The Weather U.t. WuthM- Bumu BerKitl More Showers (DttiMi Pigt 1) THE PONTIAC PRESS ? Edition VOL. 126 — NO. U.5 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WLDNESDAV , H LY 24, 1968 —68 PAGES UNIT E D*P R E E R N AT 10 N A L 10 Die in Cleveland Sniper Outbreak CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) — Snipers armed with rifles, shotguns, carbines truck at the start of a night^of terror that left 10 persons dead, including three white policemen. Four thousand’ National Guardsmen patrolled the area today, restoring at least surface calm to the East Side Negro neighborhood that saw burning and looting follow the outburst of shoot-, ing last night. more than a year ago by predicting an eclipse on May 9, 1967, would be ac-rompaniwL by a wave of racial-T The battle started, according to police, when the snipers opened fire on policemen removing an abandoned auto, three officers fell dead. The coroner listed seven Negroes among the victims and police said two of them were snipers. in American cities on that date. The violence predicted by Evans, who was then operating an astrology shop, did not occur. The outbreak also produced: • 19 injured, 11 of them policemen, one of whom remained in critical condition with a gun wound. • 50 arrests, about half on looting charges. Others were held for breach of peace, conspiracy, carrying concealed deadly weapons. • About 200 homeless, from blazes started by fire bombs. An unofficial damage estimate The calm of the hot summer night— the temperature was 80—was shattered -bullets began-pouring from..-rooL- tops, windows, from behind bushes— and police rushed in many more men. It ended, except for the occasional crack of a gunshot, just before a heavy thundershower about midnight cooled off the steaming streets and dampened some blazes started by fire bombs. Police armed with rifles joined National Guardsmen on patrol today. When the gunfire erupted, police radio calls came thick and fast and had a lone of desperation. PRETI’Y BAD' STILL UNDETERMINED Whether the other dead were bystanders, participants, or were in their homes when struck down by ricochetting bullets couldn't be immediately delermined. Among those arrested was Fred Ahmed Evans, who has claimed a position of black nationalist leadership. Police quoted Evans as saying there were 17 men in his group and that he surrendered after his rifle failed to fire while he was aiming it at a policeman. Evans attracted widespread attention over $100,000, mostly for buildings and their contents, and for several burned-out autos. • A halt in the sale of alcoholic beverages in Cleveland and surrounding suburbs. • Mobilization of all of Ohio’s 15,‘250 National Guardsmen with 4,000 dispatched immediately to the state’s biggest city to help keep order. The three-hour firelight with police began when the police tow truck rode up to Beulah Avenue and 123rd Street to “pick up a piece of junk” “We just started,” said Patrolman William McMillan, 35, “when somebody started shooting at me with a shotgun.” said one, “We’re pinned down. The wounded men are lying in the street. We can't gel to them. Get some armored cars." Gov. .James A. Rhodes, alerted at the National Governors Conference in Cincinnati, promptly mobilized Ohio's 15,250 National Guardsmen. Why Official Tells Road Tax Needed The office of the adjutant general in Columbus immediately committed .4,000 men to Cleveland, the state’s biggest city. Its population of more than 600,000 includes about 350,000 Negroes. Ohio Adj. Gen. Sylvester T. Del Corso, summoned from Akron to command the guardsmen, said “I see some evidence of a plot” involving black Nationalists. Witnesses said the snipers appeared to have an organized battle plan. Some used automatic carbines. After some fires were started, snipers began shooting at firemen and police ordered the firefighters out of the area., There wa,s none of the mob rioting that exploded in the Hough area two years AP Wirtphoto Ducking For Cover Is A Wounded Cleveland Police Officer Won't Waver on War^Johnson - ■ ago, -iout--ther*--was--m4. I9fta Musf Accept Role of S. Viet Rulers Harriman Warns N. Viets PARIS APi - Ambassador W Averell Harrunar bhJDti>' tokJ Ncrth \»etnamese negotiators today that to progress toward peace “you mtKt be prepared to recognize the role'' of South ing is that the terrorist actions on theaters around Saigon hav'e started again. People have been killed I intend to caU attention to that.'' The Vietcong bonded fmir theaters in Saigoft- tmao^ gpvcmmait in winking out a i^i^- Towns SSday. killing 12 \iet-s<‘ttiement of the %'ietnam war Hammans assertion in the (lammari • would like U> know if a statement last week -ol Hanoi* requirements (or a fieace settlement was interKled to intnxluee a new element into Ihe idow-iwrving talk.s 14th session of the Pans peace talks followed directly on President Jcrfinstai’s Htmoluiu meeting with President Nguyen Van Tnieu of Sewth Vietnam at the end of last week North Vietnam regularly denounces the Saigon government as an American pup^t ’’ namese and wounding 91. TO PRESENT APPEAL Going into the talks. Harriman said he would present to the North Vietnamese negotiators the appeal issued in Htmoluiu by President Jdinson and President Nguyen Van Thieu for a peaceful settlement and an end of the violence. ” Harriman and his aid^ are also try ing Harnman told newsmen he had not , to find out whether North Vietnam definitive evidence that the lull m weakening its support for the National Tile slatemeni from the .North Vietnamese foreign ministry last week summarized Hanoi'.* lour-pmnt plan fw ending the war, including first, withdrawal of all U.S, forces; second, neutralization of North and South Vietnam; and third the final decision on unification" of the .North -and South to be made on the primtple of ‘ self-determination. ' mid-June was finally coming to an end But ne added tkTiat is disfurb- a new lure among its terms foT'a poteK'B-* serfenwm''1trS^1BTTe{hain The third point was the one which rec.eived fresh treatment, ft called for ■ the rigm of siilf-delermmation im^Ttre Vleti I am ' in--the st . ’iffatrs'*'' SLAIN FAMILV-The Richard _ ___________ ____ Delores, I>athrup Village whose bullet-riddled bodies were Richard C. iSyrleyt Robison, 40. daughter Susan. 7; Richard found Monday in their northern Michigan cottage, are shown C Robison. 42 Back row (frdm lefti; sons Gary'. 10; Randall. in a recent family portrait Front row 'from leflj: Mrs. 12. and Richard. 19 Hearing Aug. 5 on Raises jn^en^oTTunSnSu^ Seclusion of Cabin Delayed Discovery of Six Murders (Continued From Page One' Police said they discovered a note near the cabin door indicating the Robis a neighfxjr hood resident about 10 a m Revision.*: in the city's 1908 general fund budget — increasmg revenue and expenditures by about $360.O(X) — will be aired at a public hearing Aug 5 City commissioners last night received revisions from the administration E6-ward R Gallagher, director of finance, said the revisions, the second since original adoption, are necessary’ to bring the budget in line with actual fiscal, experience. than antiapaled m March when the last revnsions were made The city now expects to receive $3,129,000 for collection of property taxes, up 1132.000 from the amount an- Related Stories, Page A-9 He said it is now realized that income and properly tax receipts will be higher OTHER CHANGES Officers said she had .suffered a blow-on the head Police said that a warrant naming an unidentified suspect has been issued by the Oakland County Prosecutor's office. Exam Focuses on Cash Deposit to Weigh master MOTHER OF .SIX Mrs. Allen, the mother of six children and a waitress at the Greyhound bus station in downtown Detroit, was reported missing July 10 when she failed to appear at work. Her husband and son identified articles found with the body as belonging to the victim, police said. I.AST TO SEE ROBISON Construction is now set to begin in mid-August with completion in 22 months, according to Stoutenburg Other buildings prbpo.sed lor Ihe complex are a t-S-million, 4,000-seat conmi hall and a $2-milIion, 1.200-seat Meadow Brook Theatre j '[■he last person who had seen any of the family alive was the elder Bli.ss. who said Robison had come to his house to pay a condolence visit after .Norman Bliss, the younger Bliss' son. was killed in a motorcycle accident two days before the Robisons were to leave for Kentucky His son .and Richard Robison were frequent companions before Nor'man (Kiughl a motorcycle, the r,,e sort caretaker recalled. But later they drifted apart, he said Evidence found near the body has been sent to the Michigan State Police crime lab in Ea.st Lansing, according to in-' vestigators. T^e owner of an excavating company testified yesterday that he had once given a $2.50 deposit for a special hauling permit to Tom Kennedy, former Oakland County weighmaster charged with embezzling. Clinton B Leonard, president of r B, l>eonard. Inc , 6695 Highland, Waterford Township, said the deposit was in lieu of a $5,000 bond he was to secure at a later date. Creation of a housing code enforcement division for the rest of the year wiU co.st 127.800. increases in longevity pay $36,966 more than was an-tipipated in March, Other increa^s which will presumably be approved Aug. 5 are: cost of referendum election. $5,000; contribution to employes retirement system, $22,000 more: new personnel. $53,404; vacation and holiday pay allocation left out of the previous budget by mistake. $45,966 amounts needed for wage and longevity increases for employes will cost some $45,000 more than was anticipated. Police said they are awaiting the results of an autopsy performed yesterday at .St, Joseph Mercy Hospital. Gun Bill OK Predicted Leonard was the first witness to testify at the opening of Kennedy's preliminar\ examination before Waterford Township Justice of the Peace Kenneth H. Hempstead. Kennedy is charged with three counts of eitibezzling funds totaling $1,250 from the Oakland County Road Commission. 3 Still Critical in Powder Blast INDIVIDUAL CASES The Weather WASHINGTON lAP' A leading congressional .supporter of gun control legislation predicts the House will approve President .Johnson'.s embattled pi^oposal to restrict the .sale of rifles, shotguns and ammunition. Fun U.S. Weather Bureau Report PO.NTI^ A.ND VlCI.Snv—OccasioiiaJ shower*-and thundershowers today and tonight with variable cloudiness and little temperature change. High today 82 to 87. I>»w tonijiDt 60 to 65. Partly sunny and mild Thursday with a chance of thundershowers/ .Southwesterly winds five to 15 miles per hour. Friday outlook; .More showers with sea.sonal temperatures. Percentage precipitation probahililies; today 70, tonight 40. Thursday 30. The prediction was made by Judiciary Chairman Emanuel Celler, D-.N',Y , after the House spent .seven bour^ Tuesday, wading through amendments to ready a rpeasure for bxlay's expected final vote. Celler’s opposite number in the .Senate, Judiciary Chairman James 0, Eastland, ITMiss.. declared 'his opposition to a 'similar bill called up for simultaneous action in his committee. Assistant Prosecutor .Michael Friedman attempted to consolidate the cases since some of the witnesses to testify are the same in each alleged offense. Hempstead, however, sustained the objection of Kennedy's attorney, James Lawson, ruling that each case will be heard individually to determine if a crime was committed. I^pnard said he had never paid Kennedy in the past for a special hauling permit, but he never questioned him about the deposit when Kennedy wrote on the permit that the money was returnable upon securing a cash bond. Tu»»d»)r in PenlUc Ex-Factory Manager at GMC Truck Dies Carl D. Rodgers, former factory manager at GMC Truck and Coach Division, died this morning. He was 55. His body is at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Rodgers of 1411 Maryland, Birmingham. was president of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce in 1%2 and a member of the Elks Lodge 810. I.eonard said that he needed the special permit to use a portion of Middle Belt Road in May 1967. Restrictions on truck loads would have prevented him from operating if he hadn’t received the permit. The second witness, David Hasse, director of the Department of Permits and Special Uses for the Road Department. testified, however, that the department has no record of a receipt showing the $250 deposit. Listed ia critical conditicBi .are, .G.ary' Deffendorf 23, of 9418 Dixie Highway, Springfield Township; and James Broegman and Walter Simons, .37, both of Davisbueg. Reported improving and in fair condition is Carl Lapham. 25. of 8880 White Lake Rd,, White Lake Township. Lapham's condition was listed previously as serious. PATIENT IMPROVES Surviving are his wife., Julia; a .son, Edd at home; a dau^ter, Mrs. David McAlice of Warreni^is mother, Mrs. Edd Rodgers of Sparta, Tenn.: a brother; and two sisters including Mrs, Dorothy Boyd of Pontiac. HE HAD RESIGNED Kennedy, 49, of 2908 V n n r h e i s , Waterford Township, resigned last October, shortly after being copfronled with reports about irregularities in his department. Kennedy has been weighmaster 15 years. Th? hearing was adjourned after three hours. It will resume late next month. Jack Miles. 16, of 1811 Meadowridge, Commerce Township, ia in good condition, according to hospital officials. 'Miles was .listed previously in satisfactory condition. State Police said Deffendorf and Broegman had their clothing blown off by the force of the blast, which resulted when a piece of wadding from a Civil' War mortar was caught in a bre^,e and blown 65 feet to the powder keg. igniting D^effendorf was burned over 80 per cent of his body, while Lapham and Simons were burned over 60 per cent of their bodies, according to police. . Need for More Road Funds Is Explained (Continued From Page One) NATIONAL WEATHER—^wers and thundershowers are forecast for tonight from the Ohkt^and Tennessee valleys into the Southeast and wmitward into the iflfMitiilwrTi nortioiis of the plains and plateaus, it will he cooler in the upper Missis-, Nortligpitt b_________ What the road commission has faced is a series of circumstances that also has affected many other governmental functions — rising costs of Wages and materials and increased demands for services, but littlf increase in the scope of funding. What the commission hopes to gain with the 1-mil] levy are funds that will be directly applicabfe to road improvement projects. $9$ MILLION gas and weight taxes, and participating funds, is about $9.5 million per year. However, maintenance, administration, salaries and equipment costs account for ail but abouL^tS mHiion per year. The commission hopes to realize about $3.,5 million a year from the millage levy, based on the county’s valuation. would not provide what engineers feel are the needs of the county. However, it would provide an obviously closer program to what is needed. nie compnisSihn's income, froqt state These funds would be slated entirely for road projects and would provide a total of about $5 milliim for the next five years above and beyond the cost of running the operation. According to Stanian^ this amount shll The road commission has prepared an engineering report which it is presenting to* all communities. In it is explained the road needs and probable costs. Staman said support for the millage vote is being sought in all the communities and the pledge is made that money collected from the communities will be puLback into them oh an equal basis.- Birmingham Area Confirmed on Water Main ticipated in Marbh, and $2,473,000 from the inewne tax. up $262,000 from the amount anticipated in March. Other changes bring the net increase to $360,000, The income will be utilized for items wffich were cut from budget considerations in March including about $146,000 for office equipment, furniture and fixtures, special radio equipment, machinery and replacement of city cars. Bi^f^FIELD , TOWNSHIP - The to.wnship board this week confirmed a special assessment roll for the construction of an eight-inch water main extension on four .streets in the extreme northwest corner of the township. , Confirmation of the project, in the Ward Orchard Subdivision, came after a petition of lOc-a! property owners in the affected district. More than 54 per cent of the residents of Wellington, Desiax. Maward and .Atkinson were in favor of the special assessiherU-.that will be required to fund thR'project. Township officials confirmed the project, at a cost of $28,420 to be asses.<;ed bn a site basis. A township official =aid that definite figur^ concerning the amount o f assessments, to each individual have not yet been determined. SEWER HEARING In other action the board held the first hearing for a sanitary sewer special assessment district for the Cranbrook Hiils-Chelmsleigh area. The.board passed a resolution setting a public hearing for 8;30 p.m. Sept. 9, at which.iin8lripproval will be decided and public objectionsjo the project will be heard. The board also awarded two contracts to G. & H Contractors of New’ Haven. The firm submitted a low. bid of $18,487 for the^ Ward Orchard Subdivision sanitary s^wgr project. G & H al.so/Was^ cJiQseri to receive a contract for a relief drain project for the Edison-Desiax area. Its low bid was $14,172. Three of five Pontiac-area persons who suffered burns in a gunpowder accident at a Civil War-style weapons de’monstration Sunday remain in critical condition at the University of .Michigan Burn Center in Ann Arbor. Some 25 spectators were injured in the explosion of a keg of gunpowder at the National Cannon and Carbine Matches at Swnerset Center in Hillsdale County. BLOOMFIELD HILLS-State Rep. William Hampton. R-Bloomfield Hills, is one of several prominent Republicans serving on a committee out to gain two scats on the Michigan State University Board of Trustees this year. 63 MEMbIrS The group, calling it.self the Committee for Better Trustees, was formed ln’'1964. Today it has fo members. - -‘S3w-basiG goaL,::.^. ii/tD::ele£l.irus-... tees who are interested in, who will support. who will fight for and who will work objectively with the MSU adminis-ffattes/’^id Kenneth Thompson, a GOP Trustee.'^ The committee has endorsed a Bloomfield Township man. Richard D. Ernst of 4364 Orchard Hill, who announced his I candidacy y e s t e r - | day. “As a Michigan . State alumnus, I am ’ ^ convinced that the present makeup of -theNboard must be I c h a n g'e d for the' I good of the univer- I sity. "'.'l^ms^ said. ERNST A. 1948 graduate of MSU, Ernst now serves .as a member of the Executive Board of the MSU Alumni Association as well as a member of the Board of Directors of the Oakland County MSU Alumni Club. ((iltit; torn* uld SUZUKI TRAIL BIKE SNAPPED UP FOR $150 “Cduld not keep track of the tyeat-number of calls from our Press Want Ad. Sold cycle first lUghL.'’.. - - PRESS WANT ADS provide action and satisfaction tor most any need. So easy to place, resultful and at a very low fcpst. ■V'ou’ll be pleased, too. Dial— 352-818] or 334-4981 -jV'y?'"-. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESnAY, .H LV 24. 19f!8 - —3- Legal Probe Speedup Urged LANSING yp) — Gov. George Romney has asked Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley to do his best to speed up completion,,of an jn-j vestigalion of the Livingston County courts and lawyers. Romney made his request after receiving a telegram from the industrial committee of the' Livingston County Chamber of Commerce. The chamber group com-' plained that the state bar. the attorney general's office and| other authorities have been conducting the probe for the past six months. ★ * * “It is publifc* knowledge that there are some irregularities yet ~ThHe~anthortttes-haveJiot made The governor said, however,]by the attorney general covers that anything Kelley could do to [a limited area. It is being exspeed this investigation or a'pedited, the aide said, but may separate one being conducted not .be completed before the by Kelley's staff would be primary, beneficial. * ★ s * . , Romney, meanwhile, asked' Rep. Thomas Sharpe, R-Kelley for a copy of his report]Howell, also wrote the governor] as soon as the a 11 o r n e yiurging him “t» use all your in-general's investigation is com-ifluence to bring about a public pleted. i report' within ,Jhe jvext two An aide said the investigation] weeks” Tf the charges are founded, this should be clarified immediately,’’ fiiharpe .said. “If the charges are true, disbar-: ment proceedings and whatever] other action is indicated .should begin immediately — so that attorneys who had no part in* the alleged irregularities 'cam seek the public trust without! suspicion on Aug. 6.'.’ Last 3-Days of Pontiac’s Biggest Sale Thurs. 9 am to 9 pm-Fri. 9 am to 9:30 pm-Sat. 9 am to 9 pm SIMMS 'an7'“puH[c^tatement offhetr-findirigs,” the telegram said. ‘CANNOT WAIT’ “The citizens of this contity cannot wait for this information they must know before the Aug. 6 primary. Many of the candidates for public office are at- “It is necessary the innocent attorneys be cleared before the primary and thd ones under investigation be publicly exposed. 'ITie voters cannot afford to make an uninformed choice of, candidates which would only] aggravate an already] deplorable situation,'’ the' chamber group said. The accu.sations involved alleged improper handling of estate settlements by lawyers* and the courts and other legal improprieties. Romney told Kelley it would be beneficial to the people of Livingston County if one or' more of the inve.stigations could “ be conctuded bctofe the Aug. 6 primary. * * * Romney said the state bar Investigation must be conducted in confidence and that any report would be submitted to the state bar and,,eventually the Stale Supreme Court.______________1 BUILD NOW . AVOIR THE HUSH! Special^Prices Now! ls ■ Mm Per Mo BATHROOMS ★ BEOROOMS ★ REG ROOMS * ATTICS ★ KITCHENS New Ideas — The Finest Materials and Craftsmanship L-cJUA/... THE KITCHEN OF YOUR DREAMS Transform your present dreofy old woricshop to a modem lj$2O0^’ as compared to $110 during the fast year. Salaries, fringe benefits and the calendar will be the only thing$ open for revision next year^ according to the new agreeiiient. . ; January 1966 more-.out of curiosity. He met the superintendent of the international school in June of that year and signed a contract soon afterward. UKES ASSIGNMENT “I like overseas teaching very much. It’s quite interesting,” Crowell reflected. “This is something I haven’t experienced before. I haven’t run into any special problems — as the Thai words ‘mai pen rai’ say, fake things as they Crowell noted that his job isn't too difficult since Bangkok is very Americanized. “Our turn over is between 500 and 600 students each yek. We teach primarily the -same-things Amer-iG-aft- high-sebboft— include in their curriculum, but we run one month ahead so that the students who leave will have little trouble readjusting if they move to America,” he explained. SIMH^AR TO U.S. Crowell noted that the administration setup, like the curriculum, is similar to that of schools in the United States. A twelve-member school board Is elected by parents M tuition paying students. Six new members are elected to two-year terms each year. * * ■* The preparatory school is growing rapidly. Next year, Crowell expects the enrollment to top 1,100. Zenith designs out toe bulky fook wito toe "Ctriyle". Inthi* •Km/modem kwk is toe latest in heuing aid elertroida ; toe 2«»lto Mlcro4^^ performanee and dependability. See and test-hear toe altotew "Cirlyto'\.. natuially fmaa Zenith. The quility goes in before the nam^des o AUnjoaoEO zenith dealer pQirtiac Mall Optical & Hearing Aid Canter 682-1113 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24. 1968 A—S Testimony Hurts Fortas Chances—Hart WASHINGTON ( A P ) - Testimony during Senate committee hearings into President Johnson’s Supreme Court appointments has hurt chances that Abe Fortas will be con-firfned as chief justice, according to a leading supporter of the nomination. Sen. Philip A. Hart, IXMich., says opponents of the nominations picked up much ammunition during Senate Judiciary"” Coinmitfee hearings The conunittee, called into closed session today, seems unlikely to finish its hearings in time for the full Senate to act before September on the nominations, which includes the appointment of federal Judge Homer Thornberry to be an associate justice. ★ ★ ★ Chairman James 0. Eastland, D-Miss., said he never predicts what—the^-committee may do, but told newsmen he could not AP Wircphoto BOSTON CASUALTY - George Jalbert, 22, of the Rox-bury section of Boston, examines the scalp wound of Michael Mahoney, 19, of Beacon Hill after a fracas with police last Jiight on historic^oston-Common. Police have been^forcing midnight curfews on hippies who have been congregating on the Common where cows once grazed and Redcoats drilled. an associate justice,...!®'. retirimg Earl Wifr^. *, * i Hart said that Fortas’ refusal to answer questions about his decisions, his acknowledged participation in White House conferences since becoming a member of the court, testimony attacking his rulings invited to return to testify on[ 'Thurmond pressed Christo-i “Our view over-all is that this point if he cared to do so. ' Ipher to tell him what the [justice Fortas has taken Easltod later raid he ».uld|'’““" “ “ sayl nederate and reasonable view layout lortas’ record mm the field i of obscenity,” obscenity cases. ' Christopher replied. extend Fortas a written invitation to come back. The conflict of interest ques- j tion was raised by I’hurmond in J citing testimony Monday by I James J. Clancy, an attorney Citizens for Decent Literature Inc,, who oppose Fortas confirmation. _____________ Helps You Overcome FALSE TEETH Looseness and Worry Mo longer tie annoyed or feel Ul-at-eeee becauee of looee, irobllly falsa teeth. FASTEBTH, an Improved alkaline powder, bolds plates linnet ■o they feel more comfortable. Avoid embarrassment caused by looee false teeth. Denturea thst qt are eeefntlal to health.See your dentist regularly. Oet FASTEBTH ataU drug oounteta. (Political Advertisement) into the naming of Forta^Wj^n^.eiyg Fortas nomina- tion being brought up in the Senate before September. Congress is expected to recess t the end of next week until after Labor Day because of the Republican and Democratic national conventions. PICTURES DISPLAYED The committee concluded nine:P“^**®*’®'^‘ CITES CASE Clancy said that Fortas’ law firm filed a brief for a publisher in a 1957 case and also reportedly helped him get a mailing permit for his men’s magazine and then in 1966, as a member of the Supreme Court, Fortasj l^t -in judgment, on an appeal] involving another firm of thei n XcTnity case a pro3e^ hearings Tuesdayl Thurmond wanted to know if, in ODSCenity cases an proviae i Ithp .Iiistipp nenartmenl hari in-t Candidacy Is OK'd for 2 Romney Aides LANSING (AP) -Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley has rulfed that the governor’s legal aide may legal- on a sensational note when Sen. [the Justice Department had in-i Strom ’Thurmond,^R - S.C.,]«^sttgaterthisn:mrtstophef tolJt displayed magazines with pic-jhim that “a careful iTview oC tures of nude pipn and. .HwmpwW--■mvesttgath^ Ti a s j m sugg^^^^^^ poses and said [revealed there is no reason whyi bv a 10-6 marein at worst and distribution of such “hard- Justice Fortas should not be 'possibirby a iSLf 12 4 core pornography” has become|confirmed as chief justice.” I much worse since Fortas has i The final witness was Deputy] |PLUS ORMUNUS? a Sureme Court justice in Aliy. Gen. Warren Christopher,! I What happens in the Senate,[1965. who was called for questioning! [Hart said, will depend in part of I * ★ * about a Ju.stice Department^ whether Republican opponents] Thurmond also raised the|memorandum reviewing Fortas’! {decide that fighting his ap-question of whether a conflict of {service oh the Supreme Court! pointment will be “More of atnterest was involved in Fortasjand crediting him with an plus than a minus for them {taking part in an obscenity case I unusual degree of judicial Russell Heilman, D-Dollar Bay. In the case of Danhof, Kelley said that as a non-classified politically.” Jy rmior the Court of Appeals, state employe he is aot^pro- without first resigning his position. The ruling was asked in the case of Robert Danhof, legal aide to Gov. George Romney, a candidate for the court post. hibited fpm becoming i date for public office. candi- In the ruling on Milliraan, the a attorney general said that members of the Civil Service Commission are not employes of Kelley also held that the chair-state civil service subject to Commission can run as a candi- tivities that apply to workers date for the County Board of under civil service. Supervisors without a conflict of “Moreover,” Kelley said, “the interest exisrisg between the offices of chairman of the State and suggested that Fortas be restraint.” ELECT ERWIN O. SLATER • Lifelong Pontiac Resident • 36 Years Attorney Private Practice' Pontiac • Your Neighbor 57 Years • MaTfted 39 Years 2 Children 3 Grandchildren FORMER MEMBER; • President Eastside Civic Association • Secretary Pontiac Board of Education • Board Member Oakland County Bor Association MEMBER: • Oakland County Bar Association •-State'"Bdr'^ " of Michigan • American Bor Association • Many Low Committees qnd Sections DISTRICT JUDGE Cin OF PONTIAC EXPERIENCED • CAPABLE • UNDERSTANDING Thin Advprthement Paid for by Slater for Judge Committee, Ralph Lea, Treat. two posts. This question was raised because Richard Milliman, a former press secretary to the governor and present Civil Service Commission chairman, is a candidate for the Eaton County Board of Supervisors. Both queries were from Rep. Girl from Waterford at Medical Meeting A 16-year-old Waterford Township girl has been selected to represent Oakland County at the National 'i Young Adult Conference on Birth Defects sponsored by the March of Dimes. Marsha Karnes of 2120 Old Lane left S u n d a y for Brigham Young MISS KARNES i University in Provo, Utah, to attend the conference. She isi one of 250 young people representing every state at the con-vtotionr— - — -- —- Miss Karnes was chosen this spring to be Waterford Township High School’s teen leader for the 1968-’69 school year. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Karnes. Civil Service Commission and member of the County Board of Supervisors are sufficiently unrelated so as to preclude the of a conflict of interest.” PROPRIETY AT ISSUE Heilman, a Democrat, said several people had asked him ! about the propriety of the^andi-dacy for office by the two Re-! publican aides close to Romney.; Kelley also answered three [ other questions raised by Hell-1 man. 'The attorney general; ruled:. There is no conflict of interest involved if a county register of deeds also operates a private abstract business. A member of a county social services board is not required to resign to become a candidate for state representative. member of the State Board for Public Community and Junior Colleges is not required to re.sign to become a candidate for state representative. 1 Splitting Hairs .- NORTH..LAS. VEGAS,.Nev. (AP) — A city ordinance which declares “girls with long hair are required to wear bathing caps,” was changed this week to “persons with long hair are required to wear bathing caps. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers FREE PARKINCh ON THE PONTIAC MUNICIPAL LOT (CORNER SXGinnrand HURON) Furnuhed by the Following Merchantt: ARTHUR’S 48 N. Saginaw St. OSMUN’S MEN’S WEAR 51 N. Saginaw St. BOBETTE SHOP 16 N. Saginaw St.- GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 51 W. Huron St. CONN’S CLOTHES „ 73 N. Saginaw THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 W. Huron St. July is a bad time of year to buy a sport coat at regular prices. Come to Osmun's great storewide summer clearance sale. July is when Osmun's stages a speetaculaf clearance sale. Wedo it, really, to clear the placeout.. .to make room forthe new merchandise we’ll be showing for Autumn. So suits and sport coats and topcoats and shoes and zip jackets and slacks and you-name-its are going for much lower prices than you’d pay at other times.(You-name-itswith names like: Eagle, Petrocelli, Ronald Bascombe, Ambassador, Phoenix, Martinelli, French Shriner, Crosby Square, M'sieur, Esquire, Fashion Park, etc.) And every^thing that's now sale-priced at Osmun’s previously was regular-priced at Osmun’s. It’s all merchandise right off our racks. And it’s all right on our racks now. Specially tagged. With savings, in some cases, up to 45 percent. So come and look. The sale goes on .all of July. But don’t wait too long. An Osmun’s sale is a bad time of year to wait too long. a part of Pontiac *inc# 1931 LJSMUN’S BTOftES FOR MEN & YOUN® MEN FREE PARKING AT ALL STORES ■ USE YOUR OSMUN’S CHARGE, SECURITY CHARGE or MICHIGAN BANKARD Tech Plaza Center in Warren (12 Mile & Van Dyke) • Downtdwn Pontiac , • Tel Huron Center iq Pontiac Open Every Night'Til 9 Opbn Fri.’Til 9 Open Every Night Til 9 THE PONTIAC PRESS W^t Huron SU'eet Pontiac. Michigan 4805S WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1968 HAitout A. nxauMLs CtiAlrmas of tbo Boon AsKM w. rmatua ^ ^ *»«utlT» Vico preildent MosoglDg Xdltor RICHAU M. FmOCTAtS Treasurer and Flnanco Officer Study Means to Prevent Hijacking The hijacking of airliners is fast becoming an item of only mild news value simply because it happens with such frequency. In fact, the news that government and private agen-cies^ are finally considering steps to prevent airline hijacking was more newsworthy last week than a story about a hijacking several days earlier. of metal like a pistol are being studied. ★ ★ ★ While surveillance has some merit, it would seem the most valuable preventative item would be a device installed at gates which would detect metal objects being carried by passengers. Surely something of this nature must be done to stop this rash of illegal hijackings. Viously because government and private agencies have been -sitting around watching airliners being forced to fly to Cuba and doing little or nothing about it. ★ ★ ★ Last week the Federal Aviation Administration and the Air Transport Association disclosed that devices to photograph passengers boarding a plane, keep them under secret in-flight surveillance or detect large pieces While we cheer these agencies for showing some desire to tackle the problem, we can’t help but wonder why it took so long for someone to decide preventative measures were in order. Maybe it was because the most recent hijacked airliner carried among its passengers a U.S. Senator from Mississippi. One can only imagine what action might have been taken had the airliner carried a higher ranking government official. Voice of the People: ‘Express Your Opinion on Court Appointments* —Americans, supp^ your, senators who are. questioning the qualifications of Justice Abe For-tas and Homer Thornberry. The Senate JUdiciary Committee is acting on our behalf. We do not have the opportunity to question these men but our senators who represent us do; and if they don’t, they are letting us down. ★ ★ ★ ~ President Johnson would like to place his pals on the bench on the highest court in the land, without question. Why should we accept this? We will have to abide by the decisions of these men for the rest of their lives. Do we not have the right to know everything about their qualifications and backgrounds? ★ ★ ★ The decisions handed down by the Supreme Caurtjaffect each of us in our daily life. It is our duty to seTthaC:^ find the very best men in the Country for suchKigh'PQsitmns. Find out the facts and write your Senators tolfelHhein how you feel. MRS. A. W. FOSTERT 591 FIRST Why Not Make It A Team Operation! David Lawrence ^ys: ‘Fathead’ Could Be Compliment in Disguise " Ervill Plan Aims at Judge SetUD „ ‘Pontiac Qtizen Has Great Interest in Youth’ One of the outstanding citizens in our community Is Howard Dell, who has been called the “Great Youth Worker.” Countless numbers of youngsters have been influenced for good because of Howard’s outstanding character. Boys who were potential juvenile delinquents came out on top because of Howard’s love and interest. He was my little league baseball coach when I was nine years old, and for the past ten years he has been a tremendous inspiration to me. Every person I know who has come in contact with Howard has found Fman-he^ean trust. BILL TIPTON 57 ADELAIDE Although medical science continually warns us that excess fat can lead to dire health problems, it may turn but to be just the opposite topside. Being a fathead may have its advantages. ★ ★ ★ A researcher, Dr. Georg& T. Cherayil of the Marquette School of Medicine, suggests there may be a definite relationship between fatty material in the brain and mental illness—the more fat, the less likelihood of illness. He says studies have shown less fat in gray matter from former mental patients than from normal brains. Various fat deficiencies, in- cluding that old devil, cholesterol, have been indicated in cases of schizophrenia, senility, degenerative diseases of the brain and spinal cord and alcoholism. Cherayil cautions that research is still preliminary and doesn’t support a cause-and-effect relationship. But further study could conceivably lead to therapy aimed at reversal of whatever processes may be involved in fat deficiencies. It could turn out that while sticks and stones may break our bones, at least one name is a downright compliment. WASHINGTON-At last the Congress of the United States is beginning to give attention to the political manipulation of America’s system of s e ie c t i hg pressing doubts as to the wisdom of the appointment. If it were not for the widespread criticism of the Supreme Court of the United States today, the whole subject would probably not b^ in the news. The fact that Abe Fortas, who has been named by President Johnson to be chief justice, contitnued to act as a personal adviser oL M r-i Johnson while serving as associate justice of the Supreme Court during the last •three years. Jias r a+s-ed eyebrows in Congress and elsewhere. (Copyright, 1968, PubMsherS'Hali Syndicate) Even the Eskimos Have Gone Modern The illusion-shatterers are at it again, coming up with those cold, hard facts to break up our fondest dreams of people in faraway places. This time it is word that stereotypes concerning such peoples get in the way of understanding. The word comes from a University of Wisconsin anthropologist, William S. Laughlin. The people in question? Eskimos. You know, those people of the North who dwell in igloos and rub noses. You’re in for a surprise. Only one in 10 has ever been in- side an igloo. Most live in frame houses, according to Laughlin. The nose rub, so dear to the hearts of storytellers of the Great North, has been replaced with the kiss. Furthermore, lest we harbor any other illusions about this ancient people, a five-year, $1 million study of the race is about to be undertaken. All of which makes us blubber for the good old, myth-ridden days, not to mention the long, long nights when Eskimo gals gnawed on reindeer hide to soften it for clothing, thus becoming the first among females to chew the fat with the neighbors. Myth Surrounds VP Nominees By RAYM0ND MOLEY There are periods when political commentators and editors find acute shortages of interesting —topics to write abouL They then fall back upon a few hardy perennials or, one might say in this case, quad-rennials. W h e n the MOLEY presidential nominees are all but determined — and they usually are a few weeks before the nominating conventions -r- speculation returns to possible nominees for vice president. * * -k In more than one presiden-,-4M-t;afhpaign year in the past, when this question of vice presidential candidates has been brought about, I-have taken the trouble to point out a lesson in politics which I , learned a long time ago. And now since I realize that no one long remembers or little notes what is written by a political writer, I venture to repeat that lesson. FDR STRATEGIST I learned it from the late Ed Flynn, boss of the Bronx, the Democratic national chairman in 1940 and the wisest mid most influential of all FDR’s strategists for many years. It was in 1944 iftdien, because 6t Flynn’s advice, Roosevdt had decided to ^Hlump” Henry Wallace from the ticket. As a replacement, Roosevelt had substantially promised the vice presidential nomination t o James F. Byrnes who had left the Supreme Court to help the president in the war effort. At that point Flynn, as he told me later, decided to intervene. He forcefully and even heatedly told the president that if Byrnes were on the ticket he could not hope to carry New York state. Then, in answer to Roosevelt’s request for an alternate, Flynn answered: “The man who will lose you the fewest votes. No candidate for vice president has ever helped the head of the ticket.” And so, Harry S. Truman, relatively unknown nationally, was chosen. FLYNN WAS RIGHT ^ ... ^ . . 7- ■■•---.ayould turn away troi After Flynn told me about 3 "pi?ffiersbip-aad. v this I looked at the record - .... over the years. It was clearly apparent that Flynn was right. Vice presidential candidates have been chosen for many reasons but I find that until 1960—a quite definite exception to the rule—none has helped the ticket. Sometimes they have been chosen by pure chance after the'^nomination of the presidential, candidate. Often geography has had something to do with it. In one conversation with will wan| sonjeone who will Nixon in 1960, L learned that be loyal to • the President, he’^ at that time firmly be- who will help in off-year lieved in Flynn’s rqlc., The campaigning and will be used nomination of Hen^ Cabot by the president for mlscel-Lodge was the idea 0^ Presi- lajieous, chores. dent Eisenhower and ex-President Hoover, but the listless campaigning of Lodge unfortunately lost many votes for the ticket. ■ Two “dream tickets” have been the subject of most comment. One was Rockefeller-Reagan. ERRAND BOY? This has been repeatedly rejected by Ronald Reagan no doubt because if he accepted such a nomination he would stultify every principle which he has stood for in his public life. And why leave the great office of governor of California to be an errand boy for the governor of New York even if that governor should be elected president? Countless thousands of Republicans mid turn away from such 7 ■ vote for George Wallace or Hubert Humphrey. * k * Or a Humphrey - Edward Kennedy ticket? The young senator would sacrifice a promising future to be the tail of the kite of 9 man whose views on Vietnani his brother Robert Kennedy vigorously opposed. The two men who are likely to be nominated fbTPfesident will no douM follow a rule created by Nixon himself and followed by Humphrey in the office of vice president. They Ervin, D-N.C., who has been criticizing appointments to the judiciary made “for political purposes and not for judicial excellence” has offered an amendment to the Constitution to provide a new way for the President to choose justices of the Supreme Court of the United States. Under the Ervin proposal, when there is a vacancy on the court, the president would be required to call a conference of the presiding judges of the highest court of each state and of the chief judge in each of the 11 United States circuit courts of appeals. This conference would designate and transmit to the president the names of five or more persons considered qualified to fill a vacancy on the high court. WOULD BE OBLIGATED The president would be obligated to select one of the designated j) e r s 0 n s for nomination. If the Senate did not„ confirm the first name, the president then would he obligated to pick someone else from the list. Up to now, the Department of Justice either has submitted names to the president in advance or has looked up the record of persons whom the president has indicated he might be interested in appointing to the bench. But the department has not itself publicly d i s c u s s.e d the qualifications of the appointees. k k k The Department of Justice could be made an independent agency, headed by an attorney general who would be appointed for a tern^ of 10 years. The department could be conducted like t h e Comptroller General’s Office, which is responsible directly to Congress for its acts and not to the execqtive. Many senators were astonished this week when the Department of Jii-stiee transmitted a memorandum defending the appointment of Justice Fortas and making laudatory comments about his decisions, while at the same time criticizing the congressional committee forj cx- Verbal Orchids Mrs. Grace Munro of 172 K Mill; 82nd birthday. Mrs Eva Eyarts of 1107 Airway Drive; 88th birthday.. Mr. and Mrs, Emtnet Bailey of Ortonville; 66th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Harry Lehman of 1763 LaDue; 87tli bir^iday. Humphrey Fears Revolt hy McCarthy Delegates By BRUCE BIOSSAT WASHINGTON (NEA) — It Is supposed to be something of a put-down for Vice President Humphrey that President Johnson seems to be stage-managing the 1968 Democratic national convention as he did the 1964 affair at Atlantic City. Actually, the vice president’s strategists are far more concerned over a put-down of another sort— how to put down an incipient rebellion at Chicago by the most militant of Sen. Eugene McCarthy’s chosen convention delegates. k k k Humphrey men estimate that upward of 200 of the senator’s committed delegates probably “Will be in noisy revolt throughout the convention and very likely will walk out under the glaring eye of gullible television. As one aide puts it: ,, “These people are going to look upon Chicago simply as a place to demonstrate against the war.”------ FEARS REAL The Humphrey camp’s fears of a seriously disrupted convention thus are very real, and are not assuaged by triple-perimeter ticket checks to prevent packing of the hall —or provisions for a tight security seal to block any storming of the doors as some hotheads are calling for. There is obviously no way to bar the doors to legitimately chosen McCarthy* delegates obsessed with extreme dovish views on Vietnam and determined to condemn as undemocratic any convention that does not nominate McCarthy. Humphrey leaders think they saw the shape of things to Come in the Minnesota convention a few weeks :^go. A delegate who had been sharply criticized bv McCar-thyites in the hall stood up to answer on a point of personal privilege. A cluster of McCarthy delegates, loudly chanting, “We want Peace!” from the conventiqn floor, drowned him out for several minutes. He gave up. “It was the first time in my memory,” says a Minnesota Democrat, “that a delegate was not permitted to speak.” Curiously, not one of the many Humphrey men who voiced fears of a disrupted convention spoke of racial militants as a likely focus of trouble inside Chicago’s International Amphitheater. The whole stress was on the peace types. k k k So it is these militants on the delegate rosters, rather than any gallery shouters or swirling demonstrators outside, who are believed to hold the potential for trouble. And there seems to be little confidence that the permanent convention chairman, Rep. Carl Albert of Oklahoma, or anybody else can contain it altogether. ’What Merits Priority Over Airport Plans?’ The Press has endorsed the much-debated Orion Airport plans. The same Phess also dwells upon fighting crime 9nd seeking better law enforcement, complete with strict prosecution of , the guilty. What then should merit priority? An Oakland County morgue and a medical examiner so that the prosecutor could present all evidence, or a VIP airport? The Press has always had strong feelings on traffic safety, Does anyone know what percentage or^ccidehTs directly results ■ from the deplorable condition of our northend County roads? Shouldn’t priority go toward maintaining them? k k k ** You often refer to the beauty of our Michigan waters. I agree, but the water backing up from sewers and drains each time it rains isn’t such a source of pride. Shouldn’t funds go there maybe before a private jet airport? INGRID SMITH 6360 EASTLAWN, CLARKSTON Reader Disagrees With Recent Press Article 1%, I think it was unnecessary to put that article in the paper about Hollywood, Florida. We have been there the last four years and it is a wonderful place to go. There really Isn’t enough work for all Negroes. They work in hotels, restaurants and places where there is work. What are you trying to do, start trouble? Why don’t we try minding our own business? MRS. HELEN LEHIGH 42 N. ARDMORE Question and Answer Please settle an argument. In “Have Gun, Will Travel,” did Paladin have a first name, and if so, was it Ward or Wire? R. A. REPLY To our knowledge, his first name was never given on the show. However, his card read “Wire Paladin,” which may be what’s confusing you. The “Wire” was not his name, but rather a suggestion to send a telegram (wire) to Paladin in Case of trouble requiring outside assistance. He was for hire as a troubleshooter and could be reached by wire in San Francisco. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Hovertroin Atlanta Journal One of the hits of Expo last summer in Montreal was the Hovercraft, a British boat which traveled across (and above) the water on air jets. It was fun to ride and fast. Now comes word from Eng- *1 n d of an experimental overtrain, which uses the same principal. The train will have one track and will be guided by it and not rest upon it. > k k k The motor is described as linear induction which works by magnetic traction and has no moving parts. Very little power will be required to move the train at high speeds along a T-shaped concrete platform. kkk Thu is worth,Jhinking„.ab.o.ut. and watching. Rapid transit still IS in the future. A Hover-train sounds economical, fast and a lot of fun besides. Th« A»tociot»d ntiM It It 04.00 41 yaor; wit*-in MleMgcm ond all gHinr pioco* In thn Unttnd StotM $36.00 q yoor. moil tobteripHont m. PMto^ iMt hm ___deu folo of Ppm MMiborofAIC Firefighting The Holland Evening Sentinel ~ In the bad old days, fighting the fires that destroy so much priceless forest was largely a job for men armed with little more than shovels, courage and tenacity. It was tough, hazardous work, and often the battle was lost. Fighting forest fires is still tough and hazardous. Modern equipment lias made it less so, however,'and raised the odd^ Jor success. Some of the stuff now used to help the ^ firefighters has '») fine Buck Rogers flavor about It. kkk To spot fires, in the first place, the U, S. Fores t Service uses aircraft equipped with infrared sensors. Firefighters wear heat-resistant shirts and carry an aluminized blanket that whips into an instant fire shelter. The “troops” can call in flying fire engines — tank helicopters capable of dumping 250 gallons of water at once or spreading it over a 60-foot-long swathe. Frozen dinners in pop-top cans are dopped to n\en caught on distant ridges. If they must spend the night they use lightweight, disposable paper sleep 1 n g bags. Light plastia one-man water tanks, collapsible after . 4ise, repteee^^ t^^ bulky, heavy tank once carried into battle. kkk Though combating forhst fires is still no picnic, modem equipment and methods make it safer and more efficient. As a result, the chances of savingour forest heritage from destruction are greatly improved. ' searchers hove proved that daily gym classes aren’t as beneficial as those held three ’ times a w^ek. the research took plUce in California, where state law requires daily physical education classes of 50 minutes. As a trial, some schools gave classes three times a week totaling 250 minutes. k k ★ The result — the trial class students showed an increase in physical fitness almost double those in regular classes. The reason is obvious. Students in the SO-minute classes had to spend about 40 per cent of their class in dressing and re-dressing. And fixing their hair. Smiles Frimd oi from shopping in complete shock. A gal actually thanked him for bolding a door open lor her. ★ ★ What this country needs is a credit card to which you can transfer all the chargei " on your other credit «cards. For Girls . . . Wichita Kansas Eagle This may interest only girls who hate gym classes because of the complexities of dressing and rerdressing, and making theji- hair pr^entable for return m regular classes. Anyway, some earnest re- We always find something on the editorial page to shoDt abont — jam, because the kids get t^ paper before we do. ★ ■ ★' Pei^le who sneak in calorie-stuffed desserts white paying for a diet program, am just waisting their money. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNP^SDAV, .JT LY 2t, 19fi8 A—7 PAY NO MONEY DOWN . TAKE UP TO A YRS; TO PAY ON THESE TOP VALUES MAYTAG LAUNDRY HELPERS AT LOW, LOW PRICES WESTINGHOUSE Portable solid state phono plays on batteries or AC house current Operates for Kours on 6 "D" batteries OL p|jit.giJnto on/ AC putfet. Four-speed turntable. Wide-range speaker. Jwin jeweled needles. 45 RPM spindle. Volume and tone controls. 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(Sat. 9:30-9) Drayton open Sunday Noon to 6 p.m. (DmnUaum cldiet Tua, Fed. t 6. pjnJ downtown and DRAYTON PLAINS *A—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1968 Rocky, Reagan Agree That Latter Is Gaining | IbarbecuMIs^^ SPAGHETTI ;ao€e Among the convention By Hie Associated Press "rather^ sizable movements’ Rohald Reagan and Nelson A. have sprung up designed t< Rockefeller found themselves in I make him a candidate. • Gov. Tim Babcock of agreemoit today on a surpris- “I can’t ignore them. It’s Montana, Nixon’s western tag point; Both saw growing jthere," Reagan said. regional chairman, said Nixon support for Reagan’s unan-i * * * ^ ‘ has the strength in the key nounced presidential candidacy. | The governors conference states from coast to coast” to Rockefeller, governor of New (provided a focal point for’win in November. York, told newsmen at the Na-[Tuesday’s nationwide political | ★ ★ * timial Governors Conference at doings which included ai • Louisana Democrats se-Ctacinnati Tuesday that he [demonstration-marred visit byilected the state’s first racially knows of 55 delegates, most of [Vice President Hubert H . integrated convention delegation - them in the South, who have [Humphrey to New York City, a and predicted all 50 members running mate, although wasnT-locking the door to an assist from the convention. Richard M. Nixon Republican didate. Humphrey didn,’t indicate his preference for a running mate, sfiowed some irritation when asked repeatedly about whether he will talk to Kennedy about the possibility of accepting second place. The news conference pro-[ ceeded a $500-d«-plate dinner at ............. • la rad, I Gov. John B. Connally of'while hundreds of antiwar be considered irt , shaping the .programs to insure full 1968 platform; -----------------(employment; strengthening of The themes summed up what [the free enterprise system; an Humphrey has been saying in ropep presidency” with citizen campaign appearances a n diparticipation at all levels, and position papers and included; jfull use by society of the Peace, at home and abroad; a benefits of science and “Marshall plan” for the cities;(technology. SAUCE FOR HOT DOGS HAMBURGERS. FRAHKS, ETC. Cut up and brown thin slices ot green peppers, celery and onions. Simmer the mixture in Ragu' Spaghetti Sauce. the (Eugene J. McCarthy and[ _________________ ____ can-[agreement in electrical workersITexas stopped short of saying[dertionstrators milled in thel disputes that had threatened Massachusetts Sen. Edward M.[streets outside, that the next! | * * * (both national conventions. [Kennedy lacked the qualifica-j president will have to reexamine j . Rockefeller said 37 have lined] * ★ * " (tions to be a vice presidential!America’s national priorities. [ • up behind Reagan and the rest! McCarthy and Humphrey are running mate for Humphrey but I * ★ * | | behind his own announced can-fighting for the Democratic indicated he favored a morel Humphrey headquarters in dldacy. (presidential nomination. ! conservative candidate. (tVashington released a letter the I Despite conceding this shift to speech BY PRESIDENT GREAT STRENGTH rvice president wrote July 15 to' ^ Reagan, Rockefeller insisted i ^ ,i o i ... the Democratic Platform Com- that only he can win for the , State ctaef executives trooped ( _Sev^l governors earjier mimittee, suggesting seven themes ! I non„Ki,-/ane in 3 Cincinnati hotcl ballroom the conference suggested Ken-----------_________________________i I'”'- "“‘X strength . I NO SFECTFIC FIGURES | throughout ^ day that was o a Humphrey ticket. . Reagan, appearingT “at "a^^capped wTtTa speech by Pfesi-! * * ! separate news conference, dent Johnson in which he re-[ Humphrey, meanwhile, Grads to Hear YOU HAVEN’T REALLY TASTED FRIED CHICKEN UNTIL YOU’VE TRIED OUR CONNECTICUT YANKEE FRIED CHICKEN didn’t have any specific figures. I viewed world and national prob-|dicated that he was reserving , r r • But the California governor said lems. ifor himself the right to pick a / ^JrTipiQl .DONE RIGHT, THE AMERICAN WAY! Terrence J, Carey, director of admissions and scholarships at Michigan State University, will address about » 70 summeri graduates o f | Pontiac Central | High School V Aug. 2. The ceremo- I nies will be held I at 7 p.m. in the i iselioor"a jrium, according " I to Richard Til-I wick. Central summer school i principal. Yankee Doodle Dandy Serves 5 to 7 14-pcs. of Chicken, 7 Dinner Rolls, pt Country ChiekenGrovy CAREY reg. $3.95 '3.35 Bunker Hill Dinner 3 ~ pcs. Chicken, Whipped Potatoes, Country Chicken Gravy or French Fries, Cole Slow, Roll and Honey. reg. $1.40 '1.25 Carw, who has held his pres-1 ent post for three years, has I been in the MSU office of admis- ■ sions and scholarshtp^^^nce * 1961. I Farmer Jack’s Basket I A 'Soft' Criminal * GOP BIGWIGS HUDDLE -formal attire for a night of festivities, these three Republican governors — (frdm left) Ronald Reagan of California, Raymond Shafer of Pennsylvania and Nelson Rocke- AP Wirephoto feller of New York — huddle at the National Governors’ Conference at Cincinnati, Ohio. Last night’s affair was a combination cocktail party, dinner and ball. MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPl) - A burglar, described by pp- Serves 8 to 10 20-pcs. Chicken, 10 Dinner Rolls, Honey for 10. I lice as a thirs^ “soft liquorl | Iman.” hauled. ^Tvay 14 cases ofl ' heer from a/tavern, hut didn’t! T reg. $5.25 '4.50 LIBERTY BELL 5-pieces of Xhicken, Whipped Potatoes, Country Chicken Gravy or French Fries, Slow, Rolls, Honey. Reg. $1.85 '1.70 I touch the whisky supply. SAVING FESrm TERRIFIC SAVINGS ON ALL AWNINGS Romney :Vofers L/nmovedl j These special prices are for a limited time only . .. prices will go hack to CINaNNATI » - Gov George Romney of Michigan says “most people still are undecided, uncommitted and unenthusiastic” about November elections. Asked how he would classify himself, the Michij Republican said “if I was enthusiastic, I would be committed to a candidate.” Romney told a news conference at the National Governors Conference Monday he was disturbed about a poll 11 among his state’s voters show-1 ■ ing large blocs either undecided'' or planning not to yote in; I November. j Romney said he hopes the ' Republican National Convention will be “open.” He said no one candidate already has the necessary delegate votes locked up to get the nomination. Romney said his delegation will remain uncommitted until the convention. regular Monday morning. OUR SPEOltt-T^I THE MINUTE^, 11 THECDLOtRBDX 9-pieces of Delicious Chicken with 4 Hot Rolls and Honey. Reg. $2.95 '2.50 2 PIEIXS 5 rollardhohey 75' Reg- 85c Bring the family! Eat scrumptious Fried Chicken in Yankee^s cool, comfortable air conditioned store! 1125 NORTH PERRY ... OPEN NIGHTS UNTIL 10, SUNDAY UNTIL 7 P.M. We Design • We Monufatture • We Install • We Guarantee MOVE EP YOUR EARME\GS MOVE YOUR SAYINGS TO 1st FEDE^L 5% ID $10,000 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES $5,000 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rale of 514% when held for a period of 12 months. Earn the rate of 5% when held for a period of 9 months____________ 4k% $2,500 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES PASSBOOK SAVINGS ACCOUNTS Earn the rate of 4%% when held for a period of 6 months. 1 r«lr of 414% in cotnpoundrd ■ nd paid quarterly; which give* an annual yield of 4.318, a high rate of return paid on regular in.ured paiutbook aavingH. All Account^ Receive nocidental LIFE INSURANCE PROTECTION up to $10,000 at no additional cost! 761 W. HURON STREET Downtown Pontiac — Drayton Plains Rochester ^ Ciarkston - Milford Walled Lake — Lake Orion Waterford — Union Lake mE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, .JI LV 24, 1968 City Acts to Speed River Work City commissioners last night | took another step to implement a multimillion dollar improve-iment of the Clinton RiVer in the[ 1 southwest section of (he city. I I Commissioners authorized a' j resolution petitioning the I Oakland County drain com-i missioner to undertake a pro-1 ! ject to “relocate, widen,! (deepen, straighten, tile or make any improvements -necessary to the river from Crystal Lake! existing improvements at; OrchardLake and Congress. I Joseph E. Neipling, director of the Department of Public Works and Service, said that, petitioning the drain com-' mission now will speed up the' City Affairs actual improvement although) the actual construction will be; some time away, because of the time necessary to ' ‘ ' ^uch pr^cts. The commission last week, authorized a contract with con-i suiting engineers to make recommendations on what steps would be necessary to improve the course and flow of the river. MAJOR DELAY Neipling asked the City Com- , i It was neces.sary to revise the : estimates, Neipling said. In i i order to bring them in line with I actual bids received on the : projects. Engineering eslimates of the ' ■ : cost of the two drainage pro- jects were $52.1.457 but actual mission to begin the necessary paper work by approving the * ★ ! petition now instead of walLln^^^^,, ortlTelJrbjeH?'';^^ until the engine^ing study is)assessed under a method undertaken “to overcome the whereby the entire Ttty is problem of major delay in assessed the cost, bringing a project into exist-ence." Exploratory drilling for oil * ★ ★ and gas in the United States In other action, the com-continued a 10-year decline in mission approved new estimates 1967, with about 8,600, wells for two large drainage projects dr^ed last year, 40 per cent on the wesfside of town. less than in 1957. "• '■ A—9 . Police in Pittsburgh R^id 'Jungle' Still PITTSBimUH (AP) - “It-was like a jungle up there,'! • said Police Capt. Kenneth Ujev.* ich after raiding a hillside. moonshine operation, “t don't know how the moonshiner got the stuff up there. The captain said the hill In ronTstreet :on rose fi level at nearly a 90 degree angle The raiders got to the still Tue.sday by grabbing clumps of’ vegetation and pulling themselves up. ★ * * “The area is so inaccessible it would have been cheaper to buy a bottle every day,” Ujevich said, THE WINNAH! - Peter C. O’Connell (left) of Lakeside, Calif., is congratulated on his election yesterday as president of the American Legion Boys Nation in Washington, BARGAIN HUNTERS-FRETTER GUARANTEES TO SAVE YOU MONEY! PUANCE Witt PAY ANYBODY AP WIrtphote D.C. The handshake comes from the teen he defeated, Ronald D. Durflinger, of Hutchinson, Kans. Lowest of 2 Bids Accepted on Demolition of Buildings The lowest of two bids wasi Joseph E. Neipling, director; Intersections which will be accepted last night by the City I of the Department of Public improved by the contractor. Commission to begin demolition | Works and Service, said when Max Frisinger, are East Wide of city-owned buildings at 117'demolition is completed the Track at Auburn and Telegraph Lake, formerly used for opera-.property, can be offered for at Golf, tions of the Department of sale. Public Works and Service. Commissioners also: Awarded a contract was the • Approved the lowest of six IT _Elkins ^Excavating a n d bidders — Eames^& Brown. Inc. 4Temolition. £b_jiL Union^ -- for installation^ of $50,000 with a bid of $7,6,12, some $2,000 worth of new equipment at the less than the next jlowest bidder, city's .sewage treatment plants. • Approved the only bidder — Alvah Greer and .Sons of Roseville — for $36,365 worth of sidewalk replacement work, 'mostly in the downtown area Unrest Cooled in 4th Night of NY Trouble OlUiF Om Mkhigao'* Original OifcowntMi IF THEY CAN SEAT OUR DEAL ON PRICE & SERVICE j Shop us ond comparol Nobody but nobody undersells Ollie Fretterl Our ’ prices are guaranteed to be the lowest possible! We'll beat ony legitimate deal on price ond service or we'll poy you $5.00 absolutely free! 2,000 AIR CONDITIONERS SALE PRICED NOW! Bus Subsidy Is Continued "NEW YORK (AP) - Police reinforcements were called to ' - Approved the lowest of Lower East Side Tuesday 'three bidders. Max Frisinger of f"'' fourth consecutive Ann Arbor, for $14,000 worth of ^ residents parade City commi-ssioners last night construction on two city Tactical Patrol voted to continue the city’s bus tersections. neighbor- subsidy of the Pontiac Transit; * * -k hood broke up into a bottle- Cerp. until Aug. 31 and to Gon-^T^itthorized -receiving bids^“®^^^^° P°l*c^‘ sider by that time a new pro-;for the 1968 major street! * * * posal for subsidizing the bus resurfacing and reconstruction; ^50 members of the operation. (program by Aug 19 specially trained AIR CONDITIONERS ^5 Says We're Lowest • Authorized advertising for j“ riot and crowd control, | An agreement with the city | bids for a street constructionstreets adjoining and the bus company calls for program for the city’s industrial ^''®""® ^ an annual subsidy of up to park area which may run up to P several hours of $35,000 per year. $200,000, City Manager Joseph '■®‘"!*''® : The agreement ended June 30;A. Warren said. throwing spree led plainclothes ; but the ^commission had not •Authorized receiving bids !‘*®*^®®*^*''®®.*° ®"'®®P decided to continue the agree-i by Aug. 5 for $75,000 worth of'^^'"®®^ telling people to get in- ; ment pending further discussion asphalt patching on local'®**^® ^^® ‘he pre- ! with representatives of the streets. dominantly Puerto Rican area. : ** L_________________ BELOW ESTIMATES At one point, jjlainclothesmen : According to the 1968 edition! Neipling said he would not entered a tenement with gunsj of Automobile Facts and Figures published by the Automobile Manufacturers Association, three-fourths of the 1967 cars had pow&r steering, more than 38 per cent power brakes and an equal number had factory-installed air-conditioning. normally recommend the city drawn and arrested six persons,! approve a single bid, in the'including one woman. They| ' case of the sidewalk replace-j were charged with disorderly!' ment, but the bid, amounting toicbnduct. j ' about 85 cents per square foot,! Seven other arrests were! ■ was lower than engineering Imade, including two for bur-i ■ estimates ($1 per square foot) lglary at a local supermarket, of what the project would cost. No injuries were reported. Westingtiouse 5,000 BTU AIR CONDITIONER • Lightweight —only 59 lb>. • Lifetime washable filter • 2 fen speeds for high and lew cool NOMONIVDOWH SriARSTOPAY NOPATMINTS'TIl OCTOBER *89 REFRIGERATORS *5 Says We're Lowest HO MONET DOWN 3 TEARS TO PAT NO PATMENTS 'Til OCTOBER A\liii*lpool 17-FT. 2-DOOR NO-FROST REFRIGERATOR • Twin erispers • 2 glide-out shelves • Separate cold controls • Super storage doors *269 WASHERS - DRYERS >5 Says We're Lowest FREE DEUVERV, SERVKE AND WARANTH WCLUDD IN AU PRICES COLOR TV ^5 Says We're Lowest Save on light ond bright shoes for teens and women ’ 8.99-10.99 dress shoes for gals going places 4.47 A terrific selection of fashion heels, flats in assorted colors. All sizes in the savings group, but not in every color or style. Hurry, save! miripool BIG FAMILY SIZE AUTO. WASHER 5.99-6.99 casuals and flats for comfort, fun 2.97 Straps, siip-bns; sdnadls and ties in a wide assortment of styles. All sizes in the savings group, but not in every cplor or style. Save nowl 3 speeds, A-C cenverter jack, plays anywhere. $1^88 'i 23" DIA. WOOD WALNUT COLOR CONSOU OPIN 10 A.M. TO 9 t.M. (Sat. «:30-9) Drayton open Sunday Noon to 6 p.m. fDowntatm ehtrr Tut^ Wtd. at t p.m.) DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PIjMNS • 25,000 volts of picture power • Ultra-SonBitivo 82*channoi tuning • High gain 3-stago IF amplifier • Autonratic "fringe-lock" circuit HD MONEY DOWN 3 TUBS TO PAT HOPAV ------- FRETTER’S SoHttifield On Telegraph Road Just South of 12 Mile Rd. 358-2886 FRETTER’S Oakland 411 W. 14 Mile Road Opposite Oakland Mall 585-5300 A---10 'rHK rON'l'I AC PKKSS. WKDX KSDAV, JIJLV 24, I OHS M'm Running to Win' Wallace Hits GOP-Dem 'Deal' DRS (MOINES, Iowa (.MM — publican or Oemocralic candi- lace rapped the Supreme Court, George T. Watlac.e, third-party dale of enough votes to win in Commpnisls, those who inler-ptesidential candidate, says iynve,-nhpt- and Ihcrohv require fere with private property own- proposal that congressmen............... • , . . ' , ■ pledge support for the candidate ‘^e elect.oh outcome be de- crship and the right to eduva-who win,s the largest vote i.s l<’™med by the House of Rep-tion and persons respmisible for foolish -------'n’EsenTatlv’es. the breakdown of law and order. And he told a news conference'MUCH MORE Sl’PPORT' ' VVallace supporters said be Etituhonal. much more support than is gen- „ * „ * . * , supposed. ■•] m not run- ^ ^ allace ca led the proposal mng to throw the election into 5^ vaiers frolii by Rep. Charles L. Goodell, R-j.the House of Reprcsentaturs, counties N\Y., and Rep. Morris K. Udall, I'm running to win,” he said. 1 T)-Ariz.. ‘ just another deal be- ' A crowd estimated at 6,(N0 GN OKi.AHOMA BAl.l GT tween the national Republicans gave him an enthusiastic recep- In another dexeiopmc"! T.u's and Democrats.” tion for his "sad commentary” da,\ . the Oklahoma .suoctna- A number of congressmen as on the country Tuesday night at Court issued an onier grarunc well as governors have ex- the state fairgrounds. Wallace and other candidates oS pressed concern, that the \Val-____l_j*____c*----------Ins nariv o!.u,~es_i.'it itu- >.>k:.^ho- l^e camiidacy-might-tendnihg IrCthe talk, like others he has ma ballot. U.idace . ' ' 0, ; enough to deprive either the Re- given around the country, Mai- fuxi for the I tab baiiot "■LVtaE 2STEWS HSr •ITS INCONSTITUTIONAL’ — Third party candidate I'loorge C. VVallace rejects proposal of a plot to block him from the presidency during a press conference at Des Moiires: f APPLIANCE CO I»JFO-fiIONEY DOWN WASHER-DRYiR SALE jreotest home laundry values ever. Buy the pair and save! Or, you can buy 'em separately too! No trade-in necessary. No money down. Free delivery included — even at these low pr FREE DELIVERY and FREE SERVICE What's more fun than a new toy? And where do you find the new ones, plus all the old favorites too? Right at Hudson's Pontiac! Outdoor equipment lor fun and fitness, at low, vdlue prices. See these and lots more now in Hudson's Toys. Riderpp Kangaroo Jockey Ball is great fun for all ages. Just climb on, start to bounce, and away you go. Rugged wall vinyl, 61' circumference. Has an easy grip handle, too. Find it quickly in Hudson’s Toys, 2nd Floor. Just 9.99 HOXPOINT AUTOMATIC WASHER Easy to operate . . . fully automatic from fill to finish. One knob control. High vane agitator gets out deep-down dirt, family size capacity. Safety lid switch stops the spin action when lid IS opened. All porcelain — won't rust or stain ever! . . . Looks new for years. Heavy duty transmission. Handles big loads safely. Prev. yrs. models. Buys Both' HOTPOINT AUTOMATIC DRYER Fully automatic . . . easy to operate — single one-knob control. Large lint filter, tumble drying action, large family size capacity. Safety door switch stops tumble action when the door is opened. Porcelain top and tub — won't rust or stojn ever! Heavy duty motor safely handles big loads. Prev. yrs. models. Great new Go-Go-Cycle will be the hit of the block. It's propelled by reverse winding heavy-duty spring. Push it back with your foot, let it go, and off you go to twice the distance. Horn, trunk,'simulatecMkey.-Toys, 2nd Floor. 8.99 Lots of healthy exercise is built into this sturdy gym set. Lots of safety, too. Of ‘lYi’ metal tubing with many safety features like Dura-Kool seats, curved handles and welded corners. Find it in our Garden Center, 33.66 Whirlpool rr WHIRLPOOL AUTOMATIC WASHER Family size capacity. 3 water temp, selections ■ (including cold __wosh), special new Super-Soak cycfe.“ Magic-mix filter. 3 wash cycles end fred-flow draining that drains dirty water away from washed clothes. Aotomoticolly fills water to full load level. Surgilator agitator and multi-rinses. P * ^..... ..... Buys Both WRIRLPOOL AUTOMATIC DRYER You just cannot afford to be without, indoor drying convenience at this low Highland price, and Whirlpool quality and features make it really worthwhile. Fully automatic electric. 2 cycles. Automatic temperature selection. Large lint Screen. Safe for all fabrics. ' r ... .... NO MONEY DOWM • 3 yEAFI3"TO-1»AY-” POMTItC MALL SNOPPINB CEMTER TEIECRAPH ROAD, Corner Elizabeth Lake Road OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 • PHONE 682-2330 Your sandbox set will play for hours in this 2-seater. And, it will last for years! Has galvanized steel bottom, weatherproofed frame with redwood Stain and adjustable 'vinyl canopy to keep the sun out! In our Garden Center. 8.66 Shopping tips from Hudson's Pontiac tomorrow JSnSA^ilHJSC nra-.T. THE PONTIAC) PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 2i, 1968 A—11 Every single piece oi sunmer humture wcown is now on CLEARANCE atHn^on's i Famous names like Bunting, Vogue, Picks Reed, Superior Reed and Rattan, Algoma, Wall Tube, Woodard, Plantation Patterns I Wrought iron, rattan, nickel-plated cordwrap, cushioned pieces for poolside, patio, terrace, yard, cottage I Umbrella tables, dining tables and chairs, hammocks, gliders, chaises, chairs, other comfortable seating pieces I Special order cancellations, ones-of-a-kind, floor samples, some slightly soiled. Shop early for the best selection I Enjoy fabulous savings for this summer and buy now for next summer or year 'round. Sorry, no mail or phone orders I Not every piece at each store, but representative pieces at each store. Hurry to Hudson’s Town and Terrace Shops HERE ARE REPRESENTATIVE VALUES Bunting chaise 28.88 Aluminum frame; yellow/green floral cover. Bunting glider 53.88 Aluminum frame; yellow/green floral cover. Bunting umbrella table 12-88 42 ' white enamel top, aluminum base. Algoma hammock 5.18 Plaid cotton in yellow and blue Algoma hammock 7.18 Striped cotton in red a®d blue. Wall Tube arm chair 35.88Nickel-plated cordwrap; aqua or avocado. Wall Tube chaise 02.88 Nickel-plated cordwrap in aqua only. sc XJ D S O 3Sr ’ s DOWNTOWN DETROIT NORTHLAND CENTER EASTLAND CENTER 8 Mll« and ^elly Roadt WESTUNO CENTER Warran and Wayna Roads PONTIAC MALL OAKLAND MALL Talesraphand 1-75 and 'Eli23belh Lake Rds. 14 Mila Road Shop at Hudson's Pontiac Store, Conveniently Located at Elizabeth Lake and Telegraph Roads in th& beautiful Pontiac Mali Open Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday until 9:00 p.m. THE PONTIAC PRESS. W^EDNESDAY, JULY 24. 1968 I come, see our beautiful uew store at 1-75 and 14-Mile 10. drip-dry aids: 2 inditableind 2 cloihes-pin hangers. SALE! S8' H.eoverrdhangert: 12. travel hay: Non-siip{oann;washahle. %'inyl; individual Set oM. SALE! 88‘ dress size. SALE! 88* 13. travel bag: , Vinyl; mdividual suit size. SALE! 88' Ijf, floor buffer: For high shine; handles at both ends. SALE! 88' IS, steeater dryer: Stands on legs or over tub. SALE! 88* 16. glaek rack: Holds S pr. in place of one. SALE! 17. Man. brief: ‘Kleinerts’ sanitary style. 88* SALE! 18. Mkirtmek: Vinyl-lipped clips; holds 5 skirts. SALE! t NotiolU—Hudson'! Budg«t Stores—Downtown, Northland, Eostlond, Westland, Lincoln Park, Pontioc, Madison, Dearborn and NEW OAKLAND MALL THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, Jl LV 2-^. 19fi8 A—13 SHOP Thursday, Friday, Saturday.. For home and cottage 40. door hanger: 41. book rack: 42. tub scrubber: 43. clean-up hags: 44. Ifleasure set: 43. bacon press: 40. sifter: 47. frycocer: 48. jello mold: Folds away with 10 Stained wood, assem* (Convenient angled Plastic; Urge, multi-purpose. <4 cups, 4 spoons; alumi- Keeps bacon from curl- up aluminum flour Stops spatters; steam es- ( opper-color aluminum, holes. SALE! S8^ bles easily. SALE! 88* iponge.SALE! 88' SALE! Set of 10.. 88' num.SALE! 88' ing.SAI.L! 88' iitirr. SALE! 88' c>p».SALE! 88' SALE! 49. sharpener: 30. slicer: 31. can bpener: 32. salt-pepper: 3.3. barbeque set: .34. container set: .3.3. container set: .30. egg-cup set: .37. relish server: For knives; grindsionr. Adjiisiable for vegeublej. Nonilip culling gear. ( oppercolor aluminum. .Spatula, fork and bruvh. lor freerrr uve; pint vi/e; Fnrfreerer uvr;<)uari U avhable aluminum. .St a i n le..'sieef; wood . SALE! 88' SALE! 88' . SALE! 88' SALE! 88^ SALE! 88' plasiu. I'kg. ol 8 .. 88' »>re Pkg. Of 0 .. 88' SALE! Pkg. of 4 .. 88' trim. SALE, 88' 58. coaster set: 4 coiatera and 4 aiirrers. SALE! 88' .39. feathet* duster: 00. fur duster: V( ashable ■with plastic Longvtapfe Iamb’s wool: handle. SALE! 88' washable. SALE! 88' 85. emkmpan: Square;alunitnum. Hlai- lie cover. SALE! 88* 86. sauce pan set: 67. drainer set: Aluminum; Sturdy han- For dishes and drain- dies. SALE! Set of 3 . . 88* board. SALE! S8* 61. sponge mop: 02. applicator: 03. watering can: 04. cake pan I ting handle w ith vcpicegi e. I iir » axing, polivhing, llravv plaviii ; 8 quart I fblong'.aluminum.Plat- SALE! 88' long handle. SALE' 88' ai/e SALE! 88' tic cover. SALE! 88' 68. trash barret': 69. waste basket: 70. insulated mug: 71. hath spray: Lock-lid cover; side ban- Efeavy-duty plastic, See-thru bottom; decorated. E|ts regular faucets. dies. 6-gal. SALE! 88' Large sire. SALE! . 88' SALE! ' 88' SALE! 88' 72.serve tray: Lacquered; light- -K-etght. SALE! 88* 73. server set: 74. dustpan: 75. oblong tray: 76. chip-dip set: 77. candy dish: 78. shallow bowl: 79. serve tray: \ 80. wet mop: Giasi vinegar-oil; salt- Upright style; high Embossed, painted Round tray with insert Embossed, painted design; Embossed, painted Embossed decoration; /Absorbs water, dries pe^erT&ALE! 88' handle; plastic. SALE! 88' decoration. SALE! 88* lor dip bowl. SALE! cover. SALE! 88* design. SALE! 88* handle. SALE! 88* / fast. SALE! 88* handy stand-up ironing caddy Place conveniently near ironing QQ board to hang finished laundry. W 00 Chrome-finished, rust resistant tubular steel. Folds compactly. \ f€ * 'A. / prlLlJ ladndry dryer Great for all your drip-drying. Eleven rust-prOof, plastic-covered rods, fits conveniently in tub. Folds flat for storage. 2 88 SALE movable, foid- / away laundry^eart Pre-shrunk, slip-on fabric container with clothespin pocket. Tubular steel frame with cast-...ers- -for moving ■ about eas1Tyr~ 4 88 SALE adjustable Steel ironing board , Sturdy board easily adjusts to desired height. Ventilated steel top for cooler, surface; stand for iron. Pad, cover included. 6 88 Notioni Deportment—Hudsdn'i Budgtt St ore*—-Downtown, Northland, Eaitlond. WMtland, Lincoln Park, Pontioc, Modiion, Dearborn ond NEW OAKLAND MALL \ Shdp Thuradmih Vriduy^ Saturday tiU 9:90 at Pontiac Mall • •. EUzabeih Lake and Teleyrapi^ A—U 'I'HE rONTlAl rnpss. \\ la^AESDAY, JULV 24. 1968 BOB-LO FUN CRUISES ’ll Daily at 10.-II-2-4 & 6 o’clock MOONLIGHT Friday—Saturdoy—Sunday 9 P.M. 10 P.M. MOONLIGHT CRUISE SATURDAY Fun starts as soon as you step aboard the Bob-Lo boat —you can dance, sightsee or just relax in your deck chair. At Bob-Lo island more fun awaits you-r-the greatest array of new thrill rides and fun attractions you've ever seen—picnic groves and playgrourlds-even 12 baseball diamonds. Round trip $2;00. Children 90ct. Moonlights•$2.00. Island Admission lOc. Dance band on every cruise. DOCK FOOT OF WOODWARD-WO 2-9622 ^HILDB£NJRJE MONDAyS - ChMren under 12 ride free Mondays trom Detroit if accompanied tsy^a parent. WYANDOTTE SAILINGS - Every Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday. 1145 A,M. Bishop Park Dock, foot of Superior ~-Bcntevaf-dr-CHlU2REN FREE from Wyandotte every Tuesday. TJnit Refuses to Restore Cut New Setback for Foreign Aid WASftINCTON 1^1 - President Johnson’s foreign aid program, a eontiniiing target of an economy-minded Congre.ss, has suffered another setback. The Senate F’oreign Relations L'ommittee Tuesday refused to restore the nearly $1 billion cut by the House last week from the President's original $2 9 billion rerpte-sLJIn fact, tbe erfmmittee t r i ni m e'd another $22 9 million on its own. Observers said by the time the overseas proposals get,,, through being worked over in t 0 d a y ' s corrimittee hearings, future debate on the Senate floor, and certain reduction in separate appropriations bills the prograpi might barely total half of what was asked. The foreign assistance pro-i gram has been in increasing difficulties since a year ago when Congress first demanded multibiilion-dollar spending cuts in return for passage of the President’s 10 per cent income tax surcharge." ★ ★ ★ Rep. George Mahon, I)-Tex., chairman of the House appropriations committee, has 'predicted the money bill may be $400 million under the authorization an ultimate appropriation oX . .less, than $1.6 billion. The authorization measure sets policy and money ceilings. The appropriations bill fixes the amount that may actually be spent. A combination of factors has sent the aid program to its Sears Home Appliance Medilerraiicati style pecan veneer lowest level in its 21-yearJ history, -I It has its long-tim'e crili(? RKARS, ROEBUCK .AND CO. who have termed it a giveaway that made no friends for this' country. I They have been Joined in re-| cent years by former supporters | who now oppose the program to! register opposition to the Viel-i nam war and its costs. The bill! contains substantial amounts for the civilian economy of Vietnam, but the major war; costs are in the D e f e n s ei Department budget. And the foreign aid program has drawn increasing criticism from those who point to riots, urban problems and other domestic conditions, arguing the government should concern itself with the front needs first. mm fhe4e/ii/itio^Speaat£c^ Bioomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center, S. Telegraph Tel-Huron Center, S, Telegraph - Rochester, 1451 N. Main Pontiac Mall Shofiping Center, N. Telegraph Waterford Plaza, Corner M-59 and Crescent Lake Rd., Waterford Twp, ’’JUST UNBEATABLE” t ALADDIN INSULATED THERMO JAR oo^ PRICE ^ With exclusive freezer lid for keeping snacks colder longer. PACK OF 30 . 266’2” DISPOSABLE Insulin Needle Unit is. I ^ TAPERED TYNEX PAINT BRUSH 80« 1.00 3.25 OZ. - REG. 79d PLUS WHITE 12 OZ. - PLAIN OR MINT - REG. 794 PlAYTEX SWIM CAP WAYEGUARD REG. 1,09 69 \ TING ANTI-IACT. SOAP 3.25 OZ, 39 REG. 494 5 LB. - REG. 394 CATS PRIDE Sale Days Thru Sundoy PHILLIPS’ mTneVia 26 TABLETS - REG. 734 POLIDENT________________ Q.T.SUNTAN LOTION 99 MEN’S AND LADIES'- REG. 3.99 SUPP-HOSE 14 OZ; - REG. 574 X-TI^ 10 LBS. ^ SIZZLE BRAND - REG. 694 BRIQUETS WEDGEWOOD - 80 SHEETS, 40 ENVELOPES - REG. 594 STATIONERY 2-■ miiitiitumfffi Srai’s in Pontiac 154 N. Sa^inaH. FE 5-1171 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 24. 1968 , A—I3 Paint ^ow and Save Sears SEARS. ROEBUCK AND CO, Pool Clearance For Fun in the Sun Save 2®^ Gal. Latex, Reg. 6.99 Self Priming Latex DRIES IN ONLY 30 MINUTES Improved latex flowi on fast and smooth, lasts longer, resists'weather and fumes. Covers similar colors in one coat. Gives durable protection to wood, masonry, brick stucco, aluminum. And all 10 colorfast shades dry to a soft lustre in .30 min. Oil Base, Reg. 7.50 Save 2®® Gal. One Coat Oil Base IDEAL FOR EASILY SOILED SURFACES Covers any color in just one coat. Dirt washes right off the hard, lustrous finish.dlependable and surfaces. Dries in just one half hour. 188 Qt. Applies with the case of latex; dries enamel tough in one half hour. .Srriib-bahlr: won’t chip. Gallon, reg. 6.99,.... 5.4T SAVE *10 to *60 Paint Sprayer Sale Porlablp Sprayer Reg. 79.95 6488 Delivers .3.2 CFM at .3.3 PSI. Paint id sprayed witli^oil-free^Vir: never a lubrication problem. Vii*HP motor.. . 3- gal. Paint Tank, reg. 34.95 . 24.88 4- cylinder, ye-HP, reg. 169.95 . 114.88 1-HP Paint Sprayer, reg. 239.95 .. .^ . 17948 IV2-HP Sprayer, reg. 279.95 ...... 218.88 Sears Has a Complete Line of Paint Equipment Sale Ends Saturday, July 27 No Money Down on Sears Easy Payment Plan 21xl2x4-ft. Giant Oval Swiimning Pool ■sir *284 A backyard pool big enotigh^for the entire family. Ha.s heavy gauge vinyl liner, galvanized rails, sideralb and supports. 7'wo fiedwood sun decks included for sunning. Liner is mildew resistant. Pool is easy to assemble. 24x12x4’ deep, Reg. 399.95 ...........$349 27x124’ deep, Reg. 449.95 ........$384 31x16x4’deep, Reg. 539.95 ..... $469 Pools Only-Ladders, Filter and Slide Extra 12’x36” Sears Round Patio Pool Just right foi-^hounr of suminer enjoyment for the entire family. Steel side-walls are galvanized to prevent rust. Heavy vinyl liner included. 1,adder, filter and slide extra. 15’x42” round pool, Reg. 9S.95.......IT.7T t8’x4S" round pool, Rog. 149.98 .... 129.71 Deluxe 15’x48” pool, 2 redwood decks^ Reg. 159.95 . Deluxe 18’x48” pool, 2 redwood decks, Reg. 199.95 . .137.77 .179.77 ISi.li tm.r, i,NI («l ttf. 11t.il lilt.r, It,Ml c.l. ttp Ill.ti lilltr, 24,IN (.I. », Sears Carrieji a Complete Line of Pools, Ladders and (Chemicals Sears Summer Clearance Aluminum Doors and Windows Home Estimate D/4” Crossbuek Aluminum Door Sears Triple Traek Comb. Window ] -Inch Aluminum Combination Door Reg. 69.95 4!|«8 s 15** 27 ™ / ’ .1 1 x*’«ivr txrr»_ Slufflily conslniclcd with charcoal color fibcrgla^s screening, heavy duly keyed corners for a belter fit without jamming. Easy to clean, atirartive black hardware is included. Buy now, save $8! A inyl cusbioneAglass screeris. Mill finish: up to 101 united inches. Mill finish. Anodized, reg. 19.95.....17.88 White, reg. 21.95........18.88 Gel real enirance way pro-tfTtinn pins a dash of elegance. ^ our home will he more comfortable without those icy drafts in the living room and kitchen, reduces heating,^ cooling costs. Mill finish. White finish, reg. 39.95 . . . 35.88 ^ave on Sliding; Combination Windows Reg. 22.76 Reg. 24.75 Reg. 26.78 2-panel aluminum combination windows. Easy m clean and fttore; just slide lilorrii eash 20*» 22*« 23** or screen out of the way when not in use. Mill ftriith Anodized Whtte Seorj Puilding Materials Dept, Open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 Icf 5:30 NO MORUY down on Sears Emy Payment Plan Sears SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Downtown Pontiac # Phone FE 5-4171 A—1» THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, Jl'I.Y SI, 10(18 OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUN. 11 -6 WED.. TNURS., FBI., SAT. 6’x6’ VINYL SHOWER DRAPE Our Reg. 2.64 1.93 4 Days On ly “C;ohleSsa'”'%rint vinvl fhowri* curtains in white ami a rhnir* . a fashion color*. (Jinrfie It. FLOWER DESIGN SHOWER RINGS Discount Price 671 Charge It Plulic (hower curtain rinfit in pretty flower dcHigns. White and pastel colors. Sava at Kmart. .... Our Reg. 88c SNOWIR LINER 6’x6V clear vinyl. Magnetized. ^ 68* -summer Discount To Brighten Up Your Windows! ^ODEL® BLEN^ CURTAIN Our Reg. 1.84 4. Days Only m# 80x36” window tier in “Nfsva Press® Kodel® polyester and Avril® rayon. “Bow Knot” design, choose from w hite, gold, green and red. Charge It at Kmart. 84x11" V«lanc«-to-Match, rcg. 1.2T . ..... 1.07 latfmon Corp. Nap. t.m. me Corp. n»0. t.m. 84” Long ACETATE AND SPUN RAYON DRAPERIES Our Reg. 3.77 2.96 4 Days Only Jacquard -_w;eaye acetate and cliiin Fayo'n. 48" wide per pair, 84" long. 10 pinch pleat*. White, Permanent Press RAYON/COTTON DRAPERIES OurReg.^.S8- 4.88 4 Days Only 84” Long J a c q 11 a rd-wo ven, mac hi n e-w a »h-ahle. 72% rayon and 28% cotton . . . with Pemianent Press finish. Color choice. 63” RAYON/COTTON DRAPERIES, 4.B8...................3.96 GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD (hir Krf!'. 4.64 4 Ih.YS (hilv SPARKLING WHITE 72**xl08** Twin Flat or Fitted BOnOM MUSLIN SHEETS AND CASES MONnCEUOSTMPE Our Reg. 2.18 4 Day$ Only 8V'xl08" Dhl. Flat or Fitted BOTTOM MUSLIN SHEETS Our Reg. 2.37 4 Day* Only 72"xl 08" Twin Flat or Fitted BOTTOM MUSLIN SHEETS Our Reg. 2.84 4 bay$ Only 8l"xl 08" Dhl. Flat or Fitted BOTTOM MUSLIN SHEETS 36"x60" COnON BEACH TOWELS 1.96 Discount Price—4 Days Revertible, Jacquard patterni . . . hemmed edfea. Whil* «uanli«l*i Lett. Big ]2"x12” washcloth; Juniho 22"x44” bath towel, in “Esaes" lolid colors or “Holiday” iiiulti-atri|ies. SOLID COLOR BATH TOWELS Heg, 63c «tu — 4 Days COnON KITCHEN TOWELS 2 ' 76* THERAAAL WEAVE BLANKETS Our Reg. .3.56 4 Day, Only “Any season” thermal blanket is lightweight blend of r^on and nyloQ. With soft nap permanently “looted in”. Four-inch binding. 72”x90” siie. Six solid decorator shades. Charge it! PLAID THERAAAL BLANKET Our Reg. 4.47 ^ 4 Day, Only V Soft-nap blanket of 55% rayon and 45% nylon thermal weave, with Hve-inch acetate binding. Generous 72”x90” sice. Choose from three popular-color plaid combinations. Just Charge it! Bundle (if two jari|ii!ird lea. coffee and fruit patterned ail-cotton terrv towels. If)”x28” size; fringed. Reg. 4/96c t3”x13" TERRY CLOTHS T . . 4/T3c • Your Choice KITCHEN CLOTHS Our Reg. 93c — 4 Days «'» 73* KITOCITOWaS Our Reg. 93c-4 Days 3 '• 73* .Six plaid waffle weave dish cloths. Three colton-rayon-linen terry kitchen towels. PLUSH TOUCH“ BEDSPREAD 3.76 ...._............. ... _ hree aides fringed. 96”xl0.'>” double size; 7R''xl().V' twin. In six decorator shades. QUILTED ACETATE FLORAL PRINTED BEDSPREADISAVE Our Reg. 8.96 7.44 4 Day, Only Floor length, with rounded cornera. Double-stitched. 92”xl06” double; 78”xl06” twin, (iold, rose, blue, green. TERRIFIC VALUE! RUFFLED EDGED PATCHWORK QUILT Our Reg. 5.84 4.66 4 Day, Only iBI'^tiched cotton filled. Sew eral patterns. 72”x82” size. YOUNGSTER’S PATCHWORK QUILT ... Reg. 4.64.. 3.76 SPECIAL! BUNDLE OF SIX COLORFUL MESHDISHCEOTHS Oiir Keg. 7,7c 63< 4 Day, Only ].3”xl4” cotton dialiclotlis in a “locked-in” mesh construction. Red, gold, blue. Buy now and save! Charge it! 20”x26’’AGRILAN skirt. DOUBLE SIZE .... 3.57 DOUBLE AND TWIN MATTRESS COVERS 1.97 Kmart Price! Standard size zippered vinyl cover Hnished seams. ZIPPEREDMUSUN MATTRESS COVERS 23T TWIN Kmart Price! 54x76” Sanforized® natural muslin. DOUBLE $IZE ...... 1.27 Shop Tonight! We’re open daily till 10 p,m!; Sundays 11^^ GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD 'A—18 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JULY 24. 196J Steel Workers Show Their Militance as Deadline Nears PITTSBURGH (AP) ~ United Steelworkers Union (USW) members have armed their negotiators with an overwhiflmi^g vote of confidence as they race against a strike deadline a week away. Thousands of the rank and file, in meetings, by voice, and________ by ballot across the nation, told | better than ..their bargainers they wouldjof g strike. walk but of the iiiilfe. if iio-eon- l tract is signed by Aug. l. across the coun- Itemi like wages, pensions, vacations and unemployment insurance. The bargaining talks resume this morning. OVER 9b PCT. “This will shake the money loose,’’ said one union district director as he reported his men per cent in favor r Tuesday Although the negotiations are secret, no money is believed to be on the table for the big dollar Here Is Vote on Vetoed Bill Arsonist Does a Slow Burn FONTANAN, Calif. (AP) -Whoever set fire to a Fontana elementary school, destroying try, was the first of its kind for the nation’s third-largest union. Reports from 83 locals representing . about 180,000 men showed th^t some 3,700, or just over 2 per cent, were opposed. Figures from a dozen that took secret paper ballots showed 14 per cent opposed. Each local was allowed to take the vote as it pleased. Most held rneetings as the shifts ---- _ ! changed and asked for a show LANSING..JAP) — Here is.of hands, yeas and nays, or how members voted Tuesdayj stand-up vote, as the House refused to over- Most meetings were attended ride the veto of a bill giving! by a third or less of the total local officials emergency riot I membership but union rules al-powers (a two-thirds majority, Jowed the vote to stand for the or 73 votes* was required): entire local. REPUBLICANS FOR (30) L. D. Anderson, Baker, R. W. Davis, DeStigter, Groat, Hayward, Heinze, Hoffman, Holbrook, Licata, Little, Marshall, Pears, Pittenger, Prescott. Rohlfs, E. V. Root, Rush, Schmidt, Sharpe, Smart, J. F. Smith, R. Smith, Spencer, —Stevens, Stites, Srang, Strange. Waldron, Weber._________ DEMOCRATS FOR (30) T. J. Anderson Bennett, Callahan, Clark, Copeland, S. J. Davis, Fitzgerald, Gingrass, , Goemaere, Hellma^n, HOTrigan^ Muffmafr, Jaebbetti, Kelsey, Law, Mahoney, McCullough; G. Montgomery, G. F. Montgomery, Novak, O’Brien, Pilch, Sheridan, Stopezynski, Mrs. Symons, Tierney, Traxler, Walton, Wierzbicki, Young. REPUBLICANS AGAINST (20) Bishop, Brown, Buth, Caw-thorne, Engstrom, Farnsworth, Folsk, Ford, Geerlings, Hampton. Jowett, Powell C. H. Root, Smit, Swallow, Tisdale, Var-nuiri, Warner, Woodman, Ziegler. DEMOCRATS AGAINST (20) | ___Beedon, Bradley, Cooper, Del| Rio, Edwards, Mrs. Elliott,; Mrs. Ferguson, Holmes, Hood, Karoub, Kehres, Kildee, Kramer, McNeely, O’Neill, Ryan, Snyder, Suski, Vaughn, White. NOT VOTING (9) — Allen JRT,-C-.-J. Davis^RV Faxon (D), Mrs. Hunsinger (D); Kok (R), Kolderman (R), Ma-| halak (D, Petitpren (D, Ser-j otkin (R). i A b,(K)b-man local In Detroit reported only six men opposed. An 8,000-man local in Homestead,, Pa., reported nine opposed. ’Two locals totaling 25,000 men in Gary, Ind., reported themselves unanimous. Union leadership is under strong pressure to match the 6 per cent it won in the can and aluminum industries earlier thli year, despite President Johnson’s plea for wage restraint. Steelworkers averaged $3.84 an hour in May, and the industry says fringe benefits added another $1.09. But the union has lost ground in recent years to other big industrial unions, especially the auto worke^, who also won a 8 per x»nt Increase this year. OUT OF BUSINEM The steel industry says a 6 per cent increase each year over a three-year contract will wipe out two-thirds of its profits and put some companies out of A steel strike will not severely crimp the economy. Consumers have stockpiled more than 36 million tons of steel--enough for four months in normal times-* and foreign imports are ready and waiting to make up shortages. However, strike or no strike, the industry will go into a slump after the Au^. l deadline as consumers work out their strike-inventories. A study by a Pittsburgh bank says it will take eight or nine months for production td*’get back to prenegotiation levels. President Johnson mentioned steel specifically as one of the 250 major labor contracts that will be signed In the second half of the year. ★ ★ ★ “Whether or not we reestablish noninflationary prosperity quickly and in an orderly way depends on the decisions which the leaders of American labor and business will make in the coming months,’’ Johnson said. Its library andT number of books, tried and tried before he succeeded. Sheriff’s arson investigators said they found 38 burned matches outside the building Tuesday ajon^ with two books i of unbiirned matches. I 12) OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE tpotuoring READING IMPROVEMENT and STUDY SKILlS WDRKSHOP for high •chool studontr (9 and odulti who wish to continuo thoir oducotion ■ ■ LOCATIDN: Highland Lakot Campus Oakland Comm. Collog* 7530 Cooloy Lako Road Union Lako, Michigan TIME! Mornings, Tuesday through Friday, Aug. 5 through Aug. 29 A non-crodit course, no educational requirements. Course fee; $30.00; Limit; 40 students. For q brochure, application form or further information, call 363-71 91, ext. 26,9 o.m. -12 Noon or 1 p.m. — 4 p.m., Monday thru Fridoy THAT'S HOW I FEEL ABOUT Capitol Wh»n you want tho fioxibility of >c your fund* a HI CURRENT ANNUF in RATE oyi ovoiloble, CAPITOL'S Pau-just the thing for you. Romom-. "CAPITOL" idoo to lovo ybur Annual Roto, compounded ond BONUS SAVINGS CLRTIflCATES on fundi Invested for o < monfhl or longer. Cer- ...ftioauiits, .of -15.QQ£Lgt-nj«r,t_jat»™, e outomolicolly renewed. The CAPITOL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION IHOOI^fORATEO laao e iANMNW. MlpHtCAN 75 W. Huron Pontiac 338-7127 When it comes to better BROADLOOM bargains.e. do you want talk?...or action! ...because we want this to be our most powerful summer Boadloom sale yet...we took 6,000 y(is. of better carpeting... first quality, too...and priced them so low...they are down ^ht INCREDIBLE! DECORATOR PLUSH 100% Virgin ^ NYLON BROADLOOM fine quality M€imir€aE 180 sq. in. COLOR TV with INSTANT-PLAY “ sale *348®® . no rrioney down . $20 a month Handsome compact table model COLOR TV that v/ill fit an’yv/herel "Super-Scope" VHF/UHF tuning, no waiting for sound or bright, vivid color pictures. Giant 180 sq. In. picture area. • Special low price. ^ Olympic 3-way stereo-phono qm/fm radio oonsolette sale ^98 no money down $5 a month Thrill to this exciting contemporary compact epnsoiett© with. 4^eed, 4-speoker stereo eystem-phonOr^AM/FM radio. Genuine walnut wood cabinet. aUo In DETROIT POMTIAC • ANN ARBOR FLINT • PORT HURON JACKSON • TOLEDO , ■p "FT O “P T /"FT! ^ PONTIAC -L-j -L J—J -1—J Telesfranh & Souare Laka Roa OUTFITTING CO Telegraph & Square Lake Roads in Mirade Mite Shopping Center OIL Swirhmin Hole Provides Some Fun for Inner-City Kids A 30-foot-long portable swimming pool has been put into service for Detroit’s Inner-city children, culminating 10 months of work on the project. The traveling pool, a gift to the city from a Detroit television station, is haul^ to preannounced locations by the Department of Parks and Recreation seven days a week. It holds 8,000 gallons of water, A truck containing portable showers accompanies the pool: THE I’UMIAC PRESS. VV haJ*\E.SlJA ^ . .11 lA 24. 19(i8 PiiPPilfl COUNTERPARTS—Gerhard Schroeder (left). West Germany’s minister of defense, talks with his U.S. counterpart. Defense Secretary Clark Clifford, during a welcoming ceremony yesterday at the Pentagon in Washington, D.C. Schroeder was accorded full military honors. UNFOXY FOX OUTFOXED-Ann Arbor Patrolrhan Wayne Myers holds a chagHned'looking red fox prior to giving him a free ride to the country where it is hoped he \vill act more like a fox than be did recpntty. The episode started when I Prieskom of Ann Arbor found the fox in his garage. Prieskorn thought the fox wasn’t a suitable playmate for bis two dogs and cat so he asked police to evict the intruder. Police Suspect,somawie must have had hini for a pet and released him. SAND FUN—There’s fnore than one way,to avoid getting a sunburn at the beach. Richard Davies, 16, of Springfield, Mass., had his friends bury him standing up in the Cofll sand of Misquamicut Statd Beach near Misquamicut, R. I. Christine Niedzwiecki, 19, of Worcester, Mass., nearly stepped on Richard and stopped to offer him a*cool drink. T" THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1968 rA Junior Editors Quiz About- SHIP MODELS Denver Quakes Laid to Army DENVER (UPI) - Scientists have blamed earthquakes (m everything from floating*. cMi-tinents to a new explanation that they are caused by the core and mantle of the eartii grinding against each other like worn clutch plates In a car. But a Denver geologist thinks a series of quakes here has been caused by the U.S. Army. David M. Evans linked Denver’s relatively recent earth-quake probleurlo 8*12,045-100^ deep waste disposal well at the Army’s Rocky Mountain Arsenal, just outside of the city, in Question: How did seamen put ship models into small necked bottles? Answer: It looks impossible to put a ship model, with all its masts upright, into a bottle through the narrow neck. Many people cwiclude that a hole was cut in the bottle, the ship slid in and the glass plug put back. This was sometimes done, but the genuine old salt had another trick up his sleeve. ' First, the little ship was made outside the bottle. Each. If pulled on, would raise them all upright (1). Next, the old seaman would put a putty sea inside the bottle, using specially made tools. This was quite difficult. Then the ship's masts were folded down on the hull (2) so it could be slipped inside the bottle (3). The ship was pushed in until it was in its right place. Then the putty was allowed to dry, holding the ship’s hull firmly. The long thread had been left leading out of the bottle. When this was pulled, the masts would «U spring up. TWding the fliread taut , a bit of glue was touched to wher e if joined the ship. Hot wire burned off the excess thread. (You can win $10 cash plus AP't handsome World Yearbook if pour question, mailed on d postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize). Apollo Faces Trying Tests Evans has the Army so worried its engineers plan to begin pumping waste out of the well next month. QUAKES BEGIN The Army completed the arsenal weU, designed to dispose of water contaminated wi'^ chemical warfaOfe agents, m 1961. Puniplng started in May 1962. In June of the same year a quake of 3.1 intensity on the Richter scale jolted Denver and the outlying communities of Derby and Henderson. ★ ★ ★ The Richter scale measures the intensity of earth tremors and quakes on a sensitive machine called a seismograph. The scale is open-ended. A quake of magnitude 3, hardly more than a light tremor, might not even be noticed. One arsenal for nearly a year, Evans added, 73 quakes hit the area. TTie year prior to the shutdown 284 earthquakes were recorded in Denver. The yqar after the shutdown ended, more than 550 quakes hit the city. Evans says these statistics bear out his claim that shocks fall markedly when disposal pumping by the Army„ceases. average skyscraper. Scientists consider one of outside the realm of the possible. CTTY SHAKEN ^ From the time pumping at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal began until October 1965, 17 quakes rated af Richter 3 or better were recM-ded in the Denver area. On Sept. 14 and again on Sept. 17, 1965, quakes of almost Richter 5 shook the city. '_____ IhrT9647 when the Army shut down disposal pumping at the Menlo Park, Calif., National Center for Earthquake Research; presidential science adviser Dr. Donald Hornig, and David Evans are worried. Since 1962 the Colorado School of^ ^es seismqgraplL_______ i by Golden, has recorded over 16(N) Denver-area quakes, reaching an all-time high almost a year ago when^ Richter 5.3 earthquake hit the downtown area. No waste fluids have been injected into the arsenal well since February, 1966, either by pressure pumping or by just plain gravity flow, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Ql^ES CONTTNUE But the earthquakes here have continued, and the Army; the Army engineers said the pumping will begin in mid-August when, slowly and by stages, some of the 160 million gallons of toxic waste water already in the well will be carefully pumped out. Jtt_ng8rr will keep tab on any seismic earthquake activity as the fluid is jumped out. 'Grass' Control TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - Shawnee County weed spraying crews are destroying a field of marijuana estimated to be worth more than $1 million on illicit market after processing. The weed often grows wild m Kansas. CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -When the Apollo 7 moonship emerges from the artificial space of a vacuum chamber later this month, astronaut Walter Schlrra expects to be able to say, “Let’s go fly it.’’ But between now and then, the first of the new breed of Apollo spacecraft faces its most trying ground tests — mock flights in an airless chamber 55 feet tall and 33 feet in' diameter. * * * Schirra, Donn Eisele and W'alter Cunningham are sched-j uled to open the manned phase of Project Apollo on Sept. 20 by leaving earth on the nose of a Saturn IB rocket for 11 days in orbit. But the fate of their tentative launch date hinges on the success of tests getting under way late this week in the vacuum chamber. Schirra, Eisele and Cunningham and their backup pilots plan to put the ship through two day-long simulated flights to make sure everything is ready for the real flight. IMPORTANCE STRESSED The importance of the vacuum chamber testing wai stressed by Schirra and Cunningham at a recent pep rally attended by more than 400 men who have a hand in Apollo 7’s testing. . “As a crew we feel the spacecraft hasn’t been bought yet,’’ Schirra told the gathering. “It won’t be bought until we get back down from our second manned altitude chamber run. ’Then we’ll be ready to say, ‘Let’s go fly it’.’’ Schirra said he was confident ApoUo 7 is a “good machine.’’ but he warned the spacecraft workers that the moonship was delivered to the Capa to be flown — not to be tinkered with on the ground. “That means that we’re ready to go fly it. It means we don’t want to play games with the spacecraft. We want to go put it to use.’’ DICK KUHN IS THE MAN FOR PROSECUTOR REPUBUCAN FOR INTEGRITY IN GOVERNMENT TM, .4 |mM fw by Kubn ft biMMirtw Cami, niwr lolMlns. PmHec, Mkhigt Jerry McComb Joins Shelton Jerry McCemb, former Chrysler dealer in Rochester, has returned to his former position with Shelton-Pontiac-Buiclc-Opel where he sold Pontiacs, Buicks and Used Cars, Prior to thot he wos a salesman for Community Motor Sales, preiiecesidr to Shirttdri-Pdittiac-BoIckTC^ Jerry has been an outstanding automobile salesmen fo^ ever 20 years because he knows how to analyze people's car requirements accurately and put them in the right car at tfw right price. Jerry and his wife, Edna, live at 1 304 North Main Street and he cordially invites all of his friend and former customers to call upon his broad experience, both in m merit and soles, when they're in the market for a a or used. shelton PflMTUC • BUICK • OPEL ass RMbMtw HmS, IlMhmIw (IVk MUm 5eelh mfEoehmsUr) 651 -5500 KICHT PRESS. WEDNESD^^k JUEV 24, 19G8 ONE COLOR On the Sidewalks of Tel-Huron, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday Only SSmZKBSZ&lffl Every item’s a steal. Prices are triggered to the days of the|flirty 30’s FREE admission To see the "Fuhny Farm" by Poo Pan. Designed to capture the Hearts of young and old alike, with a large selection of farm^ type animals (approx. 100) in a very colorful settirig olf animated buildings and complementing props. PICK UP TICKETS AT ANY TEL-HURON STORE Check the following pages for specie! Sidewalk Sales Bargains by the following merchants: ‘Cunningham's Winkelman's Kresge's Sanders ’ i R B Shop Jayson Jewelers Children's Shop Girl Scouts Griswold Sporting Beckwith-Evans Sho^ Box Camlera Mart Petrjjsha & Sons Golder) Thimble Osrrjun's Big Boy Wrigley's • B. F. Goodrich SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH RD. AT W. HURON ST., PONTIAC Plenty of parking space for making your fast getaway! TWO Reg. Reg. Reg. Reg. 1.99 RED VINYL PLASTIC PONCHOS ... 99 2.99 RED VINYL PLAs4 RAINSUltS . . . .1.49 (PANTS AND JACKET) 3.95 ZEBCO 202 SPIN CAST REELS_____2. SPIN CAST REELS______1.49 5.00 STRATO-PLUS GOIIf BALLS_______doz. 2.99 1.99 U.S. RUBBER PLASTIC GOLF JACKETS 1.29 5.99 4 PLAYER BADMINTON SETS ..... 3.99 7.99 FABRIC AIR MATTRESSES W/PILLOW 4.99 1.50 OFFICIAL LEATHER COV’D SOFTBALLS 79 •pen Thitrs. M 7-! Thursday only! Save on versatile shells with scalloped neckline. White, colors, 36^40. sale satin nylon tricot pettislips 2.27 and embroidery-ijnmed in white, blue, (iinik, sand, SML shorts. TEL-HURON CENTER PONTIAC MALL NATU 10»" IRALIZER 2QO. Play it cool I thissumiherin Juipping Jacks Sandals. •Ame/dcoA/i woaaEN'S loafers 6.90 WOAAEN'S SUAAAAER CANVAS 2.88 & 3.88 WOAAEN'S SANDALS 12.88 MAMY OTHER BRANDS AND STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM 5.90 2 for 11.00 4.90 CHILDREN'S HUSH PUPPIES 4.90 Michigan bankard SECURITY CHARCE DINERS CLUB FE 4 0259 Tel-Huron 29 S. Telecraph NORTHWOOD FLORSHEIM THF/rOXTTAC FRES^, WEDNESDAY. JULY 24, 1968 SEVEN SIDEWUK SUE! OUR REGULAR *300 SIOEWALK IBS'"* Reiliiced to only If you think thaVs a good buy, wait until you see what else we have! What ejlse' do we ha>^e? A selected group of good buys, that's what. And th^^rie all out ori the sidfwolk waiting f6r you! But don’t wait. . . PERMANENT PRESS SLACKS! Famous moke! Alt sizes! iChecks, sol- ids! Great buy at mcire ithan Va-otfl jnew Reg. $9.95 i«*< " DRESS SHIRTS! Whot o buyl Some have long jsleeves, some hove $^022 shortl (We guorontee two, of ^he some on each { shirt!) Famous, fomoos maker! Vblues to $5.95 $10.oi Wash & We^r Cotton Slacks! You con moke o sensotionol huy hom this group — if you weor a size betweejn 28 ond 321 You'll ^ ^ 00 even find some of those plec^ed beauties you've !*OW I be«n searching for! Untold values . . BEHER SPORT COATS! Lofge selection of the kind of spCrt coots Osmun's # 5 famous fori Lots of potterns! Lots of oolorsl Lots of fabrics! 1 Lots of savingsl Volues from $35i00 to $55.00, n^w /O ' exactly Vi-off ' ^ i GOLF & DRESS SLACKS! They're lightweight! They'p^e • made by a Famous mokerl They have ielfj-bellsl They're ^ terrific! $14.95 . . |. .j. ; Iwo for $13.90! NYLON JACK^S! Right! Those famous rlyion jackets! Most-wanted hip-length!' Most-wonted new ^ low price! Reg. $10.00.1 just w | SPORT SHIrHi i 1 $122 A group of long-sleeve ond ^ho^-sleeves! Greott ^qw “ patterns ond colorsi The kmd lof| sport shirts youj just ■ reolly likel Volues to $5.95 - • -' - ij ^ *•''* S®-®®’ ROBES! Lightweight! Just right for ofler shower} Just right for before shower!! Ploids, solids, ^ stripes! Values ta $13.95 BETTER SPOf SHIRTS! Long-sleevesl Short-sleeves! | Greet pofterns $^^^22 and colors! The kind of iport shirts you |J®* reolly likel Values to $8.95 . $18.00! BEHER TIES! All kinds of designs! 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Tel-Huron I Silver Lake Rd. s Dixie Highway ^ REN^EMBER We'ile Ri'iht At,OSS THE STREET BABRICS FABRICS Fit To Sew With A GOLDEN NEEDLE TEL-HURON Shopping Center Phone 335-5471 PLENTY OF FREE PARKING DON’T MISS Poo Pan’s “FUNNY FARM” THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1968 Foreign Writers Differ in Views of the United States LONDON (AP) - John Braine, best-selling British author of “Room at the Top” and other novels found himself inexplicably happy during an Unsuccessful lecture tour of the United States. He didn’t know what to make of it. “Toward the end of the trip I _---,^woritedJt (Wt;^nieOTUes^^ the British weekly magazine, Spectator. “The name of the happiness was freedom. This (the United States) was still a country in which you could be anything you wanted to be, from beatnik to millionaire. This was I a country in which still the state was there for the people, not the I people for the state. | “The name of the system the people lived under was capitalism. It was often cruel, often unjust, often inefficient, often wasteful, but it gave everyone. lecture tour without making the; financial profit he had anticipat-! ed, he writes that the visit was' worth more than anything mon-j ey could buy. It gave him a new! insight, he says, and changed him from a life-long Socialjst to a supporter of Britain's Con-i servative party. LESS COMPLIMENTORY their fields. The scientific explorer shall be as free as possible from routine.. . Researchers of this kind resemble the even in an arbitrary and confused way, a chance to be what he wanted to be. Above bit, it didn’t care. It left people alone. . .” Although Braine wound up his Less complimentary is Ameri-i viewed through the eyes of Taisuke Eujishiraa, a popular Japanese writer appearing in the Shukan Yomiuri, a weekly magazine in Japan. The biggest hangup of Amerl-i Hong Kong or in Red China. Fu- America’s educational peli- cans is that they would “ratherjjishima told him it was in Chi- cies got special attention in a be loved than love others,” he|na. weekend supplement of the writes. Another big problem is I‘FLABBERGASTED’ Frankfurter Allgemeine Zei- “their incredible simbfe^^^ to American''” looked flab-^“"8- the extent of .stupidity, he goes Fujishima writes. by students at Westj^j,^ advanced fighting. But ‘ This man . shouted to his^'"'''"^" ‘‘^‘^bnical schools for a * * * Ifriends sitting across the aisle, J*^”*^*^ended on the California coast, To prove his claim, Fujishima I saying: ‘Did you know that?; ★ * * no limits are set to the number tells of an experience with alThat’s a Red Chinese moun-j Ifi » full-page report, thciand direction of the new prob-group ~bf Ame.ri7^W"1niMstsl4aTrrr^T4nWi:e^ ’ Thp~wbTi1ernewspapep--eoBcluded--thece-wasi4<>Bwt--4n--a.-p£ciod-.aL fprmpniing (AdvtmiWTtwit) YOU MAY M|kVK PINWOmiB AND NOT KNOW IT 3 pentons examined. Entire familiea be victima and, not know it. T9.S®t '■'9 ot Pin-Worms, they must the large intestine where ri miiRinltf.'X'hat'a ilets do .. they li' _ what Jaj_______ ______ here's how they do it. First- a scientific coating carries Ul /UllClil-ail lOUl iota j Ullll; IIUW ICl l lUlC. l UC WIIUIC] ---------——ttl—IISI ni .It-I aboard an airliner about to set|^bappening simply amazed me. I; no school in Europe that could j planning at European universi-down at Hong Kong. ! knew then just how deep-Tooted! niatch the California Institute ^1 tie^ the eyes of all who care for. An American sitting next tojAmerica’s China-allergy was.jTechnology. jlteeping"bur science abreast air him spotted a green mountain;reflecting the foreign policy of; ‘‘Caltech,” it explained, “en-|directed on the California super-below and asked if it was ini the United States.” ! courages researchers to change [institute.”■ goes right tq work—MBs I^n1.Worms Don]t take chances with d —--------.„..™ft.j»miliai, Getge e Jayne's P-W Vermifuge . all. essy-to-take tablets ... apeci M for children and adults- SALE ENDS SATURDAY, JULY 27 Home Appliance DOORS ARE REVERSIBLE 19.3-Cu. Ft. All-Frostless Side-;by-Side Regular 529.95 An All-Frostless Combination Reg. 329.95 BIG 16.3 CUBIC FOOT With a 5.2 cu. ft. bottonb freezer! Refrigerator has 2-full width steel shelves. Freezer holds 181-lbs. has adjustable shelf, lift-out basket. 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Choice of 3 colors. 199 Kenmore Range Guarantee Free Replacement and Service of any partt which prove defective within one year of sale. Free Replacement of any defective glass or porcelain enamel and other finishes within .30 days of sale. NO MONEY DOWN Maintenance Agreement . Up to 36 Months to Pay ^ on Sears’Easy Payment Plan You Can’t Do Better Than Sears >r dependable operation. Yet, Refrigerator Guarantee sealed refriieralion aystem of your t'oldapot produet o operate properly within 5 yeara dua to defe«l»4n^ 4ed repair bills. A.k Open .Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5:30 Sears «EARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Downtown Pontiac • Phone •4171 IS B~8 - THE PONTIAC PRESS; WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1^68 Housewives Enough Money Wed 3 h nrinrytrained repnirmpn I he TIME SHOP 151 S. Bair*, Birminghair appear as spots on a solar pho- disrupt communications tograph. I * ★ ★ , ______ i A. Through its emissions. X Q What causes solar flares? days and" extreme ullravibTef' * ★ ★ rays affected the ionosphere,' A. The equator of the sun, a ]temporarily knocking out short-globe of very hot. ionized gases,]wave communications almost rotates faster than its poles.'immediately. Later, ■ slower This causes magnetic lines of moving electrons also upset force from the suh’s general shortwave transmissions, magnetic field to wrap around >---- the sun. The resulting ropes of Q. yhat caused the northern emrssms^n tdr-ui^^Tkeiy e^^ the militar a major flare^hould occur j^terest in space, such as orl ing and detecting flares that ' ______ would affect unmanned *Tnis-sions, perhaps by ruining equip- Q- Why do you say more ment such as soiar cells. ,flares can be expected. Q. What chance is there an as-] A. Because past performance tronaut would-encounter a ma- indicates there is a peak in the jor flare? number of flares, about every 11 •k * * years We are near thal scHied- A. Small. There have been uled peak in the solar cycle. HAMBURGERS AND iism BARMCUE RENT, SELL, TrXdE - - - I'SE PONTIAC PRESS-IVAMUUXSJ- ^wrism ON THE LOOKOUT — Chief solar astronomer Patrick McIntosh (light) and observer Joe Sutonk man their telescope at the Space Disturbance .Forecast Center in Boulder, Colo. They keep a watch for solar flares'which can disrupt communications and affect space ventures. His Dream Hasn't a Leg to Stand On Hulo Girls Ask a Fair Shake By BOB THOMAS I “Nearly every signer, dancer'growing waves of tourists AP Movie-Television Writer and musician in the shows has a 1.200.000 expected this year,, HONOLULU—With the tourist'day job, too,” explained a per-'1,350,000 in 1969-are seeking invasion continuing to grow as!former, who also works for an more sophisticated entertain-the jets touch on these shores,'electronics firm. “I know uke- ment. ^?*clQnii*r» Unitormt SOB W. Huron at Talegraph Pontiae - FE 2-2300 SUMAAER CLEARANCE 'entertainmerit is booming. 1 Probably nowhere else in the United ! States — except iL a s V e g a s,i I where the gam-|b 1 i n g creates artificial salaries — could a lele players who are taxi drivelers and bank tellers, and hula The switch was illustrated dancers who are secretaries and|jj,jg Sheraton’s Grande! I waitresses. It would be hard to achieve anv ^ohdantv to call a , ■ , . , I strike” ■ _______■ Royal Hawaiian, which pre- ,1 If • 1 miered a new show in its Crown I But the AGVA officials re-]main militan seeking mini-g mum wages that would makej^ moonlighting less necessary. star Broad-1 ]way*, continued as leading per-i former, supported by a cast of MORE SOPHISTICATED 21, compared to nine in the pre- By DICK WEST ialtitude here in Mexico City performer get a THOM.^S One thing is certain; Gone are] vious show. i WASHINGTON (UPD-Near-1 affects the joggers. half - million - dollars per year the days when hotel entertain-] Producing the Royal Ha- ly every middle-aged male adult! “Yakamoto, the Japanese contract. That's the r£poj^tcdjgeg|j^g5_gg)yde4^=meBib6r&wati8fl--=Rhj5j0 NU SOFT (10c OFF LABEL) Fabric Softener PUFFS , BOX Facial Tissue NYLONGE ,/ PKG. 131 ee«^ • • •_ BTL. . w NYLONGE ,/ PKG. Cellulose Sponger 39 TunaCatFeei..2 ifii 29 nine lives (CAT |ei6D) ^ eeje# Tuna imf Chicken 2 29 MICHIGAN U.S. No. 1 Grade A<^P CANE SUGAR 07‘ ! «^49* MIX OR MATCH Sread Sal^ PLAIN OR SEEDED RYE OR VIENNA 4—99* PIE OF THE WEEK 00 DplclLApple Pie^.. 49 Grange OR lemon i.lb. m am Chiffon Cflko • • • • R^G 55 Pineapple, Almond or Cinnamon m Coffee Cakes .. 3 1 PKG. M m. Jelly Donuts .... V 45 SpeciaCf POTAYO CHIPS P/2-POUND BOX SEA MIST 183/4-oz. aerosol « CAN Potatoes • • .69 "ln Cleaner 39 TIDE A&P FROZEN SLICED 10-LB BAG STRAWBERRIES 310-OZ. cTNs. ASP FROZEN Jkjk- French Fries •• • 2 bIg 39 we care FRESH , HOME GROWN HEAD ' HOME GROWN PEACHES LEnUCE 1 1 ; Green Beans ,b|9* i ^5 24-Size I Heads ■19 -WESTERFnjROWN 27-SIZE ^100 ^ for I CANTALOUPE.. ^ Gionf— Detergent B—-12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1968 Pueblo Affair Settles Into Lengthening Diplomafic Stalemate WASHINGTON - Nearlyllo and its crew. The North Ko-| a half year ago — at noon Jan; reans have been calling for aj 23, Korean time—the small U.S.ju.S. apology and confession to! criminal spying inside Korean] waters. the Pueblo intruded within 7.6| He said the Central Intelll-ldeclined to give the source ofi miles of their coast. They havelgence Agency actually^ had his information. intelligence ship Pueblo was cruising Viff Wonsan when a North Korean subchaser appeared with a challenge: “^eave to or I will open fire.” “I am in international waters,” the Pueblo replied by international flag signal. The United States says the] Pueblo was 15.4 miles from the nearest Korean land, well out-1 side North Korea’s clauned 12-1 mile limit when seized. i Rusk has Said that if exami-igpurned a U.S. offer to take thelcaused the ship to sail within nation of the ship’s log, after its ................ release, shows there was any penetPation of Korean waters prior to the seizure, the United States would apologize. The North Koreans contend! issue to an international body. Sen. Stephen M. Young, D-Ohio, predicted on July 12 that the North Koreans would free the Pueblo and its men by the end of August. the 12-mile limit, and that the United States would apologize and pay an indemnity of $100 million or more. Young, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, STATEMENT CRITiaZED The State Department promptly took Issue, with the Senator and criticized such statements as potentially harmful to the negotiations. McCloskey said there still is! no breakthrough in the Panmun-j jom sessions. * * ★ ‘‘The matteP of ransom, or however it has been described, is nothing that has ever entered the picture,” he added. ‘‘There is absolutely no indication that such an effort would accomplish the recovery of the Pueblo and I her crew.” Preliminary observations of cosmic rays have given scientists hope that an undiscovered chamber' is hidden in the 469-front pyramid of Chephres. Two hours and 32 mlnutesris: ter the lightly armed, M6-ton American.YeS5fil..sigoed off her last radio transmission after an unequal skirmish with the subchaser joined by three North Korean patrol boats and a flock of MIG jet fighters. ‘‘Have been directed to come to all stop: being boarded at this time," the Pueblo radioed. ‘‘Destruction incomplete. Several publications will be compromised. Four men injured, one critically. Going off air now. Destroying-gear.” LONG STALEMATE >fRANK'S NURSERY SALES-«as» 0PEN9to9 After flanrlng quickly into International proportions, t h e Pueblo affair has since settled Into a lengthening stalemate between the U.S. and North Korean negotiators at Panmun-jom. Their latest announced meeting at the Korean truce site, July 10, was their nineteenth. The Pueblo, first taken into """ been moved by the North Koreans to a port farther north. The 82 surviving crewmen — one died — still are prisoners somewhere in North ___" Kbrea, exact •whereabouts oindis. closed. The men are believed — from pictures, letters and North Korean reports — to be relatively well physically, though the Koreans have rebuffed U.S. pleas for access to the captives by the International Red Cross or other ___nutslders.------------- RUMORS DENIED The State Department took pains last week to deny rumors, reportedly originating in Japan, that Pueblo's skipper, Cmdr. Lloyd M. Bucher, 38, had committed suicide. ‘‘Hie North Koreans recently told us there has been no change in the conditions of the____ crew-smeo €ariyDebruai7'” ahff that word through Panmunjom is mterpreteiiy the State De-partent as denial of the suicide] rumor, press officer Robert J.i McCloskey said. The flow of letters from the prisoners to this country has fallen off sharply, but family members say those still being' received continue to show the heavy hand of North Korean propaganda. There is no evidence, U.S. officials say, that letters and packages addressed to the captives have been reaching them. A ‘‘Remember the Pueblo Cqmmittee” led by the Rev. Paul D. Lindstrom of Prospect Heights, 111., has been trying to drum up popular support for tougher U.S. action to rescue the ship and its men. MILITARY ACTION The cominittee leaders sayj the United Stated should takei ffgr the men. Presideht Johnson | and Secretary of State Dean Rusk have counseled patient negotiations as the best way to save the crewmen’s lives and win return of the vessel. ‘‘I think it is rather unlikely that you could get them back alive by military action,” Rusk said. ‘‘We would like to get them back, not simply insure that they would be killed.” ---Rusk ^^ejected a call by-thej— committee for a U.S. ultimatum] to the North Koreans. Lindstrom said that if the] Reds ignored an ultimatum .set-j ting a time and place for release of the Pueblo and crew, the United States should seize North Korean ships and blockade Wonsan. 12,000 MESSAGES Mrs. Bucher, who has been active in the committee drive, recently reported receiving some 12,000 letters and telegrams from sympathetic Americans. Since the day of seizure the United States has been demanding prompt release of the Pueb- Heat and pour like gravy on -^yfALMTlETS Add heated Ragu' Spa-jjietti Sauce to the ^|l relish and enjoy HOT BEEF SANDWICHES IS GUARANTEED Frank's guarantees that every Scott product must do what we say it will or you get every cent of your rrioney back from Frank's — right at the store ^ no questidns a^ed. this unconditional guarantee applies to any Scott product: seed, chemical or mechanical. You are the judge, you must be satisfied. SAVE i.00 on Turf Builder Plus 2 m GROWING CRABGRASS! 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TURF BUILDER MAKES GRASS MULTIPLY ITSELF FOR A THICKER, MORE BEAUTIFUL, DEEPER GREEN, HEALTHY LAWN «5.45 You get a more beautiful lawn with Turf Builder or money back. scons WINDSOR 2,500 SQ. FT. 1,000 SQ. FT. REG. $11.95 REG. $4.95 ^10*95 ^4.45 w/Turf Builder w/Turf Builder :t! WINDSOR BLEND 70 2,500 SQ.'FT. .1,000 SQ. FT. REG. $9.95 REG. $4.45 A** ^ «8.95 w^jTurf Builder ^3.95 w/Turf Builder NURSERY SALEI 5919 HIGHLAND RD. iM-59) at AIRPORT RD. 31590 GRAND RIVER, FARMINGTON 6575 TELEGRAPH AT.MAPLE 14 MILE AT CROOKS RD. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24. 19g8 B—18 Johnson to Mix Teaching, Travel When He Retires WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson, unlike some people approaching retirement, has very definite ideas about what he will do when he leaves the White House next Jan. 20^ He is looking forward wini enthusiasm to a return to teaching. But he plans to mix teaching at the University of Texas in Austin with travel, especially in Mexico, where he has visited a number of times. Central America and South America also are likely spots for informal trips. The President expects to live at (he LBJ Ranch in Texas, and probably will rent an apartment ki Austin. The ranch is within easy driving distance of Austin, which also is the home of one of his daughters, Luci. F'riends who have talked with the President about retirement say he never mentions politics in his post-White House nl; ^nmg. They~ interject this to moan he might be content 'with a role similar to that played by former President Dwight D. Ei- Six Soldiers Killed in Viet Are Identified WASHINGTON (AP) - Six servicemen killed in action in the Vietnam war have been named in the latest Defense Department casualty Kst. They included: ARMY V\issourl-SBt. James E. McClafferty, Kansas City. NAVY Ohio—Hospitalman 3.C. John J, M ^ i MARINE CORPS IllinoiSt^Pfc. Thomas G. Turner, Chatham, Ont. Entry into servicei Changed from missing to dead — hostile; MARINE CORPS Michigan—Lance CpI. William Reyes, Warren. AIR FORCE Iowa—1st U. Warren K. Brown/ Sioux City. Missing as a result of hostile action: AIR FORCE senhower, who serves as a sort of elder statesman but not as a day-to-day combatant on the political battlefield. The classroom will be nothing new to the President. It was in a little school in Cptulla, Tex. where most of the students were of Mexican descent, that he be-:ame a teacher shortly after iraduating from a teachers’ college at San Marcos, Tex., in 1930. The next year he became a teacher in Houston’s public schools. Before coming to Wash- million to build two others. One will be an eight-story structure housing the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library. ’Ihe other is' a three-story building for the Lyndon Baines Johnson School of PubKc Affairs. Johnson already has been elected a member of the faculty. ington to become secretary to Richard Kleberg, when Kleberg was a member of the House of Representatives. His new teacher career will be in a place spectacular different from the little school in Cotulla. JOHNSON LIBRARY I The regents suggested he The University of ’Texas has sume the title of “distin^shed magnificent buildings on its professor of public affairs” or campus, and is spending $12'“distinguished lecturer in jmblic affairs.” But Johnson feels, some less ostentatious title, such as “visiting lecturer,” or ‘conversationalist in residence” would be more appropriate. He considers the teaching job would not be one in which he would carry a full work schedule and meet 8 a.m. classes. Rather, in which his political experience might enaljle lu,m to discuss in a helpful way "various topics of interest to students. He where he could participate in informal discussion groups and seminars. visn;s TO colleges His teaching would not be confined to the University of Texas, but would involve occasional visits to universities such as Harvard, North Carolina, Texas Christian and others. Some have speculated that he might use his post-retirement thinks of it also as a place 1 activities in travel and in the classroom for advocacy of a speedup in the formation of a Latin America-wide common market. At Austin some wags have k suggested that the entrance liK-tel to the LBJ school carry in stone the words “Come let us reason together.” This one of Johnson’s often-used expressions. Some of his friends say such carved words might not be a bad idea at all. |. Gobel D. James a Changed from missing to captured or interned: AIR FORCE ^ Ma|. Fred N. Thompson-and Capl. Jo»- Died not as a result of hostile .action; ' ....... ARMY Illinois—Spec. 4 James G. McWhlrter, Crossvill#. Missing not as a result of hostile action: ARMY Mexico's Man in Cuba Calm ^Breaking Relations Would Help Nobody" HAVANA (AP) - Miguel Co-vian Perez, the only Latin American ambassador in Havana, says he cannot be concerned by criticism from those who think Mexico should not have relations wUh^ Cub^ “We have oniy^to account lo the people of Mexico,” Covian said in an interview. To break relatipns, he added, ‘ wouldn’t help anybody.” ★ ★ * Although he mentioned no names it was obvious he referred to Cuban exile groups in the United States who have tried bombs and political pressure to get Mexico to end relations with Prime Minister Fidel Castro. “I am sure there are persons who are not in agreement with this policy toward Cuba but so far those who have demonstrated this disagreement are not Mexicans and therefore Mexico isn't concerned with their opinion.” A 38-year-old lawyer, former representative and former president of Mexico’s Chamber of ^©eputiesv "Csvia»"^eelaredT""“Itf ^ a few words, the maintenance of our relations, respectful and cordial as they are, depends exclusively on Cuba and Mexico,” A recognized liberal, Covian is serving in his first diplomatic post. After less than a year on the job, he i? credited with having the best relations of any ambassador. East or West, with the Castro government. Shortly after-his arriyaLlast^ fall, Covian was iftstrumentaTFh arranging with Castro the're-•sumption of flights to Mexico forfcn estimated 3,000 American citijpens and their Cuban relatives waiting to. leave the counr try. The f 1 i gh ts. had been , blocked for nearly a year and even Uien there had been only) two previously. Now they are on a monthly basis. Prices Cut on all King Size Sleep Sets for this Once-A-Year Super Sale! 12 PIECE KING SIZE SLEEP SET p ^ Luxurious Quilted Button-Free 7 ft. long, 6 ft. wide Mattress and 2 Box Springs HERE’S WHAT YOU GET: • King Size Mattress • 2 Box Springs King Size Metal Frame with • 2 King Size Fieldcrest Percale Sheets Casters • King Size Mattress Pad > 2 King Size Pillowcases > 2 King Size Pillows 3 iDAYS I ONLY 174 INCLUDES DOUBLE BONUS GENUINE ORTHO MATTRESSES ARE SOLD ONLY AT ORTHO STORES! DOUBLE BONUS! King or Queen Size QUILTED BEDSPREAD PLUS King or Queen Size HEADBOARD (not , as illustrated) with i 1^ Your Purchase of Any ^ Super Savings! Super Discounts Lowest Prices Ever for 3 Days Only! SAVE! SAVE! SAVE ON QUEEN SIZE SLEEP SETS! GIANT ORTHO SELECTION! King or Queen Size 12-PIECE QUEEN SIZE SLEEP SET Luxurious Quilted Bu#on-Free! 60 in. wide, 80 in. long Mattress and Box Spring HERE'S WHAT YOU GET: • Queen Size Mattress * 2 Queen Size Pillows • 2 Queen Size Pillowcases • Queen Size Box Spring • Queen Size Metal Frame • 2 Queen Size Reldcrest •"Queen Size l^tfress^^^ " “ p^eate Sheets ' 3 DAYS ONLY 154 INCLUDES DOUBLE BONUS SPECIAL DISCOUNTS ON HUGE SELECTION OF TWINS, FULLS AND EXTRA LONGS! PLUS ORTHO'S DOUBLE BONUS! TWIN OR FULL SIZE, QUILTED BUTTON-FREE MATTRESS & BOX SPRING V Quilted luxury, finest quality! Long wearing, deeply \ cushioned comfort. Attractive extra-heavy cover^_ , BONUS! , • Beautiful Plastic Headboard * (not as illustrated) and Metal ■ Frame with Casters witii the * A Purchase of any Twin or / \ Full Size SeU y 3 BAYS ONLY 74 INCLUDES DOUBLE BONUS Open Daily 10a.m.-9p.ni.*Sat,10a.ni.-6pm,*Sun.12-6p.ni.(LivernoisClosedSunday)*Phone Orders Accepted-No Cash Down, Up To 24 Months To Pay! Gopyrisht (S 1968 ORTHO MATTRESS 2211 S. TELEGRAPH, PONTIAC MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER • MIIUCLE MILE STORE ONLY, OPEN SAT. UNTIL 9 P.M. WE HONOR MICHIGAN BANKARD ond SECURITY CHARGE PHONE: 332-2227 free parking at all ortho stores Other ORTHO STORES in Detroit, Livonia, Lincoln Pork, Roseville, Deorborn & Ook Pork B—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1968 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1968 B—15 ' '' t " #F*ifcC^ JC^i^iLJPC X J ^ -■ ^fracJettn,,-480 ' t VI; fCo ' ^isp. It '•'^n/oic* «ooW -*-4I,J;'«»‘'y'"**- up *ffw. •"wnfc/^ •"•PA«e, OU SaUiT CHARCOAL 590 Steak Whole Plump, Tatty 2H-3)i lb. Avg. AMdMrWHgl«7**BMtl«r*1 lb. Californio'kV»x *'^*'*”*P*0" hre»b Celff^ “Sweet Plums Seedless Grapes^ V'';?yNectarines" "B^tlett^Peiars PftoM fMrf TiMa« Jufy a tkmtmu,Julr2r.}9A light M Limit Ctnftr Cuts USD*CI»l..».rf Boneless Roast ch..k ...ii. oB*!^ USDACMmOiidi nr\^ Beef Swiss Steaks it. 89*^ ■ Frath Grouna s.!!,..** i-» All Beef Hamburger ««••• 55^n U.S. Choice Stleta ittl ,fc. Shotrider Roast SSt ; ■' ’ 'A ■■ < ““'^•L,-. 1 ■'’.*' p" ***‘'~inonade ‘ .’. -: f, '-Cream.-Pi^-'^*-®- ' «xC*a&»s># ... , '.7 ftyin.lt. f?4»»n /i&e Pattern of your choice Melamine )f M Ml till Sin,I > I f With tb« purehoi* of f-IzHtahof Lettuce! IJ Eitir ^ Sold Bdl 6iH Stiaps ^ with tho purehoi# of „„y )4.Gol. Tropi-Col-Lo Fruit DrmKs al Eitfr 6«ld Bdl 6iH Stiaps > with tho purchoio of any Wholo WATERMaON . Limit o< , llfttfr, ^ 6«M Idt 6IH SiMPi ^ llh tho purehe 3 IbLoroM |6eef Ground Chuckl Offer good thru 7/27 ''-litonopor family i ll Eitar r 6«ld Bdl 61ft SlMpt ^ with tho purchoo# of o" at airports here and clients, according to Engerson' of 17134 Kirkshire, Bloomfield' 2 FUGHTS CANCELED Hills. ; A spokesman for Mohawk STANDS TSST * !sai(|’Tuesday the airline had ' TAS has survived naralvzine! cdncelerttrtwtrTrtghtlrfreigh^ j IAS has suruveo paralyzingbetween Boston and !snowstorms, bank- closings and ^est of July. The a depression. two flights carried passengers Engerson initiated a wake-up g^ g^ j^gji and ex- service during World W'ar II press. because alarm clocks were traffic controllers main- st'arce. fain that they are overworked, He also offers “vacationigp^rtstaffed and underequipped: answering,” an idea formulated; to handle the increasing air traf-i one summer when a burglar'fjc - | chose homes to rob by calling to; ilie bill was $153 million high-| see if the owners were home, ler ,than a measure passed pre-| Another Engerson concept is a viously by the House and its) daily cheer-the-shut-in call. ! sponsors said the extra money j tiona} political conventions. * ★ ★ In a related development, FAA officials met Tuesday with leaders of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Oranization, a new union, to discusi4 the air tieups. F. Lee Bailey, the lawyer who is executive director of union, said after the session his organization would seek meetings with industry and other interested parties this week to talk over Immediate steps to end the problem. Also, FAA administrator Wiliam F. McKee said a three-day "meeting, stariirig today, would consider proposals on ways to relieve the congestion. The traffic jams in the airways figured prominently in* ,^enate debate on the money bill to expand FAA operations! * * * While there has been sharp dispute among the various parties involved over the causes for the recent jam-ups in air flights, there has been general agreement that a shortage of controllers is one factor. Williams tried unsuccessfully to block a provision exempting the new FAA jobs from a new law to roll back federal employment to 1966 levels. DONT MISS THE BIG^"MADE-FOR-MICHIGAIT mmam^ Tremendous appliance savings direct from factoryJLyo^ NOWIN PROGRESS AT... FRAYER APPLIANCE INC. 1108 W. Huron 589 Orchard tic. Ave. children; and one brother. w ri ix r> coming vehicle apparently spun ^ Mrs. Passatta Peavy ^^f control into his lane. Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Passatta Peavy,; 77, of Chicago will be 1 p.m.j Friday at Liberty Baptist) Church with burial in Oak Hill) Cemetery by Davis-Cobb Funeral Home. Mrs. Peavy, a member of Bethlehem 'Temple Safecrackers Take $300 From Firm Mrs. Mabel Upleger IMLAY CITY — Service for I Mrs. Mabel Upleger, 69, of 7661 ! Crowe will be 1 pjn. Friday at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church with burial in Imlay Township Safecrackers stole $300 from a Cemeter\. Apostolic Pontiac firm in a break-in Mrs. Upleger died yesterday; Church, died Monday. reported yesterday to city Her body is at Muir Brothers Surviving are eight daughters, poiiog ' Funeral Home. Imlay City. She Mrs. Rochelle Taylor, Mrs. Neb: investigators said the was a member of St. Paul’s tie Spears, “ Mrs. 0 v e r t a burglars broke into Pontiac Lutheran Church. Williams and Mrs. C 0 r a <-,iaSs Co., 35 W. Lawrence. Surviving are her husband Hopkins, all of Pontiac, and through a side window, then; John; three daughters. Mrs. mie Currey, Mrs. Elizabeth to another before forcing it ! Clemens, Mrs. Betty La Bair, of Jackson and Mrs. Katherine, open. - Wisconsin and Mrs. Lois Jordan Davis, all of Chicago; 34j Identification officers wereiof Kentucky; one son, Roland of grandchildren; and three great-called to check the scene for|lmlay City and ten grandchildren. j fingerprints, police said. grandchildren. AP Wirtphslo GAS CLOUD HOVERS OVER FLAMES-A cloud of chlorine gas rises from the FMC plant in South-Charleston, W. Va., after a series of explosions yesterday ruptured a gas line, forcing up to 5.000 persons to leave their homes. Their were no fatalities. Police sealed off the city, which is known as “the chemical center oWhe world.” MORE FIIME INTERIOR PRODUCTS CHINA LUXE Ss ENAMEL • MADE TO RESIST GREASE AND GRIME • WILL NOT SPOT OR SMUDGE FROM WATER, SOAP OR DETERGENTS • RESISTS STAINING AND CHIPPING Reg. per gal. 2 GALS. *Q98 FOR O LIQUID GLASS TEXTURON S.^“ss ENAMEL • ONE COAT COVERS MOST SURFACES • COVERS CHIPPED, CRACKED, TAPED SURFACES EASILY • DRIES TO A HARD, WASNABLE FINISH • SAFE AND NON-TOXIC FOR CHILDREN'S TOYS AND FURNITURE • EASY SOAP AND WATER CLEAN-UP Reg. per gAl. Reg. per gal. 0 GALS. *098 Xm FOR M 0 gals. *7^98 FOR # 7 PIECE 9" DELUXE PAN AND ROLLER SET/ ^ ZIP BRUSH CLEANER 89< 77* CLASSIC INTERIOR LATEX JUST 100 DAP VINYL SPACKLING COMPOUND 1/2 PINT SIZE % 69t ^yiotois All Victor Paint Stores Carry a complete Lina of Mary Carter Paints AMERICA'S BEST PAINT VALUE! AAORf THAN 1300 STORES FROM COAST TO COAST! 158 North Saginaw St. | _J06 West Huron St. Next to Sears, Pontiac-Telephone 338-6544 | at Telegraph fid., Foirfao--=T^f»phone 338:3'F38 AVON-TROY CARPET* WALLED LAKE JOHN’S LAWN AND 1650 Auburn fioad DISCOUNT HOUSE* GARDEN EQUIPMENT* Utica, Michigan 107 Pontiac Trail, Walled Lake 1215 Cooley Lake fid., Union L k. Telephone 852-2444 Telephone 624-4845 Telephone 313-8104 It’S a Classroom Summer for Two Teen Volunteers Not many people are aware that the long hours in the summertime are actually ocgupied in soUd, constructive ways by our young people. At McConnell Elementary School, teen-ager Mark Schafrick, has been a part of the volunteer staff working with principal Howard Caldwell. Mark’s job is an interesting new one for teens in community service's. ★ ★ ★ Each Wednesday morning for an hour and a half he teaches the Engli.sh language to Spanish-speaking children. Most are Puerto Rican families that have recently settled in Pontiac. ★ * * Mark is helping them on an individualized basis to memorize and understand the words via a colloquial method. In this way he Is preparing them for the school curriculum by instilling confidence via this informal approach. At ]7 years of age, Mark is filling a need and paving the way for improved understanding between youth from various backgrounds. ' * * ★ Caldwell established the language program for the summer involving 12 teen volunteers. “The main concern with these youngsters is to establish verbal understanding so the kids can fit into school programs. This kind of personal attention is essential,” stated Caldwell; PHOTOGRAPHY A few blocks over from McConnell School, Tom Rosenthal, community director at Eastern Junior High School has also generated one of many cultural-educational programs this summer. . A particularly interesting one involves teen volunteer 'Thomas Johnson, 17-year-old student from Birmingham and a THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESnAV, .11 J.V 24, 1968 Two Can Ploy the Game Questions May Break His Routine By ABAGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My husband, Mike, and I are both in our early forties. We have four children. Mike is busy with his business and I am busy with my house and the kids. Lately Mike has . been getting up at 5 a.m. He doesn’t bave4fr be at work until 8 and he has only a 20 - minute drive to get there. Well, he rushes around getting showered, shaved and dres.sed and he runs out of'^the house like he is going to be late for something. ABBY When I ask him where he is going so early he says “Nowhere—I just like to ride around.” I am getting suspicious and would like to know where this guy goes. Should I follow him! BERTIE DEAR BERTIE: No, but ask him what he would think if you did the same thing for the same reason. DEAR ABBY: I was amused to read that letter from the girl whose boy friend supposedly didn’t know how to kiss. All 1 can say is—I should be so lucky. More than once I’ve had to push my dates away in disgust because of their aggressive “bedroom” kisses. There is a time and place for everything, and a doorstep after a date is not the place for a kiss like that. A Dynamic State Democrat, Mrs. Margaret Price, Dies - By JOHN TEARE Associated Press Writer ANN ARBOR — A finger pointed at her in a moment of political compulsion launched the career of Mrs-Margaret Price, later vice chairman of the Democratic National Committee, who died Tuesday in New York. Democratic National Committeeman Neil Staebler Tuesday recalled that incident at the State party convention that launched G. Mennen Williams’ tenure as governor. ARGUING “She and I were standing in t hall arguing,” recalled Staebler. “The state chairman rushed out of a meeting and said, ‘One of you two has to be ou^ioam didate for auditor general.’ I pointed to her and she consented on the spot. Staebler said, “but she was not without forethought.” Mrs. Price, whose husband, Hickman Price Jr., had been a vice president of the Kaiser automobile company and later an assistant secretary of commerce, devoted much of her life to politics, women’s rights and establishment of programs for children and young people. From the Texas White House, President Johnson said: “It is with deep regret that Mrs. Johnson and I learn of the death of Margaret Price, who gave so unstin-tingly of herself to her family, her friends, her country and her party.” JFK Mrs. Price was a campaign assistant In Sen. Jota ^ pre^enliM"dimpaigh in 1960, and later his special representative to the inauguration of the president of Paraguay In 1963. After living for several years in Brazil, the Prices moved to Washington, where Mrs. Price did legislative work on Capitol Hill for jM-ojects of interest of Mrs. Lyndon B. JohnsMi. She was the first chairman of the Michigan Youth Commission, formed in 1949 to participate in a White House Decennial Conference on Youth that convened in 1950. From that meeting was to devebp the National Council on Children and Youth. Mrs Price became its first chairman. Mrs, Price who was 55, is survived by her husband and a son, Mamton. Another son, Hickman, died in San ’’"Ffanciseb.----...... Funeral services are plained at 10 a.m. Friday at St. Johns Church, Lafayette ^uare, Washington, with burial in Rock Creek Cemetery. 't- . specialist in photography. Tom has been instructing two Eastern students on the techniques and development processes of commercial photography. When the fall school term begins, Tom’s students will be instaijed as Eastern’s official p h o t o g r a p h e rs , representing the school paper and covering special student events. A lab and darkroom were recently built in a renovated section of this school. ★ ★ * Rosenthal comments “I’m extremely pleased with the success of this unique class, more so because it enables our students to develop talents on their own and makes them feel like an important part of the staff. “I’m proud of all our volunteers; I don’t know where we would be without them.” The Oakland County Volunteer Bureau has been, instrumental in placing teen volunteers in botli schools as part of their on-going programs in education and cultural enrichment. Learninq to speak English in the “Expanding with their volunteer teen instructor, Mark Schafrick Their World” program sponsored this summer by of Commerce Road, West Bloomfield Township and the Oakland County Volunteer Bureau are three Maria Reyes. The girls, who are attending these sisters. From left are Lucy and Francisca Reyes classes in McConnell SchoQl,Jw£MmFefki^^ A “shy” kisser can become a bit more bold in time, but an aggressive kisser can never be toned down. I don’t feel any sympathy for Jake’s girl. I just wish I could meet Jake. READER ■w ★ ★ Everybody has a problem. 'What’s yours? For a personal reply write to Abby, c/o ’Itie Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056 and enclose a stamped, self-addressed esnvelqie. Getting some of the outdoor action are these amat^tur photographers. From left are Larry Walker of East Boulevard, Tom Johnson of Birmingham and Randy Ihrke of Chandler Street. . Tom, an Oaklar^ County volunteer in the “Expanding Their World” program has been instructing Larry and Randy in photography in anticipation of school events at Eastern Junior High School where both attend. Tom is a senior at Seaholm High School. 'Mister' Is Fine; Familiarity Is Not Necessary By ELIZABETH L. POST > Dear Mrs.. Post: My husband has been , corresponding with his future employers for some time, and he has met the president and vice president of the company. Since they address each other and him by first names, should he do the same? (The diffefence in age is not great.) - ,Agnes Morgan Dear Mrs. Morgan: As a general rule, an employe should call his superiors “Mr.” until asked to do otherwise. This Is particularly true in your hqsband’s case where he is not yet employed by this new firm. Once he starts to work for them, he should follow the lead of others holding —r-positlon Similar to his. “ CHOICE Dear Mrs. Post: I have two nieces —ages 15 and 12—and have always bought them both birthday and Christmas presents. Now, is there a time to di.scontinue this practice? If so, should it be both occasions, and ho.w,Joes, .one go about It? 11 is not a question of money hut time and effort are involved. - Mrs. K. C. Dear Mrs. (' : You are free to discontinue the gifts—one or both—at any time you wish. The timing depends entirely on how close the girls are to you. Generally these breaks are made at the —end—of grammar school, or possibly,----------- high school. There is no need to make any explanation-just send a card instead of a gift. If you wish to make the move more gently, you might enclose a dollar or two with the card for a few years. RECEPTION Dear Mrs, Post: Our daughter-is-4o—=— be married in the hometown of the groom, where she has lived the past three years. Since most of the guests at the reception will be friends and relatives of the groom and his paTents, please tell me the best way to form the receiving line.—Kay Johnson Dear Mrs. Johnson: Since the groom's mother will know so many‘more of the guests’ names than you will, she should stand first in the receiving line with you next to' her. This way she will bo able to introduce each guest to you. ■k * * Neither the groom’s father nor your husband needs to stand in line; in fact, they are probably both happier and more useful circulating among the guests. , ,, . —rf'. - JIPilBl 'J MRS. RICHARD S. MEHOLICK Pair Honeymoons in the Pacific Folloy/ing Vows — Foltewing -fr TecepHon'JSIfurday at Maurice's, newlyweds, the Richard Steven Meholicks (nee Carol Ann Thomas) departed for a wedding trip to Hawaii. ★ ★ w - TTie daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Thomas of Woodstock Street and the son of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Meholick of Dearborn spoke vows earlier that evening in Grace Lutheran Church. FLOWERS Carrying a bouquet of Phalaenopsis orchids with Stephanotis, the bride was attired in a satin skimmer, the same worn by her mother. To complete her look, she chose a circlet of orange blossoms securing an illusion veil. ‘ ir, it -k Honor attendants for Ahe couple were Mrs. Basel Miracle, Barbara Butler and Louis Duncan.' Nancy Garretson and jDeajina. Shucy were bridesmaids with Rcb^k Tliomas, (^orge Palmer and Donald Lucas serving as uahers. Lily ■Stack was flpwer girl. We re trying hard to make our Summer Sale better than anyone else’s. 1. 2. We’re cutting *30®", *40”® and *50®® off our normally low dinette set prices. We’re including all famous dinette makes in the sale, such as Daystrom, Virture and Douglas. ^ We’re including aU styles - modern and traditional, 4. 5. in all wood grains, with legs or pedestals. We’re giving a famous Regent Sheffield 17-piece quality Cutlery Set with each purchase. We’re staying open daily from 9 a.m to 9:30 p.m. and adding Sunday from noon to 5 p.m. for those who can’t make it during the week. OPEN SUNDAY 12-5 house of dinettes No one tries harder than that. HERE’S WHERE IT’S HAPrailVING: 1672 S. Telegraph Rd. Between Miracle Mile and Orchard Lake Road Open 9:30-9 Daily • Phone: .3.34-2124 C—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUEY 24, 1968 Fine Furnilur* Sine* 1917 ^MidSu^mer furniture SALE! SAVINGS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS! EVERYTHING INCLUDED EXCEPT A FEW PRICE-ESTABLISHED ITEMS! SPECIAL SALE PRICES! SALE Reg^ular $114.50 to $135.00 DittincFiv* xbair ttylsi in a salection of beautiful new decorator fabrics, very specially priced through an important manufacturer's purchase. Select from Transitional, Italian or French Provincial. Velvet Ladies’ Lounge Elegant trend to velvet in a distinctive button-back chair. Selection of fabrics. French Provincial Lounge Fruitwood frame with authentic fabric selection; country French design. SALE *99 EACH Velvet Hi-Back Transitional Tapered high back with button tufting and tailored skirt. Selection of fabrics. *99 EACH Italian Occasional Classic Lustrous dark Fruitwood finish frame with choice of decorator fabrics, ideal in pairs. SALE *99 ^:ach All Fahrirt Retinlunt to WoUr ifnilSoiFi V ■ Open Thursday, Friday^ Monday-’til 9 Italian-Styled Hi-Back Button-tufted back and Italian carved Fruitwood frame in an important chair. Choice of fabrics. SALE *99 each ...;.^"®Int'erior-. Decorating Consultation BUDGET TERMS 1680 S. Telegraph South of Orchard Lake Rd. Free Parking Front pf Store FE 2>8348 Tiy— KING-JEWELL I Butterfly roses and white I daisies comprised the cascad-I ing bridal bouquet held by M. j Kay Jewell as she spoke vows \ Saturday with Arvil G. King. For the evening rite in Central Methodist Church, she chose a traditional ensemble of Chantilly lace over taffeta. I Donna Langdon, maid of hon-I or, and Thomas Bomfleth, i best man, the Richard John-j sons and the Earl Pollards at-I tended the couple. Prior to their departure to Mackinac Island, the newlyweds greeted ' guests in the church parlors. Their parents are the Elmer C. Jewells of Draper Street and the Cratie Kings of Romulus. “ Polly's Pointers Uses for Oven Shelves Dear Polly -r- I always enjoy the column. When we know things can be done faster and easier it proves that housekeeping need not be a drag. My Pointer concerns the many uses I have found for my seldom used lower oven shelf. I remove it and put it on the floor to drain wet boots on. I put newspai«r or an old rug under it and figure that if it can withstand 509 degrees of heat a little water cannot hurt it. ..'■s * ■* Also an oven shelf over a bdx (weighted down with a brick or rock) will provide a temporary shelter for a Small pet. 'The open shelf top lets air get in but the animal cannot get out. ★ ★ ★ The oven shelf can be removed before baking starts and be used to cool the cake, cookies or whatever you may be baking. An oven sheU put over one side of a double sink can be used for draining freshly washed lettuce or even dishes. (Polly’s note — Be sure it is secure before trying the dishes bit.) Such a shelf will fit in the bathtub (be careful) not to scratch the porcelain) and used as a sweater dryer. Wash it off and return to the oven after any bf these u.ses. I am a new* mother and I find a beach towel is wonderful for drying my one-year-old after his bath. I wrap him in it, sit him on my lap and dry him. I stay dry and he gets dry quick- ■. I also keep* his bath toys in a plastic basket which hae holes in the side and a handle (like an Easter basket). I put basket, toys and all in the tub arid, when the bath is over, leave them there to drain. -MRS. R. & ★ ★ * Dear Polly — I do hope some of the readers can tell me how to open a window that was painted when it was so cold I did not bother to open it. Now that I would like to open the window it is ^tuck so tight T cannot budge it —MRS. J. ■k * * Dear Polly — I used to have trouble with the bottom of my coffee pot handle burning as did other friends. I solved this by wrapping a double thickness 'of aluminum foil around the bottom of the handle and pressing it on tight with my hand. This works wonderfully for me. -IDA Announcing the engagement of her daughter, Janet Kathleen Powell, to Jonathan W. Simonds is her mother, Mrs. John H. Eiden of Ellis Road, Independence Township. Janet is also the daughter of the late Kenneth D. Powell. A student at, Oakland Community College, Highland Campus, Jonathan is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas O. Simonds of Summer-hill Drive, Independence Township. PROCESSING PONTIAC'S ONLY COMPLETE DRAPERY FINISH Ultra-Ton* i Professional Car* \ Protects Your Drapery Investment! ; We are proud to be Pontiac's first cleaner qualified to recommend and qijer Ultra-Tone — The finest drapery care the textile maintenance industry can provide. It Costs No More To Get The Best! • RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL • INSTITUTIONAL Ultra-Tone precision forms drapery folds os no hand pres-jing can. It permits length to be odjusted to straightline accuracy, correcting minor flaws in imperfectly hemmed droperies. 605 Oaklanid Avenue PONTIAC FE 4-2579 Area Couple Speak Vows in Dearborn Clinton Inn at Greenfield Village was the setting for a re-ceptiffli following vows exchanged by Lydia Ervene Shepard and Timothy James Mc-Kibben. The pair were wed Saturday evening in Martha-Mary Chapel, -Greenfield-VUlageJ----------- The bride wore a silk organza cage of Alencon lace with pearl trim. A matching detachable train of lace complemented her gown. A headpiece of small silk organza petals held the silk illusion veil. She carried white roses centered with a white orchid. Mrs. Stanley Reilly, the bride’s sister, and Peter Ryan were honor attendants. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Thomas Adamson, Sandi Shepard and Sharon Weber. Gretchen Gilder was flower girl. ESQUIRE SIDE On the esquire side were Roger Ghettig, John Helner, Gary Shepard, t h e bride’s brother, as ushers and Michael Bonomo, ring bearer. Parents of the newlyweds who are honeymooning in Georgian Bay and Ontario, Canada are Mr^anri Mr.s Erwin C. Shepard of Verona Drive, West Bloomfield Township and Mr. and Mrs. James H. McKibben of Union Lake Road, Commerce Town.ship. Save 20% Sale ii) MADE-TO-YOUR MEASURE DRAPERIES Lined or Unlined DRAPERIES MADE JDST.FOR.YOUR.WINDOWS . FROM YOUR PERSONAL CHOICE OF FABRICS AND COLORS . . . TAILORED WITH DETAILS OF QUALITY AND BEAUTY. Look at theie lou 20% off pricei for drap«rl«» made to fit your windows. Solids • Prints Novelties • Sheers SIZES UP TO 108»INCHES LONG UP TO 200 INCHES WIDE / Valances If Desired ALL 20% OFF Limited Time Only — 2 Week* Delivery! 1666 South Telegraph JUST SOUTH OF ORCHARD UKE ROAD Quality Carpet and Draperies Sine* 1941 FE 4-0516 AAeffs ^ ^ - 7^- \Ks Mefal Time One of today’s most fascinating art forms, welded metal sculpture, has been adapted to a new use, making a housing for a wall clock. It is designed to hang vertically. Tb keep it all modem, the clock’s square face is burlap-textured. The clock is battery powered. Make Your Appointment Now! PERMANENT and HAIRSTYLE Tinting—Bleaching Cutting IMPERIAL S'v' 158 Auburn Ave. Park Free FE 1-2878 Slensortf turner OX’l'IAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1068 .7/0. C—a JULIARD'S SEMI-ANNUAL AND MORE WOMEN^S and CHILDREN'S FOOTWEAR and HANDBAGS Choose from our outstanding selection of quality brands and famous makes.. Footwear for every^need in a beautiful assortment of colors, materials and heel heights. BLOOMFIELD PLAZA {Corner Maple and Telegraph) Volunteers “who sell season tickets for the Meadow Brook Theatre learned this week that prizes are being offered for the most tickets sold. First prize is a trip to New York City for two. Attending a meeting at the Bloomfield Hills home of the 1968 chairman, Mrs. William L. Mitchell (right) are women from a wide area. From the left are Mrs. L. A. Wineman, Green Tree Road; Mrs. Ralph R. Curtis, Noble Road, Addison Township: D'Etta Boland, Flint; Mrs. Forest B. Wiley, West Avon Road and Mrs. Donald Foss, Peach Tree Lane, both Avon Township: Mrs. Kent Mdthewson, East Long Lake Road. OtTief prizes to be awarded (op saleswomen include clothing, a lamp, luggage, electric lawn mower and, one free season ticket for each 15 season tickets sold. CHARGE ACCOUNTS MICHIGAN BANKARD di^^sTlub Any Born-Loser ChUdren? FLOWERS and NATIONS Mo.st counlrieii in the world have adopted a flower or plant as a national emblem. The official flower of the United Stales is the Golden Rod, which many people look, upon as a weed — nevertheless, it is a flower and a prolific one, even though BETTY CANARY jolds. “It’s too late by then. By if somebody is talking over Its it is the flower of the fields After writing rather smuglylfour they are already too far crib. Good heavens! It is a and roadsides. congratulatory words a b 0 u ti behind. They haven’t learned to shame he didn’t manage to be display ALL imothers who cuddle and talk to'learn. born at our hou.se but you know! shop, because their babies, the question I By the age of 12 to 18 months, how iL goes - thats life and Mrs Frank S ! " ” ' ' “What children from “nonverbal” that s the way the ball bounces. P .i, . , , happens to the babies whose homes have already dropped t)f course, we ARE con-Papez of Brighton, will be feted -faehtnd-4he-teaming ability br5idcring-4Hm~at--ag&--louc.-SQ-aL a buffet dinner in Livonia’s! kind of attention!” children from “verbal” homes, iperhaps we COULD think about Roma Hall Saturday. I cannot answer that as well And, we could go farther backlh^m when he’s IS^onte and ^^T^e elder We proudly display ALL flowers in our shop, because We know that different peo- couldn’t put down was, ‘ pie love different" flowers. Celebrafipn Set for Livonia Hall Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Papez of Cambourne Place, West Bloom- IS IT SIllY TO i liiffllTElCflilTIlOW? a bouquet. Call FE 2-0127, we are as close as your telephone. PEARCE FLORAL CO. 5.59 Orebard Lake Ave. r a nHnrrrmrmTmrmTmTinnreTTTr CONNOLLY'S Jeuiel/ OF THE WEEKF as any kindergarten or first and wonder how well-equipped grade teacher - the ones who for learning a child will be if it ^ake him from hts younger their 25th. Another son,, get the results of such homes. is bom of an undernouri.shedPowers of San An- * * * imother.whohashadnoproper.s'^hoolb Send in tutors? WelUtonio, Texas, will be present. A talk with a former Head prenatal care. ^^^f^f ons ob-jThey have seven grandchildren. c* But we shouldn’t do that ‘ ® ------------ Start teacher did confirm my; we snouldn t do rnat, national nrodiirt thinkine about helninff “disad-should we? It probably isn’t our^,®*" ^ , o ,. *™ gross national product vantaS’’tur^^ right or our duty. There’s too ^'>P vantaged four and t.ve year philosophy ^ven the educators can’t agree in our government already.Problem;; Whose business is it if some women don’t drinlc irrilk or get Pf ^ projects^ So 3 the proper amount of protein? "P o idea such as volunteer teen- ^ THAT’S LIFE agers or substitute And, it is only logical that if grandmothers working through 3|we don’t wonder about the un-;already existing visiting nurse ?born child, we shouldn’t wonder*programs? Who would listen? A "Classic" consisting of a on» carat and ninety Before it can receive the coveted rating of *‘chroi»ometer”.'..e\'ery Omega Oinstella-tion must undergo 15 days of rigid testing ’ an official testing bureau. This is in addi- tion to the 1497* quality-control checks which all Pmega watches receive during manufacture. The Constellation requires no hand-winding or powercell to keep it,running. It's gT'ority-ptm-erei by a pendulum-like rotor, which continuously winds the movement while you wear it. All Gonstellations are water and ' shock-resistant. Some models offer the added convenience of date-telling dials. See out complete selection today. Bedmond’s Jewelry—81 N. Saginaw St. Free Parking in Rear of Store Aatkeritcd Owtre Atnur...ik» WlA ftrm lafHime «/ fnnd PtymiM Sad shirts? Drahtlresses? Blah blouses? IEST. 1B40 - In answer to all of vou who depend on me to tell .you about the latest fashions for fall, I shall begin this week since I have I just seen the fall collections of the^tep American TieslgniS's Tn New York. Today, I must generalize by mentioning the highlights. There is a great return to the softer, more feminine look as lessed by the silk crepes, satins, velvets, fur trims, feathers,! land beads. | __ -k -k k^_________________________ The length that is generally accept^ is just above the knee | or about the center of the knee which is probably where most! of us have been wearing the skirts this past year. A few Midi length skirts did crop up into the picture, but it is definitely for the young, tall, slender gal who will do justice to it by making it a complete look with the right bo6ts or shoes as well as all of the other accessaries. Yes, there is a, return to more fitted clothes but don’t panic and call the Goodwill yet! We can salvage'many of last year’s; dresses by fitting them in a little closer and adding a belt. , A decorative sleeveless vest is a very important accessory! and can change the mood of any dress already in your ward-i robe. ! As the weeks go by, I shall tell you about the techniques | needed when working with new fabrics to achieve the new look | ! of 1968. It would be a good idea to plan your entire wardrobe \ needs before buying anything to get the maximum coordination. k k k .j Dear Eunice Farmer, I didn’t remember your advice about the original fold of the fabric and now I have a deep crease at the center front of my dress. Nothing I do seems to have any effect on it. Is there anything you can suggest? . Mrs. M. M. E.; Dear Mrs. M. M. E.; j Having to correct errors seems to bring out the creativity in jail of us. This has happened before and one of my students covered up her mistake with a handsome wide striped gros- ^ grain ribbon from the neckline to the hem. Actually, the dress is much more attractive than it was before. k k k - i Since this is the year of trims, you could also use a strip of heavy cotton lace, cotton daisies, or other decorative trim. A ruffle would also work. Double the width of the finished ruffle, using one seam which you will place at the centeiLOH4h& under side. Using two rows of machine stitching set on a large stitch, at the center of the finished ruffle, gather up to the desired fullness and machine stitch to your dress. You may add tiny buttons to the center of the ruffle if you desire. However, no furiherJrimming-is-fleeessaryTTfevef'give^ iip^Wfien ybii’ve made a mistake; just use your imagination and you can usually come up with some great ideas. ★ ★ ★ Illustrated instructions help you make button loops in the hqoklet “Spaghetti Straps and Rope Belts.” To obtain your booklet send 25 cents and a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for it to Eunice Farmer in care of The Pbntiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. BuTD, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. Itputs the“new”baGk And we’re not kidding. New Sta-Flo Fabric Finish actually restores the original body, feel and appearance to your entire wash. Works wonders with cottons, linens, synthetics . .. even new durable-press fabrics. Mak« ironing easier. Puts crispness in, but never stiffness. And that’s what we mean when we say, it puts the “new” back. Do you feel like somethingwDndCTfuris tbbut to happen? It is. [and well prove it] 7^ MEDITATION SHIRT /f's on everybody's mind! '99 only 3' STORE COUPON SAVE7^ ON STA-FLO FABRIC FINISH TO THE DeXuER; Mr. Groc«r, your Slaley repre»en1»-tive will pay you plus 2# handlino charge for each ol theee coupons. Or, if you wish, you may mail coupons directly Ip A. E. Staley Manufacturing Company, Coupon bapartmeni, P. O, Bo» 1500, Pecatur, fllinois MS2S. Invoicet proving purchase of suWcIertrsYiBCk' to ...... ... ______... .....i proof of product* purchaeed i* shown. OFFER VOID IF THIS PLAN OF MERCHANDISING IS TAXED OR RESTRICTED. Cas^ value 1/10»h cent OFFER LIMITED ONE PER FAMILY, STORE COUPON 7c a mfcro-m/ni* or pants-top sensation: daring when you wear it as is, mi ni-short... dramatic when you wear it as a pants-top... decide, and have funi a Guru-collared swinging sensation: flirty perfect-length...subtly shaped with a bit of flare and widening sleeves... back-zipped... ready to gol a black-embroidered white sensation: white, the wow-what-flattery color... black embroidery, for bold trim... Dacron* polyester and cotton... real cool! Misses’ sizes 32 to 38 R*g. TjiA, for DuPont's pohriMtor fibor. PONTIAC CLARKSTON 200 North Saginaw 6460 Dixie Highway Free Parting .Juat.Nsrth ,qf Way*rh»rd Hill For The Big And Tall Man In The Family, Please Refer To Our Big Men’s Shop at 16051 Grand River or 8800 Van Dyke iWAnT to SELL LAWN MOWERS, POWER MOWERS, BOATS? USE A LOW CO^T PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD - - - TO IpLACE YOURS, j^ALL 332-8181. ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDaV, JULY 24, 1968 Sen. Fu I bright Faces Tough Fight in Arkansas Primary UTTLE ROCK, Ark. (APj -Sen. J WUliam Fulbright, D-‘Ark., outspoken Vietnam war critic, faces his toughest battle^ for election since 1944 .next Tuesday in the Arkansas primaries. Fulbright. 63. chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. seeks renomination in a race with three Democrats who are hitting hard at the senator's stand on the war, the major is- sue in the race. His foes say his criticism has encouraged Communist ambitions. Also on the ballot is an eight-man race for the Democratic nomination in the 1st Congres-sioal District, where Rep. E C. “Took” Gathings, D-Ark., is retiring, plus primar>’ races for governor, where Winthrop Rockefeller, first Republican elected to the post in almost 100 years, seeks renomination. Six persons seek the Democratic nomination for governor, including Mrs. Virginia Johnson, first \yoman ever to run for the state's highest office. She is the wife of the party’s 1966 nominee, Jim Johnson, who is opposing Fulbright. 1 SEGREGATIONIST FOE Fulbright’s most noted opponent is Jim Johnson, a self-styled segregationist who polled 257,000 TOtes in losing to Rockefeller two years ago. Also opposing .Fulbright are Bobby J. Hayes, 37, a flooring manufacturer from Calico Rock, and Foster Johnson, 53, a music publisher from Little Rock. ★ * ★ I Hayes is making his first bid for public office. Foster Johnson received more than 90,000 votes in his 1966 race against Sen. John L. McClellan, D-Ark. The tandem campaigns of Jim and Virginia Johnson have been closely tied to the third-party presidential candidacy of former Alabama Gov, George C. Wallace, whose Strength is thought to be considerable in this state. Johnson led the petition drive to get Wallace on the Arkansas ballot. Fulbright has turned up at political rallies this summer in sports shirts and slacks, like the informal attire of the voters he meets. “We’ve got old J. William down here campaigning in his shirt-sleeves and calling himself Bill,” says Jim Johnson, who labeled Fulbright the “pin-up boy of Hanoi.” The country’s cigar industry became mechanized in 1918 when the first cigar-making machine was put into operation. RENT, SELL, TRADE---USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS I Sears SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Outstanding Values on 3-Piece Decorator Bedroom Suites settle Ends Saturday^ July 27th 3-Pc. Contemporary Suite 3-Pc. French Provincial Suite DRAMATIC LINES, MASTERFULLY CRAFTED VENEERS Satin smooth walnut veneers and select hardwoods with cross banded accents. Brass drawer pulls. Includes 60-in. triple dresser with plate glass mirror; 4-drawer chest and choice of full or twin size bed. Regular 279.95 I Priced Separately: S149 Dresser... *...$132 4S.95 Bed..........42.88 $81 Chest...........69.88 44.95 Night Stand . 39.88 BED, DRESSER WITH MIRROR AND CHEST Magnificent sculptured lines crafted of handrubbed cherry veneers and select hardwoods. Graceful cabgriole legs and curving tops. Decorative ornamentation of plastic. Includes 9-drawer triple dresser with framed plate glass mirror, 5-drawer chest and full or twin bed. Priced Separately: St94 Dresser _____ 164.88 $169 Chest..........89.88 66.95 Bed......... 54.88 59.95 Night Stand . 54.88 Regular 369.95 VUit the room ditplaya of exciting furniture and acces»orie$ on Seart Home Fashion Floor, then create your own decorating magic. JVO MONEY DOWN On Sears Easy Payment Plan ^-Pc. Pecan Veneer Suite 3-Pc. Spanish Inspired Set ELEQAMT DESIGNER STYLE WITH HANDSOME CANE ACCENTS A new magnificence in contemporary styling . . . master-crafted of richly grained pecan veneers. Unique reversible cane and pecan drawer and door fronts ... antique brass hardware. Set includes triple dresser with plate glass mirrqr, chest, twin or full size bed. Save 70.95! Priced Separately: $239 Dresser________ $218 $141 CheSt.........129.88 69.95 Bed......... 59.88 59.95 Night Stand .. 49.88 Regular 449.95 379 RICHLY GRAINED OAK VENEERS THROUGHOUT Classic elegance reflecting the grandeur of Old Spain. Crafted of oak veneers with solid oak tops. Includes a triple dresser with mirror, 4-drawer chest, spindle bed. Priced Separately: $159 Dresser.......$140 $81 Chest...........$76 49.95 Matching Nite Stand . 44.88 59.95 Bed . .. $54 Regular 299;95 259 Seorj .Furniture Deportment Open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5:30 SEAR!!. ROENtrCK AND ri>. Se^rsl Dowiitown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 Chemists Find New Nerve Impulse Clues THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JTT.V 24. 1968 C—T By Science Service WASHINGTON - School children traditionally hook up frog legs to batteries and watch them jerk. On a more sdphis-ticated level, chemists have measured the movement of so-diam and potassium ions through nerve cell membranes and concluded that they carry the electrical signal. But brain scientists have become more and more dissatisfied with this electrical explana- tion of nerve function, and are seeking alternate theories in the molecular material of the nerve membrane itself. ★ * A clue of major importance has now come from this work with the discovery of a very Active, excitable protein molecule in the nervous system. It could lead to new understanding of the driving force of biological energy in nerves — a major unknown in science. The nerve impulse moves in | Naval Air Development Center waves through membranes suraLn Johnsville, Pa., has found rounding the cell body and its [that some of these proteins can branching fibers. The mem-; exist in an excited, free radical brane is, in effect, a chain of large protein molecules which theoretically change character and shape as the impulse wave passes. How they change and why all but defies scientific analysis; the living membrane is nearly impossible to work, with. But a scientist at the U.S. form, meaning they have an paired electron and the capacity to control and induce chemical reactions. Plastic horseshoes are replacing steel ones, and the next step may be to fasten them with a gluelike adhesive instead of nails. Parkway Error Takes Its Toll PRINCETON. Ky. (.AP)-An; attendant started out of the toll booth on the Western Kentucky Rarkway, and carried a waste basket under one arm. When a motorist drove up, the attendant told him to “drop the money in the basket, please.” It took the startled attendant several minutes to sift through the waste basket for the coins which should have gone into a basket at the side of the booth. Top Court Appointee Hassle Not New WASHINGTON - Current arguments over a successor to retiring Chief Justice Earl Warren; continue an Arhencan tradition. For almost two centuries, the Nation's highest court has stood amid winds of controversy, the National Geographic Society says. In contrast, the first Supreme Court started serenely. It convened February 1, 17M, and recessed for lack of a quorum. Three of its six members were absent. I Today’s Supreme Court handles a huge volume of cases. Some 2,800 petitions to be heard are received each year. About 160 cases are set down for arguments after the petitions are screehed.' * * * Justices, appointed for life and removable only for “high crimes and misdemeanors,” generally outlast the presidents who nominate them and the critics who oppose them. While 3.’) men have been president, only 14 have been chief justice. One man, William Howard Taft, served in both capacities. ★ ★ * ' ■ Of 96 Justices in the Court's history, three held office a record 34 years: Chief Justice Marshall (1801-35) and Associate Justices Stephen J. Field (1863-97) and John M. Harlan (1877-1911). Hugo L. Black, the present associate justice, has served 31 years. Chief Justice Warren was appointed 15 years ago. # SAVE 100.70 6-Pc. California MODERN GROUP WITH DEEP DOWN CASUAL COMFORT This handsome suite includes a tweed and print 90-in. sofa with matching print covered Mr. and Mrs. chairs, cocktail talile, hexagonal commode and drawer commode in a rich walnut finish. Save over $100. Priced Separately: 249.95 90-inch Sofa..........I99.8S 99.95Mrs.Chair...89.88 109.95 Mr. Chair.....94.88 39.95 Cocktail Toble or Drawer Commode.......oach 34.88 59.95 Hexagonal Commode........................... 44.88 A handsome Italian Provincial suite idesigned with warm fruitwood finish wood trim and elegant brocatelle upholstery on the full-length sofa ahd matching chair. Suite also includes fraitwood finish cocktail table and commodes. Priced Separately: 279.95 Sofa ....................259.88 129.95 Matching Chair ............................... 99.88 54.95 Cocktail Table or Commodes.....................each 44.88 Open Monday, Thursday,' Frida.y, Saturday 9" to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to S :30 {SEARS, ROEBUCK ANt^ CO. Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5^4171 THREE COLORS THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1968 THREE COLORS JaJ ^ yHi :yS2'ififf rrWh |!?i«!j |n^^j I Meadowdale Frozen 10-Oz.Plcg. Plus Gold Bell Gift Stamps Meadowdale Frozen i LEMONADE SMf 6-Oz. Can It- CALIFORNIA « lETTUCE Borden’s or Seattest # M HAIF n HAIF 45^ Quart m Carton Plus Gold Bell Gift Stamps RighU Reserved to Limit Quantities FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS a Pleasure to Shop and Save at V i .v^ i Hills Bros. Instant COFFEE I STlIlSS I OPEN^HDA^ I I OPEnISZy""' J_«;;EDSI^^ OPEN SUNDAYS | lU-UZiJar ^ ^^^^Lveryda^jm^P^es •Friendly Service • Gold Bell Stamps B "olftslLm'lif PEOPLES FOOD MARKETS IjiB ^ ^California J Golden, Juicy 27 tin ONLY EACH COCA COLA Fonda Whtte PAPER PLATES niilaiMiillia CREAM CHEESE Ze^ee Strawberry PmiDai- ribl Moot. I r d Town-Peoples Bonus 50 50 IIFl>4r VA-Oi. tm NESTEaT rh-e-H. INSTANT I Timtus -TEA-^ 6^ 15^ iii JIFFY ^ • WhftN • Yellow • Chocolate CMEJIlim PETERS Del Monte JIFFY fROSTINfi MIX io< Plus Gold Bell Gift Stamps White or dwciilBi a^eini;: Plds Osid Ml CttSlMli* Pltu Gold Bolt Grift Stamp$ I ZION FIG'BARS 14-Oz. Bottle lel Monte TOlUTO CATSUP 15‘ .upon and I 0 Purchase I .nE.pt,,. Sunday, July 28, tt HYORADE'S th. Pius Gold BeH Gift Stamps ^ ARMOUR STAR CANNED PICNIC 3-Lbn Can H GIIELOT ICydnOSb I niiiifii AncE 12-Ci. PETERS rousH Jumbo Ring liNMoin I PERCH IB0L06NAISAUSAGE 20L4!Fi.59t 50 free gold bell FREE GOLD BELL FREE GOLD BELL Whole or Half stamps With Purchase 2 1-Lb. Bags W fctamps WITH purchase 3 Jars K S&£ ^0^0 Mamps wiTn rurenase 20 Pounds POTATO CHIPS Pickles or Olives |E m ^rm: CHARCOAL Ceepen »]»»«>?»’ ■‘“'yf* !*** 50 Stamps With Purchase I PI 50 S^amfs With Purchase Two Va-Gal. Pkgs. ICE CREAM of Any PORK ROAST c—10 THE POXTIAC PRESS, WEDXF/SDAY, JULY 24, 1968 Childhood Habits Influence Food Selection feAST LANSING - Why did, you choose lo have steak and green salad for dinner instead> of boiled »potatoes' and salt pork? Many factors enter into your' decisions on what and when to eat, according to Mrs. Anital She noted that Americans creasingly hard to change, Dean, foods and n u t r i t i o n have more foods available thdn specialist said, specialist with Michigan State ever before, yet their diets are University’s Cooperative Ex-less nutritious than 10 years tension Service BARBECUi ^SPAGHEnl SAUCE thejdecisions regarding food, "Few people will change -their purchases. food habits simply because they I in-| All of these settle into food|gj,g certain foods are. lhabits that make us look' ^ for them or will make varieties of forward to eating some foods healthy. Concern forj health appears to be one of the{ July Meals End Best With Icy Parfaits A perfect ending to warm summer meals are frosty cherry parfaits. The parlait sauce, made with plump, juicy,* fresh, sweet cherries and subtly accented with lemon and almond, alternates with layers o f creamy rich ice cream. ....If..you --wish-,-.prepare the parfait.s in advance and store them in your freezer. They’ll be ready to bring, icy cold, to the table with no last-minute preparation. ★ * -A Sweer cheery time is all loo brief, .so let your 'family enjoy this luscious fruit often in ever-so-refreshing summer desserts and salads. These summer jewels make wonderful between-meal snacks. They are low in calories, yet high in nutrition. Fresh, sweet cherries keep best if they are stored, unwashed, in plastic bags in the refrigerator. Wash them just before serving. . SWEET CHERRY PARFAITS 2 cups fresh sweet cherries | 1*^ tablespoons cornstarch [ cup sugar 1 cup orange juice 2 tablespoons lemon juice ’4 teaspoon almond extract Few drops red food coloring 1 quart vanilla ice cream ’ W'hipped cream ' Halve and pit cherries.^ Jlix cornstarch and sugar until well; blended. Stir in orange juice. | Cook and stir until thickened and clear. Stir in cherries,; lemon juice, almond extract! and food coloring. Cool. * Alternate cherry topping with •coops of ice cream in chilled p^faif glasses. Top each par- j fait with a dollop of whipped | Use Egg Whites to Top Appetizer French Souffle appetizers start with thin slices of French bread (cut into halves if loaf is more than yiree inches in diameterV. 1 Beat two egg whites until stiff. F'old in two tablespoons mayonnaise, two tablespoons chopped onion and four slices bacon,; conked and crumbled. Spoon mixture onto bread slices. Bake in preheated 400 degree oven 10 to 12 minutes or until puffed and golden. fluenced by , „ , ■ ui • Kinds and vaneues ui*''*""*** *'■ ----- ------ , ... , , "”8h‘ food products, their quantities and rejecting others. People can But the nutritional value of pg the food habits formed as and proportions in the diet ,be totally unaware of the basis the food you consume is pro- , . Methods ' of processing f"'’ their food preferences, Mrs. bablv one of the least important * * * ' • meinMS 01 Pmeessing, factors, she said, P a r e nt s . .. . * 'storing and shipping foods. ^uean.aa.^ ^ ^ particularly mothers, have an Many habits are formed In, , Methods of preparing andj 5^,^ typing, important part in setting food childhood and remain for a serving. jpatterns and the possible nonhabits in children by what they lifetime. Some become quite, • Number of meals, and theiputritjonal meanings behind buy, how they serve it and what firmly entrenched with eachlamount of food eaten daily. such practices: meaning they attach to It. pas.sing year, and become in-i •Person who makes the, « Eating favorite foods I gourmet eating and snacking — pure enjoyment. j • Compulsive overeating, |undereating or bolting your food emotional tension and-or' [release. j I • Private family eating — | [security. | [ • Preference for childhood I [foods — insecurity or im-; nxaturity. | "Meat and potatoes” —! masculinity. | Fancy salads and de,s.serls| — femininity. | • Style of entertaining — 1 [status, social mobility, tradition! [and sophistication. • 1 Food fads or diets — | [anxiety, attention, gullibility. ; i • Impluse invitations and sharing food — sociability, affection, trust or anxiety. | I • Novel foods and snacking— independence, attention. I • Food as a bribe or reward — discipline. • Food as a gift — love, loyalty and morale, tradition. I “Even such a partial list j makes it clear that people hhve I many reasons for choosing their !foods and pattern of eating,” iMrs. Dean noted. least effective ways of motivating people to -change 1 their food habits.” I SAUSAGE SAUCE RAGU' Cook Italian sausages In heavy try pan. Add Ragu' Spaghetti Sauca and simmer \ RAGr SALAD DRESSING Cdmbine epual parts of Ragu' Spaghetti Sauce and mayonnaise and hard-cooked eg| chopped fine. ■ RECIPE ■ RUM SOUR a SWEET CHERRY PARFAIT - Fresh sweet cherries folded into an almond flavored sauce are layered with scoops of ice cream in frosty parfait glasses. Serve with a topping of whipped cream. The first sour was a rum sour, made 50 years before the Mayflower. Still unsirr|>assedv----- 1 oz. lemon j nice and 1 tsp. sugar (or use a prepared mix). Add IV2 oz. gold or amber Puerto Rican rum, shake with ice, strain into a sour glass, and garnish with fruit. PUERTO RICAN RUM is light and dry and Outsells all others 3 to 1 • ; 31 rum riclp«s in t 20-p«ge color bookl#t. Writt; Rum R*cip# Bookitt, 666 Fifth Av»., N. Y., N. Y. IOC I I o floFFMAN’SI! THE RI6HT TRACK FOR GREftTEfi BAVINfi^ ON fOOD! Tender and Delicious Boneless and Tied Patio or Rotisserie Roast 791 2nfl Week Repeat by Demand Tender Bonieless Delmonico Steaks 991 For a Quick, Easy, Tasty Meal Cottage Style Pork Steak 3 LBS. STEER BEEF HEART 3 LBS. STEER BEEF LIVER 3 LBS. STEER BEEF TONGUES 3 LBS. GRADE #1 MICH. HOT DOGS 8 LBS. YEtLOW OLEO NO DEALCRS, MEASfe! • UdlJiWred .Ir«i«tntrk — Milinl Foods Ine. Milan! Foods Ina 12312 W. Olymnic Boulevard Lpp Angeles, California 90054 e MILANI rooo* INC. I9«« HOFFMAN OAKLAND PACKING CO. 5M N. PERRY ST., PONTIAC FREE PARKING IN REARl^ ^_Gpan Daily S p.iw. to 0 p.m. 332.1100 EARLY-BUY SCHOOL SPECIALS Permanently Pressed Sport Shirts and Scat-Back Canvas Ivy Style Slacks and 2 3 58 Men's S-XL Reg. 3.33 Shirts 66 Men's 28-36 Jeans Boys' Shirts: long-sleeved, button-downincluding many Dan River® Dan-Press fabrics' with Scotchgard®. These delightful new styles come in lively solid colors, woven stripes and multi-plaids. Washable, Pre-shrunk Cotton Corduroy Dresses, 3-6X- Jumper-effect with corduroy body and cotton knit collar jW‘or and sleeves. Rich fall colors, 2,86 ea. Better No-iron Dresses, 4-6x ,3.96 ea., 2/$7 Lika Iff Cbarga Itl Comes with earphone attachment, carrying case and 9-volt battery. Has 214" dynamic speaker.4 -2 4 Days—Reg. 3.67 6-Traasistor Pocket Radio With Own Case 2Va' Full tone speaker, fingertip tuning controls, builxdn ferrite bar antenna, 9-V battery. 41/4 x 2Va!'. Lika Iff Charge Permanent Press For Small Fry! Gingham Plaid Sport Shirts, Twill Pants 4 Days Only - Our Reg. 73^ Lb. Summer Bridge Mix. 4-7 Reg. 1.56 Shirts fl7 Slacks B Everyone’s favorite for panics and family trCats.Nuts, and raisins coated with delicious non-sticky chocolate, j Buy bagged or hvAk.This Weekend! Moisture-resistant, plastic-coated, white 9'inch paper plates ,with fluted edge. TEL-HURCW CENTER S. S. KRESGE COMPANY Our Regular 58^ Package of 50 7-Oz. Poly Cups 7-Oz. insulated plastic cups for hot or cold beverages. 36-Ct. Plastic Cutlery 64< Cotton twill slacks, ivy style or with adjustable tab waistband, in blue, taupe, brown or sage. Shirts come in harmonizing plaids. It’s just a hop, skip ’n jump from boy to wisher to dryer and back on boy (no iron)! 4 Days Only! Reg. 23^ and 44ff Regular or Broiler Foil Iff 3ff Regular Broiler 12"x25' 18"x25' Our own private label en- ' ables us to sell first quality aluminum foil for less. \ BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUEY 24, 1968 U EVERT TIME YOU SHOP KROGER TOU GET we ReSBRVE THE RIGHT TO LmiT QUAH. TITIES. PRICES AND ITENS EFFECTIVE AT KROGER IN DETROIT AND EASTERN MCH^ IGAN THRU SUNDAY, JULY 28, 1968. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. COPYRIGHT 1968. THE KROGER CO. SEA TREASURE BRAND FROZEN BITS & PIECES Breaded Shrimp GORDON'S ROLL Pork Saosogo...2itpLL 99* Duncan Hines Cake Mixes LIGHTLY SALTED LaodO’Lokos Batter 'ciS 74« Norfhern Teiiet Tissue Kregar Preserves OELMONTE PEASyWHOLE KERNEL OR Cream Style Corn rJ)~ZCAN 19* GERMAN OR MAYONNAISE-READ’S SPEQAL LABEL Potato Solod ...... 59* Spotlight Coffoo...3ue*1*' P^M.OOTCWMAN STEMS iP/ECEJ STOJtMLY FROZEH Moskrooms........ ••••wfcAN 19* Stowing Vogotoblos2('ftSS* UBBY'S REFRESHING BANQUET.FROZEN Tomoto Juico...i».olcs» 25* Chicken^Domplings2i>n>99* ASSORTED FLAVORS CLOVER VALLEY Hi-C Drinks..... • •U-OZ^AN ;2S^ Strowbsiry preserves 2 jar 49* ASSORTED FLAVORS FROZEN Hawaiian Punch 14-0 z\: AN 29* Morton Dinners • ••• WTPKO 34* Libby’s Pineappie Juice fresh BARBECUE Spare Ribs............u 69* SLICED BLACKHAWK SKINLESS Rath Bacon.... 1-LBPKO 79* Rath Wieners______l.59* FOAM 50 Thermo Cups .37 SPECIAL LABEL Clerex Bleach FREEZE-DRIED Maxim Coffee a-ozwT S9ST .------ JAR--p-- - " -- SPECIAL LABEL Giant Tide XK It 3J| Zs ■ 9 VARIETIES INCLUDING STRAWBERRY, BLUEBERRY, CHERRY OR RED RASPBERRY rJiff y^ Fresting or Cakb Mixes KROGER WHITE GRADE'A' Large Eggs DOZEN 49 KROGER BRAND Soar Cream..... ...PTCTN 39 HOMESTYLE OR BUTTERMILK Kroger Biscaits....iru»'”'11* JHOUARTEKS “ Tastoo Margarine 15* KROGER FORTIFIED 2% BUTTERFAT Hi-No Milk .... .. H-GAL CTN 47* SALTED BROOKFIELD Swift’s Butter Vs. f-LB ROLL 64 • j_........ ^ RED RIPE I whole RED RIPE ■ TENDERAT BONELESS ^JIFFY BEEF BURGERS OR^ Strawherries Mratermelens BEEF ROAST «CHUCKWAOON STEAKS s - ..... - . WITH THIS COUPON ON ; ANY 5-LB OR 10-LB I COUNTRY CLUB * CANNEP HAM ---------- „ ------------- LVaJ«Thf.5M»v Jii/fX, IM« aJ VmllflTk»t Sm.,Jttly38, 19*9 ^ V9tUTknSun» JPtr».J9U J AtK>p»rD»K9euMt.Ml€h. ElAtXi»ewAe*. 4Zef.lt/ek. |»1 AoXtegerOef. 9 Emd, MIth, Bj ■ ■■ma*eeeaeaaa'anBIMnwniaweewaainwieae>Waeww»eaaaa^antlh4l FCAOf THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, .JULY ; EVERYDAY LOW PRICES PLUS TOP VALUE STAMPS —WHY SETTLE FOR LESS? COUNTRY^CLUB Corned Beef ^^^Xonned Ham OVSH-REUIY Pne-SE/iSONED - CLEMOALE FRESH OR SMOKED ^ 110099 Maot Loaf.....2'/2'ko*1** Livor Savsogo........l.S9* TIGER TOWN SUCRO FR£S« loilod Hop • •• 8-OZWTPKG 79* Leg 0*^ fork loost KROGER BAKED Angel Food Cake -ao‘ Oplr 8 ALLPURPOSE STRAINED Gold Medal Flour..5a<‘ 49* Gerber Orange Juke ENRICHED DiuCIOUSl NUTRITIOUS! GERBER Gold Medal Flour 10 afs 97^ Junior Cookies.....i.%°l22* ALL PURPOSE / assorted COLORS Kroger Flour......5a“39* Kloenex Napkins..../pk” 19* ASSORTED FLAVORS ST. REGIS O 1-^ Jell-0............*T?» 10* 100 Paper Plates... pkc 49* || StOKOly 01*111114 BETTY CROCKER CAKE MIX lemon Chiffon....2; REGULAR OR DRIF GRIND R,CE,STRA,NEO,M,KEOORHKSHFROTEIN^ ‘ BfOi COf f OO iS5* Gerber Baby CereaLV°Ka18* VANILLA. CHOCOLATE OR NEAPOLITAN Pelar Pak Ice Cream ^ y~-S9 FROZEN Birds iye Ceel Whip 29 2 "I ORANGE, GRAPE OR FRUIT PUNCH KROGER FROZEN-BEEF, TURKEY OR Chicken Pot Pies 8-OZ WT PIE KROGER BRAND Frozen Lemenade 3t-PL0Z JB* ________m9 COUNTRY CLUB FUDGEES. TW/M POPS OP Rainbew Peps GRANULATED Pieneer Sugar 5»W MIST O’GOLD FROZEN y FOR^COLD LIQUIDS Orange Juice......15* 100 Solo Ceps....pkcI / KROGER BAKED 13 Vorieffios Broad MIX/ Oft MATCH 4 1 LOAVES INCLUDING GIANT WHITE, ITALIAN OR PUMPERNICKEL f-OT J4-0Z CAN 19 JEWEL BRAND Shortening i-LB lyt ii-OZCAN I# KRAFT CHEESE SPREAD KROGER BRAFD Velveeta. I..........2 PKC 88* Vac Pdc CoHee •••3 CAN PHILADELPHIA BRAND SPECIji LABEL Creom Cheese......... , ••wfpKC 13* Ajdx Cleanser. FLEISCHMANN’S CORN OIL SPECIAL L ABEL f Margarine...............Vai 37* Rinse Blue..............jiv“Ka59* , miANi.WK-FJu:.rrMAJCESM^^^ ..... ^ JMCIAL label --------I I Sanalac Dry Milk....PK= *1'* Ajax Detergent..laisz'paa 63* i BABY FORMULA-SIMILAC OR ' SPECIAL LABEL-LIQUID | Enfamil Liquid........o’li'M 22* Sols Detergent..........iYJrL 42* i TO AID TEETHING BABIES-GERBER SPECIAL LABEL-AJAX U. Teething Biscuits^...'?Kr 22* Liquid Cleaner.............-'o-2°aV65* GREAT LAKES CHARCOAL Brigoets 30 39 REGULAR OR SUPER-KOTEX Sanitary Napkins.........»1« 45* Kotex Plus............... sanitary napkins Fems.................. EXTRA hold setting LOTION Breckset.............. REGULAR OR SUPER-KOT^X Sanitary Napkins......... EXTRA STRENGTH TOOTHPASTE Ultra Brite............. w‘AJIa 69* 82* 43* .80 SIZE FREESTONE Nectarines 12-“W THOMPSON SEEDLESS Grapes 37. SWEET N‘ JUICY Red Plums...........12 > SWEET Seedless Grapes.........i.a 49* 70 SIZE CALIFORNIA Freestoie Peflches,.12««99* /4ttd ISemttf f4uUl SPECIAL LABEL-DOUBLE EDGE Super Stainless Schick • Razor Blades 5-CT PKG 56 REGULAR, HARD-TO-HOLD OR UNSCENTED Miss Breck.'lf^frf.r. o’|-a69* NORMAL OR DRY Breck Shampoo 69* NORMAL OR DRY SHAMPOO Brock Concentrate wt~TJBE 69* REGULAR, MENTHOL OR LI Me Colgate Shave Cream cix 49* SPECIAL LABEL “ Cutex NanTollsh ReioveU - 99 ” OZSTL TFTK PONTIAC PRESS. VyEDNESDAV, JULY 24. 1968 Italian Lakes a Delight ' Nixon in Lead I There's Nothing to Hide WASHINGTON — Lombardy’s soaring freaks, liish vpgetalion, - lakes have delighted the sports- and bistorie cities, man, inspired the poet, an<' quietly invited Jhe soul for twi 10," writes .Shor, "is a thousand year.s. delightful place for a family rar\ed from the Alps and hnlidav. The fragrant odor of mellowed by the sun. the gliimr- p,„nsp“u thin i of Gnv. Claude Kirk, who is ac-!beat Damascus by three lengths S“tz Bearcat wa^ tivelv seeking the vice presi-in a mile-and-a-quarter race“‘' dential nomination. Some of fhe with one hoof lied behind his bob PHYLLIS HOPE OILLER ■ A Secv.'fAHO PrM^fci.' Also Dicic Van Dyke as «FITZWILLY» "*FOR^yFOBMATTOM - M2-1800 When you talk about ‘The SAA'immer’will you talk about yourself? COLUMBIA PICTURES and HORIZON PICTURES Prejent Burt Lancaster ,, . The Swimmer TECHNICOLOR* @ Nixon votes might go to Reagan back, if the balloting is. lengthy: ^ Argue that gldf has^gbne Virginia -- At least 21 of the,steadily downhill since Bobby 24 votes for Nixon on the first; Jones hung up his putter, ballot. The other three say they Cet goose pimples at the very are undecided, but may be mention of Greta Garbo's name, leaning toward Rockefeller. gn imitation of A1 Jolson; Louiciana -- The 26 delegates smgjng "Mammy.” | are nffieia'lv uncommitted, but Recall how you used to smokei Nixon is expected to get 19 eubebs when you were a kid. votes nn the. first ballot and nnrinnririrroTroTTirT^ HELD OVER MOW ATPOPULAR PRICES! UNCUT! DIRECT FROM ITS ROADSHOW ENGAGEMENT! ACADEMY AWARD WINNER HURON it/-: ire « 'W' JuJie Andrews JS MILLIE Mary Tyler Moo; Carol Cliaiining eJaiaesFox in ROSS HUNTER'S THOROUgHtH .gftGarfn Beatrice liUie= G? PRICES This Engagement Only Adults WEO.-SAT.-SUN. 1:30 - 4:00 - 6:30 - 9:00 THURS.-FRI.-MOM.-TUES. 7:00 A 9:22 Divorcee Fate Problem for Church Unit DANCING Thursday - Friday Saturday - Sunday LONDON 'AP' Represenla-tivetr of the half million members of the Mothers’ Union of -the Anglican—cnmmumon-Iaee an agonizing decision whether to admit divorced women to their ranks. The Mothers’ Union, a strong force Jor- good although some-j times critici’zed as nld-lash-ioned. has always refused membership to any woman involved in divorce whether she was the innocent or the guilty party. But in August last year the Anglican Church of Canada passed a canon permitting the remarriage of divorced persons with a partner still living. Two months later the Do m i n i o n Council of Ihe Canadian Mothers’ Union jumped the gun by deciding to admit divorced -mot hers to membership.------ According to Mrs. Joanne Hallifax, a British admiral'; NOW- "THE GRADUATE' IS AT THEATRES AND DRIVE-INS ALL OVER TOWN ! ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST DIRECTOR-MIKE NICHOLS JOSEPH E. LEVINE / GRADUATE f AN AVC» EMBASSY FILM AMIK BANCROR . DUSTIN HOFFMAN MTNARINE/R^ CAIDERW1LLINGHAM.»BUCKHENRY PALILS'lMON SP'N«GARFUNKEL MENCETURMAN SiK^ NICHOLS TEOMlOLCr PAKW6I0N* CAMELQT ' CENTER • Livonia Mall CINEMA i • MEL'PALMER PARK • PENN-Plymouth TRENTON • UNIVERSAL CITY • VILUGE . WASHINGTON, ROYAL OAK OttlVB-INS: EAST SIDE • GRAND RIVER « MtCHIGAN - TROY ' WAYNE widow and a grandYnothcr, who is central president of the union, the Canadians have pul ihern-se,lyes. oj.itside the worldwide union by unilaterally changing the membership qualification.s. She thinks it unlikely they v\ill be present among the 4.50 delegates at this week’s conference. SO,ME DECISION Bui the- to many, distasteful —subject of divorced mothers will certainly be raised. And some decision mu.st be taken. | New Zealand has long been, demanding liberalization of Mothers' Union rules and Mrs., J. T. Ho'land, wife of Ihe bishop of Hamilton and the Union's dominion president, mav press for immediate action Mrs. Haflitax has promi.scd p\nrything will be brought out into the open. "One understands there i.s turmoil in the M.nthers she said the other da>. "There the church and, as the Mothers' .Union the church,' there is all in the Mothers' Ui •UP To CHURCH LEADERS’ The (^hurch Times, comment-, ing that this year's congress of the mothers coincided with the Lambeth Conference, which bnng.s leaders of ^ the Anglican churches/ together, suggested that It was up to the church Icadeis to do something about "ihe controversv within the Mothers Lnion has to be against t,he background of that wholesale’pressure against traditional 'principles in which the vyhoie church is now rnvolved,” it said. "The establishment of, the truth of such a'thing as the! nature of Chri.stian marriage i.s a matter for the church itself,] since it is a (het^gical is.sue. rank^ inatotf TPIE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24. 1068 C—15 How You Serve Franks Is a Matter of Choice By JANET ODELL eONEY CANOES Food Editor, The Pontiac Press Who says you always have to grill a hot dog? There are any number of ways to serve this truly American food. Maybe you’ll even invent a new one yourself. Because hot dogs are already cooked, you never have to worry about youngsters not getting them well done when they’re on a hike or picnic. * ★ If you’re serving hot dogs at home, consider combining them with refrigerated pizza dough. Cheese, pizza sauce and pickle relish are added before baking. CONEY CANOES 1 lb. frankfurters 1 package refrigerated pizza dough and sauce Va cup pickle relish Cut a narrow slit lengthwise in each weiifier. ” " ■ ■ ' 3Tid plgfp_____t( Peanut Butter Fine for Lunch seasoned side down. Stretch to MEXICAN FRANKOS Sauerkraut 'n' Wieners Team for Buffet Salads form a 14xll-inch rectangle. Cut in half, lengthwise, then cut into 5 crosswise strips, forming 10 small rectangles. Place one weiner lengthwise on each rectangle. Bring dough around weiner and pinch ends tightly to resemble a canoe. Combine pizza sauce and relish. Spoon 1 to 2 teaspoons sauce into slit in each weiner. Place on greased cookie sheet. Bake at 425 degrees for 10 to 15 minutes, until golden brown. Heat remaining sauce and serve over hot Coney Canoes. Makes 10 sandwiches. Half a world away from pizz.a land is Mexico where zesty food is also standard. Roll tortillas around franks and bake. Sour cream is the appropriate garnish. MEXICAN FRANKOS 3 cans (8 ounces each) toma- _____sauce ___ ____ 2 tablespoons chopped green chilies or pickle relish 2 tablespoons instant minced onion 2 cloves garlic, minced 10 corn tortillas Pure vegetable oil Peanut butter is fin.e for, 10 frankfurters summer sandwich lunches. Just! 2 cups shredded Monterey remember that there are other I Jack., Swiss or process sandwich combinations besides! American cheese peanut butter and jelly —i ^ sliced ripe olives This beanbake takes just minutes from refrigerator and shelf to table, and it’s good enough to serve your best friend or the whole gang! The basic ingredients? A cap of pork and beans plus a package ol fully-cooked wieners. A bit of chili powder and hot pepper sauce give it flavor dash. WIKNKR BEANBAKE OLE 1 package (1 lb.) wieners 1 can (1 lb.) pork & beans in tomato sauce ^2 cup tomato sauce | ' ■j teaspoon chili powder T Few drops hot pepper sauce ■ 1 Tickled Pink Reserve juice drained from canned sliced beets and from a ]ar of bread and butter pickles, i ■ Place approximately equal I parts of both vegetables in a' bowl and add a few onion slices. ; Marinate overnight in beet juicej sharpened' with liquid from^ pickles. Serve drained. k "A cup crushed corn chips 'lA cup (4 oz.) dairy sour j cream j I Preheat oven to 350 degreeSi Cut wieners into thin slices. Combine with pork & beans, tomato sauce, chili powder and hot pepper sauce in I'A quart casserole. Bake 25 to 30 min-jutes. or until heated through. Top each serving with a spoonful of sour cream and a sprinkling of cprn chips. Makes 5 servings. MIAMI BAKE SHOPPE Mon., Thur*., Fri, ■nd Sat. ’til 9 THE PONTIAC MALL BARBECUE The tang of sauerkraut, the full-bodied flavor of frankfurters and the sweetness of a juicy red apple are cohnbined with the delicate, fresh flavor of western pickled red peppers for color contrast when serving as course dinner salad. “German Buffet Salad” would be an excellent accompaniment Iceberg lettuce in “German Buf-^tg sliced turkey roll which is so fet Salad.” I convenient for buffet service. .Theja:eam.cheese-sour cream popular as that is. Here are some suggestions for sandwich spreads: Chop leftover cooked ham and mix with peanut butter, chili ssucc snd rn3yonnflis6. Make plain peanut butter sandwiches, dip in slightly beaten egg mixed with a little milk and frenchfry in butter or dressing enlivened with caraway will seem just right to you for this party salad. This creamy, caraway dressing, incidentally, is equally good served over crisp wedges of western iceberg lettuce. Garnish with ripe olives and perhaps Guard Goodness of Tasty Hot Dogs Give the franks you buy for outdoor and indoor cooking the good treatment they deserve, and they’ll be wonderfully tasty no matter where they’re cooked. In the sausage kitchens where franks are born, they are stuffed with selected lean beef and pork and delicately blended with just the right amount of spices. They get their ruddy tan from hanging in a smokehouse and are then given an invigoratng steam or water bath. That’s why they come to you ready cooked. The proteins and vitamins in franks are equally as nutritious as those in any meat cut. Once you’ve purchased “the franks, give them the same careful treatment. Store theijit promptly in the refrigerator and use them within a week. For best flavor, don’t freeze frankr They lose flaw when held at home freezer temperatures just as do other cured and smoked meats. Instead, buy franks every week in the amount you-plan to use within the week. One busy mother slathers butter on^pplit frankfurter rolls, then tucks a hot cooked ear of corn into each. Twirl until buttered. ‘ GERMAN BUFFET SALAD 1 head western iceberg lettuce' 1 cup dairy sour cream 1 package (3 oz.) cream cheese, softened 2 teaspoons sugar ^ Vi teaspoon salt teaspoon white pepper Vi teaspoon caraway seed 2 cups sliced frankfurters 1 can (8oz.) sauerkraut, well drained 1 large red-skinned apple, diced 1 cup chopped parsley Gore, rinse and dramlettuee; chill in disposable plastic bag. Cut head lengthwise into halves: place cut sides down on board and shred to make 5 cups, packed. Blend sour cream with cheese, sugar, salt, pepper and caraway 1 in large salad bowl. Add all remaining ingredients and toss well. Chill. Makes 7 clips salad or about 14 buffet servings. Shredded lettuce Vi cup sour cream Whole ripe olives, if desired In saucepan combine tomato sauce, chilies, onion and garlic; -RLminuti lightly cook tortillas in oil just! to soften (about 1 minute.) ★ ★ ★ j Place frankfurters in centers margarine. Stewed tomatoes of tortillas: sprinkle with IMt taste good with these. ;cups cheese and olive slices: Add a,little finely diced celery spoon 2 tabl''spoons sauce and pickle relish to peanut but-each. Roll tortillas around ter. . .—----------------Trdnkfurters;-place-^seara - side Mix grated carrot, finely down in oiled 13x9x2-inch baking shredded green cabbage and. dish; pour r e m a i n i n g sauce minced parsley with peanut over; sprinkle with remaining! butter. .cheese. Bake at 325 degrees for Add crumbled crisply-cooked 125 minutes, bacon and chopped raisins to| Serve on bed of shredded peanut butter. j lettuce; garnish with sour cream Add leftover drained crushed | and whole ripe olives, if depineapple to peanut butter. j sired. Makes 5 servings. FRITTER FRANKS—Put 1 cup buttermilk pancake mix, 2 teaspoons dry mustard, two-thirds cup milk and 1 egg into a bowl. Beat with rotary beater until smooth. Stir in one-third cup wheat ghrm. With tongs, dip one frankfurter at a time into batter; hold over bowl until surplus batter drips off. Fry in deep fat heated to 375 degr'ees for 2-3 minutes or until golden brown. Drain on absorbent paper. Serve hot on wooden skewers. Enough batter for 12 franks. As batter thickens, stir in a- little more milk. SPAGNEni k SAUCE MIUNO MEUNGE Fry ilieied oirlons, strips of green pepper and ground beef. Add ona cup of Itagu' Spaghetti Sauce and one cup of cooked rice and stir until thoroughly heated. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1968 more savings than ever. ON FARMER JACK’S SPECIALLY PRICED U.S. CHOICE MEAT-YOUR BEST BUY! - 0 lb. si 29 Form or Jock Sliced Bacon ^ Boneless Beef Roast GRADE A TASTY Cacklobirds LEAN FLAVORFUL Ground Chuck U.S. CHOICE BLADE CUT Boot Roast U.S. CHOICE TENDER Chuck Steak - 69< BONNIE MAID Boneless Leg O Veal LB $]09 79^ FRESH, LEAN,TASTY Ground Round LB 39( 69« U.S. CHOICE ROLLED RUMP OR Rotisserie Roast LB. J]09 69* U.S. CHOICE Special Cut Rib Steak .= ASSORTED 26" WIDE BY 7H' LONG OR 26" WIDE BY 25' LONG Christmas Wrap 2 ROUS ^^00 USE IN CASSEROLES ] Hunts Tomato Sauce ALL PURPOSE COFFEE Chase G Sanborn________________ • UbLICr50S"FROSTING OR Jiffy Cake Mixes RICH TOMATO TASTE Libby Catsup TENDER, SWEET Town Pride Peas JOHNSON ^ JOHNSON PLAIN OR Sheer Strip Band-Aids 9 0Z., WT, BOX 1 LB. 4 0?. BTL. PIECES AND STEMS Butternut Mushrooms FRANCO AMERICAN __ __ ^rmirsp^glietti ASSORTED VARIETIES STRAINED Beechnut Baby Feed 11x9 3/8 JUMBO Northern Towels SPECIAL LABEL Fab Detergent FARMER JACK’G PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., JULY 27 •RIGHT RESERVEjp.TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. FONTtAC MALL SHOPPING CENtVr • GLENWOOD PLA^A SHOPPING CENTER e MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER e DIXIE HWY. AT WILLIAMS LAKE^ROAD e NORTH P^RRY AT ARLENE THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, C—17 with "Double Discounts!” YOUXL SAVE MORE ON EVERY ITEM-CHECK THE PRKES FOR YOURSElf! “•tfPuiMl, REOUUr bbcount met ®**CO0NTWMd FARM MAID WHITE OR PINK 6 OZ. NO RP # Frozen Lomonado w cans^"^F CREAMY SMOOTH ASSORTED FLAVORS ' % GAL^ NO A CTN. jy % Moplo Loaf ko Crotnn ^ QUAKER MAID POPSICLES OR A Frozen Fudsoicles ' ^ 39* ETAVOR^ YOUR COFFEE FROZEN Rkhs Coffoo Rich ctn. FROZEN IN BUTTER SAUCE 37* Stokoly Poos IL Com FROZEN FRENCH TOAST OR lOOZJMNO^ Downirf [oktJMadflesi%k29^ PERCH OB HADDOCK FROZEN ^ C.™ , ..WOOO ..z. ™ «... . ^ ''r - r' C—18 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1968 Viet Foliage' Is at Its Lushest on the Chin of 'Weird Beard] SAIGON (AP) — There arei Sloman’s medical problem Is [Since he grew his beard, hovrev-1 the good-humored sergeant en-tome 535,000 beardless Ameri- an allergy brought on by Viet-jer, he's been on the lookout forjjoys his whiskers, can soldiers in Vietnam andinam's heat, humidity and later-iothers and he’s spotted a few. | “it’s a lot cooler with a beard, then there is John Sloman.jite soil. It makes his face brdak| “i know one guy with a beardjlt keeps the sun off my f^ce,” sometimes known as Weird|out., The doctors couldn’t figi^e-jn the Long Binh jail,” Slomanihe claims. “Besides, the little Beard. |out any other cure so they gavte gajd “j don’t know why he’s in kids like to feel it. They like to He’s the despair of dutiful'Sloman a slip of paper excusing the stockade but 1 know he’s got pat it. I’ve only had one kid give military policemen who try toihim from shaving. a beard, I saw it.while we were it a real tug.” enforce an Army ban on chin fo-; t^iopT^n s may be the only “of- workitjg out there.” i sioman tets a somewhat more liage. Sloman politely refuses to’fjciai ' Armv beard m Vietnam, r Despite a lot of funny looks,ipointed working over from his comply. He’s been getting away buddies In the 46th Englneerjbeard, they see the uniform and Battalion. [they just known something’is “Some guys call me Moses wrong.” . , and they are always coming up His only close calj, was an with a new needle,” Sloman [Army major who felt the war says. would go better if Sloman “I’ve had MPs stop and ask If shaved. The discussion got a lit-I was real. They are always|tle warm, Sloman recalls, but stopping me, but they’re usually [the beard survived, polite about it. They see the! Such brushes with authorityii usually take place In headquarters areas. Out on the job, the engineers are usually a pretty informal unwashed bunch. On his present job, building emergency refugee housing 6n the outskirts of Saigon, the kidS are always giggling and yeliing what must be loosely translated Dig that crazy red beard. Sloman knows his days whiskered glory are number* It’s his wife Elizabeth back i Springfield, 111. “Her last letter sort of sal that if I didn’t shave it off w would just stay home when I gc back,” Sloman says. “I figur on .going out a little, so th beard will have to go.” with it for three months and figures to hold out for the rest of his tour in Vietnam. No hippie is Sloman. He's a hard-working engineer sergeant and onetime farmboy and mechanic from Pawnee, 111. Sloman’s secret weapon is a medical paper, signed by an I Army doctor. It excuses him [ from shaving as long as he is in Vietnam. (And Sloman voluntarily extended his 12-month tour for another six—though not just to escape shaving. LUSH RED GROWTH ! “I have plenty of guys come! up to me and a.sk how I get by with it,” grins Sloman, proudly; fingering a lush red growth that! any other 22-year-old would Photographer, 83, Ending 3rd Career UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.I (AP) — At the age of 83, Leo I Rosenthal is taking bows for the! third career of his long life—i photographer of U.N. notables from Secretary-General U Thant on down. Born in Riga, Latvia, under; the Russian czar, he has been a criminal lawyer in Moscow through two revolutions, a .jour-1 nalist in Berlin and Pans be-| tween two world wars a nd a; freelance photographer at the; United Nations since it was formed in 1945. He estimates that his U.N. photo collection contains more than 300,000 pictures of statesmen, delegates and U.N. officials at General Assembly sessions, Security Council meetings, conferences, luncheons, receptions and other events here! and abroad. STILL PINK-CHEEKED Now, white-haired, bent, lame —but still pmk-cheeked and sprightly-he has been honored, by the U.N. Association of thei U.S.A. with an exhibit of 600 of his photographs on U.S. partici-'; pation in the United Nations. Son of a prosperous Jewish jeweler, Rosenthal became a criminal lawyer in Moscow, served under the provisional Tver^sky government as head of the Bureau of Released Pris-| oners and commissioner of the! Taganka Prison, and after the; Bolshevik Revolution became executive secretary of the Political Red Cross and a defense attorney in the revolutionary tribunals and people’s courts. He quit the law when lawyers; were nationalized in 1919. • A year later he moved on toj Berlin and# became a court rcn, porter ip 1922 for the “Vorwarts, ' chief neWspaper of the German Social Democratic party. He worked at that until 1933, cover-1 ing big trials all over Germany' for eight Socialist papers and taking courtroom pictures to go with his stories. When Hitler came to power in 1933, the Vor-warts was suppressed and Rosenthal was arrested. As a Latvian citizen, he was set free. OFF TO PARIS In August 1934 he went to Paris as correspondent for Labor party papers in Helsinki, Stockholm, Oslo, Copenhagen and Goeteborg. He stayed till June 1940, interviewing and photographing world leaders. He left Paris the day before the Ger. mans marched in and .served as a correspondent in Vichy for his Scandinavian papers until the Germans took over the remain-der s present job, building emergency refugee housing on the outskirts of Saigon, the kids are always giggling and yelling what must be loosely translated Dig that crazy red beard.”! Sloman knows bis days of whiskered glory are numbered. It’s his wife Elizabeth back in Springfield, 111. “Her la.st letter sort of said that if I didn't shave it off yve would just stay home when I got back,” Sloman says. “I figure on going out a little, so the beard will have to go.” 1125 NORTH PERRY AT ARLENE Orioles clout Indians, Eye Tiger Efforts BALTIMORE (AP) ~ The American League pennant race hasn’t entered its fin^l stages yet. It only seems that way. While Mayo Smith, manager of the first-place Detroit Tigers aiready is bringing his starters back with only two days rest, the runner-up Baltimore Orioles have become ardent scoreboard . watchers. And, it’s only July. * ★' * * After outlasting Cleveland 8-6 Tuesday night in a 21-hit slugfest, and replacing the Indians in second place, the Orioles turned their attention to the late-finishing Detroit-Washington game. “What’s Detroit doing?” several players asked reporters as they arrived in the clubhouse. When they had left the field, the scoreboard showed Washington ahead 4-3. --.^J^ashington has made thrde pitching «han|»s-iii^ eighth,” a reporter said. “Never niBd~-tihatill_outfielder Frank Robinson said. "DidDetroiTscDre?^- - -GALLED HALT Even Oriole Manager Earl Weaver, who has posted a 10-4 record since replacing the deposed Hank Bauer, momentarily got swept up in the moment. Suddenly, he called a halt. “Let’s worry about Cleveland first,” Weaver said, “We have Detroit coming id over the weekend.” Then, after being informed Detroit had gone ahead in the eighth. Weaver added; “It’s early yet. We’ve got time.” ‘ Baltimore trailed Detroit by 10''i games when Weaver took command July Ity htit now the Orioles are six behind with a three-game series against the Tigers coming up. ★ * ★ Baltimore continued its recent robust hitting Tuesday night. Boog Powell drove in four runs with a homer and double. Brooks Robinson homered with a man on, and Dave Johnson tripled for two McLain's Road Show Big Hit Michigan's Shock Switching Positions ANN ARBOR, Mich. (API - Dave Strack, who recruited A 11 - A m e r i c a Cazzie Russell and catapulted Michigan into basketball prominence, resigned as head coach of the Wolverines Tuesday, He will take over the newly created post of business manager of athletics. The appointment was approved Tuesday night by the university’s^ board in control of intercollegiate athlebcs. ★ ★ ★ Don Canham,.....who...succeeded. H O. “Fritz” Crisler as athletic director last spring, said a successor had not been named, adding: “We should have a new to Michigan. Now I’m looking forward to the business operations which should prove, as rewarding as my 20 years as a coach.” Under Strack, the Wolverines posted a 11.3-89 record over eight years, including a 65-17 mark while Russell, now with the NBA’s New York Knicks, was a player. * * ★ With Russell, Michigan won three straight Big Ten titles from 1964 through .shanng one with Ohio State. 'Fhe Wolverines finished third in the NCAA tournament in 1964, and second in 1965, losing to UCLA. HIGH-HANDED TACTICS-Shortslop Hal Lanier (221 of San Francisco awaits the toss (top photo) while trapped baserunner Adolfo Phillips of the Chicago Cubs attempts to beat the throw. Lanier and Phillips each throw up their hands (bottom photos) as the Giants’ infielder makes the tag during the collision in the base path. SF second baseman Ron Hunt follows up on the play. The Giants won, 4-3, in lO innings. The best bet to succeed the 45-year-old vStrack is John Orr, w’ho served as his assistant last season. DIFFICULT DECISION “The deci.sion to leave coaching was certainly difficult, but I’m pleased to be working with Don Canham, who is bringing new ideas into this important field of athletic administration,” .said Strack. ‘Tve been fortunate to have talented players, who have brought great success THE PONTIAC PRESS AVEDXESDAY, JULY 24, 1968 SPWS No 1 QUINTET Strack's team was voted No. l in the Associated Press poll with a 24-4 mark in 1965, his best year. * * * The team slipped to a 2-12 Big Ten record in 1966 and was 6-8 la.st year, winning its last four conference games, Strack was ,a three-year basketball regular at Michigan and captain of the 1946 team. He served as an assistant coach before taking the head coaching job at Michigan following a year as head coach at Idaho in 1959-60. Don'Bufotrd^.hUting .385 since the All-Star Game, had Two hits, stole three bases and scored two runs, Jose Cardenal and Joe Azcue hit homers for the Indians, who lost to the Orioles for only the second time in 10 games this season. CLEVELAND BALTIMORE ^ State Pro-Am Decided Late Switch Pairs Champions Baltimore 4. JB-Snyder (0), Cardenal (5), Powell (16), Aicue (3). IP H R ER BB SO Easy Net Victory for Miss Fisher at Dayton Meet Special to The Press , DAYTON, Ohio — Top-seeded Emily Fisher of Bloomfield Hills trimmed Californian Mary Struthers, 6-2, 6-2, ’ yesterday in the 18-year-olds division at the Western Girls Tennis Championships. The leading 16-year-old Kristin Kem-.meg also breezed to a setond-round win,,. while three other highry Tanked entries . were eliminated in upsets. “ ^ Kathy Dortibos, second seeded in the iJ-year-old division, was ousted by Pam Austin of RolUng Hills, Calif., 6-3, 7-5. SURPRISES Eighth-seeded Rana Epstein of Miami, Fla., was eliminated by Tuppy Daugherty of Baton Rouge, La., 6-1, 64 and in the 16-year-old division, Sharon Walsh of San Rafael, Calif., upset third seeded Cincy 'Thomas of Los Angeles, 6-4, 5-7,10-8. Miss Kemmer breezed by Chris Slade of Redwood City. Calif., 6-2, 6-0. ★ ★ * In other play, Connie Capozzi of Middletown, Ohio, third seeded in the 18-y^ar-old division, defeated Martha —'^rnhill ol Huntington, W. Va,. 6-1, 6-2. SSeventh seed, Jane Lawson of Middletown, Ohio, defeated Pam Farmer of San Diego, Calif., 6-2, 3-6, 7-5. By FLETCHER SPEARS A couple of longtime pals playing together in a competitive event for the first time own the 1968 Michigan Pro-Am Golf Championship. CS.ss Jawor, assistant at Glen Oaks, and Detroiter Dennis Mclnerney, both 31, were brought together for this tournament almost by accident and they made the -bestr of -H -by pestiag- a . stroke victory in the S^hole tournament at Indianwood Country Club near Lake Orion. The two sharpshooters closed the 54-hole grind over the hilly, 6,909-yard, par-72 course with a hot 18-under-par 198 on rounds of 64, 69 and 65. TAJKE SECOND A stroke back were Bill BiSdorf of Grosse He and former Michigan amateur champion Glenn John.son. ShSmg^thmf with 203s were former^ Oakland Hills pro A1 Watrous and Hunter McDonald along with Glenn Stuart of Cascade Hills and Peter Green of Orchard l^ke, the 1966 champions. Defending champions Bill Mattson of .Shenandoah and Bill Curtis were 10th with a 209. CAREER HIGHLIGHT The win was the biggest one of his career for Cass, who is one of five Jawor brothers in the pro golf business. Cass is assisl^ljdcbrQther Stan at Glen Oaks. ■ “ * * Cass’s bdst previous showing in competitive golf came in 1962 when he finished 10th in the Cajun Classic during a brief stint on the pro tour. Jawor had entered the 31st running of this tournament with Roy Cullenbine of Detroit, but business forc^ Cullenbine to withdraw. The first round of the tourgament was slated Tor Mohday, and as of early Sunday, Jawor had no partner. DRAFTED PARTNER Later in the day. Mclnerney, a shirt salesman, strolled into the clubhouse at Glen Oaks. "I drafted him then,” said the happy Jawor. ★ Mclnerney had just returned from a selling trip to Chicago. On Monday, they fired an eight-under 64 to share the first-round lead with Knollwood’s Robert Panasiuk and Bob Solomon, lost the lead during the first round of yesterday’s 36-hole finals and then came on strong over the final 18 holes to sew up the champion.ship. Bisdorf and Johnson were in at 130 on two stralghTBSYand^ld a three-stroke advantage over Jawor and Mclnerney as they headed into tbe final 18 holes. HOT STREAK But the Jawor-Mcinerney duo hit a hot streak. Dennis banged home three birdie putts on the front side, while Cass col- U.S. Race Group Trims Turbines lected one on the front and three on the back and they finished with a 65. Bisdorf and Johnson carded a respectable 69, but both ran into tree problems on the. 18t.h, a 509yard, par-5, wiping out their bid to force a tie and a playolf. Both Cass and Mclnerney had tlie long-range touch around the greens in that final round. ON TARGET Dennis chipped In an 80-footer for a birdie on the third hole and Cass knocked in a 36-footer at No. 6. On the back side, Cass knocked in a 76footer at 10 for a birdie, a 20-footer at 15 for a par and a 60-footer on 16 for a birdie that boosted he and his pal into a one-shot lead. ★ * * They played the final hole in a steady rain anOon Brooks — Donald Chalfant-Dennv Vass Stan Jawor-Pete Shubeck Pau1,Thomas-Ron Yorick Tom D^an-Ed Igslehanty GerSd Prieskorn-George Pri Jim Scott-John O'Donovan 68-69-72-209 (47.73-70-210 71.70.69- 210 71.72-67—210 68-71-72^M 68- 73-70-211 69- 72-70-211 69.69- 73-211 71.71- 70-212 72-68-72-212 71-69-72-212 71.70- 71-212 69-72-72-213 68- 72-73-213 72.72- 69-213 69- 71-73-213 67- 76-71—214 69-75-70-214 69- 71-74—214 70- 73-7W214 70.73- 71—214 71- 71-72-214 72- 73-69-214 . 70-75-70-215 , 71-70-74—215 71.73.7W215 68- 73-75—216 ,,7^72-74-216 72-70^74^216 . 72-70-74-216 . . 72-72-T2—216 . 70-74-73—217' .. 71-72-74-217 .. 72-71-74-217 . .72-75-71—218 . 72-73-73-218 71- 74-74-219 72- 73-74—220 71- 74-75—220 72- 75-73-220 68- 79-74-221 72-80-69—221 69- 73-80-222 Boston Goalie Fined WILDWOOD, N. J. (ft — Edward Jtrfinston, 32, a goalie for tb Boston Brums’ hockey team, was fined $1M, Mohday on an assault chhrge in this New Jersey shore resort. ■T' ■ ^ ' .V""‘ INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) - The checkered flag was waved for the second and apparently the last time Tuesday for the__controversial but still winless turbine-powered race cars of Andy Granatelli. The U.S. Auto Club board of directors cut the air intake area of the turbine cars to 11 9 .square inches, effective Jan. The intake area, which governs the power of the turbines, was reduced from 23 9 to 15.9 square inches last summer by USAC. Both moves were to make the turbines more cdmpeBtive“wrth the conventional pistqn-engine cars in races with Indianapolis type cars, including the Indianapolis USAC said. But Granatelli, STP Corp. president, said Tuesday, night the latest USAC action “speaks for itself.” OTHER MOVES “I’ll not be back at Indianapolis next year with a turbine,” he said from his Chicago office. USAC also: —Lowered displacement of the turbocharged Offenhauser and Ford engines from 170.856 to 161.703 cubic, in-; _ ches. also effective Jan. 1. — Raised displacement of nonsupercharged production stock block engines from 305.1 to 320 355 inches, effective imnjedialely. —Left unchanged displacement of the specially built nonproduction stock engines, such a,s Dan GUmey drove to second place in this year’,^ SOO, at 305.1 cubic inches, with the formula to be reviewed at USAC’s January meeting. Pontiac PrMi Photo WASHINGTON 'SI?' Dobson p 0 0 0 0 Bryan ph War(•» me appoint-j^its, two rbi’s and two runs: Roch^sfer 9, E,gips 3 * * * scored in the 9-3 victory over ■ ^ Rosso got his horse Tuesday uu g ‘ Red John.son had two singles r’'"'”'*" ^ widset Nation.; for four rbi’s and teammate I Ted Clark drove in two morej widgetin'iarnatian.i Rosso, making his first a|>M ^ ® peararice at the sale this yeaK Auburn Heights Boys Clubj,„-; » *' ^ came with the intention of buy- ®^upted for 11 runs in the t'^st, Bravos 21, ootroit rigors 0 ing a chestnut filly by Sea-Bird,'two innings and posted an lt-3 whom he had seen race iniClass E conquest of New Hope j optimist Mots m ^ France, and outbid another Baptist. -------^----------L I Jvnior lightweights Stables, N.J., for the horse. .' I" Widget National action,; ; * * ★ Bill Webb’s (wo home runs for I TOKYO (AP) - -, World ,iunior ^p,^^g and ran The two-day sale of 248 horses the Columbia Avenue Recrea-ihghtwcight boxing champion Hi- ^ winning 88(1 relay netted a record $7,606,900 for anition A,ssociation featured an 8-5 roshi Kobayashi of Japan will aibu average of $30,671 a head it triumph over Hou.se of Barbers, meet Ruben Navami of Mexico wws compared with last year’s; Another two-round t ripper;in a nontitle fight in Tok\o Aug. ” ' auction of 284 yearlings fori performer was Terry Hubert in 26, Filipino matchmaker Lope each a 20-10 slugfest win by Charlie iSarreal announced today. B Sets 84-Mile Mark t MELBOURNE, Australia l,(.\ri Marathon runner George Fh>rdn, 43, set a long dis-‘ tanep record of 84 miles, 1,413 7 yards in 12 hours Tuesday, but 1 failed to break the 24-hour mark 2 of 162 miles, 704 yarcis set In Malhim Clul Jon Costello of Pontiac Cen-1 tral, entered in the 1.5-17 age,|^ group, also won three events. opTim He took the 440 hurdles (59.), two mile (10;54) and 440 (54.0). 14-and-under class, widgei Natioi By Th« AiiaclatMl P i 'Skins Name Captains I CARLISLE, Pa. (AP) - Th« 5 Washington Redskins named ’ center Len Hauss and lineback-^ er Chris Hanburger as co-cap-;j tains for the 1968 National Foot-5 ball League season Tuesday. YOU WAY '■**..7* :r------. cInter Offer Ends Satuflilay, July 211968 Major League —^Leaders=J ARMSTRONG THE SAFE RED TAG ClEARANGE! Not Seconds, Not Retreads, But Brand New Nylon Cord Tires SIZES FOR MOST CARS AT LOW LOW CLEARANCE PRICES “You mean you buy any bourbon that’s on special sale? 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JULY 24, 19( St. Louis Takes 12V2 Game Lead ^ AAcCoveys Gimpy Knee Causes Giants No Pain ' By the Assfociated Press ' Marichal checked the Cubs onjwith the first of his three sin-jwith a blast into tbe left-centeriried the Mets past the Braves, Bob Bailey’s leadoff homer in Dodgers from behind against t Willie McCovev stepped off five singles before nailing his gles. His run-scoring single in'field seats. ■ who have dropped five in a row_ tbe sixth—the first hit off Mike iH^stom _ Mancha, a Tuesday evening, but as far as McCovey unloaded home run lead, but the Cubs rallied for baseman's inning and Swoboda crashed his ^ ' - the Chicago Cubs arc concerned No. 24. two runs in the seventh to knot season-high hitting streak at 27 first since June 10th in the sixth his feet still haven't touched the Elsewhere in the National it. games. before Koonce rescued winner ground. Leagtie, the streaking Cincin- * * * Thp bunched the last Tom Seaver in the eighth. McCovey flew to Los Angeles nati Reds shrugged off a two-j Lamabe got past Ron Hunt four of their 20 hits in the 12th for an examination of his gimpyjnin ninth inning homer by Pitts-jg^^j ^yiUie Mays in the 10th, but f® break a 5-5 tie at Pitts- right knee, then winged backj burgh player-coach Bill Virdon'w p . . rfpadiockif’urgh after 37-year-old Virdon, in fimA in cfrrtlro frkiir hifs onr4 nirtrvAj-1 4hA Piraioc 7Ji in fhn! * ^ naoAiHrafAH locf xuodIt U Claude Osteen brought theiH. RENT. SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! home in time to stroke four hits, I and nipped the Pirates 7-6 in the' including a two-out 10th lnningll2th; first-place St. Louis wal-homer that gave the Giants and loped Philadelphia 11-5, the New. Juan Marichal a 4-3 triumph i York Mets edged Atlanta 2-1 over the Cubs. and Los Angeles topped Houston Piepul Named New Coach McCovey made his trip to Los Angeles to consult with Dr. Rob- _____ [_ejl_J5erlan_cegard»g-4he--knee--AMHERST. Mas^ (AP) -injury that had been bothering pjepui ^as named an as-for more than two weeks.. . . reactivated last week after I three-year absence from the I majors, sent the game into lovertime with his ninthrinning i homer off relief ace Ted Abernathy. FTFm Two doubles by Roger Maris drove in four of St. Louis’ 10 runs in the first three innings as the Cardinals stretched Phila-i delphia’s losing string to five; with a 14-hit barrage. j Lou Brock and Mike Shannon delivered two rilns apiece for sv^ - ■ thp Parriinals. who lead the sec-; Horse Racing Northville Entries «tl>—$1200 Cond. T Clilming Pact; I WRIST ACTION Dr. Kerlan found a touch of The former Notre Dame star, arthritis in the knee, but the who also played professionally Cubs soon discovered there’s with the Detroit Lions, has nothing wrong with the towering!spent almost a quarter of a cen-first baseman’s wrist action. tury coaebing in New England McCovey drove in one of the at Dartmouth, Brown and Holy j Tony Perez’ fifth hit, scoring single, gave the Reds a ' ivuu ricuui was iiaiiicu an as-1 . , , . _ n r-i I sistant footbaU coach at the Uni-|®-5 Tommy Helms fol- , versity of Massachusetts today, lowed with another RBI single,, good/^ear T"Ask Your Goodyear Dealer for His Competitive Price—Goodyeor Retail Prices Shown Abpve.'^ ernw.^r ri-^nr GREENFIELD TIR| & BRAKE SERVICE i GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE of Rochester -1370 Wi* Treck Drive ( ^ 335-6167 Mom, Rochester ^ 651-4007 Installed whila you wait, if .wanted. Expert warkman-tfiip by skilled craftsmen using finest quality m< All Work Sgarantoed BILL KELLEY’S SEAT COVER 756 Oaikahd Ave. CorfiarKinnay •» OPEN DAILY 9 to 6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAV. i^l LV 24. 1968 iiUhf the Out4^0f ^tail with DON VOGEL—Outdoor Editor, Pontiac Preii Retiring Expert Makes Prediction Deer Hunting Should Remain Good LANSING i^IV-Michigan still survive despite the human popu-1that have prospered in smith- Michigan deer aren't as hig as' Bartlett can grin now when should have fuie deer hunting lation explosion," Bartlett said, ern Michigan manages to evade in the good, old days. telling about the fierv oppo- in the future, even up to the As proof, he.cited the continii- hunters and grow to maturity, "The old kicks lived longer," sition again,st shooting does and ' I year 2,000, • iing increase of the deer in the record still might be broken, he explained. "There weren't lawns when the idea was first There is a chance, too, thatisouthern Michigan. Despite ex-i Bartlett says the nld-limPf.s so many hunters then to pick I COOL SHOWER — Mike Suiydermoud of San Selmo.'^alif., sends up a shower as he water skis irr the- R»ishp Udo near London, England. The 18-year-old was conipeTIng in AP Wlrephote the first round of the Golden Skis Trophies in the Wills International Water Ski Tournament. Large Perch Hitting Near Port Huron Large perch are tutting ini Interest is high, but the coho Lower Lake Huron near the No.'salmon aren’t quite ready to 3 buoy north of Port Huron with! move north in Lake Michigan, minnows the best bait. Action is still best from Walleye fishing on the St. Clair River south of Port Huron remains fair with pencil plugs the favored lures. Catfish are Muskegon to Holland. Fishing in the Oakland County area has been good for bass and spotty for bluegills. Few pike . but a Bay in Tuscola County and a 22- rainbows has been fpr. pound musky was caught at, ^ a new record deer might be panded building, deer browse kre bagged some year in southern around abandoned farms and Michigan. can be spotted on the outskirts * of even the state's largest These sound like pretty far- cities, out predictions. i * * ★ But they have to be taken] Bartlett predicted that with for gospel when they come from wise management, hunters will Ilo Bartlett! who retired last continue to lake .some inn.noo^ week as deer .specialist for the deer a year -with the killvary- .State Conservation Department, ing 10,000 one way or another Bartlett started on the job in according to hunting conditions 102fi and has devoted his 42 and the shape of the farm crop, years with the department to Michigan's record deer is list-learning about deer. |ed as one that dressed out at ^ I T I I j He is "Mr. Deer” to many, 354 pounds, figured at 425 llPT I rPflfmPnT leadmg pounds on the hoof. The luckv V/vl M V/UIIIIV/III Michigan into its present scien- hunter was A1 Tippett of Flint lifir manageipent of Michigan's who shot the big buck at Trout Lamprey Eels Great Lakes Streams deer herd—one of the state's Creek, in the western part of Receive Chemicals most spectacular outdoor re-The Upper Peninsula, in Ifllf) CAN SURVIVE CORN-FED . claim,them off." "We wiiiiTd get hundreds of Although deer hunters have letlers. ITey hung us In effigv stayed at about the same level and 1 remember once that a the last few years, the more caravan drove down from the than ,500,000 hunters in the field north country to I.an.sing,” he each year means that not many recalled, deer live to a ripe old age and * * . * trophy weight "They had a funeral for a Bartlett ,said._ tlirniigb _ the deer they claimed it was the years the biggest change he last one left in Michigan.” has seen is in the deer habitat Although scholarly • looking, LOW RRliSH Bartlett is very much the out- , doorsman. He figures he spent about one third of his time in the field.^ , He has been hunting every season, but never worked vei In the late 1020s, north country mostly was eov-ered with low brush ideal deer browsing hahitat. A.s early as ,, the forests had hard at it and figures he has Bartlett thinks it possible that The Pent water River 1 n - Oceana County is tb&—firsL-^ stream to be chemically treated I in the fiscal lamprey control] "Deer have proven they can if kie of those corn-fed deer II.0 RARTI.ETT Holly Riding Dispute started to mature into taller ^ ^ . Retirement plans include " Ihe reproductive c^panty ,^e rest of the sum- of the deer wa.s stall there, but there was not the feed to carry j,, them, Bartlett said, ^e has a cabin, in the heart * ■* ■* of the deer country. He also In 1941, Michigan tried its plans some travel and probably daring first experiment of also will continue to unofficially using the sur^us deer instead advise the dephrtmenf on deer Murphy Lake, ington. !Fisheries Commission for the' 11668-69 season. - i Teeple and Minnie are good xpe work is under contract toi for trout. Pontiac, L 0 ui s e , the u.S. Bureau of Commercial; Lakeville, Union, Pine. Tipsico Fisheries and includes rivers' Temporary' Solution of allowing them to die of management, starvation in the woods. One deer was allowed for a party of hunters, a buck, doe or fawn. .Sentimentalists raised so much furor the idea was dropped Ihe very next year Wild Turkeys Doing Well are yielding^ good catches of tributary to the Great Lakes in; The conflict between horse because the department has-f Nor were the It wasn't until that the Lakes]owners and the Conservation ruled the Holly area off limits vinced that more hrkers use the"^'""^''''''’''^’^ TTe'partmefr sta"rr Maximum Points in Soccer Tilts [black bass. Calicoes are hittingj22 Michigan counties on . .. ....... .......................... jon most lakes with Stoney Superior, Michigan and Huron. I Department over use of the! to horses. Former bridle trails jCreek and Deer among the; * * * Holly recreation area-was are now listed as hiking routes. I better-watej;s. j By July 1, 1969. t h e s e '“'Pmporarily” settled ' yester-; Mrs. Paul Meinke, 1099 Bird, : Lake trout fishing remains Michigan waters will have been day. Grove land Township told very good in Ihe west arm of treated with lampncide: Lake 'hink we ran work out oodge: I Grand Traverse bav. Superior — Traverse River temporary,” Robert, Plan More Permits] in Bddwin Area i By - trails. They pointed^ "" ''s present track. Any' \Va.shington and Toronto heavy use bv Uits "mav give deer--doe or fawn as well asl^acked up maximum pom tm ' this impre.ssion ” .lohn Regan, ^uck was legal during the lasti'a'a with victories m the North .supervisor for the Holly area, •hree days of the .season in ■''nierican vSoecer lx>ague Fri-,said "many other people'besides bunicrs who had no early .sur- day night. .................... .......^ . We heard thev (denartmenliiSf""'a are on the trails.” .cess. , Washington nipped New York Houghton County; Potato River,'^”dge, chief of the department trails out of Ihe Hollv legend on Ihe new maps H wasn't until 1956 that thej5 2 and Toronto edged Vancou- U..»X' I Ontonagon County; Rig Garlic^ area and we would like to have recrealion area present quota and area .sy.stem ;ver 4 3 in the only games uOOr n untino 'River, Marquette county. P®"P'® ® .^P'" them back Whv aren't we ncr- ''hanged to read "hik on anierle.ss deer was started, j played. ; * * * ' cia meeting at the Groveland j , j : jnn........................... ^ I * * * util milted to ride in the area any ' Seosons Set Lake Michigan — Jordan and' "n. nip Hail.^ ^ longer?' in,stead of "hridip” trails. The meeting wa.s requested by NOT COMPATIBLE Father, Daughter Seek Mixed Title Bonnie L a u e r , 17-year-old horse owtiefs-and 4-iL leaders Dodge pointed mri that there] "i.s a conflict between hiking! and riding on the trails ... and our regional people reported there is more hiking. The two activities are not considered Fdgewood Country Club golfer, compatible.” and her, father, Edward, will be "We are geared to a long-, hand Saturday to defend Jerry Byrd drove in four runs range water oriented intensive Iheir Mixed Invitational cham ' - ............. bridle trails pionship at Plum Hollow' Conn- Big Inning Aids Softball Win Boyne rivers, Charlevoix Coun- Wild turkeys are doing wellin^ ,ty; Fishdam, Little Fishdam the fialdwm^and- Mio hmrtmgf- season,'rivers, -and Valentine Creek, area.^ according to Conserva-isept. lO-Nov. 5. dogs permitted. Delta County; Boardman River, non Department biologists, and jjas been established for the Grand Traverse County; prospects are fair to good for;upper Peninsula. Millicoquins and Black rivers this fallls Nov. 1-10 season. | As in 1967, all bear hunting is and Mile Creek. Mackinac One thousand permits (200 prohibited in the Lower County, - j more than last year) will bejpgoinsula. Also, the Big Manistee River,' Issued in the Baldwin area and * * * Manistee County; Lincoln 500 in the^Mio area. | From Oct. 1 thhough Nov. M.iRiver. Mason County^ Sugar^’^Ighr"r'wrxom us^plan,” he said, .... Hiinfws intersested m.v nh bears »eek and Cedar H i v e r , (.grpentrv Engineering. 10-1. in probably will be included in our try Club, tam inf^rmS on arTa? and and Menominee County; Big Bear^ Industrial Softball, 'overall planning for the area Other entries in Ihe field of h ° Muskegon and White a second game* Larry Lntil then, we Can look fnr'hOteam.sinrluHpTomDr aper p y Muskegon C o u n t y ; py^j^-double capped a five run something temporarv.” and Mrs. John, Hume, last ■erRivpriVp.n.ronntv .sent John * * * year'.s runner-up and 1964 , , „ ro I jGaiesky scooting across the The remamder of the two-hour'' ' ' Lake Huron - Devils Creek, ^„h the winning nm in ..„.u ,i,„ Green. Alpena County: . ^ -n fi A j Jiiijjs-i lai .:i u -t mti u\ti nr uwiiri d< tA2illUi Ui^ lU t.:uU" , ' . • ••• i .» AuGres, Rifle rivers, Arenac j^aggerty Lumber. vince Dodge Ibat riding is a Hot m Final Outing County; Saginaw River ] _________ tributeries. Bay County;] Canoe Lake] Drawing Scheduled procedures Wild Till-key, gun deer hunting season under'Pentwater River Oceana County, nf Conservation, a gun deer license. ... application writing to Department Lansing. Mich. 48926. The Mio wild turkey hunting ] area covers 775 square miles! and Includes parts of Alcona. Iosco, Ogemaw, Oscoda and' Montmorency counties. Solunar Tables , The schedule of Solunar Pe-Martineau Creek, riods, as printed below, has (872 sq 'been taken frpin John Alden The Baldwin area , . . mi ), slightly enlarged from last iKnight’S SOLUNAR TABLES, year, includes Lake County and Plan your ^»ys so that you will portions of New.aygo, Oceana be fishing in good territory-or and Mason counties. --- -hunting-in good -cover-rlUringi^^^ _____________________ these times, if you wish to find jviackinac County ; Keeth of the Sunday Mixed League ..at. Montcalm outlet, Chippewa County; Rock! ' was his first visit to the HoUylBowlmg Centre rolled a 277-2.36- Falls and Sucker creeks, Huron City softball program director area, didn't appear to be'212 trio for 725 in the league's County. ' ) iJim Jones reminds slowpitchjswayed. ' j last outing. * * * 'team managers,that the draw-1---------------------------------- -------------------- Silver Cheek, AuSable River; jings for the post-season play-Ibsco -CountyT" Hessel ' Greek;;offs wlR fe^aFT! iFlbnight T5r 0 c q u e 0 c the National League and 7:15 c/ionop Location River, Presque Isle County; p.m, tomorOw for the Inter- <^nOnge LOCOr/On has to offer. . eiack creek, St. Clair county; national regardless of the of Next Meeting - ^. MUI creek, Sanllac county. weather. Thursday has to offer. Eisttrn Daylight Tim# A.M. F.... Minor Major Minor Major 4:35 11:45 8:30 - 5:35 12:10 9:00 12: A;45 1.65 9:35 1: 745 145 10:05 2: New Galvanized 48” 10:15 3:10 11.25 3:50 Today jThursd Friday The August conservation com- Sunday*"' mission meeting will be held in rSesdey the Jack Tar Hotel, Lansing, Instead of the Park Place Hotel.; ~ n p* r *1 ! Traverse cfty, as previously] Pasarell Defeats Ashe i announced. Dates are Aug 8-9. In another; WASHINGTON (AP) — change, the dates for the! Charles Pasarell, America’s September meeting at Caberfae'top-ranked men’s amateur ten-Lodge, Cadillac, have been nis player, defeated second-moved up one week. The new ranked Arthur Ashe. 9-7, 6-3. in dates are Sept. 5-6. an exhibition match Tuesday. inLakes COUNTRY CLUB Welcomes You as a Golfer to r Country Club Atmosphere ECURRENT GREEN FEES- 9 Holes 18 Holes fs $2.06 S3.00 1.- Holiddys $2,50 $4.00 2 Milas Wait of Pontiac Airport ’ » And South on Williams Loka Road 8020 PONTIAC LAKE RD. * 673-1914 15% to 33Vs% Reduction on Clothing & Fnrnishings from Our Regular Summer Stock the clAvmoRe ' shop 722 N. Woodward Ave; Biriiiingham, Mich., MI 2-7755 Also bn Joslyn R?l., Lake Orion 1 Thurs., Fri.^Sat, ONLY! W Per Ft. 100’ or more Includes Wire, Line Posts and Top RaiL Manufactured to last for years. End Posts, Gates and Fittings Extra. PORTABLE DOG KENNEL rrofi^ssional Trainer* fj»e Them Quii k and Easy to Assemble 10 Feet Ijong — 3 Feet Wide 6 Feet Hi/fh — With 4 Sides Conifflele With Gate PROFESSIONAL INSTALUTiON EASY TERMS AVAILABLE SAVE UP TO 14 OFF AND MORE MID SUMMER GOLF SALE WILSON • SPALDING • MacGREGOR LOUISVILLE • BURKE • ARNOLD PALMER Wilson SAM SNEAD CHAMPS Matched and Registered 3 WOODS 8 IRONS Save $75.00 $11494 mtmfDT... BVT yoBonv I mERSELL^ji ACAfE! THIS AREA'S LARGEST SELECTION MATCHED SET 2 Woods & 5 Irons $2494 Very Special Save $56.00 WILSON CARY MIDOLECOFF 3 WOODS, 8 IRONS $gg84 PRO QUALITY CUSTOM MADE *‘Eddy Allen" Signature Model *34” RK.HT OR I.F.FT H4SD 2 WOODS AND 5 IRONS.............. erruA IRONS......................................,...S4.m each EITRA WOODS.........................................SS.I4EACH SPALDING CHI CHI RODRIGUEZ _ ='7«“ MatUEGOR GEORGE RIVER • Finest Persimmon Htadu • JWGGdt s*78“ • Milehad #nd Rtslitimd • Siy)n( WticM GOLF BALL GOLF GOLF SPECIAL UMBRELLA RUBBERS $484 or Cary Middt^roff Colors ^ Rtmavakl# ClGGtG Score Card Holder..............................Now$L4I Score Keeper....................................Now 88e No. 1 Driving Irons............................Now $5.94 284 Assorted Golf Putters, Very Special........Now $2.94 Plastic Golf Tubes.............................Now 10c Sunday Golf Bag, leather trimmed'.............j^ow $3.94 USE YOUR MICHIGAN BANKARD OR M^ERS ' UNIVERSAL FENCE CD. 750 N. Milford Rd. FREE ESTIMATES c„u 363-6639 /4cfHC 0mcU (^. 2924 N. WOODWARD AVENUE between I2\. AND 13 mile Open E..n,n,s 'i.l 9 P M , Ju„do,'1,1 5 P M ' LI':.Vi Jacoby on Bridge 'I’JIK POXTlAC' PIJKSS. tfs All a Part I of the Families W Ki)^j:sija\', jply ROBIN MALONE By Bob >.ubher$ WAT A OJAlUf"' i'>M r^-irAciut/TiiGnidnriOKL WTST FAST AQI03 AJ!i$2 ¥.Tin94 Vfir. 2 ♦ 10 9 ♦ A J 8 AQJ8 2 AK74 SOI TH (U) A AK 4 V AK7 ♦ 73’ ■ AA 10 9 5 3 Neither vulnerable West North East South Pass Pass Pass 1 ♦ Pass 2 N.T. 3N.T. Pass Pass Opening lead—V J B\ OSWALD AND JAMES JACO'feV The .duck play in today's column represents a more complicated safety play than the discussed ye: terday. M o s declarers woul have made ye: terday's pla; We think only a small minonty. would make today's, Marshall Miles says his article “Popular Bridge”: “Why does It help to save our high cards until later rounds? It is because as long as both hands can lead a suit it doesn't matter which hand is on lead. “Whe'n only one hand has cards left in the suit it is vital for that hand to be on lead. For some reason everyone 'ean see why that is true when the entry is an ace, but it is harder to see when the entry is a lower card.” .^outh wins the heart lead in hi.s own., hand. He needs the queen^o't hearts as a laler eiiir\ ti> dummy Then he leads a (li.imend. West lolliyws' with tile nine ami South -hoiild )ila\ low (nim dummy. This play will ciKt him a trick in the event that West started with tWo or three diamonds to liie ace, ljut he doesn't need fi\e diamontl, tricks. P’our will give him liis ('oiitract and prohably an uvi r-trick, I.eC.s ,see what happens if ho plays the king or queen. .Nothing bad if East takes his ace right awa.w but East duck.s. South returns to hi.s hand with a spade and leads a second diamond. This time Ea.st takes Ins ace and South takes a two trick set. He has only one remaining entry to dumni.\- and he does not have the diamond suit established: « ST, LOUIS (UPI) - The St. , . „ . J. „ J 'i IjOiTFs Police Department has leads the second diamond and riNCS with one of dummy’s lion- * ★ ★ ors it wont matter whether the \ congratulate Ar- ace is pla,\cd or held back, thm- Dwyer and Thoma.s Koth, Dummy will be able to set up graduates of the Police Acad-the rest of the diamonds, with cmv, were l.t Edwin Roth and llic queen ol heayls as a sure Set I'lulip Dwyer, lathers ot eWtry. tin' rookie policemen " Tin: HKTTEH HAI.F 1!1E HEHHYS By Carl Gruber! don't ^Oiioi.MB’S AaSEP IW THE UAAtAAry^ I nklA AtJD____ I' * ☆, ^ ¥ Jf ☆ ^ Astrological Forecast Daily Almanac By United Press International Today is Wednesday, July-24, the 206th day of 1968 with 160 to follow. The moon is between its last quarter and new phase. The morning star is .Haturn The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter. On this day in history: In 1679, New Hampshire became a royal colony of the British crown. •k * * In 1929, President Herbert Hoover signed , the Kollocg-Briand Treaty, (iilder which 43 nations agreed- to renounce war as--an-inslruixieiW_uf_.iuw^. tional policy. * ★ * In 1948, Henry Walla^cp and nominated "as presidential candidates of the Prdgres.sive party. In 1958. Vice President Richard Nixon and Soviet . Premier Nikita , Khru.shchev staged their famous ''kitchen debate'' at the Americail exhibit’jn. Moscow., Must Be Nutty I EL PASO, Tex. (AP) - Two teen-age bandits robbed a bak-* ery Tuesday of $75 and a bag of; ■ doughnuts. BOARDING HOUSE :^j 'MM ! dentist! PVoU WyOU YOU'W"yOU%YOU%'YOU W YC i CAN ^ CAN i CAN I CAN I CAN i CAN JH Cfi u d THE P( )N riAC PRES WEPyESDAV, JULY 24, 1968 D—7 Founders Festival i Church Invests Staffs in Farmington A, kaleidoscope of events is in «twe for area residents for the three, days of tlje Farmington Founders festival, beginning tomorrow at noon. Open activities include an ox roast sponsored by the Elk’s-Club, helicopter rides continuing until Saturday, and final judging in the Miss Founders Festival contest. The grand opening takes place at 6:30 p.m. with ascent of a hot air balloon. The schedule of events includes activities for people from 9 to 90, including Little League baseball games, a slow pitch softball game, band concerts, a' teen-age dance, concession stands and a sidewalk sale. WINNER’S GIFTS fhe winner of the Miss Founders’ contest selected from LOS ANGELES (AP) - The] Patricia Stevens F i n i s h 1 n g| Episcopal Church has depositedi School, Detroit. The twO'$675,000 in 45 banking institu-l runners-up will receive $25. jtions in low-income areas of the; Saturday there will be a United States, a church official; parade, on Grand River from says. i Orchard Lake Road west toi The Rev. Canon Nicholas Kou-Farmington Road. letsis_of the Los Angeles_Episco-i This year only incumbent politicians will, march in the parade. It will be followed by the “candidates corner,’’ providing a chance for challengers to expound their views. Later there will be a horse show sponsored by the Masonic Temple and a flower show sponsored by the Farmington Garden Club. pal Diocese disclosed Tuesday the church’s executive council has reinvested $45,000 in three minority-group banks and savings and loans associations ini Los Angeles. | Canon Kouletsis said the church hopes to allow banks in Negro or Mexican-American !sections to increase capital fori business and home loans to peo-| pie in their communities. “My black friends tell me that putting money in black banks has done more good for them; Ti ’ lL \A/ II I than all the preaching we’ve! Through Wall or done in years,” he said Top Reds f Headed for Czech Talk PRAGUE (AP) Uncon- DeathNotice^" July 25 at 11 a.m. at Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home with Minister Glen M e 11 o t officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Cordingley will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 9:30 a.m. and 9;30p.m.) |hrmed reports today said Leon-ioAVIS, GLADYS L.; July 23, id I. Brezhnev and the rest of the Soviet Communist party I Politburo was on its way to Czechoslovakia for its crucial meeting with Prague’s new Commuriist leaders to discuss the latter's controversial democratic reforms. 1968; 3518 Erie Driv Orchard Lake; age 76; dear , mother of Mrs. M. C. Worster^ and Mrs. Wayne Skidmore; dear sister of Mrs. Louis Ball, Mrs., Mable Carter and Mrs. Raymond S a m e s ; also survived by five grandchil- Departure of the Soviet dele-1 - dren and seven great-grand- for previously an-1 r/eeting was reported | Engine Crashes NINE KILLED — A two-car passenger train collided with this farm labor bus at Newtonville, a small southern New Jersey community, killing nine and injuring 20. AP Wlrtphot* State police said a Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines .train hit the bus carrying about 40 migrant farm workers at a grade crossing last night. — children. Funeral service will be held Friday, July 26, at 11 a.m. at the. DonelsM-Johns Funeral Home. Intement in White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Davis will lie in state at thej funeral hom^ (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9. t ten finalists will receive $100, a, PnlIrnnrI ----$200 sLdiolaiship-traimHg^fu^ OffOps^ and $5*00 course at the; HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP Last month a Santa Fe locomotive got away from the railroad yards here and sped some 80 „ . miles driverless across Kansas Mrs. Donald Fryer of 385 . , , ... pvpriv Wptprfnrrf ! ^efoi’e H was derailed. Nevis in Brief ,d Tree Trimmer stung Afgeric, Frees 23 others looiimesbyBees 'Skyjacked' Israelis Still Held gation, for nounced by the Yugoslav news agency. Tanjug, from Moscow. There was no official confirmation, but rumors of the departure circulated in Moscow. The trip to Czechoslovakia is the first by the Politburo—steer- _ 'ing committee of the Soviet par-IjackSON, JENNIE sl; July 24, ty--outsideTlussia as a group, | iges; (OO Mark Street; age 84. ! The meeting is expected to be Funeral arrangements are held today or Thursday in Slo-;/ pending at the Donelson-Johns .vakia, adjacent to the Soviet | Funeral Home. Union, but the time and location ------ ------------------------- have not been announced. LUKES, SGT. THOMAS Despite new Soviet arrhy maneuvers along its eastern fron-j PARIS (AP) - Beverly, Waterford'Township,, CINCINNATI, Ohio lAPj - reported to township police yes-l Tuesday, another diesel kept Bees stung a professional tree terday afternoon that a 10-fo^ going when it should have trimmer more than 100 times on SlrtTvS to cf'mbini 's™lUeUinr'.nr2r72“.“. ^ ■ through the wall of the railroad above the ground. citizens today after releas- tier, Czechoslovak officials ex pressed confidence the Russians would never resort to armed in- Mom’s Rummage: Thurs., 9 to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin Rds. —Adv. outside the shops when a machinist attempted to drive it in- Regular meetings of Waterford Aux. No. 2887, FOE has been changed to Wed., July 24, at 8 p.m. Doris Strickland, secretary. Huston Wilhoit, 45, of Cincin-;ing 23 non-Israeli passengers. The locomotive was sitting nati, finally escaped by shaking! The El A1 Boeiiltg 707 was di- . u . r-. T 1- .■ 1 • tervention if the country stands ^e Algerianihostages for Arab commandos El Al. the Israeli national air^^^„.^^^ !ld a hijacked held prisoner in Israel, “'-‘t ^6 crew members and i 21 or 22 Is- there was no public response'12 passengers were detained. 1 „ . “.. , from Algiers and no demand for|The Algerians said they were^^, a iholding 11 nasspnpprs alnna . . Lodge --Galenclcti—- ■ side. lie said he apfllied "the last lOAeet. down the tree and falling the l^ojiLRome toJsraeI.eady-Tues-js^^ brakes “but she just kept bn going” through a brick and reinforced glass wall. Damage to the building was loose of the ropes, climbing vferted to Algiers on a flight iday by three members of the extensive, the railroad reported.ition at a hospital. Wilhoit, who had been sum-jFront for the Liberation of moned to a trailer park to Palestine, an Arab sabotage or-remove a damaged limb from a'ganization. The front asked the tree, was reported in fair condi-jAlgerian government to hold the- Twenty of the released pas- holding 11 passengers along with the 10 crew members. flown to Paris. Tb? threeJiijackers-al parently were in Algiers. The Israeli government asked U.N. Secre^ry General U Thant and the I®ian government to They included two Americans, Rina Uziel, 23, of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Gabriel Gaiz, 17, a student from Long Beach, Cal-p if., who finally arrived in Tel |intercede with the Algerians for 'Israelis aboard the plane asjAviv today with four other pas-|release of the $6 million jetliner — jsengers. jand the Israeli citizens. Italy Three Jewish passengers.jj^Q[wf3it aaeffiissaiy^t&-Aigiers;' ;tf^ a strengthening of were nor Israeli citizens were' Algeria is still technically at Czechoslovakia’s border with flown to Marseille. war with Israel following the West Germany, presumably by Reports of the number of Ls- Arab-Israeli war in June 1967, [Red Army troops, as “just an- tary intervention,” one Commu-nist party official-said: -“Moscow will have to get used to what is going on here. There can be no turning back the clock. We are not going to compromise and are determined to continue on the present course.” Party officials said they viewed the Soviet note this week July 13, 1968; 4088 Wenonah Lane, Waterford Township; age 20; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A, Lukes; beloved grandson of Mrs. Delia Juett and Peter Brim-combe; dear brother of Mrs. P’red B r o w n, Mrs. Charles Walker, MrS. Irving Benjamin, Jim, Robert and William C. Lukes. Funeral service wiJT %e-beltk Friday, July 26, at 1:30 p.m. at the St. Andrews Episcopal Church. Interment in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Sgt. Lukes will lie in state at the Donelson -Johns Funeral Home after 1 p.m. Thursday. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to .9)., the raelis held in Algiers differed, and Israel has never had diplo-jOther step matic relations with any of the |nerves.” Arab governments. APPARENT REBUITAL Although the several Arab M guerrilla organizations have jg sent commando squads into Is-gn'lrael repeatedly on terrorist and In apparent rebuttal to the Soviet note, Maj. Gen. Jan Pe-prny, commander of the frontier . • . iguard forces, said in a state- sabotage missions, this was thei^„„, , It; ■ i , ment to the official news agency first Israeli plane ever hijacked.^ One of the passengers who, , was released, Leon Papu, a Co-^ I’^ars regarding the safety lombian, said the plane’s copilot .^'"«‘-’‘“®‘°':akia’s borders are staggered into the passenger Socialist Republic has I staggered into the passenger compartment 29 miinutes after, . , , , the takeoff from Rome. strength to safely pro- tect Its state border with its capitalist neighbors.” ‘He was bleeding profusely from a head wound and his shirt was covered in blood,” said Papu. “We heard he had been hit over the head by a revolver. He told us the plane had been hijacked.” Chino Raccah, a 29-year-old Libyan, said one of the hijackers drew his finger through the blood of the injured man. “He licked it,” Raccah reported, “and said in Hebrew. ‘Jew- The Soviet note is expected to be a chief topic of discussion at the meeting of the 11-member Soviet Politburo and the 11-man presidiupi of the Czechoslovak party. In Moscow, the Soviet Defense Ministry announced Tuesday that “military logistic exer-are under way in the western Ukraine, which borders ish blood is very sweet.” He on Czechoslovakia, ax well as in added ‘We shali throw all the'White Russia, Latvia and the MARTYN, CC^RA M.; July 24, 1968; 39 Waldo; age 88; beloved wife of William Martyn; dear mother of Edith M. .Cadieux, Olive L. Hibler, Ernest W., Russel J. and Otto L. Martyn; dear sister of Edward l,enex; also survived by three grandchildren and six g r e a t-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Saturday, July 27, at 10:30 a m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. Martyn will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hourst 3 to_ 5 .and 7Jo_ 9.) PEAVY, PASSATTA; July 22, 1968; Chicago, Illinois formerly of Pontiac): age 77; dear mother of Rochelle Taylor, Nettie Spears, Overta Williams, Osie M c E w e n , Simmie C u r r e y , Elizabeth Jackson, Katherine Bavis and Cora Hopkins; also survived by 34 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren, f’uneral .^rvice will be held Friday, Julj - - . -. Jews into the sea,’ and then quickly said ‘we want peace’.” j Two “baldish men” covered the passengers with revolvers and hand grenades, the passengers, said, and another was with ithe pilot. Russian Federation. They continue until Aug. 10. The announcement gave no hint that the maneuvers were connected with Soviet pressure against Czechoslovakia’s more liberal course. Nevertheless, thers-was some thinking in Mos--^ cow that the. army exercises could provide a cover for any Soviet forces that might be preparing for an invasion of Czechoslovakia if the party talks failed to settle the crisis. | A Want-Adable is on article which is too valuable td be retired to idleness, and which someone else would be proud to own and ilse. Maybe you have a baby grand piano which hasn't been played for years. 0{ another musical instrument of value. These are true Want-AdablbsreageHyJoqghf'By^pebple^ who daily read The Pontiac Press Want Ad pages. \ Want-Adables are easily converted to money in your pocket. All yOu do is dial 332-8181 or 334-4981 and ask for the Want Ad Department. Ybp will be treated with friendliness and courtesy, and placing your Pontiac Press Want Ad wilt prove to be a pleasant experience^^ - _________ Your Want Ad wOl cost vary littia, ond will bring you quick ratpbnta. PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS The,men told..the passengers to keep quiet, hold their hands above their heads and they would not be harmed. A Danish passenger said one of the hijackers took over the controls and brought the jetliner down in Algiers to a good land-1 r>, . i t, t ,, ing. D©Qth Notices Young Gaiz said the passengers were frightened but members of the plane crew tried to comfort" the non-Israelis by telling them the hijackers were concerned only with Israeli citizens. Landing in Algiers before idawn, the passengers were taken to a barren building at the 1 airport and kept there together ■until midday. luly 26 at 1 p.m. at Liberty Baptist Church. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Remains can be viewed after 7:30 ■Thursday evening at the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home. STUART, CLARA D.; July 23, 1968 ; 571 Joslyn Road, Orion Township; age 65; dear mother of Gilbert C., Gerald W., Gordon L. and Gene R. Stuart: dear sister of Edward . Trosien; also survived by 13 I r a n d c h i Idren. Funeral service will be held Friday, July 26, at 3:30 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Stuart will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) BURGESS, GENE PAUL; July 21, 1968 ; 2626 Holland, Lake!STRANGELAND, GINA; July Orion; age 24; beloved hus-l 24,1968; 119 State Street;, age band of Marita Burgess; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs.| Max R. Burgess; beloved' grandson of Mr. and Mrs.l Leon MejRath; dear father of Tamara, "Trdcy, Christy and Linda Burgess; dear brother of Mrs. James Crombie, Mrs.: Micbael Womack, 89: dear mother of Mrs. John (Elizabeth) Borsvold, Mrs. Gabriel Flessland, Mrs. Donald Rath; also survived by two sisters, six grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, July 26 at 10:30 a m. at Gloria Robert and Gerald. Burge4«r^--DeLJjUtheran—ehnrch."Tnlef^ 332-8181 or 334-4981 Be Sure to Order the Thrifty 6-Time Rate roll,” Gaiz “Then they separated us. Israelis were taken away. We were asked who we were, why we were going to Israel. After we were separated, all of a sudden we were like guests. “We were given a good meal and taken on a tour of the city before we Were put on a plane to Paris.” -^'^flS^-PuTierar 'semce^^ll be held Thursday, July 25, at 11 a. at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with Rev. Robert Hudgins officiating. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery, Mr. Burgess will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours: 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) Switches Meters ment in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens. Mrs. Strangeland will lie in state at the Donelson - Johns Funeral Home after 7 p.m. this evening. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) WRIGHT, LILLIAN H.; July 24, 1968; 18 Dakota; age 62; beloved wife of, Owen G. Wright; dear mother of Mrs. William Morris and kfrs. Richard Abraham; also survived by seven g r a n d ,c h i Idren. Funeral EL DORADO. Kan. lAP) ~ Mrs, Robert Baird has switched | from checking parking meters; to checking water meters, After^ serving some tirtie posting; tickets on windshields > f! Lindsey, Joseph and Arthur overtime parkers, she has now! Cordingley; also survived by jbecome the dty’s first feminine | 6 grandchildren. F u n e r a 1 water, jneter reader. | ^service willJae held Thursday, CORDINGLEY, ALFRED; July 21, 1968 ; 5108 Chipman Waterford Township; age 55 beloved husband of Valerie GorJingley; .beloved son of Mrs. Sarah Cordingley; dear • service., will be held Friday, father of Mrs. Radford July 26, at 1 p.m. at the (Sarah) Penland; depr step father of Gilbert and Donald Lwigo; dear brother of Mrs. ‘ Sarah Whitebread,- Mrs. Ina Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in llVhite Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Wright will lie in stata at the funeral home after 7 p.m. Wednesday. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) ■ • ' . THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. JULY 24, 1968 PONTIAC PRISS CUSSDPIED ADVERTISING INDEX NOTICES Card of Thanks _____ In Memoriam ........ Announcements . Florists ....... Funeral Directors . ...... 1 ....... 9 ....... 3 .......3-A 4 Cemetery Lots .............4-A Personals .................4-B Lost and found -..;..........5 EMPLOYMENT j Help Wanted Mole...........6 j Help Wanted Female......... 7 ! Help Wanted M. or F........8 Soles Help, Male-Female.. .8-A Employment Agencies______'.. 9 Employment Information ...9-A Instructions-Schools ...____10 Work Wanted Male ..........11 Work Wanted Female.........12 Work Wanted Couples .... 12-A SERVICES OFFERED Building Services-Supplies.. .13 ; Veterinary..................14 ; Business Service............15 Bookkeeping and Taxes......16 Credit Advisors...........16-A Dressmaking and Tailoring..17 Gardening ..................18 Landscaping..............18-A Garden Plowing _____.....18-B ' Income Tax Service ........19 i Laundry Service ............20 Convalescent—Nursing ......21 Moving and Trucking.......22 Painting and Decorating,.. .23 , Television-Radio Service.....24 Upholstering.........._.^^24-A -----Trcmsportation ...........25 Insurance...................26 Deer Processing............2^ WANTED Wanted Children to Board..28 Wanted Household Goods...29 Wanted Miscellaneous.......30 Wanted Money................31 Wanted to Rent .............32 Shore Living Quorters......33 Wanted Real Estate.........36 RENTALS OFFERED Apartments—Furnished.......37 Aportitients-Unfurnished ... 38 Rent Houses, Furnished ....39 Rent Houses, Unfurnished. . .40 Prope’-ty Management....40-A Rent Lake Cottages.........41 Hunting Accommodations 41-A Rent Rooms..................42 Rooms With Board...........43 Rent Farm Property.........44 Hotel-Motel Rooms..........45 Rent Stores.................46 Rent Office Space...........47 Rent Business Property...47-A Rent Miscellaneous.........48 REAL ESTATE----------- Sole Houses ................49 Income Property............50 lake Property .............51 Northern Property .......5J-A Resort Property ...........52 Suburban Property .........53 lots—Acreage ...............54 Sole Farms .............,...56 Sole Business Property ,...57 Sole or Exchange ..........58_____ Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Press Wont Ads FOR FAST ACTION ADS RECEIVED BY b P M. WILL BE PUBLISHED THE F-OLLOWING DAY. >rr»ct. The Pres BER.'' No od|u»tment« wi CASH WANT AD RATES Funeral Directon i LOVINO MEAAORY o and brother Dennis A But always a beautiful memory loVIhFO MEMORY OF turned to scenes I Grandmother Wilson. IN ME'mORY’OF'JO P*. RUZICH who passed away two years ago today, July 24, 1966: Gonie but not forgotten. Sadly missed by a friend Phyllis J. Cotcher._____ IN LOViNG MEMORY of Ullie m’ Sadly missed by Gladys Moore, Announcements with’ A Payday Payment Let Debt-Aid, professional credit counselors provide you with confidential money management service that has helped thousands solve their bill problems. Getting a big loan Is not the answer. You can't borrow yourself out of debt! Get the help you've been looking tor by faking all vour bills and discussing your problems: . DEBT-AID, Inc, SO< Community Nat'l. Bnk FE J-0181 Licensed & Bondi Bldg. FINANCIAL Business Opportunities....59 Sale Land Contracts.......60 Wanted Contracts-Mtges.. .60-A Money to Lend ............61 Mortgage Loans............62 | MERCHANDISE Swops .....................63 Sole Clothing .............64 Sole Household Goods......65 Antiques .............. 65-A | Hi-Fi, TV & Radios ........66 | Wotw Softeners ......... 66-A I For Sale Miscellaneous .... 67 Christmas Trees......'...67-A Christmas Gifts..........67-8 Hand Tools—Machinery..... 63 Do It Yourself.............69 Cameras—Service ...........70 Musical Goods..............71 Music Lessons............71-A Office Equipment...........72 Store Equipment............73 Sporting Goods.............74 fishing Supplies—Baits .... .75 Sand—Gravel-Dirt ..........76 Wood—Coal—Coke-^Fuel ....77 Pets-Huntipg Dogs .........79 Pet Supplies-Service....79-A Auction Soles .............80 Nurseries..................81 Plants—Trees-ShrubS^.... 81-A Hobbies end Supplies.......82 ________FARM-MER0IAND1SE- r-r livestock ............... 83 Meats ...................83-A Hay-Grain-Feed ....; — 84 Poultry....................85 Farm Produce...............86 Farm Equipment.............87 AUTOMOTIVE Travel Trailers ...........88 Housetraiiers..............89 Rent Trailer Space....... 90 Commercial Trailers ......90-A Auto.Accessories ........,.9l Tires—Auto-Truck .. —...92 Auto Service ............ 93 Motor Scooters.............94 Motorcycles................95 Bicycles ..................96 Boats—Accessories ........ 97 Airplanes .................99 Wanted Cors-Trucks........101 Junk Cars-Trucks——101-A Used Auto-Truck Ports ... 102 New end Used Trucks .... .103 Auto-Marine Insurance ...104 Foreign Cars .............105 New and Used Cart ......106 HALL FOR RENT. 37 W. Yale St. _______ FE 2-007i._ ^__________________________ HALL FOR RENT, RECEPTIONS, lodges, church. OR 3-5205. FE 2- _383«^_________________________ RAWUEIGH products AT BIG BM-i67o’. 38 ChVchill Road. Auburn BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the following boxes: C-10 C-33, C-35, C-36, C-45, C-46. C-48, C-57, C-71, C-79, C-94. Funeral Directors ' 4 COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS____«72-046l C . J. GODH A ROT FUN E R AL -HOME , ___l^ego Harbor, Ph. 6B2-0200._ Huntoon FUNERAL HOME r TRY : IT! OTHER . DO,,, Other folks moke money j from Pontiac Press WANT ADS j If you haven't , , . try j one. Hundreds of others do . . . doily! It pays ... It's quick, simple ond productive. Just look oround your' home, goroge and basement and list the many items that you no longer use. Hundreds of readers ore searching The Press's classified columns doily for just such drtkles. Perhaps the piggy bonk itself would bring more than the change that it'holds I Try it! YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU’ DID! Phone 332-818,1 "Jboughtful Service^__ VoorheesSiple Cemetery Lots AT WHITE CHAPEL, $95 EACH. Ml 2-3534._ hTte chapel, Oakland HiTR, __ _ i.j^onfjclenna AVOID GARNISHMENTS Get out of debt with our [Han Debt Consultants 814 Pontiac State Bank Building FE 8-0333 * state Licensed—Bonded Open Saturday 9-12 a.m. _ AUTO Ylean-up "and "waxYng', J, stca CART RIDES AND pony PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM $50. 625^4590. _ ___ ON AND AFTEr YhIS DATE, July responsible Help Wanted Male ASSEMBLERS SPOTTERS DRILL PRESS OPERS. 58' HOUR WEEK O&W TOOL ENG. Sale, -jraph, No phone _____________ ^ ARE YOU A GOOD ENOUGH BODY REPAIR MAN TO APPPRAISE THE COST OF ANY JOB? If you can make quick, fair estimates of auto damage, we need you as an appraiser. P'ay is above average. Fringe benefits are ex- nothing less. Interested? Cali Mr. Joska at EL 6-4000 for an Interview. ALLSTATE INSURANCE CO. 16130 N'oiYhTarTd^Pri^ Southfield WantedJVlala^^^ ELECTRICAL PANEL WIREMAN 2545 industlrai Row Plenty of work. Contact i AUTO MECHANICS WANTED NOW! FE 27992. Vigs by Calderone. S T R A T I O NS, hair. Kuttkuhn wigs, Wigland, 332 W. Huron, FE 5-2953 WIG ' D E AAOJli-J-R-A-'Pi:0 NS, ._-G4JAR7WTTED^100 per cent _VVi^and, J32 W._Hu^ron,^ f"e 5-2953! WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY B Y Lost and Found $200 REWARD FOR INFORMATION concerning 2 rolls of carpet, stolen from Coleman's Furniture Mart, 536 N. Perry, kitty-corner from K-Mart. They were taken from our loading dock on the evening of 7-17, 7-8 P.m. 1 roll is 12x31 royal blue, the other Is 12x34 avocado. Contact D. J. Coleman, FE 4-9615. RO. FE 2-4395._________________ LOST: 1 OVAL SHAPED blue ceramic earring with darker blue the Pontiac Press downtown. "H found please^ call_OR_3-7080. LOST; CHILD'S YORKSHIRE Tert c. Rd., answers _to_;;puffy"^rew^djj68^-408^_ LOST; LAKE ORION, biack'and white male Wire Haired Terrier, long curly hair, but neck clipped. LOST: JULY 5. Female German short hair pointer. FE 8-8894. Lost: MALE BEAGLE, wearing otf the 1963 Chevy .. Pontiac Press Parking lot please ' return them, YOU WERE SEENI Help Wanted Male 6 1 MAN PART TIME presently in Industrial accounting to discuss with us, or any_ mfimber^-of our ^Uft, -thr-opporTunTties in -pubTTE^iccountinq and specifically our firm. Send resume to; JANZ & KNIGHT, CPA's nOO N. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM, MICH. AGGRESSIVE AND AMBITIOUS Young man wanted for retail automobile sales. Excellent op-portunity — will train. 624-3192. ALUMINUM SIdI NG. experiVneed man with tools wanted.- "Spare time. Union Lake, 863-7627, eve. Applicators ^ SIDING-1 Trim Top pay for quality work, group Insurance. Steady, good future with young growtng co. Pontiac ■ coMect_537-6940.__ , ARC WELDERS , Structural Lay-Out Men Flat Welders $3.33 per hour 3 position vyelders $3.48 per hour. Steel Cor Ls s fs TAnY^~“r’e'1'YT\u'r^^^ manAg-"” - - - ---- Attention Are you looking for a full time job with advancement possibilities, we now need 10 men to do pleasant outdoor work In Pontiac area 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. daily, only those who can slart immediately need^ AUTO service CONTROL TOWER OPERATOR knowledge, good working conditions. and fringe benefits. Contact service marrager, Ed Rtnke Chevrolet, 26125 Van Dyke, Centerline, Mich. _ . ASSISTANT “FOREM AN ^ Auditors Progressive CPA firm has immediate openings for outstanding senior and junior accountants. Suburban location, diversified practice, excellent compensation ' and opportunity. Outstonding fringe benefits. ELECTRICIAN perlence to loin our MAINTENANCE Dept, as an electrician. A generalist with an eye for trouble • shooting desired. Salary open to negotiation. Excellent tringe-benefts and working conditions. Contact St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, 900 Woodward, Pontiac. FE 8-9111. ENGINEERING ASSISTANT CITY OF TROY $2.95-83.80 per hour Excellent opportunity for on the lob training and growth In all phases of engineering work. Steady work with excellent fringe benefits. High school graduate with surveying experience required. Contact Personnel Department, 500 W. Big Beaver Rd., Troy, 489-4900._____ EAVESTROUGH INSTALLER OR semi experienced. Inquirt 4162 W. WaHon. Drayton Plains._________ „ „ , „ minimum of supervision. Work Is varied, challenging; demands good skills, experienced 541-8666._______ EXPERiENCEb Ci^lNET finisher. Beauty-Rite Cablhets. 673-1196. FITTERS FOR STEFL PLATE EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS FACTORY VVORKERS Help Wanted Male _______ ___ hydraulic sysler..., also pumping plants. Union shop. Wages commensurate with ex-petience. 396;2236. Royal Oak. LIFE INSURANCE Brokerage Supervisor The Imperial Life Assurance Co. of Canada ottered an experienced brokerage man, to work out of our new Detroit-north branch in Southfield. This is one of several new « planned program of expansion. With over 75 branches in 7 countries, this^ 71-year- , Gaunt, 353-8901. MAN w"lTH experience with painting contractor/ 673-2671. _ MAN MECHANICALLY INCLINED for heating, elr conditioning, pipe fitting and duct work. Liberal benems, hospital, and steady. 682- MANAGEMENT POSITION KOPPY TOOL CORP. 1530 Farrow Ferndale BODY MAN, EXPERIENCED collision r»pair. Must have own tools. Guaranteed wage. Steady work, year around, apply in person. Judge's Collision. 165 W. 14 Mile Rd. Clawson. I8t‘9220.__ BOLT /VIAKER SET-UP OPERATOR ill round _ - _ iced nee opportunity and fringe b< MICHIGAN SCREW Porducts Company 6400 E. n Mile Rd._____1 BROILER MAN. MUSY holidays. Apply BUMPERS alified to earn top v FAIR experience CARPENTER CREW 673-1291 332-9647 CARPENTER, FOREMEN ________ -Vrite Pontiac Prei_ . C-26, Include, work references. CARPENTERS, ROUGH, FC custom builder, overtime, ste< 646-4431. Eves., 586-2140. ___,‘nced, capable of tak charge of a busy deparfrm unlimited opportunity tor vancemenis. Top salary, bene and bonus. Apply In person. Pe n makeup, steady work, LI 5- COOK-HELPER, START $2 PER hr. Must have transportation. Centaur Farm Restaurant. 5600 Drake R0.J26-9222._________’ COOK - GR'iLLMAN. Top PBV tor good man. 5 days. Benefits. Vaca- • tion. Biff's, Telegraph at Maple (15, -. -Mi1e)v—..............--------- - ■ ' CARPENTERS ' ROUGHERS OR CREWS Iininn Elst 400 west Side work. itial. Weekdays, 358-4470, :ves. and WeeTcends, 626-4485. E.M. NOLAN CONTRACTING CO. An Equal Opportunity Ennployer Resi DESIGNERS special automatic steady year-arund reasonable 1800 W 642-3200. DENTAL TECHNICIAN Permanent position, to nepl man retiring. Hospital and ret., ment benefits. FE 4-8701, Zien Dental Lab., 512 Pontiac ' Bank Bldg^__________ DATA PROCESSING OPENINGS 3 Immediate openings, In both programming and operations. are with well-known growing companies. Salary to $11,500. Call or write Paul A. Rancour: Hudson Personnel Service 820. Commerce Building Grand Rapids_____^58-^614 "DifREPMR AND PRESS (MAINTENANCE 2725 NAKOTA Design Leatder Progressive company, not 4 |ob shop, offers permanent ppsitlon with good viiorking conditions, top rates,. fringe benefits, reasonable overtime and opportunity for ad,-vancement to qualified individual. Must have experience on special machines and related toolings and be capable of assuming responsibility for entire design group. Reply to. Box 218, Troy, /. Paid vacations, holidays, and er fringe benefits. Apply Sally Martinizing, EARN THE M0ST-(-SELL THE BEST-BRITANNICA 65 S. ______ 26117 Grand River 2320 Hilton Rd. garbage tr FLORIDA MOTEL MGR. Beach Section Ft. Lauderdale, 30 units, experienced man and wife •--m. Wife to do offtea," Troirt I supervise housekeeping. employment, salary and turn. apt. For appointment mail resume to George Martin, P.O. Box No. 40, Petoskey, Michigan.____________ FRY COOK Experienced. Evening work. Pleasant working conditions. Good ----- ■■-Inges. Apply GRADUATE EM I ST, EXPERIENCED in Industrial finish water soluable, or electrocoat background preferred; but would train experienced paint chemist. Salary open with exc^lent gross potential. Send resume or call Robert T. Mlnshull; Guardian Coatings, Corp. 16255 Wahrman, _ Romulus, Mich. 941-4040.______ EXPERIENCED SURFACE Grinding hand, experienced mill hand on HSS form tools. Trainees welcomed. Overtime, benefits. 626-0626. Equal Tool. ___________________ I.D -O.D. GRINDER HAND. Must be experienced. Reply to Pontiac Press Box C-10.______ INSPECTOR - EXPERIENCED on machined parts. Good wages, plus fringe benefits. Precision Automatic Parts. 366 S, Blvd. " :t. Pontia- GIRL FOR LIGHT BOOKKEEPING, answer telephone, some typing.. Barbers Flying Service, Pontidc Airport, 6744)336. ________ GENERAL AND JOB superln-tendants, for design and build firm, specializing In industrial and conirnercial construction. The _ 8-65(10;_______^ GOOD AND EXPERIENCED C3£penter^35-4111,_ext;_2568._ HANOYAAAN, EXPERIENCED all a round for fine custom home builder In Oakland County area. Must have station wagon or truck. Snyder and Snyder Builders call after 7 p.m. 358-2488. ______ INSPECTORS CITY OF TROY' $3.25 t0-$3.65 per hour generous fringe benefits. Contact personnel department, 500 W. Bl0i Rpajy Rd., Troy. 689,-4900.___ intelligent NEATLY DRESSED YOUNG MAN Age 19 to 25, to work with our customers. Immediate opening regardless of experience. Guaranteed $800 per month if you meet our requirements. Automatic increases. Call 338-9618 . 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m^MnJtoeg.__________ JAZZ PIANIST. BETWEEN 18 AND 21. Experience necessary, 673-2223. J 6 U R N EYMEN CARPENTERS, good roughers, steady year around work, west side residential. 357-353-0536. LABORER FOR BRICK 0 476-5698. Help Wanted Male —_____________ _________ ._rTrgro5s $7,000-89,000. Immediate full time lobs available naar your home. We train you to teach driving and provide you with the customers - ettarader. 5. Full time only. FOR INTERVIEW PHONE: FE 8-9444 EXECUTIVE OFFICES 15032 GRAND RIVER AVE. OPEN 7 A.M. TO 10 P.M. _ MACHINE REPAIR AND MAINTENANCE MAN Needed at once, good wage: fringes, Including cost ot livin; overtime. Apply 366 S. Blvd. Eas Precision Automatic Parts Co unlicensed steam boiler and minor machine repair. Allen Cooler 8. Ventilator, Rochester._________________ and lathe work. 214 W. Walton. MECHANICS Also helpers and parts clerks. Hourly rate. Must be able to work any shift. Apply positions. Must be Intelll sharp and neat appearing, those who can start work mediately need apply. $145 WEEKLY SALARY To start offer to all building maintenance. Call or apply at Season-All Industries, 26051 Michigan Ave., Inkster. 565-9200, MANUFACTURER OF elactro-mechamcal- auaducts needs experienced foreman tor afternoon shift. Apply Syncro Corporation, MECHANICAL ENGINEER and Assoc. Call 342-8935 or 626- 1915.___________________________ MECHANICS, BUMPERS AND, Moonlighters — Retirees Part-time work, 5 nights per week. 9 p.m. to'2 a.m. Write letter with phone number to Pontiac Press and persohiiblL 338-4061. r 25, dependable MULTIPLE SPINDLE AUTOMATIC operators and set up men. Good wages and benefits; second shift. Plant In Pontiac, Precision Automatic Parts Co. 333-7983. NEW FORD DEALER needs ex-p erlenced mechanics, excellent opportunity In recreation area. Call 616-723-6551 collect or write, P.O. Box 299, Manistee, Michigan. OPERATORS - NORTHWEST 6 backhoe,'Allis Chalmers bulldozer. Lots ot hours digging large lake. Private |ob. Call between 8 a m. and 7 p.m. 678-2248 Metamora Mich. _______________________________ ORDER DESK AND office wSrk. Industrial. Steady lob for man nver 30. Sand comoleta resume and 9 Press Box C- OUTBOARD MECHANIC, full time work. 335-5660. Help Wanted Male 6 TOOL AND DIE MAKERS GENERAL MACHINISTS TEMPLATE MAKERS (Aircraft Sheet Metal) Apply In Person 8 A.M. to 4 P.M. Mon. Thru Sot. Or Coll Collect ’ , 539-0300 Ext. 251 / MISSILES AND SPACE , DIVISION-MICHIGAN LTV AEROSPACE CORP. Erfiployment Office — North Gate Von Dyke at 16’/2 Mile Rd. Warren, Michigan 4N EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Help Wanted Male 6 ..... OIL COMPANY - LOOKING FOR* A GENERAL - SALESMAN operations, experienced preferred but not essential. We will also consider gas station managers lor this position.^Please send complete PONTIAC PRESS C-64 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN 48056 PART TIME PART TIME all-round help. Evenings '‘OTlF^weekends. Apply at? Chicken Delight after 7 p.m. 1302 PROTOTYPE AL MEN EXPERIENCED~~ONLY TOP WAGES TOP FRINGES Anzick Mfcj Co. . 23675 MOUND ROAD WARREN, MICHIGAN BETWEEN 9 and 10 MILE ROAD RETIRED OR SEMI retired gentleman for light work, FE 4- _______ Real Estate Salesmen jobs, used REWARD $100 CASH REWARD IN ONLY 90 DAYS _ Me will pay to the wife of the —- ‘-■-g (]flo It he proves Mr. Giuliani, Ml 4-1930. ROOFERS CLARK5TON ROOFING SALESMAN ' with speciality or Intangible tales background. $150 weekly guarantee to man meeting our requirements in Pontiac Area. Call W. G; Stanton, Flint, 235-8561 from 8 a.m. until noon and 7 p.m. until 10 p.m., Monday through Thursday._____ Service Representative For national company In Pont|ac SALESMAN WANTED A national company s benefits. Write Pontiac ness DUX C-54.________________________ SERVICE MAN ON new house work to take care of customers after move in. Should have some finish carpentry experience. Truck furnished. Weekly salary to start, $150. Steady work with large con-cern. Call Mrs. Davey, 273-8100. L LAYOUT men a ■lospitallzatlon, p a . _ d holiday. Call 566-0775. Help Waaje^ Molp Salesmen *4iEN'S CLOTHING AND SHOES full TIME OR PART TIME Career opportunity tor the aggressive person who Is planning a fine future. Experience preferred but not essential. Excellent employe benefits Include: MAXIMUM EARNINGS 4 PURCHASE DISCOUNTS HOSPITALIZATION LIFE INSURANCE LIBERAL VACATION POLICY PAID VACATIONS RETIREMENT PLAN Apply in Person Employment Office Basement Hu(dson's Pontiac Mall_____ Service Manager Lloyd Bridges Dodge Walled Lake. 624-1572 See Mr. Bridges, top. Salary and incentives, for good experienced . SH()RT^0RDER"CObK . Over 25. Days or nights. Experienced, Apply 3611 W. Maple at _ Lahser;_Birmlngh^._ _ SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT or Mechanic Apprentice, good wages, uniforms f u r n . , hospitalization avail.7 53 S. Washington, Oxford, Mich. ______ Supervisors FOR Boy Crews structures will produce you better than average earnings. Must have good personality and eniny working with youag boys. Experience in Direct-sales will be helpful but not For further information please call between 5:30 and 8:00 p.m. MR. THNtE Y-334-498i _ TooL and Die ienced die try-out men, _____, ,/panded production. portunity for advancement. Top wages and all fringe benefits. weekdays 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. call 264-6100 ext. 260 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 a.m. and weekends, call Mr. Purdy, 756-0090; Mr. Gllray, 644-4013; Mr, Pauffman 644-4591 or APPLY IN PERSON 8:30 a.m. to ^B^IGGS MFG. COMPANY 6600 Esat 15 Mile Road ____________Warren^ _____________ TOOL DESIGN” Immediate Openings for - LAYOUT MEN DETAILERS CHECKERS With experience on body fixtures. Lena orooram.. overtime, full Koltanbar Engi- 1-366-S040 Ext. 247.__ TV REPAIRMAN Benchman or road man must know color TV. Apply Tech TV, 14U Help Wanted Male Help Wanted Male ENGINEERS (With Imagination) We We^iooktfta4oc-an industrial or material handling engineer (or two) interested in a pdsitTd^n leacItlTg 16 a rewarding career in material handling equipment SYSTEM sales.- Rapisttrn rt ^ International corporation with fine benefits and depth training programs. Contact: H. R. EITHER Rapistan Incorporated 22223 Telegraph Rd. Southfield, Mich. 48075 . Phone 444-4355 MICHIGAN ■ BELL Has iormediate full time openings in Pontiac, Detroit and throughout the Metropolitan area fort • LINEMEN • INSTALLERS • ELECTRICAL TECHNICIANS • FULL PAY DURING TRAINING • HIGHER STARTING WAGES • EXCELLENT BENEFITS APPLY NOW! Rood 201, Leland House, 400 Bagley, Detroit Room S-175 — 23500 Northwestern Hwy., Southfield 19992 Kelly Rd., Detroit (near Eastland), MICHIGAN BELL Port of the Nationwide Bell System An Equal Opportunity Employtr TRAINEES I . ^ ........... thYplaSse CO., INC. THE I’OXTJAC' PUKSS. WE1)\K,S1)AV, Jl'LV 24. ]9(!8 ;" WOMAN FE 3-7377 OR 682-1774 eISs’ik'IS TROY STORE HAS POSI-TIONS AV Executive AVAILABLE FOR )PENINGS FOR MANAGER, ASSISTANT MANAGERS, ORS, SALES, DISPLAY, AL-i TERATIONS, AND CASH- Telephone pl'easant working en-vironment plus top oaies salary and company part time benefits, apply ONLY; ENINGS AND SATURDAYS IF EXPERIENCED AT OUR ', PONTIAC STORE. ALVIN'S 892 WEST HURON will Wanted Female 12 ^ B & B AUCTION ,^.EP.,OE.ATeO w„.r, ..... 24-A 13 20 TO 50 PCT. OFF Attention Young ................... _ All Fee Paid "''"'"uS™ ,g.A _com’r^upho,...rv. Pontiac Press g . '*7fr « ™"e»s Want Ads Rd„ poT,'unity En?p,ever. URGENTLY NEEDED peripnee necessary. Moving ond Trucking 22 camorrria, Seattle Fnr“Arfinn "S-irfsr""'’-'""'"" ... I": r.sr ?s,;= ^ ^ .a:::'S ■.... .......................................................... tfrif 1 SECRETARY IT TAKES StRVfCI- SUPPUSS - IQUIPMINT I'' 33?-«^5 o;^^.pe (TWO TO TANGO) .............................................. ........... i Se^' Xt'' sHF,r D^rlTe”: ' FALES^WOMEN^ ■sYoF7?d%t°dn7pt^rrsrnFr, Air conditioning Credit Advisors ' Painting and Decorntir Ladies |Ag“'lrs"“ SHf3SI^ 1S.9R ri™-”. ?.r„E SATFS -St-.M-.t.,'- ~ AIu™.u» BM,. ,..n„ ”< “■ ^mT r? ~ 18-25 “P"o'Women ‘ Needed PUNCH PRESS . OPERATORS _... . ..ii “ ■ iif INCOME Adequate? Call OOl-IUOU y, York REAL ESTATE. ;a°S"St' Dream »'5owe.k. Come True aaT "Criri??C^ I J;rjree^\Y',r DRAFTING teed .ee A„.aTeP- A'upeMoY^: Dressmaking, Tailoring house ^p^a^i^nj , n g. guaranteed . can P, a.,3t?t arryunne. ALTERATION. -w^e?,-?pe' =;:;n ^FL™sa™'“"Upg|l|- .. . r». Economic. .„d Ein.ncr ^Rn’IeIGHTS PAVING 'Up‘'SS.,:nV;.tr?l Sales Help Male-Female 8-A Sales Rep Trainee DOMING CONST. CO. WE SPECIALIZE IN INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 2335 Dixie Your Dream 's|Ard;Sl'£'3 EVENINGS AND SATURDAYS Come TrUO „r’::rr:;agA^;:rcap ;'.?»™."'»Ei! CLXit“;,'SLKt;.™;|Secrelary i “JLw.Se'iS™ :,2*5S„"“'••'■'”" «”■! beaches cleaned ' ™-j»^^rycs- p„LL,,,............... 'sSet .„. ............. .... ...^ ‘wS'i =.• M.d..i..ti.. - '--A..,, ■'‘U™rE=""EY€, sfesi ;'~t 13, r”'^i5"r HAULIKO »-«•. FI ■ Truck Rentol '“'Trucks to Rent ; Farm ( Indusrtial Trartor Co. S, WOODWARD^ WITTY’S LAWN MOWER repair. E“nr,a"Yk'l^*’RX c CUSTOM CONCRETE CO. ' " ' ***"" rrn"SHDa?S?r'"''‘’'''^' ^ i --ifV 5 .\V^‘ -i-n ...S'lffM? .... _ _ U 'lMJO PRIVATE, NEAR YMCA, a»l*S'fc?Sag; r'. rooms - ■■ ■■■■ * “ WlLr PAV »M POR »nv , kind ol ' THK PONTIAC FRES.S. VVEDXKSIJAV. Jl LV 24. 1968 ^ i«' ____L fHONE: 313-685-1585 B ROYER iiV2-BEORO?)M SMALLER RANCH - HOLLY LAKE FRONT - \^irc S; il^jTo Crestbrook MODEL OPEN----- ivan w. .... SCHRAM _____ SiSiySidHS^^^ OPEN DAILY 9-9 SUMMER COTTAGE "9mi recreation ''°rodm ™8nd List With SCHRAM takr Ro«d Uid.y. S.ld* .«clu5,v,ly rX"oom with brick flrk" " ^ LIVf IN THE CITY MODEL SISLOCK & KENT, INC. no, Pontiac S,6.. Bank Bid., Share Uving BENIAMIN 5c live in the city MODEL holly f “ BISHOPDNC. KENT' home .h.H. irnn. n,„. nntin ,„ backvard, X>V.i_J±Ni OPEN SAT., SUN. 1-5 - Teauty W lI:; on one floor " Homes ,.. ■ RENTING $78 Mo. CC4TTLEY REALTY L"“n"d $10 Deposit "c?r'’'’i , d.n,n« arS^lSHrS %iItr^?’"'' 'tpc?”.? r; K« , L,c. HAYom^ Tbedroom^hJme I os: For Immediate Actior V nrrnoaTAn-t, ..p.Mr- SPLIT LEVELS - 2 ..ity^OvV .ppralsar 18 awaCind.. ,o-(;^trNCiES ALL CASH , ^ ^ MODEL OFFICE: 623-0670 TAKELA'ilDlsfATir'' Y UnK ^ ‘issYs; SS ..;k™ 'tHt!?' GAYLORD'I; *'h£l“°nice "’raX^''^ioi'°N'Ta'r' Longo Reolty 2 rcrEOsloThcr’s'LrolA 5c Building Co. L^'ftgl^^TnlnTro’o’^^LiP^T;: ^,'Pnc^ar«y'ar^G^'b?dL'o"LrTiS" .7" Da, no money down s.r. ^S-rEE'-MS'^ 2°'Y,'NronIaBe' 477-7418 ZZ«ZLr ‘“ ANDERSON _ . _________ "00 ^0- cc- s as; , "fIrD 'VlMrOFFRED 363-2511 T-- , ,, Pi LD A Y vacant bilt-homes 689-0760 ®-" YORK "•si? 'SgsifiS .... ..MADISON. .. 731-0500 ^’’^InRnnMC FROM $140^ a’p- 1702 S. Telegraph Realtor ' r .....,7?'"' Lauinger .... HIITER REAL ESTATE WE BUY WE TRADE FE 8-7176 OR 4-0363 ^.5w,,nd, zerck.,sal,,e_._ ^ The Rolfe H. Smith Co. . j HURON GARDENS........ ! 5 of oniy S7900 with monthiy.payments of s,,eidon B. Smith, Realtor j ^r^nrt.^gas^^heat,^?^ ^arj Sid iToniy^HVoSo*''*'’ ' ri VoWTriVi ------ T~N T .7" i 4-BEDROOM HOMES nHUJirvA L"T HIGHWOOD yiLLAGE ' YC)RK ' - ya1r oyeIsi'ied'’%G-car' garage, hrirk and ^ ^ COSWAY REAL ESTATE Solc HoUSCS Pontiac Press rL Want Ads ARE FAMOUS FOR "ACTION".,, .: “‘ ;:1,■■-■5^™*=-"- ■ "i“ -s.-«K:d...w—-- s^=~' H 8 7176 F?j7fJr APD/^ 'rS-W j:“r* „ ,, NtWLY WEDS OR RETIREES - KEATINGTON ..AEur6^ '^JBrdS .SCsir-irE',.£“'.2??^^;;-’='.,„,.... ......... HALL • huron ars^Rd^*'--^ OPEN .:;,» .SSV'”"S— iiig i-J'U 1 VI/ESJ SIDE c. PANGUS 4NC„ R€oltors «St d7wn !^s: ealtof o.r,e tvt LALL 0 / 3-SOdO^^E A TED'S « •’ EA0Pd»,™.T.^o.,..a,n OR 4-3105 • lazenby strujee rilfci rfSs FRUSHOUR ,1. MrPn.Hpr I ’ e, I $a-5"^nr,'r»ch4l'’*S5r.;?“TOS REALTOR xu.c ,n,P. v, uo..r' LAKES AREA de rV\CbrU06r j home is well kept arxJ in a very aooroximatelv SIOOO and live \*/c tdapiC THIS I DVFl Y HOME >. .. OUR LADY OF THE s;,±s«r4i *'lotrir. , BOATING, LOTS OF SILVER LAKE ESTATES ...-...... “™~“- 'Editors ”"28 e. Hurt's" DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY ?85-mo^ oT«Ea t Sf’Eoi *’ relegraph Roads rqyCE LAZENBY, Realtor - terms. Fha or G,. _ 4a°fw‘’wa^.LV■oR^^^^ DRAYTON PLAINS ' TID'\ A 7’T1\T £,s^"5i :?i "'Sii& HBl K/sm " '“and 2 _ r„n":'r,dt”'‘' ^ LOW DOWN PAYMENT L?n??L'!lf _ „ euA r, ON A LAND CONTRACT NOTHING HOWARD T. . .„,o.r„S,, ........................... ?;;;.,■ sr.r-ay KEATING r^n =«? IRWIN 2425 AVONDALE; s'tIs sFilr"; Pi Ms Les FE5-8I83 Brown 2350 ELLERY; BRICK RANCH stone and cedar ranch on- =v^,rfsss^^ R„r'-^"“"'.biuuT;. soJthside '••••'Best Buys -ni'Tw:“E.™r MILLER Today Leona lovSand RIFLE RIVER beautiful lake LOT --£S^' C. P/ ' iBmmm ; mmsi WARD'S ORCHARD HERRINGTON HILLS pjp5s4gggiSg Tf’YOU'RE DETERMINED Tr2-iJ262 VafW Wayap^iFFrL.. - si;?.; -m. a¥fSfsNYraR, a its., 'S! •»- KINNEY & ‘ ; Times^fi^lty ill! i’Hs;—« „J”{Ss.2r'" 'sraSBzr— |^^;5pS^-:ENNETT| ■ ■ . a" .3'' ■: ■■ 1'^' .■ ■ '.■ ,’ THE PONTIAC PRESS. nVP:DXESDAY. JULY 24, 19 lousehold Goodf 65 TIZZY Bv Kate Osahn For THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1968 Pe»^Huntin8^^*__ 79 free *>»nict#r»d back and tan males, i SHORTHAJR POINTERS, ®«c bloodlines, regislered, 7 wks. m;.B359 aft. •* n >n T^el Trolleri 88 or lOVj FOOT PICKUP Camoers. GooDELu Trailers 3700 $. Rochester Rd. 657-4550 5' ALUMINUM CAMPING trilTir, with accessories, sleeps 5 or a S450. 3305 Shin3mons Rd.. ms.nnw 1' dreamer PLAINSi^'N, ^78-7488. ®Sred°^"^ho^s'^Ta'rf^croJ.a': Ho'llow T^JmbSX ■'"^RlSHiEfTEW wlielped June 7, sired by cham'-^on ot_Be_nch-Field. FE ?.7387. last call FO^R labra'dor r'etriever^ .SLSI!? AAJOVE'a 681-0395 or <87-! 1963 apache eagleT^^ spare tire, storage cabinet. / Room, exc. condition. $350. X 50 REGAL. Fully arpeted and skirted. ■E 4-5807 tor tippt. Motorcycles RICHARDSON, 2-bedroom, TRIUMPH CUB, sacrifice tor ) or make otter, TOO CC, Knob- - -i. 335-5496.________ V967 HONDA S90. Excellent con- Auctlon, 693-1671.'_____________________ 1967 HARLEY Davidson Sportster. .1 2-BEDROOM DETROITER, 1 1967 SYZUKl 7(5, 200 CC, exc. con- 1965 HOLLY, 20 FT. .Ji!!.® new. FE 5-6279. 1966" CHAMPION TRAVEL" self-contained,! VER^~AKC.I 5, $695. FE 2-6200 or| l"965 miniature AKC dachswn'dT ol"5~english sheepdog, “l3 weeks, AKC, champion S295. 475-1125._________ Pekingese puppie^/ POODLE CLIPPING AND g Pur"EBRE“D ENGLISH SETTER nuppies, $30. 682-1070. registered toy fox ditlon, 1-255-3087. 585-1276 or 585-5789,' Royal Oak. 1968 Starcroft Campers CRUirEVu|?INC. ^ Walton Dally 9-6 FE 8-4402 AIR STREAM ernational 26 toot, completely f-contalned, tandem wheels, ctric brakes, excellent condition, rIsh SETTERS,; SCOTTISH terrier poppies, AKC, AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIG 3 get a demonstration i shepherd ^o'°'^Terrlr m^xed puppies $5. Shots Included on all pops. Health guaranteed. 349-1102._________________________ foY....POODLES, white male, 4 HEILITE CAMPER, CENTURY YELLOWSTONE travel TRAILERS " allty at any bu" ‘ SPECIAL uallty at any budget SPECIAL Yellowstone Truck Camper ' unOSUALLY pretty kittens ^3771 Highland One lO'/S' a.._ ., Special Price STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. BOB Hutchinson's 21st . Anniversary SALE YES, 21 YEARS Bob has been in Mobile Home Sales Bob Hutchinson Invites you to see the all new $22,000 DOUBLE-WIDE KROPF HOME 1400 SQ. FT, FLOOR SEE THE ALL NEW DETROITERS F ee d*1”e y to^300 ml Open Daily 'til B p.m. Saturday and Sunday 'til 5 DRAYTON PLAINS 4301 Dixie Hwy.(US-lO) OR 3-121 By Dick Turner ditlon, $450. FE 8-2377. __ 1968 TRIUMPH TR 100C, 500C"C, TRIUMPH Bonneville, $1200. ANNOUNCING THE NEW^ 1968 HodakalOO cc. 5-SPEED trail bike. The Bronco 50 cc. 4-SPEED BIKE. MG SALES 4667 Dixie Hwy„ Drayton 673-6458 ANNUAL SUMMER SALE ALL 1968 MODELS ON SALE! BSA, TRIUMPH, HONDA, NORTON, DUCATI, MONTE5A, AND MOTO-GUZZI. ANDERSON SALES 8. SERVICE 645 S. Telegraph_____FE 3-7102 DEMO 1968 120CC Suiuki Trail i Used 1966 150CC Suzuki \ Suzuki cycle* SOCC to 500CC. R( Minl-bikes as low as $144.50. Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right to Hickory Ridge Rd., to Demodr Rd.e left and follow signs tc DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO • * Phone 62»»2179. New and Used Trucks 103 triple axle, flatbed “You lookin’ for me?” Boots-Accessories Wanted Cors-Trucks . 101 HARLEY DAVIDSON, XLCH, 1966. J Call belw— * - - ----- -363-9929. HONDA 160, ; r. $400. 647-3208. SCRAMBLER m''^436 o‘'647-7«90. NEW, adult 1968 - 17' SILVER LINE WITH 1 " - Chrysler I. 0., power tilt ai ir, $3395 complete. Kars Boo 693-1600. 96”6 DODGE PICKUP 4 spMd, V-B. like new. $1695. LLOYD BRiOGESrTroveiond V. Maple Rd., Walled Lake 624-1572 W-TON CMC I iransmission. 1965 rgra -/a-ton pickup. 1965 Chevrolet 16 • t o n pickup. All these trucks can be purchased uWith no money down. LUCKY "auto 1968 CHEVY El Comeno with V8, automatic, power stee Ing, brakes, whUe^vInjtl roof, tor lactory warrenty. Like,-,newl Di; BILL FOX CHEVROLET Rochester______________0^1 -71 ' FORD VAN. $1350, must's ukc TOY FOX TERRIERS, OR 3-7944._________ walker FOXHOUND PUPS, weeks old. Regis^re^^ or grad W A N T E D :"F EM A L E""B 0 ST 0 N~ Te YORKSHfRE TERRIERS, Pet Supplies-Service POODLE GROOMING. Reasonable. 647-8630 Auction Soles 80 AUCTIONLAND CLOSED for vacation. Private sales only. OR 4-3567.' ^ B & B AUCTION i Check our deal on — SWISS COLONY-a LUXURY TRAILERS , 1 FROLIC I TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 28 ft. on display at - Jacobson Trailer Sales 5690 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-5961 Camping Private Lake Safe beach, flush toilets and ; showers, 1140 M15, Ortonville. ' McFeely Resort. 627-3820 v"'-—-or 965-5958 weekdays * ' Empfre Bldg., Detroit, Best Mobile Home Sales I Open Daily 9 a.m.-8 p.m. 1 Royal Embassy MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE S. K. JOHNSON AGENCY Landola MARLETTE EXPANDOS ON DISPLAY . ?EE DELIVERY AND SET UP WITHIN 200 MILES. 12x50' Marlette 1968, $5,200.00 ON DISPLAY AT: "lerry Lake A Home VlllB! MONTESSA SCORPION, 250 C months old, A-1 condition, sell, going in service. $600 or Motorcycle Insurance Anderson 8i Associates 1044 Joslyn FE* 4-3535 _____ Village 9620 Highland Rd., (M-59) 2 mlitt West of Wllllami Lk. Rd. 673-1191 BOAT TRAILER, Windshield, stern, and controls. 6731041 aft. 5 p.m._ i COHO BOATS I PINTERS; 'YOUR JOHNSON DEALER" | 1370 PbyJi® j Exin*”' CtlRYTLEkXNblj Boats and Motors OPEN DAILY 9 TO 6 MON. TILL 9 SUNDAYS 104 PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. 4030 Dixie Hwy. STOP HERE LAST M&M “TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S CLEAN" USED CAR« CLEARANCE Inventory Reduction Sale NEED ROOM — MUST SELL No Reasonable oiler refused DUMPS ■ 1963 CHEVY 60 series, 4x6 yds.. Ton Stakes- ^cku^^ New^^ INTERNATIONAL Harvastar pickup truck, cheap, FE 5-2076. Foreign Con 105 1953 MG-TD good condition, $1,075. 647-7292. New and Used Can 106 STANDARD AUTO 1961 Chevy, 2 door, Impala, $295 109 EAST BLVD. S. 3384033 1959 VOLVA. GOOD ENGINE, $85. 996 Premonf, FE 8-2331. 1960 VOLVO 544, good condition, eng^nt 2 yrs. old. $400. Call 625- 1962 MG MIDGET, good condition. $400. 674-2609, after 1. 1963 CORVAIR CONVERTIBLE — call 674-3682, 1963 VOLKSWAGEN, GOOD mechanical condition. $350. OA 8-2493. 1962 CHEVY II station wagon, real good. 662-9223, Riggins, dealer. 1962 CORVAIR, RED AND whiter $165. Save Auto. FE 5-3278. 1962 CORVAIR 2-DOOR, stick. $395. 1963 FORD CORTINA 4-speed, $195. "0" down. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4- i5 MINI COUPER S. KonI ehocks lew brakes, rally lights, Tech. "3. OR 32033. TRIUMPH SPITFIRE , GOOD CONDITION, GRIMALDI "Your New Buick-Opel Dealer" 210 Orchard Lake FE 2-9165 1966~MGB BRITISH racing gr overdrive, radial tires. 334-4247. BRAND NEW 1967 Jaguar X-K plus 2, new car guarar Automatic transmission. Pontiac >3 FORD Pickup, ■ luty tires, clean, r*' i4 DODGE State •6 FORD Stake, 4 2 TON DUNE BUGGY PARTS AND ACCESSORIES FRAME SHORTENING ------B¥~BILIY DOYLE - 10 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 682-9248 TOP QUALITY NEW AND USED IMPORTED CARS ARE FOUND AT GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 OAKLAND AVENUE STANDARD A'UT0^_^ ^ power, lL new,^^ 109 EAST BLVD. S. 3384033 2 <:HEVY II, TUDOR, « 62 CHEVY II Hardtop, 6 cyl transportation ^peclal^at’ Only $281 John McAuliffe Ford CHEVY BEL AIR Station igon, lust $395. Buy Here — Pay re. Marvel Motori, 251 Oakland SERVICE. 1963 Chevy I Econo Vans 4 FORD Econo V TOP $ PAID for all sharp Pontiocs qnd CADILLACS. We are prepared to moke you a better offer 11 Ask for Bob Burns. WILSON CRISSMAN PICKUPS 1964 DODGE 6 man ( 1966 DODGE ^4 'ton ly, sliding lop. DODGE H Ion, ' ■ _. "ford Rancher beautiful customer „„ic»<.i..,it995r’~ ALL TRUCKS MUST BE SOLD BY August 1st. Easy credit — Terms. Immediate Delivery JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 277 West Montcalm FE 5-4101 "Michigan's Fastest Growing VW Dealer" OFFERS A FINE SELECTION OF 100 PER CENT WARRANTEED USED CARS iiBillGolling 1821 Moplelawn Blvd. Off Mople Rood (IS Mile Rd.) ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT ^ Just South of Pontlec _ STANDARD AUTO ;1963 CHEVY, convertible, red, blec ‘f'k'onlj695 109 EAST BLVD. S. 3384033 1963 IMPALA jr hardtop, pov transttfleslon. 1963 CHEVY II, ____________ horsepower, 6 cylinder. Call el P,M, 851-2414. STANDARD AUTO $495 , 109.4AST.BLVT)-: New ond Used Cori 106 STANDARD AUTO PONTIAC 109 EAST BLVD., S. Ic SALE BUY A NEW 1968 Javelin 2-Door Sedan for $2469 AND HAVE YOUR CHOICE OF Ajitornatte Transmission or Raidio for NOW AT Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham Ferggson 20 tractor, John Deere 414 plows,'$245. Lawn and garden tractors also. Loaders and backhoes. 825 S. Woodward PONTIAC FARM AND ^industrial tractor CO- - Open Daily including Sunday EARmalL CUB TRACTOR WITI SICKLE BAR 'AtTACHME"NT, ‘ shape, KING BROS. ! ■" 662 FE 44)7341 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke ^EEL HO'^E .tractor, 6 h.p., electric start. Snow blade, tw^r.-^cheins. 5 mos.'iold. $650. j this onel $795. On US 10 ■ 1-A Beauties to Choose From I WE FINANCE - TERMS RICHARDSON delta monarch ,, duke ihomette , liberty ! COLONIAL ^flOBILE HOMES, IFE 2-1657 — 25 OPDYKE Auburn Heights_____-- - X 32 PONTIAC Chief-, nicp, ' $1,000. Phone after 6 p.m. 887-5897, ' 1 HOUSE TRAILE'R, tlflM. Celt 673-8659. , _______ fO'“X~50' VAN DYKE, 2-exc. condition, carpeted, 3115.- 19S HONDA, EXCELLENT ditlon. Green metallic paint $495. Call Goodyear, 335-6167. S6 SUZUKI X6, $250. ____________FE 8-8912._______ 1966 HONDA SCRAMBLER. helmet Ihcl. Make otter. 647-U 1967 305 SCRAMBLER. 2 Mis ort bars. Must sell immedidtely. $500. Pontiac Press Want Ads , For Action j1966 ’6^TON FORD pickup. Factory Brooch OAKLAND AT CASS FE 5-9485 1957 CHEVY 4 DOOR, hardtop. OR 3-6323. 1965 corvette FASTBACK. AM-FM radio, haatar, blua alraak 11959 CHEVY IMPALA, 2-door, good transportation ear, $60. 338-4665. tires, one owner, trade. 11959 CHEVY 2-DOOR 6 stick, exc. i motor and body. 363-0081 dir. M17.M5T™“°%I^^ Il959 CORVETTE. HIGHEST otter over $l,00a 685-3098. 1965 CHEVROLET, STICK, $600. Ml 7-3561. 1960 CHEVY STATION WawB, 8 good eondiflon, $175. FE a-I»6. MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PIYMOUTH 1960 CHEVY WAGON, GOOD transpon|«lw,„^ OHM. Call altar 6. FE >6747 CHEVY: WHEN YOU buy tt M MARKET TIRE » $.»«• ■afsty dtadc. 90s OretiMa Laka , Rd. Kaago. . 1965 Chavy Impala^ .w aBd*. automatic. douMa powar, Whitawalla. wbita with rod^bAa^. Claan^nlca ru™Uj|IoM. 677 MM, FOXUAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. JULl^ litw «wi QimI Cm lEW FINANCE PLAN. IF PROBLEMS, BANKRUPT. OR fARNISHED WAGES, WE CAN-OET YOUR CREDIT RE-ISTABLISHED AGAIN. WE HAVE OVER 80 CARS THAT ‘AN BE PURCHASED. WITH « DOWN PAYMENT. COME 1 AND SEE CREDIT MGR. >IR. IRV. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W- Wld* Ti /E 4-lOW_____or______I 1945 CORVAIR MONZA, wheels, automatic, radio steerlns wheel. Like ne\ HUNTER DODGE 499 SOUTH HUNTER Ml 7-mSi___________B^rtnlnghai New and Useil Con _ 1061 Nwji^sedj^^^ ButomBlICt ^ gower V GO! HAUPT PONTIAC 6 New and UeedJIan^_______106 V-l. $65. Save Auto. 1961 RAMBLER^tation Wagon $2M DEALER___________sswaai RAMBLER c6NVERTIBTI, ( RAMBLER AUTOMATIC, gbod And Save $ $ $ CLARKSTON________^ _ 625-5500 1948 TEMPEST 2 DOOR hardtop, PONTIAC-TEMPEST ! «, ' °"mV QA99A MUS^r^ElX^-:^ 1968 PONTIAC MY 3-6226 | ^^LeMans. Hardtop, ve-automatic BUY A NEW 1968 American 2-Door Sedan for $1888 AND HAVE YOUR CHOICE OF Automatic • Transmission or Radio for 1967 BISCAYNE CHEVY 2-doorj ...i FORD GALAXIE factory air condi automatic, radio, I BILL FOX CHEVROLET 58 DODGE CHARGER trim. Power glide, brakes and {’’ steering, radio, and tinted glass all around, whitewall tires. In ex-l- 1967 CAAAARO CONVERTIBLE. Disc: brakes, tilt wheel, power steering.! brakes, and top. 327 engine. $2095. FORD a-DOORr po-Ye ■nd. $1395. Vh.tH per oYeei r. Parks. W. d-7SOC j_rf>er_Po-a, firmingr-arr WvUS'TAfyG +-i*PDTOP. ' "$2495 , Suburban Olds foPt BIRMINGHAM V-8. 860 S. Woodward Ml 7-5111 1968 OLDSMOBILE 442. Teacher's only d^ioning^ AM-Tm'^ 65^123^*^^ \ H Clearance I ™ Sale r_-,, AH remoining '68 Oldsmo-bi!es ond "Youngmobiles", ' V- ond demos now for the buy of your life. Madgwick.' v 684-1825, MiH( t, 1959 FORD, 2-DOOR, CHEVT _ transmission, 7500 miles. 345-7788. MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1965 Chrysler DOWNEY BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 5~BaWaCUD^E E'6,”« ing tripes, radio, heater, power steer- ig. Really cooll .$1495 HUNTER DODGE 499 SOUTH HUNTER Jj_0955_____B i r^ng^hgm 5 PLYMOUTH FURY ill 2 door ForE Birmingham. 1961 T-8IRD, fuRCiuOISE .1 FALCON 2 Jown. Call M.. Harold Turner Ei . ........ur usual way.;. Be 19^FMTON_^0OR, ^ WHEa¥oN^HRYSLER PLYMOUTH'’ C. E. LEE ^97 S*'jOHNSOti Waned Lake: ------ -------- ——-------------- 1965 CHRYSLER 300 $1695 MOTOR MALL, ) IV] miles East BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1965 Chrysler Newport 2 6 hardtop. Light blue, automa FORD V’-8 _______ good. 6S2-9223, Riggins. D'f 1962 FALCON SQU!RE Wagon' Like new. $575. 1968 Torino fastback GT $2475, 682-3460.____________ ■ pr0**y 1965 c.nc 'l966 J/USTANGS ■ .TriVed'fr^GuVs'' ’ \ - ’As. Low.x-s-.529.Dcwn',, HAROLD ' TURNER Oldsmobile, Inc. 550 Oakland Avenue FE 2-8I0I : T ■ 1967 OLDS 98 toxury Sedan , -oaded with all the extras In-1 eluding factory air conditioning, $3W5.' OAKLAND 1967 FURY III Wagon, 8 automatic power steefing, power brakes one of the sharpest - cars ii PONTIAC; Vacation special 52388. ^-OAKLANCr S- \yood\ IRMINGHAM 1962 FORD HARDTOP, t Sub’Qrbdh OTdS; chrysler-plymouth II, 724 Oakland FE ^9436 .......... ....... PONTIAC: When you buy it let 1967 OLDS MARKET TIRE give it a free - ,1 I safety check. 2635 Orchard Laka Cutlass Rd., Keego.______________ 1. FE 4-7336. Len^r' ( W: Suburban Olds i BIRMINGHAM Power steering, power braki power windows. $895 Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales 1958 W. Maple _______Ml 6-2i 1963 FORD GALAXIE hardtop, wi 1967 ford Custom ' PLYMOUTH STATION 1961 BONNEVILLE, HYDRAMATIC, 3963 FORD STATION WAGON, v -' in, $495. Call 673-88lt. D Fairlane 4-door, radio, ------- , I transportation :6ndltlon. $495. 1966 CHRYSLER Newport 4-door sedan, light metallic green with matching Interior, V-8 BUtomatIc, AIR CONDITIONING, power steering, " »kes,—radio,—'—--- $1895 ... ..!, No Money Dowr — r—TT-irc.-__ , ,1 John McAuliffe Ford BIRMINGHAM :|BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth Been *Banlcrupt? — Di Got a probem? Call Mi Chrysler-Plymouth L 651-6778 after 5 p. . 638 Oaktend Ave. , - - , 1962 MERCURY STATION WAGON,-Automatic, $395. "0" down. Gall MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH STANDARD AUTO ______i. 67? M?4, Li MY i-2Q4t.____ 1»47 CHRYSLER 2~door. - _ S’rM&Lttt'•"‘""'T 109 EAST BLVD. SOUTH OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH .... __ JU Oakland______FE 5-94361 Birmingham. $395 IT BLVD. 338-4033 power brakes, , factory air ci dltioned. $1895 Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales KESSLER'S DODSE CMS AND TRUCKS ADKINS AUTO SALES 731 Oakland Ave. TfE S-4238 •— “ilaxie 580 coupe, 8 - ' itallsa ctwpe, auto .... . jrd .wagon 8 a^., H963 Special 8 autd..iirst 1961 Ford t aut«., fir*t .. . Call Mr. Parks 5 mercury 4-DOdR, « 1966 M E R C M R ' $2X,"'UL 2-5263. 9;PASSENGER->^M-FMi. $ha$^,‘ The Heart of our Business IS THE SATISFACTION • OF OUR CUSTOMERS 1966 MERCURY Montcloir Hardtop red vinyl Ir ‘1965 MERCURY rPorktane 1967 COUGAR 2 Door Hardtop with 289 super V-8, automatic, power steering, powei disc brakes, vinyl top, stereo type system, mai wheel»,- wlele.oyal wWtevyalis. Must see to appreciate 1964 COMET Calientie with a turquoise finish, with a matching Interior, eufo matic, power steering, brakes, radio, healer, white walls. A low mileage, one-owner beauty. 1965 PONTIAC Catalina Hardtop vjdth V-B, automatic^ power steering, brakes, radio 1966 FORD Custom 500 Club sedan, with V-8, automatic, radio, heaterr white walls. A low mileage, garage-kept beauty. Only— HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY 125G Oakland -■ $2695 $1295 333-7863 1965 1967 1966 1967 CORVAIR PLYMOUTH CHEVY CHEVY 2-Door Hardtop Valiant lOO 4-Door Impala Sport Coupe 2-Door Biscayne With midnight blue finish, automatic, whitewalls. Only— Sedan, with 6-cyl. stick shift, with V-8, radio, heater, white-walls, silver blue finish. With ermine white finish, 6-cyl. $1095 $1595 $1795 $1695 1966 1967 1967 1965 CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY TEMPEST Biscayne Vl/agon Impala Sports Sedan Impala Convertible Sports Coupe with V-e,^ automatic, radio, heater, with V-8, automatic, power steering, radio, fwater, whitewalls, tuxedo black finish. Only— ing, radio, heater, whitewalls, and gold finish. Only— with V-8, automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls, dark aqua finish, only ; $1795’ $2195 $2295 $1395 1965 1966 ' mb 1964 MUSTANG CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY Coupe Caprice Wagon Bel-Air 4-Door Bel-Air 4-Door with 6 cyl. stick shift,, radio, heat- v'ls, automatic, luggage *rack, radio. heater, whitewalls, beautiful India Tv'orTiinlsh,*Only"7'''**''*' whitewaMs, turquoisa finish. Only $995 '$2195 $1245 $995 1966 1966' 1966 1967 MUSTANG CHEVY FORD FIREBIRD Convertible Biscayne 2-Door Fairlane XL Sport Coupe with 6 cyl. engine, stick shift, with 6 cyl, engine, radio, heater, whitewalls, silver blue finish. Convertible, with V-B, eutomatlc, radio, heater-.^whttewalls. topical v-8 engine, power steerfhg, automatic transmission, radio, heater, yvtjitew^L tire^^^«n^^^ $1195 $1395 $1695 FE Oakland County's Largest Volume Chevrolet Dealer 4-4547 flBSBB57.631 OAKLAND Widest Selection of 'OK' Used Cars in Oakland County THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24. 1968 D—15 Landau Marital 'Mission' Is Far From Impossible By EARL WILSON Hollywood—“I had a crush on my teach’,’’ Barbara Bain said. “I was Martin’s student at the Kurt Conway acting school In New York. He was very critical of my work and with good reason . . • I wasn’t very good at the time.” Barbara and Martin Landau are the hottest husband-and-wife acting team on TV now. Their CBS series, “Mission: Impossible,” has made' a second two-parter for a movie feature, for release ahead of TV, so there must be a success formula, but they don’t know what it is. “But it does work fine for us,” Landau said. “When I come home from the office, I doq’t have to tell her what happened today because she knows. We can get right down to basics. I don’t think we’ve had any fights in me two years we’ve been working together—while we’ve been working.” When not working, well, that’s different. “The only thing,” Landau mentioned, “is that Barbara gets up an hour earlier than I do to go to the studio, and that extra hour’s sleep is precious—and she does make an awful lot of noise.” —^Television Programs— Program* furnished by stations list^ in this column ora sub{oct to chongo without notico WILSON “That’s because I’m incompetent at that hour and bump Into things. I get to the studio at 6,” Barbara explained. But they agreeJhat-itls jnore^tural ^o playTiusband and wife if you really are husband and wife. “Very often you meet an actress for the first time and ynu shake hands with her, then you’re suppifeed to go right into a scene which shows you quarreling on your fifth ^ wedding anniversary,” Landau said. “Yes, It works better if you fight with somebody you know how to fight with,” Barbara laughed. When Barbara has a scene as a seductress withrtinother man, Martin may leave the set if -he isn’t in the scene. “Often it bothers the other performer, me being there,” Landau elaborated. “It doesn’t bother me, because I know Barbara and we know work is work. After all, we met acting...” “We met watching each other kissing other people while acting,” Barbara recalled. “And I said, ‘Yeh, gee, I like the way she does that, I think I’ll try it! Landau said. ■k it it “So now we’ve been married 11 years. We were married twice,” said Barbara. “We feel you shoiW be married twice.” They were married at New York Municipal Bldg, on their only free day, and 10 days later they got married again in courtesy to their parents who hadn’t been invited to the first ceremony. “Almost everybody in Hollywood’s been married twice but we’re tiie only ones we know who have been married ...twice to. each. oth«^’^ said Barbara, a Chicago gfri who got a B.A. from the University of Illinois. “What do you fight about at home?” “Oh, maybe because she starches my shirts.” “I don’t starch your shirts. 'The laundry starches your shirts ...” “Well, you should tell the laundry ...” “How do you fight at home—quietly?” “Loudly!” ★ * ★ THE WEEKEND WINDUP ... Dick Benjamin and newcomer All MhcGraw will get complete exposure in their film debut in “Goodbye, Colum-bus”-they’U be nude . . . Robert Anderson won’t allow South African production of his two B’way shows, “You Know I Can’t Hear You When the Water’s Running” and A Look at TV Equal Time hr Paulsen By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD ( U PI) - U.sually when a presidential candidate makes a speech, excerpts from his remarks are sent hither and yon, to and fro, around and about the country. It doesn’t seem right to deny Pat Paulsen the same privilege. Let's be fair abput this. * itt * As you may have heard, Paulsen, the free-lance candidate for the presidency who also works for C B S - T V his personal support to s: minority group. “Before giving you a brief, report on my campaign, I’d likCi to say something about the gun control controversy . . but let us not be guilty of oversimplification. If we outlaw all firearms it will merely cause other problems. Without guns, how can we shoot anybody? Supple a man comes home early and finds another man making love to his wife. What s Smothers-Brottiers to-caw. hebe .^ppsed to do — him? . . . But let'US be objective about this. Guns are not the real problem. The real problem is bullets. If I am elected I’ll see that there are plenty of guns for everybody. But we’ll lock up all the bullets. ' doesn’t get elected, was given an 89-cents-a-plate testimonial dinner in a Beverly Hills cafeteria during the weekend. In return, he gave a speech, and here are some excerpts from it: 8crib™"'^.^’gossJi^^^^^^^^ ‘‘Please do not get the idea CIA^a'gentf ^-fsidLtiT^lection""fystem. UA agents ... > ^ some Americans. busybody reformer comes up with some kind of futuristic_20th century concept to let the peo-‘ pie select our present system ‘SOME BY FEAR’ “As I look out over this large gathering, past the television lights and steam tables, I find that I know a 'greqt many of you, perhaps a little too many. Some of you I know personally, some by reputation and some by fear... ' . , ‘We might be honored tonight by the presence of Richard with its built-in checks and balances which prevent the majority from seizing control, and abusing the rights of those who run the government. If we ever allow the voters to setoct the man they want to be president, before you know it, they’ll Nixon.JL=JsaBt=te=£ongEatoiate^^nt=^o=tok^ country.” WJR(760)WXYZ(1270) him for finally getting the endorsement of Mrs. Eisenhower. It was a well-thought-out, carefully considered endorsement . . • which Mrs. Nixon first requested eight years ago . - . it * * “President Johnson indicated ,st first, toat be would be here. Apparenfly Ti¥ iS not exactiy being flooded with invitaticMis these days . . .not the kind he Wants to accept, anyway. But New^ i^oiie opinto^ W’e got a wire earlier today saying he would have to cancel out in order to attend another gathering: ‘President Johnson sends regrets but unable to leave Washington due to ernergency meeting of “Friend of Hubert Humphrey.” ’ “So the President Is lending Chonn*lii 2-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV. 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 56-WTVS WEDNESDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R — Dennis t h e Menace (50) R C — Flintstones (56) Misterogers 6:30 (2) C - News -Cronkite (4)C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (9) R C — Gilligan’s Island (50) R - McHale’s Navy (56) What’s New 7:00 (2) C—Truth or Conse- j quences (4) C — News, Weather, ' Sports (7) C News - Reynolds (9) R — Movie: “Lost Horizon” (1937) Jane^Wy-aft, Sam Jaffe, Thomas MitcheU (50) R — My Favorite Martian (56) R - Eric Hoffer 7:30 (2) R C - Lo.st in Space — Dr, Smith tricks time merchant Chronos into returning him to earth of 1997. (4) R C — Virginian — A sandstorm strands Tram-pas, Elizabeth and Stacy in an old shack which becomes the refuge of a sick banker and his young wife. (7) R C — Avengers — An amnesia-inducing drug that can be shot from a gun results in a growing number of agents who don’t know who they are. (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) (Return) Power of the Dollar — British-American series focuses on U S. investments and influence around t h e world. 8:00 ( 50) R C - Hazel (56) R — Insight — White fugitive learns meaning of brotherhood when he’s forced to hide in a Negro home. 8:30 (2) R C — Beverly Hillbillies — Sports promoter tries to sign Clampetts as wrestlers. (7) C — Dream House bo) R — Honeymooners (56) R - U.S.A. - Poets Michael McClure and Brother Antoninus talk about their lives. 9:00 (2)R C - Green Acres—Oliver is taken to court over payment for a rain-making service. (4) C — Music Hall — Host Ed McMahon welcomes guests including comedian Flip Wilson, singer Gloria Loring and the Rocking Turtles. (7) R C — Movie: “Ski Party” (1965) This teenage romp through TV Features e AVENGERS, 7:30p.m. (7) MUSIC HALL, 9 p.m. (4) POUTICAL TALK. 9 p.m. (56) TALE OF TWO STREETS, 9:30 p.m. (9) MERV GRIFFIN. 10 p.m. (2) (‘(Rush to Judgment”) and Alan Adelson, attorney for Jack Ruby’s family; discuss^the Warren report. (56) Innovations — “MaSs Marketing of New Products” 10:30 (9) Square World (56) On Hearing Music 10:55 (7) Political Talk -Humphrey 11:00 (2) (1) (7) (9) C -News, Weather, Sports (50) R — Alfred Hitchcock 11:30 (2) R — Movie: “There’s Going To Be a Party” (1^) Eddie Cwi-stantine, Barbara Laage (4) C - Tonight - Alan King is host. (7) C — Joey Bishop (9) Wrestling (50) R - Movie: “Shining Victory” (1941) James Stephenson, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Donald Crisp 12:30 (9) Window ’on the World 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) News 1:30 (2) R - Dobie Gillis (4)C-PDQ 2:00 (2)R - Highway Patrol 2 : 3 0 ( 2 ) C - News, Weather THURSDAY MORNING 5:45 (2) On the Farm Scene 5:50 (2) C — News 6:00 (2) U. of M. Television (4) Classroom 6:30 (2) C — Gospel Singing Jubilee (4) C — Ed Allen 7:00 (2) C — Woodrow tHte Woodsman (4) C — Today (7) C — Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round Nature Center Sets Summer j Curriculum The Drayton Plains Nature ,...,.,.6..... Center today opened its sum- snow 'feTurer^'hT ’sound mer classes to area adults and of James Brown and the Flames, the Hondells and Lesley Gore. Frankie Avalon and Yvonne Craig star. (50) R — Perry Mason (56) Political talk -Rockefeller , ; , 9:25 (9) C - News 9:30 (2) R C - He and She — Harry the fireman jumps to the wrong conclusion when he finds Fernando Lamas massaging Baula’s leg. (9) C (Special) - Tale of Two Streets — Film contrasts London’s t w o fashion centers: Savile Row and Carnaby Street. 10:00 (2) C (Special) Merv Griffin — Manhattan landmarks supply the backdrops for this potpourri. (4) R C — Run For Your Life — Paul combs the hippie haunts in San Francisco searching for the runaway daughter of Captain young people. Five classes on various facets of nature are open to everyone more than 9 years old, according to the nature center’s executive secretary and past president, Mrs. Edmund L. WiRdeler Jr. of 3741 Columbine, Waleifbrff Township. ★ ★ . it Mrs. Windeler said t h e classes drew more than 500 interested participants last summer, and she expects another large turnout this year. Included in the curriculum this summer are dosses in ‘ W ildflower Identification,” ‘Nature Art Work,” “Nature Photography,” “Insects — Observing and Collecting,” and ‘Geology for Rock Hounds.” The classes meet one day a week for two hours at the Nature Center offices at 2125 Denby, Waterford Township. Each class will run for six weeks. Fees for the courses are $1-50 a wealthy friend ~ ljQr?Nature.£ente£jnembe^ Crane - $3 for nonmembers, Mrs -Attorney Mark Lane i Windeler said^______________ 8:00 (2) C -Kangarop (9) Tales of the River Bank 8:30 (7) R - Movie: “Midnight Lace” (I960) Doris Day, Rex Harrison (Part 1) (9) C — Upside Town 9:00 (2) C — Merv Griffin (4) C — Steve Allen (9) C — Bozo 10:00 (4) C - Snap Judgment (7) C — Virginia Graham (9) R — Hawkeye 10:25 (4) C - News 10:30 (2) R C - Beverly Hillbillies (4) C — Concentration (7) C — Dick Cavett , (9) Friendly Giant (50) C — Jack La Lanne 10:45 (9) Chez Helene ll:60-(9) R- - Andy of , MaybeiTyMv.^;v (50) R — Three Stooge* 5:00 (9) C —Bozo (50) R — Little Rascals 5:30 (4) C — George Pierrot, “New England Holiday” (9) C — Fun House (50) R — Superman 5:45 ( 56) Friendly Giant India ACROSS 44 Beast of 1 Evil genius burden of Hinduism 46 Broadway S Hindu tide of respect 10 Italian community 11 Sidney heroine 13 Token of recognition 14 Element sign 47 South Seaa island group 48 Herd together, as seals 61 Low casta Hindus 55 New 16 Roman god of 57 Sacred river lower world of India 17 Footed vase 68 Shun 19 Mouthlike 59 Trap IK)WN 1 New Zealand bird 2 Word of sorrow 3 Malayan gibbon 4 River in India 5 Made a cocoon 20 Greek letter 21 Sphere* of action 24 Genus of true olive* 27 Tender 29 Items of jewelry 81 Repeat 85 Roundabout ways 87 Tropical water lily 88 Playing card 6 Armed 40Rebels (coll.) conflict 41 Flaming 7 Candlenut tree 8 Biped* 9 Troy 10 Insane 12 Emanation 15 Feast day (suffix) 18 River (Sp.) 20 Hindu temple 84 Sigmoid curve 36 Feel remorse 39 Auricle 41 Serpent 42 Boast 43 Tree snake* 45 Egypt’s neighbor- 2 3 n 1 r ^ lb 1 1 16 26 35 36 J8 41 42 43 1 46 6t y 21 Nautical 47 South term African fox 22 Lively dance 48 Make secret 23 Mistakes plans 24 Ordinary 49 “Buckeye (ab.) State” 25 Prevarica- 50 Accom- tlon plished 26 Noun suffix 52 Danube 28 Exchequer tributary 30----Canal 53 Turkish VIP 32 Devoured 54 Pronoun 33 Bathroom 56 Feminine item name ? F* F L SL Y Awnings & Windows Everything in home improvement 335-2102 Get our big seasonal deal on Lennox central air conditioning 32 33 34 48 50 56 60 Strikers Meet DETROIT (AP) - striking linemen have agreed to meeti with Detroit Edison officials and mediators in an effort to end a 54-day-old strike against the electric utility. | 'The mediation session was! schefiuled for 10 a m. today, j ★ * ★ j About 800 members of local 17 i of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers struck May 31 because their contract with the utility had expired. The main unresolved issue is wages. An experienced lineman at present is paid about $4.50 an hour. The company says t h e strikers are seeking an increase in pay of 20 per cent in a one year contract. Edison officials have declined to say what company offers have been, if any. K/i-NJoRt Laundry Village Sel(-S«rvice Coin Operalad 747 N. Perry St. Across From Krogar Supor Market HOWARD DELL Is at th* BALDWIN PHARMACY 219 Baldwin Ave. FE 4-2620 StAivIP OUT Remember? Last summer you said, "Never againr The fan juggling, heat, humidity end dust were just too much. Do something about it now, BEFORE THE SUMMER RUSH. Save on our special pra-sea-son prices on famous Lennox central air conditioning. We want to keep our crews busy, so prices Were never lowerl Act now. It’s later than you think. Besides saving money, you'll get the r/gM equipment and unhurried installation. And you'll bo taking a big step toward Total Comfort which includes air conditioning, heatirvg, electronic air cleaning, humidity cohtrdl and air freshehihg. ^ Call now. No obligation. KAST HEATlillB &G00UNGC0. 580 Telegraph Rd. at Orchard Lake Rd. FE 8-9255 IMPROVE YOUR HOME DEAL DIRECT FREE PLANS and ESTIMATES-NO CHARGE Liz Taylor Fine After Operation LONDON (AP) - Elizabeth Taylor had “a very good night ., . and her condition is excellent,” her doctors reported to- *y--‘.^ The Fitzroy Nuffield Nursing Home, where the 36-year-old movie star had a partial hysterectomy Sunday, said no further medical bulletins will be issued. * * , ★ Miss Taylor entered the nursing home last Wednesday and is expected to stay at least another 10 days. 'XOOL IT" with Air Conditioning by CHANDLER HEATING & COOLING OR 3-5632 FREE ESTIMATES — Radio Programs- CKLW(800) WWJ(950) WCARd 130) WPONQ 460) WJBKQ 500) WHFM=M(94^ TONIGHT Tom Shannon rs, sporH'-'.... vs. Sports WJBtc/ iiewsr Hank O'NsIl WJR. News/ WWJ, News* n Review, , Emphasis WJR, Business Barometer, -Time Traveler «;4S-.^WJR, Lowell Thoma«, Autoscope 7:0*—WWJ, News, SportsUne WCAR, News, Rh* Stewerf WJBK, N»ws. Tom Dean 7il*-WXYZ, News, Dave Lockhart WPON, Music TUI MIdnita WJR, Raasoner Report 7;J5-WJR, BasatMlI Fanfare 7:4i-WJft, Tiger Boat 7:55—WJR, Tiger Baseball ♦:»—WHFI, Tom Coleman CKLW, Scott Regen 10:45—WJR, Music for Mod- WJR, Music Till Dawn 17:**—WXYZ, News, Jim DavH CKLW, Frank Brodie ,. WCAR, News, Wayne Phillips WJBK, Niahttime THURSDAY MORNINB *:#*-WjA JMulie Hall WXYZ. News, Martin A Howard :WCAR, Newt, Btif Delzell CKLW, News, Chuck Morgan .WPON, News, Arizona Weston ■■ rwc. ____... Mottle Carl! r:i»—wnri, Gary Purete WPON, News, Chuck Warren •■*#-WJR, News, Sunnyside ♦ :**-WJR, Nevvs, Jedk Harris WWJ, News, Ask Your Neighbor WCAR, News, Rod Miller WJR, News. Music ii:*»-WJR, News, Kaleldo- WHFI, Jim ZInser ' THURSDAY AFTERNOON 12:*0—WWJ, News, Emphasis WJR, Newt, Farm CKLW, Jim Edwards W:»=-WWL, Marty McNmI^ wxyZ, Ne»ir Don-McNf!J.^ 1:#«—WJR, News, Arthur Godfr- WXYZ, Npwi, Dick Purtan 4:|B-WJR,.N««t, Fanfare «itS-MfJR, Ugar Baat, B«ta bail irlS^WPONf Lpm 'n' Abnar S;3B->WPON, Pat A G 8 M CONSTRUCTLQN 8 ELUS ---------"iiiiioiNG IN Pontiac siNCt i*45" mme's *QH£ STOP sutLOm smm* KITCHEN CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen $0|;(|00 COMPLETE £|VU 7-Ft. Kitchen itiOnnOO COMPLETE INCLUDES: Upper and Lower Cabinets, Counter Tops, Sink with Faucets, Formico or Wilson Art. CALL FE 8-9880 Open Daily and Sen. CALL DAY OR NIGHT vADDITIOIIS WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION AVOID GARNISHMENT ■■ Btineh all your bill* . . . %»• *4iT'l«t:sip' ONE PAYMENT you cm afford. OdII SSS'^OSSS O'* stop in at DEBT Consultants of PONTIAC, INC. 814 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. Aft (Utli^tilitui . . . \tfl I l.tmn Open Soturdoy PAM lo 1 2 Noon State Licensed and Bonde HOME IMPROVEMENT IS MY BUSINESS • ADDITIONS • ALUMINUM SIDING • BREEZEWAYS • ATTIC CONVERSIONS • AWNING WINDOWS e AWNINGS -.St-OiMS • PATIOS • garages • RECREATION ROOMS • CONCttTrW©RtU..MASONRY • KITCHENS a f AMILY BOON f BATHROOMS • STORM an'a-^CRff+t-OOORS ond WINDOWS ■ 86 North Saginaw - Downtown^Pontiac M Fr*B EBfimalBt OpmratoronDutrZfHourg 5 TBf»»toSuit PHONE FE 21211 to iw-• .1ap ■■■■■ ■#’■■■■ ■ DEAL DIRECT WmtLOCAL BUH.DER1 • Every Job Personally Supervised • All Work Guoranloed • Quality Materials And VYorkmanship No SaleBman’* Commiaajon—No Middleman Profit! anjjlM FAHILY ROOMS M.295 • KITCHENS • BATHROOMS • ALUM. SIOINO • FREE PLANNINO NO MONEY DOWN-FHA and BANK RATES ^ NO PAYMENTS 'TIL OCTOBER Member ^ontioc Chombr of Comm.fC. D-^16 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. JULY 24, 1968 Heavy-Duty Shock' Absorbers Premium all-weather fluid adds a smooth cushioning artion to your Sears shocks in any climate or road surface. Hardened steel rods give firm action. Installation available. Reg. 6.99 ea. sr44 All-Weather Top Carrier Cotton twill — laminated backing. -----____________ Side opens for easy loading. Steel jM O'y roof clamps, foam pad to protect • roof. Locks with padlock included. -M. llCa. Ft. CarfiBx,Ree-i6.9ft- Brake Shoes, 2-Wheel Set Install Sears brake Ihoes for proper QO braking action . . . quicker, surer tF stops. Linings resist heat, moisture. 25,000 Mile Guarantee set ... . exch. 4.59 Oui 2” Thick Station Wagon Mattress F.,.n„ 1499 Chrome Plated Ti:ailer Hitch Pit Most Cars I” Thick Mattress.. Full 4-Ply PVylon Cord Silent Guard Tires .. y - Tread Lifetime GHarantee PIns 40-Month Wearout Guarantee Reg. 31.95 with old tire 23 96 Pius 2.19 Federal Excise Tax and Old Tire 7.75x14 Tubeless Blackwall • Specially compounded inner liner is twice as effeetjm io-#re«^-venting air loss as liners in our other tubeless tires e Gives you better wet road grip, ^r 195 feet of traction slots spray water from under tread • Two thick scuff bars circle whitewalls tor near curbproof pro^ tection Sears ‘‘Express” Truck Tire 161J 6.10x15 Tube-Typo Blackwall Express 3-rib email truck tire, 6-ply rated nylon cord construction. No trade-in required. 6.50x16,18.44 plus 2.66 F.E.T. 7.00x15, 22.44 plus 2.89 F.E.T. Sears carries a complete line of light commercial tires for small trucks Silent Guard Tubeless Regular Price with Old Tire Sale Price with Old Tire Federal Excise Tax 8.25x14 Blackwall 33.95 25.46 2.35 6.50x13 Whitewall 29.95 22.46 1.81 6.05x14 Whitewall 30.95 23.21 1.95 7.35x14 Whitewall 32.95 24.71 2.06 7.75x14 WhHewall 34S5 26.21 2.19 8.25x14 WhHewall 36.95 27.71 2.35 8.55x14 Whitewall 39.95 29.96 2.56 8.15x15 Whitewall 36.95 27.71 2.36 8.45x15 Whitewall 39.95 29.96 2.54 Fast, Free Installation and Tire Rotation Wheels Balanced 4 for $5, weights included NO MOMEY DOHW on Sears Easy Payment Plan . Sear. Auto Tire. Dept. Heavy Duty Muffler Sale - Guaranteed for As Long 4-Track Stereo Tape Player Reg. 49.99 44^^ ■MS Auto Ratchet Jack with Easy Action Reg. 5,99 36-inch liftins height and 4,000-lh. rated lift for mo.l American car.. Non-tip bate. Reg. 8.49 7 Most 80-63 Falcon - Comot • Designed to last longer, perform better than most replacement mufflers • Steel end caps are up to Vs thicker. Extra large inner tuibes insure quieter running • Extra-heavy-gauge steel inner and outer shells for extra wear on all oval mufflers Installation Available Jumbo 20%” Wide Auto Kool Kushion Removable Trailer Towing Mirror Reg. 6.49 5^"^ Guarantee ir murncr falla dua to dafecu in maleriali or work-manahip or blowouU, rust-out or weer-oul, while original |>urcHaser owns the cir, it will be replaced upon return* free of chaise. If the defective muffler was installed by Sears, we will install the new muffler, charging only for brackeU and bolts, if needed. Sears Auto Accessories Dept. Fits Most Cars Listed Below Regular Price Sale Price 61-64 Pontiac 13.99 12.44 64-67 Chevelie, Chevy 10.99 9.44 65-61 Chevelle, Chevy 10.99 9.44 65-67 Plymouth, Dodge, Chrysler 12.49 10.88 54-64 Chevrolet 11.99 10.44 Fits Most Cars Listed Below Regular Price Sale Price 60-66 Dart, Lancer, Valiant 8.49 7.44 61-64 Buick 23S9 2144 62-67 Chevrolpt, Chevelle, Cheyy II 10.99 9.44 62-65 Plymouth, Dodge 11.99 10.44 60-65 Ford, Fairlane 11.49 1044 Open Monday, Thai Friday, Saturday 9 •sday, to 9, I 5:30 SEAK&aOEBUCKANO CO. ]\0 MOMEY DOWM on Sears Easy Payment Plan Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 The Weather U.I. W#»thtr Buruv Forec More Showers THE PONTIAC PR V01-. rjfi ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, .MICHIGAN, W KDN KSDA ^ . .ICIN' .'C I'Xis associated press P€D PRESS INTERNATIONAL 10 Die in Cleveland Sniper Outbreak CLEVELAND (API - Snipers - . shooting from rooftops, windows and behind bushes — launched a reign of terror at dusk yesterday that left 10 persons dead in a predominantly Negro neighborhood on Cleveland’s East Side. Four of those killed were white, three of them policemen. Police said two of the victims were Negro snipers. ' ★ * ★ At least 18 others were hurt, two critically, in the three-hour gun battle with police thht shattered the calm of a hot summer night. Scattered arson and looting followed the shooting. Twenty-four persons were arrested, 17 on looting charges. SCATTERED GUNSHOTS It ended, except for scattered gunshots, just before a heavy thundershower about midnight cooled off the steaming streets and dampened some blazes started by firebombs. National Guardsmen and police, armed with rifles, patrolled the area today. The shooting began, witnesses said, when two Negro snipers "carrying rifles and . . . sacks of ammunition,” ran out of an alley, crouched behind bushes and shot three white policemen, the first victims. Later two snipers were killed. Bayonets, shotgun shells, gas masks and iirst aid kits were found on the bodies. Waves of police, some using Brink s armored trucks, turned the neighborhood into an armed camp. Tear gas and smoke bombs burst on the sidewalks and against buildings. Officers and some ‘residents became ill from the fumes. * * ★ The shooting scene, on Lake view Road near East 125th Street, is about a mile from the Hough area where four Negroes were killed in rioting and looting just two years ago on five other hot July nights. ★ * * When the gunfire erupted, police radio calls came thick and fast and had a lone of desperation. PRETTY BAD’ "Things are pretty bad down here, " said one. “We’re pinned down. The wounded men are lying in the street. We can’t get to them. Get some armored Gov. James A. Rhodes, alerted at the National Governors Conference in Cin-, cinnati, promptly mobilized Ohio’s 15,250 National Guardsmen * ★ ★ The office of the adjutant general in Columbus immediately committed 4,000 men to Cleveland, the state’s biggest city. Its population of more than 800,000 includes about 350,000 Negroes. Official Tells Why Road Tax Needed Today's rain is expected to continue throughout the night with a chance of thundershowers predicted for tomorrow and more showers on tap for l^ridayTj Little change in temperature is forecast with highs today in the mid-80s, dipping into the low 60s tonight. Tomorrow will be partly sunny and mild. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: today 70, tonight 40, tomorrow 30. Low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a m. was 68. By 12:30 pm. the temperature was 77. In Today's Press Waterford Schools Five “deficient” history texts are in use. — PAGE A-4. Steel Talks Rank and file shows its militancy as strike deadline nears. - PAGE A-18. I Fortas Hearings Sen. Hart says testimony hurts chances for confirmation. - PAGE A-5. Area News A4 Astrology Bridge ................. t)-6 Crossword Puzzle D-15 Comics D-6 Editorials A-6 Food Section C-10, C-15 Obituaries , Picture Page B-1 ^ Sports D-l-D-5 Theaters ............... C-14 I TV-|ladio Programs D-15 I Vietnam War News D-7 I Wilson, Earl . , • D-15 I Women’s Pages \C-1—C-5‘ % Mayor Carl B. Stokes, a Negro who took office last November, appealed to all citizens to "stay home and cooperate with the police.■' SITUATION CONTROLLED Stokes described the situation as "bad” but at dawn said it was "controlled. The trouble started along Lakeview Avenue and spread to other nearby residential and business districts At least 18 persons were hurt. Eleven policemen were shot, two critically ■Three others had minor injuries not caused by gunfire. Ohio Adj. Gen. Sylvester T Del Corso, summoned from Akron to command the guardsmen, said "I see some evidence of a plot” involving black Nationalists BATTLE PLAN Witnesses said the snipers appeared to have an organized battle plan. Some used automatic carbines. On the body of one dead sniper was a bandolier of shotgun shells, a gas mask by his side After some fires were started, snipers began shooting at firemen and police ordered the firefighters out of the area A supermarket burned down. An apartment house was heavily damaged by uncontrolled flames. The outburst last night launched a chain of violence that spread into nearby Negro areas. NO MOB RIOTING There was none of the mob rioting that exploded in the Hough area two years ago, but there was more gunfire, scattered looting of stores and some firebombing A number of rooftop snipers were reported. Ducking For Cover Is A Wounded Cleveland Police Officer Won't Waver on War—Johnson (EDITOR'S NOTE — This i.s the jirsl of three stones on the Oakland County Road Commission's bid for a l-mUl property tax increase for road construction.) By ED BLUNDEN Oakland County voters will be asked Aug. 6 to approve a 1-mill properly tax boost to improve county roads. "There just doesn’t seem to be any other way,” Fraker W. Staman. chairmah of the county road commission, said in explaining the need for the levy. Staman and the commission have been faced with increasing criticism in the last two years as the condition of county roads came nearer and nearer the crisis stage. Despite stopgap measures, ($500,000 on a short-term basis and $4 million on a 20-year bond) the situation is getting worse. Staman explained that a lot of county roads were constructed in the 1920s under a statute that stimulated projects but placed a heavy burden on property owners along the rights-of-way. With the Depression of the 1930s, road construction fell off. Then there was World War II when men and materials were scarce. In the postwar period the population boom brought thousands of new families and hundr^s of new subdivisions but relatively little improvements in the road system. Staman recalls that a $6-million bonding program in the early 1960s accomplished some badly needed work. But mostly it has been patchwork and crisis-type construction. (Continued on Page A-2. Col. 3i Rain to Continue, Sewer Project Says Weatherman Receives Boosf Train Hits Bus; 9 Migrants Die The Clinton - Oakland Sewer Interceptor Project received a boost from the federal government yesterday with the approval of a substantial increase in a ^ant of federal funds allocated for the project. The Federal Water Pollution Control Administration of the Department of the Interior approved the $4.68-million increase that goes to the Oakland County Department of Public Works. , , The grant, which is allocated hs a certain percentage of eligible project costs, was increased in the same proportion as the eligible cost increased, a fact determined when bids were received earlier this year. Construction of the interceptor, which will connect Avon, Pontiac, Waterford, West Bloomfield and Independence townships, is to begin this year. It is slated to empty sewage from the Clinton Valley area of the county into an interceptor being constructed by the Detroit Department of Water Supply which runs to Detroit for treatment. The original grant for the $28.2-million project was $3.83 million. The majority of the project will be financed by the sale bf bonds. NEWTONVILLE, N. J. i.l") - A two-car passenger train plowed into a farm labor bus Tuesday night, killing nine of the migrants and injuring 20 others in thi.s .southern New Jersey community. State police said the two self-propelled diesel cars of the Pennsylvania-Readiiig Seashore Lines, carrying some 100 pa.ssengers, tore the old school bus in Iwo and threw the rear half .100 feel See Picture, Page B-16 down the track. No one on the train was injured State police accounted for 39 bus passengers, but did not know exactly how many were aboard. State police said the train was .southbound from Philadelphia to Jersey shore points where it passed the crossing, which is marked with painted railroad warning signs but no lights. Stale Trooper John CSruso said the bus driver. Love Clark, 33, of Wilmington, Del., had a Delaware driver's^ license which had expired in March 1968,. , Four of the injured were reported in serious condition (.'INGINNATI. Ohio '.4’i Prcsidcnl Johnson has declared he will not waver from a Vietnam policy he called jiisi and reasonable, despite "(he pressures and strains that come norm,3lly in any political year," The nation's governors who -heard that pledge had no plans to attempt to match it with one of their own The tifllh National Governors ('onference . held its linal session loday, and the agenda did not |mich-on Vietnam, •lohnson spent an hour last night at the conference. Before a black-lie crowd of more than 2,onO persons al Ihe governors’ hall, Johnson declared "Our nation wants peace, our govern ment wants peace, our men in Vietnam want peace and your President wanls peace. Yet some among us seem to feel that I or we alone can bring peace to Vietnam. They seem to ignore Ihe presence and irreconcilability of Ihe enemy. " I KEPT THAT PROMLSE’ ■lohnson said he had promised batik' ground restraint in announcing hi' would not run again for Ihe White House, and has kept that promise. ■ We are willing to go as tar as honor and safely permit us to go, " he said "But wc arc not going to impose a coali lion government--or any kind of govern ment—on the people of South Vietnam. * * ★ "Nor are we going to let the lotali-tanans impose a Communist government of their direction either, ” the .President said That drew one of only two rounds of applau.se which came during his address He said he and President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam agreed that a cease-fire, with effective controls and guarantees, could be part of a war-settlement. .Johnson got a silver plaque from Ihe governors, inscribed with words of "appreciation for his long and devoted pub-fic serive " and his leadership in establishing tics between Washington and the states. He urged the governors to work at the stale h'vel to deal with problems of jobs, slums, education, health and the like-saying that the federal government has in the past taken responsibility by de-taoK, because no one else would act. In that context, he mentioned the problem of crime. 'Thi' federal govern ment does not seek the responsibility of policing our streets—and 1 hope and pray it will never accept it, " he said. "But if‘the American people look to Washington in a matter so clearly defined as this, it may betray a weakness in our partnership” Johnson asked for the governors’ help in getting congressional action on legislation to "protect our people from guns in criminal hands " Romney Backed in House Riot Bill Veto Is Upheld LANSING I API A 4l)-member bipartisan -coalition upheld Gov. (Jeorge Ifomne.v in the Jfouse yesterday, defeating an attempt In override his veto of a controversial bill giving emergency riot powers to local officials. Backers of Ihe bill, who claimed support from more than 50 cities and lo.wnships, mustered 00 uiles to write it Related Story, Page A-18 into law over Romney's objection a majority of Ihe 109-mcmbcr house, but 13 short of the needed two-thirds vote. The vote came on the anniver.sary of Ihe start of Detniil's bloixly 1907 racial noting. , _ Returning alter a month's recess for a two-day session, lawmakers also voted down a bill which would legalize court-ordered wiretapping by law enforcement' officers The House approved a bill allowing package liquor sales within 500 feel of a school nr church and decided against challenging Romney's veto of a measure exempting legislators from Lansing's new city income lax. The Senate, meanwhile, approved and sent to Ihe House a resolution which would bring lawmakers back to work Aug. is and 16 and would end the regular 1968 legislative session then. A bill creating a state commission on agricultural labor and changing the name t. 19H8 Legal Probe Speedup Urged Romney Eyes Livingston Quiz Last 3-Days of Pontiacl^EHg^Saie Thurs. 9 am to 9 pm-Fri. 9 am to 9:30 pm-Sat. 9 am to 9 pm SIMMS LANSING i/P! Gov George Romney has asked Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley lo do his best to speed lip completion of an investigation of th^ Livingston; (,'onnty courts and lawyer;}. Romney,made his request after receiving a telegram from* the industrial committee of the Livingston County Chamber of ('ommercc The charnher group complained that the .state bar. the attorney general’s office and other authorities have been conducting the probe for the pa.st six months. ' "It i.s public 'knowledge that there are some irregularities yet these authontie.s have not made any public statement of their findings," the telegram said. •CANNOT WAIT’ "The citizens of this county cannot wait for this information they must kqovv before the Aug. (i priman"-. Many of the candidates for public office are at-torney.s," the telegram “ continued. "It i.s necessary the innocent attorneys be cleared before the primary and the ones under investigation be publicly exposed. 'I’he voters cannot afford lo make an uninformed choice of candidates which would only aggravate an already deplorable situation," the chamber group said. Tile accusations involved, alleged improper handling ofi estate settlements by lawyers' and the courts and other legal improprieties. Romney told Kelley it would he beneficial to the people of Livingston. County if one or more of the investigations could he concluded before the Aug. 6 The governor said, however, that anything Kelley could do to speed this investigation or a separate one being conducted by Kelley’s staff would be beneficial. Romney, meanwhile, asked Kelley for a copy of his report as soon as the attorney general’s investigation is completed. An aide said the investigation prim Romney said the state bar inve.stigalion must be conducted in confidence and that any report would be submitted lo the stale bar and eventually the Slate Supreme Court, ' News in Brief Yesterday From the State Capital THE GOVERNOR ^ R?iec1pd cnnfprpncp TRY THE BEST Milani Foods Inc. 12312 W. Olympic Boulevard ; Los Angeles, California 90d64 by the attorney general covers a limited area It is being expedited, the aide said, but may not be completed before the primary. Hep Thomas Sharpy, R-Howell, also wrote the governor urging him "to use all your influence to bring about a public report within the next two weeks." "If the diarges are founded, this should be clarified .immediately," Sharpe s^id. "If the charges are true, disbar-j meni proceedings and whatever! other action is indicated should' begin immediately — so that attorneys wjho had no part in the alleged irregularities can' seek the public trust without! suspicion on Aug. fi” BUILD NOW . . AVOID THE RUSH! Special Prices ISoiv! $1095 Low As ■ Mr Per Month BATHROOMS « BEDROOMS ^ REG ROOMS ^ ATTICS « KITCHENS .Veic Ideas — The Finest Materials and Craftsmanship LadieA'... FREE Estimates And Planning Decorator Service FOR PAST SERVICE CALL NOW! CWeeilon 6'onslrudionffa THE KITCHEN OF YOUR DREAMS Transform your present dreary old workshop to a modern kitchen of convenience, beauty and sheer delight. New, cobinets in many styles and colors. Formica tops. The newest in floor coverings. All electrical and plumbing work As Low As ^2*® Per Week For All This Convenience and Happiness Ei erylhinti In Modernization DORMERS e FAMILY ROOMS e STORM WINDOWS e AWNINOS ROOFING e EVEASTROUGHINC e PORCH ENCLOSURES GARAGES e ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING 1032 West Huron Street — Pontiac 2 BLOCKS WEST OF TELEGRAPH FE 4-2597 This is whiskey blended smooth And light. Yet whiskey with real, flavor. A blend made great by nearly a hundred years of know-how. It’sa Hill of a Hill of a whiskey. At a Hill of a Hill of a price. 3.75 4/5 QT. HHIofa Hilltfa tun. THfeWLii HIUQISTaLt'ttr Cg'. lomsviltt y HOj},.proof ,?l two (in>-iTtl^5'5y^.StBii6HTWHlSK|tS,65VGIt^lN HtU^li^tSPlatTS.- Since 1 934 Simms has been Pontiac's Original Discount Store . . . and we re still at it. Here's more proof that your dollar buys more at Simms. Limited quantifies and odd lots at special birthday prices while quantities remain in stdek for the next 3 days. We must reserve the right to limit quantities — sorry no sales to dealers. 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Large 64-Ounce Capacity Non-Drip Plastic Decanter Ideal for serving or shaking liquids. Non-drip pour spout, snap on lid. 25* Lifetime Use-Reusable Ice Chest Ice Pack Large size ice pack for use on trips, picnics, etc. Keeps ice chests cold without mess. 59* Only 9 to Go at This Price BISSELL Rug Shampooer Dry rug cleaner applicator with 1 pint of shampoo to clean rugs and carpets. Avocado Color - 7-Piece TEFLDN Cookware Sets 4-qt. Dutch oven, 2-qt saucepan, 1-qt. sauce pan and 10" frypan. 12 sets to go at ....... . For Refrigerators & Freezers Freezette Food Containers f 69*1 72-ounce size container preserves flavor and freshness of foods. ‘REGAL’STAINLESS STEEL 9-Pc. Cookware Sets 4-qt. Dutch oven, 2-qt. saucepan, 1-qt. saucepan, 10" fry-pan. Easy care stainless. 1[34 Keeps Food Nature Fresh Lettuce Saver Bowl Special constructed bowl with cover keeps lettuce fresh, crisp and green longer. MILK GLASS MUGS 79^ CEREALBDWLS Pyrex Terro bowls. R Main Floor SPECIALS WhamoFRISBEE Game Festival YO-YO 98c list baseboll, lootboll, 8-ball, basket ball.......................... OP-YOP Novelty 98c list — 2 buttons on string for kids.......................... Beginner’s GUITAR MAGNIFIERS SET 1-YR. DIARY BOOK Ladies’ HAIR BRUSH 98c value — 3 styles in 3-colors to choose Pocket ADD MACHINE Reg 49c odds up to 1999 automatically. For shopping................. STAPLER & 1000 staples Regulor 49c Windsor pocket stapler ond Battery Scissors “SeT Playing Cards PAPER-MATE Pens Immersion Heater Reg. 98c — complete with decorated .•coffee cup........... 66*’ 66*’ 66* 49* 59* 59* 33* 34* 1*5 66* 59* 66* DRUGS and COSMETICS Gillette ‘Right Guard’ 004* SPRAY DECDORANT Famous ‘BAND-AID W PLASTIC STRIPS ^||V Genuine‘BACTINE’ 199 FIRST-AIO ANTISEPTIC I** $1.98 Value—16-fl. ounces..... JBL TONI Innocent Color ^ 19G Hair COLOR SHAMPOO 1^^ $2.25 value — assorted shades. AQUA VELVA Silicone J l%4« SHAVE CREAM BOMB Zl. i V 98c Menthol or regular.. -HL W 2»“GILLEnETechmatic 147 RAZOR OUTFIT $1.59 Cartridge ....,97c SQUIBB Synton Bristle |1l%4« TOOTHBUSHES 2 || i V MENNEN'SQUINSANA 1|l| FOOT COMFORT I**' $1.89 Spray for kool kots. 7-oz. net wl. JB. MONSIEUR LANVIN OOl"* After Shave Lotion AV $3.50 value I 1 /3 ounces .. BARGAIN BASEMENT 1st Quality American Made Panel Curtains-Each 60x63-inch panels in blue scenic or floral design in blue or brown. $1.98 values. 50« Cool Short Sleeves-smart BOYS’‘BONANZA’Shiris Denims, cords, velours etc. in sizes S-M-L for boys..... 2;100 Water Repellant Cotton Poplin Men’s Sport Hats Regular $1.69 value for work and sport,, , Popular colors. -Sizes 6% to 7%. . . . 94« Fortrel Polyester & Cotton Blends Men’s Walking Bermudas Values to $5.49 — Perm- anently pressed in plaids. ^ Am. 1 st quality. Size 30-36. Main Floor Clothing Ladies’ Swim Tops Short sleeve cover-ups for swimsuits or sleeveless dresses...................... |34 DuPont Nylon Latex Ladies’ Swimsuits $8.98 sellers one piece style, yellow, hot pink checks. Sizes 10 to 16. 394 100% Cotton-Sleeveless Girls’ Blouses 97c seller — 1st quality in white, prints and solids. Sizes 10-12-14............ 34« Washable Boxer Styles Boys’ Shorts Irrs. of famous brand. Zipper ' front. Green, brown or blue. Size 3 to 6x.. W!SM 134 98 North Saginaw Street iHE PON If AC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JILV 24. 1908 THE POXTTAC PRESS. W EDXKSDAV. .H IA' 24, 19.J8 SUMMER CLEARANCE Savings Up To 1/2 OFF MUST AAAKE ROOM FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL AND FALL MERCHANDISE SPECIAL EARLY BIRD SALE SAVE NOW on Boys' Girls' Sno-Suits, Jackets and Winter Coots. 10% Off on purchases made through July 25. All of our leading name brand garments are included. CHARGE or LAY-AWAY TEL-HURON - FE 5-9955 CHILDRENS' CAMERA Permanent Press! Avril Rayon and Cotton Shopely, Flower Splashed Shifts No-Iron Biovses And Creose-Free Skirts ... Ro'*'' . Now 1127 With Hidden Coin or Key Pocket Men's and Boys' Stretch Swim Trunks Now Now ^ 2^^ Stunning Beach and Pool Styles! Girls' and Women's One and 2-Pc. Suits Now Now "sr STORE HOURS: 9:30 to 9 MONDAY ' thru SATURDAY □ Optronic* Electric Eye □ Electric Film Drive MART ANNUAL BELL & HOWELL MOVIE SALE it's easy with tlie Bell e Howell AUTOLOAD SUPER 8/REGULAR 8 COMPATIBLE MOVIE PROJECTOR ON model 456 Perfect for Super 8 film. Projects bigger, brighter and better. Even Regular 8 wili bring greater enjoyment. automatic threadirtg... reel to reel. reverse and still picture control for exciting effects. Lets you back up for review, stop for closer look. format selector safeguards film ... Super 8 or Regular 8 by your selection. ■ Fast 1.5 Projection Lens ■ Gear Driven Reel Arms ■ 400 ft Film Capacity ■ Permanent Factoiy l ubrication ■ Cord Storage Compartment ■ Completely Self-Contained SIDEWALK SALE .Q.ADGET_B_AGS_ up to CHARGE IT - NO MONEY DOWN I uU /o FOR THE MOVIE DISCRIMINATING MAKER Canon 8:1 AUTO ZOOM MOVIE CAMERA ONLY $369 For those who demand the finest—here’s the perfect movie earner?. With a powered zoom lens that brings subjects 8 times closer! Completely automatic in every way, with a brilliant f/1.4 lens, folding grip, and elegant case. Come in for a closer look at the finest! Guaraiiteed by Bell & Howell. Tim CjanwuL Maud 55 South Telegraph TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER FB 4-9567 Gowns and Pajamas Up to V2 SUMMER SLIPS, PANTIES and PEniCOATS Up to ^2 OFF Billfolds, Wallets, Bags, Jewelry 2 OFF -INDIA MADRAS- Roll-Up Sleeve BLOUSES Regularly ^7.00 and ^8.00 It SPORTSWEAR Up to ^2 DRESSES AND PANT SHIFTS Up to ^2 OFF BRAS and GIRDLES Y2 off Pontiac and Rochester Store Only nlors n„ \ < .sr,, 11 s limit.-,I All Soles Final No Layaway or Phone Orders HAM STEAK DINNER Generous Center Cut, Corn-Fed Ham with Grilled Pineapple, Served with.^ French Fries, Chopped Lettuce Salad, Choice of Dressing, Dinner Roll and Butter, REMEMBER TRY THIS SPECIAL S E FISH i DINNERS % TASTY HALIBUT FROM THE DEEP, BLUE WATERS OF THE NORTH PACIFIC, SERVED WITH SALAD, FRENCH FRIES, TARTAR SAUCE, DINNER ROLL AND BUTTER. I Aids liros, BIG BOY 20 S. Telegraph Across from Tel-Huronc Silver Lake Rd. THE STREET FABRICS FABRICS Fit To Sew With A GOLDEN NEEDLE IliiiTS com: / \ I v/> uium si:.. in: IIAl l: i:i i:ii\ TiiL\(; TEL-HURON Shopping Center Phone 335-5471 PLENTY OF FREE PARKING DON’T MISS Poo Pan’s “FUNNY FARM” THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1968 Housewives Save Enough Money Weekly Watching the advertising in The Press to have it Home Delivered for months. Make Sure You're Included THE PONTIAC PRESS For Home Delivery Dial 332-8181 MU lUKs-r ’-s- Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas rHK I’OA riAc PRKSS. \\ K1)\KSI)AV. n G^ZhT" Senate OKs More-FAA Funds Alfred Cordingley Service for Alfred Cordingley, 55. of 5108 Chipman, Walerford Township, will be 11 a m. to-morrow at Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mrs. Enevald Strangeland Mrs. Gladys L. Davis Celebrated Mount Park Cemetery. Cordingley. ee for Mrs. Enevald Strangeland, 89, of 119 State will be 10:30 a m. Friday loria Dei lAitheran Church WASHINGTON ( APi — The 3,627 air-traffic controllers. The much of August due to the na-,con.sider proposals on ways to Senate has approved an addi-i House bill allowed for only 1,631 tional political conventions. relieve the congestion, tional $153 million for the Fcder-i controllers. i In a related development. The traffic jams in the OKCHARD E.AKE—Service for The growth from a single, The Senate approved the addi--FAA officials met Tuesday with! ways figured prominently Mrs Gladys L Davis 76, of standup. hook-tvpe phone to a'™'''* relieve the t'ongestion part tif an overall! leaders of the Professional Air | Sedate debate on the money b 3518 Erie will be 11 a m Friday lO-office business, is being appropriations bill|Traffic Controllers Oranization,I to expand FAA operations. at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home celebrated this month by ................‘ ..... " burial at White Chapel Telephone Answering self-em- with burial in Oakland Hills Cemetery, Tro>. .Memorial Gardens by Donelson- 7 j _j ivifinui.fai uv ployed carpenter died Sunday Surviving are his wife, 'al-eric his mother. Mrs Sarah M'S- Strangeland. a member Cordingley of Toronto, Ont.: a of Ooria Dei Lutheran Church, daughter, Mrs. Radford Pen- died today Mrs Davis, a member of the 12 S. Mill. Inc., which has local offices at some of the nation's businest’fg,, -p,.ynj.pgrtat.ion Depart-1 a new union, to discuss the dir while there has been .sharp airports, ment, 82 to 2. Only Sen. John J.itieups. dispute among the various par- This i latter of ail Williams. R-Del., and Strom, F, Lee Bailey, executive di-| ties involved over the causes for died Bethany Baptist Church. Tuesday Surviving are two daughters. Mrs. M C Worster of Orchard Lake and Mrs, Wayne Skidmore ■safety, it s a matter of air sur^-,jj^y,.,.pQPj Q i rector of the union, said afteri the recent jamups in air flights, vial," Sen. John C. Stenms, D- ■■ ■ ■ ’ “ organization I there* has been general agree- land of Pontiac, two stepsons. Surviving are three daugh- Moines, h r.ilberl Longo of Warren and ters, Mrs. John Borsvold of (gg^ ' five grandchildren Waterford Township and Mrs seven great-grandchildren Gabriel Flessland and Mi's Donald Rath, both of Pontiac; six grandchildren: eight greatgrandchildren; and two sisters. Donald Longo of grandchildren: n and two sisters. brother; Mrs. Richard Jackson" Mrs. Warner L. Forsyth commercial answer BIRMINGHAM The 40-verr-old companv was Mj" Jaid before the Senate an- '"formed Senate source | the session .... .. ■eanizeri' after oricinator John °La a'sajd he expects the House williwould seek meetings with indus- ment that a shortage of control- F verson w- n de ^ if not all, the in-i try and other interested parties | lers is one factor. " ^nlnmher to fix a broken ^ , creases in t(ie Senate bill, jthis week to talk oi-er immedi-i williams tried unsuccessfully ate - nine action came while report^s Quig]^ action in the House will I ate steps to end the problem. Ug block a provision Exempting ^ delays in takeoffs and land-,|jg necessary if the measure isi Also, FAA adminiltrator Wil- the new FAA jobs from a new and T, , . ,u. 'og'' at "'"for airports thiough- (g gg jntg gffggj before fall since|iam F. McKee said a three-day, law to roll back federal employ- The plumbei wa.s one ol me ,,^1 the country continued to; ^^.g^ggggg ^gi^gg .... ... •’J . . schoolteacherr-eal estate man's gg,ne in. - -- ...- ,____ stomers, at the 24;hdur break for meeting, starting today, would ment to 1966 levels. Mrs. Owen G. Mrs Richard , Jackson, 84. of KKI Mark, died today. Her body IS at Donelson- .Sen ice for .Mrs Owen (Lillian H.i Wright. 62, of Thomas B. Lukes Dakota will b^l p.m. Friday at .NEW YORK (API - Some; mg scr\i(.e minor changes in flight sched-Service for ope't^d in a small office on y|gg jjgg^ announced by . , former resident Mrs.\varner 1. Pan American \Vorld Airways Wright of Oscoda will be II 't'® service still bases and Mohawk Airlines as a re- n am‘‘ Thursdav at St. John's itself on personal, courteous and suit of increasing congestion at Episcopal Church, Oscoda. b‘leP'i«"e co'erage of airports here and elsewhere. Mrs Forsvth was the wife of clients, according to Engerson a spokesman for Mohawk ,f^g gf of 17134 Kirkshire, Bloomfield said Tuesday the airline had DON'T MISS THE BIGS "MADE-FOR-MICHIGAN" Memorial Cemetery, Service for gt Thomas likes, 20, ol 4088 Wenonah Waterford Township, wll be 1 pm Friday at St Andrews Mrs Wright, Episcopal Church with burial in teacher^ al Wisne Ottawa Park Cemetery by today .She vvas a Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Saints Lpiseopal .Sgt. Lukes wa.c killed in ac- .Exchange' Club and "‘ffed and underequipped to Andrews Alpha Deltia Kappa. Bishop Richaid Eni riche s He also offers 'vacation handle the mcreasign CONVIK^ Episcopal Church, Waterford ^^rv^ng^^re jj; ,g„,,,g,, Detroit Pontiac and Paul ■ traf- wnship. iving t p his pai s Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A Lukes ol Hichard Abraham of .A Waterford Township: a"d -seven grandchildren. grandparents. Mrs. Delta Juett _ .............. ^ of Waterford Township and Peter Brimeombe of Windsor. Ont.; three brothers. Jim at home. Robert of Pontiac, and WTlliam-C. of Sylvan Lake: and three sisters. .Mrs Fred Brown of Union Lake and Mrs. Charles Walker and Mrs Irving Benjamin. both of Waterford Township. Mrs. Edward Jewell Three Injured in Car Collision c OAKLAND TOWNSHIP Service for Mrs. Edward 1-Jennie .A.' .lewell. 86. of 1450 Hill Top will be 2, p.m. Friday at the Pixley Memorial Chapel with burial at East Lawn Cemetery. Lake Orion. Mrs. Jewell, a member of the leaners Society, died yester- Tock; also offers "vacat ering," an idea formulated Re, one summer, vvhen a burglar The bill was $153 million high-chose homes.to rob by calling to er than a measure passed pre-see if the owners were home, viously by the House and its .Another Engerson concept is a sponsors said the extra money - daily cheer-the-shut NOW IN PROGRESS AT. PRAYER APPLIANCE INC. IIO8W. Huron 589 Orchard Lk. Ave. would provide for the hiring of day. ™ u . I Surviving are a son. Llovd L. Three persons were hospital- , ® r i . n.-i-C.,- -j . jBankenburg of Lake Orion: a ized—one in serious condition— . Mrs. William Marlyn a.- me re- o, s .ra.tic accr Sendee for Mrs. 'Villiam spLgReW^Toli'nshm iCora M.i Martyn, 88. of 39 ^RepLted tn, serious condition‘hree grand* W’aldo. will be 10:30 a m. p^„Hac General Hospital is great-granddhildren. Saturday at DonelsonJohns j^jgptjg L Vg(jPO(jy j7 of Hrand ii_. r\r^,-anr-a. Funeral Home with burial in piggp ^.,,ose car collided with Muart Ottawa Park Cemetery. an auto driven by Albert L ORIO.N TOWNSHIP — Mrs. Martyn died today. She p,erre of Detroit about 8 pm.. Service for Mrs. Clarence was a meml?er of Central according to Oakland County ,Qg,.g d.i Stuart. 65, of 571 .Methodist Church. sheriff's deputies. josiyn will be 3:.30 p.m. Fridav Surviving are her husband: George Kovacs. 16. of Flint, ,'^0 Doncison-Johns Funeral two daughters: Mrs. Edith M. a passenger with Vedrody. is Home with burial at Oak Hill Cadieux of Pontiac and Mrs. reported in fair condition and Hemeterv Olive L. Hibler of Newhall, Vdekie Jackola. 19. of Detroit. g'^^gp, yesterday. Calif.: three sons, Ernest W. o,f who was riding with Pierre, is sgpyjyjgg gpee four sons , Venice, Fla., Russel J of listed as satisfactory, hospital yy-g^pp^^pj yj^pgl^j Orlando, Fla. apd Otto L. ol authorities said. Pontiac, Gordon L. of Waterford Township; and one deputies said Pierre \vas driv- 11^ trrother. mg north when Vedrody s on- ^ Highland: one >' «P"" brother: and 13 grandchildren. Mrs. Passatta Peavy uut of control into his lane. Mrs. Mabel Upleger Service far former Pontiac fT resident Mrs. Passatta Peavy.. jalGCrdCKcrS IdKG LMLAY CITY - Service for 77. of Chicago will be 1 p.m. AfPS ^gbei Upleger, 69. of 7661 Friday at Liberty Baptist OAA Trrim Firm Crowe will be 1 p.m. Friday at Church with burial in Oak Hill JlJV/U I lUlIl I 11 Ml y;f Paul's Lutheran Church with Cemetery by D a v i s - C 0 b b burial in Imlay Township funeral Home. Safecrackers stole $.300 from a Gemetery. Mr. Peavy. a member of ^ break-m Mrs. Upleger died yesterday. Bethlehem Temple Apostolic pppopjed yesterday to c i t y Her body is at Muir Brothers Church, died Monday. police. Funeral Home. Imlay City She Surviving are eight daughters, investigators said the was a member of St. Paul's Mrs Rchelle Taylor, .Mrs. Net- burglars broke into Pontiac Lutheran Church, tie Spears, Mrs. p v e r t a (Rgsg Co. 35 W Lawrence. Surviving are her husband Williams and Mrs. C 0 r a through a side yyindow , then John; three daughters, Mrs Hopkins, all of Poritiac, and moved the safe from one office Gladys Ostrom of Mount Mi;S. Osie McEw'en. Mrs. Sim-m to another before forcing it Clemens. Mrs. Betty La Bair, of Jackson and .Mrs. Katherine open Wisconsin and Mrs. Lois Jordan Davis, all of Chicago; 34] identification officers were|Of Kentucky; on grandchildren; and three great-called to check the scene torilmlay Cit grandchildren 1 fingerprints, police said. ! grandchildren. son, Roland of ^t^en SAVINGS MORE FINE INTERIOR PRODUCTS GAS CLOUD HOVERS OVER FLAMES-eloud of chloritle gas rises from the FMC int in South Charlestoh, W. Va., after a ries of ekplosfens yesterday ruptured a gas line, forcing up to 5,000 pereons to leave their homes. Their were no latalities. Police .sealed off the city, which is kndwn as "the chemical center of the world. " ENAMEL Reg. per gal. 2 GALS. *Q98 FOR O LIQUID GLASS TEXTURON ™"ss enamel • ONE COAT COVERS MOST Sl.HFACES • COVERS CHIPPED. CRACKED, TAPED SURFACES EASILY • DRIES TO A HARD, WASHABLE FINISH • SAFE AND NON-TOXIC FOR CHILDRENS TOYS AND FURNITURE • DRIES IN 30 MINUTES • EASY SOAP AND WATER CLEAN-UP Reg. per gal. Reg. per gal ^ ^ GALS. *Q98 X FOR ^ O GALS. *Tf98 X FOR # CLASSIC INTERIOR LATEX 7 PIECE 9" DELUXE PAN AND ROLLER SET DAP VINYL SPACKLING COMPOUND V2 PINT SIZE All Victor Paint Stores Carry a complete Line of Mary Carter Paints AMERICA'S BEST PAINT VALUE! MORE THAN 1 300 STORES FROM COAST TO COAST! 158 North Saginaw St. I r 9®® West Huron St. Next to Sears, Pontiac-Telephone 338-6544 | at Te|e| AVON-TROY CARPET* 1650 Auburn Road Utica, Michigan Telephone 852-2444 MOST STOKES OPEN Ml at Tefegraph Rd., WALLED LAKE DISCOUNT HOUSE* 101 Pontiac Trail, Waited Lake Telephone 624-4845 Pontiac-Telephone 338-3138 JOHN’S LAWN AND GARDEN EQUIPMENT* 1215 Cooley Lake Rd., Union Lk. Telephone 363-8104 . r THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNKSDA"» , .M IA J4, 11)«8 EViRYDAY LOW PRICES PLUS TOP VALUE STAMPS —WHY SETTLE FOR LESS? COUNTRY CLUB Corned Beef POINT CUT COUNTRY CLUB OVEN-READY PRE-SEASONED GLENDALE FRESH OR SMOKED Meat Loot......2 '/2 *1 ** Liver Saesoge.......... $9* TIGER TOWN SLICED FRESH Boiled Ham , 8-OZ WT PKG 79* Leg 0’ Pork Roast ..l. 89* KROGER BAKED Angel Food Cake CAKE eP VANILLA, CHOCOLATE OR NEAPOLITAN Polar Pak Ico Cream Birds Eye Cool Whip s3V KROGER FROZEN-BEEF, TURKEY OR Chicken Pot Pies 15 8-0 Z WT PIE KROGER BRAND Frozen Lemonade 3 0Z _______ CANS COUNTRY CLUB FUDGEES, TWIN POPS OR Rainbow Pops 12-44 GRANULATED Pioneer Sugar S-^OV Canned Ham 10-7” ...■.iw-i--' ' 'o. ,/r r«:.■—j RECULtR M DRIF GRIND R,CG.SrR.NGD,«XGDORN,CNPRO.,N^ ,t;HillS BPOS CoffOO 155* Gorbor Baby CeroaL'fpKclS* STRAINED BETTY CROCKER CAKE MIX Lomon Chiffoa....2». ALL PURPOSE GoM Modal Flour..5a<‘ 49* Gorbor Oraage Jui(Oo^cA» ENRICHED DELICIOUS! NUTRITIOUS! 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While Mayo Smith, manager of the first-place Detroit Tigers alread>’ is bringing his starters back with only two da.ys rest, the runner-up Baltimore Orioles have become ardent scoreboard watchers. And, it’s only July. After outlasting Cleveland 8-6 Tuesday night in a 21-hit slugfest, and reiilacing the Indians in second place, the Orioles turned their attention to the late-finishing Detroit-Washington game. "What's Detroit doing'’" several players asked reporters as they arrived in the clubhouse. When they had left the field, the .scoreboard showed Washington ahead 4-3. “Washington has made three pitching changes in the eighth, " a reporter said ‘•Never nind that," outfielder Frank Robinson said. "Did Detroit score'.’" CALLED HALT Even Oriole Manager Earl Weaver, who has posted a 10-4 record since replacing the deposed Hank Bauer, momentarily got swept up in the moment. Suddenly, he called a halt. "Let's worry about Cleveland first. " Weaver .said. "We have Detroit coming in over the weekend." Then, after being informed Detroit had gone ahead in the eighth. Weaver added: "It’s early set. We’ve got time. " Baltimore trailed Detroit by 10'2 games when Weaver took command July ft, but now the Orioles are six behind with a three-game series against the Tigers coming up. * ♦ * Baltimore continued its recent robust hitting Tuesday night. Boog Powell drove in four runs with a homer and double. Brooks Robimson homered with a man 01), and Dave Johnson tripled for two Don Buford, hitting .385 since the All-Star Game, had two hits, stole three bases and scored two runs. Jose CardenaJ and Joe Azeue hit homai's for the Indians, who lost to the Orioles for only the second time in Hi games this season. McLain's Road Show Big Michigan's Shack Sy/ifehing Positions HIGH-HANDED TACTICS—Shortstop Hal Lanier i22) of San Francisco awaits the toss (top photo) while trapped baserunner Adolfo Phillips of the Chicago Cubs attempts to beat the throw. Lanier and Phillips each throw up their hands (bottom photos I as the Giants' infielder makes the tag during the collision in the base path ,SF second baseman Ron Hunt follows up on the play. The Giants won. 4-3, in 10 innings. ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) - Dave Strack, who recruited A 11 - A m e r i c a Cazzie Russell and catapulted Michigan into basketball prominence, resigned as head coach of the Wolverines Tuesday. He will take over the newly created post of business manager of athletics. The appointment was approved Tuesday night by the university’s board in control of intercollegiate athletics. ■ Don Canham, who succeeded H.O. ■'Fritz " Crisler as athletic director last spring, said a successor had not been named, adding: "We should have a new coach shortly. " The best bet to succeed the 4.5-year-old Strack is John Orr, who served as his assistant last season. DIFFICULT DECISION The decision to leave coaching was certainly difficult, but I'm pleased to be working with Don Canham, who is bringing new ideas into this important field of athletic administration," said Strack.' "I've been fortunate to have talented players, who have brought great success THEkPONTIAC PRESS \VK1)\ES1)A^^ ,n L\' J4. lOdR smrs to Michigan. Now I’m looking forward to the business operations which should prove as rewarding as my 20 years as a coach.” Under Strack, the Wolverines posted a 113-89 record over eight years, including a 65-17 mark while Russell, now with the NBA’s New York Knicks, was a player, ♦ * * With Russell, Michigan won three straight Big Ten titles from 1964 through 1966, sharing one with Ohio State. The Wolverines finished third in the NCAA tournament in 1964, and second in 1965, losing to UCLA. No 1 QUINTET Strack’s team was voted No. 1 in the Associated Press poll with a 24-4 mark in 1965, his best year. ★ ★ * the team slipped to a 2-12 Big Ten record in 1966 and was 6-8 last year, winning its last four conference games.^ ★ ★ ★ Strack was a three-year basketball regular at Michigan and captain of the 1946 team. He served as an assistant coach before taking the head coaching job at Michigan following a year as head coach at Idaho in 1959-60. State Pro-Am Decided CLEVELAND BALTIMORE Late Switch Pairs Champions Easy Net Victory for Miss Fisher at Dayton Meet Special to The Press DAYTON. Ohio — Top-seeded Emily E'isher of Bloomfield Hills trimmed Californian Mary StrutTi*ers, 6-2. f2. yesterday in the 18-year-olds diWsion at the Western Girls Tennis Championships, The "leading 16-year-old Kristin Kem-mer also breezed to a second-round win, while three other highly ranked entries were eliminated in upsets. Kathy Dombos. second seeded in the 18-year-old division, was ousted by Pam Austin of Rolling Hills. Calif., 6-3, 7-5. SURPRISES Eighth-seeded Kana Epstein of Miami, Fla., was eliminated by Tuppy Daugherty of Baton Rouge. La., 6-1, 6-4 and in the 16-year-old division, Sharon Walsh of .San Rafael. Calif., upset third . seeded Cincv Thomas of Los Angeles 6-4, 5-7. 10-8. ' Miss Kemmer breezed by Chris Slade of Redwood City, Calif., 6-2, 6-0. ★ * ★ In other play, Connie Capozzi of Middletown, Ohio, third seeded in the 18-year-old division, defeated Martha Tliprnhill of Huntington; W. Va.. 6-1, 6-2. Seventh seed. Jane Lawson 0 f Middletown, Ohio, defeated Pam Farmer of San Diego, Calif., 6-2, 3-6.7-5. By FLETCHER SPEARS A couple of longtime pals playing together in a competitive event for the first time own the 1968 Michigan Pro-.Am Golf Championship Cass JawoF. assistant at Glen Oaks, and Detroiter Dennis Mclnerney, both 31, were brought together for this tournament almost by accident and they made the best of it by posting a one-stroke victory in the 54-hole tournament at Indianwood Country Club near Lake Orion The two sharpshooters dosgd the 54-hole grind over the hilly. 6,909-yard, par-72 course with a hot 18-under-par 198 on rounds of 64 . 69 and 65 T.AKE SECOND A stroke back were Bill Bisdorf of Grosse lie and former Michigan amateur champion Glenn Johnson ' Sharing third with 203s were former Oakland Hills pro A1 Watrous and Hunter McDonald along with Glenn Stuart of Cascade Hills and Peter Green of Orchard Lake, the 1966 champions. Defending champions Bill Mattson of Shenandoah and Bill Curtis were 10th with a 209. CAREER HIGHLIGHT The win jiyas the biggest one of his career foy Cass, who is one of five Jawor brothers in the pro golf business. Cass is assistant to brother Stan at Glen Oaks. -* * * Cass’s best previous showing in competitive golf came in' 1962 when he finished 10th in the Cajun Classic during a brief stint on the pro tour. Jawor had entered the 31st running of ^ ^ ^ MICHIGAN PRO-AM Al Watrous-lfunter McDonald 66-67-70- 203 this tournament with Roy Cullenbine of Detroit, but business forced Cullenbine to withdraw. The first round of the tournament was slated for Monday, and as of early Sunday. Jawor had no partner. DRAFTED PARTNER Later in the day, Mclnerney. a shirt salesman, strolled into the clubhouse at Glen Oaks. '1 drafted him then." said the happy Jawor Mclnerney had just returned from a selling trip to Chicago. On Monday, they fired an eight-under 64 to share the first-round lead with Knollwood’s Robert Panasiuk and Bob Solomon, lost the lead during the first round of yesterday's 36-hole finals and then came on strong over the final 18 holes to sew up the championship. * * ★ Bisdorf and Johnson were in at 1.30 on two straight 65s and held a three-stroke advantage over Jawor and Mclnerney as they headed into the final 18 holes. HOT STREAK But the Jawor-McTnerney duo hit a hot streak, Dennis bgnged home three birdie putts on the front .side, while Cass col- lected one on the front and three on the back and they finished with a 65. Bisdorf and Johnson carded a respectable 69. but both ran into tree problems on the 18th. a 509-yard, par-5, wiping out their bid to force a tie and a playoff. Both Cass and Mclnerney had the long-range touch around the greens in that final round. ON TARGET Dennis chipped in an 80-footer for a birdie on the third hole and Cass knocked in a 36-footer at No. 6. On the back side, Cass knocked in a 70-footer at 10 for a birdie, a 20-footer at 15 for a par and a 60-footer on 16 for a birdie that boosted he and his pal into a one-shot lead. DAVE STRACK Yields M’ Cage Reins = rank Metzger-Tom Draper \6ac McElmurry-Barry Solom rom Talkington-Doug Wilson Iharles Knowles-Tom Page rom Cosmos-David Cameron 3ick Bury-Chuek Byrne Golfer Gets Shakes Following Ace, Fogle BRISTOL, Va. — Robert Towns quit „after playing nine holes at the Holston Valley golf course Tue,sday—'too shook up to go on. ’ Towns in that distance, carded a hole-in*one and a doubje eagle deuce. * * ★ The double eagle came at the par 5 third hole. Towns’ drive went into an adjoining fairway but his iron shot went over a blind hill, onto the third green— and into the cup for a two. The ace was at the par 4. 298-yard ei^th hole. A brisk wind helped Towns’ drive. He finished the nine holes in 34, two under par. ' Vic J^ho|a-Geo,rg| Cat^o ^ Roberf^Szilagyi-Ray Hartner Don White-Steve Horvath 69.71-73-^213 67-76-71-214 69-75-70-214 L/.S. Race Group Trims Turbines INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) - The checkered flag waa waved for the second and apparently the last time Tuesday for the controversial but still winless turbine-powered race cars of Andy Granatelli The U.S. Auto Club board of directors cut the air intake area of the turbine cars to 11.9 square inches, effective Jan,,,. The intake area, which governs the power of the turbines, was reduced from 23.9 to 15.9 square inches last summer by USAC. Both moves were to make the turbines more competitive with the conventional piston-engine cars in races with Indianapolis type cars, including the Indianapolis ^0, USAC said. But Granatelli, STP Corp. president, said Tuesday night the latest USAC action "speaks for itself." OTHER MOVES "I'll not be back at Indianapolis next They played the final hole in a steady rain and Mclnerney tapped in an 18-inch putt for a par to clinch the title. Johnson and Bisdorf, playing with Jawor and Mclnerney, hit trees with their second shots on the 18th. Johnson’s third shot hit the green and stopped 50 feet from the cup. Bisdorf was off to the left 3b feet from the cup. Bisdorf chipped and his ball rolled toward the hole but stopped two feet short. Johnson's try for a birdie that would have tied the match mis.sed’by six inches. The win brought Jawor a check for $350, while Bisdorf picked up $300. Al Watrous, a three-time winner of the event, and Stuart, the 1966 champ, each collected $262.50. Appendectomy Puts White Sox Skipper Lopez on Sidelines CHICAGO (API — Manager Al Lopez of the Chicago White Sox was resting comfortably today following an emergency appendectomy Tuesday night. Lopez, who will be 60 next month, complained of stomach pains Tuesday and was taken to Mercy Hospital as a pj^ecautionary measure shortly before the Oakland-Chicago game was rained out. A couple of hours later it was announced he was undergoing surgery. Lopez, who returned as the Sox manager July, 14 two days after Eddie Stanky resigned, will be out of action for at least two weeks. Coach Les Moss will direct the team during Lopez’ absence. Pinch Singles Earn 19th Win for Tiger Ace WASHINGTON (UPI) - If Denny McLain wants to win 30 games this season, it might help if he gets his next 12 starts on the road. McLain picked up his 19th victory of the year Tuesday night as the Detroit Tigers rallied to a 6-4 victory over the Washington Senators on pinch singles by Jim Price and Gates Brown that punch-• ed across two eighth-inning runs. ★ ★ * The victory, which brought the Tigerso ut of a three-game losing streak and increased their American League lead to six games, was the 12th for McLain in his 12 starts in road games. All three of his losses this season came in home games, where he started l5, won seven and had no decisions in three others when he was replaced by relief pitchers. * ★ * The victory, which brought the Tigers out of a three-game losing streak and one-season record with 29 triumphs in 1944, gained his 19th victory that year Aug. 16 in relief at Boston and his 20th two days later at Fenway Park. * * ★ Detroit’s uprising against the lasl-place Senators began when reliever Phil Ortegff hit a wild streak and walked Al Kaline and Bill Freehan, with the Tigers trailing 4-3 and one out. SOUD SINGLE Price’s pinch hit scored Kaline to tie the game and Brown sent Detroit in front with a solid single to right. Jim Northrup doubled and Kaline singled him across to add an insurance run in the ninth inning. McLain, who gave up eight hits and all four Washington runs, bowed out for a pinch hitter in the eighth inning Detroit rally, but Pat Dobson and Jon Warden preserved his win in relief. ★ * ★ The Tigers surged to a 3-fl lead in the first inning by tagging starter Camilo Pascual for three runs on a walk, an error and singles by Kaline and Freehan, Frank Howard belted his 28th homer of the year into the upper leftfield deck to cut the margin to 3-1 in the second inning. CLOSED THE GATES The Senators started a three-fun rally in the sixth when Mike Epstein was hit by a pitch and Howard doubled. Successive singles by Ken McMullen, Bernie Allen and Paul Casanova then accounted for the go-ahead runs. But Brown, who is 10 for 17 as a pinchhitter, closed the gates on the Senator’s bid and gave the Tigers a six-game American League lead. ' ★ * ★ “Brown has three things going for him," Manager Mayo Smith said. "Brown believes he can hit; Brown knows he can hit, and Brown does hit. " The Tigers face the Senators again tonight in the second of three games. Mickey Lolich (7-5) will pitch for Detroit -against Washington’s Jim Hannan 3-2. DETROIT WASHINGTON ab r h bi ,, ab r h bi MAugffe 2b 4 0 0 0 UnW cf 5 0 0 0 Stanley cf 4 110 CPetersn rf 5 0 10 Mel''M?hl4Venl®D^^ 70- 74-73-217 71- 72-74-217 year with a turbine," he said from his Rod^ Thom^so^Mike Murphy 72-71-74—217 Chicago office. Stan"' J a wor^'p^*^ Sh ube^k"'’* 72-73-73-218 USAC also: 72-73-74-220 —Lowered displacement of t h e Jack a^k.*Dr" A^"'l°''LaGroix 72-75-73-220 turbocharged Offenhaus^er and Ford Tom Dofen-EO Delehanty Larry d/ancour-Dave w'sner 72:77:721^1 engines from 170.8^6 to 161.^03 cubic in- Geiilld Prieskorn-George Pripskorn Jim Scoll-John O'Donovan 72-80-69-221 ; 69-73-80-222 :phes, also effective Jan, 1. Boston Goalie Fined WILDWOOD, N. .1. (4>i - Edward Johnston, 32, a goalie for th Boston Bruins’ hockey team, was lined $100 Monday on an assault charge in this New Jersey shore resort. — Raised displacement of nonsupercharged production stock block engines from 305.1 to 320.355 inches, effective immediately. —Left unchanged displacement of the specially built nonproduction s lock engines, such as Dan Gurney drove to second place in this year's 500, at“305J cubiq inches, with the formula to be reviewed at USAC’s January meeting. _ PRO-AM CHAMPS—Cass Jawor (left) aiid his amateur partner Dennis Mclnerney hold their trophy high after winning the Michigan Pro-Am yesterday at Indianwood Country Club. The two carded a 54-hole total of 198, 18 strokes under par. Golf's Big Guns on Missing List ST, PAUL. Minn. (AP) - The $100,000 Minnesota Classic—the closest thing to an institution on the pro golfing tour—opens a four-day run Thursday without most of the big name golfers. The oldest tournament on the PGA circuit, the meet originated in 1930 as the St. Paul Open. ★ ★ ★ Such stars as Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, Billy Casper, Doug Sanders, Gary Player, Masters champion Bob Goaiby and newly-crowned PGA champ Juliu$ Boros will be sitting out the tournament. The field of 150 will be packed with young pros. ★ ★ ★' Lee Trevino, colorful U.S. Open chanipion, and young Tom Weiskopf, currently the leading money winner of 1968, are rated the favorites. Defending champion Lou Graham and 1965 titUst Ray Floyd are back for another fling at the $20,000 first-prize money. 'I'llK. luXHlAf W KDXKSDA V. .11 lA Founders Fesfival Church Invests Starts in Farmington-^ : ‘ - I LOS ANGELES (API - Thei A kaleidoscope of events is ini Patricia Stevens F i n i s h i n g Episcopal Church has deposited store for area residents for the School, Detroit., The two!$675,000 in 45 banking institu-l three days of the Farmington I runners-up will receive $25. jtions in low-income areas of the, Founders festival, beginningi Saturday there will be a'United States, a church official! tomorrow at noon. 1 parade, on Grand River fromjs^ys- j Open activities include an ox Orchard Lake Road west toj The Rev. Canon Nicholas Kou-| roast sponsored by the Elk’s- Farmington Road. j letsis of the Los Angeles Episco-i Club, helicopter rides continuing I This year only incumbent: Pal Diocese disclosed Tuesday until Saturday, and final judg-ipolitfcians will march in thel^he church's executive council ing in the Miss Founders'parade. It will be followed by, has reinvested $45,000 in three Festival contest. |the “candidates corner," pro-ilTiinority-group banks and sav-j * * * jviding a chance for challengers^nd loans associations in' The grand opening takes To expound their views. Los Angeles. i place at 6:30 p.m. with ascent] Later there will be a horse' * * * i of a hot air balloon. |show sponsored by the Masonic] Canon Kouletsis said the The schedule of events in-[Temple and a flower show;church hopes to allow banks in! eludes activities for people from:sponsored by the Farmington Negro or Mexican-American' 9 to 90, including Little League Garden Club, baseball games, a slow pitch softball game, band concerts, a teen-age dance, concession stands and a sidewalk sale. WINNER’S GIFTS The winner of the Miss Founders’ contest selected from, ten finalists will receive $100, a| $200 scholarship training fund' and a $500 course at the .sections to increa.se capital for business and home loans to peo-! pie in their communities. “My black friends tell me that putting money in black banks has done more good for them: Through Wall of op K&d’s Headed for Czech Talk 6 grandchildren. F i service will be held Thursday, July 25 at 11 a m. at Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home with Minister Glen M e 11 o t of-. ficiating. Interment in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. Mr. Cordingley will lie in state at Ihe funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 9:30 a.m. and 9:30 p.m.) Engine Crashes Railroad Shops NINE KILLED — A two-car passenger tram collided with this farm labor bus at Newtonville, a small southern New Jersey community, killing nine and injuring 20. State police said a lA'iinsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines tram,, hit the bus carrying about 40 migrant farm workers at a grade crossing last night. News in Brief Tree Trimmer Stung Algeria Frees 23 Others iooii.«b,Beei 'skyp^ked' Israelis Still Held j PRAGUE (AF) - Uncon-1 I firmed reports today said Leon-j lid I. Brezhnev and the rest of the Soviet Communist party, DAVIS, GLADYS L.; Politburo was on its way to Czechoslovakia for its crucial meeting with Prague's Communist leaders to discuss ] the latter’s controversial democratic reforms. Departure of the Soviet delegation for the previously announced meeting was reported! by the Yugoslav news agency, ■ Tanjug, from Moscow There! was no official confirmation, but rumors of the departure c lated in Moscow. The trip to Czechoslovakia is the first by the Politburo—steer-1 ing committee of the Soviet par- ] T.v-outside Russia as a group. 'jacKSON, JENNIE S.; July 24, The meeting is expected to be , iggg; too Mark Street; age 84. held today or Thursday in Slo-, Funeral arrangements are vakia, adjacent to the Soviet I pending at the Donelson-Johns Union, but the time and location Funeral Home. • have not been announced. _ . LUKES, SGT. THOMAS B.; July 13, 1968; 4088 Wenonah July 23, 1968; 3518 Erie Drive, Orchard Lake; age 76; dear mother of Mrs. M. C. Worster and Mrs. Wayne Skidmore; dear sister of Mrs. Louis Ball, Mrs. Mable Carter and Mrs. Raymond , S a m e s ; also ■ grandchildren and seven great grand children. Funeral service will be held Friday, July 26, at 11 a.m. at the Donelson - Johns P'unerai Home. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Davis will lie in state att the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) CZECHS CONFIDENT 1 Despite new Soviet army maneuvers along its eastern frontier, Czechoslovak officials cx-Ipressed confidence Ihe Russians ,r-1 would never resort to armed in- ' HUTCHINSON, Kan, (AP) -Last month a Santa Fe locomo-jtive got away from the railroad [yards here and sped some 80 miles driverless across Kansas, Mrs. Donald Fryer of 385 , ;i ..,.,0 ^ Beverly, Waterford Township, _ ^ , , . , , CINCINNATI, Ohio reported to township police yes-! Tuesday, another diesel kept Bees stung a professional tree ^ . , , r . . a u-i ai .1 t r . 1 terday afternoon that a 10-footigoing when it should have trimmer more than 100 times on Pho Algerian hostages for Arab comrnandos El Al. the Isiaeli national aluminum boat was stolen from'stopped and crashed part way his face and chest as he was g^me^ prisoner in Israel, but me, said 10 crew members and;teryention if the^c^^^^^ her hark varH i.k u.u ii r.u , ^ trapped in liis climbing ropes 35 jetliner and 21 or 22 Is-i there was no public response 12 passengers were detained, lunited behind Alexander^ Dub-^ her back yard. [through the wall of the railroad ^ ^ove gS^ J'^eli citizens today after releas- from Algiers and no demand for The Algerians said they were leek’s reformist regime. » Mom’s Rummage: Thurs., 9 shops. Huston Wilhoit, 45, of Cincin-‘^'8 23 non-Israeli passengers, ia swap. holding 11 pas.sengers along "The Soviets would lose more to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin The locomotive was sitting „jjti, finally escaped by shaking! The El Al Boeing 707 was di-| ■* * * with the 10 crew rrjembers. .than they would gain by a mili- Rds. — Adv.!Outside the shops when a rriach-'loose of the ropes, climbing'''^rted to Algiers on a flight! Twenty of the released pas- The three hijackers also ap-]tary intervention," one Commu- ---------------- |inist attempted to drive it in-!down the tree and falling (he Rome to Israel early Tues-.sengers were flown to Paris, parently were in’Algicrs. 'nist party official said. Lodge Calendar 'side. He said he applied the I last 10 feet, |day by three members of the They included two Americans, * * ★ * ★ * 'brakes "but she just kept on] Wilhoit, who had been .sum-Peont for the Liberation- of Rina Uziel, 23, of Brooklyn,! The Israeli government asked - Moscow will have to set used Regular meeting.s of Waterford;going" through a brick and rein-imoned to a trailer park to;Palestine, an Arab sabotage or-N Y., and Gabriel Gaiz, 17, a PTVI. Secretary General U Thant Aux. No. 2887, FOE has been|forced glass wall. [remove a damaged limb from a ganization. The front asked the student from Long Beach. Cal-iand the Italian government to|j,g„ turning back the changed to Wed., July 24, at 8j Damage to the building was tree, was reported in fair condi-jAlgerian government to hold the if-, who finally arrived in Tel jintercede with the Algerians for l^.|gp|^ We are not going lo com-p.m. Doris Strickland, secretary, I extensive, the railroad reported. Ition at a hospital. Ilsraelis aboard the plane as Aviv today with four other pas-release of the $6 million jetliner ^ptermined to ^ _ _ --------------, gg Three Jewish passengers who went an emissary to Algiers. I officials said thev were not Israeli citizens were! Algeria is still technically at f . „ . ' ^ viewed the Soviet note this week demanding a strengthening of Czechoslovakia’s border with West Germany, presumably by flown to Marseille. jwar with Israel following the ! Reports of the-number of Is-j Arab-Israeli war in June 1967, raclis held in Algiers differed, land Israel has never had diplo- -,ma,lc relations «.h any or the r";"; a"n’ .Arab governments. . [ Although the several Arab r Tewefs^arid\eia%d“wor'k'^wm; gue organizations have ®‘the‘"'officc o?"'ihe TSwnlhl^sent commando .squads into Is-ykl? Roalc® Midl'iga^n cacl repeatedly on terrorist and missions, this was the step the war of APPARENT REBU'TTAL In apparent rebuttal to the Soviet note, Maj. Gen, Jan Pe-first Israeli plane ever hijacked. Iprny, commander of the frontier One of the passengers who ]guard forces, said in a state-was released, Leon Papu, a Co- [ment to the official news agency lombian, said the plane’s copilot [CTK If staggered into the passenger ;;|compartment 20 minutes after 0 the takeoff from Rome. A Want-Adable is an article which is too valuable to be retired to idleness, and which someone else would be proud to own and use. Maybe you have a baby grand piano which hasn't been played for years. Or another musical instrument of value. These are true Want-Adables, eagerly sought by people who daily read The Pontiac Press Want Ad pages. Want-Adables are easily converted to money in your pockef. All you do is dial 332-8181 or 334-4981 and ask for the Want Ad Department. You will be treated with friendliness and courtesy, and placing your Pontiac Press Want Ad will prove to be a pleasant experience. Your Wont Ad will cost very little, and will bring you quick response. PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS 332-8181 or 334-4981 Be Sure lo Order the Thrifty 6-Time Rate "Fears . regarding the safety of Czechoslovakia’s borders are quite unfounded. The Czechoslovak Socialist Republic has enough strength to safely protect its state border with its capitalist neighbors." ne, Waterford Township; age 20: beloved son of Mr. arid Mrs. Thomas A. Lukes; beloved grandson of Mrs. Delia Juett and Peter Brim-combe; dear brother of MRRS. Fred Brown, Mrs. Charles Walker, Mrs. Irving Benjamin, Jim, Robert and William C. Lukes. Funeral service will be held Friday, July 26, at 1:30 p.m. at the St. Andrews Eqpiscopal Church. Interment in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Sgl. Lukes will lie in state at the Donelson -Johns Funeral Home after 1 p.m. Thursday. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9). MARTYN, CORA M.; July 24, 1968; .39 Waldo; age .88; beloved wife of William Martyn; dear mother of Edith M. Cadieux, Olive L. Hibler, . Ernest W., Russsel J. and Otto L. Martyn; dear sister of ! Edward Lennex; also surviv-I six g r e a t-grandchildren. i Funeral service wil be held j .Saturday, July 27, at 10:30 I a m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. Martyn will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) PEAVY, PASSATTA; July 22. 1968; Chicago, Illinois (Formerly of Pontiac); Age 77; dear mother of Rochelle Taylor, Nettie Spears, Overta Williams, Osie M c E w e n , Simmie C u r r e y , Elizabeth ^ Jackson, Katherine Bavis and Cora Hopkins; also survived by 34 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, July 26 at 1 p.m. at Liberty Baptist Church. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Remains can be viewed after 7:30 Thursday evening at the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home. ‘e "Ru wa.s bleeding profusely irweM; "ifsTrom a head wound and his shirt raf'anS^re! ^’^vered in blood,’’ said heard he had been 33 revolver. The Soviet note is expected to ser'vices'' pluub had been | be a chief topic of discussion at !>onTr''’f H-member V Chino Raccah,. a 29-year-old j Soviet Politburo and the 11-man Jaitecna'te®;Libyan, Said one of the hijack- presidium of the Czechoslovak io°n "ofShI ers drew his finger through the [party. Proposal injured man. j In Moscow, the Soviet Defense it,” Raccah report- ;Ministry announced Tuesday !!fpon'‘?a°y!^-‘^’ Hcbbew: ‘Jew-|that "military logistic exer- 'sp°ecilica':'‘^^ sweet.” Helcises" are tinder way in the be ex- added We shall throw all the!western Ukraine, which borders ind''’in's'ur^then !00 Czechoslovakia, as Well 3s in LwrTor' 'White Russia, Latvia and the! "baldish men” covered Rus.sian Federation. They are to c-riiart CLARA D - JuIv 23 'f ?eTc|the passengers with revolvers [continue until Aug. 10. T 1968 V JosR^^ :onsiderTd;^nd hand grenades, the passen-1 The announcement gave no' Township- age 65- dear the Town, igej-g said, and another was with hint that the maneuvers were the pilot. connected with Soviet pressure ■ * * * against Czechoslovakia’s more , 24, 'iwe The men told the passengers [liberal course. Nevertheless, *^eep quiet, hold their hands there was some thinking in Mos-1 and ^eads and theyicow that the army exercises ,"a°rc'rto|!i''™^*^‘T)ot be harmed. , [could provide a cover for any 'LqL'T ^ Danish passenger ^aid one [Soviet forces thdt might be pre-hijackers took ove- the'paring for an invasionofCzech-^snd^weH controls and brought the aner ioslovakia if the party talks Social Security Act Provisionsidown, in Algiers to a good land-'failed to settle the crisis. =Tu^'?!'ish^e'd“o'paUen7s'"5^^^^^ Youhg Gaiz Said the pa.ssen-wooDWARp”^ (^est^'hom'e^^si 1 S^rs were frightened but mem-„ooo.„o Phne rrew tried to 21, 1968 ; 2626 Holland, Lake Orion; age 24; beloved hu.s-band of Marita Burgess; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Max R Burgess; beloved grandson of Mr. and Mrs.| Leon McRath; dear father of NOTICE aodward Rest Homt d Rest Home #2 v Program (Title > Isecretary' of Health.^Educatic .fare will be terminated on Death Notices mother of Gilbert C., Gerald W., Gordon L. and Gene R. ’ Stuiart; dear sister of Edward Trosien; also survived by 13 g r a n d c h i Idren. Funeral service will be held Friday, July 26, at 3:30 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Intej-ment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Ktfrs. Stuart will lie in state at the funeral home, f Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) jSiy n 24°25,!non-Israclis by tell-j - 'ing them the hijackers were F MjcHiGAN-m the Probate concerned only with Lsraeli citi-’■ zens. icerning; Landing in Algiers before] of said:jjawn, the passengers were tak-1 !hin'’fi;^!®n to a barren building at the [ and kept therelogether ' Tal^'^ativ S.nsJv sent Whereabouts,of the lather of,until midday lamard, iracy, Christy Linda BurgeSs; dear brother, he People of re hereby not j petition will h' stat was fled thal:some coffee and a roll,” Gaiz County isaid. "Then they separated us. o°"Au"iThe Israelis were taken away. ihianded! We wcre asked who we were, personal [Why We Were going to Israel,’ of Mrs. James Crombie, Mrs.! Michael Womack, D i a STRANGELAND. GINA; July ' 24, 1968; 119 State Street; Age 89; dear mother of Mrs. John (Elizabeth) Borsvold, Mrs. Gabriel Flessland, Mrs. Donald Rath; also survived by. two sisters, six grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, July 26 at 10:30 a.m. at Gloria Dei Lutheran Church. Interment in Oakland Hills Robert and Gerald Burgess! Memorial Gardens. Mrs Funeral service will be held] Thursday, July 25, at H a.m.i at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with Rev. Robert J.' 'Ar* c o -----V... I iiuiiitf witn r\t;v. noutn j. , er We were separated, all of] Hudgins officiating. Interment] a sudden we were like guests. ^ ; "We were given a good meal je and taken on a tour of the city . before we were put on a plane to'Paris.” ' , Strangeland will lie in state at the Donelson - Johns Funeral Home after 7 p.m. this evening. (Suggestedvisitinghours,-3 tok 5 and 7 to 9.) in White Chapel Cemetery.] Mr. Burgess will lie in state! ' al the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours: 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) i Y OF PONTIAC, MICHIGAN been declared abandoned and a Switches Kiefers pur wan. ,o aeci.pn J ot“‘’Act DORADO, Kan. (AP) ^ September”?! 1948 HitSwitched pomia^c''Mict>checking parking meters 1953 GMC ■ Serial No. 5 324 P30 650 to checking Water meters. After j?! pSsoto''' ■ “55 276 726'Serving some time posting ......'R tickets on windshields ofj O F52 X24 „ "o Hn s82 260 Whitebread, Mrs. Ina 3 become the city’s first feminine' g water meter reader. WRIGHT, LILLIAN H.; July 2(4; 1968; 18 Dakota; age 62; beloved wife of Owen G. Wright; dear mother of Mrs. William Morris and Mrs. Richard Abraham; also survived, by seven g r a n d c h i Idren. Funeral service will be held Friday, July 26, at 1 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in White Ghapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Wright will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. Wednesday. (Suggested Lindsey, Joseph and Arthur- visiting hors 3, to 5 and 7 to Cordingley; also survived by; 9.) COkDINGLEY, ALFPIED; July! 21, 1968; 5108 Chipman,' Waterford Township: Age 55; | beloved husband of Valerie; Cordingley; beloved son fj Mrs. Sarah Cordingley; dear father of Mrs. Radford (Sarah) Penland; dear step! father of Gilbert and Donald] Loiigo; dear brother of Mrs. 11277723