. G»ss $14.2*2. All tar $50,000 with SIMM dawn. STATEWIDE-LAKE ORION 3S-MN Attar 3, OR 3-70M MOTEL' Royal Oak. Partntrshto disagreement forces seer We* at only $15,-0M dawn. Their ton to yaur gain. MtJFlidiy. Chapin Motel Brokers 73M WEST 9 MILE 337-MN SOUTH FI ELD. MICHIBAN OWNER MADE HIS Wants to retire tram lucrative plumbing and heating business at Houghton Lake, S'xfc’ Mock and brick building with Hvtng quarters above. Established .1$ years same tocatton. Shows good greet, take* " — "un, 3io,- HAGSTR0M REALTOR • W. Huron . OR 4035* Evenings cell 412-0435 PACKAGE LIQUOR STORE Beautiful ultra-medam party xtore. high prom; ntos $200,000 last year. Parking tot, located In Mil- 4__M------------rhMrlhfl Partridge “Is the Bird to Sea" A Realtor With 33 Yr*. Experience "LITTLE GOLD MINE your- grasp It the priviton* ol making bundles of money.- owner retiring and will sail tor $2,000. You will have to hurry an thl*. - eater than Wall Street, grab thl fast. Lew than 33Mb wlU hand! this dial. A FORTUNE-BUILDER At tha halm of this restaurant rcan start laying your plana being a millionaire. Thl* to the "hottest package" to coma •tong In some Hma. wall known •e tha place tor eating in styta without so in ding a fortune. Yaur LrSUT^ MEM PARTRIDGE 4 ASSOC., INC. OfFICEl THRUOUT MICH. INTERNATIONAL TRADERS CLUB COAST-TO-COA1T TRADES . 1030 W, Huron, Pontiac FE 43511 TEXACO INCORPORATED interstate 7$. station It n _______ aging 1JIM gallons of gasoline pe, day. Station Is open 24 hours e day and may ba seen at any time. is modam location calf r. e. WILL ESTABLISHED P store, across from beautlh With 4bedreom living Very prof It *61* yeer^eroi tele loBii Certncti 68 1 TO 50 UND CONTRACTS UrgmtJi wanted. See us before WARREN STOUT, Realtor 14M N. Opdykp Rd. PE MM* Open EveazT--------- ACTION an your land contract, Ian* or MM. Call Mr. Hiltor, FE Ml79. Broker. 3140 Elizabeth Lake Rent. SEASONED - W8U1 MoUftlB - W—tid CEatiact»m» 6M 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urpwjtjr wanted. Sab w baton WARREN STOUT, Realtor 14» N. Opdykt Rd. PI 53145 Open Evil, 'til I pjn. 11 ?■ THE PONTjAC rUKSS, THURSDAY, AUGUST g, 196* i Wfa jmmMi Ml 6S GISH Far, land contract*, equities or mortgages. Don't to** that home. Sma ll mortgage* auajlam*. Call Tad MeCulkHSKTSr. 612-1120. : ’ ”5- ARRD REALTY ■ It CASS-BLIZABETH RD. 1 NlEb land contracts. REA- eonabl* discounts. Earl Oarrels, EMpfra 3-2511 EMpIre IH QUICK CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS cm* Real Batata, EE ME I fe A-aaia. Mr.Ctortu REALTOft PARTRIDGE "I* THE BIRD TO SEE" s i a i 6 N E 5' UNb mma% tTiSSi 40-INCH PRIOIDAIRE ELECTRIC atov*. Ml EE MME ■ A BIGGER STORE TO SAVE YOU MORE! Shop in cool comfort GRAND OPENING Just moved acraaa IB* »*r**t la 1461 Baldwin at Walton PHONE FE 2-6842 Flrtt traffic light nwtti of 1-71 Lata af fra* parking. MAIN FLOOR Lara* display af beautiful duality tarty ~---------s— mm m ■ _ m__________________ d these wonderful stylings. Ido HoEMboH Goods 65 #OlYiNO?^iR^ er, SU'D I-MIS. - NEW and Used Stereos at 11JS par taaak Refrigerator *1.45 par weak -TVs at SI JS par waak i Rang** at Si.Jt per waak--, gat and elactrlc dryers at 51.39 par waak and up. SEC USiFOR TERRIFIC BUYS GOODYEAR STORE 3S S.,C*** FE S4W NEW BED FRAMES, TWIN SIZE, I td table, picture*. Ml 6-35*4. PLASTIC WALL TILE" . 1C **. BOO TILE OUTLET, MW W. Huron OCCASIONAL CHAIRS. TABLES, studio couch, lawn choirs, good condition, good values. MA 6-2377. BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY . WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $1,000 OFFICES IN Fontlae-Oraytan Flam* Uttc* welled Lake—Birmingham 7 LOANS Tb $1,000 * Usually an flrat vlalt. Quick, friend-- hr, helpful. FE 2-9206 oakundToan*co. MS Fontlac State Bank Bldg. tiSSta SiSO - Sat. PtSS to 1 LOANS . community ujan CO. SS E- lAWtiNOI FE *4 . WA*ii TO $1,000 To conaolldata bills Into on* monthly paymant. Quick- service, wHtl courteous axpartoocad coun-sellort. Credit Ilf* ktsuranc* available. Stop ih or nhen* FE 54121 HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. » N. Ferry St. _ FF u” Mai OdPllywSat.T ta l0an$ New I awe* dinette, second ... Used cabinet oink ........ Used ram** ......... S17 to 7 piece drop leaf dining sat ... LITTLE JOPS BARGAIN HOUSE BZ TERMS—BUY—SELL—TRADE Mon, thru Frl. *tll 9 p.m.| Sot. *111 « ADMIRAL DUALTEMP FREEZER refrlgorotor, 12 cu. ft., ' dltlow SSO. OR 3-1*33. ADMIRAL STEREO. 2PIBCE EAM- ALUMINUM SIDING INSTALLED, PONTIAC KITCHEN SPECIALTIES Spring clooronct of kltchon cabin* wflriSVd Loko, S34432 RE-ESTABLISH YOUR CREDIT -Why do without the things y« not* far your hornet Furniture carpeting and appliance*. Sit dowi could give you a aoeond chencs -Family Homo Fumlihlngt, 111 Dixie Hwy., cor, of Telegraph. REFRIGERATORS, S2S UP Ranewed Appliances Refrigerators, ranoated S4S—STB Maytag wringer washers, rebull OB automatic washer APARTMENT SIZE ofay*,, dean, 4044 N. R APPLIANCE BARGAINS r Portable TV ......... f V Console TV ...........SI 'S WAREHOUSE WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $1A>00 W* will b* glad to Italp you. STATE FINANCE CO. Home Owners NEED CASH NOW? CALL ANY TIME LOAN-BY-PHONE SYSTEMS WIDOWS, PENSIONERS CAN EE ELIGIBLE. CHICK, LOWEST RATES at>ooi ............s< 12,000 ............. $12.89 afrlgtratort i FRITTER' Telegraph Road, v» m Orchard Lake Road. AUBURN HOME FURNISHINGS 3 Living room chair* . Used electric rang** Buy—call—trada Open dally 12IW » . SOM Auburn Rd. Auburn Haight* , *52-2322 BEDROOM lUlTB, LIVING ROOM suite, dining room oulta, moot six* gas mwa. large NBNI erator. Mata sectional. All price to soil. Coast wide van Unas, 37 E. Pike atraat. BNDIX MANGLE AND H AMI LI drysr, MO each. Ml 4-4451_____ BLOND DINING TABLE, CHAIRS, ■ -hairs, star A 44772. BUNK $EDS “ Choie* af IS alyl**, frundM had*, trlpla trundle bad* and bunf-complete, 149JO and up. eon's Fumlturs, SIS E. Flip. caAfeTs and life tOO cIan GOOD HQUSEKEEFINQ^SHOF^ *1 W. Huron St. FE 4-1005 REPOSSESSED A CABINET MODEL SINGER SEW-Ing machine. Dtol ilgiamor makes l • different decorative stitches. Including butfonhok SIwSSEn written M|raM*2 Oinwkn. .t and pad-U x ll.-ft., ' AIR CONDITIONER, window unit. *» ™... . ____ubotu Market. Oavlsburg. AIR CONOlflONER CONDENSOR, S ton, Dunham-Buah. Ml 4-210 AnChO* ttNciT NO MONEY DOWN FE QW1 AUTOMATIC Z» .ZAO SEW.I machine. CustomeMc model. O casts, appliques* buttonholw, -blond cabinet. Repossess. I off account In 7 months at 0* month or S42 cath balance. I varaal Co. FE 44*08._ QAtlMOdM' FIXTURES, OIL i gas furnace and bamra, aufom water Heaton, hardware ami « trtcal supplies. Crock. ML i per, black and giMiawas L— end fittings. Sanity and Laws Brothers paint. Super Kant-Tan* BEEF AND PORK - HALF AND auartan. Opdyk* Mkt. FE 5-1*41. behind the ear hearing aid $75. FE 44275. BIRCH PANELING , 25 PIECES , 4*x8'xVi" BIRCH PANELING .. Bottle Gas Installation Two 100-pound cylinders and equipment, *12. Gr*« Plains Gas Co., FE 54*72. USED OFFICE id machlnas. Forbes, Hwy. OR 54747. ” CLOSED IN 2-WHAbL UTltfTY frailer. 3354977. COMPLETE STOCK OP PIPE AND A G ,L B* PUPPIES. BOSTON TERRIER Phone UL 2-17W. , , ■ COLLIE, 7 YEARS OLD, STUD, COLLI A PULPIEST GENTLE, GOOD \ tar children. , Pedigreed. *2*4745. | OaOhshOWO' puppy, Abo i GERMAN SHEPHERD AND CO PUPS. 4*21*91______ GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPJES; l chlldrer eves? MA 4-7922. ! BEAGLE^ 2W ^OARS OD6 Rochester. OL 1-4171_ PART^BAASn SHBPH4Ag POPS AectfBN Sofas DAIRY CATTLE_ AUCTION SALE, Vk aiaf of Roma* at 547** Romeo ‘ Plank Read. Saturday, AIM- 9. at I p.m. 29 very pood llafafpm caw*, mostly fresh and some baa* caws, good alia and good producers, soma vaccinated Dairy equipment, II ft: feeder wagon. Arnold Wan-golln, proprietor. National Bank of Richmond, clofk. Foul Hillman, auctioneer. 752-2*34- I EVERY FRIDAY „ l EVERY SATUROAY EVERY SUNDAY “7Tj* Km. , ____FE fl-4953. ^PEKINGESE FUFFJES, - months. AKC registered. OA *-2i«4 PUPS. SHEPHERD, lABRADOR, watch-bird doge, SS. *S1-W7. aawSsIMLbetMN “Okay! I know money isn’t everything! YOU know money isn’t everything! But do our CREDITORS know it?” For Sofa Miscellaneous 67 i — plastic, ragpsi^ or and galvanized for water. Bk for gw. Montcalm Supply. IS* Montcalm. FE 5-4712. ______ P. i. CABINET'SHOP THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 111 W. LAWRENCE ST. CkdhUngl * Furniture, ' Appllancas. TRIPLE ROYAL' PAX WINPdWS ELECTRIC STOVE 5lS extAa TwgJ - --------H| ) stools, mlscaHanaous rt^^gopTsfiip*, if" Mo- , l and swivel tab)*, naw , excellent condition, 10 boat ---- —lit guard ——* ballar f gan Fluorescent, J -TY-mn, conoi coast flue _ electric.boot boiler pump, volt, Tralle-find Boet Livery. — rrTnwBTrfYn,i USED 2 X Formica tap I “ rug Inctudve. ™. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. GARAGE RUMMAGE SALE, day and Saturday Aug. 7 i _ 104 p.m. 112# Maple .Haight* otf M|f.__________ ■ GAS FURNACE, USED, LI£E NEW a'sr?.r, FE 8-2657 can't call ... Mall i Loan-By-Phon# MdRTpAQg mintv9ml DA. with lJdtoot trintjW No appraisal fee. E. D. Charles, Equl-FaM* Farm Lean Sarvic*. bwk CASH Loans to $3*000 OTe^yment.VNo closing costs and IH* Insurance Included an unpaid balance at NO EXTRA eaat. Repay over a convenient term Phene er Apply In Fan** Family AcMptmca Con. »» National Bldg. 10 W. Huron Telaptierte FE *4022 2-WHEEL UTILITY TRAILER, >-man rubber rati, bay'* It" bike. Trad* ter equal value. MA 54171. sit AMP AIRCO PORTABLE WELD-*r, trade ter lata modal car or cath. OW-liaS. I 19*7 FORD Ft. DUMP TRUCK, skill asrap far 4adta*l drive |**p at equal vahia, PI *4751. 195* CHEVY WAGON, SELL OR trad* ter truck or t», P-14 Trac- tor INC, PE 24997. •_______ 1942 BUICK CONVERTIBLE, ORIG- ____ ■■ iarnaaTiirdrti'i , ftfrdamra, itfw. tturan, PE S4101 I ITAPAAn ELECTRIC RANGE. wide, glass doer, tuner- Buna • trbaaar, 43-7224. CLEARANCE 'SALE 1964 Floor Models All Must Go To Mok« Way for 1965 Models This Week! c6lonial purnitueE, large satocNon. avarythln# for your homo Family Ham* 1 Dlxto Hwy.. car. 1 Furnishings, 2139 ratagraph. DANISH SOFA. 1 sJl4.rM?'S. Rosty hci MVP ILlctft LQVESEAT, LIV-and rackara. 412 ic raRgE/'eH- electric shempooer, SI. Pey-Johne-ton Pelnt Co. TWlk‘ nSPlE TRUNDLE BEDS. tide. 5*2 E. Tennyaon. USED TV'e ......... SW.n Washer B"Qry*r ......• • S 7S.OO "—• »—'lance me. _____________________2344*77 USED FURNITURE — 700 ROOMS full of hotel quality’ fumllur*. t carnet, dressers, couches, d • of drawers, chain, lamp*, < stuffed pteea*. Now on dhelay in '^SSn^ te WASHED SPEED QUEEN WRI^G- ar, good candHIon. *35, 6*2-1592._ WESTINGHOUSE URRIOHT FRfetit-er. Ilka new, SI 50. OR 34379. avat. WE TAKE tRADK'-INS. FAMILY Hem* Pumlehlnos, 2135 Pbtla Hwy. WHIRLPOOL AND TAFPAN OAS I---1* 30-Inch, SIS less this week. Hampton's BMetric 13* W.- Huron PE 4.2525 . SELL OR TRADE AUTO-He waabar dryar cdmblnaHan, * operated, excellent electric waahar-drver a i or Individual weeher a WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN StORl____ AT OUR II W. FIXE STORE ONLY TwbvGaa bads, PC— 1——t size a LUMBER .Burmeisters sCiMnM. or um. _ —~ w# BARE any food SERVICE TO MATCH THIS. "Why buy a ftaazarT" _ Use our Manor freezer H needed. Taka advantaw °* th*“ JSH saving* dallvand to your home. All meat* and giKefbs. - Far tra* IntarmatMn. *47-1577 WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS AT discount prion. Norton# 4500 Dixit Hwy. OR **U7, WOOD SHUTTERS, HANOVIA pint sun limp* WOWOnjfgm - G00D CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT - BULLDOZERS l John-Dear. Modal 40, InMmatMnM TD4, Corn Modal 1000, Cam1 “~L I 440 crawler. Ford Sherman hot, 2 Model SO Dear* backheat. Phon* Holly 437-7451. . l. -,:-Clarkston 425-20*7 or Detroit KE LORAIN DRAOLINE tL 2S, 19» peed condlflen, *3.500. EM 3-4373. OUT OF BUSINESS TIRE TRUE-mg machine, all... attadimiwMi Brake doctor/ txcalMnt condition. Riticol Cooil ___________71 THOMAS ORGANS FOR 1965, one of America's greates values. Full spinet organ, starting at $495. WIEGAND MUSIC CO., 469 Elizabeth lake Rood. Piano tuning and organ rt-pair. Ilhwk Uemwe r 71iA ACCORDION, GUITAR LESSONS. SeMe-ServIce Puleneckl, OR 3-5*9*. OUR 6tlLD SHOULD HAVd MU-Ik lessons, privet* pleno-orgen. gutter. Cell tediy ter further Information. GALLAGHERS MUS * SHOP, PE 441**. ________ OfffaE lyfpfawt___________72 SBVEEAL OFFICE DESKS, CHAIES PUPPIES. NO'MONEY DOWN. S1.25 par week. Gorman Shepherds, Begales. Poodles, Brlttlany Spaniels and lots more earning ovary day — . Hunt's Rat. Shop. 33*4239. PRUE-BRED GEtlMAH SHEPHERD 7 months, gentM, all ahota, housr broken, fra* to good horn*. FE 44214 attar 4- ______ REGISTERED ENGLISH *4ttAk dups, 4 months old. Also 2 Brn-Sanies I year eld. FE >4947. REGISTERED chihuahua pup pits. Different prices, colors and sites. Also, Toy Pox Terriers. Toy Fox and Chihuahua stud servlc*. FE 2-1497. REGISTERED ENGLISH SETTER 2 years old, hunted last year SSO. 4*2-0*73. ___________ REGISTERED MINIATURE DACHS bund puppies. OL 14*91_ EBOISTMkO TOY FOX tekkiER m-Ms. *35. MA M177, StHNAOtifcsV MINIATUQi AKC rr-'-‘— -----t. «a- SIAMESE KITTENS. ___________4*242*1._________ i'PRINOjR SPANIEL PUFFIES. TOY POODLES, 1 ADULT SCHNAU-m, imui, na 147*2. C*«n r—s-----. JO elderly 91*11 eWT^Wt - * ^ p| -r. female. OR 34792. WANTED: GOOD HOME FOR 3 mem eat, dyaaruid mai*. " tered, frant claw* removed, v affectionate, nevar Matt/ «lte< outside, Mael for middle***# —* - email ehllds BEAUTY UNITS WITH FI Ing, 2 Kokari hydraulic manicure MM chair and --------- reducing couch, f swivel chairs. Tanya, FE P71H, ask ter Tatty. DEEP FRYERS, GOOD CONDITION/ w^giwN f Pontiac' Pram WANTED: SHEPHERD - COLLtR. mixed puppy, MmaM. OR 3-2554. WE BOARD BIRDS. AlL PETSHOP 55 William* St. PE 44433. •qtilpmant. Mqy ba seen af ISt S Saginaw. stDRe Fixtures---------- Revolving skirt rack Revolving slacks rack (2) 4-ft. showcases, lighted (2) 4-ft. showcases All Sebaroff constructed/ Ilka m . THE cuthbert pioneer c n Try Home ESTATE AUC SATURDAY, AUGUST I —H--------- at 7400 Crosby Lak* Road. Clarkston. (OccupHd by th* Into' Inez M. Cuthbert (Aa ordert-- by Ih* hairs). WARNING THIS PLACE IS NOT EASY TO _l °-CATE. START OUT EARLY 12 MILES N.W. OF PONTL SportingGood* ‘ Sporting Geoda-AS TWB ’ B^sferSTb^ —4 Consignments Welcome BSB AUCTION >9 Dlxto Hwy. 7 ■ OR 3-1 3 Special Auctions FRIDAY—7>30 P.M. SATURDAY-7-.30 P.M. SUNDAY—2i30 P.M. SCHOOL SUPPLIES. N tie , chrome kitchen sets, platform rockers and bunk RUGS end Linoleum. NEW and used and tab!**. RECONDITIONED and guar-, an teed TVs, record players and radios. AIR CONDITIONERS and SOME ANTIQUES Such . I clocks, rockers, chesfs. dlthi Auction 33-P.OOT. TRAVEL MASTER.fMM- eagaeasnaF limp* 4. Ml 1143 SHAStA, lepflDT, oks 4IM-frlgerator. heat, lights, ream MWy electric brakd*. Ilk* naw, SUM. LI 74339. , _______ 144 WA-WA CAMPER, OE S414R,' *445 Highland Read, 144 COMANCHE. 14-FOOT PLUS overcab, sleeps *. um* U days. *1.150. OR 34230. ■WM! . retwood, Garway, won*. Comanche. Driftwood. Tour-ehom* and Bee Line. Truck campars and used traitors. Storage. JACOBSON TRAILER SALES AND RENTAL. 5490 ’ Williams UM Road, Drayton Ptolns, OR 3-99*1. AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Sine* 1932. Guaranteed ter Ufa. See them and gat a demonstration at Warner frailer Sato*. 3S9B W Huron (plan to MM an* af EXCLUSIVE . SALES for Century Custom Built* . Travel Trailers for ttw PONTIAC—DETROIT ROYAL 0AK-AND FLINT AREAS Has BebA Awarded to^ TQM STACHLER AUTO & MOBILE SALES This appointment hm mad* It pomlbM tor us to Pass an *1 you a b-**— ---1 — -/ailty bull t 1:30 pjn. It will t with 3 auctl----- old, Upton, famora°Bank' Tugust I — 1 ' Pienaar Home, iwm Road, ClaniiMn, ______ August 4. Stan Par- , Auctlonaer. 4354400, Swartz TOM STACHLER AUTO & MOBILE SALES Hobbits 8 Supplfas 1 (4. 19*0 S|D *42, ALL NEW 1964 Aval airs, Hoilys, Tawas, Crefl Travti Traifars 14 to 11«» mWcantolnad Order now and have R tor vacatton ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES 177 Dlxto Hwy. MA S-lfOl CAMPING SITB MMfliiiHia p*s* f i-..-.^ I M15, Orton. CUTHBERT ROADS. Or 4 MILES SOUTHWEST^JP.. CLARKSTON. MU.OW AUCYION MEOWS. HEIRLOOM FURNITURE —U i walnut/ Dog head rocker/ oughbrad Say gaMIng, 14 hands, excellent |uotor hunter and field hunter, ha* baan shown. MA *-1145. ►YEAR-OLD GELDING, MORGAN type, willowbrook Stables. 47430 Waat 10 MIM Rd. , SO RABBITS -GOOD HUTCHES, feeding cracks, naat boxes, reasonable. Eves. Saturdaye or Sunday Mornings/ 912 Williams Lake Road. South af M29.. ,, ARABIAN PURE-BRRO »TUP. 3 years eld. Chosmyt.. Reed .P-*^ A real beauty. ReglWarad English. Arabian pure-bred calf, * months, beautiful CAMPING TRAILERS, SENT OR buy. 3491 N. Joslyn Rd., 1 mfim north At 1-71 PR 94911 . COR VAN 1943, FULLY EQUIPPfb lor camping, canopy ktdudad, new condition. $524010, SIN 1 Rochet-ter Read. \ -otT Reservations lit-' > 4 WR9NL PMWt i few u*bd campers SITS u ' a tew 1944 factory d Apache camp trailers a rocker/ pigeon t library table, w ih double towel ra ........’ ractorr nma k/ table/ library f td, _|n* ih stand ism S241 Travdp Tri 1943 LUDWIG I DRUM SET. Fridz. OR 3-9M7. CON- — ^ ing room suit* . S29.9J _______1 wq* atoctrfc rang* $49.9* G^ggc. mNWMor.WA* s FE 4-1144 Allaiy, FE 3-7114. ANS' pLatinum genuine blu) star sapphire ring. Ptttoan carat! aattM astato. OR 4-21lt. MOVING — OE WASHER AND dryer/ 9-plece dining roant stti TV console/ mlsc household furniture! 1950 Pontiac/baby furniture/ AT GALLAGHER'S BRAND NEW LOWREY ORGANS AS vOW AS $495 9IO MONEY DOWN - NO MENT TILL SEPTEMBER. PAY- INTTILL SEPTEMBE SHOP US BEFORE YOU BUY GALLAGHER’S MUSIC CO. ANDPRI. WITh or ■ and aarvlng cheat. ndWan. A bargain at S mil glecm separate- . :- Wfl, TV A Radios Sofa Clothing PERSIAN LAMB CAPE. $71 FE 2-4771 trier 1_________; SUITS/ SKIRTS/ FORMALS, SIZE 11-11 excellent condition. SIS-Mta^ ' "ws 11 termal, t t ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE ONLY $3 WEEKLY 7-ptoca living team, davar and chair, (earn cushions. 2 atop fiSW EM 1 —* — •rater Mmp*. ' I place Biitu.,- ____ _______ tiinliinni bad. cheat at drawers, lari* mirror, has spring and Inner spring, 2 vanity lamps. Sgitoea chroma or bi 4 WJOM* Dp PURNITURifTN-cludlng automatic washer, 30-Inch electric sSova, maple tablr mM ' ’ MMB aBaH ____________ 4-YEAR CklE/ tCALESl Pj>YPdw/ axcalMnt eoM^"»fJ*c* bedroom sat, rmsonabla. OA S4144 guftNitukC' iVDVI, dudYAiNS _ end rugs. FE 2-42**. esSSS» dresser, ________42 Plngree Gk RANG#, 4 MONTHS OLD, PtR-■ ' condition, make ottor, ■■ E' MOTOROLA CAR RADIOS AND RE-VERB1 *29.95 up. PHILCO and Iranchlsed sales and ornamental ifcflN pohdt . ^ ^ p“,‘ MQVEU TO 40 CONGRESS ST. next to Allan's acrao Iran yam DRAINAGE SUPPLIES -SUMPS Gream trap*, steal cuh/art pM* Manhole rlnwT - ^covers - grates ui sbm round and square 4" to so* BLAYLOCK COAL 1 SUPPY CO. OZALID STREAM-LINER MODEL new 1943 SeMta rag. S94S at 1491 APACHE FACTORY HOMETOWN DEALER OPEN DAILY 9 a.m. to S p.m. SUNDAYS J# a.m. to 4 p.m. BILL COLLER 1 Mile East of Lapeer On M21 ,RMV SQUAD TENT, 14x14, I pood condition, 494 Emerson. GUNS—6UY—SELL—TRAOi— Burr-Shell. 37S >. Telegraph. / SET OP NEW WALTER HAjifcR weeds; also used sat at Wilton 1-A TOP SOIL, BLACK DIRT, 9 sand, gravel, dgHvardd riason Judd Ferguson, OR >4229. gravel and fill dlrf. 1700 - Lake Redd, V mlto 1 at C OR 3-5*50 er/OR 29*47. A-I bLAdK/FARM SOIL, DRlIV- candle stands /and bevel g I a mirror/ bed roam suite pine, hi urved, 3-place/ solid walnut b stood/ room screen/ mild wall dresser with candle stands I Iewel boxes/ old fashtonad kltd cabinet/youth chair, wicker/ n safe, /blinds; fiber rugs; trui.... mild tapper tub/ pine drapery fads with wood ringa; walnut curtain rods/ drapery rods with brass knobs; fmther ticks/ walnut pic-fure frames/ matched oak leaf picture frames; folding hat house Minds/ wood wrlngarsz tog frames/ Federal mirror eagle/ 'G.G; mirror* and cm. — mirror/ rag canmt/ ptoto glam mirrors/ dell dresser; flower picture 1174/ Board of Supervisor* picture of Oakland County METALS - Cartridge raloi •at; service tor 12 McOraw si ware/ 4 storting tm spoons/ 4 Ish. Hava no roam. SITS tor .... ythln*. EM 3-9171.______ moving-must . »elu„ fao*6Alt Gaidfe Sod ‘AS sleigh and comptoto ham***, MY You disconnect It. FE BRUNER AUTOMATIC? MODEL BRUnIR FULLY AUTOMATIC WA-tor soitaner, used 1$ months, 1150. itodto couch, baby crib, comptoto, elav pan. Mlac. MA *-7*BS. 9:90 to $ CiH FI Hflllf after L PE 444*7. - m Buinc kenmoRe ironer, verV g<5oo portable typawritor hi conaole ........... .„_jt canmi* auto. xlg-mB console chard, organ ...... *59.50 *33.50 *39.50 pLAiTlt PIPt IRKiaL, R6* tHB month of May, buy now and ““ Par 100* con. M", *4.2*; 1". 1U', 99.34/ IW'. tlKW. TIIOl UMd Fully Automatic WATER SOFTENERS 2 Reynolds automatics/ 1 Culligan . automatic, 1 Spartan automatic. Your cho/ca. B9S. Cooley Soft Water Co. PE MWS USE6 OLYMPIC -PHONOGRAPH, radio, and TV . combination. *41 FE 54445. WATER SOFTENER RENTAL, Uh limited galtonaga, S3 par montt 4*2-5020, Universal Soft Water. axis LIN plastic TILE ....... K H. - VINYL ASBESTOS (Random) 5C Ea. CEMM 1C TILB . Sc p- furniture rmsonabla, Including brass bad*. {Xaach, 4j)lac* a, Beaton rachir. OR 34444. gu5R]B01^^1THpro A-1 VALUES AdlyatoMa b Hollywood h /MULNY OTHER BARGAIN* Open Til 4 pJvl Mats- Prt. Til 9 p."V BEDROOM OUTFOliNG CO. 4^0'DIXIE HWY. Drayton Plains 678-9441 Water Softeners . UMd I semi-evtomatlcs In above «v* ge condition. Your choke, *25. Cooley Soft Water Co. PE 22*33___________ WHITE, 2 YEARS C 147.95; w>.n Laundry shewar stalls . —— MB Meart aink, ss.as; Lav*., stas; tuba, did and up. PM “ threaded SAVE PLUMB *41 Baldwin. RE 4-1514. REPOSSESSED WE HAVE A SINGER SW1MG needle tawing machine that make* buttonholes, monograms, ap-pllques, etc. Taka ever monthly paymant* of *5.25 par month er full pried *45.40. llyaar written jMhHB Domelco, In Telegraph, Rliddto MB - ^ State Bank. PE Fbt Sofa MIscbHbmqbs 67 ■A ALUMINUM RIDING, STORMS, awnings, vinyl tMktg. installed or materials. Quality tout cost. B 54541 VALLELY OL 1-4423 GIBSON REFRIGERATOR, GOOD i, *»9. G. A. Thompson, 'SICKLE BAR dhouse |—M *iii^H "TABLE SAW, ifGllJS Christmas Ins, Vodowagan, sale. Many MQP nraioa to i^nE/r Jcxia choom tram. 4 and remnants and*5"furniture trade-ins. Avw XUS jJvt R.W2444. specialize In «WpM ia*4N BTU 6k PAST MLIVIRV; " 3a PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-ply, jHMC- gravel. Nil dirt '*• TOP SOIL. BLACK DIRT, PEAT T5----, fill dirt aand. gravel, sad, etc. 6212021 « ,KITTQMl|. i sidfe ,LE BEAGLE PUPPIES. S293. WHITk, STALL SHOWERS, S27.95, COM-* Mgto with faucats. G >. Thompson TALBOTT LUMBER Paint ctoeaout Sato. Interior Laytox. •name and Plastra Ton*, n to 1*8" OaPldS" Ava. Ptlikm toilBtIL" tii i. fcai USED UPRIGHTS ^OfiT . $48 low, USY TERMS GRINNELLS PONTIAC MAq, r coat, biacK/ mrty b ly 4 mi crumb tray he f picture molding, gold a old alad with round run* ■■■ H* back ______iTjdl*. IW/* I CHINA AND GLASSWARE pc. hot chocolate sat, hand ed, royal Austrian Ngnadi Prussia vagataMa bqwl. red large; tea sat R__* Frussl marked; craampr and au»*F< bona china. M piece* * * Bras, dlnnarwara; 17 RtocQ-varian china/ service of 4 Curator and Ivaai Coltoetton at nghMrd dishes hand painted; RUf, *1*1 ray a) Austrian crfMSm/MM handle; Mottter at pearl satin glaaa. cruet; Mlllefiort atomltassa e”» »~t saucer; Hobnail fluted va» I black HOLLY TRAVELCOACH 15210 Hally Rd., Holly ME 44771 —Open Dally and Sundays— IT'S TRUE! . See Our New 20* FRANKLIN Overhang, aatt^^contolnad tor suiation with tomrara •"* little darling Intomatlenal floor heater. -1 IF YQU ARE ATMfWTER SPORTSMAN -4n 0» -On Display This Weekend Holly Travel Coach, Inc. IMS Holly Rd* Holly . MB 4d771 —Open Dolly end Sunday— LOOK! fflFT Naw dimensions tor campara to fiUhg S ' ------ after S:M OR 342**. CULTIVATED ILUEBBRRI El pick your own, bring - cantftotara lit • quart. Ordara takan, SJ0 i i Raad, IRRIEl k n cents a gc I Orchard and Cktor Rad Havant by Friday. Pktojjri-ing, freezing, canning. EartyappH* naw. Oakland Orchard*. 2205 E. Commerce Rd. between Bumf and Duck Lak* Rda* Mltterd. 5490 Williams Lak* Road, Drayton ■lain*. OR 3-59*1. NEW WINNEBAGO PlilC-UP fra* ait **7-4411 M4I Lake Or PHOENIX TRUCK CAMPERS 2121*4, frant and *M* modal*. Pienaar Camper Satoa PE 239*9 j SOMETHING NEW THE COACHMAN CADET 1412ft. tr4v*l traitor that will sleep 6 to ». You win nevar *** more ream In * 14V24I. Check thla trall- AI*TRAVELMASTER SAGE TOMBfACHLCR J AUTO A MOBILE SALES _ 1*91 W. tturan St. 222491# WOLVERINE fRU6( CAMPERS - and Sleepers. Naw and used S39S up. EMPERIOR Tent Traitor*. $449 up. Jacks, Intarcama. tetoscoplna bumpers. U EM 3-3461. , 15-FOOT TOUR-A-HOME, SLEEPS 4, |------“A 4-2504. ■; - . . _ _ ■ 195* 22POOT NASSAU. '.Wfaiy E CHERRIES, PICK YOUR Holtz Orchard. 3307 “•* 1L 2-2*4*. li Lodge. May pick y< — arternoons and evas. I'S GARDEN FRESH VE< v when in aaason. 22** Ct e Rd. MIlford, EM 3- neA m ndltion. OL ia-r»eaar v»iy» wr w F**”^*. AN DC ft SON TWAIL1W* 1 1SX55. LIKE fiEW, Cruiser, also exc. ______..... at wnwra TfeNM* ftott, w^2M*i batere i ML fane iQEiyEUE* PIANO SALE SOHME R JCOHLBR A CAMPBELL Buy now at Somar Price* _ CONN MOANS - FULL LINE Used Wurlltzar Spinal Organ Across fror^BIrmTng^ai^'lTteatre Free Parking % Ml 4400 Organ, good condition. MINIATURE ack, *50 up. MA 4-1535. ; MINIATURE POODLE weeks, ***. 332-4547. __. AKC Imck aMd. tan doo heund pups, bam 4-22. 426-7239. KC PEKINGESE PUPPIES. weeks, ready to go. 1340 Ldka Angelus Rd. FE *4451 AKC POODLE PtJkl BOARDING, exc. Poodle dtoa. reat. Walled Lk. Orchard Grove Kennels. MA 4-1113 JkkC POODLE PUPPIES, WHITE ' tiny toys, apricot of silver mini-toy, stud service, birds, Nth, pats supplies. Crane's, UL 3-220*. AKCT BLACK POODLE FVPPY. to Bowl, fl ' #*“ d I milt* c *ariBya} mhk, mm toothpick holder, glass, mlsc. small —y glasawa— J I tumblers. !r5eaj^*Btoawr*m. glass and ritlna. d dish/ c H. I. a ■; cranberry cand i; An canisters; s; barber bottles; ur j bias/ tea ie _______./adlng stamps' OR 34374. Nana dll* AKC DAdttHUND FUPFtES_ - SJafes’ _ STOREY AND CLARK PIANO, EX-cel lent candWoft, sacrifice. (431 OL 1-— AFGHAN PUPPY, AKC, FEMALE. 3 menths. FE 2-OM1. BATHING AND GROOMING, PICKUP AND DELIVERY. 451-3405. bIADle puppies. 5 weEksIO. Parents good hunters. 4*2-54*1. 17 DiK. PLOW, YORK ftAKE, >r« . Ford pickup ind traitor. 676-1608 or 626-2574. " ■ _. LINCOLN OAS-ORIVfeN WELb with GMC pickup, and a cable. < amp. GE welder. No. 2 heavy-duty Brown-Sharp mill with dividing „ head and visa with motor in the base. 2t" GE shaper. - AMERi. - CAN STONE - MA 5-2141, | NEW AND USED TRACTORS equipment, parts and aarvic*. KING BROS. FE 44734 PE 4-1442 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyka RfcW “AiN6 it ft." TRACTORS: chain saws. Evans Equlpmant. 425- Bob Hutchinson II Dlkl* Highway OR 21202 Drayton Plains Hartland Area. Hardware. ^ illErL or used mobile home. Naw 10* wtdes 1 bedrooms tor only S3.945. Delivered and set-up. Many medeto on display tor your shopping con-yantonca. * •; Bob Hotchirison . . . <301 Dlxto Highway OR 2t2SS i Drayton Plains , * • Open 9 to 9 Dally Sdt. 2d i ’____________Sim. 125 ' • ' . . MARLETTE. VAGABOND, GARD-1 - , Skyline, General. 10-12 and wM*. 40 flour plana. haim now zo'xso' tot*, to put PARTS AND SERVICE. RTf AND III lamp, blue opalescent glaaa petals, dining — tore, satkiized and WmMt satinized, lamps; candle stick bracket lamp bp lamp*/ lanterns. S AUCTIONEER, PI . 11314 Miliar Road, Swartz C applied Travel TNBdfS HpW 2-WHEEL TRAILER. 4X11 “Wje I .. UL 21037. IT CAMP QE TRAVEL TRAIL-_ SIM. 236 W. Ruigan FE 2744*. -rant. Hasps 1 FE HNI., Open dal^ 9-1:30—Closed asm. Oxford Trailer Sale§ l mile south of LJb* Orton' an M24 v v : " r MY 24721 i ' . r 4 n ■ bARKWOOO AND CRANBROOK : Mobil* homo* In tlm op to into jto 1 styles. EARLY AMERICAN • J CONTEMPORARY J FRENCH PROVINCIAL Cranbrook ir Wkto ..*4.0*5 ; Midland Trailer Sales M 7 DAYS A WICK . mi HOMES SHORTS MOblLE H RESTWOOO - |«| 1*43 14' TURBOCRAFT JET BOAT 170 1#. V-* Demo. Mlchloon T“ boeroft Sales.. 2527 Dixie Hv ALL-WAYS A BETTER DEAL BOATS-MOTORS MERCURY—SCOTT McCULLOUOH AAA tRUCKERS SPECIALS Trood damaged t'rei, otherwise perfect condition. 155-JO and UNO'S. *5* *5 and up. Credit JULY SPECIALS IJM hwy. t.JJ-5 traction 1.17-5 traction 10.2M traction uji SUraeMM *.25 x SO hwy. •S r IS hwy. §sL SV CRANKSHAFT GRINDING ear. Illlir rebuilding ____ Sechin* Shop, to bO YOUR OWN BODY WORK, Vacation Specials MOTOR TRANSMISSION AND BRAKE Overhauls and Minor Repairs * ON • Any Make Terms OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth d-S PiilkOLAS SKI BOAT, V-40 —|U -‘‘I aqulpmant, ^ i 10 hours, *51-30 4-SPEED DUCATI - . 250 cc Acycto angina 'Only *57* P.O.E. Easy farm* \ Atotwrtoad daalar* for— ISA—NORTON—HONDA 1M4 HONDA DREAM 30& 7tt MILES *3*1 Hillcroat, Clartuton. MA 5- 1t*4 h6n6‘a* Ormond Rd M MILE! ton. MAS nn ■BE Honda Hawk '""TSrSW NEW SPORTY HONDA *t issasyrasbwff no 1. PEW __ PE wot KiW CyCLs, mcC and utc. TMI *“* “— 731-02*0. 5-Speed Transmission Mil PO.E. K&W Cycle MM Auburn Rd. ■ Phono HI-02*0 ttr"?*»■- 2 OIRL'S BIKES, 1MNCH 24-INCH Mra Airport and Hatchary Rd.' OR 1*1 SCHWEITZERCRAFT, IS JOHN- _E- 14*- RC 4 FOOJ WOLVERINE, 55 HORSE f 4hAi4 ( VST T7#bOT*bWBNS. 75 HORSEPOWER itowttoa. traitor. LM- M —■—* UL 5-1343 attar * pjn. iS^bOT 1*42 SEA RAY Nl — IH-haard aatbaard, 122 h.e. Ford in-torcaator angina, whit* with tar- .Hlk • FOOT CHRIS - . Marcury. 444-5351. Used Car Dapartmenl 545 1. Woodward , imipibe rglAE 16At an6 Close-Out pn All LONE STAR, GLASTR0N and MF6 BOATS IBfeot flining boat with 10 hp N cury and traitor, 1275. 14-toat aluminum boat, 10 hp Mor--cury and traitor, *450. . , 12-foot Chaka run-about boi 7SA Marcury with contrail, *44 CLIFF DRYER'S Gun and t-u* renter R10 Hally Rd. - Opan bally DAWSON'S CLEARANCE — -----flbargla* runabout Ilk* n ‘ *■ * Evlnrud* Lark w CHRIS CRAFT OWENS Jet Boat, Save $1,000 FIBEROLAS, 14-FOOT MMM now tort July, tperkilra rad i whltai 110 h.p. Chryitor Mai attain*. axmltant condition, to* tog now 4-whaal traitor. Muat b* seen to b* appreciated. 5557 obtto Hwy.; M B7* JET BOATS For your cboica at BOATS < MOTORS . TRAILERS AND BOAT ACCESSORIES Bad Michigan Turbocraft Salas 1527 Dlxto___________OR ABM Kessler's Saa Ray Boat* — Jahnaan Motor* Carvar Baal* — Mirra Aluminum COMFLITI SERVICE AND FARTS MERCURY MOTOR MARK 2S WITH oantrets - - - ... 628-3596. Ndw FIBSRGLA# SO AT. 40 horaapowar Evlnruda motor; traitor 1 mmpiata ......... 412** It Ft. Aluminum boati ..... ills Naw boat tralton ...... i *J BUCHANAN'S “ PONTOON BOATS CLEARANCE SALE 8 models to choose from, $445 to $1900 for a nice 26' houseboat With aluminum pontoons. \biu C0LLER 1 Mile East of Lapeer i M21 SPIC0 SKI BOATS \ MID-SEASON SALE ^ SEE THEM TODAY! MICHIGAN TURBOCRAFT SALES Summer Sale Now Save ON SALE -MERCRY OUTBOARDS— Starcraft — Saa Ray — Cruiaara In “ -B0ATS- Birmingham North at 14 Mlto, at Adanii Rd. SHELL LAKE BOATS Saa The FaButou* Caravad Michigan T Mxto Hwy- r -T-- - —- .. . RMUItod ___I. Michigan TurbacraR Satoa. [7 Dlxto Hary. OR BON. I PONTOON BOAT . I ' 473-1345 ________ THOMPSON IP-FOOT CABIN CRUIS-ER. HEAD, feaMHkH hp Bvlnrud-T. tpndam traitor. Fl BMH THOMPSONS DORSETTS JOHNSONS DUOS . MODELS IN WATER FOR DEMONSTRATION -RIDES. CANOES-PONTOONBELIMINATORS. OPEN MON., TO FRI H SATu *-4l SUN., tH PAUL A. YOUNG, INC 400 Dlxto Hwy., Drayton Ft* , MARINA OH LOON LAKE OR 44411 - . tONY'S MARINE-for JOHNSON MOTORS Shallaka, Geneva, Araocratt, to and canoes, M years r*Mlr par tone*, opan * 'BlC ’ . • KEEG0 HARBOR tRACIN' DAYS Trad* up to that BIGGER BOAT AND JOHNSON MOTOR NMVl Starcraft — Saa • Ray — Thompton PINTER'S V-l PONTTAC ENGINES, AAARINE canvortad or atandard auto. Michigan Turbocraft Sato*. U27 Dlxto Hwy. OR 44730S. ^ WC CARRY OnS 5? THl largaat supplies of Marcury parti In Oakland County. Kart feata ' Motor*. MV WE WILL BRAT ANY DIAL Kar*a Boat* - Maton, Cak* Ortoa 5 11-PACER, CLIAN, Wit. Wanted Care-Tracts 111 ALWAYS lUYINO AND PAYING MORI POR 0000 CLEAN CARS. ASK FOR •iRNIB AT— BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH INC *H 1. Mtoedwerd Ml 7-3SI4 AVtRIU'S Did You Knew? VILLAGE RAMBLER Fay* mar* tar ANY make mid car. Call tor Appraisal HURON MOTOR SALES IS LAYING tap i tor good uaad car*. 1101 Boidwln, S block* north of r ~ FIS444I ____ LAtl MODEL CARS Sullivan Butok-Panltoc Si MANSFIELD AUTO SALES WaYo bujHn^ sharp lot* ' lit* Baldwin Av*. FE 5-5900 M&M MOTOR SALES SPECIAL PRICE -FAIO FOR MS-1NI CARS VAN'S AUTO SALES 8 Dlxto Hwy. . OR »IISS “TOP DOLLAR PAID" FOR "CLEAN** USED CARS GLENN'S WAtrrdbi mMfci CARS Ellsworth AUTO SALES: *577 Dlxto Hwy._ MA S-I4M LATE MODEL USED CAR .TODAY FORD tatusstsm in* 1 TO 50 JUNK tAtS AND TRUCKS. ALWAYS BUYING ' I JUNK CARS - FREE TOW I TOR SS CALL FE 54145 SAM ALLEN B SON INC. Used AEf-Traefc Parts 1B2 1*54 FORD VB AUTOMATIC OIL Mew and Used Tracks IBS , after 5 FE 5-»4l*. 1*54 CHEVY 44-TON PICKUP WITH 1*48 Bukfc aWBktow OA »14a. 1*55 CHEVROLET PICKU^ WltH utility box, S40S. Fata** Motor Sola*. FE 4-41*3. 1*57 DODGE 4* TON PICKUP, GOOD condition, *450. FE 4-7411 140 FORD Vk-TON PICKUP WITH camper. ON 3-7744 ----------- - 1*42 FORD, 44 TON PICKUP. V4*d tranafnlulon, * 3434713. \ FORD ECONOLIN^ B^IS. 1*41. EX- . THE PQNTiAC-FRESS. THURSDAY, AUGJJST ( Mew aadlfsed Tractai ill MARMADUKEg , By Anderson & Lceming 1*43 ECONOLINC DELUXE BUI. 4-cyllndar angina; M and ird row teal*, 4-ply Hr**, | haator, radto, custon paint. V 6sl: JMIVy w-ton PICKUP, RA-dto and haator, 4,100 mltob — ---------y Atlor 4 j;ar*1 G. M. C. Factory Branch -NEW and USED TRUCKS FE 5-9485 JEEP OLIVER BUICK and JEEP AUTO INSURANCE RAVMMrPLANtAVAHAlLl Stop In Todayl 1044 Joslyn Ave. af*-"a**-iu PROBLEMS we willcdol our very best TO HELP . YOU BUDGET PAYMENTS AVAILABLE BRUMMETT AGENCY Mtrocto Mlto FE 4050* Next to Pontiac State Bar' i. Buns good, looks *1 mlto* f— FE *-1054, 1*51 METRAPOLITAN, RUNS GOOD, no rust, 1200. 0274170,___ 1*5* MERCEDES BENZ 1*0 FL 425-4747. 1*5* TRIUMPH TRS NEW TRANS-mtoaton, good tiro*, 3LOOO mlto*. Inquire 402-1775. SIMCA 4-DOOR SEDAN, 1*S». EX-coltont running condition, tranv portatlon tpoetol at 113*. Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER W mlto north of Mirada Mlto 1741 «. Trtiarogh - On*—1*42 VW, tun ml A 7777 Ona—1*41 VW ................ Ona—1*40 VW Sun roof . PONTIAC lyFORTS CAR . 447 Auburn Ava._____________335-f*11 1*40 SUNBEAM ROADSTER, NEW t SUPERIOR RAMBLER *50 Oakland Av*. i ona li an mediant car 1*40 VW 2-DOOR WITH RADIO AND OAKLAND SALE PRICED AT: $1295 714 Oakland __________333*434 1961 VOLKSWAGEN But. Dark bhw, tow mltoag*. sharp " ‘van camp chevy MILFORD'__________ MU 4-1W5 1*41 MOA 1400 CONVERtlBLE. NO 32005. r,.Call A root gdm. ■ SUPERIOR RAMBLER FE »*4»1 AUSTIN HEALY SPRITE MARK .. IMS, A-1 condition, Boradn. Far-mtoBton. OR * **** lowal. OR 32114- ROVER, 1*41 POWfeR STEERING OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth N42 VW SUNROOF $1195 SPRITE ROADSTER. M00 Homer Hight TRIUMPH 1*44, SPITFIRE, $1,150. WHERE THE HUNT ENDS 1*40 Bulck LoSobro 4-door *adan. This 1-owner trad; la almott ilk* naw. Hat powai •tearing and brakes. Sal* priest at only *1,1*5. Hunter Dodge Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER Vt mlto north of Mlracto Mlto 1741 S. T New and Used Tracks 103 Nbw and Used Tracks 103 FORD (X)MfcAIff TRUCKS WE HAVKOVER 40 TRUCKS ' - \ NOW IN STOCK ' Pickups - Stakes - Tractors Vans- Tandems -r Diesels JEROME FERGUSON ROCHESTER FORD DEALER ; * OL 1-9711 New eod died Can 104 1*42 BUICK, SPORTS COUPE, SKY- WHERE THE HUNT ENDS 1M1 Bulck LtSabrt 4-door hardtop. Hat power ottering. power brake* and la In excellent condition throughout. Color to Hunter Dodge INI BUICK SPECIAL, STICK, LUCKY AUTO SALES 1*1 orlS4 S. Saginaw Fl 4-1214 «r FE 37*55 (Accow^gon.1 WHERE THE HUNT ENDS 1942 Bulck LaSabre 2-door hardtap wlth power .steering and brake*. Thto enammar trad* ha* had (ha bad of car*. Your Hunter Dodge 1*43 BUICK LASABRE, DOUBLE power, auto., *2^50. Will accept trad*. 1278Outran/ 1*42 bOick ELECTRA CONVER-pawar.ttiw. «4>or FE 37IS3 (Aooaaa « — -1 —■ 1*5* CHEVY IMFALA CONVERTI- OUR PRICE S3»7, weakly pay- manta 14.11. King Auto Sales 227J W. Huron St. FE S-Q4M 1*40 CHIVY I-bOOR, POWER steering and brakes. si,o»o. Fl 4-7411. ar, 3 speed,-2 tape, axcaltoftt c dition, 450*5 Orent Park, I*" 701-14*4. 1(40 CHEVROLET CHEVY 'itoi HAebTbF. BCYLIli- matte^jfe. r*MONEY*t*rbawl?i SHARP UElTwir FINANCE I , CREDIT NO PROBLEMI UF TO 34 MONTHS TO FAY. Full price SMI. TEL-A-HUR0N AUTO Fl. 3N41 WHERE YOU WALK IN' AND DRIVE OUT I 1*40 CMfevY CORVAIR MONZA, RA- only IS down end S4 months on VILLAS RAMBLER —■n WWPIPW wUuujiilBk AVM BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. NO CHEVROLET IMPALA CON- serlllitoi V4 « • ________ Turquoise........... top. Extra ctoen. Only S 1,3*5. Easy torms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET COu 1000 S. WOODWARD AVI., »*40 CHEVY IMPALA ' hardtop. A beautiful red vhlt* car, fully equipped TWO-YEAR G.W. WARRANTY —. , _______ ____TIRSON CHEVROLET CO., 1*00 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. W CHEVY STATION WAOON CHEVROLET INS STATION WAOON you will like this car and ospo-clally the price. OUR GRAND OPENING SPECIAL TO^ YOU SMS. Hunter Dodge WHERE THE HUNT ENDfv 47* S. HUNTER BIRMINOHAM Ml 7-0955 1*41 CORVAIR MONZA 4-bOOR SE- with rad Interior. UltfB actual mlto*. Only SUM- lady- torms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO„ 1000 S. WOODWARD AVI., BIR-MINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. 1*41 CORVAlfc, ItAblO. HEATER, automatic Iran smite Ion. A sharp Birmingham ona owner trad*.. *4* dojjjn, bank rates. VILLAGE Rambler TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8-0536 rtORVAIR > set Extra*. El Ml CHIVY "PARKWOOD STA^ tion wagon" with howargBaa t~— mission, power stoarmp, i__ brakes, radio, Itootar tond mcoltont whitewall Mras. Exterior la ah attractive Bamboo Cream and th* neat Interior to trimmed In a harmonizing brawn flecked with goto. Handles and performs very nicely and It I* guaranteed In wntinay tor a full veer; A dandy .family per that will be tcconomlcal to malt tain and easy an your budget at our tow price of only S1.1TL Torms. arrangod to suit you. BIRMINGHAM Chrys tor-Ply mouth 1*41 CHEVROLET IMPALA CON- Ont owner. Low mltoag*- Spar* still naw. Only SIMS, tiayk- PATTERSON CHEVROLET ■ 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., Blto-MINOHAM. MI 4-2735,__________ an Chevrolet station wag- wallt, yellow. DON'S. 477 S. poor Rood, Orton. MY 2-2041. INI CHEVRbLET BISCAYNi tw6-door sedan, 4-cyllnder, standard shift. H.OOO actual miles, aparr still new. This car to Imtnecuieto Only ti.ito. EaaytotiNB, PAfrEW -SON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-1735. 1(41 ClIkVY 3000R. AUTOAAATIC, — radio, haator, whitewall*, M.M kly. Na money down. Call Mr. 1M1 GREENBRIAR (-PASSENGER bus. PE 4*744 aftor 4 A-hn. 1*41 CHEVY CORVAIR Jt sedan, radto; haator. IMS, m down, bank i VILLAGE RAMBLER TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8&36 INI CHEVROLET IMPALA . V-d automatic. Onemaner. 11475 EM 37IM. PE 44214.______________ mi IMPALA, 2-OOOR HARDTOP, Nbw Bud Usod Can IN li woboK i mi CORVAIR I jtodtM.S70S.0SA___ REPOSSESSION—ml CHEVY CbN-vtrtibto, no money down, coil Mr. Johnson; MA 32444. HeSdns Chevy. 1962 Chevy II Novo 2-Door Sedan Hot 4-cyllndor one In* and atandan haator and prlcad at S140S. BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Shea 1*30" ON DIXIE IN WATERFORD Horn* at service aftor th* tala - AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 wJno• piusn oiacx and sltvar interior to an ax-callant NadfaN. A .Bn* car that to guarantoad In anfltog fora full year. Full pric* only 11,0*5. BIRMINGHAM-CHRYSLER 12 S. woodward Ml 74214 . -'Js’m *40 DODGE 4-CYLINDER, AUTO., good condition. 22* E. Walton, It cT Street, Pontiac. ■ - 1*40 DODGE Phoenix, all rad, 2-door hardlw, power atoaring and broket,, radio and haator. This car I* real Mara. You would at. r— ** *“ 140 DODGE "DART V-«" torquafntt transmission staorlng. Ilka naw tire* a extras. Light baig* with maculate Interim trimmed "U A flee «Horr......_________ I mm_________I ... writing tor a full i year. Hare priced to flf * ** real bargtlr S4*L Terms arranged to NO IpOWN PAYMENT NECE3 SAR ! BIRMINGHAM Chryslar-Plymouth 1*41 DODGE 2-DOOR SEDAN Leak* and runt Ilka naw, only $895 FULL PRICE $90 down TWO-YEAR G.W. WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE II S. SAOINAW , FE 34541 OAKLAND Chryslar-Plymouth - 1*41 DODGE P6LARA 500 Convertible In beautiful condition Almost Ilka naw $1595 734 Oakland 3332434 1*42 DODGE DART, 3DOOR SPEC-lal SIAM. HURON MOTOR SALES (tearing, radio, heater, ' art and other extras. 3><-i payment! Low coat now car Full prim only S1H95. BIRMINGHAM Chryal*r;Plymouth 1*42 DODGE Polera 500 2-door hardtop, wNB bucket atats, all red beauty. Our Grand Opening Special to You. Only S3,0*5. Hunter Dodge WHERE THE HUNT ENDS m S. HUNTER BIRMINOHAM Ml 7-0955 1*3* FORD, MODEL A, SI 1958 EDSEL, $70 Ft BUN 1*57 FORD TRANSPORTATION 81N a ~~ 33117 now tires, ctoaq. 1*58 English Ford 1*57 FORD STAtlbN WAGON, RUI good, 84S. Sava Auto, FE 31278. JfN FORD, 81*5. PONTIAC AUTO 1*1 or 154 S. Saginaw FE 32214 ar Fl 37153 utiiiar conafructloo) nlc*. Fl 37542. H. Rlggln*, deal- 1*5* FORD 3 AUTOMATIC, RA-dlo, haator, S3N. 4831817. i*5* 'Wr6 Vbbon CultOM, t-cylinder automatic low ml'- **4*'HU RON MOTOR SALES 1(51 FORD BDdOR, ........... TRANSMISSION, RAOK3, HEATER WHITEWALL TIRlI. ABSOLUTE LY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments of 14.9S nar weak. Saa Mr. Park* II 37500. f*5* THUNDERBIRD, HARDTOP, . ! radto, heater, automatic transmission, full power plus factory sir-conditioning. ' B* sura to sm and drlvt this car at only 11483 NS down, bank rates. Ask about our money back guarantee. VILLAGE RAMBLER 444 I. Woodward, Birmingham 1*40 FORD WAGON, ECONOMICAL • auto- - wWtr S650. FE 32530 ‘I960 BIRD" A brand naw ipodmon at ..... Classic. Executive owned, garage LLOYDS Ngw Location 1250 Oakland Av*. FE 3-7*43 HN FORD TOWN SEDAN H*S • nice on*, only $495 TWO-1?E AlTo ARR ANTY SPARTAN DODGE ni S. SAGINAW fif! 1960 “Bird" Conrartibli Remember? The ene wBH t h o oTYaura tor bnly l|l^ weekly wdh no 8 down. Call Mr. Data, Credit Coordinator. LLOYDS Lincoln Maraury-CamN New Location 1250 Oakland Av*. FE 37841 1*48 FOR6 3DOOR, AUTOMA+lC. 1485. Opdvkt Hardware. IN* Op-dyke Road. Fl 34484. 1*60 BLACK GALAXIE, STICK. VB. 2-dr., bast otter. 483HM. 1*40 FORD 500 4-cyllndor angina ___ transmission pto* now nra*. For your drlrim comfort. Only sm, OUR GRAND OP&NINO SPECIAL TO YOU. Hunter Dodge1 hubn«ha« Ml 7-0955“ “WAY UNDER BOOK" yours far only INI Call Mr. Dal*. Credit LLOYD'S Ltncota»M*rcuryC*m*t NEW LOCATION J FORD STARLINER, l-DOO •die, haator, whitewalls, V-8 a unatlc. On* at th* bail. Tap eft II 31843. fDrd Convertible, m jH price with no monoy down. LUCKY AUTO SAiB 1*3 ar 184 S. Saginaw FE 31114 ar FE 3-H53. . INI FORD 3DOOR, V4, STICK SHIFT, RAOIO, HEATER, WHITE-WALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Fayiiianto at S7.fi par weak. Sm Mr, Parka at Herald 1961 Ford Country Sidon 4-passenger station wagon, has ra-. dio and hamar, Mf alu* finish, Vf angina and automatic transmission, priced at 11,315 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER tinm 7*30" ON DIXIE IN WATERFORD Home of SERVICE after tha sal* AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 PEOPLE'S AUTO SALES 1961 T-Bird HARDTOP Sharp, power swlng-a-way wheel, Mutt saw to appreciate. BOB BORST Lincoln-Mercury , mi."" BIRMINGHAM RADIO, HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments at W.fS bar weak Saa Mr. Parka al Harold Tumor tom-crafted car. Solid silver tur-quois* finish with matching attvar-toned vinyl intortor. Alt power equipment and detailed to satisfy the most fastidious buyer. Join the happy ranks at "T-Blrd" owners, tor only S3,3*7, lull prim. LLOYD'S Llhcoln-MercutyComot NEW, LOCATION 1250 Oakland Ava. FE 3-7843 FALCON 2-DOOR, DELUXE, SM 1962 Ford Fairlana 2-Door llco groan with radio, heater, Ford-o-Matlc transmission, S-cyllndor engine and primd if 8I48L BEATTIE "Yeur FORD DEALER Sine* 1*18" ON DIXIE IN WATERFORD Horn* -of SERVICE aftor th* sal* , AT THE STOPLIGHT - OR 3-1291 LLOYD'S Lincoln Marcury-Csmet NEW LOCATION 1250 Oakland Ave. FE 37841 1*42 FAIRLANE 3DOOR, 3CYLIN- 1-owner and extra sharp. 81*5. JEROME FERGUSON, RsChmNr 1962 Ford ACou anWrufvO Country Squirt ~aer station, 352 VI engine IBO-Matlc transmission, ra- BEATTIE 1962 Fairlane 2-Door Sadan Has a thrifty 4-cyllndar angina and a Rica blue finish, radto and haatar and only *1,2*5. BEATTIE "Yeur FORD DEALER flam l*3d" . ON DIXIE IN WATERFORD -Horn* at service attortoa aato .- AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 in* OalaxiE M 4666A HAltDi TOP, V-# automatic, Mi power, 1-owner and extra daan. JEROME FERGUSON, Radwator FORD Dealer, OLMWl, "1963 FORD 24oor" if By * sat et ilk* i r sedan • white- LLOYDS Lincoln-Mercury-Comat New Location 1250 Oakland Ava. > J :m tV-e' JHE PONTIAC PRESS, VriUftSDAY, AUGUST «, 1964 ^ -a d—ir New mmI Used Ctn DAN 4-•rauto- SON, Rochester FORD Dealer, OL IMS fORO COUNTRY SEDAN 4-• tiiiilBiffin ti'rr-—-odlo, heat HewwdfcedCm 1 i INI COMET t-33 2-000* While with red bucSVt MOfintt Fully ay-i—** —.t. I EAST. %. Excellent condition’ I3VS FORD OALAXIE FAST BACK, red. Mack interior, power, lew nnlleeae^Muet tell, IH-ltR M FALCON f erode — Private — MV.sTigt. t»!» LINCOLN 4-DOOR t owner let black beauty. Full equipment including air condition-iag. Specially priced at * $1,295 two-year o.w. warranty SPARTAN DODGE til S. SAGINAW ' - FE i-4541- NCObN CONTINENTAL t. Moor hardtop. Complete-— —i—-. Gotham Gold PATTERSON CHEVROLET C0„ loot S. WOODWARD AVE., SIR MINOHAM, Ml 8-8735. . dltien. JEROME FERGUSON, Ro-cheoOer EORP Dealer: OL 1-07) l. IMS LINCOLN CONTINENTAL ISAM miles. original owner, many pow- LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" >3 or 84 S. Saginaw "$98$ two-year G.W. Warranty SPARTAN DODGE nt s. SAGINAW fe I-4V .top. transistor i »S4 OLDSMOBILE FULL PRICE Cooper Motors New ui «ni Cm 106 New tmi lleed Cm Itss PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR STATION wagon with radio Rend heetei tometic transmission, V-8 a_ nkca*rMae MbMl MMpricani^ weakly payments S3.SO. ESTATE STORAGE PLYMOUTH SELVADERE -.11, radio. ' heater, : Outomi 'ansmisstan. A sharp trade, prk IP E, St h Blvd. months on balance, i rX»' ** VILLAGE ^RAMBLER VILLAGE RAMBLER l*5S OLPSMOBtUE 1-OOOR HARO- TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8-0536 imo Valiant stick>1»7 Full orice with no money doom. LUCKY AUTO SALES 193 or 254 S Saginaw TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8-0536 “ r- Ml VALIANT 4-DOOR AUTOMAT Ic-JTM. FE MW). WHERE THE HUNT ENDS IMS Plymouth Fury 4-door hardtop, baautmil car td see and drive. Lika riding on a cloud. So much comfort lor so IMO OLDS SUPER M 4-DOOR SE dan, full powers radio, hooter, esc. condition. 8M0. OR HIM._________ 1942 OLDSMOIlLE FAS, CONVEX tlble, B-cyllnder automatic, radio, and heater. New Cer trade. JEROME FERGUSON, Rochester .FQRP Dealer, OL l-oni.___________ reasonable price. SS70 David “Mtts^ Make Ployer Trade ntf Lloyd Motors got Herb Strunk LLOYD'S Lincoln-Mercury-Cqmet NEW LOCATION 1250 Oakland Ave. F» 3-78*3 19*1 COMET, 2-OOOR STICK, RA-did, excellent condition, good rub-bor, 8875, OR 3-1254. HAUPT •PONTIAC —SPECIALS— 1M1 TEMPEST 2-DOOR, 4-cyllndar engine, radio,_ heater, whitewalls, itomatlc, ..... PI ■_________.tlco, *99 One Green—One Beige. IMI Tempest 4-door todan, rod finish, standard transmission, radio and heater, a share car. I CHEVY Sal J whitewalls M Haupt Pontiac 1 milt north ol U.S. If an MIS Open MONDAY, TUESDAY and THURSDAY'S 'till * P.BL MA 5-«S*i finish wllh matching Interior. Only use* —terms. PATTERSON 1962 Cutlass BOB BORST 520 S. Woodward BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-4531 1944 OLOS tF7&OOR~ HARDTOP, low mlloigo. hilly equipped, 12,195 MA 5-5071, Ask for Cecil. Alt- ' *73-1280. IM7 PLYMOUTH. 875. PONTIAC . Auto Brokers. Walton at F GLENN'S Motor Sales •Sharp Cars '*1 Chevy 2-dOOf Impale, V-8 stick *3 Buick Special wagon '*1 Chevy If Nova wagon '*2 Buick LeSabfe wagon ‘*2 Grand Prlx, 4-speed '42 Buick Skylark '*2 Buick Special convertible. slid '*1 Buick LeSabro 4-door hardtop tot Buick LOlabrt convertible '*3 VW Sunroof ‘*2 VW Sunroof . •60 corvette convertible '*1 Chevy 4-cyllnder automatic 'tl Chevy Moor, automatic '*1 Chevy < dppr stick-* '*1 Olds 4-door sedan '*2 Mercury Meteor, d-door. stl< '*0 Sol Air, 2-ddor hardtop '*1 Ford 2-door atick Corns Ovtr Today and Maks Your Own Dwell L. C. .Williams, Salesman No reasonable otter rdfuedd. FE 4-7371 or FE 4-1797 Zg™ Hunter Dodge v —Billed tan I IH TKMPCiT LtMANS,, SPORT arpeting An r* Dai*. Crm ir ufnmwgr. LLOYD'S Ltncoln-Morcury-Comet NEW LOCATION . 1250 Oakland Ave. , *tw RtdNEEd Cets ID* 19*3 PONTIAC, CATALINA CON vertlhl*. bucket seats, aluminum W transmission. es. PE 5^*14 at only 1597. OUR GRAND OPENING SPECIAL TO YOU. - Hunter‘ Dodge . WHERE THE HUNT ENDS lit S. HUNTER .BIRMINGHAM Ml 7-0955 IMO ^CyMOUTH ‘'f-PASSiNOEf' ■—-nYHStodt “ wall tiros and lets of other nici extras. Original snow white flnial with an immaculate contrastini rad Interior. This one is sure h please you and It has a NEV CAR GUARANTEE. TQ- 50,00 912 S. nd other extras. A oor model finished In o with a. metallic bh Full price only $895. Terms ar- r,natd BIRMINGHAM _ Chryslar-Plymouth 1963 Valiant 4-Door Factory Fresh, Sava $600 TWO-YEAR G.W. WARRANTY . SPARTAN DODGE 211 S. SAGINAW FE 8-4S41 19*4 VALIANT V-200, 225 ENGINE, ...0 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE l-cylinder, 4-door sedan, full power, automatic transmission, almost like T • $1,000 TWO YEAR G.W. WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE II S. SAGINAW FE 8-4541 7-3214 -SPECIAL-1963 k Tempoit*Il ! 14-Door Has radio and heater and auto mafic transmission.' whitewall tire and all the little extras that meki nke car. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens St.' FE 3-7954 -Deluxe v *74-0*79 OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth * 1960 PLYMOUTH . 6-Passenger wagon, radio, heater SALE PRICE DAT: $695 24 Oakland ___ 335-94M 1961 Plymouth Wagon 1957 PONTIAC 4-066K, KAblDI heater, power steering, and brawysri good condition, vary little rust,, *80. OR 3-9594._________ 1959 PONTIAC STARCHIEP 2-DOOftI hardtop with a tu-ton# blue finish, ‘soring, brakes, full price MARVEL I Ave. ’ FE 8-4079 LINA. 4-OOOR, .POWER 83*9. sppreciato. il,ISO. 452-230*. Mel In sparkling Mueh»s»' P6NTIAC,- POWER, BLACK linish with matching and white; clean. 393 W. Iroquois, ™.r Power steerinq-‘ PONTIAC CATALINA 2-DOOR Reed|t for yc Co-ordinator. oom to mare. I only Til47 Dale, r B LLOYD'S NEW LOCATION 1250 Oakland Ave. Lincoln-Mercury-Comet .... 98 u.... . transmission. Alaska:. .. „.;J mechanically and I? hat excellent tires, radio and heater. Our price et only 8995 includes a year written guarantee. Terms ranged to suit you. BIRMINGHAM Chryilar*Plyinovth flf f .Woodward - Ml 7-32M ml a,YModYiL. radioTheatIr, m 4-1057. CONVERTIBLE SPECIALS 157 Dodge. 195* Pontiac <»' 157 Ford, 1M3 Cadillac . HUftON MOTOR SALES 1501 Baldwin 2 blocks north of Walton > PONTIAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP rice with no money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES 193 Or 25( S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7(53 (Access or “ ......- a cleon. PE 4-S979. WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward Ml 4-I3M BIrmlngham, Michigan CLOSE-QUT, NEW CARS AND1 < .demos. Plenty ot quality used cars KEEGO PONTIAC SALES. BIRMINGHAM, TRADES Every used car offered for retail to the public, is a bonafide 1-owner, low 'mileage, sharp car. 1-year ports and labor warranty. 1964BUICK Electro . DEMO 19*4 BUICK Convertible . SAVE 19*4 BUICK Special KEOUCED 19*3 BUICK Wildcat hard* 19*3 BUICK Hardtof. Air 19*3 BUICK 4Moor hardtoi 19(3 BUICK 2-door hardtoi 19*3 BUICK SdOor sedan 19(3 BUICK Skylark Convl 19*2 BUICK Electra 19*3 BUICK Custom Invct 19*2 BUICK Etodra Cony IMI BUICK Convertible . 1M1 BUICK Hardtop ....... 19*0 BUICK Convertible .. 19*0 BUICK Hardtop ...... 19*0 Buick 4-door sedan .. 1919 BUICK 2-door hordto $1,285 monthly |2ymanti.C*r Wn* ? TWO-YiAR G.W. WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE 211 S. SAGINAW FE 0-4541 1950 PONTIAC TRI-POWER, EX- >• *7,(95 . S3,395 .. 82,395 . 87395 81.85 .. <1,195 . 8 995 FISCHER BUICK 515 S. Woodward CLEAN-1 UP SALE ' ALL CARS MUST GQ! WE ARE -MOVING TO OUR NEW LOCATION S00N^ SO WE MUST CLEAR QUR LOTI 19*2 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE white top. New car trada-ln 82295 19*2 RENAULT Deluxe 4-Daor. Powder blue finish and most""economical. Lew price ot .... Mil 19*3 CORVAIR MONZA 2-Door. 4-speed" transmission with Shift an the floor.' A real beauty ,51795 IMI PONTIAC BONNEVILI Convertible. Hae radio, -heat lull power. Sunllre with black t 19*0 CHEVY IMPALA 19*0 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-Door Hardtop.-Power brakes and steering, Hydramatic, maroon finish. ^7,ooo actual miles, a beauty, fists 13*3 PONTIAC CATALINA Can- 19*] TEMf*E$T 2-Door with black ftnlsh and' rad Interior. A most economical car and ready to po. ^ ............ 81495 I AC BONNEVILLE A C BONNEVILLE 19*2 CHpVV BEL AIR 4 Door Sedan. Runs and drives Ilka new. Locally owned and only ... 81*95 1963 CHEVY H NOVA 4-Door. Automatic, (-cylinder, radio, heater, new car warranty ..........SI795 PONTIAC-BUICK OL 1-8133 22$^MAIN ST. ECONOMY CARS .811 up I3B5 Dixie j GET an "A-l 11 USED CAR CDME IN ,r. START SAVING TODAY I 1962 Pontiac Catalina 2-Door tardtap with v-8 angina, auto-netic, power steering and brakai md premier rubber! $1993 . U963 Ford Galoxie 500 4-Door Vlth radio. Malar automatic >qwer steering,'' whitewalls. A laautlful chestnut flnton. Yeuri dr only— , . $1998 I960 T-Bird Convertible ( $1691 '61 Econoline, Bus—Real Nice I- $1493, •1963 Ford Fairlane 500 ith v-s engire, stick shift, whl silt, medium blue I In Ith. Onh $1796 1962 Ford 2-Door Hardtop •laxia "500" with radio, haat itomatlc, whltawalla. It's a ri *”$1791 1962 Ford 4-Door Galaxie 500 Nh radio, haa iwar steering an $1493 I 1962 Ford Fairlane 2-Door ith radio, heater, whltet.,— Hid while with rod trim! Only- $1078 1961 T-Bird . Hardtop With- radio, heater, power steering, ■ brakes end windows. All leather trim, tv-tene pelnti Only— $2094 1963iFord 2-Door Hardtop With radio,, heater, power steering and brakes and whitewalls. Only— $2295 1961 Ford Fairlane 500 4^Door whitewalls!*'tu-to^**palrJU!0oinly— $995 1962 Rambler $1492 PONTIAC'S "ONLY" FORD DEALER JOHN McAULIFFE 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 19*1 PONTIAC CATALINA CONVER-, tibia, radio end heater, whitewalls. power steering and brakes, SI,395. OR 3-9537. 1962 Pontiac Bonneville 2-Door Hardtop Power steering and power brakes almost Ilka new. 8139 down and om full year warranty. BOB BORST with a white top Nirgundy Interior, g tine performing I it discount price is 01 OAKLAND i Chrysler-Plymouth' 1942 TEMPEST 4-600R SEDAN ] 7 Almost like new Automatic Transmission $1295 724 Oakland 335-9434 1942 CATALINA CONVERTItLI, riftee LI 8-7711 dr OR 3-129t. Bt This WMk's "Spnhul" Credit Coordinator. LLOYDS Llncotn-Mercury-Comat New'Location , 1250 Oakland Ave. PE 3-78*3 9*2 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, V-8 automatic transmission, power, steering, power brakes, ~ Hilltop Auto Soles, Inc. / You Can . / BUY WitX No Mopey Down' N6 Credit Problems / • Spot Delivery.! 19*9 FALCON 2-door, Auto. 1919 PONTIAC 2-door, nice INI PORO 2-deor, white .. 1958 T-BIRD Hardtop ........ 1981 MERC. ABser Monterey wi raw pittas sm h'top ltd] CHEVY Imggla Convert. 1982 BUICK Canvartlbto ... 19*4 PONTIAC. 4-door ....... 19*4 CHEVY impale Hardtop 19*4 PONTIAC 4doer Hardtop 962 Oakland FE 4-9969 RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES M-24 at the Stoplight . .. Lake Orion MY 3-6266 WEEK-END SPECIALS Select Used Cars 1963 FORD Galoxie 2-Dopr * tt . $1690 1961 OLDS "98" 4-Door* .;. $169S 1962 RAMBLER 4-Dobr Classic With economy f*ylinder angina, stick eh ,. .>$1095 1964 GT0-4-SpHd/ ... $2895 1961/lHEVY 4-Door Hardtop . ... $1395 1962 PONTIAC Bonneville 2-Door Spcrts' Coup* with putomatic, ... $2288 I960 DODGE Pioneer 4-Door With ■ automatic transmission, v-s an haalcr. Southern car with no rustl 1 ; ..A flm«, radio and Only* mb 1957 DODGE 2-Door, Hardtoi With automatic trapsmission, v-t ready to go at only— ■ . . . i ) dntinds and 1» 5250 1956 FORD Wogon, 6-Passenger This ana It in good running condition and will mako a perfect second cer at only— . . : . $125 1955 JEEP Pickup With the 4-wheat drive, this one am Deal sharp, only— ...$ 1295 1961 TEMPEST Wogon With automatic transmission, radio,. haatar, whitewalls, one owner, and Is a blue beauty 1 ... $995- 1957 OLDS "88" 4-Door Hardtop with", automatic, power i brakes, radio and heater. Beautiful white upper. One owner. w.:.5; 5695 WE ARE NOW STARTING OUR 1964 MODEL CLEAN-UP ON BOTH fONTIACS AND RAMBLERS. HIGH TRADE-IN! Prices Too Low to Print RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC - RAMBLER LAKE ORrON MY 3-6266 FE 8-9661 NO RED TAPE ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN '59 Porttiac Bonneville Full Price $597 '60 Chevy : Impala Hardtop . Full Price $895 '59 Buick Hardtop Full Price $497 '57 Mercury 9-Possenger Wagon Full Price $195 '58 Lincoln Continental Full Price $495 r '58 Chevy Hardtop—Big Engine Full Prico $495 59T Pontiac Sedan Full Price . $597 '60 Chevy Sedqn-> Power Full Price $795 '57 Buick Convertible Full Price $197 '57 Mercury Radio, Heater Full Price $99 '60 Ford Sedan Full Price $39? '58 Dodge Nice Cor Full Price • $197 ■ CALL REGARDLESS OF CREDIT, WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING. ALL TRADES ACCEPTED, EVEN IF YOU OWf MORE ON IT THAN WHAT IT'S WORTH. 100 Cars to Choose From * 1955 to- I960 $95.00 to $895.00 WALK IN-DRIVE OUT IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 36 MONTHS TO PAY REMEMBER: ABSOLUTELY Nd MONEY . ■; . DOWN TEL-A-HURON FE 8-9661 FE 8-9661 ACROSS FROM ' TELHURON PIAZA THE PONTIAC- PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGU$T 6, 19& 1*44 PONTIAC CAT/AUNA. WHITE ^'JMT 1W4 T»MPg»lr unaans. red"with »W*WW.jViA tPWTTCWWr OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth DRAG STRIP SPECIAL HM PLYMOUTH SPORT FURY I 424 Engine, 4-opoed Bunt trim-minion, headtrs. Mallory Ignition, 4S4reer grid oloctrlc fliel pump. MAL Tw5feY*WINSBRm***f' * •- $2995 v and Used Cm 1U 1963 Bonneville 2-OOOR HARDTOP; Radi*, DaaMr, power .tearing, power brakaaand l full year. warranty. Ill* dawn. BOB BORST" *■ Lincoln Marcuty SM S. Woodward. Birmingham •' , Ml HM Hey-Freddie's Bock I And ho would llko to Invite hi* atTtoyd'. Motori-naw location at l]50 Oakland Ava.. or call him, Prod Potior, at PE 3-7143, anytime. LLOYD'S L Incotn-Marqury-Comet NEW LOCATION • 1250 OaMbnd Avo. Fg 1-7143 v UsmI Cora . 1M 1*44 CATALINA 4-DOOR HARDTOP. ■ power. - 11450. v IT* LaBaron, alt 14*44 PONTIAC CATALINA. WHITE, * CATALINA SboOR HARDTOP, ad with Mack Ventura trim. a.. t mllat. >24*5. *42-44*4. 1*44 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE Power, low mileage *444714. 1*44 bonnevillIe, pCntiac, con- tlon, new car warranty. . . WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1390 N. Woodward Ml 4-1*30 Birmingham, Michigan 1**4 PONTIAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP. bucket aaata ILtOQ, FR HM, 1*44 BONNEVILLE SMRTS Hue wrflM On 11 1*44 PONTIAC CATALINA STATION. ■*■■4* mmumm >nd POWWT WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 394 N. Woodward Ml 4-t« Birmingham, Mlchlfiti New wd Ueodtow 181 1*44 AMBASSADOR 4-DOOR. RADIO, heater, autematk trantmlaalen, 14*5, S4S dawn, bank rataa. , VILLAGE RAMBLER TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8-0536 ' tHEY MUST GO 1*5* RAMBLER CLASSIC 4-DOOR station wagon, low mlloogo, ox collent condition. 14*5, 45 down. VILLAGE* RAMBLER 444 5. Woodward, Birmingham ^ g«d ttwd OW , If* . Credit or Budgot ^Pr6blems? We CanFinonce^You! 100 Care to Select From! Call Kir. bale FE 3-7865 1*55 and 1*54 Chevy ..... $45 to 4*5 1*55 Dodga and l*5S Ptym., 145 a*ch. 1*43 Rambler and 1*57 Cadillac. 1*4* ChOVV Md 1*57 Chevy. Ford*. 1*55 10 1*5* Plymouth*, 1*5* to 1*51 .... 1145 up —--------------- —• Bixife ECONOMY CARS RAMBLER 4-DOOR. RADIO, k - HOME OF BUICK-RENAULT-OPEL-JEEP - 219 Orchard Lake - ; FE 2-9165 1962 C0RVAIR Coupe, Stick, white :.. .........$1095 1961 FALCON Deluxe 4-door, automatic, white $ 795 1960 ELECTRA Convertible, bucket seats_______ .$1495 1964 RENAULT R-8 black, 4,000 milts.......... .$1395 19$9 MERCURY 4-door hardtop, powor....... ,$ 595 1961 CHEVY wagon, feylindtr, stick; red ..... .$1095° 1962 LeSABRE 4-door, sedan, bluo, nice ....... .$1895 1962 CHEVY II, convertible, red ..............$1495 1960 LeSABRE 2-door hardtop, power ...........$1495* 1957 BUICK Special 4-door, liko new ...'.. .$ 595 1962 RENAULT Gordini, 4-speed, white..........$ 875 1963 JEEP CJ-5, red, snowplow ......_________ .$1695 1962 BUICK Special 4-door, power,, white . .^.$1595" 1961 IMlPALA 2-door, automatic, power ...... . $1395 1963 JEEP Wogoneer, power, blue ______ ______ .$2595 T963 ELECTRA 225 4-door hardtop, power.........$2995 1964 WILDCAT, 4-door, powder green ...........$2895 1962 MERCURY Convertible, yellow .............$1695 1962 LeSABRE 2-door hardtop, power, fawn ... .$1995 1961 BUICK Special 4-door, green ............. .$1395 VILLAGE RAMBLER VILLAGE RAMBLER TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8-0536 RAMBlBR CLASSIC CUSTOM 4 Beautiful Oliver condition. Com- OAKLAND Chryslor-Plymouth 1*41 NASH RAMBLER 4-Door, radio, heater, itlck ULC PRICED AT: $795 734 Oakland 335-9434 JEROME . OLDS-CAD ILL AC QUALITY - We have it — . SERVICE - We give X- SAnsFAenoN - . We guarantee it--- •acta, reclining > a o 11, automatic tranpnlifion, radio and new tires. Birmingham trade ■ In. Don't miss Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER 14 mil* math of Miracle Mil* FE 4-4531 RAMBLER CUSTOM CLASSIC, ^jnamli steering power ows. A beaut I-hd white '—“ VILLAGE RAMBLER 444 5. Woodward: Birmingham 147 RAMBLRR- RADIO, HEATER, i owner and sharp, 4*05, 4*5 doom, 30 months on oalonoo, —* a New end Used Cere 18$ ' CAPITOL AUTO SALES LIQUIDATION | LOT SEE US TODAY! 312 W. Montcalm FE 8-4071 1964 RAMBLER Close-Out BILL SPENCE for That Rambler! 1471 Dhtte Mime." Brand Now 1964 Rambler Compare all claims Than got more for loss VILLAGE. RAMBLER We won't be undersold ToM us If w* ar* \ Nothing Down—Special Finance Plan $49.71 $n.9o a $1.66 - d£ Also free Fringe Benefits To save you S otter Hie Solo Available tally of VILLAGE RAMBLER 444 S. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM A SUBURBAN OLDS "Birmingham Trades" 100%, Evory car Kstad carrios this guarantM. Toko WRITTEN the guesswork out of . buying. Gat ona of aor GUARANTEE Certified Used cars! Bank rotas. 1963 Olds “88" 1961 blDS F-85 Convertible, rod. whit* tee, »i-most likB mw md nidy to go, 4-Door, New New. Only HIM njii 1963 Buick LaSabre 1962 Olds Storfire Coup* — Ilka new all the -way. Cenvartibl*. AN poorer. Sharp. Blrmkipham car. Air condition Ina. Two la choaM 1958 CADIIUC DO Villa 1962 OLDS Dynamic 88 Sedan, all power, factory air can-dmanmgl Convertible with power (tearing and brake*. Sharp onewwnar. 1964 OLDS Demos. 1959 OLDS Dynamic “88" . NT Convertible "ST'. "*»" Cutlau Sport Ceu^m^ New car warranty. Moor i,rg|(es, win-dowi, tool Win* owner 1 1963 OLDS 2-Door 1963 Cutlass Hardtop With Fewer — Only ttMl Hardtop, Dynamic "ST', automatic, radio, whitewalls, power! All vinyl Imarlerl SUMMER CLEAN-UPS Over 50 Used Cars to Choose From 2 Year Warranty SEE BOB MARTIN, STUB STUBBLEFIELD 565 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM MI 4-4485 •oout our mon«$ VILLAGE RAMBLER 1*41 RAMBLER CONVERTIBLE. STANDARD TRANSMISSION, RA-DIO. HEATER. WHITEWALL1 TIMS, ECONOMY ENGINE. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payment* of M.*5 per week. See Mr. Fork* at Harold Tumor Ford. All 1964 Olds-Cadillacs — Now On Sale — -BRAND NEW- 1964 OLDS "F 85" Yours for Only $2088.00* As Low as $55 Per Month DEMONSTRATOR 1964' OLDS. "88" $2888-;. Fully equipped including powor steering and brakes. Also automatic transmission Low Monthly Payments •Plus Soles TAx'and License CADILLAC and OLDS DEMO'S 15 OTHER DEMONSTRATORS TO CHOOSE FROM Save Up to $1500.00 We Are Sorry for the Inconvenience to You During the Perimeter Road Construction—Please .Call for One of Our Courteous Salesmen to Stop at Your Door Tonight—With the Car of Your Choice. s: CY PERLMAN / ART THOMAS ^ jr . LEE LAMOREAUX »PAT STOGLIN JOEREHFUS LLOYD WALLACE JEROME Olds-Cadillac v 280 S. Saginaw St. ? Pontiac FE 3-7021 malic transmlnlon. **4£, $45 down, bonk ratal. VILLAGE RAMBLER Closing Out Our 1964 Ramblers Year-End Discounts in effect righjknow ROSE RAMBLER EM 3-4155 1*41 RAMBLEb CLASSIC 4-0064, radio, heater and automatic Iran*, minion. Sovaral to choose from of only 12* down. Aik about our money back gvaronloo. VILLAGE RAMBLER TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8-0536 REPOSSESSION - 1*41 RAMBLER, ■a money down. Call Mr. Jahman. 5-2404. Haiklni Chavy. 1*42 RAMBLER 4-DOOR. RADIO, haator. A sharp onbownar trad*. 0*5. 575 dawn, bank rataa. VILLAGE RAMBLER TROY, MICHIGAN JU 40536 BRAND NEW 1964's All Mi All Mi All Mi All Models PLYMOUTH VALIANT .. CHRYSLER IMPERIAL . $AVE SAVE SAVE OAKLAND Chryskr-Plymouth 714 Oticlud P A T T ROCHESTER . - R S O N Close-Out On All New 1964 chrysler-plymouTh VALIANT S *• DODGE TRUCKS Now Going V bnj : , 1001N. Main IT'S HERE ... THE SALE YOU'VE BEEN' •WAITING FOR! CHEVYLAND 6th Annua RED'TAG SALE! • -. T / / / /•j xi ■ i Buy Now — Save Now — Look for the RED TAG on every new and low mileage, 1 owner "OK" used car on our big lot. Come in and browse around...then make your choice and own deal. x IMMEDIATE DELIVERY - FINANCING On the New or Used Car of Your Choice Oakland County's Volume Chevrolet Dealer y 631 Oakland Ave. V . FE 5-4161 . FE 4-4547 THK l'ON —Television Prograrm— '^ Programs fumishod by stations listed in this column are subject to cbongo without notice. ChemkU 2-WJIK-TV ChonnoM-WWJ-TV WXVZ-TV CKoooolt-aaW-TV Chown*l36—WTVS EVENING yMJi) (4) News, Weather, 1, Sports (7) Movie: "^tank Batta- j , lion.” (In Progress) ./ (9) Huckleberry Hound (56) People and Politics 6:90 (7). (Color) News, Sports (I) Follow the Sun: Two girW.claim to be artist's daughter. (Repeat) (56) French Lesson ‘ 7:66 (2) Ripcord: Photographer drops into forest fire. " (Repeat)' » (4) (Color) George •Pierrot: Highlight of present-: day Turkey. (71 (Color) Michigan Out-; doors: Outdoor rating around the state. (56) Antiques 7:96 (2) Password * (7) (Color) FUntstones (9) Movie: “Case of the -Lucky Legs.” (1935) Warren William, Genevieve Tobin. Contest winners - murdered and Perry Mason goes to work. * ' (56) At Issue 8:61 (2) Baseball: Tigers vs. Chicago (4) BUI Dana: Jose decides to quit to help out his boss. (Repeat) (7) Donna Reed: Allowance is short for expensive date. (Repeat) (56) Cultures 6:36 ft) Dr. Kildare: Hospital is too noisy for sensitive woman. (Repeat) (7) My Three Sons: Bobbie Joins his father for' golf tournament. (Repeat) 9:66 (7) Ensign O’Toole: Com-, mander’s oldCk^lassmates show up to cheer him up. (Repeat) (9) Zero One 9:99 (4) (Color) New Christy Minstrels: Debut of singing group’s show. English comics are guests. . (7) Jimmy Dean (9) Music Stand 19:69 (4) (Color). Kraft Theater: Woman runs off to Brazil ' -with ex-husband's fortune. , (Repeat) (9) Wrestling 19:39 (7) News 19:59 (2) Baseball Scoreboard 11:99(2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:25 (9) Movie: “Rhapsody in Blue.” Life of George Gershwin. 11:39 (2) Steve Allen (4) (Color) Johnny Carson (7) Les Crane: Variety 1:99 (2) Peter Gunn (4) Best of Groucho (9) Featurette 1:15 (7) After Hours FRIDAY MORNING 4:15 (2) Meditations 9:29 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2)'News 6:39 (2) Sumther Semester ^“Origin of the Solar System" (4) Classroom Role of witness in U.S. courtroom is examined .(7) Funews—Cartoon 7:99 (2) News, Editorial (4) Today Filmed interview with Luci Baines Johnson (7) Johnny Ginger 7:19 (2) Fun Parade 6:99 (2) Captain Kangaroo Greeno the Clown visits (7) Big Theater 9:39 (7) Movie: “Flesh and Fantasy” (1943) Edward G. Robinson, Charles Boyer, Barbara Stanwyck. Tales of the supernatural 6:55 (2) Movie: “Accent on Youth” (1935) Herbert MarshaU, Sylvia Sidney. Author finds himself part of storybook romance • (4) Living—Women (9) Kiddy Koroer Kar-toons 9:39 (9) Jack La Lanne 19:99 (4) Make Room for Daddy Uncle Tonoose writes own eulogy ^ (7) Girl Talk Socialite Gregg Sherwood Chen^ol 7- | '^laaaaHipaaMwaamHnaMaaaaMaiaMaawMsaBn 11 TV 'Features | Folk Group Performs By United Press International - BASEBALL, 8:00 p.m. (2) Timers meet Pale Hose in Chicago’s Comiskey Stadium. , NEW CHRISTY MINSTRELS, 9:30 p.m..(4) First of five programs starring folk-singing group. SUSPENSE THEATER, 10:00 p. m. (4) Man hires Iwo private ijetectives to bring back ex-wife? who made off with . his fortune. FRIDAY * „ j TODAY, 7:00 a m. (4) Filmed interview with Luci Baines Johnson highlights program. CHAMBER OUTING - Watching David Ogg, controller of Ogg Cleaners,, tee off at Pontiac-Country Club, are (from left) Russell Doolittle, Pontiac office manager for Lawyer’s i Title Insurance Corp.i Richard Mineweaser, representative of Equitable Ljfe Insurance Co.; P»ntlM PrMi Photo 'and Derril Looney, assistant cashier at Pontiac State Bank. The foursome was part of hotter than 400 area business and professional men attending the annual summer meeting of the Pontiac ‘Area Chamber of Commerce yesterday. Car Hits.Boy Riding Bike Nicholaus Vitinaris,-12, of 49 Clark was.hit by a car while riding his bicycle at Pike and' ! Roselawn streets at 12:20 p m. ; yesterday Mrs. Robert L. Arnold of 869 Slocum* the driver of the car, said that (he boy failed to yield the right of way and pulled out iiyront of her. * . Nicholaus is in satisfactory | condition at Pontiac General1 Hospital with a fractured left [ leg. ■ . - - NEED CASH SZ *2,200 Repay $16.57 a Meath p L ,50N0T0NE 291. CemeN Ft Williams Dodge, actress Eva Gabor . headline panel ($) Robin Hood Runaway serf is in tough predicament. (Repeat) 19:39 (2) I Love Lucy - Lucy’s heavy foot lands Ricardo in calaboose. (Repeat) (4) (Color) Word for Word • . (7) Price Is Right Wally Cox is celebrity guest (9) Movie: “So Long at the FAir” (1951) Jean Simmons, Dirk Bogarde. Young- girl can’t make anyone believe her broth- * er has disappeared 19:55 (4) News .... 11:99 (2) McCoys When Luke gives bowling lessons to pretty girl, Kate resorts to drastic action.-(Repeat) * * (4) Concentration (7) Get the Message Marjorie Lord, Constance Ford, comedy team Allen and Rossi end weed’s appearance. (Repeat) 11:39 (2) Pete and Gladys Porters cancel dinner en-. gagemeni with Pete's boss. (Repeat) (4) (Color) Jeopardy (7) Missing Links Robert Q. Lewis, Sam Levenson, Phyllis Diller conclude stint. -FRIDAY AFTERNOON 12:99 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) Say When! (7) Father Knows Best Old friend visits Ander-sons. (Repeat) ■ (9) Mile, de Paris 12:25 (2) News ' 12:39 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) Truth or Consequences (7) Ernie Ford Comedienne Minnie Pearl returns ' (9) People in Conflict 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:55 (4) News 1:99 (2) December Bride. Curvaceous hiking guide causes Ruth to put her foot down. (Repeat . (4) News (7) Movie: “Cow* Up” (1949) Wi%m Bendix, ' for practice. (Repeat 1-<4) Doctors Matt’s absence poSes challenge to hospital staff (7) Day4n Court After husband is killed in accident, divorced wife ‘leeks to regain custody of children 2:55 (7) News 3:99 (2) To Tell the Truth .’ -. Gretchen Wyler, Marty Ingels, Phyllis Newman Sk-itch Henderson end week as panelists. V (4) Another World - V (?) General Hospital * 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News . 3:39 (2) Edge of Night • <4) (Color) You Do n ’ t Say! Mary Tyler Moore, Mi-K chael Landon end stint as celebrity guests. (7) Queen for a Day (9) Vacation Time—Chil-. dren 4:99 (2) Secret Storm . / (4) Match Game Betty White, Pat O’Brien in final appearance of' week (7) Trailmaster Stranded. in small town, man (Gory Merrill), accompanied by wife, runs OK Proposal ! for School Plan! fo Serve °n Health Unit Members 'of the Waterford Township Recreation Board last | night added their unanimous ap- j j. Duncan Sells, recently approval to the proposal to estab- pointed associate dean of Oak-lish a community school pro-1 land University, was named yes- ________.... terday to the Oakland Couity ^.Community Mental Health S*v- Planners Nix Trailer Park Developers Wanted Rezoning in Pontiac REPAYMENT SCHEDULE U.IH.N I nut Ms. S1.SM.M 1 SMIM. SS.NMS I HIM M*. Ill M*rt*MS ttMvnMM Schcdult Southfield Mortgage Co. State-Wide FE 9-4300 &S cm C*M*ct f t.m. t* 4 * .m. The City Planning Commission last night turned thumbs down on a request to ..rezone |some 20 acres on the East Side \niaht will nave the wav for the1 Announcement of tile appoint- f°r development of a pro-NWgnt will pave me way tor tne; oounfv s mental P°spd 150-unit trailer park for programs launching. i!” ■ „tfte - £ninr citfoMM I health policy-making group, was .sen,or c,tIzens-4^* teree^boards together ma(je today by Delos Hamlin,' flj ___ - visors. contribute to the program. whi^-h seeks to more extensively utilize school facilities by providing a variety of progrdm*\for both cbUdrea and adults. A $50,090 grant-from the Mott Foundation has tieen offered to ______ _ _____ _________ Commissioners >voted 6-0 to chairman of the board of super-1 recommend Jhat the City Corn- Before his recent promotion, Dean Sells served three years as dean of students at Oak- mission deny the requested zoning. The parcel has 599 feet of frontage on. the north side of and. I Mount Clemens immediately „ . . “. , . .. east of the Grand Trunk belt He had prcviouzly spent flvej Une railroad tracks. Nearby residents opposed the j zoning change and were sup- aid establishment the Water-! J*"*;**the counseling staff of ford community school program. Cornell University-. vibe grant, which Will span] He replaces Dr. Kenneth R- Ijoi^A^Duwn ^"aftended four years, was extenofei op a Roose, who resigned from .the jr* ' • ® matching fund basis. \ | mental health board recently to L » , \: ", ■*.---—. \ | accept a position in the East. I , •*, , _ - . The American bison or p%s| Dean SeUs is married and has! ^T^^^^ aSTor tte ALUMINUM SIDING I AWNINOI e STORM WINDOWS 0 DOORS * PATIOS SNCIOSID * OOOR WALLS ALL AWNING FI 5-7909 Day or Night 919 Orchard Lake Ava. into former Wife believed1 bfal°i8 ^largest biggaf^|hinechiidreri.The family lives animal m the western hemis^l at 3821 E- ACROSS 1 Short — to destination 4 Footway Y * 6 Go by foot dead. (Repeat, ,. 4:21 (4) News - , pliere. 4:39 <(2) Movie: “Make Your Own Bed” (1944) Jack Carson,‘Jafie Wyman. Enterprising muTfinds solution for senAnt problem during World War II .. ' • (4) Mickey Mouse Club (Repeat) (9) Hercules—Children. 5:09. (4) George Pierrot “Berlin to Russia” (?) Movie: “The Fast and _ m , , . . - the Furious” (1964) John W Goddess of infatuation Ireland; Dorothy Malone. IGenus of true olives Fugitive from police IM ToWard the sheltered side hitches ride with lady] 15 Operated sports car driver ]■ M Colombian community (9) Captain Jolly and j 16 Condiment containers Popeye 20 Acquire knowledge 1:11 (56) Friendly Giant 21 Spanish commander 5:39 (56) What’s New? — Chil- 22 Goddess dren 24 Seed covering 5:65 j£) Weather 26 Broad smile (4) Carol Duvall 27 Bud’s sibling in.;.-......-. v a 130 Scottish wooden bowl 32 Cherryllke color Tax Teaching Program 34 stirs (coll.) _ j » . • 35 Having dropsy Ready for Area Schools ^ Redactors tab ) Pontiac area high schools i ?7 P.r?n!line'?t Performer . Crossword-Puzzle ON THE ROAD -V Answer w Previous Puzzle Dennis O’Keefe, Barbara Britton.' Despite evidence to the contrary, everyone agrees dead man committed suicide. | rumim: aica "-"w." I m (9) Movie: “Brother have been notified by the loral ^ to ^ Orchid” (1949) Edward G. office of the Intenial Revenue « . Robinson, Humphrey Bo- Service that the 1965 edition of “ “ad ,com” fo^. . gart, Ann Sothem, Ralph Teaching taxes is now avail- « European blackbird (var. - - - ... i abJe ° \ 145 Fabrication i i, ■ j 49 Most strait-laced The IRS educational program 151 Pinnacle is designed to teach students: 52 Dispatched how to sssist their parents in 58 Wood burr filling out income tax returns 54 Bitter vetch and give them “an insight into 55 Requests the taxpaying responsibilities of [56 French verb citizens in a democracy.*' Bellamy. Gangster winds ' up to) monastery infirmary 1:19 (4) -Eliot’s Almanac: • 1:15 (4) Topic for Today 1:39 (2) As the Work) Turns (4) (Color) Let’s Make a „ Deal 1:55 (4) News 2:00 (2) Password Eydie Gorme, Peter Law-ford conclude week as celebrity guests. . w Lorrtu v.u.. (ite-i beach, am^mr 2:29 (7) News Actress Bette Davis had under- 2:39 (2) Hehnesey 1* leugU^ l^ysical check- rhinlt is brought in when i up at a hospital in Lacuna base football team’s star Beach, Calif., and a doctor said - fullback fails to show up | she is in good health, Bette Davis 'Healthy' 57 Observe DOWN 1 They’re on the road 2 Some roads lead here 3 Retentive \ 4 Sat for portrait 5 Winged •- i r p JZ change from Residential to J Walton, Pontiac Regi£ntiaM, which is W ically for mobile home sites. .. CITY SEWERS Plahners said that the lapd had recently been rezoned from] manufacturing to residential for future development of single family dwellings when the area has city sewers. Although planners ques* j tinned the advisability of a single entrance and exit off Mount Clemens, spokesmen for the Detroit firm said they had no traffic jams'in other trailer courts • of 256 to 590 units with one entrance. Their plans, called for each unit to be fully equipped with a kitchen, plumbing, 1 to \lk bathrooms and up to two bedrooms. - USED TV BUYS . V6" RCA •14»5 17" Royal *|9»5 ' 16" Admiral $24*5 1 7" Wastinghousa $24*s 17" Philco W5 21" Muntz •34M 21" Admiral •34»# 21" Motorola V*34*5 21" RCA »4915 21" Motorola- ♦49** JI-OAY EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE FE 2-2257 WALTON TV 6 More rigid 7 Chapeau 8 Declines 9 American soprano 10 Malign look 11 Songwriter Jerome . 17 Arrayed : 19 Scottish garb ^ 23 Kitchen accessory .. 24 Measure of land 25 Cruclflx 26 Exploit 27 Counterfeits 28 Egyyptiairdeity 2? Denomination 31 Pronoun 33 Fortification 36 Rise 49 Liberals. - 41 Liturgical .headdress * ■ 42 Bones 43 Shoshonean Indians 44 Overcome (slang) 46 Eskers 47 Blood 48 Gadic 50 Masculine nickname — Radio Programs— WCAR, WRON, WHFI, NRWt iilS-WJR, Sporti CKLW, Ey« Op*ner iiM-WJR, aiwliup* Mtmt WWJ, BuNnaa *' WHFI, MusK for ModUfns S.4J-WXYZ, Nswt, SrutH WWJ, TUrUAtlgr Exlro - WJR. Lowoll Thom*s CKLW, Fulton L*wH 7:*A-WPON, News, - - Bob Qrssn* wwj. New*Tmuiwsl* WXYl M Morwn ' V arr»HDt ' ’ MS 'JBMTlSfiSMIn WJR, Chor*l -7:45—WXYZ# Knight ■MD-MMR, Evening Concert we knw. News Cmphuls IMIi'.RFJfe- KaMMowaf* n.-ss-wwj. News Ilfl^WOkR,’ This' l llk* ' U:»-WCAR, C*ren«w f.% 11:M-WJR. Music WWJ, Music Sean* CKLW, Muste 'til.Dawn 7i(S—CKLW, Nam, WPON, News, Whitn WHFI, Larry Favn • Laodsvlll* J 7:**^kTw, Nam I Tobv b -WJR. N !:•*—WJR, Nam , Agrtcuitur* ’ WWJ, Nam ewarta WXYZ. Fr«< wolf, Mi SiW—WJR, I----..... 7:W—WJR. News, Horrte CKLW. Naim, DavM WCAR, News, Martyn whfi, Nam McLaad La* Murray miBS^JiSSiir WXYZ. BreSSSart Club, Dan - mmmj : CKLW. Jo* van -wjSK. Nam RaM WFON News, Ron Knight • WJR, News, Kart Haas' it;si—CKLW. Jib Van Itib-JWJR. Nam GoWrty CKLW, Jot Van FRIDAY AFTERNOON UMO-WJR. Nam farm. WHFI. Larry Fayna Nam Hank lurdlcx It:!*—WJR, Bud Ouadl ism-wjr, NEanTT^pgs f Art LMOaflar - WXYZ, Dave Frlnew Musk > whfi, Nam BardkR .__. Ma-WJR, Nam Jm wood WWJ, Nam FriMSMU Club IpqmOfimMwte., WJBK?*News, La* wpon, Nam Laairsnca ):**—CKLW, Oavlas *:J*—WJtL Ml PI CKLW, JW Va* u r r i 5 6 7 J r r IT PT 12 13 w 15 13 r II Is ii IT 25 29 w c 43 Jf IT bl ET ■ 54 ■r K 57 The recommendation will go to city commissioners next week : Phr concurrence or rejection. I Receive Bids on 3 Projects Bids were received on tBree Oakland Coimty road construction- and improvement projects ,yesterday at the office of the County Road Commission. Largest of the three projects calls for 1.16 miles of grading, drainage, 50-foot and 90-foot concrete pavement with curbing on 14 Mile between Rochester Road and John R in Royal Oak Towhship and Troy. Cooke Contracting Co. of Detroit was the apparent low bidder at $417,124. Highest of the three hkls submitted was 6472,999. The Cooke Co. was also low bidder on .43 hundredths of a mile of grading, drainage and 50-foot concrete pavement on | j Middlebelt between Eight Mile I] and Gfand River in Farmington 11 Township. * . * * * The Detroit firm'submitted a p\ bid of $186,510. The only other bid submitted was for $191,053. I ONLY BID i Max Frisinger Construction Co. of Ann Arbor submitted the only bid on widening and relo-! cation- of the Eight Mile-Novl { Road intersection in Novi Township. The project itfas bid at $104,764. „ ♦ A Contracts for the three jobs will be awarded, by the Road Commission at its next regular meeting Aug. 17. - ! Ale* MumMian Siding it now abl* to dool diroct with homo own*** in Th* Pontioc and Metropolitan Dotroit oroa to fivo you invisiblo loams that provunt buckling. Wo (ooliio high prossuro solos-mpn and dishonust prica gouging has hurt tho aiding businoss in ■‘ is oroo so wo hovo ducidud to protoct our intoroat ond your* ■* a horn* own or. This is no gimmick, prices include labor and ...otoriol to cover a 24*30 homo all (our sides (or 310.00. 24«30 Asphalt shingle roof 233 lbs. par Sq- 143.00. Alto aluminum storms, gutter*, ownings and pro-coat atone. .Written mamwfac-turer't guorontoo. Got two bid* then coll us end save. FHA or low cost bonk consolidation and pay oH your biNs at one piece. Coll 24 hour* a day. Call 546-4366 M.C0 ALUMINUM SIMM CO. 41W. Lawrence St., Pontiac Authorised RCA-ZEMTH Sales • COLOR TV-8395 Mi NEW 1965 LINE IS NOW IN STOCK! 23-lsah TV.......wly USED TV'S $19.95 and Up! CONDON’S RADIO & TV 730 W«sl Huron - FE 4-9736 USED TVs j 16” — as low as....... *25 ■ 21” — as low as....... *35 ■ "‘V — several to choose from — : JOHNSON We Service What We Sell RADIO t TELEVISION FE 8-4669 WB&x : A i; ^ D--20 THE-PONTIAC PRESS, 'THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1964 SEARS You Can Count on I s... Quality Costs No More at Sears HOME i APPLIANCE Reg. $259.95 SAVE $63.95! All-Fabric Automatic 3-Cycle Washers >196 No Trade-in Required NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan NO MONEY DOWN Sca n gmy P.ymrn. Plan Big 12-pound capacity washer baa five combination #n|! • rin»e temperature*, super Roto - Swirl agitator, .‘built-in filter, por-relained top; printed instructions on lid. See it! matching all-fabric AUTOMATIC Elec, Dryers Buy The Washer And Matching Dryer SAVE *30 , Additional Normal, Delicate and Wa*h 'n Wear cycle* plus 5 hell (election* give you safe drying of denim* to delicate*. Lighted control*. Appliance Dept., Main /Interned! Sears Large Capacity Coldspot Dehumidifiers *68 Coldspot Giant Capacity 22 Cn. Ft. Freezers Regularly at S79t9S! Auto, humidiatat control - Cheek Sear* low price! Hold. 770 Iba. of food 197 NO MONEY DOWN on Seara Easy Payment Plan NO MONEY DOWN on Soar* Eg*y Payment Plan Avoid- coatly moiituro damage in baiemont or rec-Horn. U*e* very little current. Automatic shutoff. Smart cabinet design, air scoop grille. Keeps 1000 sq. foot area dry. Thin-Wall’construction gives you more freeaer space, tabes loss floor space. Porcelain-finish interior is easy to eiean. Stores all the foods your family likes most; right on hand all year ’round. 14 Cu. Ft. Coldspot Refrigerator-Freezers* 239 ChCck Sears Low Price! 171-lb. True Freezer Refrigerator-Freezers in White or Coppertone *239 14 Cubic Foot Model, 101-lb. True Freeaer Choice of Whili or Coppertone Finish Refrigerator defrosts by itself—automatically. Low-priced, value-packed model contains porcelain enamel interior, 25«$iquart crisper, flush-door hinging and roomy lift-out freeser basket. Save! satisfaction guaranteed or your money back*' NO MONEY DOWN on Seara Easy Payment Plan Frost I ess throughout — no defrosting ever because frost can’t form. Spacemaater shelving uses all the space in any of thousands of combinations. Yon adjust cold' control—atr control in freeaer. SEARS ” compare... You Can’t Beat Sears for Honest Values I and Men’s Pants Reduced M v H h°y*' easy-care slacks regular 13.99 sizes 8 to 20 Charge It Rugged polished combed cotton, tightly woven Jo lake rough and tumble wear. Sanforised for minimum shrinkage and to assure comfortable, long-lasting Jit. Popular tapered cut in a choice of Ivy or continental styles in dark colors. men's campus slacks 2V Charge It Wash *n wear blend of Orion® acrylic, rayon and acetate. Spot andwrinkle-resittant finish. Pre-cuffed bottom*. Choice of charcoal, brown and medium gray in *ise* 30-42. V-- V r'^' bays’ Wash ’n wear sport shirts reg. "1 88 •2.59 X -Charge It Cotton broadcloth in button-down or regular collar*. Many patterns and cplors to choose from in •isos 6 to 18. Hurry in for, best selection. Save at Sean! Boy*' Wear, Main Floor assorted jac-shirts Reg. 83.99! Asa’td f%Q7 colors. Sntl.-lge. ^ Mon’* Furnishings, Main Floor boys’ wash ’n wear lined jackets reg. 097 83.99 dU Charge It Stylish jacket his roomy slashed pockets, easy -working sipper and flannel liningtfor chilly Fall days. Chotose from assorted colors in site* 6 to 16.' . Shop tonite, tomorrow until 9 p.m.! save'on these assorted Fall easy-does-it dresses No-Fugs fabrics! 6«8 Downtown Pontiac - .- - .1 t'lium* FE 5-1171 >ati dart ion guaranteed or your mon just say, “CHARGE IT* at Sear* Imagine, the newest easy-care fabric* in a huge collection of style*, brilliantly colored! Twg-piecers, juniper dresses, sheaths, more! Come choose Dacron® polyester and Avril® rayon, Fortrel® polyester and Avril blends . . . and forget those tedious trips to th^cleaners! These beauties stay crisp, fresh and new forever! Juniors’ 7 to 15, Junior petites’ 5 to 13, Misses’ 12 to 20, Half-sizes 14Vk to 24*4. Ladies' Hrady-lo-W ear, Second Floor Shop TONITE, Kridav and Saturday Nites Until 9 P.M. iM' SEARS ■j' \ /• i[ SHOP EVERY PAGE then PARK AT THE FRONT DOOR OF YOUR FAVORITE STORE Shopping at BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE 'MILE will save your valuable time, footwork—and money tool You can depend on quality, brands, service and1* economy at Miracle Mile merchants. 48 STORES & SERVICES OPEN EVENINGS 'fil 9 Where Parking is a pleasure ».. NOT d problem! S. Telegraph at Square Lake Rd ft separates with that #*** Notfrhown CirJlwt Jaipur* 11.9S A 14,95 Cadhny Berntud** H 7.95 I'EGGY S TWO r 1 ' v ■- THS PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST «, 1964 _ 1 ^ .v ,tf r 9 7 » • ' s,. , v*m,‘ » .fi / £ ? i| THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUOT6, 1964 THREE SIBLEY’S MIRACLE MILE IVY and CONTINENTAL SUITS Smart new medium.tone*, dll wool worsteds, sharkskins, add silk and wool iridescents. Sizes 36-46, regulars and longs. CLASSIC SPORT COATS In Cordovpn or Brown.. 9.95 Alio. .available In little girls' sizes l2Mt to 3 •••>•«. 8.95 New rough texture jn tweeds and plaids "and traditional all wool flannel blazer. vamp Stitched as low as it can go. Just how handsome l be? Slip into this stunner and see! 9.95 ‘Michigan** Largest Florshelm Dealer'* Use Your Security Charge Miracle Mile Shopping Cantor -E 8-97M OPEN EVENINGS TIL f South Telegraph at Square Lake Road SCHOOL SLACKS PRESENTING New Elegant SHOPPER'S SPECIAL All the popular brands, "Foroh" "Lour and H.I.S. /At tCRNA TIONAL ; ■Dl b* SIMS 3 piece salad serving set SMART SWEATERS Famous brands by "Jantzon", "Purhoft" and "SevOire", Lambswool. Alpaca and Mohairs. SPORT SHIRTS GALORE Select from "Arrow", "Donegal"- and "Norris Casuals". New colors in plaids. Checks and stripes. Gleaming silver poized with sparkling crystal far poor ewa home or gift thing: t* crystal bowl gracefully contoured . , . available with dberplated serving fork and spoon in your choice el these stunning DeepSQver pattens. USE TOUR SECURITY OR ^ OUR 90 DAY CHARGE 1MMMMGMAM MIRACLE MILE 162 N. Woodward 2203 S TaUgroph Ml 6-4291 EE 2-1391 MEN’S WEAR Manufacturing Jewelers FOUR X--- THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1964 DRESSES SLACK SETS SUCKS 1.97 I NO MONEY ■ ' DOWNWITH 1 SECURITY BANK ^ CHARGE ACCOUNT An array of Style* in solids, ploids and «om-butatonv Sizes 3 to & and 7 to 14. Cotton -corduroy docks. Banded fronts — elastic back. Matching cotton knit top. Sins 3 to 14. Three styles. fished cottons. Oocron polyester, nylon and rayon tricot. Sizes 4 ta 14. Foil colors and block. Zipper fly-pockets Be It less. Stns 3to7. - Coat Sweaters SWEATERS Orion acrylic button front non jacquard patterns. Eosy-corq, woshobin orlon that retains Us shape. New foN shades. $icns 6 to 12. Cushion loot, crow top. Super soft premium cot-ion. Belntettod haoi and toe. Solid whtte and Striped Sin* t to IQ— Sanforized woven ging-hmn piotds. checks, high count cottons. Long sleeves. Sices 6 to 10 Assorted colors ‘ — washable acrilon acrylic, tong sleeves. Sites 3 to 8. ... 1 r ft THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1964 FIVE lion vo I MIRACLE MILE Your Brand Name Store for 43 Years m BILLY-THE-KID ROBERT BRUCE ACECRAFT HEALTH TEX GREAT WESTERN SHIR ’N SHORE TEEN FORM nOTKMS TRIM FIT HUNTINBTON CARTERS STYLE UNDIES QARQNER QASTWIRTH JAYMEE OERBY POLY FUNDERS KATE GREENAWAY , KUTE KIDDIE JONTZEN YOU NOLAND SACONY GIRL TOWN LORTOQS BAMBURY COATCRAFT HER MAJESTY Girls' Sweaters tweeters By Regal and Pandora Mony M« fashion colon to occont the protty plaid shirts. New style cardigans ‘ that oro, oh, so smart S to ax. 7 lo 14. *3#* - »$“ Girls' Wool Skirts A wide choice of ovor popular solid colors’ and a fabulous selection of bright now plaids. $3" to $798 BUSTER BROWNS. Sheet like these get children off to a good start . beautifully styled and built to talce a heap of punishment! And, at always, our trained fitting specialists assure your child of a perfect fit. free Surprise . Package wHIT purchase of shoes! Girls' Dresses * LVVE* These pro the drosses little gills love the drosses that are so easy-care, mothers are only too happy whan tall brings thorn out hash and crisp. Slouson In 100% cotton ovor pleated skirt in TrioCotato and Rayon protected against spills end spots by ZoPol*— lasts through countless washings. rOutan'tseT.M , f Sixes 7-14 Sizes 4-6X $*198 $098 Other Dresser ham $4.09 . Boys' Slacks Sixes 9% to 4 A to f widths Use A Lion Charge with Option Terms OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 . m by arex • FARAH Boys' The ever presented . Cardigans, V-l Crew-Necks . . oil kLlke newest of fell, 19*4. SizesAte 20. Leanline, beltless styled tares slocks that keep their neat, good leeks longer. Get several pairs in — Bait Olive, Ivy ieige. Slack, Char imam, Blue-Olive. Sties 4 to 12 l>» pylon end Slims Amps: Welsh IS’ S» 33* Lengths arte 13*. SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, A. 100% wool flannel jumper in solid tone of.red or navy. Sizes 7 to 14 5.98 8. long leon look in 100%'wool flonnel-solid grey or red size ? to 14.... 4.98 C. Machine Washable blue or red plaid' in 70%.wool 30% nylon. Sizes 7Jg(\b. at (Penney** ft ■enneus ALWAYS HWAT QUALITY * toke fhe jumper \ooV back to school 498 _ C 98 She "HARVEST FESTIVAL” . FRIDAY Md SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2-3 The Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center extends a cordial invitation to all civic organizations/ dubs, churches, youth groups ond educational groups'to sponsor their own booth and concessions lor the purpose of raising funds* for their own use. Two big days in the Bloomfield' Miracle Mile Shopping.Center ... We will give your group an area 15'xl5' with minimum light and power furnished. from the operation of your concession are yours to use in. ‘of Vour group projects. All booths.will be placed ir\ a designated area of the parking lot. Cash prizes will be awarded for the most attractive booths. „ DO NOT DELAY ... APPLICATIONS ARE ALREADY IN . RESERVE YOUR FREE SPACE NOW) SEND APPLICATION TO BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER * „ 2247 S. TELEGRAPH PONTIAC, MICHIGAN PHONE FE 2-9203 NAME OR ORGANIZATION APPLICATION . V ‘ ADDRESS. n By. .......... • •. Phone\........ Home. TYPE OF CONCESSION, STAND, GAME, ETC. (Application muit ha returned by Sept. 19th, 1994} THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1064 NINE CAPITOL SHOPS "BACK-TO-SCHOOL" for the . atyle minded young man starts at Capital! - RECOMMENDED BY OUR REGtSIMR is BASIC SWEATERCOURSE NO. 1 stressing the new look in V-Necks and the Course Fee is juct prepared by McGregor Revere ADVANCED SWEATER COURSE NO. 2 Special emphasis on Orion, Alpaca Coat Style Instructor - Revere Knitting Mills and the course fee is |ust To Round Out The Curriculum SUCK-OUT COURSES NO. 1 and 2 MILE $099 $1499 Docron and Cotton Chines >» Ivy ■ and Continental. Course Fee PAINT and WALLPAPER MX IDE LATEST COLORS AND PATTERNS IN MINT A WALLPAPER Trnined Personnel To Help You In The Selection of the Perfect Pmlnt or Wallcovering For Your, Home. VISIT OUR ART DEPARTMENT PICTURE FRAMES AND PRINTS THOUSANDS OF WALLPAPER AND VINYL PATTERNS FROM WHICH TO CHOOSE BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE 3127 SOUTH TELEGRAPH RD. PHONE 132-7001 NO EXTRA COST POHTIAC SUTE BARK HI • Dtmrmrtart Offices-Member of Federal Do posit Insuranco CerjeratieM Bloomfield Miracle Mile ireneh-Arcade Area r L0H6 LAKE BRANCH 970 W. LORO LAKE RO. - NEAR TELEGRAPH AT THE ENCORE RESTAIRART WE HAVE JUST INSTALLED A BRAND NEW AIR-CONDITIONING UNIT FOR YOUR COOL COMFORT! COME IN AND REALLY ENJOY ... ★ CHAR-BROILING AT ITS VERY NEST ★ DELICIOUS NOME-MADE MIS ★ DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIAL-MJO DOMELCO’S AUGUST CLEARANCE The onco-ci-year opportunity to get the sowing machine of your ^ _____, if ^ choice at the price and terms you' '5t—* prefer! NEW MACHINES ...14 MODELS (2) line Plana Supermatks . w ..... $199 Etna Plena Zigiag........... $79 (2) Necchi Portable Zigzags..$110 NE-MULT MACHINES Greyhound Electric, cabinet model. $19.95 Pfaff Portable Zigzag......$59.00' Graybar with cabinet...... . $24.95 TNAOE-MS 4 Aldert Electric....... ............................. $14.95 Portable Straight Stitch....................... ....$39.95 (2) Portable Singers............... ................$) 9,95 DOMELCO INCs “ Miracl* Mile Utpini center - FK 1-4821 JEWELERS means Diamonds ANNOUNCES their BRAND NEW JEWELRY SHOP at BLOOMFIELD PLAZA TELCORAPH AT W. MAPLE (ARCADE AREA) COME IN and REGISTER For o'Beautiful $49.95 WITTNAUER and o Fine $49.95 BULOVA WATCH to bo Given dri AUGUST 15, 1964. NOT NECESSARILY AS PICTURED ABSOLUTELY FREE No Purchase Necessary OTHER SIFTS ADULTS ONLY MAT‘REGISTER AT JEWELERS means Diamonds BLOOMFIELD PLAZA •ltd BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTERS ARCADE AREAS! TEN THE PONTIAC PRESS* THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1064 LET US HELP GET YOUR CLOTHES W W WWsl WITH COIN-OPERATEOMY CLEANING MACHINES Only *2 for 8 Lbri. WE WILL ASSIST WITH TINTING PUTNAM DYES-ALL COLONS ARE AVAILABLE AT THE COUNTER COATS CUanofJ arid Pressed. . . . . * • » . ....... 1.19 SLACKS Cleaned and Pressed ,1. . . . .. • |....... .49 SWEATERS Cleaned and Pressed. . t . . . . . , .49 SUITS Clwntd and Pressed. . , ., ., f. 1.00 TV STAMPS WITH LAUNDRY SEE THE PONTIAC PRESS EVERY MONDAY FOR OUR WEEKLY SPECIAL New 12-Lb. Washers 25c SMALLER WASHERS ALSO AVAILABLE 3-2^Lb. Washers *15 Dryers BACK OR FRONT DOOR PARKING BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER NEW Portable Transistor PHONOGRAPH That Plays Any Record Aaywhere On Just 6 FLASHLIGHT BATTERIES F *25 RECORDS Gofts With Itl Here’s Plat You Get: • 25 Pop/Ubums Ineludad... Hey Paula” fey Paul I Paala aid "It’s My Parly” fey tie Sere, and enters. • *39.95 Mercury Portable Phonograph A$64.95Vatuefor the price of the phonograph alone REALLY A PORTABLE NalMne la phf In! Mays owycdiare . , . etthe beach ... ealhc paHa. Rich mw.k in the Need . . SM lone-lotting diamond beadle deaagh hi* Tkonal tpaeher. Has. odNdlc ihjhalf ... Only $39.93 far lha - phaeaferaph plu* meg id,... ma year p.tian iapanaa aradh el MW CENTER EUC* TROMCSI I ★ Hay* IS,43arte Speads -k PallyTransislorizad * Ftlp-OvarCartridea ★ WalshsOnlyS-KLb*. A Compact tlxGVhxA” A Complete with Amplifiar add Speaker A Built-In Nprup 45 RPM Spindle A Hays up to DM Hours en t Flashlight Batteries A Rrnak Resistant Ganyiag Cast NEW CENTER ELECTRONICS BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE, S. TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE POOLED Clearance Sale On Seasonal and Specialty Lines! Franklin Stoves Originated In Colonial America By Benjamin Franklin Wonderful for Amusement and Family Rooms, Cottagos, Northern Cab-' ins. Bum Coal or Wood Logs or install a Gas Log in Unit! BASIC UNIT....... RflCT rpmihfr BASKET ORATE . .. . TOTAL: .. . •”«*. 14” leng black atnal pipe *2“m rdia. adjustable elbow •2“ ^ Swing-ouf ■arhecua Grill *8M Each Plrt imp. *8" Each 69 Years of Continuous Service To The Community! COMPLETE LINE of CLOCKS Electric and Spring Wind Wolf and Table Models! % PRICE Piun Federal Tan MiOACUMlU SHOPPING TEUgSaPH RR pLfRih96t9 Complete Line of PICTURES, PLAQUES, andWALL DECORATIONS Ta PRICE POWER LAWN MOWER CLEARSnCE THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST «, 1®84 ELEVEN, TWELVE New Dimensions by ^TANLKY OIL WALNUT WITH ROtIWOOD NOR DUTIFUL BIAUTY The low-look of room in today's smart apartments and homes is specifically and bond somely met with this co-ordinated grouping which is just a few inches lower in heightl. Yet, neither interior spaciousness nor quality is sacrificed one whit. See how beautiful' this children's room can be... and how durable it b with Westinghouse Micarta mar■ and-scar resistant matching tops. Solid woods, dustproof construction, center-guided drawers, too.... as Will os go-togethers for master bedrooms, as well. All spectacularly , priced for greatest value! M ADI FOR lACM OTHRR . . . OUT FRICKD FOR ONLY YOU I A-Mt Mel* Stonm ....... 109.95 l—WtCtoMi S-Ktot M el* Ston»r........... ■—M Sin OpM M4 M (-Teh Mk Mi. . ....... i—Chut, S-Crmn •— High hfcM wHfc Drtwtn. ,...,....104.95 r-M" Iriplt Dmur .. 1— MMe Oto Inn ..59.9S • •—New. 54 « JS" . .. -f— Csmr Ink........ 29.95 I-St" StuU, Drainr S—Aedmi| (Mr 17.95 S-SkrM. * « JS” , 0-hcMw Oust «M Imwi. . T-M Sin M?.. ....... | Hi^li CfllM willt Browon ....104.95 e Mi|ht Mb 1— SwMt Brnnr S Stick Unit. I-MmiM ......... CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF OURTIS-IIATIICS VI 34.95 49.95 ......| ..74.95 .104.95 .......19.95 .... 09.95 .19.95 44.95 ..........29.95 ......... *4 95 ft STEREO THE PONTIACT PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 190ft ONE DOLOR THE PONTIAC PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, im—58 PAGES Keeping Watch on Red China WASHINGTON OR—The United States pressed its military buildup in Southeast Asia today as officials watched for any clue Red China might ignore President Johnson’s warning and start its troops marching. Many officials here doubted they would. They expressed belief Peking would, in general, confine jtself to mounting a prop- 1(\ Ia4 RnmtwC aganda attack, which is JU JUI l/vl I lUvl) already under way. i i • r • ; MOSCOW (UM) - The So- the American air strike a, against Nutt Viet Nan aa “aggression” and wanted the United State* not to “ge too far.” The government newspaper livesUa said the Ameri- SAIGON, South Viet Nam (II can action "threatened the - About 30 U.S. Air Force B57 widening of the conflict” in Jet bombers, capable of carry- Capable of Carrying Nuclear Weapons fWbi!f^itgyjenK>p fapIflmL -BfisuapJgr Attgfifat Soviet Delegate Delays, Charges Aggression Predict Council Hear North and-South Viet Nam Intensify Probe Crackdown Planned in Mississippi After Lake Death Tho Communist Chinese to meet any attack from the charged the United States with Communist North, aggression against North Viet ★ * ★ Nam and declared “U.S. bn- The fleet of high-flying, twin-perialism” has gone over the engine planes sped to Saigon un-brink of war. They said the heralded while a steady shuttle “Chinese people will absolutely 0f transport planes completed not sit idly by without lending a overnight a buildup of troops Agjftstf ill Slayings Rumored to Be Near The West Bloomfield Township Board is going KTrom being“subjeS to crack down on what a law officer called the “float- to aggression.” ing bar’’ of Cass Lake. Secretary of State Dean Last night, trustees petitioned for an emergency Rn,k termed the rihMtion exhearing before the State Boating Control Committee 5?“^ mrmiifnl” Ameri-to improve conditions at caa air strikes agaiaat Com-# .. _ Cass Lake, where a 20- maMst North Viet Nam's pa- Fpctiup rPr^nP year-old K e e g o Harbor I vJllfv I UlUUv youth was killed Monday a * I r • night. JACKSON. Miss. (API -Federal and Mate authorities intensified their investigations today into the slaying of the three dvil rights workers whole the Gulf of Tonkin crisis probably would be past. "We cannot be completely * * * sure about what the days ahead Tbs alert status in South Viet , —. m m ■ of us may held,” Rusk add, Nam's capital was nowhere •mA rf «h» wMtyraa afe.Btt JA |3l|yiAh raiT Alan L. Aker ley, 2134 Park and the administration braced near what it would be if an the FBI naffilHier confirm A* liMUIIUI I MU Circle, was struck by’ a‘ Ml- for a siege of trouble in South- ilMfck were considered immi- nor deny the reports. and-run power boat while swim- a**1 u nent- la Umslala. Negro come- Pinnacle of Efforts ming in (he muked-off "safety" ** * NO ANNOUNCEMENT rnmDkk CnfMy mtihdj, .re. D«lg, SUU Put No. hy Coun'Y 4'H*" «**«3.r* SfiSfSTfiSS iAodies * * * from the West Coast - toward , u . , . The pinnacle of a year’s ef- Police today were continuing the crisis zone. uronoccupled yesterday by six Gwy also, said ha had giv- forti by Mmt 1(80o 4-H’ers wiU their search for the driver. clear WARNING supersonic Fl«2 Delta Dagger eo.t^C,^BI he launched witt a festivejm- According te a statement And the President delivered a fighters from Okinawa, contalnlng nmim of to killer,. ^h Ntk Mott, gt^^Akeitty. mmp«. JgZZ?* A w Th* three bodies were found - k*’ Sh*B* Bre"•C national with a ner- two days ago in an earthen wa- Once .again it’s the time of uSZJnarbeM^S tte vou*trlgger tershed embankment bi a re- par when hundreds of visitors gwlmmln_ area >fter malttwf Addressing thousands af mote area near Philadelphia, will pass through tte metal two or three passes Jostout-Mi»s. quonsets and bums at the 4-H ^ marker buoys POSITIVE IDENTIFICATION fairpounds, on Perry Just aoutt a disrt time earlier. Andrew Goodman, 30, and Ml- , ■ * - • . . Miss Brennen, 125 Chewton, chad SchwenMr, 24, both white ’Iko flve-day eveat wjll be- Btoomfield Township, said the New YorkerS, were positively 1re^y’ T*” boat’s spotlight was flashed on ideatifled, tte FBI said. entrants ia the home (rtsm- bathers each time and directly jsrrrr: wswa zaassot » tlvely identified as James ors, vegetables aad other pro- A a w ^STanh^ d,ICt‘- TV conditions police have un- by aggression, and no immunity jjjg ■<*° . ", kurrarr*^! ■ These, as well as exhibits in- covered were reported to town- from reply. That is what is 6rd*^ „ . eluding photography, rabbits ship trustees last night by tte meant by tte action yesterday.” TWO engtt rauaaeipma and poultry will be showcased man who has been heading the Two top Senate committees Tlx rmtaa ea Jane zi. - and judged Tuesday afternoon, investigation, Lt. Donald Kratt, overwhelmingly approved today rons The University of Mississippi * * * (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) (Cm Medical Canter here —- where Featured in the evening will Morozov said tte United Stetes'ncould “do without the assistance of these flunkies,” but he agreed to pull hack his resolution and let Nielsen draw one up. Says SE Asia Election Issue pro-Western South' both send spokesmen/ it .. will probably predacc^a heated debate on the reles the United States, North Viet Nam and Red China play in South Viet Nam’s war. The debate opened yesterday at the request of the United States, which asked for an urgent council meeting to consider Scattered thundershowers are “tte serious situation created expected to arrive late tonight by deliberate attacks of the Ha- and Friday with temperatures noi (North Viet Nam) regime on «little warmer, tte low 62 to 66. United States naval vessels in Tomorrow’s high will climb to international waters.” the mid 86s. Thundershowers Due Tonight, Friday Broomfield: Crisis to Be . Campaign Factor There was no public announcement of tte arrival of tte B57s but they were seen by a correspondent on a runway Rep. William S. Broomfield (R-Mtch.) agreed with otter key Republicans in Washington to- _ ,___day that President Johnson’s The Fitts were saM to have ..fight. |£. we.must” policy ^ ^Vse oa dampened but not smoth-the South China Sea 261 miles ered ^ Vietnamese crisis as a ,______|_____________ northeast of Saigon. 1964 campaign issue. case University campus, John- a U.S. Embassy spokesman * ,* * son declared yesterday: “To discounted two Saigon rumors, j^. Broomfield said he aay who may be tempted to which also lacked confirmation backed Johnson’s action, but “it support - or to widen - the elsewhere. does not take tte Viet Nam is- present aggression, I say this. * * * „ _ sue out of tte presidential elec- Tbene is no threat to any One was a story that Ho Chi ^n camDaian » peaceful power from the Minh, president of North Viet .., ' United States of America. , Nam, had been replaced by a „ Vle* ** _______.. „ IkL oro-Pekine subordinate in the «*»sefi," V rtid.‘‘Wehave right along The question of Vietnamese Pleasant is the outlook for Sat-partidpation in tte debate was urday with skies clear and tern-brought up by Soviet Delegate peralures cooler. Platon D. Morozov, who intro- * * * duced a resolution to have the Fifty-four was the low record-council seek information from ing in dovpitown Pontiac preced-North Viet Nam relating to the ing 8 a.m. The .mercury hod U.S. complaint and to invite soared tp 82 by 1 p.m. Rep. Broomfield has been one of the backers' of an amendment to the foreign aid bill which would allow more money for defense of Viet Nam. Minority party members in. Congress made it clear they had “no choice” but to unite behind the President In replying to Communist aggression with retaliatory attacks on North Vietnamese coastal installations. STRONG QUALIFICATION But there was a strong "at this time” qualification in their comments on whether the war in Viet Nam was entering a political sidetrack. Farmer Vice President Rickard M. Nixon, in town for discussions with presidential nominee Barry GoHwatw and other Republican leaders, told All beef judging will be held Wednesday, beginning at 9 a.m. Visitors will be able to view clothing, swine and vegetable judging as the day progresses. : f .. , Dons Mackie pushes FDR Jr. for VP - PAGE B-12. f Satellite First state weather cap-soda launched — PAGE 04. Ar«| News .......A-4 Astrology .. ....D41 Bridge .........D-ll Comics ..i*.....JMi; Editorials ...... A.A4 Peed, Section B-2-B-4 Markets ........D-16 QRHrtfiMl Short Story ....A-I2 Sports .......D-2—D-7 Tfcsalrr ......'...M2 Kadis Programs D-ll "It’s too early to take Viet Nam out of tte campaign. I hope the President’s action presages more decisive moves, but what has Happened is only part of the problem. The major problem is guerrilla war — on that we need a plan.’’ English halter and flower identification competition are also scheduled for Wednesday. EVENING PROGRAM In the evening, a demonstration of tractor operation will be featured, along with beef show- While Rep; William E. Miller. R-N.Y., the GOP vice presidential nominee, agreed that the Preaident’s stent action had removed Southeast Asia as an issue “as of now,” he suggested tte situation might he different by October or November. Thursday s e ■ e of the 4-iTkrs staying ia the receat-ly-expanded main dormitory will finish grooming their Mtotp far the memiag judging. Demonstrations of western (Ceotinued on Page 2, Col. 6) DUTY TAKES HIM - A sailor hugs his girlfriend before boarding a guided missile -frigate at San Diego, Calif. Ibe^craft along with 11 other ships, is part of a,cruiser-destroyer flotilla that left yesterday to join 9l;M' 7th Jleet on alert off North Viet Nam. (See Story, Page A-1S). Patricia Agorgianitis as Bruce Montney zeros in with his camera, mid Tim Duvall and Ben Holland inspect their tomato crop, hfrp. Jamas Duvall mid B. C. Cromeenes are the ckib’s leaders. READY FOR FAIR — These youngsters from the Drayton Plains 4-H Chib display their special activities in anticipation of next week’s 4-H Rah1. Discussing their sewing project (from toft) are Mane Scott and THE PONtlAC PRESS, Ttfl Comedian Indicted for Income Tax Evasion -LOS ANGELES l*- Comedian Ben Blue hasbeen . Indicted by a federal gniind jury in Los Angeles on six counts of Income Daughter Scores4as Actress Killed by Pickup Truck MUSKEGON (AP) - A 75-year-old Muskegon woman was struck and killed by a pickup truck Wednesday while walking on a bridge over the Muskegon River hi North Muskegon. She was Mrs. Frances Bouwsma. Terrified' Mother Can Relax Both In Technicoloi ; “I was terri- fled,” says,,Mrs. Lucille mother of ac-^Bwtress Elizabeth Ashley. “I told ^■everybody at the office where ■UPHHMPI worlc in Baton THOMAS Rouge that she was still studying at Louisiana State University. I was so upset that I couldn’t bear to tklk about it without breaking out in Friday Special SUNDAY Fish Fry CHICKEN rs85‘ "wer She can talk about it. now. And she did, while visiting daughter Liz on the set of “Ship of Fools.” Miss Ashley is the electric brunette who scored on Broadway as Art Carney’s daughter in "Take Her; She’s Mine,” then established her stardom with “Barefoot in the Park.” In between she played George Peppard’s sometime wife in “The Carpetbaggers,” and was termed b yseveral critics as the only worthwhile ele-. ment of the movie. EXPLAINS FLIGHT Liz explained her flight from Louisiana: “I felt it was something I had to do. .1 envisioned myself as a character out of a Hemingway novel — Lady Brett Ashley, per- Friday and Saturday 3:30 PM. la 7:30 P.M. SMILES NOW—Mrs. Lucille Cole (left), who was upset when her daughter, Elizabeth Ashley,, left home for an acting career in the big city, is all smiles as she visits her daughter on the set of "Ship of Fools" in Hollywood. Liz rose to Broadway eminence, then received the inevitable call to Hollywood, where she starred m “The. Carpetbaggers..” . vary. I wanted to be a wild" She dodged oniy two questionsl Wy' If you want to, make ty ■ Friday the big. Day of the, week then come to the Waldron for that really something extra! f] FRIDAY EVENING BUFFET i] sons non foui-thutt on 'I }ur famous 8sc Round of Beof, ml tasty Friad Chicken, Breaded Frlid Shrimp and golden Fried t M Perch.'Plus fourteen varieties of hotne-made ‘n\ salads and an unusually fine iced relish jra . tray. jfl aii you ornjit $178 tempestuous, -larger- than-life character, ' and New “York seemed like the only place for with “no comment” — Concerning her romance with George Peppard and her opinion of “The Carpetbaggers.” About all she would allow is that the public likes the movie and she likes George. 2 ELVIS PRESLEY HITS! After her plane fare., she had $143 in savings from modeling. She didn’t know a soul in New York. All she did was write ahead for reservations at the YWCA. “It was nice there,’’ she recalled. His Latest Film and By Popular DEMAND WE CO-FEATURE HIS CREATES JFK Dallas Drive Nets $200,000 Plus toward Hie purchm of any Liz got work right, away as a model, then gave some thought to acting. She was accepted for study at foe Neighborhood Playhouse and then faced her greatest challenge. Losing her Dixie drawl. DALLAS, Tex. (AP) — More than $200,000 has been contributed to the John F. Kennedy Citizens Memorial Drive in Dal- "I couldn’t get Jobs until I did,” she explained. “I took some coaching and worked hard with a tape recorder,' and I managed to get rid of most of my accent.” BROADWAY EMINENCE The Jobs began to come, and she rose to Broadway eminence, receiving the inevitable call to Hollywood. She came on her own terms. “Of course the studios wanted to sign me to contracts but I wouldn’t think of it,” she said. “Imagine having someone else deckle what roles you are going to play! I wouldn’t think of it. Why, it’a a denial of my rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”: Back by Popular Demand'" FrL and SaL Evenings JIMMY ROLLINS auMua Metsm' Funds will bb divided between a Dallas memorial plaza two blocks from the site where Kennedy was assassinated last Nov. 22 and the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston. -PLUS-Audia Murphy "THE QUICK GUN" Acron from St. Joo'i Hospital Casta System Leads India Lovers to Suicide ALLAHABAD, India (AP) -Two young lovers, foe boy a member of India’s ranking Brahman caste and the girl an I “untouchable,” committed suicide today because their parents1 refused to let them marry. ■MbrHlM uni nun UU ONV HI OU . ON :A1MHUM on iBoiunoMai jirgigna | Cocktails 44 Daily at Special Prices! Catering to Wedding Parties, Receptions, Banquets Businessmen's Lunches Organ Mnsic by Dick Belmont Fri„ Sat. 8:30 P.M, Till Serving the Finest Food and Liquors IS N. CASS PH: FE 4-4732 ENTER PARKING EOT FROM HURON or CASS ONE OF THE WILDEST AND FUNNIEST GIRL-HUNTS i IN MANY AYEARI” i Police sakl the couple hanged themselves and left a letter explaining their parents denied them permission to wed. Eighty-five per cent of foe public libraries in foe nation were built before 1920, foe American Library Association reports. OPOYKI ’I amThomasina-a most unuaual cat... they say I'm enchantedt and I AMI” , Walt Disney*-*. n W THE THREE UVCS Of_ Tttomasma ■' wMcGOOHAlTsuswi HAMPSHIRE HELD OWlt*8/6 k&K ROMANTIC STRANGERS i share a * I fantastic \ ad rents re! mM Twlinii’olor* ilAUGHSUWBMSttiX swam* SwMWj. no exit' "COME AT EITHER 7:15 OR 8:50 ANq Ul aOTH MATURIS" COLQR BV OE LUXe cinemascope PPfflMDPI [deadliest.duel. imiSi .. pier Laurie QLEASOM'JC^i \rJS2 KEECO Marlon, David Brando Niven Shirley Jones EAGLE THEATER Starts FRIDAY! ) Beathard to Start at QB for All-Stars THE PQVTIAC l‘RF.8S. THURSDAY, ACGL’ST d/lOif POSSIBLE SUCCESSOR - Ford Frick (left), has announced he will not seek another term as commissioned of baseball and Joe Cronin,^American League president has been named as possible successor. Also being mentioned are Judge Robert Cannon of Milwaukee and'Republican Sen. Kenneth B. Keating of New York. Tigers Thwart Chicago Bid Homer Wins in 13th Inning McAvliffe Frustrates Chance for 1st Place r CHICAGO (UP1) - The Chi-igo White Sox must feel to* pay a little like that Jason fellow did when he let the Golden I slip through his fingers k few times. I The Pale Hose failed to tpke tdvantage of_____ ty to assume possession of ; plane in to American gue lor the MTOnd time in trow last night. I Thanks to the Detroit Tigers I the smoking bat of Dipk (dcAuliffe. McAulilfe, one ef Detroit's leading hitters hi the extra Frick to tFrom&aSel •bases Imartiasat, hamm j his Ml heme ran of the sen with a man an Is break Mp 1-1, lMaaiag tie apd send I the Aprs te a 1-1 victory. | Chicago has been one-half b h*bb»d New York and Bai* j for the past two nights I two victories over the aev-h-place Detroit chib would nr* provided them with a nice b u s h 1 o n - all alone in first, tut, they lost both night games, 1 today finds them still one-f game in hade of the Yhnk-sand the Orioles. 11 The game was deadlocked at flie end of nine innings, with both sides having one run. Detroit and Chicago settled down to a pitchers duel for the next three innings until the 13th. ; Don Wert opened the inning brith a single to left of Juan Pixarro, who went the distance and absorbed his sixth loss. INTO FIFTH ROW • McAullffe worked the count to 1 and 3 before he drove the ball into the fifth row of the lower deck in right field. It was flie fourth game in the last five' between the two teams in which Tiger home runs have produced bte-inning wins over the White allowed only seven la the 13 lining* and would have woe in the regulation Mae except for aa aa-1 earned ria by to Tigers la . the sixth when Jerry Lumpe ! reeded bees ea aa error by I Pete Ward, advanced on a ! ’waft aad seared on Al Ka-Jine’s single. j Tlie White Sox collected nine Bits off three Tiger pitchers and *n victory went to Juan Navar-io, who worked to last three Mines, yielding three hits. Was bis first win of the season [The Tigers meal Chicago Btonight before returning eft for a weekend aeries i Kansas atpA’a. B> "lfiferwr tut 4#ao lct SOtS Sutord 3b 3010 IliJ! imSa 9 if!; NEW YORK (AP) - Ford Frick, under whose guidance the major league baseball map underwent vast changes and expanded from coast to coast, has announced his retirement as baseball commissioner when his present term expires next year. \ ★- * * Frick’s statement, although not unexpected, came without any advance' notice Wednesday when the 69-year-old former newspaperman who rose to the HOCKEY FIGURE DIES -Art' Ross, 78, the first coach and later general manager of the Boston Bruins hockey team, died in Medford, Mass., yesterday. Smoke Clears at Gun Club RENO, Nev. (AP)-Alex Kerr of Beverly Hills, Calif, named ' world champion and Steve Hansel of San Antonio, Tex. junior champion in 36-gauge competition tonight of the 1964 World Champion Skeet Shooting Tournament. . Kerr emerged victorious when the smoke cleared after a 15-gunner sudden-death shoo toff as the tourney ended its fifth day in Harold’s Gun Club. The shootoff was forced when 15 contestants shot perfect 100x160 scores. * * * The winner fromrTexar fired a near-perfect 99x100 to win the junior divisioft title. Runnerup to Kerr was William Rogers of Atherton, Calif., while William Sesnon of Los Angeles took the Class AA title. An Illinois entry copped the five-man team title over rivals from Massachusetts and the UJS. Army in the day's final shootoff. The three teams posted* total scores of 493x500 to go into the shootoff. mmmR. wumtcAbim. the first leg of the Western ffK'V a' n aa so OP**1’ ■ U^au«« wort employ- .....iH * i i 4 4 faig )60 birds through Saturday, ...... fN o 0 l i j grts under way tomorrow with 7 1 i 1 * Whrtits. No. i position in baseball told The Associated Press: * * * “It’s just what J have said all along. Now I’ve just made it official." . -Frick has been commissioner since Sept. 30, 1661 and has a contract through Sept. 31, 1966. He, however, said he was ready to stop aside aa soon aa the club owners elect his successor and had so notified the 20 dub* owners by letter Tuesday night. *TQ stay an as long as they want me to — that is, until the end of my term," he said. “If they want me to stay around and work with the new commissioner for awhile, I’ll be happy to do that too.” SPECULATION STARTS Speculation as to his successor tnmediately centered around Joe Cronin, president of the American League; Senator Kenneth B. Keating of New York, and Judge Robert Cannon of Milwaukee, who has been counselor to the Major League Player Association for the past five years. Cronin praised Frick by saying “the commissioner has had the best interests of baseball at heart all his career." As for Cronin, who rose from the ranks of player to manager to club official to league president, was elected president of the American League Jan. 31, 1959. The Hall of Famcr is in the second half of a seven-year term.. * * * In Washington, Sen. Keating said, “I have heard nothing about tha baseball commission-erohip from anyone except newspaper reporters.” He declined further comment. Judge Cannon was not immediately reached for comment. Under -Frick’s 13-year tenure as commissioner the baseball map, which was cut off at the Mississippi River, stretched to the West Coast with the Boston Braves moving to Milwaukee, the St. Louis Browns to Baltimore, the Philadelphia Athletics to Kansas City, the Brooklyn Dodgers to Los Angeles, the New York Giants to San Fran-ciscoand the Washington Senators tQ Minnesota. * * * League presidents Cronin and Warren Giles of the National League said they would ask that an Executive Council meeting be called in Chicago on Monday, to present recommendations to joint meeting of the majors league to consider procedure to be followed in selecting Frick’s successor. Pros After Records at Tam CHICAGO W)-Tam O’Shan-nr’s 36-35—71 par was ready to go info mourning Thursday with golf’s greatest shooters charging itinthe first round of the 61st Western Open. A field of 153 teed off on the 6,686-yard layout, scene of some of the game’s most fantastic’ tournaments during the late George S. May’s promotions, which ended in 1057. EXPERT RECORD SCORE Some of the top players, shooting for winning money of about $11,000, foresaw such par-powdering that the 72-hole Tam record of 266, apt by Byron Nelson in 1945 and the course mark of 53, shared by Lloyd Mangrum and Gene Llttlec, might be broken. ‘Given good weather, I wouldn’t put anything past these fellows and I think chances would be good for a crack at 259,” said eighth leading monpy winner Mike Souchak, who fired, a <8 in Wednesday’s pro-am. Defending champion anij, master titlist Arnold Palmer doubted that a 63 would be But I think there is an excellent chance of taking aim on the 266 record,” he said. “I’m playing the course this week for the first time since the last World championship in 1957. And it is isier now.” - Lew Worsham, whose eagle deuce wedge shot in 1953 on the Floyd Cancels Bouts FALUN, Sweden (UPI)-For-mer heavyweight champion Floyd Patterson has 'cancelled two exhibition boxing matches on the advice of doctors. Patterson was to have performed -in the tourist villages of Mora and Naas but withdrew because of the recurrence of an old back injury. 72nd bole won the World witti 276, said that 371 “il a good winning target—the greens are bouncy in some cases."! ' • ' “Under ideal conditions,” added British Open champion Tony Lema, who is seeking his fifth tourney victory of the year, “possibly both the 63 and 269 can .be cracked. I think the course is a good test of golf.” National Open winner Ken Venturi was highly analytical. “I think the records of 63 and 260 are safe. Because of the heat and moisture, there is spft grass on top of hard ground. Yotf can’t get the proper spin on you* shots and* a lot of times they fly on you. t 1t h ■ . In Wednesday’s pro-am, Souchak eagle-deuced to 434-yard 13th. His long drive left, him needing to play a low second shot under tree limbs to the green 100 yards awqy. He punched a 6-iron. The ball rolled into to ,cup. Jack Rule, a comer from Cedar Rapids, Iowa, .also had a 68 with an eagle 3 on ihe 464-yard second hole. He planted a 2-iron two feet from the pin. TO FACE PROS - Quarterback Pete Beathard of the University of Southern California will get a chance tomorrow night to lead the College All-Stars against the Chicago Bears. ALL-STAR STRATEGISTS - Coach Otto Graham (left) talks things over with cocaptains of the College All-Star team' at SokUer’s Field, Chicago, yesterday. Quarter- AP Phatsfax back George Mira (center) and guard Mike Reilly will lead their tqammates as they tpke on the Chicago-Bpars tomorrow night. Top Woman Bowler* COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Mrs. Jeanette Bopp of Milwaukee averaged 906 in league play during the 1963-64 season and Mrs. Rita Modzelewski of Wyandotte averaged 306 to erase the old record of 306, to Women’* International Bowling Skins QB Out Against Lions Bears to Take Aerial Route Cards' Coach Doubts Stars' Strength CHICAGO CFV—If the Chicago Bears live up to the role of solid favorites over to College All-Stars in Friday night’s game at Soldier Field they probably will do it in the air. ★ * * , Although the Bears won the National Football League title ' last year by ball control football, Bill Wade will be tempted to limber up his arm with a few bombs against the college boys. “The All-Stars may have trouble with tileir pass defease,” said WaUy Lemm Wednesday at to camp of Ms St. Louis Cardinals at Lake Forest, 111. Lemm should know for, his Cards scrimmaged to All-Stars last week. The Cardinal coach also thinks the collegians may not be able to mount a strong, pass rush oh the Bears’ quarter-1 back. ★ it it GREEN BAY, Wis. UR-The Green Bay Packers worked against St. Louis defenses and then wound up with their first1 two-minute” drill ef to season Wednesday in preparation tori Saturday night’s exhibition with the Cardinabki New Orleans, . it Or . Or \ In the two-minute drill, to Packers attempt to move to length of the field tor either a touchdown or a field goal. U took them only seven plays » to move to the opponent’s five, from where Paul Horhung booted a 13-yard field goal. The drive was sparked by Bart Starr passes to Horning, Max McGee-, Ron Kramer and I Jfan Taylor. PACKER LECTURE — Vince Lombardi, coach ef the NFL Green Bay Packers gets plenty of action into his lecture in preparation for tomorrow’s game with to College All-Stars. Ljstenhig are (from left) Gary Kroner,’ Boyd Dowier and Ron Kramer. Golf Entry for U. S. Artiie, NicklauPicked NEW YORK (UPI)—Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer, who scored a brilliant personal and team triumph in last year’s I competition, were named today to represent the United States in the 12th annual International golf championship and Canada Cup matches at Maui, Hawaii, Dec. -3-6. • x ' The tournament brings together two-man teams from 34 nations, who compete for a team title as well as individual laurels. Nfckiaus won to iadiyidual competition last year at Paris With a score of 337 for the 63 holes to which to tournament was limited by tog, Palmer was fifth in the individual standings with 345 qnd together he and Nicklaus won toTfeSn crown with a 412 total against 4K for Spain. |L Jurgensen Hurt in Scrimmage First Exhibition Game Saturday Night By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press The Detroit Lions wanted to give their "remodeled” defensive unit a good test in the opening exhibition game against the Washington Redskins Saturday night at Charlotte, N.C., but the quarterback who was prepared to dp that,~Sonny Jurgensen, frill not be in the lineup. Jurgensen, whom the Redskins obtained from the Philadelphia Eagles in exchange for Norm Snead, injured his left knee in scrimmage yesterday and a medical report disclosed that the former Duke star will be sidelined for | at least three-weeks. The team physician said Jurgensen suffered a partial tear of medial ligaments. Another injury Redskins’ coach Bill MePeak Is upset about is th eshoulder separation of defensive halfback Dale Hackbut. The quarterbacking duties will thus go to veteran George Iro and rookie Dick Shiner. Jurgensen’s last meeting against the Lions was in the Miami NFL playoff bowl in 1662 and in kthis game he suffered a broken shoulder. The Lions will take a 47-player squad to Charlotte and three new faces among the veterans and seven rookies will see most of to playing time. Game time Saturday night is 8 p.m. and it wiU be broadcast by radio and also videotaped for replay on Sunday at 1*90 p.m. The. Lions will leave Friday afternoon. DrafrChoice Who Shunned Lions Named Graham U>t* Starters for Clash With Bears. Friday Night CHICAGO (UPI) ~ Coach Otto Graham said today fete Beathard of Southern California wojfld start at quarterback Wednesday night whim'his College All-Stars clash with to Chicago Bears at Soldier Field. Beathard got the nod over two other All-Stars who performed smoothly in training camp ~ George Mira of Miami and Jack Concannon of Boston College. Beathard is to No. 1 draft choice of the Detroit Lions who spurned the Motor City offer to sign with the Kansas City Chiefs of theAFL. Mira, who is rounding into shape after an army injury, and Concannon are expected to see their share of action, however, since Graham has been a great believer in trying ail his passers until he finds the right one for the right night. Graham broke with tradition is releasing his starting Hue- . ups. an uuanuacemeut he hu- bRuaiiy - wfflsaaf^“isar-w-" day ef to game. This time, however, a rash of injuries has trimmed his roster, knocking many of his athletes out of contention for starting assignments. ■ Tony Lorick of Arison* State and Willis Crenshaw of Kansas State are Graham’s selections to start the game as Ms ranking backs. If Lorick is unable to make it because of a knee injury which has hampered him in training, the All-Stars can call on a few other fleet sprinters such os Matt Snell of Ohio State, Charlie Taylor of Arizona State, and Bobby Smith of North Texas State. STARTING ENDS , Graham listed his starting pass catchers as Paul Warfield >.of Ohio State at flanker, Chuck Logan of Northwestern at the split end, and Ted Davis of Georgia Tech at the tight end. The interior of the storting offensive line consists of tackles Lloyd Voss of Nebraska and Emie Borghetti of Pittsburgh, guards Hatch Rosdahl of'Penn State and Dick Evey of Tennessee, and center Ray Kubala of Texas A&M. Tentative starters--listed by Graham for defense are: George Beals of Missouri and Ed Lotha-mer of Michigan State it rods; Tom Keating of Michigan and George Bednar of Notre Dame at tackles; WaDy Hilgenberg of Iowa and Dave Wilcox of Oregon at linebackers; and George Ross of Auburn, Perry Dunn of Mississippi, Mel Renfro of Oregon, and Jerry Richardson of West Texas State at Defensive backs. -TODAY’S Washington at Ua Abasias. night “-3— m 'Meat* i at Detroit, night • Clovoland, 1 twi-nlght St. Lawk ........ *4 tl M I Mo Angalts .... 0 « .IK Hi Chicago ....... m u Jm if 4» to alK , 1 i Philadelphia 4-t Manilla W pantOTh 4, los muMh i tan Prandsca 4 Naw York 1 Mitwaukae 4 Cincinnati I ' St. Lawk 4 Chkatjo , ChicegoJEMiwortti 12-13) st St. Lauls Milwauka* (PMctlA* 94) at OndnSWr (Jar 40). night . . .jston (ParrolT 107) at Philadelphia (Short tag), night Laa Angelas (L. Miller l-i) at Pittsburgh (Friend 4-11). ntft x at PhlUdatphla. Houston at San mnstokjaxlMllMM. night Los Angolan at Mllweukte. tig* THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1964 Finger’s Now Carry -I * / ■ VEMCO V DRAFTING instruments PONTIAC mall shopfins center Coach D|ek Sisler of the Cln-cinnati Rada decided the 1990 National League pennant when he hit • home run against the Brooklyn Dodgers in the final game. He was a Phillie outfielder bat season. "Bud" NICHOLIE calling all 1BOAT OWNERS | NOW you can unjoy Ifull boat coverages for a* $000 PER , little as £ HUNDRED^ ... through our excluilve NEW plan with the 3rd largest marine writers In H United States. The season is just beginning * start out right by completely protecting > ' “Bud” NICHOUE INSURANCE For COMPLETE Carefree Protection SK ^ ^ 49Mt.Clement _ FEMM^ SENSATIONAL SUMMER SALE Here's yeer chance te save ea a brand-new, 1964 Chris-Craftl Special savings ere efiered en every medel shown below. Many greet vilees offered on ether Chris-Craft models. Come la now to discess easy hvdget terms. SAVE - 29' SEA SKIFF SPORTSMAN. This is an extra large boat. Single 185 H.P; or 210 H.P. or Twin 185's. THESE DEALERS ALSO HAVE A LARGE SELECTION OF USED ONE-OWNER BOATS FROM 17-50 FT. BANK TERMS AVAILABLE Colony Chris-Craft Sales, Inc. 6509 M-29 Hwy. SW 4-4933 Algonoc, Mich. Gregory Boat Co. 9666 E. Jefferson 823-1900 Detroit Jefferson Beach Marian 24400 I. Jefferson PR 8-7600 St. Clair Shore. Major League Boxes met .run —i m 3 • e * ceyrrhu s e uni m - # e e • comer * * t • -r lord »on » j e t e gram m tees Oanmlra lb tSkwim 3b 3 is* “-^Trt 3S1* CetevOo r« 434 O'er 4seeSSm tb ns __ cT f t i S Cdwards c Sit frattl tt 40SSAIU*lk H IIS. Peptone lb 41ft TWtVI ph-lf 1111 Howard c 4 f f f MoOmm «» 4 | • oarer 3b 4 0 10 Sew p 4 Downing p 2001 Moor* pH 14 0 0 BSSri ph ioioi ___k. Line. OP—New Yc I. LOBNew TOrk 0, Kanin City I m eefciWi i nimord- •- u| dee (S), CotovOe JUI, _Wfr-&niir PB—Brumley. T-3iJS. A 2T.LOUIS t /ill Javier 2b *3 4 I 11 Brock H 5 . - . 4 0 0 0 Whit* tb 4 113 4 0 2 1 Boyer 3b 4 0 2 0 ionko II ctem c 3 0 10 McCarver c 3 01 . Olio* Buchek M 4 0 0 0 3 0 0S Kkb'doon p I i i 0 list H'mebor* p t * Clemens ph 1 0 0 6 ftt* E—Boyer. OP—Chlcapo 1, St. Louts LOi-0 Pr u—| - ' Dryadala p 1 Parran'skl p I Pagliaronl . . . . Schofield -3 0 0 0 Alley pr * * f Gibbon p McBaan p l o o o . 000 too 012-4 2B—Lynch t 4 Starpell * Ml Ollf 52-3 7 3 f 1 2 11-3 I t 0 t I 1 1 « 0 I I | man In Ithj Perran-_ - .... In Oth. WP— Perranoskl. T—2:42. A—lljn. PtoR McBean, W tblQdBli &SJL Stuart 1b Thamaa r . MINNISOTA *4M Vtrselles ss* 2 0 0 0 Pont ph TUI off i 1 OSS 4 00 0 itsi .. Oil OH Ml—3 neon. DP—Cincf- UtSirS. Harper. HR NR SO SAN PRANCKcT' NOW YORK abrhbl Hart )b 4 111 Klaus lb DNonport 3b 0 o 0 0 Hunt 3b Intdor rt f S 0 I Kran'poel lb M. Alou rt-lf 1410 ChrTphar H Man ct 4 1.11 IHIst cl McCovey It 4 111 Can'zero c ‘ “iu rf 0 0 0 0 Altman N la tb 4 I f f McMillan s* ft 4 PI 1 Thomas ph 4 0 1 I H E-Cepeda. DP—San Francisco 1. -fan Francisco A Haw York 1. je Hpltor 2. 3B—Klaus. K* N Hardy ct Lillis at My pmKamlpnia 4000 frlsndot ph i 00 I I Calllson rl * v I 0 Allan 3b 4 0 0 0 CovtMon If JSSSSpwt E—Covington* LOB—Houtton f jursts- Roebuck, W, 3-1 . Ka&r. BALTIMORE abrhbl ISIS Parry ct „ _ 4 0 Vi Oraan if p lb 4 sio mmol si i jf 3 010 Smith rf VilJb 4 4 I 5 Adcock It ■vwaris ft 4 0 11 Rodgers c Lmi c 3 0 0 0 Torres lb Adair lb ft f f Clinton Od livaront pr 0 0 0 0 Satrmno 1 Bunker p 3 0 0 t Ktooe » Johnson ph I f 0 0 ChancO p R.Lee p. Totals 14 000 Totals Baittmaro ...........Off V' ; m I 2. LOB—Baltimore V Hi iff ill. if What is the Best thing to do when you are greatly overstocked? SELL! GUT PRICES! MAKE BEALS! WE WILL NOT REFUSE ANY DEAL, WE ARE OUT TO SELL 258 NEW FORDS, FAIRLANES, FALCONS, THUNDERBIRDS, AND MUSTANGS! BRING YOUR 0LI CM II NOW . IT WIU. NEVER BE WORTH MORE! Our salesmen have been told to write every deal and this it your BIG CHANCE to save! And what a tremendous telettion you get! Thee# ears have a History ef selling faef . . . so if vpu want to be choosy, better )H(stte to McAU^IFFE FORD! 630 OAKLAND AVL FE 5-4101 Heavy Foot Brings Pay at $t. Pete SEATTLE (AP)-Bob Sehroe-der of Detroit kept a heavy foot on the throttle Tlniraday w average 11X735 miles phr hour in the St. Petersburg, Fie., speed1 boat Miss Budweiser end be first at the pay window in the 816,000 Seafair Trophy Race time trials. it u u Fifteen unlimited hydroplanes, including Gold Cup winner Miss Bardahl, are here for the Sunday race on Lake Washington It will be a 45-mile dash of three 15-mile heats. Most of the boats have passed the once-yearly test that qualifies them for all races and time trials here are run merely far added prize money. Schroeder picked up $150 as first to run a three-lap trial. Young .Billy Schumacher of Seattle earned $100 When he followed the Budweiser with a three-lap run at 104.583 in $ Bill, which is based at Lompoc, Calif. Bemie Little of St. Petersburg, who owns the'Budweiser, announced he had purchased the Seattle boat Tempest, renamed it Miss Michelob and entered it in the Seafair race. Yachters Led by Californian 4th, 5th Races Held in Olympic-Trials CHICAGO If! — Gary Comer of Chicago and Joe Duplin of Boston won Wednesday’s fourth and fifth races in the weeklong series to determine America’ Star ClSas yachting entry in the Tokyo Olympic Games in October. However, leader on points for all five races in the Lake Michigan competition was San Diego’s- Pete Bennett, with 5,038. Bennett placed second in both races Wednesday. A fresh northeast wind and rough waters prevailed over toe 12-mile Olympic course. . Comer, sailing his Turmoil, won toe fourth race Wednesday morning, in 2 hours, 19 minute* and 2$ seconds. Second was Bennett in 2:19:28 and Malin Burnham of San Diego was third in 2:19:16. The fifth race Wednesday afternoon was captured by Duplin’s Star of the Sea in 2:97:54< Bennett’s time in this race wad 2:09:00, while Chicagoan DkHt Stearns was third in 2:10:04. _. The five-race point standings: Bennett, 5,038; Bill Buchan, San Francisco, 4,701; Comer, 4,786; Steames 4,614; Burnham, 4,465; Robert Lipphcott, Riverton, N. J., 4X27; Jim Ding Schoon-maker, Miami, Fla., 3,965; Du^ 3,013; Don Sever, Vermillion Ohio, 3X12; and Torn Black-aUer, San Fraaciico, 3,424. ritnoor Camper Sales ter *nq»r* m4 "Cerere* Wants* TRUCK CAMPERS FORD CAMPERS SM’MSIcim Or. - FE 24M Off AMt.JE. si BMfSbsNi Lab* Rtf. RIGHT AND WRONG -- In water skOngptond your knees and keep your head up as the skier is doing in large photo. The wrong way is demonstrated by Skier in insert. 2 TitleGames on 'U Schedule in Junior Play Two title scraps are on today’s fph«>riiile in the Junior Class D League. Arnold Drugs will take on St. Michael at 5:30 p.m. for the National League crowp, and "Auburn Heights Boys Club will meet Pontiac Boys Chib for toe American League tide at 7:30 pm, W Fraternal Order of Police wrapped up the Class E International League title yesterday with a 2-1 victory over toe Eagles. Jerry McKeever scattered five hits to take the decision. Northside Kl wails donned toe Class E American loop crown with a 124 victory over Foodtewn Hornets, League title wife a 12-4 triumph ova- Diny’s Satellites. Chuck Bogey paced the Merchants with three singles. In Class F playoffs, Pontiac Boys Chib trimmed the Hanks, 44, in the National title game, and LeBaron knocked off the Titans in eight innings, 54, in the American Widget division, w w _ w ■ Moose dumped the Yankees, 54, in toe ‘F’ American and the two meet today for toe title. The Colt 45*8 downed Met Club Panthers in ‘P International and toe two will decide the championship today. JUNIOR BASEBALL FLA TOFFS Cltul Pontiac FollCtf 2. -Easto. . . I League champ lonsh Ip game) NirtlwMe KIWMiii 11 Faaeitoi....----- (American League chanwionship game). is, SnyJ Satellites 45i I. Met Club Panthen S raSl day Wr c _ --------- Pontiac Boy»' Club 4. I____ League chagiilanNilp oama). .■Baton 5, Titans 4 (WWgat League championship game). UNITED TIRE SERVICE ANUFACTUE2E II NAM Of TM WIU NOT AUOW NS TO SI i22.95Si23.95B 25.95 s Batons IiiAI Rumw AC nc _ fast Fin MomniM nils /O.fly Mk'MMCLAMD! $8 THUS-ANY SIZII Wf WENS— SMI iwm m KES .•riZ’lI? nim a- SKYb 2SZ£*> HIM TOUR OIL ■RmkrMniENT snitt I « jaiidml am cMi! m Opaa Mon, tom Frt.»to «., 1st. I te I - Closed Sun. UNITED TIRE SERVICE “WHERE PRICES ARE DISCOUNTED—NOT OUAUTY” 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Chicago Sailor Leading Trials Star Class Skippers After Olympic Berth Scullers After Olympic Spot New Yorker Faces Singles Division AMSTERDAM. Holland ID -Don Spero, the Si-year-old Amerian sculler from the Haw York Athletic Club wen Me heat in the singles sculls in the European Rowing Championship* today and qualified for toe finals In the event. Sperd, the U. S. Olympic entry and U.S. national champion, was timed in 7:19.31. The former Cornell student defeated Germany’s Achim Hill, triw was second in 7:23.17. ♦ . ♦ 4 The German led early in the race, tool Spero stepped up stroke, took toe lead at the IX meters mark and stayed to front to win easily. Goft Kettmann of Switzerland won the first heat of the single sculls. The United States finished second to Its heat to the pairs without coxswain event. * * .* The American team of Thomas and Joseph Amiong ef the Vesper Boat Club of Philadelphia was timed in 4X7.79 and trailed the winning German en- try. clocked in 3:55-77. ' __ "%rX53^troto«rs recently won the National Championship to New York. Thomas Is a lieutenant in the Army and Joseph Is a lieutenant to the Air Force. WWW The German pair of Michael Schwan and Wolfgang Hotten-rott led from the start. The United States passed Holland at the 1X00 meters mark and finished Just ahead of the Dutch. CHICAGO (AP) - Dick Steames of Chicago held the lead to a total points Wednesday without finishing first in any of three of seven races in the final Olympic Trials for star class skippers. Steames finished third in one race and fifth in another Tue§-day to take oyer the lead to the standings with 3X05 points. James Schoonpiaker of Miami, Fla., winner of Monday’s'race, was second with 3,061. Marlin Burnham of San Diego and Tom Blackaller of San Francisco climbed in the s|and-togs by capturing Tuesday’ races. Burnham took over third place with 3,026 ^points Blackaller was sixth with X713. w w w Bill Buchan of San Francisco, placing second and ninth Tuesday, was foufth with 2,757, fol lowed by Bob Lipptocott of Riverton, N.J., with 2,728. Two races are scheduled Wednesday and the Trials will end after single races Thursday and Friday. Paul Bunyan Days Water Ski Program A water sld show to exjunction with Panl Banyan days will be held at Union Lake Sunday afternoon. The Casa Lake ski dob will highlight the program which inclndes kite flying by Podge Adler and barefoot skiing by Jerry Voerheee. A colorful costumed water sU shew will also be held, altog with ski FAMILY BOATING Haadquurters SAVINGS SB *• Complete Bostisg ,0rtffl* NEW USBD ^BIRMINGHAM \ mr awn 1265 5. Woodward Noeeh ofl4 MHa a» AdHNB JO S-4727 Ml 7-01II ALL FOOTBALL EQUIPMENT IN STOCK! _WELDEN_ SPORTING GOODS 698 W. Huron PK 4-621T Phone FE 4-1551 H. tf. Huttenloeher Agency, be. S0S RIKKR BULDING, PONTIAC, MICHIGAN BONDS —FIRE —AUTO —MARINE LIFE —HEALTH —COMMERCIAL ★ •' ★ wt du.JCumparu uaywhen hr &....QVAurr..„sAmr uhBf He IMT GNrariM- Your Best Tin Btty.J HO MONEY DOWN -AsUwAs*l*OAW-k- Wo euted. Deluxe 24* GRILLE Eftctrk .Spit Deluxe Hood X!l*2r* m m jw window of ior! Koat *tfrl Op,rotts «^o«otieo»y;' • “ -^ wawtat^by onyoMf 115 N. SAGINAW J & R AUTO STORES S37J40.20 Twin-Double Ducat Holder The Jkket is collectable, however, any time in (he nest year. The payoff was a Michigan record; The previous twin-double high Was $11, SOS JO which three fans won on opening day last Friday. The payoff is on the fifth, sixth, eighth and ninth races. ★ 15 Minute Service ensow - * pree installation MUFFLERS GUARANTEED* ,, rust, coho- sion, blowout, wear-out for as long as you own your car Written guarantee good in over 400 Midas Shops, coast-to-coast, U- S. and Canada. Budget Plan available. CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATES 435 SOUTH SAGINAW • FE 2-101 MUFFLERS • PIPES • SHOCKS • SEAT HITS Close behind the leaders were luee players grouped at 71, teid Goodliffe, Brigham City, Ftah, Gary Pratt, Austin, Minn., nd john Richart, Aim Arbor, THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. AUGUsj1 6, 1904 Eight More Qualify for Putt-Putt Berth Eight more newsboys qualified for the Pontiac Press Carriers’ Putt Pbtt tournament to begin next week at the course on Dixie Highway. AD carriers are eligible to enter the tournament and those scoring ISO or less in qualifying will enter the tournament proper on Monday. Th... ■ho tncludp Frank LeClair with 119; Leigh Dushane, 121; Randy Reight and Gerald Walton, Ml; Ron McPherson, 127; Dave Crawford, 129; Gene Bauer and Skip Up-cott, 130. Qualifying continues today and tomorrow at the Putt Putt — Past gridiron great Otto *p Graham imparted a little signal knowledge to August 7, They are (1-r): Jack Concannon of three of the quarterbacks who will play for the Boston College, Pete Beathard of USC and College All-Stars against the Chicago Bears George Mira of Miami. Pontiac Softball PONTIAC SOFTBALL STATISTICS Llllm HttNrs (Final AvtraaaO (M ar Mara AB» Atnaricaa Laafva AMI TBAM 0 AO H AVO. ■ ullar# UAW #SM ....... 14 M - — Lana. 300 Bawl ........14 41 itack, eiki alio ..... 13 33 wSwsSTwro ., ..........•’ 34 Travli. Arro.....,.... 13 9 Nichols. Kaavas IT M Tg ‘ 11,4, —,4 42 WMstlay. O 4 M...... 13 43 _ ■■ MMoan, G A M ........ 13 3S IT .543 VjsTI. Slata Hospital .... It 30 IS .473 Wraar, Bob-Larry .. It 34 14 BiiOTWr«r~ Raasa, Local #453 . 13 44 17 .jss B. Frasiar, Local #453 .. 14 34 13 .311 Mcllrath. Circla Inn .... II 17 14 BS A o’* A* H AVO. :*n i f Paul. Buckner ... (1. Jt 1 FltnaraM, Motorcar .... it s* ‘ Riabucka, LytalKola. .. 10 PM, Marchants. JfEfm OlaMOi ;s: Spencer Class B Champs Spencer Floor Covering came up with an unearned run in the seventh inning last night to down Howe’s Lanes, 2-1, and take the Class B softball championship in Waterford Township. ■ ■ ★ w. “* Louis Seay reached first safely in the seventh on a fielder’s choice and scooted around the bases with the winning run when the first baseman fielded a bunt $hdtoWdninfg?lplfer Jerry Thomas, winning his second game in two nights, held the losers to six hits. Harry Dearborn led the winners with a triple and single and he knocked In the first ran. In Class C, Don Weichert fired a two-hitter and struck ou in Dixie Bar’s 1-4 decision over Lakeland Pharmacy. Dixie picked up the lone run in the fifth on an infield hit by Ralph Radford, an error and Norm Tick’s single. Huron Bowl and Lakeland Pharmacy will tangle tonight at 7 with the winner meeting Haskins Chevrolet in the second game at8:30. , - winner vt * will meet Dixie Bar tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. for the Class C title. Coach A1 Widmar of the Philadelphia Phils began his pitching career with Canton, Ohio in the Mid-Atlantic League in 1042. AUTO STORES Conform 100% NYLON TIRES! GmmwIbmI Crat to CMt.«wilfr fit Butt Tin Guurmtn m America! -JUJLulv ---— TU IfalaAf Trio Shoots 70 in Jaycee Golf SOUTH ST. PAUL, Minn. (XI -Chuck Taylor, Chattanooga, Heard, Visalia, Calif. Johnson, Warsaw, Ind., were the early leaders id the 19th annual International Jaycee junior golf championship at Minndakota Country Club. Taylor shot 3448-70, Heard 3648—70 and Johnson 3743-70, under per over the 0,285-3745—72 course. tt R 1J Of Mich. Sixteen-year-old Taylor scored four birdies on the front side, making an 8-footer on the ninth. own your car FREE ESTIMATES • FE 2r1010 • SEAT HITS THIS IS I* 11,1 1964 MODEL CLOSE OUT SALE PONTIAC^.. WEST Let The Pontiac Retail Store Shew You Now To Save Money! IB Friendly Salesmen To Serve You Better! tti#!* it** Choose From A Good Invontory • Grand Prix • Bonneville • Star Chiaf • Catalina • Brougham • Tempest • Le Mans Be Sure To Visit Our NEW DISPLAY LOT at Mt. Clemens St. Corner of Wide Track Drive ^ THERE MUST BE A REASON: Other* Talk Deals, but The & Pontiac Retail Store Moke*Them! , Tke Pontiac Retuit Store 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7951 sffl lit i 1|*| Mi THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, W6f MARKETS The following vf lop prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and1 sold by them in wholesale package loto/ Quotations arp furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Produce Applet, Ducheit, b Oaj*l—» Tranaparer btviberrtw, pi , Peechet, Sun Haven, bu. », green, b» s, Ky. Wen Cabbage, curly, bu. . ............LOO Cabbage, red, bu. ..................US Cabbage, SM. .....................1.50 Carrots, doz. bdta. Carrots, C*N* PSK Carrots, bsM bt. Cauliflower, dz......................L» Celery, Pascal, dz. . *“ celery, Pascal, crt. Celery, wblta, dz. . Celery, while, crt. Cam, Sweat, bag ... Cucumber, dill It a Cucumbers, stjpi , Cucumbers. sUcsrs. bu. . Old ................. Eggplant, lb bu...... f«rwr *:b Okra, pk. bskt. .... Onions, dry, SO-lb. beg Onions, green, dz, bens. . Parsley Root ........ Peas, B lackey e, bu.... Peppers, Cbjianiw, pk. bekt. . .1.00 iaeatbiOi fbs .......................... Escarole, bleached, bu. ..............3.25 Lettuce, gib^pk. , “ Lettuce, Boston . Lettuce, HaaL bu. Poultry and Eggs lULTRY ee paid par pp lallty, live poui »j light type li 4 lbs whlltt 17VMD; 7-t; heavy type roasters or oilers and fryer* S4 II Barred Rock 32-23. DBTROIT boos DETROIT (AP)—Egg prices paid p dozen at Detroit by Jlrat receive (including u.s.): Whites Grade A lumbo 40+i; ext large M4ti large 34%-37; medium 201 27; small ITtMfi Browne Orado A |um 40; largo 34%-J3; medium SB-27; am /War Scare' Seems Oyer Market Back on Even Keel NEW YORK (AP)—The stock market remained on a fairly even keel today in moderate trading. Wall Streeters were pleased with the “resilience” shown in Wednesday’s vigorous recovery from “war-scare” selling. The Viet Nam situation was seen as no worse, at tins moment, and traders took profits on some of the gainers of late Wednesday, notably the aero* space defense stocks which advanced on prospects of beefed-up defense. United Aircraft was off nearly a point addle fractional losses were shown by Boeing, General Dynamics and Douglas Aircraft. STEELS, MOTORS Steels and motors were unchanged to a shade higher. U.S. Steel, General Motors Chrysler were among small gainers. ‘ * * Wedpesday the Associated Press average of SO si dipped .3 to 315.5. ■ w, Ja a Prices were higher on balance in American Stock Exchange trading. Changes were mostly fractional. The New York Slock Exchange (hdi.) High Lem Lett ft Air Rad 240 1 52% ..... 1 2)1* - lb lift] ■ « = S Hg-Am 1-2 AMa AmAIrlin 1.22 15 Irk L4P 1 &*,b^ even s , 4 AElPw 1.14b 7 A Ehka 1.40a 2 in am ASxpor !.12r 4 47Vb 471b Am FPw .75 5 fK 12% 421b 28 431b — % M 9 57% + % 441b 4474 44%..... MW 34% 5444 .... 47Vb 47Vb 47Vb + H Am Photo .33 '—MW 1.40 ..flCr'a Am tab 1.40 Zinc la > Inc .45 .-JR Cp_ AmpBorg .40 Anaconda la Arm coSt 3 Armour Ml JaflTtiE 1.40 , Atchison 1.40 AiKUnt 2a AnRpf3-40 SJf .20 lebcockW IsMLIma Beckman ji Ijitfcblr .40 Hi 240 Beetwall .30e *Stl ilo 1 4Mb 444b 40* 37 Ji% 7074 7074 ■It Mi* 73 73 + V. 3 7774 7774 7*74 4 4274 4274 4274 .... ’j ,!% ik iibb-'r 23 nib 23 ■ 231b + Vb I tew MW MW ........... 7 137k 137b 137b + Vb Saw ■ price unchanged; 7: 72 A 5414; 70 B 57%; 90 B 51; W C 1474. Eggs tteedy; wholesale buying pried* unchanged; 70 per cam or better Drew ‘ ■■•‘•“e 34V,; mixed 34%; mediums W; "I 27Vb; dirties ------------313 CHICAOO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)—Live poultry; wholesale buying arm* lb lower to 1 higher; roosters 2+25; epeclel fed White Rock fryer* HVk-ITVk; Barred Rock fryers 22; lew heavy bene 171b. Livwstock v "to avtreg* choice eteere 22.50-23.00, small lot 2Mt; good to lew choice 2040-2244; standard to lew good 17.50-20.M; Mur smell loti chafea hellers 21.00-22.00, goad to lew choice 2l.0M1.ig. Hogs IN. ierrows and glltt under 241 lb*, steady hr week ,heavier weights and tew* steady; mixed 1 and J 177-223 lb. barttwt and glltt 17J5-1744) smell let *t 17.50; s and 3 170-230 lb.14.7S. CHICAOO LIVESTOCK 0 (AP)—(Osda)— Hogs iteedy lo 25 lower; 1-1 ______» 17JI-17.75; mixed 1-3 170-230 lb* 16.75-17Ml 230-240 Ibe 14.25-14.75; '■ 250-270 lb* 1l.fg-t6.3S. Cattle 10,000; cpjvai none; slaughter steers tHiedy to 25 hlgliari three UPda prime 1,225-1,325 lb etbugMur steer, 25.50; high choice and prim* LMM^M mTiftjfwr Stirai f—— —— 1,200-1,300 lb* 25.25. steady? ceuple -Tat*18 choice’ end prim* lo-ioo ib iamb* HMr good and dielet 22.00-24.00. American Stocks ArkldOW 1.2 • -21 34% 37% 111b - 7b Ased Oil 0. O 7 714 77b 71b 4-1b Barnes Mg 4 2174 10 It - 1b true Tree 1 214 314 >14...... Brit M Jr 3 OH 17b OH -1-14 Stwwn Co .40 3 14 13W 14 -W Campb Chib 12 4 11S-1* S15-15 —*-J4 Cdn Javelin I It 11% 11% + 1b Cinerama 171 j% 0% *14 + 74 Cruel* V 2.40* I 4gib 41 .44% + % Data Cant 5 d 4d% 43tb-W Draper 1.10 I 44W 44% 44% + 74 Pane oil* I 2% 2% 2% -1-14 Felrot Pet ,15g 4 IB 4% 14 + Ply TJgtr tf I 774 I + % Ben oavei U IW fib lib..... Ban Phrwd 4 47b 474 4% + % Giant Yel .60* 3 11 11 11 ..... Goldfield 13 lib lib m....... Kaiser Ind Kroner Mb Livings Oil Macfeey Air 1 Mead John 4 5% 5% 5% + 7% 77b 7% + I 15% 1ST* 157*+% II I 17 13% 14 5 3014 2774 27% - 1 r-encsr re,« 10 1% 1% 11b — 1 town 3“ “ ■** •nan nw Signal OIIA 1 2» 30% 30% 30% + Sperry R wt 10 4% 5% 4% - Syntax Cp ,20g 34 46% *574 44 — Technlcol ,50b 10 1574 15% 15% + Un Control .31 I 514 5% Sib .. WtbbBKnapp 4} % 5-10 Mi-.. ■ore Wer : inf My I Brunswick hs g , Bullard.15, Camp Sp 00 OnficUm Cero PwLt 1 Carrier ,1.40 Carter Pd 40 £aterTrac .00 Simegllif Cncolnet .50 BHaB.iii CtrroCp 1.40 CattnaAlrc 1 ChampSpk 2 Chmplln 1.20 Checker Mot &Mn sip i ChPneu 1.40* CRI Puck 1 ChrlsCrft .441 Chrysler I CltTetSv" 2.40 ClevBIIII 1.20 1 34% 347k 13 37V» 37H ...... B fe-* 4 47% 47% 8% + % 1 13 31 21% lf% +*« 1 15% 15% i(W .... ! r r ■” + w 2 22% 23% «7b • 47V, 47% OranCS 1.41 (MAP 1.20 M Nor Ry GW Pbi J Grumn .50 Butt MAO Gulf Oil LI wit I * 4Mb Mlb *4% * < '2% 12% 12 irsr»4 M «% M M HercPdr .4% Hem 1.20 iBwhw Pb Homes! 1.40 HookCh Hotel ; HoustLP .71 - Him sa .40 Hupp Cp M InperRand 2 IntBusMch 5 IntlHerv LM ImMln 1.00* IntHIck 2.2% IntPaper 1.20 Ml TAT 1 JanLogan JontsAL J Joy Mlg tj Kennecott 4 KernCL 14 Kerr Me t.2u KlmbClark 2 « 127% 124% IVik +1 5 45% 45% 45%- P 14 44 +‘ 5 51% 51% 53% -1 12% 12% 127k ... 14%*%*%... 111 I1 '■ - 1 4* «* « +1 5 2% 3% 42% + 1540. 451 451 ... I 777* 7774 777* — I 4»% Mb Mlb + 4 77% 77 77% — 8 Mtf 31% 12% + W Bib 14% 141b ... l—awajw---- 7 «% 53% M% + IT Bib MW 23% + ! 14 017b 01% 01% ... i Ink 32% ii%- —K— ii»s%sa+ T 47* 47* 47* ... ' 7s 3% 3% 8* + 5 34% 34% 24% + "lr“ IP 14% 14% 14% + L, 14 4%'4% J^% — % « R m i 21% - S’ 24% 35% 34% 3% St 3% 1 TT% $% 3% 5 3% 3St 8%±S iS&Et&U 4 M% Mb SB 41 54% 54 C I* |7^ ^ K ™ “i- 8 Col* Gas 1J2 sag.1® CsmSolv 1.10 SmSd i.40b . ConEdls 3.30 ConEteclod 1 CnNGatUgBC ConsPw X70 CoS* Air .40 com Can 3 Coniine 3.33 Control §m'"" Copper Rnge Com Pd 1.5P ? CoxBrdc .10e CrucSteel .00 I 4174 41% 41% — % 4 377* 2*7* 2{j* — 3 1174 11% 1174 + f |3% 0% »% -f 1 3* 34 5 ... I 31 3Mb 31 1 14% 14% 14% + % 74 51% 51 ^ ■iSSa; 1 ’53b 134% 134% — % 1 41% 3% 45% - % | 17% 17% 17% — I 12%. 12% Ml.,.- | 41 41 O — % 11 27 + S 12 21% .Hi SS .tS « 51% irr M isP 73% *•%-■ P ris ■ MW f ■ 24 «% 13% 1374 - DanRIver .00 Deere 1.10 DelLHud Mb DelteAlr 1.40 OomeMki .40 DeugAIr 1.411 Do wCh 1JP Air Lin Pfi*n amp *— Mm 2 1.40 it A Music 4 44% 44% 44% — % I » 1/ 5" ... 4 77% 77% 77% —1 1 44% 44% Mb —1 2 3% 8% 3% ^ 45 f?74 8% 8% — % ^1 6774 47% 4W4 stChrt 1.771 JM M HuPwTii FoodFalr .70 FMC Corp i } 32% 31% Mb + % 0 M l 9 — % 11* J2 W ...... 7 MS S% Mb + % 30 41% 41 — % 5 31% «% 31% + % Freept I Fruehf 1 GamSk 1.20b - OenElec 2.20 fen Foods I 0 Mllh 1.20 GenMot 2.45* , OPrecn 1.20 GPubSvc .33* *"*ubOt 1.2* TtlBEI M vis. M 4- Mb Mb 51% + % 4 lb% 14% M% + %] 34 52 i a .....; ,r»t jst sbts IB S% + % II a* 21 fi + 14 11 5% 574 ||lb + % 73 33% 33 »% + % 17 11% Bib Mb + % 7 15% 55% Mb — % 2 24% 24% M + % 33 B 277* K + % 7 If* 13% 13% •*■ »* M 4f% «% r 577k 577* I ssv%+ % i, 44 N- % t STWA- % Merauer .25* MerlinMer l MayOttr 1.20 McDonAIr .40 MeedCp l.io Merck .72 ISSl 551 MM SU 114 4 »t fi 82 ] T8t 88 ■ 11 SI I littisifftV 4 44% 447' “ 10 14 14 4 3574 35V ! St 25% + % 7 40 gib « 4- % » ,« ,» 1 rim m NalCen .40b NCbthR 1.20 NDelry 2.40 NarPtc 2.40* NStjlPw 1.3* NsvktAki M Fit* 9 74% 77% 74% it 35S it% 85t -JI8S »’ 2 517* 517* fl%- 5 u li n n 54% 54% 54% Ilf 1: 1 3*74 3*7* 3*7* ■ U 5M 57 Mb f‘% OlInMeth 1.40 OttoElev 1.00 ombmbr'M Owenslll 2.50 CBinP * PpebCoal .00 PMtMy 1J% , -““t* y* Si i5o —™ El tJ3 FhlloRdg lb * PhllllpsPet 2 Bpw .70 'rfMAO 1.75 .'ublkln .341 PuOnibn i.40 PureOII 1.40 M4PW l tyonler 1.20 ..jyttwon .40 MKbCh if RepubAvl* 1 Repub Stl 1 It 21% Mb 31% I 12% 12% 12% ..... 13 20% 24% 24%.... 34 S% K. »* + % 9 27% 8% 2774 lii 1 41% 41% 41% ... 15 1774 57% 577* + I M% 241b 30 V, -' « 34% 24% 347* + . 11 S Wt* A — lb I 35% 3f% 31% — I 53%. 53% Mb ... 14 1437* MM 141V* +1% ? ft ft f r . 57% 51% + 42 317* 3174 f Rat 4 22% S n% i'i* w, «t i«t«t r 44% J7% dKb J% 72 12% 12 12V* + V* »L'SenF*l.40 Schenley 1 Er ieoHPep .« SebbAL 14 pap l.i ieereR l.M fiobure .40 MjA 1.1 t 29% > 17% 1 SmlthK 1.20a SoeonyM 2.40 SouCelE 1.04 SouthnC 1.70 HnatitlL Sperry Rend Spiegel IJI SquartO 1.40 — rend LM Kollsman Ml Cal lb . ... Oil Md 3 SIOIINJ L19* StdOllOh new m rtig 14 1* H » +* 14 44% 44 « +% • j M M J%^ -a ii*% iu% ii4% - % I Mb 247b Mb - % 0 50% K K + % 3 in% %i% i*i% - % 7 45% 45% 41%....... II £ 8%-ib 3 a 8 8 34 3% 3374 33% ^'(b 7 44% 44% *4% — % IP 44% 43% 44% ...... M 14% 14% 14% ..... | Mb 9% a% + % 1 75% 74% 74% — SterlDrug .70 Studebaker Sunrey 1.40 IwlfICp 1M. Ihds.) Htph Li 11 9% 21 * 51% 51 —T— a m* 2 if KO 2 20 a 0074 N% 00*4 - 1 ax OulfProd *»%«%%% + % twosyi .40 ■ at ffib I* ays + % Texlnstm .00 4 77% 77% 77V* — — 3 42% 4)74 4|74 — 21 1374 15% M% + I 227k 32% 33%- 1 07 Mi B% —1 2 42% 42% 42% + 7 S 44% 44% — .. 15 4% 47% 47% - % 2 24% 24 34 -+ % f 7 45% 45% dM-i- II SI:;:.. i |i% a% 117* - % 14% M% 35% + % l 8% ■■■■■ 1» M fe 1 7 Mb 53% flfi + 1 114 1M 114 - ik mm.. 5 35% Mb 15% — 7k UCarbld 1.40 a°5s.« unS Un Fruit .40 UOasCpi 1.70 UnltMAM 1 msr-a 5ss..jf uSr?- 42.13% 13% 11% .... ll 47% 477* 47% - < —W— Warn Lem .00 WnAlrUn .00 M^StP.I WgaM Md 1 WUnTO 1.40 SI 1*0 II 1.M :p i.sc Worthln 1.50 ^ a% ro + % 7 25% 34% 21% + % a 14% M% 14% f % ivflfii . I 317b Mi Mb + % ii Mb a% a% ‘ “ 1 41% 3% 45% a 147% 107 104% —Y— 44% 41% 49% , figures ere unofficial. I ** footnote* *’* M*mUM ln **• ___.dee «$ri w .extras, b—Annual plus alock dividend. *—OtclAred dr paid so 7tr this year, f—Paid in stock during 1743, ettlmemd cash value m ex-dividend — ' distribution date. p-Ptld last VMr. dared or pad after stock dividend «R up. k—ppciered or paW this an eoumubitty* Issue with dlvl-bl errtars. p—Paid this year, dlvi-xnltttd, daOenuf or n* Milan taken F dividend maatlnp. r—Declared or z—Salts In full. ctd-CSled. x-« ante. ww- WWh w____________ ..... rituted. wi—Whan latuad. nd Next day vpn Kennedy Says: 'Soriy, Fellows' Note to Cabjnet Aides Spoofs VP Elimination WASHINGTON « - With grin, Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy said today he had written a note to fellow cabinet members to this effect: , “I am sorry to have taken so many nice fellows over the side with me." * This was a reference te Preaiieat Johnson’s pronouncement last week Cabinet member, aad nobody who sits regularly with the Cabinet, will be tapped Johnsoa’s vice presidential running mate. Kennedy and other Cabinet members, ineliglbles all, spoke at a sort of school for Democratic congressional candidates, advising them how to present the issues and put their best foot forward in the drive for Democratic victory in November. * * * Kennedy called for the election of Johnson, saying this is the way to carry out programs “begun in 1961,” when the late President John F. Kennedy took office. n IflllLE FOR V P - Over Viet Nam i Execs to Calm be only i V’ Looking over the audience of about 900 candidates and their families, convened by the Democratic National Committee for the waning of a three-day lioarKeBnedy said, at the outset: “I am a Uttle bit in awe of yea when 1 think of my own “You are not members of the Cabinet, and you don’t meet regularly with the Cabinet, and therefore you are eligible for vice president.” * * ★ When the President’s decision came out, Kennedy said, a lot of people asked him how he felt. LTTTLE PREMATURE At first, he said, “I thought of saying that I thought the President was a little premature in eliminating Dean Rude.” But he decided against making that comment, he said, and instead sent the little note to Cabinet members, generally. Ct, #r attic We* auumed by tucb esm-po**M %7^,*<}u«l|l,*tton,1ta«*Cl ** Stocks of Local Informs! Figure* after decimal points ere eighths OV8R THR COUNTER STOCKS Th* following guatpileni da not Me*t-irlly rapraaant actual tranaactleuf but r* fcitapded at a guide to th* Ml* trading rang* of **“ ***-- AMT Cm. ............. Vtaocletad Truck ... ~IHFOktP*r.:......... Jhlmpi«|n^l«n*ln8ulkH ritlzent Utilities Class i Jlamond Crystal I Ethyl C*fy. .. . jj., ... Ktlabf bu jjrlr1 Jimp ::>2.4 24.1 ...Ti W S Wyandotte Chemical ............ MUTUAL FUNDI ...jVta ...13.77 1LM .17.77 WJ5 :ayt7ona Qnaiulli K-2 . ::i5#u M 113 Treasury Position 5^51 %27 425.32 iukmSww' x—Tatal Debt— ■ - -•» _--- MU ai KM 315.7 uay ........ 443.2 1M.4 .57.0 115.5 MB ............445J 154.5 1574 215.7 ______ Age .........445.2 MM 157.4 2174 Year Ago ...........373.7 1434 147.2 271.P w 11454 High .........452.7 MAS 114.9 22LB % MSP L*W .........405.6 150.7 14U 2*4.7 % j 1743 H#l .........407,1 152.5 151.1 I LOW . I 121.8 134.f 2427 Seek to locate Son of Dying Woman LANSING (UPI)—The family of ■ dying Lansing woman has igsued a plea to the public to help locate her son, whom they feel could be almost “anywhere in the Midwest” or Los Angeles. Mrs. EleAnor Mathews lapsed into a coma at Ingham County Medical hospital with a cancer condition yesterday, according to the woman’s son-in-law, David Breeden, who said be can be contacted if anyone knows the whereabouts of Robert Mathews, a. ..a ■■ ♦.. ★ Breeden, who works at the Michigan Department of Health laboratory, said Mathews was last known to have a turquoise and white 1955 Ford automobile with California license plates and be believes be could be “anywhere in the Mid- Grain Pricas CHICAOO (AF)—Op^Todey S tor ..................... 1 ................! Cara ap ................... 1.MIM9 . mc ..... ................ 1.14%* 11% tar ...................... 1.117* bar ..................... im% Oata WC ......................... 557k-% tar ..................... 47% tar ...................... bi% Rr* WC. ..................... 1.25% tar ...1................. 1.27%-27 tay ..................... i.2»% - C-f IM-7 *5.7 TP.* 74.1 fL7 103.5 M4 ....____..IU 1004 47.2 mi 1453 High . 0L2 102.4 >44 71.1 170 Law ..74.7 444 SM PP.4 MMMONI INOON AV1RABBS Higher grade rail* . . 271.49+0.15 .. 07.54+0.01 • B.W.-n . 72.13+0.05 By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK—Business executives ire likely to take a calmer view of the Viet Nam military showdown than do traditionally more emotional stock traders. the stock market's quick drop after the U.S.-N