The Weather O.l. WMlhtr ■wraau Fortcut Sunny, Wanner * (Details wi rage aj THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 125 — NO* 128 * * #-★ PONTIAC MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 —52 PAGES un,ted^^7nt«“tional 10e The Pontiac Press Offers $1,000 Reward in Slaying The Pontiac Press today offered a $1,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the killers of West Bloomfield Township trustee Edward E. DeConick Monday. ■ * ★ ★ DeConick was killed and his sister, Kathleen, was wounded by three bandits and a woman who gained access to the DeCohick home on a ruse late Monday night. “This is a vicious crime, one that stirs the wrath of every member of the community,” said Harold A. Fitzgerald, chairman of the board of The Press. “Someone knows the responsible parties, and he must come forth and bring the culprits to justice.” “The identity of the person - earning the reward will not be revealed, so no fear of reprisal will exist,” Fitzgerald added. i ★ * ’ ★ Oakland County Probate Judges Eugene A. Moore, Donald E. Adams and Norman * R. Barnard will decide the recipient of the reward. They agreed to serve in this capacity this morning.' Police Press Hunt for W. Bloomfield Killers No Suspects—Chief By ED BLUNDEN As a reward fund was being raised, West Bloomfield Township police are pressing the hunt for the killers of Edward E. DeConick, 63, a township board trustee. DeConick was brutally slain and his sister, Kathleen DeConick, 73, shot in th.e head at their home Monday night by four intruders. Miss DeConick is in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital today in fair condition. She required surgery on her right eye; DANCE PAVILION BURNS - South Haven’s 50-year-old used as a dance pavilion and skating rink for many years, is shown burning early today. The pavilion, which was dosed this season, was destroyed by the blaze. apartment building were evacuated as a precautionary measure. The cause of the fire has not been determined, but arson is suspected. (See story, Page D-6K Holiday Toll Soars to 694 By the Associated Press Traffic deaths soared to a record high for an Independence Day celebration during the long holiday weekend. The total reached 694, far beyond the previous mark of 576 set during last year’s three-day observance of the July 4. Hie four-day weekend toll came dose to the low end of the National Safety Council’s advance estimate of 7M to 800, and exceeded the 530 tally made by the Associated Press during a nonholiday weekend of equal duration. The nonholiday period was from 6 p.m. Friday June 10, to midnight Monday, June 20. The holiday tabulation period began GM Ready to Fight UAW on Guaranteed Income Bid DETROIT — Five days before contract talks open, General Motors has served notice that it will fight guaranteed annual income, the pet Remand of United Auto Workers chief Walter Reuther. The giant of the nation’s auto-makers . produced yesterday a 12-page-booklet detailing some income guarantees already given to UAW-represented GM workers. The action was a public indication of what GM executives have made plain In Today's Press I W. Bloomfield Twp. 1 Young movie maker an award j| winner — PAGE A-4. | Archaeological Find I Discovery at Midland may date to 900 B. C.—PAGE B-10. Negro Aide Woman tells of work helping; teacher in all-white school — PAGE B-14. . i j Area News ..............A-4 Astrology .............. C-S Bridge ............... 04 'Crossword Puzzle ......D-13 Comics ................ c-8 Editorials .............A-6 .Education Series .....A-ll Food Section ... . .C-l, C-9, C-12 Markets .... ...........D-4 Mystery Series ....... B-7 Obituaries ........ ...D-7 Sports ........... D-I-D-5 Theaters................C-4 TV and Radio Programs . D-13 Wilson, Earl ..........D-13 ' ‘ i Pages ..". .B4—B-4 in private, where, with newsmen, they have scoffed at Reuther’s “scheme to pay people for not working.’* “We can’t guarantee anybody’s income until somebody can guarantee us a market,’’ one said. “If a guy can draw his pay even if he isn’t working, who would work? I wouldn’t.” The development gave strength to fears that titis- -year** auto-labor negotiations have as much strike potential as any previous sessions. LABOR HISTORY Reuthef .claiming his 1.4 million-member UAW will make labor history this year, has warned he will sign no contract unless it contains GI, as the demand has been dubbed. He contends a worker must know at the start of the year what his base pay will be for the next 12 months—and that the worker must draw this pay even If laid off during that period. The red-haired labor boss has not revealed his GI plan in detail, but he has called it the#,major* innovdfiotT in the UAW’s “longest and most ambitious list of demands in history.” * ★ *»★ * ■ ★ ■ ’ GM’s booklet raid workers’ income guarantees already were substantial. at 6 p.m. Friday and ended at midnight Tuesday. MEMORIAL DAY TOLL During this year’s Memorial Day holiday, also a four-day observance, 608 Americans lost their lives in traffic accidents. It was a record for that holiday. “Hie large number of traffic fatalities over the Fourth Of July weekend once again pointr-up tie urgent Tfecessity for strong public support to gain speedy adoption by the states of badly needed traffic safety programs,” commented the Safety Council’s Executive Vice President John B. Lawler. Such programs, he said, include improved law enforcement, better licensing practices and other steps. Highway police went on extra shifts across the country as thousands of motorists took to the roads. I failed to surface Detroiter Drowns in Cass Lake Bay A Detroit man drowned yesterday in the Grundegut Bay area of Cass Lake, Waterford Township, while, swimming from a boat; s " * Larry R. Josey, 2 after giving from the boat during a water outing with friends, Oakland CounJjL sheriff’s depiitiej^weretold.1 Witnesses 4 s aid Josey decided to take a swim while thei boat rips near the center it the bay about 3:50 p.m. When he didn’t crane up after diving, a friend attempted to save him, but was unable to see in the silty water, deputies sai(|. v. ?$pL £ < Jjj, *■„ *’ Sheriff’s department divers, also hampered by poor ■ visibility, recovered JOW^IBNtSodfe.- iw*®* P feet of water. 7$'§ iff™ i Romney Eying MIRROR LAKE, N.H. UR - Michigan Gov. George Romney, speaking from the porch of a lake-front home, said today that ft,, he decided to become a presidential candidate,' “I will enter the New Hampshire primary, and if I do enter’ I will enter to win, Romney, looking comfortable in a green Sports shirt and gray checked jacket, began a four-day working vacation in New Hampshire’s lake country, during which he will meet with top Re- Mercenaries Land in Congo KINSHASA, The Congo (AP) — Two unidentified planes landed a group of foreign commandoes today at the airport of Kisangani ‘ in the northeast Congo, President Joseph D. Mobutu said. The Congo radio had claimed last night that 200 Belgian mercenaries were ready to fly to the Congo and free Moise Tshombe if the ex-premier were extradited from Algiers, where he is being held. n Kisangani, formerly Stanleyville, is about 775 miles northeast of Kinshasa. It is a former rebel stronghold. In a radio address to the nation, Mobutu said foreign settlers had attacked Bukavu, near the Rwanda border 320 miles southeast of Kisangani. Oakland Drowning Toll in ’67 14 Last Yur to Date 16 The situation throughoiit the eastern Congo is tense, the Congo radio said. PART OF A PLOT Mobutu made no attempt to link'the reported landings with Tshombe, but the official Algerian news agency implied that they were part of a plot to overthrow. Mobutu and reinstate Tshombe, who faees-death if he-is handed over to. the Congo by Algeria. Tshombe was on a plane flying from Spanish territofy last week that was 1 hijacked and. landed at Algiers. He has been held there while Algeria decides The pair was viciously beaten by the robbers and the fact that Miss DeConick survived and was able to tell of the crime surprised hospital officials, considering the woman’s age. She is under police guard at the hospital. Police Chief Melvin Will labeled the crime “the most vicious” in his experience. He said information gathered by State Police crime lab technicians at the scene is being tabulated, and other cities are being pursued today. However, there are no positive suspects, he said. Officials at the Township Hall, 4460 Orchard Lake, said discussions have beeif held on raising a reward, .both by office-holders and private citizens. From Miss DeConick’s description, police reconstructed the robbery-slaying: - • About 11 p.m., a woman knocked on the DeConicks’ door and said her car was disabled and asked to use the phone. ★ * (★ • When the door was opened, three men, brandishing a shotgun and pistols, pushed their way in, beat the pair with a shotgun and tied them up. • They ransacked the house and took with them a cash box and floor safe. Before leaving, they shot the pair, DeConick fatally. Miss DeConick was apparently left for dead. • After the bandits left, she was able to free herself from her bonds and summon help from a nearby farm building housing laborers. Police said " Miss DeConick was not yet able to supply them with compete descriptions of the intruders. However she said tiie men were all Negroes in their 20s, ranging from short to abovemedium height The woman was either white or a lightskinned Negro. Police said “a large amount” of money and securities were taken, but family members denied the amount was anywhere near $50,000 as had been re-ported. • . !;. *" ★ DeConick served as township justice of the peace from 1947 until he was elected trustee in 1953. He had served on the board of trustees since then. 51 Members, $67fl00' Club to Aid OU Growing “Our Chancellor’s Club at Oakland ‘ .University is barely a year old,” said publican leader aqd with supporters of his possible presidential bid.-' w * ★ He said that hedid hot think a person would be riecessarilh finished by a loss inihe New Hampshire primary, which is the first in the country. Romney said that he felt he was an underdog in, ffew Hampshire. He added that former Vice President Richard M. Nixon had “been here many times and is well known.” EDWARD E. DeCONICK Pontiac Breaks Sales Records Pontiac Motor Division announced today that sales of Pontiacs, Tempests and Firebirds have set an all-time record of high sales for any one quarter. Records were also set for the mohth of June and the June 21-30 pktiod. John Z. DeLorean, a General Motors vice president and Pontiac’s general manager, reported sales of 250,999 cars for the second quarter of 1967 which erases the old record of 231,599 cars«sold in the same quarter of 1965. DeLorean also pointed out that the 81,346 cars sold last month topped the 75,351 units sold in June last year by . eight per cent. Pontiac dealers sold 30,623 new cars during the June 21-30 period this year as compared to 28,506 cars sold last year. “All of these new Pontiac sales records indicate that our dealers are presently selling cam at the rate of a million a year.” DeLorean said. Chairman" L. C. Goad, “but we have 51 members and $67,000.” Members give a thousand dollars a year for 10 years after which they become-honorary life members. If the contribution, becomes burdensome in the years ahead, the university steps aside With complete understanding. The bulk of the money goes to kcholarphips. “All big universities have similar organizations,” says Chairman Goad, “and with hundreds of thousands of alumni to ,, draw' upon, they are tremendously important . “At Oakland University wi have only a handful of graduates, and they haven’t had a chance to win financial success. Hence, we are directly dependent upon residents who have prospered here. Through a definite part of our lusty and rapidly growing institution," they know they are playing a part personally.” Full details can be secured by a letter addressed to Chairman L. CL Goad at Oakland University. Thursday Forecast Sunny and Warm Here’s good news. / The weatherman' predicts sunny and warmer weather tomorrow with thehigh about 70 to 74. Fair" and cool witha law near 69 is tonight’s forecast. "For the next five days Pontiac area residents may look forward to sunshine and showers with the total rainfall measuring near one-half inch. Temperatures for the period will be warmer tomorrow, then cooler Frida? and continued cool into next week. The high will register three to five degrees below the normal high of 72 to 77, and normal low of 53 to 58. Percentage chances of rain are; Today 10, tonight 5, tomorrow, not more than one eighth. The low recording prior to 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac was 53. At 2 p.m. the mercury had moved up to 65. Small Machine Shop Equipment Sold for $2,250 Mrs. C. S. reports, “Twenty calls came in, everything sold thanks to our Want Ad.” SMALL MACHINU SHOP SQUIP-ment. 35 or moro pieett. AH «r sort. .1 ; , , ; PRESS WANT ADS work day and night to find buyers for what you have to sell. Dial 352-8181 or 834-4981 A—a THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1067 Moon Ml Wednesday at Moon rises Thursday at Alptna <2 49 Duluth <0 34 Escanaba 41 40 Indianapolis 75 54 Or. Rapids 40 SO Kansas City 74 42 Houghton 50 17 Los Angolas 10 45 Lansing 47 47 Mllwaukaa 40 44 Marquette 54 4t Montreal 73 54 Muskegon 44 43 New Orleans 91 74 Pellfton 59 44 New York It 40 Traverse C. SO 41 Phoenix 107 04 Albuquerque 94 70 Pittsburgh 47 52 Atlanta 02 44 Tampa *07 71: Bismarck 01 51 Salt Lake C. 93 42 Chicago 59 54 S. Francisco 40 55 Cincinnati 72 S3 5, s. Marla 57 44 Denver 72 53 Seattle 75 59 Detroit 40 S3 Washington 41 59 NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers and thundershowers are forecast tonight in southern Florida and the lower Mis- H Valley. Showers also are expected in the northern and southern Plateau region. It will be coolerin the Csrolinas, and Lakes region and the northern Rockies. LURLEEN ENTERS HOSPITAL - Alabama Gov. Lurleen Wallace is greeted on arrival today at the MJ). Anderson Hospital in Houston by Drl Randolph Lee Clark, di- 106 Marines Killed Battle SAIGON (AP) — Heavy Communist rocket and artillery fire pounded U.S. Marine outposts skid sweeping forces today Just below the demilitarized zone where ground fighting or gun duels have raged for four days. . * ★ * The U.S. Command said 15 Leathernecks were killed and 51 wounded in eight enemy barrages in the past 24 hours. This brought the unofficial four-day casualty toll to 106 killed, wounded and * The Marines have reported 168 North Vietnamese killed but believe the total enemy casualties are far hither. Each North Vietnamese barrage was answered by the Marine guns, but the Red batteries were evidently well dug in at solidly prepared sites. Associated Press correspondent Steve Stibbens reported from the battle area that the forces of the 90th North Vietnamese Regiment, which had been fighting the Marines since Sunday, had pulled back at least temporarily- CLUSTER OF BUNKERS Pushing forward to recover the bodies of {Marines killed in the big battle last Sunday, the Marines ran into a rabbit warren of abandoned, battered bunkers. The fortifications two miles above the sandbagged Marine at Con Thien indicated " Communists are again pushing dowrj in force from the demilitarized zone from which they were cleared by a Marine invasion in May. Sweeping forces protected by tanks,, two of which were knocked out by gunfire, have See Story, Page B-13 now recovered most of the missing from the opening battle Sunday. The official toll now stands Marines killed, 170 wounded and 6 still missing in that fight, in Which the‘Marines reported at least 148 North Viet- amese killed. A Marine battalion pushed across 600 yards of the battle- honeycombed with tunnels and bunkers! - While tiie threat along border zone overshadowed action elsewhere* there were skirmishes and small-scale battles throughout the country Tues-Despite this almost all American units took a few minutes off for Fourth of July observances. Only 11 miles west of Saigon, American soldiers and South Vietnamese rangers hit a guerrilla band with a sudden helicopter assault. In the melee, a recoilless rifle shell exploded beside a descending helicopter and wounded eight U.S. soldiers. In all, 22 Viet Cong were killed; and the assault force had field without opposition. It was lone man killed and 15 wounded. South Vietnamese forces reported 19 Viet Cong killed in a clash near’ TVa Vinh, in tl Meking Delta south of Saigon. * I ★ ★ American pilots, after one di. of bad weather, found fair skies over much of North Vietnam Tuesday and flew 115 missions, most of them against the rail, highway and waterway network around, the heavily defended Haiphong-Hanoi area. AIRFIELD HIT Air Force pilots again cratered the MIG airfield at Kep northeast of Hanoi and reported destroying or damaging " about 35 boxcars, most of them on the northeast rail line from Hanoi to Red China. ,W. Germans Protest 'Kidnaped' Koreans BONN, Germany 6JPD — The West German governmen stepped into the case of 13 missing South Koreans yesterday and issued a sharp protest to the South Korean ambassador about Seoul secret service agents’ activities in Germany. ★ .. ★ , ★, The director of the Foreign U.N. Seeking to Save Face on Mideast UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. M-Diehard diplomats at the United Nations cast about today for a face-saving token resolution on the Middle East after rival demands for Israel’s withdrawal from Arab soil failed to pass the General Assembly. ★ / ★ ★ Assembly President Abdul Rahman Pazhwak of Afghanistan called an afternoon meeting to “finalize” the work of the emergency session jhat began June 17. But some delegates expressed belief that if the assembly recessed for a few days, they could muster the needed two-third majority for a vaguely-worded draft expounding general principles and shunting the real issues / back to the Security Council. The 122-nationa assembly defeated four resolutions yesterday calling on Israel to withdraw its troops from land occupied in Egypt, Syria and Jordan during the June war.. . ★ ★ k The assembly overwhelmingly approved a resolution calling on Israel to rescind its annexation of the Old City of Jerusalem and a Swedish proposal appealing for aid for Arab refugees and other victims of the Arab-Israeli war. Ministry’s political section, Her mann Meyer-Lindenberg, mer South. Korean Ambassador Gen. Duk Shin-choi to question him about the A ministry spokesman said Meyer - Lindenburg told Gen. Duk “The South Korean Secret service must cease its activities immediately.” He also asked the South Korean dipol-mat whether there was a connection between the activities of the secret service and the missing South Koreans. German newspapers reported today that South Korean secret service agents were, investigating Koreans in Germany in connection with a Communist North Korean spy ring recently uncovered in Seoul. ^ ★ ★ ★ The disappearances came to light a week ago when die Liberal Students Union at Heidelberg University said a Korean student. studying there had been kidnaped by South Korean secret servicemen. Highland Holdup Suspect Arrested An unidentified man was arrested by Oakland County sheriff’s deputies today, shortly after a Highland Township grocery store was robbed at gunpoint about 11:30 a.m. ★ ★ ★ Deputies said a man armed with what is believed to be a 22-caliber revolver robbed the Hickory Ridge Market, Hickory Ridge and Clyde, of an undetermined amount of cash and fled in a car. ★ ★ ★ The suspect, revealed to be a Highland Township man, was arrested on M59 between Mil-d and Duck Lake Road, deputies said. The Weather FuD U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Partly sufihy anda little warmer today. High 67 to 75. Fair and cool tonight, low 59 to 63. Sunny and warmer Thursday. North to northeast winds five to 10 miles today, becoming light and variable tonight. Friday outlook: showers and Warmer. Percentage chance of rain: Today 10, tonight 5, Thursday V«. MONROE M. OSMUN School Board Elects Officers Monroe M. Osmun has been returned as head of the Pontiac Board of Education along with two other incumbent officers. Reelected as board officers with Osmun were Ru Brown, vice president, and Mrs. Elsie Mihalek, secretary. Vernon L. Schiller, schools business , remains as the board’s treasurer. Osmun, 65, who is beginning his 22nd year on the board, has been president five previous times. He is a wel-known Pontiac clothing merchant. Both Osmun and Brown were reelected to the school board last month. Brown, 57, is starting his sec-nd four-year term on the board. He is a social studies and mathematics teacher Bloomfield Hills Junior High School. - * * ★' Mrs. Mihalek has been on the board for nine years. Her current term expires in 1970. She served as vice president in 1963 and 1964. Osmun resides at 2094 Lake-wind, West Bloomfield Township; Brown at 483 Lynch and Mrs. Mihalek,. 1592 Vinewood. City to Weigh Extension of 2 Contracts The extension of two contracts will be considered by the Pontiac City, Commission tonight, with the American Transit Corp., the other with the Office Economic Opportunity (OEO). Kenneth Totten, manager of the bus line which operates the Pontiac Transit Corp., has requested the city renew the agreement for another year under the present terms. The OEO is asking that the city extend, the lease on the war on poverty office at 7 W. Lawrence for six more months. In other business, the commission will receive a report on the $1.8- million bond issue which will finance the Galloway Creek Sewer and Dumping station to be built on Opdykeo The Michigan Municipal Finance Commission recently approved the salh of the bonds. OPENING OF BIDS The opening of bids on the bond sale is scheduled for the Aug, 8 City Commission meeting, with construction bids the prefect to be opened a day earlier. V * * Another report will be submitted to the commission regarding bids on tiie construction of a new emergency building at Pontiac General Hospital, and Ithe remodeling of tine hospital I to bring itup to code. S. Korean Soldier Killed, 12 Wounded SEOUL, South Korea (AP) Korean regulars killed a Korean soldier and 12 others south of the zone today, but South Korean police reported killing a North Korean guerrilla capturing another in a gun-150 miles south of Seoul. * * * In Pusan, riot police used tear and clubs to repel 2,000 university students demonstrating against irregularities in the June 8 parliamentary elections. Two more national assembly-men resigned because of alleged irregularities in their districts. In the fifth border incident since President Chung Hee Park’s inauguration for d second term Saturday, North Korean regulars threw grenades and fired automatic weapons at close range into a guard post on the central front 1,000 yards, south of the demilitarized zone between North and South Korea. The guard post returned the fire. It was not known if any of the Communists were hit. 17 DEATHS Spending Cut Instead of Tgx Hike Is Urged WASHINGTON (UPI)-Chair-man William. Proxmire of the influential Senate-House Economic Committee today called on Congress to reduce federal spending rather than raise income taxes. “If the government has to allocate more of the national resources to defense purposes, we should cut down on the government’s other claims on resources,” the Wisconsin Democrat said in a statement. “Why should the government go on consuming more than ever when it asks the private sector less?” Proxmire’s comment came is the Johnson Administration neared a decision on how much of an increase in personal and corporate income taxes it will ask of Congress, and what date to make the increase begin. k ■ ★ ' Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara and Nicholas B. Katzenbach, undersecretary of state, plan to fly to Saigon this week on a mission that is expected to provide an answer to how many U.S. troops will be sent to Vietnam above previously planned and budgeted levels. $5 BILLION INCREASE Proxmire estimated sending 100,000 more troops than previously . planned to Vietnam would send defense spending about $5 billion above the $22.4 billion currently budgeted for the war during the next 12 months. Danger Eases at Dixie Dam Valves Are Opened to Lessen Pressure LAWRENCEBURG, Tenn. (AP) — A danger still exists at the water-damaged Laurel Hill Dam, but officials of the Tennessee Game and Fish Comihls-sion say it is less today. Two valves were opened Tuesday, increasing to nearly 130 million gallons, a day the water output through a sluice tunnel, and thus reducing water pressure which threatens to break the earthen dam. ★ ★ * The 24-inch valves, along with another valve which has been partially open since Friday, will lower the water to a safe level within two weeks, les haun, a commission engineer, predicted. 7 Galloway, manager of the lake which is wended by the Game and Ftyh' Commission, noticed increased seepage at tiie base of the 840-feot-iang dam a week ago. Engineers began working Friday to lower pressure on the structure to prevent its collapse. The lake has been closed to all activities. About dents of three communities below the dam have been alerted _ evacuate in event of a break. The lake held about three billion gallons of water. Birmingham Area News Maple Parking Curbed 2 Hours Each Weekday BIRMINGHAM - P a r k i n g along Maple in the central business district will be prohibitied the south side of the street for two hours each weekday for the next six weeks. The parking ban, approved by the ‘City Commission Monday night, becomes effective Monday between the hours of 4 and 6 p.m. Monday through Friday. The removal of parking during tiie rush period is intended to relieve congestion and allow for the easy circulation of' traffic during construction of ring road projects. - Police Chief Darryl Bruestie said today that signs warning Livonia Trio Is Sentenced forConspirary it was last Wednesday,” Haun said after the vllves were opened. “But we feel a little Seven South Koreans and 10 safer as the water level lowers A Livonia man was sentenced to 2-2% years in prison and his parents placed on two years probation for attempted conspiracy to commit murder. Circuit Judge Farrell E. Roberts ordered the maximum sentence for Jules Sorna, 25, 'The status of the dam is still jwhile placing the parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Sorna, on probation. North Korean? were killed and five South Koreans wounded in the other skirmishes Saturday, Sunday and1 Monday. The gunfight with the las occurred near squads of police and were pursuing 15 who had been reported in area. They encountered a band of eight, but six escaped. The pursuit continued, Six North Korean guerrillas have been reported captured and 75 killed in the past month, tiie highest total since the 1953 Korean armistice. Fifteen soldiers and policemen have been reported killed and seven wounded in antiguerrilla actions. Student protests against the parliamentary elections subsided somewhat in Seoul with only three demonstrations of 300, 200 and 30 students occurring, universities in Seoul have start-ed summer vacations early. Pusan University adopted the sartie tactic after the demonstration there today. Both the assemblymen who resigned today, and another who resigned Tuesday were among eight assemblymen that Park had purged from his ruling Democratic Republican party for alleged voting irregularities in their districts. a bit at a time,” Eats Undershirt MANILA (UPI) - A miner trapped five days below ground said today he satisfied his hunger by eating his dirty undershirt. “It stuck in my throat and I had to wash it down with wa-ter,*’ Francisco Rivera, 34, said. The father of five was one of 21 miners rescued Monday after typhoon rates collapsed a gold and copper mine 150 miles north of Manila a week ago: Rescuers found six more alive today and reported bearing voices of others. Eight bodies have been foHnd. All three Sonias pleaded guilty to toe lesser charge of attempted conspiracy on June 13 during their trial on conspiracy to commit murder. were accused of have a woman woman was a an arfoed robbery of Jules Sorna- has since ntence on the were alerted to the by Bert Davis of De-wbo the Sernas tried to to kill Mrs. Virginia Go-gates of Detroit. Davis wait to police after he had been approached in a Detroit bar by Sorna.'’ John Sorna also was ordered by Roberts to' pay $200 court cost. NANCY MOORE Woman Sets Fire to Self, Is 'Critical' LOS ANGELES (AP) - A young woman drenched herself with gasoline Tuesday and set hetoelf afire, police said. She was listed in critical con-Traooea Miner dition today in Los Angeles Gen-eral Hospital with third-degree burns. The woman was tentatively identified from a driver’s cen?e and library card as Nancy L. Moore, 24, Twin Falls, Idaho. The library card was from Portland, Ore. Police quoted attendants at a self-service station northwest of downtown Los Angeled as saying they heard a scream and saw the woman ablaze ii small cashier’s booth on ter island of the service station. ;t ■ ★ , k r, k kt ,,, A religious picture was found with the woman inside, the small building, officers said! the motorists of the ban will be placed along Maple between “ates and Hunter immediately. ★ k 'k ■ Initially the police department had recommended that parkiiig be removed from both sides of the street between 4 and 6 p.m., but later decided the ban on one side would be sufficient. HAD OPPOSED The Birmingham • Bloomfield Chamber of Commerce had opposed the removal of parking on both the north and south sides of the street, contending the results would be disastrous to business. A report on a 30-day test ban along the major thoroughfare last month was to be presented to the commission next Monday, but Bruestie said •that ft would be delayed at least h week. . All tiie information pas; been gathered, but the city’s traffic consultant is out of town and won’t have time to evaluate the data, according to Bruestie. ■ >* , k k k In an interim report to the commission, the chamber of commerce said that its own survey showed that all retail and service businesses oh Maple experienced an “appreciable loss in dollar volume and store tra-fic during the trial period." The chamber asked that if parking had to be removed, it be banned only from the north side between 5 and 6 p.m. In another action, tiie commission gave tentative approval to the hiring of the architectural firm of O’Dell Hewlitt and Luck-enbach to design a parking structure proposed for tiie city parking lot on Pierce between Merrill and Browh. N-Blasts Eyed for New Canal WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. engineers are considering underground nuclear explosions with a force of up to 10-million tons of TNT to blast out a new level canal across Central America, it was learned yesterday. An Atomic Energy Commission source said that would be 50 times bigger than any underground atomic explosion yet tested by the Upited States. The AEC source said Army engineer specialists, making preliminary studies, believe the largest single excavation explosion might range up to 10-million tons, or 10 megatons. The smallest might be the equivalent of 200,000 tons of TNT —about file size of tiie largest below-ground test in Nevada. School Board in Waterford Will Organize Hie Waterford Township , Board of Education will hold its annual organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. I To be elected for one-year terms are a president, a secretary, a treasurer and a chaplain. Officers can be reelected. Current board president is Robert E. Field. He was elected in January following tiie resignation of Norman L. Cheal. Tomorrow night also will mark the first official meeting for new board of education trustee Lewis S. Long, who was elected to a four-year term June 12. Long succeeds Mrs. Dorothy B. Barningham who did not run for reelection. k k k Incumbents Donald W. Porter and Michael G. Patterson also emerged victorious in tiie June 12 election, Porter gaining a second four-year term and Patterson a three-year seat. In other business, tiie board is slated to open bids for the proposed new Crescent Lake Elementary Schciol and for an interior remodeling project at W a t e "r f o f d Township' High School. Hearing on Land-Fill Due Tomorrow in Waterford The decision whether to "grant a permit to operate a land-fill off Maceday Lake Road will lie squarely with Waterfordf Township Planning Commission following a public hearing on the issue at 7:30 tomorrow night in Waterford Township High School. Advocates and opponents of the proposed land-fill Will be giyen the opportunity to present their cases at the hearipg. • The nine-member commission could render a decision directly after tiie bearing or could defer action. The issue was referred to the commission for final action after it was determined by township attorneys that the body should handle such matters as specified by the zoning ordi-ince. ★ ★ ★„ The Township Board originally held a public hearing on that issue last Jah. 30, but failed to take action. When it appeared that the hew board would decide the matter at its -May 2 meeting, attorneys ruled that the planning commission legally should conduct the public^hearing and render a decision. ■'**’ The Township Board, at that time, voted to go through proper channels to amend the zoning ordinance so that beard members would have the final say oa“permit requests for sanitary land-fill operations. Hbwever, amending an ordinance is time-consuming, f ★ '• ★ ★ And land-fill applicants Donald Freeman and David Ward of the Waterford Processing and Reclaiming.Co. requested and were granted a public hearing at the commission’s May 23 meeting. LAND-FILL SITE Hie proposed land-fill: is located on a 50-acre site hear Ward’s Gravel Pit. The . entrance is about one-half mile* north of the Maceday Lake Road-Williams Lake Road intersection. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1067 A-4 Soviets Big Loser in Failure of U. N. By MAX HARRELSON UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.jl (AP) — The Soviet Union i emerges as the obvious loser in! I the failure of the U.N. General! Assembly to find a formula for attention from the Soviet set-1 dealing with the explosive situa- back in the Middle East, as| tion left in the wake of the Arab-|Sbthe have said, it proved to be Israeli war. a boomerang. There were other losers, in- To measure die extent of the eluding the Arabs and the Unit- soviet setback, it is necessary ed Nations itself. But as the ini-1 to recall that the emergency tiator of the move for the emer-1 assembly was convened because gency session-, the Kremlin'the Russians said the Security came out empty-handed. {council was unable to cope with * * * the situation. If the session was intended aslTMDITrATT,w a propaganda project to divert ^PUtATiON The implication was that the Circus Parade on Cool 4thHit in Milwaukee MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) — It was the coldest Independence Soviet Union expected to get the assembly to do what the council ! refused to do: condemn Israel and call for unconditional withdrawal of Israeli troops from Arab territory. The United States opposed the move, contending that thej council had dot exhausted all' possibilities for action. The Rus-j sians looked even worse because they brought Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and the heads Day on record for Milwaukeejof a number of allied govern-1 with temperatures in the 50s,\™n* *'New York to lend pres-but-crowds estimated by Gov. pH® t0 the session. | Warren P. Knowles at 800,000 | turned out for the annual Fourth! "f1 ^refused | of July circus parade>OT"demn Refurbished circus wagons “J* Proposal calling for, from the Circus World Museum th® forfes' at Baraboo, Wis., were the fea-L g hf Arabs felt the Russians ture attraction in the parade,!^ 1fhthem by ,H which consisted of 3,636 persons, fuend ^emmihtary aid during' 650 horses, 59 wild ^mahJ^ war with lOTael. ttteyjuM more than 50 antique cars and hf e /,elt similar frustration 34 bands and drum and bugle!whe" Moscow proved unable to corps. It covered a 3V4-mile|“uster act,on in ““ route in just under two hours. bly. NONAUGNED RESOLUTION Some musical units were from I Long before the Soviet Union Connecticut, Mississippi, Penn- began soft-pedaling its demands| sylvania and Louisiana. for condemnation .of Israel, the On the reviewing stand was Arabs were lining up behind thej Navy Capt. James A. Lovell Jr., I nonaligned resolution which an astronaut who attended I made no mention of copdemna-school in Milwaukee. Gov. and:tion. Mrs. Knowles rode in" a horse-! In th$ end, both the Russians! drawn carriage. land the Arabs would have been! happy to settle for a simple call for withdrawal of Israeli troops, but. they were unable to get| even that. * ' * * The United Nations suffered j I because the voting demonstra-1 ted that the emergence of the'I new Asian and African nations!I had created a split that could I block effective action, on the 1 Middle East—a problem which 1 had been handled successfully ] by the assembly in the past.' Thus the Middle East was I added to the list of issues out-1 side the range of effective U.N..1 action. THANT CRITICIZED The failure of the assembly I was more disturbing since U.N» I 'Secretary General U Thant al* [ ready was under criticism for I withdrawing the U.N. peace- I keeping force from Egypt at I President Ganial Abdel Nas-1 ser’s demand. Many diplomats said frankly I that one of their main concerns I in trying to find a compromise I dealing with the Middle East I was to avert a further Mow to 1 U.N. prestige. Efforts undoubt-1 edly will continue to keep the | United Nations in the picture. * * * Israel came through with I flying colors although few dele-1 gates came to its defense during f the 2‘A-week debate. Doth the I Security Council and the Gen-I eral Assembly refused to cen-jl 'sure Israel or to demand with- >| drawal of Israeli forces. { The only resolution adopted I by the assembly inimical to Is-I rael was a Pakistani proposal [ declaring that the assembly did I not accept as valid Israel’s ac-1 tion to unify Jerusalem and I calling on Israel to rescind the I measures. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Fashions For Women in White at SIMMS Lower Prices First Quality - Assorted Styles Ladies’ Uniforms • Dacron Polyester • Wash Vi' Wear Cotton • Arnel Triacetate • Skimmers • Button Fronts Styles include short sleeve gripper front skirt of Dacron polyester pucker, convertible collar, short sleeve slim skirt of Dacron poly--ester shantung, and cotton poplin with tucked front and convertible Collar. Also, a limited number of other styles. Sizes 10 to 20 and 1 AVa to 24Vh but hot in all styles. Nk>t as pictured. ■ . .. ■' . ■ ■;*. ,f v,. —Main Floors Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac Shop SIMMS Thurs. 9 am. to 9 p.m.-Fri. 9 am. to 9:30 p.m.-Sat. 9 am. to 9 p.m. SIMMS After The 4 th of JW Men's Short Sleeve Ban-Lon Shirts Cardigan style Ban-Lon shirts in a variety of colors. American made, slight irrs. of $5.49 values. Sizes S, . t, ;XL. * —Basement J Men's Rubber Sole Canvas Oxfords Comfortable canvas tops with rubber soles and cushioned innersoles. Sizes Vh to 12. ' — Basement , Novelty Print Beach Towels 36x60-inch size thick terry cloth beach towels with clever designs and sayings. — Basement Men’s Short Sleeve Sweat Shirts ■Your, choice of 100% cotton crew neck style collegiate sweat shirt or regular sweat shirts in sizes S, M, ■H XL. — Basement , Ladies’ Cotton Shorts or Slacks 96| Wash and wear cotton shorts or sla'cks in assorted styles and colors. Sizes 10 to 16. • I —Main Floor ^ Ladies’ Cotton Sassy Shorts m . $1.98 values. Polka dot tops v with plain blue shorts to match. Sizes 8-10 and 12 only. —Main Floor J Boxer Style Girts’ Shorts' ■Day Sale Starts Tomorrow at 9 p.m. i« good V deep. So, w. cut th Zippered Leatherette Travel Kit Th. Box said'Lot leod. in tho fall.' So, when th. be*, give, at good V (loop... in fact «o daop wo mi .aranco now — while tho good people cc gn order, w. jump... ana ha told mode it re.ervo tho right to limit quantities. 200 Double Ply Facial Tissues Burgess Electric Paint Sprayer 1.90 I 77" 1 2143 10.97 "Beg, $1.29 value, zippered travel kit with comb and nail 'file, holds,, i toilet articles for traveling. Sundries—Main Floor . Mallory Rugged Mike 6-Volt Lantern Regular 29c, pkg. of 200 double ply • Tuff' facial tissues. Have a box in every room, Drug*—Main Floors Gillette Stainless Double Edge Blades Model VS855 — 0.5 amp motor with sapphire nozzle ancf 16-oz. glass container for paint and insecticides. Hardware—2nd Floor j For Etching-Burgess Electric Pencil 1.84.1 1.44 I 39 I 6.99 Regular $2.50 value, USA made lantern. High impact plastic cpse, tight powerful beam. Batteries ex- . l TRA) Sundries—Main Floors ________ Address ____■ -■" a im I Telephone Book ■ Tablets ■ 1.37 I 55' I 33 f I l*97 79c value, pkg, of 5 super silver stainless double edge razor blades. Stack up now. Drugs—Main Floor d Foil Wrapped Alka Seltzer Model V-869, electric pencil writes n wood, metal or plastic. 12 watts. , Limit 1. . . Hardware—2nd Floor A Chrome Tension Towel Nos value, new brocade finish address and telephone book with index. Gift , j boxed. Sundries—Main Floor J All-Purpose 4-Blade Scout Knife 53c volu. pkg. of 12 Alka Seltzer tables, foil wrapped (8 keep their freshness. - Drugs —Main Floor A 3 Types Aqua Net Hair Spray * Tubular steel with shining < finish. Includes towel rings and towel holder rods. Hardware—2nd Floor A Admiral Table Modal Clock Radio 77< I 46" I 10.99 An aa j I . tn VA . _ r H Hardware—2nd Floor , msuKiksm* Dissolves grease and removes rust with east. Keeps your outdoor grlH lllr* new. ft Housewares—2nd Floor^ Where Ths Real J BIG BAMAWSi Still Live. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967^ A—4 His Rims Are Winners Teen-Age Movie Producer a Head-On Car Crash Kills 2, Real Star Puts Holiday Toll at 30 By The Associated Preu A head-on auto crash killed two per- WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Music begins- (hi the screen appears a freckled grinning face peering through the mouth of a yawning tiger. Suddenly the screen tarns into a ka-lidescope of sparkling colored lights. A title appears, “Dee Tour Downtown," followed again by our smiling friend who is now spinning wildly head over heels tossing letters he picks from the air. ★ ★ ★ Somehow, the letters manage to find their places, spelling out the movie credits and opening the award-winning production of young director John Kassner. PRIZE WINNER Fifteen-year-old John has been making films for- about four years and, although he hasn’t had any box-office smashes he recently won first prize in the 19th annual state movie contest sponsored by the Michigan Council of Amateur Movie Clubs. Although he was the youngest person in the competition, John’s unusual tides and surprise ending caught the judge's •ye. His precise editing and use of Petula Clark’s song, “Downtown,” weave an entertaining fantasy about a daydreaming boy who tries magic as a way to beat the traffic. : On his way down to ‘where the neon lights are so pretty,” the boy (played by an old Muskegon buddy) takes a “dee tour” and gets lost in someone’s back yard, on top of a truck, between two gasoline pumps, and on a park •wing before he finally reaches his destination. STARTED CAREER EARLY When he realizes where he is, he becomes so happy he kisses the buildings, swings on the lamp posts, dances down the sidewalk and is led away by an a t Pe n d a n t of the Funny Farm Sanitarium. As the son of an amateur photographer, John started his movie carper early as the star in some of his father’s productions. One, a documentary of the YMCA summer camp program, is still used by that organization in its registration rallies. * ★ ★ Using an inexpensive camera he re-ceived for Christmas, John’s first movies were of tae gift opening at home. The film was a Christmas Celebration for his father who missed the “first run" that year while in’the hospital. FIRST ‘REAL MOVIE’ About five months later, John had finished his first “real movie.” - “It was supposed to be a documentary of our school’s annual track meet, but the camera ruined most of the film,” John said, about to explain the creative process that foUowed. Taking what was left, John added scenes of a barnstorming pilot from an old Abbott add Costello movie and some shots of a reptile-like monster emerging from the depths of somewhere to come up with the world’s first “Trackless Track Meet.” ★ ★ ★ “Every film I’ve done has really been experimental," John said, “I’ve tried different techniques with each one and have learned something new with every attempt.” AIDED BY CLASSMATES Seven members of his English class at Walled Lake High School participated ih one such experiment this past semester. In this project, John attempted to set to film a nonsense poem he had written. • The verses, in turn, were set to music by a film pen pal frotn Illinois. The result was a forboding sur-real-istic illusion. “There’s a lot more- work involved in making" a film of this type. I spent over SO hours on “Downtown” alone,” he comments. “That’s why there aren’t very many amateur movie makers. I don’t know of any others around here.” Cost of equipment and film is another • factor keeping qmateur film making an esoteric hobby. ' His award-winning movie cost John only $30, but he was using a $500 camera and. a $300 projector borrowed from his father. man. and cameraman are to “just relax and have a good time this summer.” But he probably will still be looking for actors to star in his next produc-“Trigger Mortis—Frontier Mortician,” It’s a western about a cowboy named Arnie who loves a girl named Pie Alamode, who is almost kidnapped by an Indian ranch hand named Joe Silver, who is caught in the act and locked up in a casket by Mortis, the fastest undertaker in the West. “It’s supposed to be a satire,” Job|n added. With a plot like that, he might win himself his own television series. sons and injured five near Kalkaska, boosting. Michigan’s highway death toll to 30 for the Fourth of July holiday weekend. The fatalities exceeded the 28 killed last year during a 78-hour Fourth of July spaa The holiday period this year covered 102 hours. Killed when the cars collided last night on M72 three miles east of Kalkaska were Arlo J. Groner, 71, of Kalkaska and Miss Addline Gauthier, 20, of Cedar. Two of the five injured were hospitalized in nearby Traverse City. Also killed were: Ann L. Domatio, 14, of West Branch, when she was struck by a car yesterday while riding a bicycle on M30 five miles south of West Branch. ★ * ★ Torrin D. Scott, 3, of Stanwood, when he was run over by a car yesterday near his home. EARLIER DEATHS Lewis Brown, 39, of Detroit was killed Friday when he was hit by a car as he crossed a Detroit street. Sr * * Robert Criswell, I 24-year-old from East Rosedale, died Saturday when his car left M53 and rolled over in Sterling Township, Macomb County. A 5-year-old Carrolton boy, Jeffery Brqsseur, was killed Saturday when a truck smashed into the tricycle he was riding. * ★ * Paul Loisell, 14, and his 3-year-old brother, Robert, were fatally injured Saturday as the car driven by their father collided with another car on M53 five miles north bf Mio. A Leadville, Colo., man, David Kinney, 38, was killed Saturday when his car swerved off U,S. 82 in Iron County. Walter J. Cenkala, 22, of Rogers City was killed when his car ran off a rural road and rolled over near Rogers City Saturday. A three-car smashup near Benton Township, Berrien County, claimed the life of Robert Warren, 90, of Benton Harbor, Saturday. He was a passenger in one of the cars. claimed the life of Charles L. Lake, 50, of North Branch bn M21 near Yale. Gary Cowell, 18, his brother, Michael, 17, acid the driver, Steven Woollard, 20, all from Leonard, were killed Monday when their car, one of its tires apparently -blown out, crashed into a tree near Dryden in Lapeer County. ★ ★ ic On an auto ramp leading from U.S. 127 to U.S. 223 near Cement City, two cars collided, one of them exploding into flames which killed Harold Pearson 1 and his wife Marianne of Toledo, Ohio, Monday.’ R. H. McMANUS Engineer Serving on State Fair Unit Planning for this year’s Michigan State Fair, which will not begin until August 25, is already in full gear. Among those serving on this year’s Michigan State Fair Authority is Richard H. McManus, a Southfiield engineer and Orchard Lake resident President of R. H. McManus A Co., McManus has devoted much energy toward the development of the State Fairgrounds since being appointed to the Authority five years ago. YOUNG MOVIE MAKER — Award winning. producer John Kassner of West -Bloomfield Township adds the voice track to one of his latest films. Although he is only 15, John is the winner of two trophies for first place in state amateur movie contests. The most recent award was won in competition in which he was the youngest person entered. Five Children Die 9 Drown in State Over Holiday Richard F. Mitchell, 48261 W. Pontiac Trail, will be installed as the new president bf the Wixom Chamber of Commerce tomorrow at Marco’s Restaurant in Novi. Active in the chamber since his arrival in the Wixom area two years ago, Mitchell is the manager of Aunt Jemima’s Kitchoi, on the 1-96 Expressway. Other newly elected officers to be installed at not month’s ceremonies are Mm. Veen Spencer, secretary, and Virgil Caifn, treasurer. Mrs. Spencer and her husband operate Speocer’s Airport on Pontiac Trail. Caifn is a representative of the Walter Toebe Company. ,Ho1icfay Party Put On By Subdivision In Bloomfield Township The expenditure is easily made up, though. * “I appreciate an audience reaction’s to my movies,” be. said, “Making movies Wouldn’t be half as much fun without an audience to show them to." EYE OUT FOR ACTORS Immediate future plans for the young producer, director, film, editor, sound- Pleasant Ridge Last Community Blocking the I-696 Freeway PLEASANT RIDGE (UPI) - This small Oakland County community today remained the last major stumbling block to completion of the $180 million 1-696 freeway through southeastern Mich-. igan. ★ ★' ★ Despite mounting pressure, Mayor. Theodore Barr yesterday promised a fight to keep the freeway from slicing through) the city of 4,000, chopping off 10 per cent of its tax Ijase. State Highway Department spokesmen ■aid delays in approving the 1-696 route have alriady increased costs by $65 'jRjUlion ever the original estimate of $115 million about four years ago. Pleasant Ridge became the last major obstacle when officials in t h e Macomb County community of Roseville did an about-face Monday night and agreed to let the freeway run through Its limits. y .* ★ ★ . The Highway Department said Roseville’s approval permits construction of the eastern section of the freeway buit also makes it impossible to juggle the alignment of the western section. OTHER COMMUNITIES * Three Other Oakland County communi- Wixom Chamber to Install Officers By The Associated Press Nine persons, including five children aged 2 to 17, drowned in Michigan waters during the Fourth of July holiday weekend. Craig Spencer, 8, of Battle Creek fell from a .dock where he was fishing and drowned yesterday in Houghton Lake. Larry Raymond Josey, 21, of Detroit, drowned yesterday in Cass Lake near Pontiac. Harold E. Rogers, 67, of Mikado lost ties have objected to the freeway but are prepared to work out their differences in binding arbitration. A bill pending in the State Senate Appropriations Committee would require cities to submit highway stalemates to binding arbitration. State law currently gives communities virtual veto power over any highways running through their limits. Barr indicated Pleasant Ridge would “test the legality” of the bill if it becomes law. ★ ★ * - “It’s like being forced to buy tickets to a party you don’t want to go to,” he said. “Pleasant Ridge just can’t afford it.” Self ridge Open House A precision aerial demonstration team, the United States Air Force Thunder-birds, mil perform Saturday before an anticipated crowd of over 100,000 persons celebrating the Golden Anniversary of Selfridge Air Force Base. Their performance at 1:30 p.m. will be part of an open hduse at the base, slated for the public from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Also featured will be a display of old and new aircraft aiid missies, along with a military parade. his life yesterday in Van Etton Creek near the Alcona County community. Thomas Good son, 63, of Pontiac drowned Monday night in Lake An-gelus in Watetford Township near Pontiac. He apparently fell from the boat from which he was fishing, police said. CHASED BALL Suzanne M. Netivion, 16, of Windsor, Ont., drowned Monday night in H a 1 f Moon Lake, Washtenaw County, when she chased a beach ball into deep water in front of the family’s vacation cottage. Ronld Olsen, 17, of Petoskey drowned Sunday night in Walloon Lake in Charlevoix County while trying to swim from a buoy to a raft. A 2-year-old Leslie boy, Ronald Mar-quedant, wandered away from a cottage, fell off a dock and drowned in six inches of water Saturday in Big Trout Lake near the village of Trout Lake. A year earlier, two of the youth’s relatives died in the same lake.. Ernest Price, 25, of Port Huron drowned Saturday in an attempt to swim the Pine River near Port Huron. A Detroit boy, Gerald Koziara, 11, drowned Monday night in the swimming pool of a branch of the Boys’ Clubs -of Metropolitan Detroit. Betty J. Rydholm, 30, of Marquette was fatally injured when hit by a car as she crossed file street Saturday near her home. , Adolph Collins, 38, of Albion died Sunday on 1-94 when hit by a car. The driver told police Collins was sprawled in the road when the car hit him. ' ★ ' ★ 1 ★ Sylvia Hale, 72, of Muskegon died in a two-car collision in Muskegon Sunday. A 14-year-old Six Lakes boy David Reed, was killed Sunday when be fell off Ids bicycle in Belvedere Township, Montcalm County. A two-car, "head-on collision Monday He was a member of the committee which interviewed some of the nation's top architects who were selected to design the Community Arts Building and the new Administration Building, now under construction. ★ ★ ★ Cochairman of the key Development Committee/ McManus visualizes a rehabilitated and beautifully landscaped grounds, facilities for greater year-round use, sports stadium, automotive center and many other projects. ONE SON and his wife, Lucille, have one son, Michael, a student at Michigan. Tefch University. Trustees Reelected ALMONT — at a recent meeting of the board of trustees of Almont Community Hospital, ail incumbent board officers were reelected. ★ * ★ Named to serve another year were Sr. I John C. Nott, chairman; James ade, president; John R. Bartholomew, Vice president; James D. Ligon, treasurer; and Mrs. G. C. Bishop, secretary. 3 on Probation for 'Live-In' Role DETROIT UR — Two ministers and the wife of the former director of Cran-brook Institute of Science have been put on 18 months probation for their role in a “live-in” at a condemned city-owned home in Detroit. ★ ★ ★ Recorder’s Court Judge Joseph A. Gil-lis sentenced the three Monday after thdir conviction five months ago for v criminal trespass. They are: Rev. Charles Sacqnety of St. David’s Episcopal Church in Detroit; Dr. Robert Batcbelder of the United Church of Christ in Highland Park; and Mrs. Robert Hatt. The “live-in” last fall was part of, the West Central Organization’s protest against the city’s urban renewal policy. A ★ ★' Twelve other ministers wens convicted by a jury with the three. Judge Gil-lis said be would probably sentence the others July 11, He said the three were sentenced now because they are all leaving the state, Coleberry Hills Celebrates 4th BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - The Colberry Hills Subdivision held its annual old-fashioned Fourth of July celebration yesterday for the fourth year. Feature of the event was the kills’ parade with about 106 youngsters competing for prizes. Awards went to the most-patriotic, best-decorated bike, etc. After the red-white and bine bedecked children paraded around the subdivision street the entire crowd gathered on a traffic circle island and held cere* monies. The crowd was entertained by their own subdivision band, “The Deserted.” The group is in the 12-year-old category and features singer Mike Biehl, drummer Tom Greeiie and guitarists Pat Bowman and Jim Hafeli. Mrsi Robert Weisenberger, chairman of the parade, calls the subdivision’s civic group “a very active organization.” During the year they put on Halloween, Easter and Christmas parties for the children as well as adult parties. Man Dies in Fall From Plant Roof SHELBY TOWNSHIP —• A construction worker at the Ford Motor Co. plant here died this morning shortly after falling from the roof of the building. Dead on arrival at Mount Clemens St. Joseph Hospital was Robert McCarty, 52, of Cincinnati, Ohio. Township police said McCarty was carrying construction material across the plant roof when he fell about 40 feet through a hole in the roof to a concrete floor. 'The accident happened at about 7 a.m. * . McCarty had been employed fay the American Roofing Co. of Detroit for about three days. The plant is located v at the comer of 23 Mile Road and Mound. All first quality! Majority cm** own dependable brand! Many Sanforised! Here’* your dumce to atock up! Pick from cotton broadcloth and oxford-cloth. Many Sanforized* to keep the fit you buy. Classic button down collars, tab and spread collars. Some tapered styles. White and blue. Plus, wanted fashion shades! Men’s sizes l4>/2 to 17. Not all sizes, fabrics and colors in all styles at every store. Don’t miss these great values! 4 STAR SALE men’s easy-care Ban-Lon shirts at greatsavings Get several for casual hours! B»n-Lon?> textralized nylon wishes up without wrinkling! Brown, pewter green, gold-tone, It. beige, copen blue, grape and chili; sizes small, medium and large. Not all sizes in all colors, but a great selection! STAR SALE nationally-known Bob Smart slip-on r {Heather uppers! Handsewn vamps! Hard-heels! Long-wear man-made soles, insoles! A. Kilt it: Bronze grain, black cherry. B. Chain: Brown. B: 7 to 12; C: 7^t to 12; D: &/2 to 12, but not all sizes, widths, colors. Don’t miss these great shoe values! THE PONTIAC PRESS H West Huron Street WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 Pontiac, Michigan 4805ft ^SS'M Secretary and Advertietn* Meadow Brook in Its Fourth Season Meadow Brook Music Festival Is oft to its fourth season, following three that progressively surpassed the preceding one in attendance and appeal. This summer’s Festival offers an eight-week 32-concert program by the Detroit Symphony Orchestra highlighted by a galaxy of guest artists as compared with the first season’s four-week 12-concert offering. The orchestra, under direction of Sixten Ehrling, has from the inception of Meadow Brook thrilled thousands with the brilliance of its renditions. As icing on the cake of this season’s program schedule, the New York Pro Musica.'directed by John White, gave special concerts last night and a week ago. With an audience capacity of 8,00Q (2,200 in the Howard C. Baldwin Pavilion and 6,000 on the grassy slope contiguous), attendance at the concerts has climbed steadily. More than 10,000 turned out for last year’s performance that featured Van Clibuhn. ★ ★ ★ Significantly, the Festival carries its own financial Weight, the cost bf the programs (this season’s is budgeted at $500,000) being met by ticket sales and support from private sources, without recourse to Oakland University funds or other sources of public money. The Press again commends the administration of OU, the Detroit „ Symphony Orchestra and those of the citizenry who have joined forces to provide the community with this annual cultural delight. Rerun Slated for Waterford Landfill Hearing Waterford Township residents are getting a rare opportunity: Two public' hearings for the price of one. At issue is a request for a license to operate a sanitary landfill near Maceday Lake. There was a marathon public hearing held January 30 before the Waterford Township Board. It was attended by more than 400 people. Following that hearing, township officials, acting on legal advice, decided that under Waterford’s present zoning ordinance, the decision to grant or reject this proposal lies in the hands of the Waterford Township Planning Commission — not the township board. Thus, a replay of sorts of the January hearing is slated for 7:30 tomorrow night in the Waterford Township High School cafeteria, this time before the township planning commission. The need for a waste disposal site was heightened when a dump on Cooley Lake Road serving township residents was closed early this year. That immediate need was eased somewhat in April with the approval of a contract whereby township residents can use the City of Pontiac’s sanitary landfill on West Kennett Road on a fee basis. Recently, we praised the fight residents of the Maceday Lake area are putting up to prevent possible future pollution of Maceday and Pontiac Lakes. We recognize that adequate waste disposal is a problem facing Waterford and many other growing communities. However, on the face of evidence produced at the first public hearing, there appears to be a strong chance that the location of a sanitary landfill near Maceday Lake could, over a period of years, result in pollution of Maceday Lake and possibly Pontiac Lake. Should we take such a chance? We think not. Maceday is one of our finest fishing lakes. It is one of two Oakland County lakes which • contain lake trout. Bass, rainbow trout and p|ke fishing are also good in Maceday, not to mention panfish. Should Pontiac Lake become polluted, we would lo^e one of our first rate fishing and recreational bodies of water. This is a big chance to take. In recent years, the county and its residents have taken big steps, at considerable expense, to preserve our lakes and assure adequate water levels. It would seem that approval Of a sanitary landfill operation in this location would, in part, be contrary tq current local and national efforts to preserve our water resources and maintain adequate lake levels. Now that the township has obtained the services of the. Pontiac landfill, it seems a good opportunity to take some time to search for a solution which will eliminate the risk of water pollution. , ° World Suffered a Beating in 21 Days By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - If the tions, and the leaders of the world’s two most powerful nations held a summit conference to foster “The Spirit of Hollybush.” Where so recently • Jews had been forbidden to pass through, the Mandelbaum Gate to pray at the Wailing Wail, they now possessed both through force of arms. Israel swore never again to surrender old Jerusalem, but Britain and Russia backed Arab demands that it be returned post-haste to the kingdom of Jordan, and Unde Sam sat on the fence wheedling,'“Come let us reason together*” ★ ★ * The world prayed for the emergence of a wise Solomon, -who by threatening td cut the baby in half qiigbt discover the rightful mother! But where is such a leader today ? And what should become of Jerusalem? JOINT CUSTODY? That city, sacred alike to Moslems, Christians and Jews, had been the most foug)t-e three weeks while our back was turned to the typewriter, American planes bombed Hand, and North Vietnamese slaughtered UJS. paratroopers. Communist China detonated its first H-bomb as Red Guards clucked their raucous wqr through the land like a ( plague of locusts. Something dangerously akin to a death rattle sounded in the throat of the United Na- The site of tiie temple built by King Solomon where once rested the Aik of the Covenants and where later the boy Jesus astounded the priests with his knowledge, is also holy grounds to Mos-lems, whose shrine marks so much friction that a buffer zone between thorn could be a blessing. This may not be the best possible solution, but certainly it is high time for root of good will to solve the age-old problem of the warring Holy Land. WC0&/ 'He's All Yours! David Lawrence Says: Cuba Steps Up Aid to Guerrillas WASHINGTON-The United States is confronted with the possibility of a half-dozen or more Vietnam-type conflicts. The Castro _ government of ' Cuba, has instigated a series of guerrilla wars de-signed to' harass governments in Central and South America. A compre- LAWRENCE hensive report, just issued by a subcommittee of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, declares that Castro has expanded his list of target countries, and is holding on July 28 in Havana a conference of Communist parties in Latin America to plan more subversive and terrorist activities. The report says, “there are guerrilla movements of significance” in Venezuela, Colombia, Guatemala and Bolivia. Details of these operations now are furnished by the House committee, based on investigation and public hearings. Are some of the principal countries in the world going to cooperate with the United States in preventing Cuba from carrying out its plots? ★ ★ ★ . The House committee makes these findings: “Cuba is still receiving considerable assistance from our ‘friends and allies.’ “The British are trading with Cuba" and recently com-- pleted a credit guarantee for a large fertilizer plant. “Other countries have granted credits to Cuba, including Spain, Japan, Francs; the Benelux countries, Morocco, the United Arah Republic, -Italy and Canada. Canadian wheat, purchased by the Soviet Union, and shipped to Cuba, amounted to 208 million dollars in 1965.” When a nation is virtually in a state of war with other governments, measures can be taken to “quarantine” the aggressor. The Organization of American States (OAS) has already condemned Cuba for “aggression and intervention” and recommended suspension of diplomatic relations as well as trade and shipping. Only Mexico has not complied with the 1964 decision to cut off relations. ga' ' The OAS/ has also proclaimed the right of its members to 'engage in individual-' or collective self-defense. The Soviet union is on notice to keep missiles and other aggressive weapons out of Cuba, and the OAS has urged that “member countries take all necessary individual or collective measures ... to assure this.” Although an agreement was reached in 1962 between President Kennedy and the Khrushchev regime to dismantle the missile bases set up in Cuba, it is not certain how many weapons remain. The House committee declares that a large supply of arms is present in Cuba as well as about 5,000 Soviet nationals. A “military assis- tance group” of around 2,000 “helps in maintaining and operating the Soviet equipment turned over to Cuba.” ★ ★ ★ It is clear that Soviet military aid has increased since September 1966. This, the committee says, could be “a Soviet replacement and resupply program for the equipment introduced in 1962.” Cuba’s air defense capability is being modernized. Bob Considine Says: Lindsay Scores at Parley With Demand f or Funds Verbal Orchids Charles L, Cole of Birmingham; 83rd birthday. Mr, and Mrs, J. B. Hubert of Birmingham; 62nd wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gillespie of Goodrich; 57th wedding anniversary. HONOLULU — John Lindsay of New York was the star of the recent annual conference of U.S. mayors held in the host town they all love best. His good looks, flair, the way he wore his leis and the fact that he brought t h e wife and kids along f-qpinr bined to win CONSIDINE him the most press coverage and TV and1 radio time. But what endeared him to his fellow i mayors was his demand, roundly endSftsed, that the federal government earmark $400 million over the next two years, to fight crime and corruption in the cities of the nation. Mayor James Clarkson of Southfield, Micb., noted that a poll of the mayors taken six years ago at the convention showed 50 per cent of them strongly opposed to federal aid. “Today, not one voice is raised against It,” ; he observed. Mayor Lindsay had another popular demand to make in connection with the first. He would have the federal, government give the money directly to the cities, not filter it through the governors of the states. ★ ★ ★ “You cotfitt-put in your eye, what state governments know about police science,” he said,, and it appeared that the assembled hizzoners might carry him around the hall on their shoulders. The most harried mayor present was the chairman, Cavanagh ofk Detroit^ First off, hie was more or less wounded during the benediction which opened the proceedings. , / The Rev. Df. Abraham Akaka smug a soaking wet Ti frond over the assembly and a sluice of water canght Jerry in the eye. It supplied additional tears for JeiTy’s speech, which dealt, bluntly with the tragedies of otir towns — poverty, insufficient housing to take care of,the masses moving into cities from the farmlands, crime, pollution, juvenile delinquency. He wondered why, in face of this urgent crisis, the government was pursuing a colos-sally costly war in Vietnam, a space program, and spending millions storing surplus cotton. Mayor Cavanagh’s particular target was the supersonic airliner which will be largely paid for hi its development stages by federal funds. He questioned whether it was worth it because, as he put it, there are only four or five cities in the country whose location of air terminal facilities will be able to handle it. The mayor would have had more to say but he had to hurry back to Detroit. His police were threatening to strike. Voice of the Pedple: Reader Seeks Answers on Who Must Fight War Many of us think of all-our American boys being killed in Vietnam. I lost a brother in World War II but my husband was lucky and came back. t What is wrong with the government? Big shots of the government are in the paper every day with fancy parties, having babies, etc. What about little folks like us who don’t have much? Let’s hear what some of the read* ers think. MRS. E. G. MAGER HIGHLAND Change in Time Prompts Readers’ Views Wait another 20 years and the advertisement for Michigan will be “The land of the midnight sun.” D.A. Have you noticed that God’s time never changes? Birds herald the dawn at the old appointed time and the sun’s light varies at the old given hours. Speaking of God’s time, the Bible tells us “now is high time to awake out of sleep; for now is our salvation nearer titan when we believed.” 1)6 you have the right time? « MARY ALLEN 9024 MILLWARD UNION LAKE — • v> As our Legislature had voted to remain on Eastern Daylight Saving Time as allowed by the National Time Act, how could a three-member board of canvassers legally Cancel that act of Legislature, even on petition of one-tenth of the people? Even Mr. Romney or Mr. Kelley had no such right. We must obey the law of the land — or must we? ARTHUR B. COTCHER 98 S. TILDEN ‘Filmstrips Valuable in Teaching Students’ Our upper grade teachers have been using the Visual Education Consultants News Filmstrip Service this past year which was provided by Die Pontiac Press. We again found the newsstrip very helpful and a valuable part of our instruction. CHARLES E. HAZEL, PRINCIPAL CARL MALKIM ELEMENTARY SCHOOL ‘Auto Graveyards Are Disgrace to Area’ I read Federal funds are available for screening auto graveyards in Michigan. I would tike to see Congressman McDonald or Broomfield work on that eyesore between the City and Oakland U. on what used to be Mt. Clemens. It’s a disgrace. ROCHESTERITE ‘Purpose of City Group Is to Help Mothers' The North Oakland Opportunity Center at 7 West Lawrence has a group of mothers called Mothers for Better Living. We are mothers from low income families and we need more members in order to help ourselves and opr community. Meetings are held each Wednesday afternoon and transportation can be arranged by calling the center. R. COLLINS Question and Answer Was the Washington Monument built by private funds or government expense. CURIOUS REPLY It was started in' 1848 and slowly built to 156 feet in 1854, when $300,000 had been raised by •popular subscription. The work became controversial and contrilmtions ended. It was finished when the Corps of Engineers resumed the work in 1880 _ at government expense. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Capitalists The Richmond News Leader The social science magazine, Transaction, reports on a study made by Barry M. Richman of UCLA’s graduate" school of business administration, of capitalists who work behind the bamboo curtain in Red China. These capitalists number morp than 300,000; the Red Chinese regime tolerates their presence because it needs their experience in management * ■ ★ # ★ All of them have been screened and found free from ties with Chiang Kai-shek. A typical “tame capitalist” described was a Mr. . yfu. Wu tied China to Hong Kong in 1958, but the Oiinese Communists two years later induced him to return-to manage his textile factory in Shanghai. / He now holds the top administrative position'in the factory, although ffie state assumed joinyrwnershi|j of, the business in1955. Mr. Rtchman also says that file capitalists fill a role by providing a graphic example of bourgeois decadence so that tb«. Chinese people can see wbat they’re fighting. For las services, Wu re-ceives about $152 a month, as well as about $32,000 in annual interest payments on the $6.4 million he has invested in the factory. He lives a typical bourgeois life: He resides in a large home, drives a Jaguar, and collects antiques. He banks much of his income, because modem China provides few material goods on which he pan spend it. * ★ ★ # Those Chinese confronted * by the living example of the rewards of capitalism may be led to question toe truth asi interpreted by that great truth-teller, Mao. They may conclude that if a capitalist can make more money than he can spend, and live well, too, perhaps the profit motive might be more than just a paper tiger. Draft Deferments The (Portland) Oregonian The Dew draft law now in effect retains the principle of sttident deferments, *but in a form significantly different from that of the expiring law. Under the Dew provisions, a student enrolled fen: full-time study in a recognized institution Will1 be Entitled jo deferment as a matter of law, on his t request. The only re- quirement is that he not flunk out or be kicked out. Hitherto, there has been no inch clear-cut procedure in student deferments. Draft boards have generally granted deferments on request and on condition that the student maintain a certain position in bis class. The latter requirement has been the causi of much dissatisfaction among students and educators. Some colleges and universities have stopped compiling class-rank lists, and others have protested the lists’ use to determine whether a man will be called up or be permitted to finish his course of study! ★ ★ ‘ ★ ■ Under the new. law, an undergraduate student in good standing may be certain of his defermpnt until he leaves school or reaches the age of 24. When his deferment ends, he goes to the top of the eligible list THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1007 A—7 Bobby Visits Na in Utah BUNDING, Utah (API-After visiting a Navajo Indian reservation on Independence Day, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., said private industries should be given tax incentives to develop such poverty-stricken areas. Kennedy joined Sen. Frank E. Moss, D-Utah, and a group of celebrities in touring the reservation but many of the Navajos were away at traditional July 4th rodeos and powwows in Utah, New Mexico and Arizona. it it It The party visited the mud and tar paper hogans of those who were at home, chatted Mlk Indians, toured schools and looked at antipoverty projects in the red rock country of southeastern Utah. Kennedy said he is working on legislation for such a tax-incentive program. He took six hours out of his northern Arizona vacation to fly 120 miles to Blanding with Moss, The vacationers who accompanied them included Mrs. Sargent Shriver, Kennedy’s sister and wife of the director of the Office of Economic opportunity, and television star Andy Williams, who sang “Moon River” for a group of schoolchildren after they did a Navajo chant. Kennedy said he was im-■essed with the federal programs in operation in the area and would like to see them expanded, Several Indians told him that education, employment and medical care should be expanded. Sr * ★ Kennedy Was greeted by a large throng and the San Juan High School band at the Blanding airport. Then he toured two elementary schools to see Head Start and antipoverty programs in operation. ' Some youngsters were held 1% hours past their nproial dismissal time so Kennedy could see the classes at work. School officials said it is normal to hold classes on holidays during the summer. ; j PRAISED SONG 'That was good, very good,” Kennedy said, clapping as a preschool class of Navajo youngsters finished singing nursery rhyme song for him. PARADE SPECTATORS HURT - A man holds his head as he is led from debris after scaffolding being used as a vantage punt by parade watchers collapsed in midtown Atlanta yesterday. Searchers continue to dig through the wreckage for other injured. Police said an estimated 200 persons were -standing on the structure when it collapsed, but only about 20 or 30 were on the portion which gave way. 32 Are Injured in Atlanta When Scaffold Collap: ses Later the group visited Neva-jos living in hogans and huts on’ government land on the outskirts of Blanding. * *. * Mr. and Mrs. Jack Holliday, answering Kennedy’s questions through an interpreter, told the senator their family of 10 must live on about $200 a month. Kennedy walked into their tar-paper home before leaving. He also passed a modern home, being built for and by Navajos in Blanding under a federal program. Meredith Ends March, Hopes It Will End Fear CANTON, Miss. (AP) -j James H. Meredith characterizes his march through Mississippi as, “at best, the beginning of the end for fear and injustice.” The last steps of the 165-mile walk brought the 34-year-old civil rights figure to the courthouse square here on Independence Day. Meredith said the completion Caro Fire Toll Now 6 Children as Boy, 7, Dies CARO (AP)—The death toll from a house fire near Caro Sunday rose to six Tuesday. Arnold Jackson, 7, died of bums received in the fire, becoming the sixth child to die as a result of the blase. Five youngsters died in tire fire as it destroyed the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Spencer early Sunday. Arnold’s brother, Ronald, 9, nd four of the Spencer couple’s children died in the fire. Four other youngsters burned by the fire remain hospitalized, their conditions ranging from fair to critical. of "his 11-day march “does not signal a victory. It is a greater manifestation of the black world’s historical, traditional and more fundamental defeat.’ He Said he had failed in one of his primary purposes because “the fear that permeates the life of tiie Negro in the United States has not been eliminated.” But he said he exposed that] fear. NEGRO FEAR “If Negroes no longer fear,’1 he told about 40 Negroes who gathered as he spoke, “then the whites have only two choices: to kill them or let them be free.lB No crowds greeted Meredith when he walked into Canton on Liberty Street. A handful of Negroes across the street from the square shook his hand when he reached the nearly deserted center of town. Along the way, small groups of whites in parking lots and service stations stared silently at the 16 march's. Meredith didn’t comment directly on the small turnout. He said only that “These people do what they want to do. The Negro has been putting on a show for the white people for years.' There ain’t no more show.” He said his march' proved Mississippi and its cities can “afford protection for any and all citizens, including Negroes." ATLANTA (UPI) «- A construction scaffold straining under about 50 spectators at an Independence Day parade collapsed yesterday when children excitedly jumped up and do' at the sight of a lion on float. Thirty-two persons were Injured. Some of the injured were standing beneath the scaffold when it plunged eight feet to the pavement. No one was believed seriously hurt. A policeman only minutes earlier had warned the spectators part of an estimated 350,000 who saw the “Salute To America” parade led by comedian Bob Hope, to get off the scaffold. Around 200 other spectators scrambled off other, scaffolds after the acident. The scaffolds had been erected in front of several buildings under construction in downtown Atlanta. ★ ★ ★ Ambulances had to thread their way through streets) clogged with traffic and spectators to get to Grady Memorial Hospital with the injured, most of whom suffered lacerations and bruises. LION FLOAT Hope already had passed the spot just off Five Points, the city’s business hub, and a float containing a lion was passing when the scaffold collapsed. ★ ★ ★ “Some kids started jumping up and down on it . . . and it caved in," said Harier Carr, 18, one of the scaffold occupants who was not hurt. Special! Women's reg. 2.99 Italian style casuals 1.96 Women's summer ploy casuals, foam cushioned Insole, figure 8 rope trim. Women's sizes to 10. Buy and save today I Many other styles in the group. Choice of assorted colors.. 2.99 to 4.99 OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9:30 Drayton Op*n Sundays Noon to I DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS ydeltfi COUPON SPECIALS! From our health and beauty needs deportment at big summer sayings WIIMM' \MS3S23am I i ‘New Dawn* 1 i Blond* £|Ac ' | Roe. 139 VV 1 I with coupon | Lustre Creme 10-os. wt. Rfl- 1-39 99 wqui-imse I Bufferin Tablets * 1 Lilt Permanent 100’s 1 ! 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All ard* Made of finest combed cotton and come in all sizes——Small through Extra large, 32 to 42. Tiny irregularities-will in no way affect the wear or fit. 57c each piece. Drayton Open Sunday* Noon to 6 FEDERAL'S DRAYTOI^PLAINS A—8 THE PONTIAC gBKSS- WP’.TYVTj)SPAY, JULY 5, 1967 Resort Rampagers Surprise Parents LAKE GENEVA, Wis. (UPI) — Many of the parents who yame to pick up their sons and daughters said simply, “we didn’t know where the kids, were smashed and police were stoned. was largely instrumental returning law and order to the weic. n * • They had been part of estimated, 5,000 youngsters ranging in age from 16 tb 24 who came to this southern Wisconsin resort area for the long Fourth of July weekend and turned from beer-drinking participants in the age-old girl gaipe to destructive rauders. From Friday night when the first of the teen-agers arrived through the holiday itself, more [than 500 had been arrested, most of them after the hit-run raids were staged neighboring towns. MEASURES EYED Gov. Warren Knowles called in the National Guard, which, With its bayonet-tipped rifles. Authorities facing much the same situation that officials in Fort Lauderdale, Eld., have faced each Easter for years, were in a quandary. “I’m positive we’re going to have to take more preventive measures,” said Lake Geneva Mayor Emil Johnejack. But he said he had no idea of what the “measures” might be. Weary National Guardsmen went home late, yesterday. Spec; 4 Timothy Smith, 24, lives in Lake Geneva -and said he was happy to spend his holiday weekend at home eyen jf meant straightening out his home town and helping “bring a bettor class of people back to our town.” The youths who drove into Lake Geneva were typified by 18-year-old blonde from Elgin, 111,, who spoke to reporters just after getting out of the Walworth County Jail yesterday. The girl, declining to give her name in order , to keep her parents and friends in the dark, among the nearly 200 arrested at a roadblock outside Lake Geneva Monday night. “Since I was arrested for not doing anything and it cost only $100, I'll be back and I will do something next time,” she said. Fit for president Sailor Soloing in Atlantic Except for Shoes SHREVEPORT, La. (AP) A well-known business and civic leader greeted President and Mrs. Johnson Tuesday dressed in a suit and ascot, but no shoes. Gordon Lambert shed his shoes after they were soaked by a four-inch rain shortly before the Johnsons arrived at Barksdale Air Force Base on a' brief BUY, SELL, TRADE! - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADSI HINGHAM, Mass. (AP) Walter Elliott Jr., says that his 30-foot ketch Atlantis survived a wild northeaster between Gloucester and Hicham in May he was convinced she could take the worst that could be expected in the way of weather during a summer crossing of the Atlantic.” So Elliott, 39, a merchant sailor from Bath, Maine, set out alone Tuesday to sail 2,400 miles to Falmouth, England-He said the trip will take 30 to 40 days and ‘Til be safer out there in the open'ocean that I aril bn Route 128,” a heavily traveled circumferential 'highway at Boston. Elliott is a former third mate in the merchant marine and an Army veteran of Korea. Visits Plymouth PLYMOUTH (AP)—To commemorate Plymouth’s 100th anniversary, Frank Champman, the mayor of Plymouth, England,’visited this suburban Detroit community Tuesday. At the neight of the rampage, thousands of youths were pushed out of Lake Geneva by a 5 p.m. curfew Monday — a curfew backed by' shotgun-toting police and com* bat-ready National Guardsmen. The youths formed car caravans and struck at three neighboring towns — Fontana, Williams Bay and Delavan—where windows and public facilities Police Aided Across State by Computer EAST LANSING (AP)-For policeman hooked up to Michigan’s new, computerized law enforcement information network, facts are just as close as his teletype machine. If he’s a member of one of the 67 police departments or 16 sheriff's departments now participating in the electronic system, he can type * out his question and transmit it computer at East Lansing State Police headquarters. The $2 million computer, in a matter of minutes, can tell him if he’s run across one of the 8,000 stolen cars or the 7,000 revoked or suspended drivers’ licenses the machine has been told about so far. State Police say it is equipped to store and handle information about as many as, 450,000 wanted persons. NETWORK POINTS The network also reaches 21 State Police posts and the secretary of state’s driver licensing bureau in Lansing, for a total of 105 points. ’ Not all the terminals have been installed yet, reports Col. Fredrick Davids, State Police director, but the system is now “virtually operational.” “The computer network has been in a test environment for the past month,” state police report. “From a practical standpoint the system will be on similar status for several -months more.” Switch to Right Set for Sweden STOCKHOLM, Sweden UPI — The.dateof Sept. 3, 1967, has been set for Swedish drivers to switch to right-hand-side-of-the-road driving, after four years of preparation. ........ The left-side rule for vehicles was introduced in 1734 and ma'de applicable' to motorists in 1916. Fireworks Late The fireworks displays planned for the Fourth of July had to be postponed until today at the Washington Monument from CONSUMERS POWER CO. 20 West Lawrence 333-7812 Bond's, The Pontiac Mall k. i & Vl THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 A—9 “peek preview” of the new Connolly’s It is with pride, that Connolly's of Pontiac announce the opening of our new store in Downtown Pontiac at the corner of Saginaw and Huron Streets. We would like to take this opportunity to extend an invitation to all our many friend and customers to visit us in the new surroundings. There are many new features that we are unable to picture here that, we would like you to see. Our entire-staff will look forward to seeing you and guide you through^ our new stoi;e designed to "better serve you. CONNOLLYS Also at 162 North Woodward BIRMINGHAM Open Friday Evening MI 6-4293 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY; JULY », 1MT STARTS tomorrow FORM LW jjERF * i - v* A dri' | |j| | « • . «^7 - Due to circumstances beyond our control -it's July again. o a part el Pontiac tinea 1931 SMUN’S stores ran men a you ns men FREE PARKIN® *t-ALL STORES ■ Downtown Pontiac ■ Tef-Huron Center in Pontiac ■Tech Plaza Center in Warren Open Fri. ’til 9 Open Every Night 'til 9 Open Every Night 'til 9 l^U,i£kdik!k4J^: k ‘d iiil 'l A—n THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY JULY 5, 1967 Home Start—9 Teach Child to Pay Attention illeJ. Ns unt of By UelleJ. Naseo, Ed. D. UNIVERSITY of SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA “Pay attention to the teacher!” is often the last word to a child on the first day of school. Good advice! A child’s ability to control his attention is major factor in school succe But it takes weeks and months of training. Children need attention control to learn to write, read and spell. Giving full attention and effort to each activity in torn should have become almost a habit in prti-. school days. Somewhere between a child with a half-hearted, careless “don't care” approach and a tense child striving for perfection is the relaxed, happy who works to improve Ids skill Whether it be eating, talking, picture drawing or catching a ball. ★ * ★ Parents have an opportunity to hetpti child develop the atti-' tudes that eventually become useful habits of behavior. SHOW INTREST The first step is for the adult to show some interest in a child's activity. This stimulates and deepens the child’s interest. For example: a child at-tempting to build a tall pile of Nocks will maintain his interest in repeated attempts if his successes are acknowledged and givens hearty approval by members of the family. As a child begins to draw with crayons, he may be given the picture of a square to copy-large ones at first. and then smaller ones. Some discussion of toe squire may be necessary to draw his attention to toe fact that toe lines are straight, that they meet at toe corners, that they are ail toe same length. * ★ * Through encouragement and suggestion the child not only Increases his ability to keep his mind on his w o r k but also learns to preceive more details in a figure. INCREASE CONTROL As he gets older and gains skills, toe drawings can be made more complex. Eventually there should be several overlapping shapes in a single picture. IBs increased ability to control his attention must make possible the recognition of a single shape from a background of miscellaneous objects. While toe child is being taught to describe shapes, colors, materials and other details he also gets practice in focusing his attention. Along with control of at- Firecracker Sets Fire to Squad Car CHICAGO (AP) — Two policemen drove their smoking squad car to a fire station Tuesday night after toe front seat was set aflame. by a firecracker. Patrolmen James‘Ralph and Nick Mostozzi had gone to the rear of a building to investigate a report, that fireworks were being set off. Lockout Legal DETROIT (AP)—The National Labor Relations Board has ruled that toe Detroit News acted within its legal rights in locking out its employes for . three days in 1962 during a Teamsters Union strike at toe Detroit Free Press. tendon he can develop toe habits of persistence, continuing tin activity to Its completion, and not least of all, toe habit of giving each new task that he attempts his best efforts. Parents must be careful however, not to expect perfection, particularly at toe beginning stages of any new endeavor. ., ★ * * A large pad of cheap paper can give toe child toe opportunity to tty a drawing again and again. The primary emphasis of criticism must always be on the improvement taking place rather than on some ideal of perfection. GAINS COURAGE Wlu!n a child’s first clumsy attempts at a new type of drawing are ^neither discouraged nor laughtd at, he gains the courage to tty new things. In the process of getting started in school he will be placed to many new situations and be expected to master many new skills. He must be willing to try without fear of failure. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers FREE PARKING ON THE COURTHOUSE LOT (CORNER SJtfilNAW and HURON) Furnished by the Following Merchants: ARTHUR'S 48 N. Saginaw St. OSMUN’S MEN'S WEAR SI N. Saginaw St. BOBETTE SHOP 16 N. Saginaw St. GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 51 W. Huron St. CONN'S CLOTHES 73 N. Saginaw THE POHTIAC PRESS 48 W. Huron St. a nnouncmg GRESHAM specializes in COMPLETE CUSTOM DRAPERY SERVICE including taking down and rehanging at a very nominal fee All draperies are premeasured, expertly cleaned and checked for any possible small . repairs then restretched perfectly to original size and shape UNLINED DRAPERIES 5* * "BC- LINED DRAPERIES 6# Decorator Fold Only I c sq. ft. additional 605 Oakland Avenue FE 4-2579 We Specialize! in good comfortable chairs and rockers, . mpdestly priced.1 Oor lower over- v head saves you money!" CASH or TERMS or LAY-AWAY SI Years sf Sailing Battar Quality for Lata! 144 OAKLAND CLOSED WED. AFTERNOON FURNITURE Juniors^ Misses, Halfs Summer Dress Clearance Great summer shapes at Sean sensational low prices. Shifts, tents, skimmers, sunbacks in assortment of summer fabrics. A rainbow of colors to choose from. Sizes juniors, misses and halfs. Shop early! ___________Ladiet’ Ready-to-Wear, Second Floor Re*. $6.98 to flTw 39i 12" Summer HANDBAG CLEARANCE Regular 12.98 to $8.98 Stretch Nylon l"«o 4" GLOVES Re*. $1.98 |C Check SEARS INFANTS’ NEEDS Fast-dry Cotton Gauze . Diapers ,”??;> 257 Popular cotton gauze dries in a wink, ii< durable, yet xoit to haby’a tender skin'. White. 69c Training pant*, 57c •I.SO Shirt.....1.27 99c, Wrapper....77e 99c Sheot.........77c •5.99, Diaper bag, 4.97 $1.75, Shirt......1.57 99c, Gown.......77c $5.99, Blanket.. .2.97 99e« Her. Blanket, 77c Vinyl covered rattan and soft crocheted. White or natural. Smooth plastic, (trained plastic or patent plastic, large or small. Spandex Stretch Back Butterfly1 Bra Reft. 1 99 $4 JL Charge II Lifts defines a youthful line. Lacy cups in sizes 3240 A,B,C. Other bra’s, He*. $ 1.59-83 ... 99c Assorted Panty Girdle* JSW 2" iatMF B Women’s—Children’s $2.99-03.99 Canvas Shoes ■ Canvas shoes in Dacron and cotton ' -* qm ■ and all cotton uppers. Rubber soles. 1 ” * M Assorted sizes. Stock up now! -A- $12.99, Ladies’ Featherlite® Shoes 1 Big assortment of discontinued style with elegantly detailed fine leather or genuine reptile uppers. Leather I or composition soles. Broken sizes, ww * 1 colors. 1 B Boys’ S6.99-S7.99 Dress-Up Shoes H Discontinued oxfords and slipons ■ with black, brown leather uppers. » g* ■ Polyvinyl or strudy composition soles. /I | • ■ Hurry in and see them today! $7.99 to $9.99 Feather Soft Pnittps 1 Attractively designed tailored suit | pumps wit]) supple leather uppers, , 1 leather or composition soles. Dis- (xq»1 continued styles in broken sizes, 1 colors. Hurry in! v 1 I Men’s $8.99-$ 11.99 Dress Shoes B Light-stepping' oxfords and slipons m with leather uppers in black, brOwn, ^ _ _ ■ other colors. Springy Searofoam or 4v97 ■ compisition soles. V Misses’ $6.99 to $9.99 Casuals 'Soft slipons. ghillies and oxfords ties with flatty to chic walking height heels, Bouncy Searofoam or composi- A A9 1 tioiv soles. Discontinued styles in 1 broken sizes. 1 Men’s $12.99 and $21.99 Shoes B See these handsome oxfords and slip-■ ons today. Black Hr brown leather aq. H uppers with leather or composition * I .soles. Discontinued styles. 1 Teens’ $5.99 to $7.99 Dress Shoes 1 Dashing young fashions include foot-skimming flats to chunky, curvy, || wee heels, leather uppers, composi- 047 I tion soles. Discontinued styles in \ broken sizes, colon. . 9 I Children’s $4.99-$6.99 Shoes B Biltwell® shoes in little girls’ and ■- bqys’ favorite styles. Leather or vinyl I patent uppers with composition or €%A.*T H polyvinyl soles. Discontinued styles. H Come early! ti-F Infants’ $3.99 to $4^9 Shoes '•§ Includes discontinued one-straps, high shoes and oxfords. Leather or glossy vinyl patent uppers, polyvinyl or composition soles. Quantity *V 07 1 limited. J[ I Fret Parking Lot Just Around ton Comar on Clark Strutt OPEN MON. & FBI. NIGHTS *TIL 9 "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back' : SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESjS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 Disaster Strikes Town—Three Times RIPPERDAN, Calif. 650 regular to 6.50 ...... .2 for 9.75 . 2” - 269 Ladies' 1 V?1 V«7 Men's Pre-Teen Spring Coats Knit Shirts Shorts - Knit Tops Your choice < regular to 8.00 regular to 5-00 'A off - 3” » 5” W ' '2” Naturalizers Discontinued Styles Sized 4 to 1 1, AAA to C Widths Dress, Reg. to '18.00 Life Stride Discontinued Styles Sizes 4 to 11, AAA to C Widths Dress, Reg. to 15.00 1290 11 90 Naturalizer Discontinued Styles Sizes 4 to 11. AAA to C Widths Casual, Reg. to 15.00 Life Stride Discontinued Style Sizes 4 to 11, AAA to C Widths Casual, Reg. to 12.00 990 790 Discontinued Stylo Reg. to 12.00 ^ Dress Discontinued Styles Casuals, Reg. to 10.00 American Girl Discontinued Styles Sizes 4 to 10, AAA to C Widths Casuals, Reg. to 9.00 Buster Brown Miss America—American Girl 590 Miss America 59° 490 490 590 890 1590 Discontinued Styles Girls' Whites and Patents, Infants', Reg. to 9.00 Buster Brown Discontinued Styles Girls'—'Boys' Reg. to 10.00 • Discontinued Styles Oxfords—Slip-ons Reg; to 14.00 Pedwin Discontinued Styles Oxfords—Slip-ons Reg. to 24.00 Porto-Ped # Ladies1 Canvas Shoes By Ball Band and Busken Discontinued Styles...... reg. to 5.99 Sizes 4 to 10 Narrow and medium 288 _ 3881 CHILDREN’S OXFORDS Children's Styles in Red, Blue or White £88 MEN'S - BOYS' Tennis Shoes Heavy Sole In White or Black High or Low Styles Use A Convenient Lion Charge Plan option terms THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 Ltic* Johnson Nugent receives her infant son, Patrick Lyndon, from her sister, Lynda Bird following services for the infant at St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church Tuesday morning. Lynda Bird and Joe Batson, of Amarillo, stood in as godparents for Mr. and Mrs. Gerard Nugent, who were not present for the ceremony. New York Fashion Decrees Are Vague About Hemlines By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK — The question facing women during fall wardrobe buying is, whither the hemline? The answer, let the skirt lengths fall where they may. New York designers in the main call for continuation of above-knee skirts in their new collections. Thai a few of them test outthe mid-calf length, vintage late 1940’#Whe testing of these “midi-sklrts,” as some designers dub them, seems as of now more in fun than in seriousness. But one thing is certain; skirts cannot get any shorter and remain skirts. UPS AND DOWNS The ups and downs of the hemlines led off the fashion parade as the pace setters in the Seventh Avenue garment center of New York began their semi-annual showings for the nation’s fashion reporters. The women, with notepad and pencil, tape recorders and television cameras, are participating in the 49th “National Press Week,’’ held each July and January by the New York Couture Group. Couture Group will be followed by shows from another organization, The American Designers, to provide all told 10 days of highlights from all facets of fall and winter ready-to-wear. In the short, short skirts come such designers as the award-ning. Geoffrey- Beene,, who places. daytime lengths four and five inches above the knees. Some of the Beene suits are jackets 1 and pants combinations, the pants cut exactly like jamaica shorts. Experimenting with the “midi-skirt” are such as another award-winning designer, Dominic of Talmack. Contrasting sharply with his above^knee lengths are the very long for both day and evening. THE “NOTHING” Poncho like capes, falling to about 10 inches from toe floor are coupled with skinny little “nothing” dresses, often hemmed to above toe knees. Typical is a poncho with hood,t done in reversible colors — purple on one side, gold on the other,'worn over a gold and' purple dress. * ★ i* * Some manufacturers coll the mid-calf hemlines toe “Zhivago influence,” named for the novel and motion picture •bout Russia during toe revolution. To . go with It — high fur collars, fur cuffs, and side fastenings. ' ■ ; . ■ •< . Professional Women Plan Dinner Meeting The Pontiac Christian Business and Professional Women’s Club will have a dinner meeting Tuesday at .7 p.nj. in Devon Gables. Mrs. Morris Townsend will speak with special music by Helen Martilla. Reservations should be confirmed by July 10. The Couture Group’s “trend time” round up shows these other fashions on the fall scene: • The armour-plate look, marked in both dresses and costumes by rows of nailheads even on toe softest of crepes, metallic sequins, nailhead trims on sleeves and necklines or around toe waist. • Belts make the biggest silhouette news. After several seasons of the “no -waistline” shapes, belts come in all widths, either self fabric or of leathers. Belt placement ranges from toe empire, high under the bustline, to natural waistline to hip hugging. Some belts mark only toe back half of toe garment. • Use of industrial, or toe outside, zippers not only in sports and other durable apparel but in toe most elegant of evening clothes. These zippers are meant to show. • The overwhelming revival of toe shirtwaist. Shirts are of chiffon or satin with demure high necks and french cuffs. • Culottes and pants still are very . much in the running. You’ll see tuxedo culottes, with formal velvet coats, colorful weskits, and many pants in aboveknee versions.’ A Garden Magazine Editor Who Doesn't Dig the Dirt President Johnson takes hold of the tiny hand of his grandson, Patrick Lyndon Nugent, in an attempt to awaken him as the baby and its mother, Luci Johnson Nugent posed with the president at the LBJ Ranch. By BEA SWORDS Somewhere there is a garden magazine editor who doesn’t have a garden. Her name is Hedy Glaettli and she is toe managing editor of the Woman’s National Magazme, published by the Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association, Inc. I asked her with amazement, you can well imagine,if not being an avid gardener bothered her new career. ★ ★ ★ She laugher, “No, no,” she told me in a faintly accented voice, “We don’t juSt have articles on gardening and flowers. “We are interested in crafts — especially in New England. We have articles on conservation, water pollution mid we do much ’ work with scholarships.” Hedy is a former resident of Zurich, Switzerland. She studied advertising there and while still in school, she and a friend began their own ad agency. Their success was so great it was Considered Proper? Garter ‘Snappy' Prom Souvenir By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: When our 16-year-old daughter went to the school prom, she . had to have a fancy garter to wear that night so she could give g it to her escoft as a f ' souvenir afterward! We suggested she] give him a ribbon from g ABBY her hair, or a flower from her corsage as we have always considered garters as a part of| underwear. Maybe toe next move, will be for the boy to ask his date for her girdle or bra. What is happening to our young people anyway? LACKAWANNA MOTHER DEAR MOTHER: Giving one’s escort her garter for a souvenir is not new, and really not very wicked. Don’t worry about toe other. Were a young man to ask for a girdle or a bra, he'll probably wind up with a snappy comeback. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: Last year we put in a swimming pool and we told all our neighbors they could come to swim any time. Most of them have, on occasion, but they have all had toe good sense to phone first. Our problem is a young mother. She came every morning bringing her two small children and their lunches. They stayed all day. Not once did she phone to ask if we were having guests, etc. When we were not home she’d come anyway and use our kitchen and bathroom. (Our housekeeper told us.) Then toe rainy season set to and we didn’t see her for four months. Today, toe first nice day, she’s back! And from her conversation she plans to spend toe summer around our pool again. I suppose we should have said something to her long ago. But we' didn’t. Now stoat do we do? ■ # * - POOL PROBLEM DEAR PROBLEM: Say something now! If you object to her coming without phoning first, say so. If you’d rather she didn’t use your pool when you weren’t home, let her know it. The same goes for your “facilities.” Since you made no ground rules when you invited all your neighbors to swim “any time,” you’re lucky she’s your only problem. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: Lots of people read your column, Abby, so maybe if you put this to the paper they will see it and learn something. Some people think it is a big joke to say, “He can’t even get elected DOG CATCHER.” Like dog catcher is the worst job to toe world. Well, my father is a dog catcher, and he wasn’t' elected. He had to pass some very hard tests from the Civil Service commission. I hope lots of people will see this and quit laughing at dog catchers. Thank you. DOG CATCHER’S DAUGHTER How has the world been treating you? Unload your problems on Dear Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P. 0. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. For a personal, unpublished reply, enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope. For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1.00 to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P. O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. almost a temptation not to come to America at all. But Hedy felt that she wanted to see how things are done here 4- that perhaps there was something more to learn. Advertising was definitely her field. * Besides she 14 much too sensible to let success go to her head. Most recently she worked for Camp-bell-Ewald Advertising Agency to Detroit and then again began a business of ho* own. This time she located to Birmingham with a printing and direct mail business. ★ ★ ★ One day a friend approached her with news of the editor’s job on toe Woman’s National Magazine. She submitted a resume to the board of directors. They, accepted her. She works from her apartment — and confidentially j*--. it's kind of a one-woman-band, thing. She is responsible for selecting cover artists, making up the pages, getting them to toe printers, editing the copy that comes to her and keeping track of the advertising. CONTRIBUTORS Every division of the WNF&GA has a writer who contributes to toe quarterly publication and their stories have a vast range of subject matter. The very crisp, attractive covers that have graced the issues she has been responsible for, give a clue to her orderly sense of doing things. Her favorite sport is skiing — although she didn’t make it once last year. Another love is horse back riding and this slid does frequently, ★ ★ ★ The WNFfcGA has selected a devoted editor. In her conversation, she often mentioned the goals of the organization to relation to the type of job she to doing for them. I asked her if she had made any big " changes as a new editor — “I change to please — .or try to. And try to progress too, but you cannot shock peoplF Any change must be natural — and gradual.” Tasked for a preview of the future — knowing already toe would refuse. She did. “Wait and see,” she said wisely.... Odds & Ends Clearance Sale CANOPY BED Fpr the young, lady, beautiful white canopy. bed, twin or full Size. Complete stock of dressers, chests qnd desks to match. Also, available in maple. No-Money Down *58 SK£ Annual Arts,Flowers Festival Invites Local TRUNDLE BED Solid Maple Includes Wood Rails Converts to Twin Bed$. Immediate Delivery , Robert A. Thom, Bloomfield Hills artist and illustrator, has accepted the invitation to judge toe third Annual Arts and Flowers Festival sponsored by COLLECTION the Union Lake Business and Professional Womens Club. Entries are bong accepted Monday, from 6 to 9 p.m. at St. Patrick’s Church Annex, Union Lake. ■ROBERT A. Since 1963, Thom as been collaborating with Dr. F. Clever fBald, Director of toe Michigan Historical Collections of toe University of Michigan, on a commission “A History of Michigan to Paint-, togs” for the Michigan Bell' Telephone Company.,' Historical paintings for which he has won national prominence are “A History of Pharmacy to Picture^” and “A His-, tory of Medicine to Pictures.” He has traveled more than a quarter of a million miles to document his paintings. ★ * . ★ He studied at toe Institute of Fine , Arts in Columbus, Ohio, and under Robert Brackman at Noank, Conn. Thom is listed to Who’s Who in American Art, is a member of the Birmingham Community House and mem-her and first president of the Bloomfield Art Association. . T i « ? ■* ■* Following toe judging of this show and awarding of cash prizes which are , being given by toe chib, the entries to oil, drawing, graphics and pastels, water color, mixed media and sculpture Will be shown in merchants’ windows at Union Lake Village from July 15 through 20. Complete SERTA COMBINATION Two Complete Beds • Two Mattresses • Two Box Springs Solid Maple BUNK BED Mattresses and Bases Included Complete MAPLE CHESTS 3 Drawers $1688- 4 Drawers *]988 FOAM RUBBER Bdx Springs and Mattress $y] Q Reg. $79.95 Set tO Values to $69 DESKS Maple, White . *38 Discontinued Styles BUNK BEDS Maple, Oak, Walnut Reg. $39.95 *24 Williams CANOPY-TRUNDLE Reg, $129 *99 PICTURES LAMPS 1/2 OFF No Money Ddwn—36 Months to Pay BUNKLAND 1672 S. Telegraph Rd.-338-6666-Open 9 'til 5.30 ' Monday, Thursday, Friday/til 9 B—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY B, 1WT UjMx's Jufcj Safe Summer Dresses Washable, easy care in casual and dressy styles regular to 30.00 *10 to l20 Summer Sportswear Skirts, tops, coordinates regular to 30.00 *3 to *20 Summer Suits Two- and three-piece dressmaker or classic styles regular to 45.00 *10 » *30 CONTINENTAL ROOM Suits - Dresses - Ensembles - Knits - Coats - Formats regular 50.00 to 175.00 Vs to H off FURS. Mink Stoles - Jackets - Coats regular to 2750.00 *299 *2299 PLUS REDUCTIONS ON ' Blouses - Shorts - Slacks - Handbags Sleepwear and Jewelry July -Sbfit Qaf& Andrew Getter " 1990 DeLiso Debs reg. to $22 14^ Caressa—Mr. Easton reg. to $18 1290 town & Country Dress O90 reg.lo $lj^v, * Capezios J Q90 A reg. to $18 \7 Cover Girl 790 r. eg. to $12 / California Cobblers 790 reg. to $12 / Town & Country Casuals reg. to $12 Italian Sandals «.i;*49py990 HURON ot TELEGRAPH King Henry's Music Is Good Pastime By. BERNICE ROSENTHAL “Music for King Henry VIII,” including several compositions by that colorful monarch, was the subject of last night’s concert by the New York Pro Musics at Meadow Brook, Again under the direction of John White, the music was remarkable for its great versatility within the confines of the limited instrumental and vocal rangqgpf that day. It was, as the quixotic Henry VIII put it, in the opening number, “Pastime with Good Company” and the evening proceeded, sometimes on a lusty note, and sometimes with a deep religiosity which was quite contemporary In feeling. D. R. Ruddicks Exchange Vows in Rochester Recent vows and reception for JoAnn Elizabeth Frost and David Roger Ruddick took place in Rochester’s First Congregational Church. Their parents are the Edmond J. Frosts of Kalh'aven Road, Avon Township, and Mr. Ellsworth Ruddick of Holland and the late Mrs. Ruddick. SILK LINEN Silk linen was selected by the bride for her Empire waisted gown. She wore a pearl tiara with an illusion veil. ★ ★ ★ Her flowers were Stephano-tls and Phalaenopsis orchid. Debra Cox was her cousin’s maid- Of honor with’ bridesmaids, Mary Cox and Nancy Hawkins. Douglas Ruddick stood as best man with ushers, William Slaghuis and James Steininger. ★ ★ ★ The pewlyweds are students at Michigan State University. Writers at YWCA Members of the Oakland Writers’ Workshop will gather for a meeting Thursday at 1 p.m. in the YWCA. Outstanding In the opening group of three vocal numbers( was “Quid Petis o Filli,” by Pygott, in which there was a tender, gentle projection of tone and excellent solo and duet section by the highvoiced counter tenor and baritone singers. ★ * * In the second group, sung in Latin without accompaniment, die music, of a religious nature, featured the famous composer, Thomas Tallis. ★ ★ ♦ His “0 Salutaris Hostia” (0 Saving Victim opening wide the gate ot heaven, give us Thy strength and aid) was a high-light Si the concert. It had a Strong emotional appeal and was sung with perfection and an ethereal quality. DIFFICULT MUSIC The instrumentalists had an opportunity to display their technique and versatility. This music is difficult to play, since die wind instruments, especially the krumm-homs, depend on the amount of breath blown into them for their pitch. Although the orchestra had not been developed by the 18th century, “combos" of available instruments played complicated and intricately woven music. ★ ★ ★ Shelly Gruskln’s solo on the Renaissance flute in “Pav-ane” was beautifully done. “La Mi Re” .was played on the tiny portative organ by Edward Smith, and consisted of an inventive melody in the right hand played against three fixed notes, constantly repeated, in the left. ★ * * Perhaps the gayest instrumental' number was a Gal-liard in which the singers also played instruments, and which sounded like an elfin calliope playing a dance. MOST IMPRESSIVE The most impressive singing of the evening occurred in Fayrfax’s “Missa Tecum Principium”. The “Agnus Dei" was magnificently sung. The final group of secular songs contained madrigals and b a 11 a d s by William Cornyshe, and was a charming conclusion to an enlightening and inspired evening. SPECIAL SAVINGS | “Seconds" 1 ANTIQUE CHTW SATIN 1 FABRICS lor ® • Drapery • Slipcover • Upholstery I if *48" Wide • Spot Resistant • 28 Fabulous Colors DACRON SHEERS titles • Washable * I" For Under Curtain. , Dfjp Dry If firstswould be $2.25 a yard A FIRST TIME SHOWING This month at Calico, a group of fine painting* and graphics from the collection of Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Davie assembled the past 15 years by artists such as: Baskin; Kollwitz, Zao Wu Ki, Luba Krecji, Glen Michaels, Friedlander, Degas and Mary Cassatt. Informal modeling by Mrs. Betsy McKinlav of her original outfits from the fabulofis fabrics of Calico on Tuesday and Thursday, July 11 and 13 . . . from 10'til 4. ^ ' ' $ Stop In and havo more fun this summer at Calico Comers (we're air-conditioned) and Save on every beautiful yard you buy. * ■ CALICO CORNERS 1933 S. TELEGRAPH FE 2-9163 (Also: 20 S. Dixie — Boca Raton, Florida) OPEN DAILY: 9:30 to SiSOrMON. NITIS TIL 9-CLOIIO SUNDAY* White Organza Worn Lowell R. Conners Wed Wed Saturday evening in Calvary Baptist Church were Sylvia Marie Galloway and Lowell Robert Conner. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Galloway of Se» dum Glen Street wore white organza over taffeta with a fitted bodice of re-embroidered lace. Petals of Alencon lace and twists of pearls and crystal held her bouffant illusion veil. She carried Stephanotis with pale pink rosebuds. * * * Joyce Ann Galloway was her sister’s maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Joan Flew-welling of Flint, Brenda Galloway of Flushing and Karen Brisbois of Pontiac. Best man for the son of Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Conner of Oxford was his brother Bill. Groomsman was Lee Shaw of Oxford. Dave Galloway, brother of the bride, and Bruce Galloway of Flushing, a nephew of the grdom and cousin of the bride, were ushers. ★ . * * - Following a reception in the church parlor, the couple left for Northern Michigan. MRS. CONNER Thursday Meeting Members of the Fashion Your Figure Club of Pontiac will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in , the Adah Shelly Library. Mobile Kitchen for U.S. Troops C Every new device available to speed meal preparation for combat troops has been incorporated in a mobile kitchen recently designed for the U.S. Army. It will use electric energy diffusion, thermally-processed or freeze-dried foods, and micro-wave ovens. Only one facility in this new kitchen will have a look familiar to home makers — a sink to hold sudsy wafer for washing Cooking utensils. Springfield Ohio Is Setting for Hanson-McKaig Rife Thomas Edward Hanson m of Orchard Lake and his hride, the former Linda Ruth McKaig exchanged recent vows in Springfield, Ohio’s Covenant Presbyterian Church. Lynn Schwanger of Toledo, Ohio was honor maid with bridesmaid, Roberta Gibson of Cleveland. » * * ★ On the esquire side were best man Donald Parrish of Ann Arbor.and ushers, Raymond Nix and David Wissink. The new Mrs, Hanson chose a A-line gown of white linen' featuring Venetian lade. Her headpiece held a tiered veil. of tulle and she carried a nosegay of white rosebuds. ★ . * ★ Parents of the couple are the F. Burton McKaigs of Springfield and Mrs. Thomas Edward Hanson of Venice, Fla. and the late Mr. Hanson. diamond kinss REDMONDS Jewelry 81 If. SAGINAW, PONTIAC Free Parking inRear of Store THE PONTIAC PliKSS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, \067 B—8 So many of you have written to tell me how delighted you were about my suggestion of using narrow lace at the hem of your dresses instead of seam tape. It does give a custom touch to your garment and costs very little more than ordinary hem tope. If you desire a colored lace and can’t find the color you need, place a small amount of cold water dye in a glass jar, mix thoroughly and dip the white lace into the tint. If you need a deeper shade, just add more of the dye. It’s so simple to do and can actually be used for any type of trim. Dear Eunice Farmer, When machine stitching facings to collars, which side should be face up on the machine? Mrs. W. A. B. Dear Mrs. W. A. B.: I always advise my students not to try to attach the facing and the collar in one.operation. First, pin the collar on your garment, be sure it is even, and then stitch it to the garment from the collar side. Next, pin die facing on top of the collar, right sides together, and stitch from the wrong side of your garment where you will be able to use the first stitching as your guide to this second stitching. It may take a few minutes longer this way, but you will be sure it is accurate every time. Don’t forget to clip the neckline to the stitching line. This is just as important when there is a collar as without. This will release the neckline for a smoother look. TAILOR TRIX WINNER Mrs. Douglas Lappin of Logan, Kan., is this week’s Tailor Trix pressing board winner for her following suggestions. I’ve always disliked pleated skirts because of the ironing problem, never knowing how deep the pleats should be. Now, when I make a skirt, and after the final pressing, I turn It to the wrong side and with a laundry marking pen, I place a small mark at each pleat on the hemline. The marks remain after washing, and by pressing the pleats lightly on the wrong side, I am sure they will-fae in the correct position for the final pressing. ' Dear Eunice Farmer, I must sew because I cannot get a good fit when I buy clothes. However, I’m having trouble with my skirts. I have a large waist but very small flat hips and the skirts always have a bulge below the darts no matter how much I taper them. Is there a solution to this? ^Mrk B. M. S. Dear Mrs. B. M. S.: . Darts are the real answer to most figure problems. They can be made larger or smaller depending on the iadividnaf’s need. The deeper the dart, the more shaped the area will become. Try to remember this point when adjusting your own fitting. In your case, you need more room for your waist and since your hips are very flat, you need less shaping in the darts. I would recommend making the darts no deeper than Vi inch wide aj^fe waistline. This will give you the extra width you will need Ct the waist, and because the darts are so small, you won’t have a bulge at the end of them. It is usually better to make two small darts, rather than one large one at the back of your skirts. ★ ★ ★ Eunice Fanner gives illustrated pattern adjustments in her helpful booklet “Your Pattern and You." For your booklet send 25 cents and a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope with your request for it to Eunice Farmer in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. Safety Rules to Follow for Summer Fun By JUNEELERT Part II Drowning is another leading death cause with children. In this state ' of abundant waters, it is particularly important that all children learn tp swim. But even that is not the whole answer. it ★ ★ Good swimmers drown too because they use poor judgment or take chances. Small children should never be left unsupervised near a body of water. YOUR JOB Lieut. Donald Kratt of the Sheriff’s Department (in charge of the Marine Enforcement Program^ is emphatic in his complaint against mothers who depend on other people to watch their children for them. He says, “Don’t send your kids to somebody else’s property to swim, and expect the other person to watch them for you. “And don’t take your children, under the age of 16, to State parks or public beaches and leave them there for the day, while you go off on some business of your own. ★ * ★ “Where there is often only one lifeguard for thousands of people, he needs your help.” The use of floater-type safety belts or vests or other lifepreserving equipment or toys should not cause mothers to relax their watchfulness. Tots can drown floating face-down on the surface of the water. None should swim alone or if overtired or in stormy weather. Cramps can occur at any time but are more likely to occur after a heavy meal. * ★ ★ Does Dad look forward to taking the family for a spin on the lake after a long, hot day? The law requires that a coast-guard approved type of life belt or vest be carried in the vessel for each person aboard, but it is up to you to see that they are worn. An additional vest must be Efficiency Tip for Tidying Trip You can make the daily chore of straightening up the house easier by borrowing Sis’s doll buggy to haul the things that are to be returned to their proper places. If you push the buggy from room to room, it makes it possible to Straighten things in order in just one round trip. Spruce Up Basement Spruce up your basement even if you don’t want to'convert it to a recreation ropm. Paint the walls and floor and keep the comers and windows clear of cobwebs. This makes a more pleasant area in which to do your laundry and iron- in time of sorrow, Mpmrtnrv are a warming comfort All tite consoling things you Want to say but cant are stated simply and beautifully with flowers. TWO DAILY DELIVERIES tO DETROIT AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS carried In any boat with a skier in tow. It Is recommended that no one ski without a ski vest. BEWARE Sunshine is great as I said before. But staying out in the sun too long can affect the body mechanism and cause collapse. Too much sun can cause skin cancers, a common ailment of farmers and sailors. Tan looks healthy but can be deceiving. Sun thickens skin and causes premature wrinkles. Sunburn can be very painful and, in rare Instances, fatal, if .burn is severe over a large part of the body. Oils are recommended by Dr. Berman to- keep the skin lubricated. Moderation, he says, is the key to healthful enjoyment of one of the best of nature’s benefits. Mothers are advised not to allow backyard, unfiltered, above-ground type swimming and wading pools to become like “dirty bathtubs.” Many simple products, such as chlorine tablets, are available for purifying this water. When preparing to cut your grass, clear the kids and the dog out of the way as well as the sticks and stones or other debris which may lie hidden in the long green stuff. Don’t let any member of your family be numbered among the over 80,000 persons injured annually in power mower accidents. Animal bites are frequent in summer. Children should be cautioned hot to approach strange animals. If an animal looks sick, leave it alone and call the local dog warden. Thanks to the licensing laws for domestic pets, rabies is found mainly in wild life. Squirrels can carry rabies. Bats, skunks and foxes are typical carriers of this disease of mammals. * ★ * Bites of these animals are considered rabid until proven otherwise, Bats are known to harbor the rabies virus. It is, strangely enough, unusual for mice and rats to carry the disease, and the wild rat is more likely to have come in contact with rabies than is the so-called household rat that feeds in garbage. Turtles and frogs do not carry the virus. If you plan to vacation at cottage, lakeshore or country cabin, find out where the local doctor or nearest hospital is located and know how to get there quickly should an emergency arise. Summer dietary habits should be adjusted to avoid heavy meals in very hot weather. * ★ * Maintain a balanced diet, but don’t worry about eating too many hot dogs or hamburgers in quick-to-fix meals. They contain adequate protein and are perfectly healthful. Dr. Berman suggests that more frequent small meals, rather than the traditional three squares per day* would contribute to hot-weather comfort Be on the lookout for food spoilage. And flies! Don’t leave foods out for long periods but cover and return to. refrigerated storage as quickly as possible. All foods spoil more quickly under warm conditions. Make Your Appointment Now! PERMANENT and HAIRSTYLE Tinting—Bleaching Cutting IMPERIALS 158 Auburn Ave. Park Free FE 4-2878 Edyth Stenson, owner 48 Ni Saginaw | Shoe Clearance Save up to 30% or more on these famous brands! NATURALIZER • DELISO DEBS • MARQUISE JACQUELINE' • LARKS Dress • CONNIE Dress CORELLI Casuals • LARKS Sports and Flats f§ Regularly *7 to 923 NOW f Don't waitl Come in tomorrow' and find your sizel Sensational savings on these nationally-advertised shoe fashions . . . great shapes, new silhouettes, straps and bows in a rainbow of colors. Shoe Salon — Mezzanine WE DON'T WANT TO BRAG, BUT... * A QiU fa 4 iCtSf -SPRING COATS- were to 49.98 *28 Coat Salon - Second Floor —SPRING SWTS— were to 69.98 $18 $28 $48 Suit Salon - Second Floor -DRESSES- were to 29.98 ll88 1388 1688 were to 49.98 Drpit Salon * Socond Floor 'BRIDALS' SAMPLE GOWNS and BRIDESMAIDS 1/2 price -FOEMTMS- FAMOUS BRANDS Jr. Bras Bras Girdles 1/2 pnte -SPORTSWEAR- SWIMSUITS Were to $20 8s8 IF IF KNIT SUMMER SUITS Were to 29.98 1488 2 F SHORTS Were to 5.98 F TTOPS Were to 3.98 J88 2** -YOCNG EOLKS- JR. HIGH SWIM SUITS were to 10.98 JR. HIGH DRESSES were to 17.98 JR. HIGH SKIRTS were to 5.98 GIRLS’ SWIM SUITS were to 5.98 GIRLS* DRESSES were to 7.98 5s8- 2*» i 2s8 GIRLS’SKIRTS were to 5.98 2s8. Young Folk* Shop - Lower Level IS COMING TO PONTIAC AND WE HAVE REASON TO BE PROUD OPENING LATE JULY , •. Vrw ,.v .., '• \ - New Fashion MhU in The Pontiac Moll -MILLINERY- SPRING AND SUMMER HATS Were to $15 *2 $3 $5 GNER1 are. to $2 *10 DESIGNER HATS were to $35 B—t THE PONTIAC PRBS3r-WEP&ESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 TrmrwnmymmmwmmH CONNOLLY'S ' 3 OP THE WEEKI Slim, elegant motchtd topered baguaNai radiate from a Ana., flary pepr-ihoped J Credit May Be Arranged ■ ^orvrvcrvtipA/ jiwuiM Q BIRMINGHAM - Opan Friday Evanlngi 162 North Woodward-Ml 6-4293 ‘ uminmnmmimiiiniiiiipnin Cose No. C-570 Alcohol Is an Escape STAPP'S * Iurt^er reduction on Reg. *6.99 to *12.99 DRESS PARTY SHOES Big Boys7 and Men's Shoes Boys7 and Girls7 School Shoes Now Sale Priced at *2.99 STRIDE-RITE Discontinued Styles Beginning At Values..bargains... buys inr boys and > girls style! Oxfords, loafers. Straps. Children's sizes 8Vi-3 and larger. Nationally Famous Brand Tennis Shoes Vy. Huron Store Only . .A table of colorful styles that wilf bi discontinued after.this seasonl Children's, Women's Girls' and Misses' sizes. & $299 SHOE STORE i 931 W. Huron St. at Telegraph Pontiac, •• " 418 N. Main Si, Rochester Phone 8324760 mrnmiju •arm»nywininmw ’ • Note Appearing « Wednesday Thru Saturday . . . 2 THE • JERRY LIBBY : TRIO • 'PouuIa : STEAK HOUSE • 1000 Plymouth Road • ORNER OF TELEGRAPH J ujuuuuuu.mu.uo Dr. J. Wayne McFarland of South Lancaster, Massachusetts, has offered a five day plan to help people who want to quit smoking. He holds that hot or cold showers or baths can reduce the nervous tension which often accompanies the first days of giving up tobacco.' The baths also serve to keep the ex-smoker busy at a time when it is advantageous for him to be occupied. MRS. ADAMS Bobette Shop Annual Summer ObumSalii;! The only wine .museum in the United States, this beautiful wood and stone building Situated one mile north of Hammondsport, N. Y. on the Bully Hill Road is surrounded by vineyards over 80 years old. The museum overlooking Lake Keuka, in the midst of one of the world’s great vineyard regions, is now owned by Walter S. Taylor, assistant managing director of Great Western, and has been granted a charter under the New York State Education Department. The museum contains a large historical dollection of area winemaking and brandy production, and vineyard equipment. Tours are conducted commencing July 3 through Nov. 1, Mondays thru Saturdays, 9 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3:30 p. m., excluding legal holidays. Candlelight Installation for Officers In a candlelight setting recently in Devon Gables, second term officers of Soroptimist Club of Pontiac were installed. Taking office were Mrs. Frank Holznagle, president; Mrs. Arnold Hillerman, vice president;, Mrs. Harold Crazier and Mrs. Harry Dyer, secretaries and Mrs. Roy Maxwell, treasurer. Mrs. Fred H. Teetzel was welcomed as a new member. Delegates, Taime Surola and Mrs. Karl Schultz were named- to attend the international convention in Toronto July 23-28. ★ * * Introduced as guests by Lucy Veler, were Mrs. Frank Andersdfl, Mrs. Clifford Todd, Mrs. Harold James, Linda Holznagle, Mrs. Raymond Hoffman, Mrs. Philip Sauer, Pat Searle and Eleanor . Haney. Five-Day Plan to Stop Smoking New York Honeymoon for Robert L. Adamses A honeymoon in New York City followed the wedding Friday evening of Susan Lynn Berden and Robert L. Adams. The rite in Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church was followed by a reception in the Elks Teniple. PBAU SATIN The new Mrs. Ada ins chose a sheath of peau satin With embroidered Alencon lace bodice and bell sleeves. Her matening chapel train flowed from the Empire waist. A laurel wreath entwined with seed pearls secured her elbow length illusion veil, She carried carnations and ivy centered with yellow sweetheart roses. ★ * * The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Bonnie Berden of Ledge-stone Road and Clement E. Berden of Silverbirch Street. J h e bridegroom’s parents are the Paul S. Adams’ of Elmwood Avenue. Karen Koon of Flint was maid of honor for her cousin with attendants Pamela Scruggs, Patricia Short, Karen Gracey, and flower girl Lauri Gee. * ★ ★ Best man duties were performed by Charles Mann. Ushers were Robert Going, Steve .Allen and Thomas Berden. Craig Gee was ring bearer. The couple will make their home in Davisburg. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE C-570: Harry J., aged 36, is a salesman. “Dr. Crane,” his attractive wife began, “Harry is a very talented man and I love him. - “But I am afraid we are heading for a divorce unless he can learn to face up to his pn.'CRANE problems,. '‘Instead of doing that, he always tries to run away by means of the whisky bottle! “In the last 10 years, he has lost six excellent positions just due to his being drunk. “For he will set the world on fire and be top man on the sales force for maybe a year. “Then he suddenly goes on a binge and ends up actually in the gutter. So what can I do to help save him?” TEST OF FIGHTERS Alcohol is a common escape device of people who are afraid. It is typical even in movie plots and television dramas for a man to order a drink of whisky when he is in a jam. If, his wife leaves him or his child dies or he violates Moyers Vacation Mr. and Mrs. Carl W. Moyer, of North Palm Beach Florida are visiting friends in Bloomfield Hills. Mr. Moyer was formerly the head of Fisher Body Plant here. After a couple of weeks here they will travel to Canada for a brief stay before returning to Florida. Before retiring to Florida several years ago they made their home in Bloomfield Hills. International BUFFET EVERY FRIDAY A Complete Menu of The World Molt Favored Cuisines r.utrrtainment - Tuesday thru Saturda DORMAN’S OLD MILL TAVERN E£j|| 5838 Dixie Highway^ ipi WATERFORD ' Phone aJST MICHIGAN 623-0060 FINE FURNISHINGS FOR FIFTY YEARS ONCE-A-YEAR SALE FAMOUS QUALITY STEARNS & FOSTER "POSTURE SUPREME" QUILTED SET SAVE, TOO, ON LUXURIOUS QUEEN AND KING SIZES Convenient Budget Term* „ the trust of his employer or gets into any other serious difficulty, the usual adult is likely to want to get drunk. That is an evidence of regression to a childish state where the “baby” enjoys an irresponsible existence and didn’t need to look after itself. During infancy, a baby cries when uncomfortable and mamma soon shows up with a bottle, which she sticks In its mouth. * Fearful adults, facing failure or disgrace or any other cause of deep humiliation and social pain, thus want to regress to their diaper stage and have a bottle in their mouth. Since mamma is no longer nursemaiding them, they reach for the whisky flask. It would obviously be far more healthful if they grabbed a bottle of milk. But milk doesn’t deaden the senses and anesthetize the. conscience to produce temporary forgetfulness. Alcohol is an anesthetic, though less complete and slower ttt act than ether. • Beautiful Satin Damask Ticking a Pre-Built Borders Have Locked Edges • Patented Seat-Edge Construction for Years of Sag-Resistant Comfort • Hundreds of Highly Tampered Steel Coils With Double Offset Construction o Long Staple Cotton Felt Plus Patented InsuTo Cushioning for Added Comfort $481® Mattress or Box Spring Full or Twin Sizo "POSTURE SUPREME" 3-PIECE j 77x80 MATTRESS AND BOX SPRINGS Interior Decorating Consultation So alcohol becomes the refuge of men who flee Instead of fight,! It is regarded.,by us psy- j chiatrists as similar to the fire escape from $ burning building. The inmates of a burning ' building would not need the fire escape if the fire itself were quickly quenched. ★ W h And alcohol, since it is not a natural pleasant taste, is not desired for its flavor but for its anesthetic effect. Many star salesmen burn up a tremendous amount of energy and finally hit a point of low physical energy. They are somewhat like the manic-depressive who is riding the crest of the wave one day and in the trough the next. * * * During this depressed level, they may dread sexual impotence and fear to face their wife, so they start drinking to camouflage their problem and divert her attention. Many drunkards, especially after the age of 40, are sexually terrified! "POSTURE SUPREME" 2-PIECE 60x80 MATTRESS AND WANT TO SELL LAWN MOWERS, POWER MOWERS, BOATS, ROLLER SKATES? . . . USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE TOURS, CALL 332-8181. Ladies’ Summer Shifts and Dresses Regular to 18.00 7" to 11" A ccSol, cooL selection of hot weather dresses, that are fine quality and stylish, too! Ladies’ Washable Sportswear Regular to 35i00 9" to 19" Includes 3 pc. Jacket and Skirt Suits, 3 pc. Travel Suits, Jacket Skirts and Suits, 2 Pc Coulotte Suits Ladies' Famous Name Washable Slacks, Shorts, Bermudas, Skirts and Tops Regular to 11.00 3" to 5" Famous Brand GIRDLES-BRAS • Formflt, Youthcraft Sarong and Others Save 25% * Use Your Charge Account Bobette Shop 16 M. SAGINAW PARK FREE bOWNTOWN FE 2-6921 B—5 OPEN DAILY KMOi SUN. 12-7 WED., THURS,, FBI., SAT. July Storewide Discount THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 TWIN HULL PLAY BOAT* Our Reg. 5.97 4 Day Only 5.66 Life-size . 5 feel x 32 inches It*, strong, rigid oolv plastic ... a Twin-hull catamaran with room enough for two children. Bright turquoise color. Great fun for the youngsters. Charge it. •t.Ms.lh.ohU.S METAL 2-SEAT TOT ROCKER Our Reg. 6.77 4 Day» Only mfjgfU 4’8” rocker; enamelled tubular steel with wide-track construction for safety-balance. Two “passenger seats have steel slats. Rust-resistant, “weatherized.” Charge It. CHILDS' PICNIC TABLE Our Reg. 7.97 44 4 Day Only wvF Sturdy steel construction. Tables are 17t4”x37”, slat construction with slats enamelled in white, turquoise, yellow, orange for striped effect. Attached steel benches. Seats four. CANOPIED BENCH SAND BOX 9.97 Our Reg. 14.44 4 Day Only Steel-built sand box, 30“ wide, 58V4” long, baked enamel finish. Two attached “park bench” seats with cabana-type canopies in turquoise/orange/white. For convenience, just Charge It. Travels around the home... up hills and 5.66 I SPRAY NOZZLE *Duy 1,17 50’ RUBBER HOSE 5.66 Spray lock noszle dial control. around trees! Our Rug. 5.88 4 Day Only Vi” I.D. Reinforced. BRASS ROD NOZZLE 4 Day ' 97' 2.61 Si 50’LAWN HOSE 2.97 Our Rss 1.17c. Gives constant ana even spray. Leak-proof. 4 Dny* Only Vi-inch I.D. Brass couplings. limited quantity, non* to dealer* TURRET SPRINKLER 4 Day 2.22 1.96 Reg. 3.99. Adjusts to terns for penetration. 50’ LAWN SOAKER 2.77 SWINGIN’ SPRAY 4 Day 3.33 Our He*. «.«9 4 H.iv. For more efficient watering. Our Reg. 3.97 oscillating sprinkler waters 1,800 sq. ft Efficient, Automatic Way to Sprinkle Your Lawn 20-GALLON CAN Our Reg. 4.27 LAWN EDGER 1.74 WALKER SPRINKLER 12.88 Our Ken. 1.97 4 Dny* Heavy steel garbage can. SUPERAIN® “traveling” water-pressure sprinkler waters to 8,000 sq. ft. Travels end-to-end . . goes straight turns cor- 4 Day Only For a clean-cut edge easily. Our Regular 15.88 PLASTIC HOUSEWARES 88€ Your Choice Our Reg. 1.29 to 1A9 4 Day Only 5-piece assortment includes: 1'/2-bushel laundry basket; 28-qt rectangular waste basket; 16-qt divided dish pan; divided pail; 32-qt utility tub. Popular colors.' Ruggedly Built for Good Service 4 IMPULSE STARTER 3% HORSEPOWER MQWER Has In-Line Wheel Tunnel Depkl 3% HP. MOWER CUTS A SWATH 22” WIDE Ideal to Use for Camp or Cottage LIGHT AND COMPACT ALUMINUM FOLD COT Our Reg. 3.66 4 Day Only Unit is 37” high, 12” deep, 36” wide. Floor protectors. Ref. 4.96 Four-Shelf Metal Unit, 60x16x12”......... Rif. 1.96 6-Shelf Mitel Unit. 76x16x16”............... Our Reg. 44.66 Days Only 39.88 Easy-to-start 4-cycle power-mower cuts an even 22” swath. Single engine control it mounted on handle. Reai; baffle, 7” white polyethylene wheels. Charge It. Hetery Blade Replaeemftnt Kit................ .2.47 56.88 Compare at 79.88^ 4 Days Only Briggs & Stratton 3Va horsepower impulse-starter engine gives this 4-cycle mower its greater efficiency* Select-O-Matic® wheel adjusters, baffled mulcher door. ■' Black ft Deoker Edger and Trimmer...... .29.9.9 Our Reg. 10.96 "4 Days Only Four-leg folding frame. Over*!! width of cot it height is 13V4”; length, 72” Wire Helical® coils ana a mattress that’s IVfe” thick, cc on one side, striped ticking on otb Kmart guarantees the qualify, discounts the price, and you can “Charge GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 B—6 Red Underground Is Majo WASHINGTON (UPt) — The Federal Bureau of Investigation has so thoroughly infiltrated the American Communist party that comedians are cracking; jokes like this: “If the FBI agents stopped paying their dues, the Communist party would be bankrupt.” A cartoon depicts the leader of an American Communist •cell opening a secret meeting this way: “Comrades and agents of die FBI.” Over the years, die Communist party that operates above the surface in America never has been much of a -factor in our destiny. In size it never came close to the membership, Jor instance, of the Italian party which has 1.3 million. Nor has the U.S. party ever been highly regarded by the masters of world communism. Nobody was more surprised than the U.S. Communists when Stalin signed a treaty with Hitier. Uncle Joe never told his American nephews anything. ★ ★ * Hie Central Intelligence Agency, contrary to widespread belief, has nothing to do with catching Russian spies hi the U.S. It works abroad. It is the duty and function of the FBI to find out who the Soviet spies are hi this country and take effective action against them. This is easy so far as the persons who publicly asknowl-edge their communism are concerned. Where it gets tough is when you run into the “Red underground." Only die most trusted and dedicated Communists are admitted to the underground. This is die way it works, according to FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover in a study of communism called “Masters of Deceit.” “To enter the undeground usually means simply disappearing, quickly, abrupdy and without warning. These departures are carefully planned. Above-ground comrades will handle any personal matters such as storing furniture. “Sometimes departures have been so rapid that hot meals have been left on the table. Once underground, the member is made ready for assignment; that is, being made into another person. As a general rule this involves the securing of a new name, date and pla^e of birth and even changing physical appearance,” by diets, surgery and other means. FALSE IDENTITY “The member must be supplied with fake identification papers, Social Security cards, drivers’ licenses, library cards, Outdoors Program for Children, Adults bank-deposit books. He should acquaint himself with his adopted place of birth, know something about its newspapers, streets and stores. Does it have a baseball team?” So equipped, the Soviet spy sets about his business and usually an FBI agent goes about his own business right behind him. It is hard, tiring work for the FBI man. It can go on for months. But there is even a more formidable enemy than the underground foi1 the FBI. There is some satisfaction in arresting and convicting an American' citizen who spies for' Russia because he can be tried and and sent to jail, or even executed. WWW But it is frustrating for the FBI agents when they catch a spy hiding behind diplomatic immunity. EXPULSION About all they can do is expose him to the U.S. State Department, which then declares him persona non grata and expels him. . It is a fixed policy of Moscow to fill its embassies and consulates in the free \yorld with spies. Sometimes the spy will act as a chauffeur, but actually will outrank the Red in the Moscow hierarchy. The Drayton Plains Nature Center has launched a slimmer program geared to teach children and adults about the outdoors and man’s place in it. No enrollment fee is required. The program is available to residents of southeastern Michigan. The nature center Is located at 2125 Denby, near Dixie Highway and Hatchery in Water-ford Township. Featured are two-hour nature hikes beginning at 9 a.m. dally. Participants will walk trails throughout the 140-acre facility, exploring the relationship of plants and animals, die succession of plants and many other phases of ecology. Offered afternoons are half- hour tours for tree, wild flower, plant* and rock identification plus aquatic studies. Folklore of wild herbs and survival foods also will be studied. Directing summer activities at the nature center is Herley B. Moore, a sixth grade teacher in the Clarks ton School District. FOREST SERVICE Moore holds a bachelor’s degree in agriculture science, has completed graduate conservation courses at Michigan State University and has had one-year experience in the United States Forest Service. Art classes from 10 to 11 i.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays will be conducted by Mrs. Dee Lommerson, a former art teacher. Instruction in taxidermy and fly-tying will be provided by James Shea, acting director at the nature center. A program on snakes is slated for 10 a.m. Saturday. Among the volunteer teachers at the nature center this summer a^e Emerson White and Mrs. Mary McGinley of Waterford - Kettering High School, Mrs. Emerson White and Arthur Lake of Waterford Township High School and'Mrs. Nancy Chung of Schoolcraft School. The center is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. The museum now houses about 100 birds, animals and reptiles plus an aquarium of water species. An attendant is on hand to explain feeding habits, life cycles and answer questions. The nature center is supported by donations and memberships, ranging from the 50-cent student fee to the $2f ~ jjj benefactor category. MEMBERSHIPS Family memberships of $10 a year, coupled with $15 business memberships, are expected to make up the-bulk of contributions. These contributions allow free admission to the several children who visit the facility daily, according to nature center officials. Funds are needed urgently to keep pace with mounting operational expenses which amount to about $250 a week. k KRESGE’S ik DOWNTOWN STORE ONLY THURS., FRL, SAT. SPECIALS SPANISH PEANUTS Reg. 58* lb. 331 Close-Out PLASTIC Assortment 2-tr Charge It! Children’s SUMMER SLEEPWEAR Sizes 2-6x Reg. $1 00 ’ Charge it! PATIO BROOM 88* Charge It! Ladies’ JAMAICA SETS $199 leg. ■ Sizes (478 ■ 8-16 Reg. $2?« Charge It! Girls’ JAMAICA SETS IP® $3,99 " m Charge It! BATH TOWELS 07 a Seconds K M V Charge It! PIC-A-MIX CANDY Assorted Flavors 33* T9-ER SALAD Tuna Sandwich Fruit Cocktail Sherbert Chips »< Enjoy Eating at Our LUNCHEONETTE S. S. KRESCE CO. Between 1950 and 1960 alone, there were H such Russians expelled from the Russian embassy in Washington or the United Nations. The Executive A brand new commuter train from Grand Trunk. leaves downtown Brush St. Ststion, Detroit, for Pontlsc end intermediate points st 6:20 p.m. This new service gives you those extrs minutes you so often need to finish a draft, complete a job, see a client —and avoid the rushl The Executive—the commuter train that waits for the busy man. Take your choice from Grand Trunk's weekday commuter service between Pontiac and Detroit. Three trains downtown In the morning, three back at night. Call Grand Trunk Western, Passenger Sales Office, 962-2260. GRAND TRUNK WESTERN SPQRTARLLTV MOTOROLA 12” WITH UHF/VHF mpoct 74 ... In. glcturo. Up-front $72 ZENITH UHF/VHF PORTABLE Compact! Lightwaiglitl Top porformanco features UHF/VHF. Handcrafted chassis. Cony handle, antenna, sound-out-front. RCA VICTOR BIG 15 IN. UHF/VHF lilt-in ant.nna and carrying hondla. i5 iq. in. pictura. Lightwalght portobla. II 82-channal UHF/VHF tuning. Tug w ZENITH LARGE SCREEN PORTABLE 18" diagonal nw«m. 172 «q. In. gj« area. Slim, lightwuight. Front control, and found-out-front. UHF/VHF. Hand- WESTINGH0USE 18” WITH UHF/VHF 172 n. in. plcturn. Ultra-dim .mart Ityl- IturAlUC K_A______I .J_J *93 ZENITH GIANT SCREEN PORTABLE 20** diogonal measure. 212 sq. In. pie. Ho^i^a^OA^'v^chorai.. Dipolo antenna and handle. Deluxe. *169 88 GENERAL ELECTRIC UHF/VHF PORTABLE A taw panonal portobln. law tn Min hondla, buih-ia antonna and ruggnd cabinet. Stroamlinad dodan. UHF/VHF. Front control, and mind. 80 ... In. gin- *69' 88 MOTOROLA 18” UHF/VHF PORTABLE Big 172-sq. tn. pix. Compact cabinet ... front it all picture yet has tuning con* trols ond sound up-front. Disappearing handle. UHF/VHF. *100 $9088 *11988 FREEI 10-DAY HOME TRIAL ON COLOR TV PORTABLES ZENITH IB” Diag. Meas. COLOR ___________a. Roctangulc. —_I_ tub*. Turin matchod agaalwn far debar, foliar wgnd. UHF/VHF. Automatic color clorifi.r. Urn m tobla modal nr an rall-oroond colt (opt. oidro.) wm..’7^rw$7®ii89 nervine lor picture UHF/VHF. -*399* RCA VICTOR 18" COLOR wood. Um a. tabla modal ar«n corf, iagt.gidraj $3fjw Hi GENERAL ELECTRIC COLOR TV *199 88 FREE DELIVERY COLOR SET-UP AND 90-DAY SERVICE CONTRACT PHILCO 18" COLOR TV SSrSStJS sA’Saza’SSMs; 1 SttnpUBnd color control.. Snwit tablo modal or um on >Opt. nV * ★ * The close cooperation has even produced a bilingual newspaper;, Haparandanbladet (in Swedish) -sor Haaparannanlehti (In Finnish).-RED DEFECTORS It also has rfifide the two towns the gateway to asylum fof occasional Communist defectors — usually sailors who have jumped ship in Helsinki and are seeking refuge in'Sweden. The frontier is marked by - a bridge that links one of the Tornio River,delta islands on which the town of Tornio is built with the Swedish mainland. When I crossed it recently with two Finnish friends, we did not have to check out with the Finnish authorities. And Swedish customs waved us through without checking my passport or my friends’ identity cards. Hi fact, about the only indication I had that we’d entered another country was a traffic island that switched vehicles to the left side of the road. Even that will disappear later this year yvben Sweden changes to right-hand driving to conform with the test of Europe. There ape approximately 13,-000 persons in this border area, about equally divided between Tornio and Haparanda. And it is clear that close cooperation is paying off on both sides of the frontier. In Haparanda the Domus department store—large and plush enough to be at home in the more cosmopolitan surroundings of Helsinki or Stockholm — owes much of its. success to Finnish customers. Some items are real bargains for Finni Coffee, for instance, costs about one half as much at Domus as it does half-a-mile away across the border. - A Pleasure to Wear! Q OMEGA THE WATCH FOR A LIFETIME OF PR0U0 POSSESSION A-Self-wIndlng, date-dial Seam aster $120 Other Seamasters $9$ to $410 S-14K (Old, matching bracelet. Sapplwtte facet-edged cryetel $235 0\a pride in being «ble to offer Omega watches to the customers of this store is two-fold.'First* only the finest jewelers are privilege^ to offer these exceptional timepieces. Each, jeweler is wlected on the basis of high technical standards and its reputation for integrity. Second, the CXpdrt watchmakers in our store proudly recommend Omega watches. They know the inside facts and wiiy it takes many times longer to make an Omega than'an ordinary watch. Every Omega movement undergoes 1497 quality-control inspections from blueprint to final assembly to assure peerless accuracy and long service. Sold ’frith a world-service,guarantee...honored in 163 countries. Omega watches for men and women are priced from $65 to Over ‘ $1000. Ask for free style brochure. . REDMONDS Jewelry 81 N. SAGINAW, PONTIAC Free Parking in Rear of Store Authorized Omega Agency...the World?z Most Wanted Watch TKuwvVhfAn.. TWICE-A-YEAR SALE I Shoo in your crew. We’ll shoe you all at savings up to 5o%! Bloomfield Miracle Mile \ Where\ Ever ft You WMayl Go. Go Pontiac State Happy Vacation Start With These 6 Summer Services: Travel in style in a new car. Taka off for distant sights In a new model. Or buy a used car that's like now and pay for it easily with a Pontiac State Bank Auto Lean. Only $4.50 par hundred a year on Now Cars. EXPO '67 TICKETS ON SALE AT ALL OFFICES Buy a boot or toko to tbo woods. A wholo woo derful world of fun awaits you skimming olonj the wotir or relaxing at a beautiful campsite Lot Pontiac State ho Ip you finonco that boo Be- sura the» valuables you loavo behind or# sofa. Put ydkjr jewelry and important popart in a Pootiac State.Bqnk Safa Deposit Box and forgot any worfmsabout firm or thoft. Tho cost Alow. Taka Travelers Checks. They S| but they’re safer because you can gat your money back if they're lost or staled. Get them at Pontiac State and enjoy a carefree vacation. The Bank on the “GROW” Pontiac State Bank Main Office Saginaw at Lawrence.,r Open 9 A.M. Daily Member Federal Deposit insurance Corporation with Deposits Now Insured to $15,000 by F.D.I.C. 12 CONVENIENT OFFICES B_8 11nip I III III# . THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 What Hoes The Best of The World Think?... Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays, The Pontiac. Press .brings editorial comments from distinguished publications across the continent (and occasionally from Europe and Asia). Hundreds have appeared, mostly from this list of publications as GUEST EDITORIALS . . . The first half of 1967. Ann Arbor News Atlanta Journal Bay City Times Boston Globe Buffalo Evening News Charlotte Observer Chicago Daily News Chicago Tribune Christian Science Monitor Cincinnati Enquirer Columbus Evening Dispatch Daily (Oklahoma City) Oklahoman Dallas Times Herald Decatur (III.) Herald Denver-Post Dubuque Telegraph Herald Hamburg Die Zeit Hartford Courant Hillsdale Daily News Holland Evening Sentinel Istanbul Yeni Ufuklar Kansas City Star Knoxville News-Sentinel Lansing State Journal Lapeer County Press Life Magazine London Daily Telegraph Los Angeles Times Louisville Courier-Journal MacLean's Magazine Miami News Midland Daily News Minneapolis Star Montgomery Advertiser Nashville Banner National Observer New Orleans Times-Picayune Newsday New York Daily News New York Times New York World Herald Tribune Norfolk Ledger-Stqr Orlando Sentinel Philadelphia Evening Bulletin ^ort Huron Times Herald Portland Oregonian Richmond News Leader San Diego Union Saturday Evening Post Saturday Review St. Louis Globe-Democrat St. Louis Post-Dispatch St. Petersburg times Tucson Daily Citizen Washington Star \§. The Pontiac Press is the only publication- existing that keeps you abreast of the developments in your own . yo£*r own state, your own nation, and the /wide world. area, The Pontiac Press for Home Delivery Dial 332-8181 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 B—9 Crazy Quilt of Liquor Laws Could Drive You to Drink CHICAGO (AP) - A fellow who goes out to get a drink, in a strange towh is apt to get confused—and maybe not' a .drink. The reason, an Associated Press survey shows, is that the United States is covered by a crazy quilt of liquor laws. Take, for example, Texas. Texas laws are pretty complex, based, on local option, even by precincts. For instance: Part of Dallas sells beer over the bar and liquor in package stores, while in other parts of Dallas you can’t buy anything .to drink.. Some counties or parts of counties can sell beer qt the bar, but no package stores are allowed, and Area Service Personnel Pfc. Thomas Tiltman will move to Ft. Lewis, Wash., after returning' this m&ntir from 13 months service in Wae Gwan, Camp Carroll, South Korea. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Tiltman of 991 Daffodil, Waterford Township. TILTMAN JOHNSON James D. Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. James E. Johnson, 147 W. Pike, is currently stationed at India Co. 2nd Platoon, near Dang Ho, South Vietnam. He was stationed in San Diego, Calif., Camp Pendleton, Calif., and Okinawa after enlisting last October. Spec. 4 Allot Booze was recently awarded the Bronze star with “V” for Valor for his bravery in battle against the Vietcong last March. Booze, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Booze of 2115 Hummer Lake Road, Oxford Township, ran through murderous VC grenade and small arms fire to aid two wounded man has been overseas since Sept., 1966. His wife lives at 5359 Mike-wood, Waterford Township; his mother, Mrs. William Spalding, at 5439 Mikewood, Waterford Township; and his father* Carl Chrisman Jr., at 819 W. Maple, Clawson. Chrisman worked at Pontiac Motor Division prior to joining the ArmedT Forces. He attended ter ford Township High School. Pvt. Gerald W. Reed is home on leave before reporting to Fort Dix, N. J., on his way to Heidelberg, West Germany for a two-year period. Reed, the, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald O’Toole of 470 Fourth, recently completed AIT Tank Driver training. He worked for GMC Truck and Coach Division prior to entering the service in February. He is a graduate of Pontiac Northern High School. They were members of his unit of the 173rd Airborne Brigade. WWW A House resolution honoring Booze was also adopted by the Michigan House of Representatives. Spec. 4 Michael T. Chrisman is currently serving with the 4th Infantry Division in South Vietnam. A tank mechanic, Chris- LAWSON REED A 2c Terry Lawson, airborne communication - navigation pairman, 3550th Field Maintenance Squadron lias been named Maintenance Man of the Month. He came to Moody Air Force Base in July 1966, from Keesler AFB, Miss., where he had been an honor student in electronic technical school. -Lawson, son of Mrs. Edna Lawson of 26 Cross, joined the Air Force in September 1965, some have package stores but no beer bars. STANDING RULES’ You can’t drink standing up in a club, hotel cdcktail lounge, restaurant or beer parlor in Maine. But the statutes do permit taverns for men only, in which everyone must drink standing up At a bar. Indiana’s Legislature decided this year to allow a licensed woman bartender to work on the serving side of the bar, a function that had been restricted to a female owner or wife of owner. But an unescorted woman is not permitted to sit on the drinking side of the bar. ★ ★ . ★ Liquor frequently has been on the minds of state lawmakers since repeal, in 1933, put ah end to national prohibition of the manufacture and sale of such spirits. Mississippi adopted a local-option liquor law last.year, becoming the last state to shift from dry to wet. Thus aridity has been ended on a nationwide or statewide scale. But there still are many dry pockets. KENTUCKY DIVIDED Look, for instance, at Kentucky, a state long identified with bourbon. Of its 120 counties, 86 are completely dry, 2f are wet, and eight are divided, i.e., wet cities in dry counties. Down there dry means no sales of alcoholic beverages are allowed. But in many places around the country the thirsty man can get beer but no stronger stuff across the bar. w w * In Georgia, only six counties of 159, including Fulton, with Atlanta, hctually have legalized the sale of liquor by the drink. Only eight of Tennessee’s 95 counties have, legalized liquor to the extent of allowing it to be sold at package stores. 1962 STUDY A study made in 1962 by the Distilled Spirits Institute showed: 15 states had some liquorless counties and, for the United States as a whole, 749 counties forbade liquor and 2, 329 did npt. The switching from dry to wet • vice versa is done in local-option elections. They vary in scope from a residential neighborhood and a precinct to town, township and county. And nine states make no provision for them at all. Regulations in that sphere, like those in the others, are a potpourri. Bottled liquor is sold in state-owned stores in 16 states and in private stores in the others. Sales are limited to package goods only in North -Carolina, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia, Arkansas,. Kansas, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Tennessee. ELECTION DAYS The closest the states come to Uniformity is on election days, when liquor purveyors shut up shop, at least during polling hours, in all but five states. k k k The Legislature in North Carolina, which bars liquor by the drink, approved legislation this year to legalize the old custom of “brownbagging.” Thus, s man can buy a bottle in a state-controlled store in any one of the 68 wet counties and take it to a restaurant, where he can buy the complementary ice and mix. Ibis sort of thing is out, however, in 32 dry counties. He also can brown-bag it in Utah, ^unwwv -A/tt at THE ^ Betty Baldwin's 'showplace PONTIAC % MAH V| July 6 thru 15 local and Detroit Metropolitan area Artists displaying hundreds of pieces of original Art! .7 Under the Direction of BETTY BALDWIN’S “ARTIST” SHOWPLACE Crr original works d'art and crafts for sale . . . * DLL Brass sculpture by Sotile (Utica Schoolteacher) ... Copper enamel jewelry . . . Wood carving . .. Walter Bilyeau demonstrating water color daily. Jesse Fqwler, outstanding portrait artist... "The Quints” with their lapidary work, doing facetting. > A I err Shea's portrait of Governor ALOW DLL Romney#'acclaimed by\ News Media and the Political World 1 another state that Won’t allow purchase by the drink* ANOTHER EXAMPLE Texas is another brown-bag state. At a late count, about 115 of the 254 counties were totally dry. In the wet oases store-bought liquor can be conveyed in a paper sack to a restaurant or night club. Public Mrs sell only beer and light wine. Private clubs began handling mixed drinks in recent years. Tourists can become instant members in some of them. ★ k. *. Gov. John B. Connally of Texas recommended the sale of mixed drinks, but the bill was shunted aside in the Legislature. , It's Easy to Remember DURHAM, N.C. <*-Charles M. Williams of Ashville, N.C. has a very easy Social Security number to remember. It’s 123-45-6789. This year West Virginia made the firpt major change in" liquor laws in a generation., Under toe new provisions, private clubs are licensed by the state to serve liquor to dues-paying members and guests. The statute is broad enough to permit hotels to set aside space for such clubs. ■k k ■ ★ A new law in Colorado, enacted with an eye on tourists and conventioneers, enables hotels and restaurants to buy an extra license which permits them to dell liquor until midnight on Sunday. Other bars must close at 8 p.m. ★ k k The Wyoming Legislature gave permission to bars to stay open from 1 p.m. to 8 p.m. Sundays. A perennial bill to permit limited Sunday sales in Maine went down to defeat. But the Vermont Liquor Control Board decided to allow the sale of drinks on Sunday afternoon and evening. Previously, such serv- ice was permitted only with meals. New YorlfStote’s legal toleration of drinking by customers as young as 18 has caused considerable friction with its neighbors, especially New Jersey and Connecticut. Law-enforcement officials in the latter states contend their kids get into traffic accidents on the way home. DURING EXPO '67 HOSTEL DOWNTOWN MONTREAL $4.00 PER'DAY HoiMI In flw haart of doom tow Montreal noor subway, M.M po parson par day. Moot for (row WANTEI Highest Prices Paid’ “We Pick Up” re 2-0200 JUNK CARS Used Auto Parts Available Pontiac Scrap 135 Branch h, till Owi -Ait Original THE PONTIAC MALL TELEGRAPH at ELIZABETH LAKE RD.V Country &quire OFFERS YOU THIS TWICE-A-YEAR OPPORTUNITY TO SAVE THEMENDOKIY ON FINE QUALITY CLOTHING FOR MEN AND YOUNG MEN, . . . including • • • » Austin Leeds Clothes, Cricketeteer Suits, Michaels-Stern * Clothing, Palm Beach, McGregor Sportswear, Manhattan Shirts, Daks Slacks, Leonardo Strassi Italian Knits, Lucien Piccard Knits, Tailors Bench Slacks and many; many more fine items. SALE STARTS THURS., JULY 6 PROMPTLY AT 9:30 AM. SHOP EARLY for BEST SELECTION SUITS Special Grdup Reg. 49.50 to 65.00 37M SPORT COATS Special Group Reg. 27.50 to 32.50 88 17 All BOYS' SUAAMER WEAR 20%<« Italian KNIT SHIRTS By Strassi 20°/U Use Your SECURITY CHARGE or MICHIGAN. BANKARD SPECIAL GROUP Men’s Higher Priced Clothing BY MICHAELS-STERN andGROSHIRE Reg. 110.00 to 125.00 9188 Men’s SPORT COATS Special Group Reg. 34.50 to 42.50 188 IT Men's Suits Reg. 65.00 to S9.50 A Select Group of Much Higher Priced SPORTCOATS Reg. 55.00 and Up 4188 HUNDREDS Of SAVINGS ill EVERY DEPARTMENT Imported English DAK SLACKS Reg. 37.50 2188 Men’s DRESS SLACKS All Wools and Dacron/Wool Blonds Reg. 15.00 to 18.99 12®—2^25 SPECIAL GROUP YOUNG MEN’S. SLACKS- Stylish low riso. Sizes 27-36 Reg. 8.99 to 14.99 588 VELOUR SHIRTS LONG SLEEVE . SAVE 1/3 Here’s Your Opportunity to Purchase the Finest at Moderate Prices COUNTRY SQUIRE-BL00MFIELD MIRACLE MILE-OPEN IH 9 P.M. B—10 THE PONT*AC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY &, 196T Relics May Date to 900 B. C. Discovery Made in State (EDITOR’S NOTE—An amateur archaeologist scuffing through a plowed field at Midland may have made the largest find ever of objects traceable to Indians of the Red Ochre Culture.) By HUGH DILLON Midland Daily News Writer MIDLAND (AP)— Donald Tanner went out looking for arrowheads, but instead he made an archaeological discovery that may date back to 900 B.C. As he was scuffing through a farm field near the Tittaba-wassee River in Midland recently, he came upon three “turkey tails’—flint objects similar to spearheads. Turkey tails were used only for burial offerings. ★ ★ ★ Tanner found the tails in a plow furrow, and reasoned that if there were more buried below the surface he might be on the trail of an Indian burial site: The next day Tanner contacted the farmer who owned the property for permission to dig. Because his son was an amateur archaeologist, the farmer realized the importance of ap wir«photo 7anner’s find and gave him and bag each of the prehistoric Indian relics permission to stake out any in the cache uncovered near the TittabaWassee area necessary. River in Midland. STAKES OUT AREA Tanner staked out an area and carefully dug and sifted the earth. When the soil turned from yellow sand to -black dirt, Tanner knew he was approaching the beginning of a pit. He knew it wasn't a burial site because there were no traces of red ochre, an irori ore residue sprinkled over burial sites by prehistoric Indians of the area. Because so little is known about them, these Indians are referred to as the Red Ochre Culture. Tanner began excavating with a trowel, found paint brushes and even toothpicks. Carefully removing the earth, he eventually came upon a cache of 20 turkey tails. Further digging uncovered seven more. ★ * ’ ★ There have been nine such PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS discoveries in Michigan over the years, but Tanner’s is believed to be the largest single find to date. Five of the nine Michigan finds were made within a quarter-mile of the Tittabawassee River. Caches also have been discovered in Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessee, New York and Ontario. COME FROM INDIANA Scientific analysis has determined that the flint of all these turkey tails comes from what is now Harrison County, Indiana. Tanner, president of the local chapter of the Michigan Archae- ological Society, has been interested in nature study and archaeology* since he was a boy, but he has been making it a serious study only three years. “To make a find like this,” Tanner says, “sort of makes you feel that from now on you can only go downhill. I doubt if I’ll' ever be able to top this.' Tanner would not part with his find for “any amount of money,’’ he says, but he will make his collection, of turkey tails available to universities or scientists for study. Eventually he hopes to add them to an archaeological display at the proposed Midland Center for the Arts. Students to Tap Undeveloped Patents By Science Service WASHINGTON—The U.S. has two great untapped sources of wealth, says Prof. Arthur A. Ezra: a vast number of undeveloped patents, and a large squad of eager graduate engineering students. Dr. Ezra of the mechanical engineering department, University of Denver, expects to turn his students loose on some promising patented ideas and see whether they can’t be developed. One of the first may be an outlandish vehicle he designed while working for Martin-Marietta Corp., which was granted patent No. 3,327,801 this week. Aimed at travel on the moon surface, the Ezra vehicle has a cabin suspended within a number of huge metal hoops. The hoops form a sphere that can roll in any direction, and the cabin is pivoted inside so that it stays upright-no matter which way the vehicle is moving. Power is supplied by a small rocket or jet engine that can be aimed to steer the craft. The cabin support pivots have a braking ' system to slow or stop it. COST QUESTIONS Dr. Ezra says he'll have his students look into questions of cost, marketing and financing to see whether patent ideas studied are practical. ARCHAEOLOGICAL FIND—Donald Tanner (left) and Bernard Spencer, members of the Saginaw Valley Chapter of the Michigan Archaeological Society, mark for identification BUY, SELL, TRADE ... USE d. FALSE TEETH: Rock. Slid* or Slip? Don't Uv» to f»r of Mm JSJth tlM tenth flnn«r. little fabtebtH on yotft putM. • FA8TEETH hold* tMM tMth firmtr. MAkM mtlng *Mler. No pasty. goof/ tMM. Helps oheok "denture breath . Dentures’that nt are essent-’ - - — denttatfeguUrty. - Are You Visiting Friends This Vacation? , Before you go ... or when you retorn, Visit Our GIFT ISLES for the unusual in HOSTESS GIFTS for a lot... or just a little... it's really the thought that counts. NIDWEST TYPEWRITER MART 81N. Saginaw St. FE 4-8788 (N*xt to Simm*) (Advertisement) (Advertisement) (Advertisement) PALESTINE-THE LAND OF ISRAEL? By Rev. Robert H. Shelton* Pastor First Baptist Church of Pontiac all that Sarah hath said unto thee, heark- This is the first of a series of messages that will he printed in the Pontiac Press in the next few weeks. These messages have been given at Jthe Morning Worship service of the First Baptist Church. PALESTINE-THE LAND OFISRAEL? The events of the past few weeks in the Middle East have caused students erf the Bible to sit up and take notice as perhaps no generation has done since the time of Christ. I grant you, there have been in days past, those who have spoken of the end of this age and have gone so far as to set dates. Such preaching is folly. But, though no man knows the day nor the hour, we are instructed in God’s Word concerning certain conditions that will exist as we approach the end of this age. There is a difference, then, between setting a date and observing a season. Jesus said: “Now learn a parable of the fig tree; When his branch is yet tender and putteth forth leaves, ye know that sum-mo- is night: So likewise ye, when ye shall see all these things, know that it is near, even at the doors.”. (Matthew 24:32,33) It is my goal in these messages to present some of these “things” that will come to pass. We will consider Such truths as the return of Christ for the church, the coming world ruler, the Battle of Armageddon, the earthly reign of Christ and other vital truths that should be of interest to every reader. BACKGROUND OF MIDDLE EAST CONFLICT Today I would like for us to get a bet-, ter glimpse of the background of the problem existing in the Middle East. In Genesis, chapter 21, beginning at verse 1, we find these words: “And the Lord visited Sarah as He had said, and the Lord did unto Sarah as He had spoken. For Sarah conceived, and bare Abraham a son in his old age, at the set time of which God had spoken to him. And Abraham called the name of his son that was born unto him, whom Sarah bare to him, Isaac . . . And the. child grew, and was weaned: and Abraham made a great feakt the same day that Isaac was weaned. And Sarah saw the son of Hagar the Egyptian, which1 she had bom unto Abraham, mocking. Wherefore she said unto Abrahanv Cast out this bondwoman andner son: for the son of this bondwoman shall not be hOir with my son, even with Isaac. And the thing was very grievous in Abraham’s sight because of his son. (That is, because of Ishmael) And God said unto Abraham, Let it not be grievous in thy sight because of the lad, and because of thy bondwoman; in en unto her voice; for in Isaac shall thy seed be called. And also of the son of the bondwoman will I make a nation, because he is thy seed.” I would like us to divide our study today into two divisions. The first one we can simply call “Abraham’s Problem;” the second is “God’s Solution.” ABRAHAM S PROBLEM The problem is pictured for us in verses 9 and 10 of Genesis-21, “Sarah saw the son of Hagar, the Egyptian ... mocking. Wherefore she said unto Abraham. Cast out this bondwoman and her son; fur the son of this bondwoman shall not be heir with my son, even with Isaac." To get ihe proper setting of the feud between Sarah and Hagar, let’s turn back to Genesis, chapter 12, beginning at verse 1: “Now the Lord had said unto Abram, (this was his name before God changed it to Abraham.) Get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father’s house, unto a land that Twill show thee: And I will make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy name great; and thou shalt be a blessing. And I will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee: and in thee shall all famil^s of the earth be blessed." Here is the Abrahamic Covenant. It is repeated time and time again in the Old Testament. We find, however, a problem follows this announcement. It is presented in chapter 16, where we read, “Sarai, Abram’s wife bare him no children.” This was a concern not only to Sarai but alse to Abram because Abram was given a covenant by God, and obviously before this covenant could be carried out Abraham had to have a son. BIRTH OF ISHMAEL At this point Abram and Sarai decided they would initiate their pwn plan. Sarai felt she could become a mother of one of Abram’s children by proxy. This was not uncommon in the East in these days. So we And this plan developing as we go on in verse 1. “Sarai had a handmaid, an Egyptian, whose name was Hagar. And Sarai said unto Abram, Behold now, the Lord hath restrained me from bearing: I pray thee, go. in unto my maid; it may be that I may obtain children by her. And Abram hearkened to the voice of Sarai. And Sarai Abram’s wife took Hagar-her maid the Egyptian . . . and gave her to her husband Abram to be his wife. And he ufent in unto Hagar and she conceiyed: and when she saw that she had conceived, her mistress whs despised to her eyes.” Apparently the honor was too great for Hagar. As soon as she found she was with child by her master, immediately she despised her mistress. Of course, this put a different light on the whole situation. In verse 5, “Sarai said unto Abram, My wrong be upon thee: I have given my maid into thy boston; and when she saw that she had conceived,, I was despised to her eyes; now the Lord judge between me and thee." I should say in passing, this pitiful situation was initiated by the flesh. God -had already made known his plan. So often, the difficulties we get ourselves into are of our own making. Abram then had to make it clear that his love was still toward Sarai and not Hagar, so in verse 6: “Abram said unto Sarai, Behold, thy maid is to thy hand; do to her as it pieaseth thee. And when Sarai dealt hardly with her, she fled from her face. And the angel of the Lord found her by a fountain of water in the wilderness, by the fountain in the way to Shur.” Apparently Hagar decided she would return to Egypt “Tbe way to Shur” would indicate that. In verse 8, “the angel said, Hagar, Sarai’s maid, whence’ earnest thou? and whither wilt thou go? And she said, I flee from the face of my mistress Sarai. And the angel of the Lord said unto her, I will multiply thy seed exceedingly, that it shall not be numbered for multitude. And the angel of the Lord said unto her, Behold, thou art with child, and shalt bear a son, and shalt call his name Ishmael; because the Lord hath heard thy affliction.” ISHMAEL, FATHER OF ARAB WORLD Here we find the announcement of a great race of people, mothered by Hagar the Egyptian and fathered by Abraham. We know them today as Arabs. There is little wonder that Egypt would like to be the undisputed head of the Arab nations, for Ishmael’s mother was an Egyptian. In Genesis 21 we find that Ishmael’s wife was also an Egyptian. So Ishmael’s children could be called the seed of Abraham but the stronger influence was from Egypt. BIRTH OF ISAAC Now we come to chapter 17, beginning at verse 15: “And God said unto Abraham, As for Sara&thy wife, thou shalt not call her name Sarai, but Sarah shall be her name. And I will bless her, and give thee a son?also of her: yea, I will bless her, and she shall be a mother of nations; kings of people shall be of her. Then Abraham fell upon his face, and laughed, and said in his heart, Shall a child be bom unto him that is an hundred years old? and shall Sarah, that is ninety years old, bear? And Abraham said unto God, O that Ishmael might live before thee!” In other words, “God, I’m content now that Ishmael might be the one through whom this covenant will be fulfilled. I have my son. He is Ishmael.” But God had something to say in verse 19: “Sarah thy wife shall bear tbee a son indeed; and thou shalt call his name Isaac: and I will establish my covenant with him for an everlasting covenant, and with his seed after him. And as for Ishmael, I have heard thee: Behold, 1 have blessed him, and will make him fruitful, and will multiply him exceedingly; twelve princes shall he beget, and I will make him a great nation. But my covenant will -I establish with Isaac, which Sarah shall bear unto thee at this set time in the next year.” Now don’t misunderstand what I am going to say during the next few moments. God .loves toe whole world, but there are tones when He has something special to say to special people. Does God love Ishmael and his seed? He certainly does and He makes that very plain in vefse 20: “As for Ishmael, I have heard thee: Behold, I have blessed him, and will make him fruitful, and will multiply him exceedingly.” You see, God had plans for the seed of Ishmael, a great and wonderful people. Those of our nation who have lived among these people, and many of my own acquaintances who are serving in Arab lands, have grown very fond of these chosen people. But having said that, I must be honest with you in dealing with the Word of God. In verse 31 God makes it very plain, “My covenant will 1 establish with Isaac, which Sarah shall.bear unto thee.” What was this covenant? We discovered it earlier in chapter 12, verses 2 and 3. It was confirmed later to Isaac himself in chapter 26, verse 4: “I will make toy seed to multiply as toe stars of heaven, and will give unto toy seed all these countries; and in thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed." Do you know a nation on toe face of the earth today that has.not been blessed by the seed of Isaac? God said that this is what would happen and it has happened. It’s a covenant, the Abraharhtc Covenant, that was to come through,his son Isaac, and that covenant certainly has been confirmed. It has been fulfilled as all of God’s Word surely is fulfilled. Paul speaks of it in Hebrews 11: “Through faith also Sara herself received strength to conceive seed, and was delivered of a child when she was past age, because she judged him faithful who had promises. Therefore, sprang there even of one, and him as good as dead, as many as toe stars of the sky in multitude, and as toe sand which is by toe seashore innumerable.” It takes more than a Hitler to destroy these chosen people of God. As a matter of fact, they Will never be destroyed. One of the great miracles of . this day is that Israel is still Israel, that there still is a nation of people devoted to one another. It’s a miracle. We’re seeing it unfolding in front of our very eyes. Well, you ask, where’s the problem? We looked at it in chapter 21, verses 9 through 11. When Isaac was born and weaned Abraham made a great feast, toe same day, and during that feast, Sarah noticed Ishmael, the son Of Hagar, mocking her son. “Therefore she said to Abraham. Cast out this bondwoman and her sori; for toe son of this bond^ woman shall not be heir with my son, even with Isaac.’ \ • ! Here was the first Arab-Israeli conflict —not fought on desert sands with planes and tanks, but fought in Abraham’s tent with female tongues. You see, they were concerned. They were afraid their sons would not get what they deserved. And so the conflict began. GOD’S SOLUTION So much for toe problem. Now I would like us to huriy on to toe solution, and its given to us' in the very next verse: “And God said unto Abraham .. .” You know, if we would only let God speak there wouldn’t be any problems. “God said . . . ” Did you know God has something to say concerning every problem in the world? He has something to say about your problem. There’s not a thing that will cross your path of life but what God spoken and presented the solution. God said unto Abraham, “Let it not be grievous in toy sight because -of Ishmael, and because of thy bondwoman; in all that Sarah hath said unto thee, hearken unto her voice; for in Isaac shall toy seed be called.” Now this question: “Are we to understand that Israel is to have toe land that was given to Abraham in Genesis, chapter 12, in every generation of human history?” Certainly not! As a matter of fact, there were some times when God himself drove His own people out of the land He gave them. When God gave them a command and they didn’t obey it, many times He would allow an enemy power to take possession of the very land that He had given to them. Often these people disobeyed the God who loved them and led them, so God for a time would-deprive them of their land. Let’s return for a moment to Genesis, chapter 11, verses 31 and 32: “Terah took Abram his son, and Lot the son of Haran and Abram’s wife, and they went forth with them from Ur of toe Chaldees, to go into toe land of Canaan; and they came unto Haran, and dwelt there.” They settled down in North Mesopotania; they were content to live in Haran; they never tod get into Canaan. I agree with the Scofield note here—these were wasted years in Haran. It was God’s design that Terah take his family, including Abraham and march into Canaan, but they didn’t go. As a matter of fact, in verse 32 we read: “The daw* of Terah were two hundred and fiVe years; and Terah died in Haran.” Get that! He died in Haran. Terah never, did get into toe promised land. So in chapter 12, verse I: “The Lord then said unto Abram, Now get thee out of toy country, and from toy kindred, and from thy father’s house, unto a land that I will show thee.” In other words, “Abram, your father didn’t obey me. tfe didn't get into Canaan. He died in Haran. I don't want you to die there. You get yourself out of that coun- '■ try. Get into toe land that I’m giving to you.’ So in the next verses of Genesis, chapter 12, vire have what’s commonly referred to as toe Abrahamic Covenant, a covenant that’s definitely associated with a certain portion of territory that God promised Abraham and his seed. In verse 7: ‘"Hie Lord appeared unto Abram, and said, Unto toy seed will I give tods land: and there builded he an altar unto toe Lord, who appeared unto him.” Well, famine came and Abram took his wife and went to Egypt. Then in Genesis 13 he left Egypt and came back to Canaan. Then his grandson Jacob left Canaan and went bade to Egypt and Israel stayed there for about 400 years. Then under toe leadership of Moses they left Egypt and journeyed back to Canaan. They came and they went, back and forth, to and from this land that God had gjven to them. After their return from Egyptian bondage (about 1450 B.C.) they lived in the Promised Land • nearly 800 years. This was the time erf the Judges and -toe Kings. You remember it was after Solomon’s reign that internal friction divided God’s chosen people. Solomon’s son Re-hoboam became the ruler of toe southern kingdom of Judah. A young man by the name of . Jeroboam became the ruler of the northern kingdom, which, we refer to as Israel. So now you have two kingdoms. They are all the seed of Isaac, the children of Jacob—10 tribes in the north, 2 tribes in the south. 19 kings served in toe north, 20 kings served in the south. The northern kingdom lasted until 721 B.C. when Shalmaneser led them away into Syrian captivity. The southern King; dom lasted until 583 B.C. when Nebuchadnezzar led Judah away into Babylonian captivity. Now we find Israel In Syrian captivity and Judah in, Babylonian captivity. Then in 536 B.C. Ezra led a remnant back into the Holy Land to rebuild the temple in Jerusalem. Some time after that Ne-hemiah led another remnant back and they restored the walls of toe Holy City. This brings us to toedose of the Old Testament era about 430 B.C, Now please get this: About 4000 years have passed since God spoke to Abraham and made His covenant' with him, but most of that time Israel has not been in her land under her own rule. We could divide these past 4000 years into three divisions. -Israel in her land ruling-berself. , Israel in her land ruled by others. Israel hot in her land. Today Israel is back in her own land ruling her own affairs for toe first time in’ nearly 2600 years. At this very moment Israel is looking for a great world leader who will assure her presence in her “Promised Land.” Hiis leader, ,1 believe, is soon to make his appearance. According , to Bible prophecy he will be raised tip out of one of toe ten nations now existing in the territory of the old Romqn Empire. This world leader will present hiinself to Israel as their long looked1 for Messiah and for a time they will believe his lie. Next Tuesday, the second in this series of messages will appeqr, entitled, “The Coming World Ruler**. We invite you to attend the serv* ices of the First Baptist Church each Sunday. Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morn• ing Worship 10:45 a.m. and the evening Service .7p.m. The Morning Messages Are Broadcast Each Sunday Morning at 11:00 Over Station CKLW. NEXT TUESDAY, “THE COMING WORLD RULER” THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1067 B~U i.ilili' I1' ■ ■ijihlljilmii'i ,n Ih ■ i ■ i. 3 Days Only ■ Cannon Quality "Concord "Solid and "Cabana "Stripe Bath lowelSandWash Cloths 14 43* R«g. 20* Wash Cloth 12x12" Bath Towal 22x44" Thick, absorbent cotton terry, in decorator colors. Solids in white, fresh pink, red, blue belle, butter yellow, shock* ing pink, Venetian green. Stripes in Venetian green, blue belle, majestic purple, old gold or shocking pink. Like It? Charge It! Reg. 2.96 Chair, 5.96 Chaise 3-Day Sale! Folding Aluminum Furniture 25 4.96 Chairs Chaise Lightweight, sturdy and weather-resistant. Firmly webbed, cool looking green and white or yellow and white polypropylene plastic on strong tubular aluminum frame. 74' Chaise adjusts to five positions, folds for storage. 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White, pink, blue, maize, aw 3 Days Only - Women’s Reg.4/Sl Acetate Panties or assorted colors. Tricot knit acetate. Sizes 5-8. Uke It? Charge til E PONTIAC MALL DOWNTOWN TEL-HURON - DRAYTON ROCHESTER PONTIAC CENTER PLAINS PLAZA BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE S. S. KRESGE COMPANY B—12 THE PONTIAC PRl^S, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 Students Give Hand to Mentally III By HELEN FRUCHTMAN Newspaper Enterprise Assn. NEW YORK — “They’re ordinary people with problems, couldn’t wait for a new day to see their progress.” “Before I was just considering teaching, but now I have decide to teach disturbed children.” “I truthfully feel that I know myself better, have more control over myself and am more perceptive.” These comments came from different high school students who had volunteered in a “careers” program sponsored by various mental health associations throughout the country. Students work summers in some cities, during the school year or both in others. Aside from the gratification of giving service, the program offers an unusual training opportunity. The students become actual apprentices to various hospital professionals, observing and assisting them in their work with patients. EDUCATIONAL EXPERIENCE One may work with the staff psychologist, another with a social worker, another with a recreation worker, or any other member of the professional team. In addition, they are given an extraordinary educational experience in orientation ses-ions and special weekly sessions conducted by a staff psychiatrist or clinical psychologist “Their work in the wards, their encounters with patients and their feelings about their experiences provide the discussion material. They always have strong emotional and intellectual responses, and these must be explored,” Patricia Ewalt, of the Massachusetts Mental Health Careers Program, reputed. Some students have some fear about the experience but these are usually dispelled by the rewarding responses M the patients and the realization that their problems are not too different from those seen outside the hospital. Most of them indi-ate that their understanding of people in general, as well as of the mentally ill, increased after the program. ★ * ★ One said, “I feel that I have become more tolerant. I have a friend who is extremely bola terous and juvenile at times. Last yeaf I avoided her .... but now I am more aware of the reasons for her actions.” 60,000 vacancies The careers program was initiated by the National Association for Mental Health to help meet the need for mental health professionals. More than 60,000 positions need to be filled to meet the demand for services. The students’ enthusiastic responsdb and mounting interest indicate that this approach may help fill the gap. A good-by number throughout the country are pursuing professions in mental health as a result of this introduction. A typical comment is: “I had no idea what I wanted to be. After the program, I decided »become a social worker.” ★ ' ★ +' ■ Whether the students continue in the field or not, the experience is usually salutary, Mrs. Richard Whitby,director of the Evansville, Ind., MHA program, remarked. “Young people have marvelous energy. This is one way for the teen-ager to channel that energy into a very worthwhile venture.” Driver Killed in Stock Car HARTFORD (AP) - With a crowd of 2,000 watching, a late model stock car flipped Monday night at the Hartford Motor Speedway, killing the driver. Thomas Pate, 27, of Paw Paw was killed when his car overturned and another vehicle rammed into the wreckage. The other driver escaped injury, Police Chief Jim E. Smith said. with Cool, Cool KEEP COOL 1 with cooling I OUARAWKD ALUMINUM SID IN 6 and TRIM AWNINGS FOLDING PICTURE WINDOW ALUM. 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This Is roughly two-thirds of the 13,000 combat Infantrymen In the 75,000-man 3rd Marine Amphibious Force, but many of the wounded were treated bt the field wlthput leaving their units or were out of action a few days or a few weeks. Because of politics, terrain and the nature of guerrilla war, the Leathernecks are fighting with severe taOtlcal disadvantages that may get worse as the war goes on. ★ * * In theory the Marines are on the border to present massive infiltration into South Vietnam by large North Vietnamese regular unite. They have not been able to do this to any degree and have repeatedly been forced into battle at a time and place picked by the enemy. The fighting this week aroun* Con Thien is a good example BOXLIKE PATTERN The Marine outpost there is one of four in a boxlike pattern that has been nicknamed Leath erneck Square. Lookouts from Con Thien Sun day spotted a moderate-sized force of North Vietnamese moving south from the border zone Two companies were sent after them. The force the Marines spotted was bait for a massive .mWmh One Marine company . was hit, cut into three segments and virtually wiped out. The second company took hieh casu- alties. J ln all 58 Americans were killed, 170 were wounded, and27 were missing, apparently dead and their bodies left on the battlefield. The 27 were bait far another trap. It was not until Tuesday that the Leathernecks could get close to the bodies. Then the North Vietnamese struck hard again, knocking out two tanks, killing 11 Marines and wounding 17. DEAD COMRADES The Marines had to pull back North Vietnamese positions con tlnually shift in and above the dtonilitarized zone. ★ ★ * American artillery and Jet bombers are 0 serious disad vantage because of this, since it requires virtually a direct hit to smash a well-built bunker Where an entire regiment ma; be today, tomorrow there will only be empty bunkers, troches and tunnels. m«u urco iwh r—- —~ again. Wednesday they finally got their dead comrades back This time there was fighting. The North Vietnamese had pulled back to their deep bunkers in the demilitarised zone to plan their next move. * Nearly everything seems favor the enemy along the dem ilitarized zone. Since the area is just over the border, he has a short and solid supply line. The Marines are at the furthermost end of theirs. The North Vietnamese have artillery buried and carefully camouflaged north of the border. U.S. planes have not been able to silence it. American B52s have not been used in the immediate area for months because of the danger from Soviet-made surface to air missiles. RED ADVANTAGE When the Marines launch sweeps, the enemy fades until he feels the Americans have maneuvered into terrain that gives the Communists the advantage. If the Reds don’t want to risk an infantry attack, they call in their artillery. The land around Con Thien is open and fairly flat. There is no place to hide from the big shells,*- rockets' and mortar rounds. DAMAGED ISRAELI TANK-An Israeli tank lies to the sand on the east bank of( the Suez Canal north of El Qantara yesterday. It was damaged by an Egyptian land mine opposite an Egyptian encampment On the other side of the canal. Argentina Rejects Bolivia on Troops to Fight Rebels BUENOS AlftES, Argentina (UPI)—Argentina has rejected ^ Bolivian request for Argentine troops to help quell a guerrnte movement ln southeastern Bolivia, a reliable source revealed last night,. - . . The informant said Argentina also refused to close ite border with Bolivia, as the Bolivian government had reportedly requested, but did promise to increase vigilance along the frontier. Press reports last week said Argentina sent a traintoad of arms and ammunition for aft of the Bolivian army. The Argentine government of president Juan Caries Ongania denied this. It said the train referred to carried only foodstuffs and medicines. The Bolivian regime of President Rene Barrientos so far has been unsuccessful in stemming the reportedly Cuban-inspired and trained guerrillas. ■ . . . The guerrillas, eluding Bolivian troops to rugged, jungle-covered mountains, have won the support of members of the powerful tin miners’ union. , . . . No substantial guerrilla threat has been reported in Argentina. But a government spokesman said stern measures to suppress communism were under consideration. _____ unnmqtiams ‘ffaAc/iiptiovi, Speaia&dtA- Bloomfield Miracle Milo Shopping Confer, S. Telegrepl.; Tol-Heron Center, S S. ToloBropH, Rochester, 14*1 N. Meta; Ponlloe Mall Shopping Center, 309 N. Telegraph USE YOUR SCISSORS AND SAVE! I Cunningham’s C0UPON i RIGHT GUARD SPRAY DEODORANT TWO J-OZ. CANS TWIN REG. 2.00 PACK UMIT-1 WITH COUPON COUPON MOO TODAY THR0U9H MJNDAY JULY 9, IMP ...................... MiiPPY!—WHILE QUANT IT IES LAST1 Utah Whites Fight Africans Ethiopians Boycott Peace Corps Classes ■SALT LAKE CITY (AP) Ethiopian language instructors said today that University of Utah officials have agreed to guarantee their safety while in Salt Lake City, after a tavern riot early Sunday in which sev eral were beaten. The Africans, who charged the JO-minute brawl was racially inspired, Sunday boycotted classes preparing 120 Peace Corps teachers for assignments’ in their country^ ★ * * Assessa Mehretu, speaking for 27 Ethiopians, said the instructors had voted to resume teaching. There were no classes Monday or Tuesday. Some 100 whites and Negroes classed in a downtown night-spot before a polite riot squad bH"* up the fight with nightsticks dogs. WHITE INSTIGATORS Mehretu said whites started striking Ethiopians and some Peace Corps students after call- -ing them “niggers” and object-1 ing to their dancing with white female Peace Corps students. He end 14 other instructors were Involved. ' , He said the university and the Peace Corps promised the instigators would be “brought to justice,” as demanded by the Ethiopians. . ■ ■ ^ The university, also promised* the teachers Insurance on their lives white living to Utah end s public apology from the city. Mehretu said the teachers alio Would: ;• Explain to the Pegco UoTps , «what happened to us since our arrival in Salt Lake City.” • Inform the Peace Corps “of our feelings a| to the suitability df Utah in general and Salt Lake City in particular as a future Peace Corps center.” e Send copies of those two letters with a third to Ethiopian embassies, student groups and newi media condemning the tavern attack. ' ™ *. * ★ Mihretu skid one policeman j clubbed a Peace Corps student. “The police meant to get us out ; of there and not stop the toci- Cunningham’s COUPON I0Z.-RE6.1.M BRECK Shampoo ALL TYPES . .... offensive could b« launched to silence the artillery Israel did this in its Syrian cam paign. But the artillery is north of the border, and the political implications of an American invasion of North Vietnam have ruled against such a move. So the Marines hide, World War I infantrymen, m their deep bunkers and await orders for new sweeps. 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MIST SUM COUNTRY 39 . ggg rxriRtS SUNDAY JULY 9,19*7. iMwMNMM B—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 , The straw vote on whether local education groups should back candidates with endorsements and financial support showed 522 teachers in favor and 292 against the proposal. On the state level, the vote was >499-311, and on the national level, 433-377. about those wonder- £| ful fresh, rich, ripe V strawberries at Ted’s . K • Strawberries flown in daily to tempt and treat the most demanding appetites. ^ • Everybody knows 1 you’re planning to I take her out • Monday. m SINGER SCRATCH A 1 SAVE " ON NEW MACHINE •STORE OISPEW' ' H machine c«««« ,h1 mm SINGER Pacific isle Climaxes Aviafrix's Flight BLACK AND WHITE — “What is she?” A 5-year-old girl asked her mother when Eleanor Gurry, Negro mother of eight children, became a teacher’s aide in an all-white .school in San Mateo, Calif. Eight months later, another 5-year-old toy Mrs. Curry, “I still haven’t figured out what you are, but you’re nice.” She is shown in a classroom facing the “polite and curious” white youngsters. Negro at All-White School What Is She? Children Learn (EDITOR'S NOTE - Eleanor Curry, a Negro, spent the 1966-67 school year as a teacher’s aide in an tdl-uMe San Mateo elementary school on the 1 Francisco Peninsula. Here her story as told in the< district publication, Intercom ■) By ELEANOR CURRY SAN MATEO, Calif. (API-Only a few days after I reported lor duty last October, a 5-year-old described me to her mother. “There’s somebody at school who dresses like our teacher and b»ik» like her, but she’s very, Very dark. Whist is she?” I don’t know how her mother responded, but the next day the youngster ran up to me smiling and said, “Come stand by me. I’ll help you say the Pledge of Allegiance so you can learn about our country.” ★ * *. It was a somewhat shattering htroduction to an experience that has turned out to be rewarding and revealing to me, aid I hope meaningful and constructive to the children who at first regarded me as something from a museum. As a Negro, as the mother of eight children, and as a citizen deeply concerned about education in our community, 1 had hoped that I could make a contribution to the school district as a teacher’s aide. SUPERVISED HAY Some days I mixed paints, read a story or helped with a puppet show, depending upon the needs of the teachers and children in two kindergarten classes to which I was a During the lunch hour I organized games and supervised the , play of older children. But probably my most important function was providing the “sneak attention” so many children need! The teacher cannot Interrupt the normal classroom schedule for this purpose. ★ ★ ★ But as I relieved the teachen of numerous chores and routine NEA Favors More Politics MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UPI) — Teachers represented by the National Education Association favor more political action by the group, an unofficial poll of delegates to the NEA’s annual convention showed today. The poll, being conducted by the Michigan Education Association at tiie convention, showed the teachers favor backing of political candidates at the local, state and national levels. duties, I noticed the restless, shy and lonely youngsters who seem to need an extra amount of encouragement or individual attention. During recess or at the first opportunity, I tried to fill in these gaps with a special compliment, a word, a smile or assistance. — * * # At first the children were polite and curious about me—too polite, I thought later, when they looked away if I happened to catch their eye. HONESTLY CURIOUS Then the questions started coming. Rarely were they insulting or malicious; more often they were hesitant, tentative and honestly Curious. ★ ★ ★ : was learning, too, how best to adapt my skills to the needs of each teacher and individual child, I could appreciate the children’s needs to learn more about me. ■k ★ * The first week a 5-year-c asked me, “Were you ever a baby?” I nodded. “Were you ever a little girl?' I nodded again. The youngster looked relieved and shouted, “Boy, am I glad"' NOT ALWAYS DIRTY There woe others who found it hard to believe that my hands were not always dirty, and I really .was brown all over. Some decided that I had to be from' Africa. One day, during the lunch hour, a 9-year-old boy concluded that I was “Aunt Jemima.” As I threw a ball back to him, I called him “Bob Hope.” He retorted quickly, “My name’s not Bob Hope.'” “And mine is not Aunt Jemima,” I told him, After that we became good friends. ★ ★ ★ Soon I stopped wondering whether the children would accept me as they would any of the other 80 teacher aides in the district. I tried to act as natural Whenever a question arose about my origin or background, I^triedtTHkBti»ivately^#i tiie child, helping him to grow out of attitudes about which he seemed uncertain and sometimes fearful. BASIC DIFFERENCES I did keep wondering whether there were real, basici ;es between these children and my own. Even eight months, when the children and I felt quite relaxed and confident with each other, a 5-year-old said to me, “I still haven’t figured out what you are, but you’re nice.” HONOLULU (UPI)-For Ann Pellegreno, the 30-year-old Michigan woman who is attempting to retrace the flight of Amelia Earhart 30 years ago, tiie high point of an exotic globe-circling journey was ' a fleeting visit to a remote Pacific island. The island is Howland, a tiny U.S. - owned speck of land somewhere near Canton Island. Miss Pellegreno claims Amelia Earhart crashed near Howland in June of 1937. “Howland is just a tiny speck of land in a big bide ocean,” Miss Pellegreno said. “We were following the same sunline she did, and if we hadn’t zigzagged, we would have missed it, too.” Miss Pellegreno landed her twin-engine and twin-t ailed Lockheed Electra — an exact replica of Miss Earhart’s plane exactly on schedule yesterday after noon in Honolulu. She has completed all but about miles of her 27,000 mile odyssey which began at Oakland, Calif., June 8. ★ * ★ The former Saline schoolteacher was accompanied on Iyer flight by Lee Koepke, c Ypsilanti, the owner of th plane; William Polhamus, navigator from Ann Arbor, and William Payne, an Air Force colonel who went along as copilot. CHEERFUL AND RESTED The sandy-haired aviatrix looked cheerful and rested af-| She said she talked to sever-1 She declined to elaborate on iHowland, Miss Pellegreno said, ter her 14-hour, 20-minute flight al people who are “sending the nature of the imformatlon because the rough runway pre-front Canton Island south of me things” which alight help she obtained. pared during the war had dis- Honolulu. I clear up the Earhart mystery. | No landing was attempted on |appeared. flown tempt What a Beautiful Wiy To a SECURE FUTURE... Stort Soviet Me Mutt et First Men1 eei YeeII Sen Mu! OAKLAND Open a new Savings Account for $20.00 or add a like amount to your present account* i You then have the privilege off selecting a world famous art treasure from the collection in our lobby art gallery for It just $5.95. A real $25 value! Jnst ask the teller for an authorization slip for one of these 18”x24” world famous masterpieces by Van Gogh, Renoir, Utrillo or other , great artists. All are full color replica painting on authentic artist's canvas mounted on a custom-crafted wood stretcher. Do this and yon save twice ... your way to lasting financial security. HOME OFFICE: 761 W. Huron Street Downtown Pontiac — Drayton Plains — Rochester — Charleston Milford — Walled Lake — Lake Orion — Waterford “ ' „ ' •.... 1 >. ■ v THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967___________;_______. ^0—1, (S — No one will trump this when it ap-table after a spirited game. One of the 20 1967, this one combines turkey, Canadian se, pineapple and cranberry relish. 1 GULF KIST SHRIMP. atyou like ‘vm AM CLEANED! Kwovtp il duo, ham and 2 tablespoons grated Parme-trio with finely 8811 cheese H Wh*rff let. Core, rinse and drain lettiace; JSnLwfe10 ** ■ Cut head lengthwise into tog in a casser- *** *5* uce and cooked all delicatelw *®ou8h to yield 5 cups. Place diH weed ed half of ch<*ped lettuce in 184-ryoT?ave Sprinkle, witfe fnr _ y4 teaspoon dill weed. m- suouer eggs with milk, salt and ppe ' pepper. Melt butter to, skillet; 9am V Eggs I add ham and heat. Stir in egg iceberg lettuce]mixture. Cook, , stirring, until I weed jeggs are set. I Placehalf of egg mfarture on • , lettuce in casserole.'* Add re-t maining lettuce and dill weed, >per then remaining egg mixture, butter or mar* Sprinkle with cheese; broil 2 to 3 minutes. Serve immedi-cooked ham ately. Makes 6 servings. Seamed Ice Creams, Sherbets Best When Homemade Double Decker Is Tasty "The Ace of Clubs," a combination of cream cheese, crushed, pineapple, Canadian bacon and turkey on whole wheat bread, today has been named one of the 20 best Sand* wiches of 1967. The unusual sandwich was created by Gordon Snyder, Manager, Kuennings Restaurant, Columbus, Ohio. This is the fourth straight year that Snyder has placed in the top 20, in the annual National Sandwich Idea Contest. He now competes with 19 other winners — first for a trip , to New York City and $500 in cash —and finally for the crown of Sandwich Monarch of 1967. If he is named Sandwich King, Snyder will receive a second $500 and an all-expense vacation for two any place in the world. Twenty years ago, Snyder joined Kuennings Restaurant, first working at the sandwich counter. Today he is manager of the firm’s downtown operation. The Ace of Clubs 18 slices whole wheat bread 4 oz. cream cheese, softened 184 cups drained, crushed pineapple 24 slices Canadian bacon, grilled 184 cups orange-cranberry relish 18 slices (1 oz. each) cooked turkey breast Spread cream cheese on bread. Cover each of 6 bread slices with 84 cup pineapple and 4 slices Canadian bacon. Add second layer of bread, spread side up. Cover each with. 84 cup orange-cranberry relish and turkey slices. Top with remain-l bread. Makes 6 sandwiches. By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press, Food Editor When you really want to impress- your guests, serve them homemade ice cream. It’s the most fun if you let them help make it.. With today’s electric freezers, it’s really no work at all. Of course, you can make ice cream or sherbet In your refrigerator any time, Try some of these new recipes toe near future. Canned Mandarin oranges a fruity, flavorful sher-[t’s colorful looking and CREAMY MANDARIN ORANGE SHERBET , 2 11-ounce cpns Japanese Mandarin oranges 1 envelope unflavored gelatin 84 cup water V* cup sugar 1 cup milk 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 cdp heavy cream, whipped Turn temperature control of refrigerator or freezer to coldest setting. Soften gelatin in V* cup water in measuring cup. Place cup in pan of boiling water and heat until gelatin is VICTORIAN AVOCADO-BUTTERMILK ICE Cook a Shrimp Dinner in One Big Skillet With all due respect to modern appliances — and marvels they certainly are — women have been working miracles for years, right on top of their stoves, in capacious pots and kettles. You may not have one of those in your kitchen, but you undoubtedly have a heavy covered skillet or Dutch oven, and that’s all you need to make a simply great dish, toe Mexican Shrimp Pot, from a Shrimp Association of the Americas recipe. By using the convenience foods listed, toe whole process takes only about half an hour, which should be speedy enough for anyone’s timetable. Mexican Shrimp Pot 1 pound shrimp, fresh or frozen, or 1 (8 oz. or 10 oz.) package peeled and deveined shrimp Mi cup olive or salad oil 2 tablespoons chopped onion 3 tablespoons chopped green pepper 1 clove garlic, minced 1 cup converted rice 184 cups water 1 teaspoon salt 14 teaspoon oregano Vi teaspoon black pepper 3 tablespoons lemon juice 84 cup tomato sauce 110-ounce package frozen succotash, partly thawed 110-ounce package frozen baby okra, partly thawed*1 84 cup frozen green beans, partly thawed Clean shrirhp, set aside. In a large deep skillet, heat oil. Add onion, green pepper, garlic and rice. Cook, stirring constantly, Until rice is lightly browned. Add water, seasonings and vegetables. Toss gently. Cover and cook over low heat 15 minutes. Uncover, arrange shrimp on surface. Cover and cook lo minutes longer or until rice is tender and plnmp and shrimp are pink and no longer look transparent. Serve from stollet or turn into casserole. Makes 6 servings. ACE OF CLUBS peafs on the bridge best sandwiches of badon, cream chees No one will trump this when it Ham 'n' Eggs La With Shredded Lettuce seasoned Parmesan cheese, you have noteworthy main dish for weekend brunch or supper. Lettuce-Crisp Ham ’n’ 1 head western Vt teaspoon 8 eggs 84 cup milk \f 84 teaspoon salt 84 teaspoon pepper 1% tablespoons butter or garble 184 cups Meanwhile, drain juice from one of the cans of Mandarin oranges and reserve- Rat orange segments from one can through food mill or in blender to make puree. ’ Drain juice from second can of oranges, reserve segments. Gomhiny -juice from both cans with orange puree. Add sugar and melted gelatin, stir until sugar is dissolved. Stir orange mixture into milk. Add lemon juice, stirring. (It may curdle.) Place in ice cube tray and freeze until frozen one inch in from edge. Turn partly frozen orange mixture into large mixing bowl and beat until smooth. Combine whipped cream and freeze again until one inch in from edge. Return mixture into bowl and beat smooth. Fold in reserved orange sections and return to freezer until firm. Makes 184 quarts. Ices and sherbets, say the experts, are intended to be refreshing rather than enriching; they are not imitation ice creams. Avocados will tint this buttermilk ice a lovely green. What could look more refreshing? VICTORIAN AVOCADO BUTTERMILK ICE 2 fully ripe avocados 2 cups buttermilk 84 cup sugar 84 cbp each: honey, light corn syrup, lemon juice Prepare Avocado Puree as follows: Halve avocados lengthwise, twisting gently to separate halves. Whack a sharp knife directly into seeds and twist to life out ★ ★ ★ Peel avocados; then force through sieve and mix with remaining ingredients, or blend all together in electric blender. Pour into pan or refrigerator trays. Freeze until mushy; then beat smooth and freeze again until firm. Let ice mellow at room temperature 84 hour before serving. Makes about one quart. There are still some fresh strawberries available. A pint and a half of them can be made into’ a frozen dessert with an elusive flavor. Bet no one will it comes from lemon flavored ice tea mix. STRAWBERRY TEA PARFAIT 184 pint boxes fresh strawberries 12 marshmallows 2 envelopes (2 oz. each) lemon flavored iced tea mix 2 cups heavy cream ' 2 tablespoons confectioners’ sugar Measure 2 cups strawberries. Slice and sweeten remaining berries to use as garnish; refrigerate. ‘, In medium saucepan, combine 2 cups berries, marshmallows, and lemon flavored iced tea mix. Simmer 10 minutes over low heat, stirring frequently. Remove from heat. Press mixture through a sieve; cool. In large bowl, whip cream until it begins to thicken; add confectioners’ sugar and whip until stiff. Blend in strawberry puree. Pour into 2 ice cube trays. ★ ★ ojit. Freeze.about 1 hour or until partially frozen; stir thoroughly. Freeze another hour; stir thoroughly again. Freeze until firm. Spoon frozen strawberry cream into parfait glasses; top with sliced berries. Makes about 8 parfaits. 1 , One of today's convenience foods — non-dairy creamer — can replace regular cream in homemade ice cream. Crushed peppermint stick candy sweetens and flavors this delightful dessert. If you want plain vanilla ice cream, substitute one cup of sugar for the candy. PEPPERMINT ICE CREAM (Calorie-Trimmed) 184 cups non-dairy creamer 84 pound peppermint stick candy 2 tablespoons flour 1 teaspoon salt 3 eggs, well beaten 3 cups boiling water 184 teaspoons vanilla Crush candy. In top of double boiler, combine creamer, flour and salt. Blend in eggs and boiling water. Cook over hot water, stirring constantly, until mixture thick-(about 10 minutes). Remove from heat; add vanilla and cool. Stir in crushed candy. ★ * * Freeze in electric ice' cream freezer, using 8 parts ice to 1 part salt (machine runs about 84 hour). To ripen, use equal parts ice and salt or store in Makes 1 quart. STRAWBERRY TEA PARFAIT PEPPERMINT STICK ICE CREAM Pears, Cabbage a Salad Twosome A pleasant, nutritious combination is pears with cabbage. Slaw and Fresh Pear Salad 84 tablespoon each sugar and salad oil 1 tablespoon cider vinegar 84 teaspoon (generous) salt 84 teaspoon celery seed 2 pups firmly packed fine knifesbredded green cabbage Salad Greens 2 fresh pears, peeled and halved and cored In a medium bowl stir together and sugar, oil, vinegar, salt arid celery seed; mix in the cabbage. Arrange on salad greens and top slaw with pears. Serve at once. Makes 4 servings The fact that 1,293,670 women are tickled pink with Easy Monday Fabric Softener is a feather in our cap. FAMILY TO WORK THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY S. 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WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 Soviet Film Festival Assures Controversy MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet answer to die glamor of world film festivals, a spectacle that puts puritanism, politics and propaganda ahead of pulchritude, playboys and parties, la on this week. Moscow's fifth International Film Festival July 5-20 again promises political fireworks. Prize awards in the past have pitted Soviet jurors, seeking to honor Soviet films with top awards, against foreign jurors demanding recognition for artistic achievements from abroad. ★ * * In 1963 the infighting got so rough that Western jurors threatened to quit. Only a Soviet back-down, reportedly authorized by then Premier Nikita Khrushchev, calmed the storm. Moves to honor controversial Aims from the West have confronted deadly serious Soviet officials with key dilemmas. DAMPENS PRESTIGE Refusal to honor such films hurts efforts to present a liberal image abroad and dampens the prestige of the Moscow festival. But the Soviets also fear that honoring such films adds pressure for relaxation of controls on the arts here, permitting production of critical films. They want the, prestige of an International film festival award bestowed on productions of the only Soviet-approved art school, “socialist realism." Hie American film “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" will be shown outside the competition to an invitation-only audience of Soviet film workers. The public won’t see it. The Soviets always Invite scores of the world’s stars to attend but few appear, partly because the scheduled showing of their films is worked out only at the last minute. This time only Leslie Caron and French actor Robert Hos- sein, both jury members, are listed as sure to attend. Among Americans, George Hamilton, Warren Beatty, Shirley MacLaine, Shirley Temple and Jack Palance are tentatively listed as coming. * ★ * Russian-born composer Dmitri Tfomkin—“High Noon’’—is on the 15-member, jury. It has a majority of eight Communist representatives, with a Russian chairman. Sandy Dennis, star of the American entry in the competition, “Up the Down Staircase," is (hie to appear. Former presidential aide Jack Valenti, now president of the Motion Picture Association of America, heads the American delegation. Two American directors, both involved in jury battles in past Moscow festivals, are expected to attend, Fred Zinnemann and Stanley Kramer. Zinnemann’s film, “A Man for All Seasons,” will be shown as the British entry. At the last festival in 1965 Zin-nemann led ‘ opposition to awarding the grand prize to the Soviet film, “War and Peace.” Officially, opponents said the film did not deserve the prize because only the first two of its four parts were shown. Western and some Soviet critics qu< tioned the quality of the film. IDEOLOGICALLY UNSOUND The top prize was split between “War and Peace” and the Hungarian entiy, “29 Hours,” which the Russians had called ideologically unsound. Kramer was involved in a bigger furor in 1963 when most jury members agreed the best film was Federico Fellini’s controversial The Soviets backed a lackluster Soviet film, “Meet Baluyev.” The issue was reportedly referred to Khrushchev who agreed to let the award go to “8%.” PAY HIKE FOR JUKEBOX — The coin shortage might have had something to do with the development of this jukebox, the first to accept dollar bills from music lovers. But it means buying tunes in volume — thq jukebox doesn’t make change. New LA Art Museum Gaining Popularity LOS ANGELES (UPI) — The Los Angeles Couunty Museum of Art in a little more than two years has become the second most visited repository of art in the United States—surpassed only by t|ie New York 'Metropolitan Museum of Art. Because the museum is yet a toddler,-'the permanent collection is not fully developed, but the structure itself is a major attraction to the thousands of persons who stroll through the galleries daily. The three buildings which comprise the museum appear to be floating on an ornamental pool but they are actually placed on a terrace which encircles a sprawling plaza — and beneath this terrace level, the service area is common to all buildings, largest building, is four stories and houses the permanent collection which surrounds a four-story atrium. hibitions and conservation area. Special exhibitions change frequently and many art objects in this building are loaned by pri-vate individuals or obtained through an exchange program with other museums. The Bing Center houses the auditorium, a cafeteria, the member’s lounge and a children’s museum which conducts several classes. Before 1964, the museum was housed in the Los Angeles County Museumjof History and Science in Exposition Park. Founding trustees realised the need for an Independent museum of art and private funds were raised. When the present structure was completed, it was made a gift to the people of Los Angeles. The museum has not yet achieved the tradition that its older counterparts enjoy. However, the galleries house ob- jects of art from prehistory in various forms. HURON NOW SNOW WHITE at ItOO—OlOO—1:00—10:00 “NAMU” at 2i26-5i30-0:30 IBM DRIVE-IN THEATRE Starts TONIGHT SO Y0UN6! SO BEWITCHING! ...BUT THE TRUTH IS SHE WAS 1 IBS! SSEB Walt Disney’s Snow -a White GET READY for THATPM at HOFFMAN'S r iwowiw THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY fl, 1967 C—5 Fires Started in Negro Area More Violence in Cincinnati CINCINNATI, Ohk» (AP) Several fired were started by fife bombs early today in another recurrence of violence in the E ZjtWhite Seven V Dwarfs if $Wllt Disney A* Walt WQ m Disney’s Snow White JOHN RICHARD LAURENCE WAYNE WIOMARK- HARVEY Utim UHITEOMtTiTS I a t n « predominantly Negro Avondale area of Cincinnati, police reported. Negroes rioted Monday night in Avondale and nearby Evans* ton areas but relative quiet had been reported restored until midnight Tuesday. Rioting also occurred there three weeks ago. Most of the fires early today j were put out Quickly. At least 11 arrests were made in connection with the disturbances, police said. Af 3 a.m., police said the trouble spots were again quiet. EIGHT CHARGED Eight persons face trial on charges of disorderly conduct as the result of Monday night’s outbreak. * ★ * Beefed-up patrols cruised the streets of the two districts about three to four miles northeast of downtown Cincinnati Tuesday night. The Cincinnati Sash & Door Co. plant at the northern edge of Avondale was destroyed by a fire whose origin remained unknown. Fire Chief Bert Luga'n-estimated damage at $1 million. 43 FIRE ALARMS Firemen said there were 43 fire alarms—18 of them false— Monday night and early Tuesday. Firemen were stoned at some fire scenes. The (Niio National Guard had to be called out ta help police quell racial disturbances June 13-18 that resulted in more than 350 arrests and $2.5 million in damages. 10-story building erected for a Chicago insurance company in 1880 is regarded as the first American skyscraper. wowssni Pontiac’s POPULAR THEATER WMfe Stow 0«H. II Mb ta It Mi. Sn*4t|rtt S>——— It Mill It M*. FANCY BROKEN LEG — Prince Philip points as he asks 19-year-old Marni Turner of Peterborough, Ont., how she broke her leg. She appeared aboard the royal yacht Britannia at Kingston, Ont., yesterday. Miss Turner, winner of one of the Prince’s awards for physical fitness, explained her leg was broken when a diver hit it during a swimming session. She told him her hobby was interior decorating, and the prince pointed to her leg and said “You certainly got a good start on the exterior.” MAKE WAV FOR RICHARDSONS’ BIG. RICHARDSON FARM DAIRY STORES 5838 M- 15, CLARKSTON 535 COMMERCE ROAD 7350 HIGHLAND, M- 59 PLAZA 1109 JOSLYN ROAD 4342 DIXIE HWY., DRAYTON PLAINS 3414 HURON 2466 ORCHARD LK., SYLVAN LAKE at ELIZ. LAKE 4100 BALDWIN RD., PONTIAC 'Russian Dropout in Better Shape' j PHILADELPHIA (AP)-A Russian high school dropout is in better shape than his American counterpart because he will have no trouble finding worit, says an American who recently taught in the Soviet Union. 'When a student no longer Is Interested hi going to school there are opportunities to train him for a trade,” Myrtlq McCal-lin of Swarthlrtore, Pa., head of the School Affiliating Service of the American Friends Service Committee, said in an interview. The committee, a Quaker group sponsored the trip of Miss McCallln, a former teacher, and two American teachers of Russian—Thomas Forsythe of Roosevelt University in Chicago and Joseph Glut of B more, Md., county schools. The visit, from April 16 to June 20, was the second half of exchange that began last fall when three Soviet teachers of English toured schools between Boston and Philadelphia, Miss McCallin said that since the Soviet Union has no unemployment problem, the dropout there can find some type of job. If he doesn’t learn a trade he can always get an unskilled job,” she said, * * * ' Schools in' both the United States and the Soviet Union are experimenting with new teach-techniques, such as the new math, Miss McCallln said. The problems we share are those of finding the balance between teaching of fact and teaching of concepts,” she said. “We also face the common problem of how to help the slow learner feel he is of equal value as a person.” Like the United States, the. Soviet Union has • neighborhood school system In large cities, Miss McCallin said. ★ ★ :; ★ “But their pupils stay in one schotri from first grade to tenth. FREE 1 Putt-Putt1 OPEN DAILY I A.M. til 12 P.M. ejzszi* •Mjta* H*ins tm and Taltfrap* Ip (L.1-MM mm DRIVE-IN SO. tUEOtAPH AT SO. LAKE *0. ,FE 1-1000 1 mile w. WOODWARD BOX OFFICE OPENS 7 00 P.M ncrriN* dihcut train ridis am mmr h jnhb bond llllllll] 5 viciwyss ^eEORSE _ BUS SEGAL MEEI SiiiiiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH EXCITING CIRCUS TRAIN RIDES. • ^BWfiffipJfe JJW! CHILDREN minim « n »n..b MoPbm so. Af Walton ilvd, |* 332-3200 TAKE 1/3.TOMT. CLEMENS RD. Ilima....,, BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:00 F,M,|u MAIN ttatfRE SNOjMi'lst * 'SSfidlK If r»rR^iiGTHATM*AN. CAINE — s YEAR < VITTORIO §5 10 t fiASSMAR |TBESTIj WOUT WOMAHl g • E ARTHUR COHN s VITTORIO = DoSlCAt ANITA QBERB*I1SA MKRlBttUl ,COLOR pfflKflWK EXCITING CIRCUS TRAIN RIDES SnmuniHinim giant free playgrounds DD loren Etroianni f co'or Marriage | Italian Style j •74-isoo D a I T f - f M 3250 WMS LAKE RD AT AIRPORT SOI AHIPT Mltr WEST Of pIXlE HCWT u s 10 m\m E'"—XBOX OFFICE OPENS 7:00 P.M MAIN FEATURE SHOWN 1st NITECY 7 NOW! EXCltlNri CiRCUS TRAIN RIDES ,OBT“/THE shatteringtrue story ifei 2 if um s V SSK yinc onm icmno muc oiuni THE HELLS ANGELS WE1 ■ i m Tht Viol*n;t...Thi Hitt... Tt* Way-out Pstti* Exactly tN SUNDAYS THIS WEEK’S • SPECIALS Everyday Low Prices •Friendly Service •Gold Bell Stamp* Borden V Frozen Treesweet Frozen ■*m LOIN CUT /«| POM NIPS 89191 SMOKED WEST VIRGINIA PORK CHOPS GREEN PEPPERS HYGRADE Kitchen Charm RADISHES wpS’SetS? couhiwstyls ECKRICH SLENDER SLICED MEATS 3-0z.Wt. Pkgs. VAN CAMP'S STORK and ■ BEANS uans LUCKY CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN NOODLE or MUSHROOM iSP* PHILADELPHIA BRAND CREAM CHEESE STOKELY ^ Pineapple-Grapefruit VELVET MAXWELL HOUSE □ ^Mfj UONEERI SUGAR | With Coupon and PurchaiA^ IS or Mora, limit 2. 1 OFREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase of 10 Lb*, or more of | POTATOES OFREE GOLD-BELL » Stamps With Pnrchasl' of any Aorasol iV BRIO BOMB I Elk FREE HOLD BELL |J(f Stamps With Purchase of 3 or more jars of i] ICE CREAM TOPPING FREE GOLD BELL I Stamps With Purchase or mora loaves of j BRAD J UFREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase : of I Lb. or mere of POLISH SAUSAGE Rl| FREE GOLD BELL l#V Stamps With Purchase PORK BO AST 1 FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS PEOPLES FOOD MARKETS Vaxweu THE -PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, jtrLY 5. im | Jacoby on Bridge^] NORTH (D) I 4 A 10 9 6 5 9 K 10 9 ♦ 62 4k K 6 4 WEST EAST ♦ 2 *K4 VQ743 V J 8 6 ♦ QJIS ♦ A 10 9 4 4.QJ108 A 9 7 32 SOUTH ♦ Q J 8 7 3 VA92 ♦ K72 ♦ A$ East-West vulnerable West North East South Pass Pass 14k Pass 4 4 Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—4k Q East had been reeding books also. He led his Jack of hearts. South could have made Ms overtrick by rising with Ms ace and finessing against West’s queen but South could not see that queen. He thought awhile, then he thought some more. Finally he let the heart ride around to dum-I my on the theory, that East had He led a s£o“nd diamond ! the ‘>“ee"-Ja1ck- which West won. West led 11 was a 8°°“ ^ hut ? lo* a book play available to Mm to force a heart lead from an opponent if spades broke M. He decided to try the book play. He went up with dummy’s king of clubs and led a low diamond. East ducked and South won the trick with his king. His game was safe but he wanted an overtrick. By OSWALD & JAMES JACOBY The name “book” play has, been given to the large number of standard plays that come ■up again andj again. In the old days only aj few experts knew the book! plays. Today, it' seems, almost everybody has JACOBY learned most of them. course, all book plays haven’t appeared In books. Some have appeared only In bridge columns. South knew all the book plays. He looked over dummy and saw that he might lose two diamonds, ope spade and one heart. He also noted that there was another club. South won with his ace and threw East in lead with the king. South had developed the book end play. If East led a diamond or club South would get a ruff and discard. If East led a low heart, West’s queen would be gobbled up by dummy’s king and South would be able to finesse against East’s jade. Unfortunately for Soq^, V*CRRD Sense** Q—The bidding has been: West North East South 14k Pass 14 Pass 2 4 Dble Pass 3 V Pass ? You, South, hold: 42 VAQ 10 6 4KJ9 5 4AQJ4 What do you do now? A—Bid four hearts. Tour partner may not-make this but the chances are that he will. Ton don’t wet anywhere sitting around, waiting for sure things. TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of bidding one spade West passes. Your partner bids one spade. What do you do now? Astrological Forecast .tU | C ay SYDNEY OMARS ARIES (M«h 21-Apr. Ik): Apply vidual touch. Strive for th* unique. You old security through original methods. Give attention to home, family, property. New i contacts today could prove protlt-able. TAURUS lApr. 20-May 20} 1. on Maas, short tourneys, fdetuel met ion. You art eblo to got Moat paper. Eapeclally good for reporting. Imparting Information. Get acrote point of view. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Don't flnecnclel Issues. Voce facts as they exist. TAURUS MdivMual Is able to provide added insight. Bring forth facta previously obscured. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Moon I your sign strengthens confidence, colt cldes with cycle of aggressiveness. Stat your — -r-i.- five, lists. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Strive tor proper understanding of ovMence at hand. Tendency exists tor contusion. Others Introduce trivia. You must evaluate, eld*:T*k# herd look at your own i social times Indicated. AccentYon friends. s to continue search. AvoM bell encouraged. Persistent effort pays off. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Study to day provides valuable Information. Check source material. Emphasize patience, responsibility. Be perceptive. Keep communication linos open. Pine tor writing, advertising. . SAGITTARIUS (Nov. ^2-Dec. 21): Better ter finishing than for beginning a project. Emphasis on Investment, money belonging to others. You ere asked for opinion, advice.„ Be frank, sugar-coating causae damage. CAPRICORN (Oec. 22-Jan. I»): Deal with legal questions. Bo sure of actions. Know whtra you stand—end why. New step proves to bo correct I one. Hanging | onto past could be mlstek*. Act accord- n for eld received Woman Injured in Jump From Fire KALAMAZOO (AP) - A 25-year-old woman was in fair condition in a Kalamazoo hospital today with injuries suffered when She jumped from her 5 smoke-filled apartment. Firemen said Audrey Davis of Kalamazoo leaped from the third floor of an apartment building to escape smoke frdfri a mattress fire on the building’s second floor. The fire caused $l,00(j damage. Firemen... said the blaze started from a cigarette. 4 Win Awards DETROIT Beer-Cheese Sauce Tops Egg Dish It doesn't take muehto turn eggs Into one of the prettiest dishes you've ever brought forth. And eggs are so versatile, they can {poked by any method that exists, snort of putting them on a stick to barbecue. They also take beautifully to different seasonings—and that’s often the tip-off to turning a plentiful food 1016" a gourmet delight. • Take,c for example, the inde-1 scribabte difference that a cup of beer makes when used in the sauce for this deviled egg and noodle casserole. It seems to upgrade all the bland tastes into] a perfectly melded combination with a distinct character of its own. The alcohol, of course, dissipates in the cooking, leaving only the flavor nuances behind. Deviled Egg and Noodle Casserole 6 hard cooked eggs I teaspoon prepared mustard Mayonnaise Salt . Tabasco 4 Mi cups cooked fine noodles y« cup butter or margarine Vi cup flour 1 cup milk 1 cup beer 1 cup (4 ounces) grated sharp cheddar cheese Cut eggs in halves lengthwise. Remove yolks and mash. Stir in mustard and enough mayonnaise to bind mixture. Season j to taste with salt and Tabasco,] Refill egg whites with yolk mixture. Place cooked noodles in a greased, shallow casserole. Arrange deviled eggs on top. Melt butter and stir In flour. Gradually stir in milk and beer. Cook over low heat, stirring constantly untQ sauce bubbles and thickens. Season to taste with salt and Tabasco. Pour sauce over eggs and noodles; sprinkle cheese over top. Bake in a preheated hot oven (400 degrees) for 20 to 25 minutes or until top of casserole is brown. Yield: 6 servings. Q. What is the name of this cut of meat? A. Beef boneless sirloin steak. Q. Where does it come from? How is it identified? A. It comes from the section known as sirloin which is right next to the loin on one side and the rump on the other. Sirloin steaks have a wide variety in their muscles as well as in the shapes of bones if it’s a bone-in sirloin. The smaller muscle to the right top of this steak, for example, is known as the “cap.’J; Q. How is it prepared? A. By broiling or panbroiling. Broiling is used for thick steaks while panbroiling is suggested for the thinner ones. To broil, place steak on broiler rack and insert pan so the top surface of an inch-thick steak is 2 to 3 inches from the heat. A steak two inches thick should be placed 3 to 5 inches from the heat. An inch-thick steak requires 15 to 20 minutes total cooking time for rare and 20 to 25 minutes for medium. A’ 2 inch steak requires 30 to 35 minutes for rare and 40 to 45 minutes for medium. * Avocado Is New in Western Salad i waldorf salad dresses up the traditional apple salad by adding avocados, shredded iceberg lettuce, raisins and cheese and omitting the usual chopped nuts and celery. Core.Vrinse and drain 1 head of lettuce. Halve lettuce and shred enough of it to measure 4 cups. Halve" and core 1 apple and cut into julienne strips. • Halve, seed and skin 1 avocado. With cut sides down, cube avocado and sprinkle with lemon juice, tossing gently to coast cubes. In salad bowl, combine Vt cup of mayonnaise with 2 tablespoons of lemon juice and salt to taste. Add lettuce, apple, avocado, 1 cup of coarsely grated cheddar cheese and Vi cup of dark seedless raisins. Toss gently. Makes 6 to 8 servings. tym/ijfm/iUk Conveniently Cut-Up lb. 33c ’ GRADE A HAND CUT Fryer Breasts GRADE A HAND CUT Fryer Legs GRADE A HAND CUT Drums or Thighs GRADE A HAND CUT - Choice O'Chick GRADE A (JVENREADY Roasting Chicken GRADE A PETITE Bar-B-Q Chicken* Pin Wheel Pak ■ssusr *• 59* ; GRADE A FRESH SPOT r : \ /: US. CHOICE BEEF : //Chuck Roast\ PURE FRESH Sealtest Half & Half qt. ctn. CHOCOLATE, STRAWBERRY, LEMON, LIME OR BANANA \ Spring Broilers f f* Fine for fKKKfl I *e# Bar-B-Queing MxZ. •/ lb. M A SX 1 SAVE 16c lb. canter cut 491 Prices Good Thru July 8 US. CHOICE BEEF * Chuck Steak wc? i US. CHOICE BEEF CHUCK SWISS Boneless Steak CALUMET SMOKED Sliced Bacon US. CHOICE IAMB SLICED AND TIED Shoulder React 59* 89* 69* 79* \ Banquet Cream 4 ssi 1 11 50 Extra Gold Bell Gift Stamps with coupon and purchase of any BONELESS RUMP, PATIO OR Round Roast ,51 Ultra! it field Bell fiift I Stnpsl LOW PRICES RE(%L.4R OR DRIP COFFER Hills Brothers WHITE OR ASSORTED COLORS Northern Tissue FOR WHITER CLOTHES jg Roman Bleach PURE VEGETABLE Crisco Shortening PIONEER GRANULATED Pure Sugar PURE STRAWBERRIES Owen's Preserves FOR BAR-HQUE Heim Sauce MEADOW-DALE FANCY Salad Dressing GREEN GODDESS Wishbone Dressing 31 *lw 4S 29* & 49* 31 77* SI 49* 49* this week! GOOD FOR ONE I4"x20" PRINT ...our gift to you... Large I6"x20" Masterpiece Print with coupon at left ... GOOD NEWS!—included in the selections this week ere some matching - prints for the l&’xZO” prints you - selected before! SECOND WEEK COUPON Worth 100 Extra Maxwell House Geld Bell Gift Stamps With tbit coupon and 17 AO or wort foott purcbas, of. I * -FIlilE MEATS i... .FINE GROCERIES or FINE PRODUCE if coupon and SS.OO or morn food aac. on n coupon porJumUy, plenum. Coupon W>od July 2 tkru t. m .noon- “ ! 23 Extra jlUMttl jiStaips 91 Ultra UMli Staaps »*. or mor* of m 11 51 Extra fiaUMIfiiR Stanps LOIN CHOPS CENTER CUT RIB C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1067 ROAST 39 FRESH PICNIC STYLE LB. PORK CHOPS HURRY! r LAST WEEK TO FRYER LEGS OR BREASTS ^BONELESS HAMX WHOLE v WITH RIBS OR ■KWH back PORTION ^ l WHOLE ff?D ^ UU SERVE N' SAVE SLICED BACON U.S. CHOICE TENDERAY BEEF BONELESS ROAST i I-03 BOSTON ^ ROLLED II^roast . m CORDON'S ROLL PORK SAUSAGE... LEAN SLICED KWICK KRISP BACON. 12-OZ CQ< WT PKG PK REGULAR. MAPLE. 0R SMOKED FLAVOR ECKRICH SMOK-Y-LINKS*?;” 69* NEW CROP CALIFORNIA THOMPSON MEDIUM SIZE, FIRM, TENDER IN TEX. TURE, TART-SWEET FLAVOR. 30-SIZE CALIFORNIA AVOCADOS ............"1 GREEN PEPPERS, GREEN ONIONS/ OR RED RADISHES wiTHwiscoupoNoi^., ANY 1Q-Lf. SAG R POTATOES * 7rf thru Sun.. July 9. 1967 Krog.r D.f. A Eoof. Mich. ■■ WITH FOAM MATTRESS WITH THIS COUPON A SS PURCHASE OR MORE I KROGER VAC PAC ! COFFEE 1-LB CAN ■ Sun., July 9, 1967 of Krooor Dot. A Eoof. Mich. Limit On• Coupon, »■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ KROGER WHITE MEDIUM SIZE GRADE 'A’ EGGS 2-49 KROGER EVAPORATED CANNED MILK 7’f m-FL ■ 0Z CANS I SAVE ASSORTED FLAVORS . — ^ mm* KROGER GELATINS « PORK AND BEANS IO GOLD MEDAL flour.. .5 » 53 HEINZ BABY FOOD.....riT HAWAIIAN PUNCH ::E2» Hl-C DRINKS BETTY CROCKER CAKE MIXES GOLDEN KROGER . SHORTENING hh S3 8913 59 CHUN KING FROZEN WITH CHICKEN FRIED RICE. PURE GRANULATED _• _ _ _ . PIONEER SUGAR......... 5 49 FRUIT COCKTAIL..........““IK TOASTEM POP-UPS...^’39 CALORIES REDUCED ^ f_Li I2_oZ « DEL MONTE PEACHES :: 24 WITH TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON OH ANY 4 LOAVES MEL-O-SOFT dread OR KROGER SUNS WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY TWO PKGS COUNTRY OVEN COOKIES CHUN KING CANTONESE 12 PACK FROZEN EGG ROLLS INDEPENDENT SHUR-GOOD! COOKIES JUMBO ASSORTMENT... BLUE RIBBON AMMONIA HEKMAN TASTY CLUB CRACKERS VITA-BOY DELICIOUS BACON CRISP •BREAKFAST-TREAT-BAYS ■ UK LKwUEK DUN) ” vwwmh ■ Vultd thru Sun., July 9, 1967 . Valid thru Sun., July 9,1967 B utKragarDat. * Eo»f. Mich, lj at Krogar Pat. & Eatt. Mich. CA TOP VALUE 3U STAMPS with this coupon on ANY 2 PKGS 8-OZ WT COUNTRY CLUB LUNCHEON MEATS Wm^HI^OUPOHON ANY 2-LBS OF SLICED BACON I Valid thru Sun.. July 9, 1967 —J Valid thru Sun., July 9, If67 I at Kragar Dat. i Eaat. Mich. U of Kroger Dat. t Etmt. Mich, j 75i OFF LABEL COLD WATER SURF.. 44 OFF LABEL •' LUX LIQUID B DISH TOWEL PACK GIANT BREEZE 1AA TOP VALUE IVV STAMPS 54-GAL Gl JUG BP I 1-LB GO PKG BP>W 3-OZ 4B WT PKG 3-LB EG *••7-02 PKG BY 12-.PL 0Z STL ENGLISH MUFFINS.......£& 22 WITH THIS COUPON ON ONE \ ALUMINUM FOLDING BED B Valid thru Sint., July 9, 1967 of Krog.r Dot. 4 Eaat. Mfcfc. 100 T V. STAMPS WITH COUPON ALUMINUM FOLDING BED 1099 ONLY THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 COUNTRY CLUB POINT CUT WHOLE U.8. CHOICE TENDERAY 7-INCH CUT FLAT. CUT ^USDA CHOICE PLUMP, JUICY FRYERS SPECIALLY BRED AND FED TO HAVE FINER FLAVOR AND MORE TENDER MEAT THAN ANY YOU EVER ATE. PLAYOR-SEAL-PAC. U.S. CHOICE TENDERAY lUSDA CHOICE FINE FOR BARBECUE 4TH AND 6TH RIBS IN 3-LB TUBE WITH THIS COUPON AND SS PURCHASE OR MORE BORDEN’S SHERBET OR 6AULON SAVE 30$ KROGER FROZEN 4 VARIETIES SET ACQUAINTED OFFER! VUVCT DELIGHT JOST whip IT AND CHILL IT if OFF LABEL SCIENTIFICALLY RIPENEOTO BRINS YOU MELLOW-RIPE SWEETNESS AND FLAVOR HAIR SHAMPOO PLEASANT TASTING NEW! ADVANCED WE RESERVE THE EIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. HEtCES AND ITEMS EF-FECTIVE AT KROGER IN DETROIT t EASTERN MICHIGAN THRU SUNDAY JULY f, 1967. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. COPYRIGHT 1967. THE KROGER CO. 24 SIZE ICE BEES HEAD LETTUCE 104 OFF LABEL VIM TABLETS EXTRA-LONG GRAIN COUNTRY CLUB SKINLESS WIENERS:.......... 59* OVEN-READY PRE-SEASONED _ M MEAT LOAF....................2Vi If** eatmore golden ® . _ _ — , ROLL MARGARINE__*B b1g¥’pop io HIKXZle whipZZZ=as applesauce..... MORTON CREAM pies KGS GLENDALE JUMBO POLISH SAUSAGE............“59' 104 OFF LABEL SUNSHINE RINSO 3-LB 2-OZ PKG 59 16 116 49 Sandwich bread 5 *i CHATEAU DETERGENTli PANCAKE SYRUP 19 FROZEN CHUN KING BEEF CHOP SUEY OR CHICKEN OR SHRIMP ^ a CHUN KING chow mein; 69 1-1 , ACT I A 01 SECOND Vs GAL ValU thru Son.; July 9, 1967 at Kroger Del. i Eatt Mich. Limit Gnu Coupon. sunrise FRESH EACH 3 BAR 4|NN PACK 9M .2»ck33* 124 OFF LABEL WISE LIQUID............. ASSORTED COLORS-REGULAR SIZE LUX SOAP................. ASSORTED COLORS-BATH Stti* LUX SOAR................. WHITE OR CORAL LIFEBUOY SOAR...............W it OFF LABEL LIGHT SPRY.. >•■•••••••• lO-OjtcAN 75* FOR SPOT-FREE DISHES DISHWASHER ALL........... ...4-0ZBPKG 41* LAUNDRY detergent % COLD WATER AU .................& 73* FINAL TOUCH.................*OLtf 124 OFF LABEL m 'to mm* ( FLUFFY AU...........».. ...3 67* SAVE M C—13 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5. 1067 Shape Like Jelly Roll Spicy Shortcakes Are Different POLYNESIAN CHOPS — Smoked Pork Chops, charcoal 1 broiled and glased with a spicy sweet and sour sauce, served with fresh fruits, Polynesian style, great food forxa patio party! Easy made, attractive and delicious! £ %. Sweet Sour Sauce Gives a Polynesian Touch Polynesian style cooking is in! People living on Pacific Islands from Hawaii to New Zealand, like to “cook easy.” They roast their favorite meat, pork, over an open fire basting it while it’s cooking with a spicy sweet and sour sauce, then eat it with quantities of fruits. Folks on the U.S.A. mainland like the exotic sweet-sour pork and fruit dishes of the Pacific Islands. Glazed Smoked Pork Chops, Polynesian Style wiU be a cook-out favorite when tried. Hie chops are charcoal broiled and basted with a honey-soy sauce then served with mammoth size chunks of fruits. Smoked pork chops look like regular ones except they’re pretty and pink, about the color of ham. Some markets •ell only bone-in chops, others have only boned'ones. Both are great for broiling or frying and cook quickly, too. When cut 1 to IV* inches thick the chops charcoal broil in 30 to 33 minutes, if % to V* inch thick they broil in 20 to, 25 minutes. Try glazed smoked pork chops Polynesian style, or prepare them I ‘ . where the delicate “ham-like’ flavor will be enjoyed, you’ll like them. POLYNESIAN STYLE CHOPS fe-cupfroitey % Cup lime or lemon juice % cup light com syrup or 2 tablespoons sugar 1 % tablespoons soy sauce Vi teaspoon cloves % teaspoon grated lime or lemon rind, optional % teaspoon salt 6 thick (1 to IV* inch) smoked pork chops* 2 large oranges, peeled and sliced V» medium sized cantaloupe, peeled and seeds removed, cut into chunks Vt medium sized honeydew melon, peeled and seeds removed, cut into chunks.^ Combine first 6 ingredients in saucepan; mix and heat. Thread chops onto double pronged kabob skewers. If double pronged skewers are unavailable broil chops in greased hinged rack dr directly on greased hinged rack or directly on greased grill. Broil oh charcoal or gas grill about 5 inches above low heat until well browned on first side, about 15 minutes. Turn and cook until wen done, 12 to 15 minutes. Brush chops with sauce frequently during Thread fruit onto double pronged or single kabob skewers. Brush with glaze and warm, but not brown,- on grill, 3 to 5 minutes. Yield: 6 portions. For hearty eaters better allow 2 chops per person. Tf smoked pork chops are not available fresh pork loin or rib chops may be substituted. Lemon, Coconut to Season Pear Pie Layer four cups sliced fresh _ - ; - , winter pears with 1 cup flaked oZe*ha°LE- cocaaat Pastry shell. Drizzle pears with 1 tablespoon lemon juice and sprinkle with mixture of V* cup flour and V» cup brown sugar. Dot with butter and cover with criss-cross pastry Bake at 425 degrees for 45 i Utes. MIAMI BAKE SHOPPE Open Evenings THE PONTIAC MALL SAM A WALTER Delicious Sausage Carry Outi — 682-9811 Open Evenings PONTIAC MALL Cull and Cmy Oaimtuj Your Choice of 3 Menus Sample of Menu No. 2 A party tray consisting of the finsit Polish ham, hardtalami, pickla loaf, konay loaf.' A vafiaty of eh*#s#s, your choica of salads, picklas and olives. 25 pawns andovar.....70c |»rperson II te 24persons....... Me par parson 14 to it parson*..Mo par parson I ft 12 persMt....... Me par parson Custom party tray* mad* to your specifications from 60c to $1.75 par parson upon request. THAY DEPOSIT REQUIRED Sant and “Delicious Sausage” 1 WEDDINGS ALL OCCASIONS mENnm Far Start Naartst You Call TW 1-1200 Sat and Sun. Call PR 6*9245 ' 1 Dessert is to dinner what the epilogue is to a play, and it is a wise hostess who plans the perfect dessert to end a meal. What better epilogue than Strawberry Shortcake? A tender, flaky shortcake topped with juicy, jewel-toned strawberries and whipped cream is definitely hard to beat — unless it’s a better shortcake! Sugar Roll Shortcake is just that. Of course; it’s made with allpurpose biscuit mix. The addition of cream, cinnamon, nutmeg and nuts makes for the t tender, flavorful shortcake you can imagine, and it’s a delightful combination with the strawberries and w h i p p e d cream. Sugar Roll Shortcake is an epilogue you will want to repeat again and again. Sugar Roll Shortcake 2 cups all-purpose biscuit mix 2 tablespoons sugar % cup light cream 2 tablespoons soft butter 2 tablespoons sugar V* teaspoon cinnamon Vs teaspoon nutmeg 1 2 tablespoons chopped nuts % cup whipping cream 2 tablespoons confectioners' sugar 2 cups halved fresh strawberries, sweetened Heat oven to 450 degrees. Lightly grease baking sheet. Mix all-purpose biscuit mix, 2 tablespoons sugar and the light (cream with fork to soft dough. 20 strokes. On lightly floured cloth-covered board knead eight to 1$ times. Roll into ltxt-inch rectangle. Spread with butter. Mix 2 tablespoons sugar, the sprinkle over butter. Beginning at narrow side, roll up as far jelly roll. Pinch edges 11 seal. Cut roll into 6 slices. ★ Sr * Place slices cut side down oh prepared baking sheets with sugared fingers flatten each to 1 inch thick. Bake 10 to 12 minutes or until nicely browned. Beat whipping cream and confectioners’ sugar until stiff. Top warm rolls with strawberries and whipped cream. 6 servings. SUGAR ROLL SHORTCAKE - Here’s strawberry shortcake that’s a bit different:. It’s biscuit dough, to be sure, but there’s sugar and spice to make everything nice. The biscuits are rolled jelly-roll style. Have it often during the fresh berry season. fitoftfed Am On Safe At Fomu/i Jacfci! U.S. CHOICE ... FARMER JACK'S FAMOUS STEAK SALE CENTER CUT ROURC STEAK S^388 78 96 98 SPE0IAL OUT RIB STEAK OERTER CUT SIRLOIN STEAK CUBE OR CLUB STEAK DEL MONTE TOMATO JUICE & 25* CAN G«W DUNCAN HINES ASSORTED CAKE MIXES 1-LB. IfeEc 2V2-0Z. Xfl PKO. ■MW BEECH-NUT BRAND STR. BABY F009S 4V2-0Z. fc WT. ff JAR ■ BREAST O' CHICKEN CHUNK 0k Meo LIGHT TUNA Z4C HUNT'S SAVORY PORK AND BEANS Ttn* CAN / ■ W KELLOGG'S ASSORTED POP TARTS 35* Pkg. REYNOLDS STANDARD 12" ALUMINUM FOIL 25-FT. ORC ROLL COLD WATER DETERGENT COLD POWER «!: QQe PKG. 1414 SPECIAL LABEL AJAX CLEANSER •T Iflc CAN 1 W FAYfiO POP 10* CAMPBELL'S NOURISHING* * , TOMATO SOUP lO'/z-OZ. WT. CAN 10* ORANGE, GRAPE OR PUNCH ST0KELY DRINKS 1-QT. 14-OZ. CAN 19* CHOICE OF GRINDS-COFFEE RUSE t SANBORN $|19 I CHUCK IUUNV7 IUKIVCT DRUMSTICKS 28* GRADE'A'YOUNG HEN TURKEYS K LB. 39 CENTER CUT RIB PORK CHOPS LB. 73 3 LBS. OR MORE REALLY FRESH HAMRURG 46* U S. CHOICE BONELESS 4141* WHOLE BRISKET «■ 68° U S. CHOICE ROTISSIERE OR 4140* BONELESS RUMP » 98e U.S. CHOICE NEW ENGLAND'STYLE 4fe41< BONELESS CHUCK «- 89 'U.S. CHOICE SEMI-BONELESS "V4i< ENGLISH CUT ROASTu 79 TENDER YOUNG CHICKENS 4W4Rl PLUMP ROASTERS > 39 GRADE'A' A4le TENDER BIRDS “49* CUT UP TENDER 4W At STEW. CHICKENS “ 39 TENDER YOUNG ilill SPLIT BROILERS ° 39 WITH BACK ON JI4Rl» CHICKEN LEGS “49* FUDGESICLES or POPSICLES Fresk Dairy Foods! KRAFT 100% PURE FRESH CHILLED FLORIDA ORABfiE JUICE •/2-GAL. BTL. 37* 1 PURPOSE FARM M. ILF A HALF Brands You Trust! PETERS GRADE I SLICED URGE BOLOGNA 39* 99s 59* 49* 69° 1-LB. PKfi. HYGRADt HICKORY SMOKED SLICED BOILED NAM m. GLENDALE OUVE, DUTCH PICKLE. SPICED, SEER OR Ht> COOKED SALAMI 12-02. | HYGRADE GRADE 1 SKINLESS I4R. BALL PARK FRANKS HU. THERE'S A FARMER JACK'S NEAR YOU! n oauv we, sat. mo, sun. Prices Effective Through Sun., Juljr 9 Sorry, No Sales to Dealers PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER GLENW00D PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING GOITER DIXIE HWY. AT WILLIAMS IX BD. I ^W gp ^ 39* FARM AAAID FROZEN RED RASPBERRIES 28* WT. PKG. U.S. NO. 1 CALIFORNIA LONG-WHITE POTATOES to 69< FRESH RED RIPE WHOLE WATERMELONS 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS Visit Our Showroom At House of Bedrooms 1602 S. Telegraph Rd. PONTIAC CUSTOM CARPET PHONE 3340177 nmmmmmmmM • . PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1907 Win, Still Drop Back Bengals 'Surge to Third CLEVELAND W-Detroit’s third-place standing in the American League doesn’t faze the pennant hopes of Tigers Manager Mayo Smith. He says “the rough stretch may be behind us,1* “Our pitching has been better, and tonight our hitting .came around,’’ Smith said after the Tigers trounced Cleveland 6-1 Tuesday night. -★ ............. . Despite the victory, the Tigers dropped into third-place because Minnesota played a doubleheader and won both games over New York, 8-3 and 7-6. * * * The Tigers, Twins and Boston had been deadlocked lor second place, but the Red Sox fell before California 4-3 while league-leading Chicago was beating Baltimore 44). The Tigers stayed 3ft games out of first place. Minnesota is three games behind. “I’ve pitched much better ball,’* Earl Wilson said after he held the Indians to two hits in the victory. The Tigers displayed their own version of Fourth of July fireworks by scoring five runs in the first inning. The big blows were Bill Freehan’s two-run homer and Norm Cash’s bases-loaded single. * * * “I was staggering in the early part of the game,’’ Wilson said. “That double play saved me.’’ BASES LOADED He was talking about the second inning when Indians filled the bases on two walks and an error with one out. Gus Gil grounded into a double play to end the threat. w ★ ★ The Tigers now have won five of. seven games with A1 Kaline sidelined and Willie Horton available only for pinch hitting. “I won’t say they’re not missed because they are,” Smith said. “Sometimes, though, the others pot ont a little extra to compensate. That may be what is happening.” Leon Wagner’s lead-off home run in the fourth inning was the first hit off Wilson. Then the 31-year-old right-hander retired 14 batters in order before Cbucfc Hinton hit a pinch single with two out in the eighth. 0 ★ w Detroit filled the bases od two singles and a walk with none out in the first. Cash then rapped Steve Hargan’s first pitch for a single, driving in two. runs and advancing a runner to third. Jim Dick McAuliffe homered for the Tigers with the bases empty in the eighth. Wilson struck out nine and walked two in winning bis ninth game in 16 decisions. Wagner said he didn’t realize that his homer was the first hit off Wilson. “It was the only fast ball he ghve me all night,” he said. “Everything else was a breaking, pitch.” The Tigers, who beat the Indians 2-1 Cubs Lose Chance; Mets Top Marichal Northrup’s sacrifice fly produced another Monday night, will try to sweep i run before Freehan smashed his 12th '’series tonight, with Johnny Podres 2-0 homer of the season and scored behind as the starter. He will be opposed by Cash. John O’Donoghue 4-1. TENNIS SEMIFINALISTS — Defending champion Mrs. Billie Jean King (top photo) of Long Beach, Calif., is shown defeating Great Britain’s Virginia Wade, 7-5, 6-2, yesterday in the Wimbledon quarter-finals. Rosemary Casals (above) of San Francisco bounced up to oust Australia’s Judy Tegart, 7-5, 6-4. The third American to reach the round of four was Kathy Harter (beloW) of Seal Beach, Calif., who upset Lesley Turner of Australia,.7*5, 1-6, 6-2. Kathy Harter Blossoms for U S. at Wimbledon ren# B»lley Connolly I Takes College Post Avon Mentor Quits The college £ahtpus has lured another Oakland County high school mentor. Veteran Avondale coach John Thompson, 41, of Warren has resigned his position with the Auburn Heights school to Join thb staff'of Wisconsin State ' University at Superior. Thompson will become head baseball and freshman basketball mentor as well as work in the athletic publicity department when not busy with ids duties as an assistant professor of health and physical education *at the 3,000 student college. IBs 10-year career at Avondale included stints as assistant football, junior varsity basketball and head baseball coaches. On the diamond, his three Billy Casper Readies Defense of His Title at Speedway Course INDIANAPOLIS, Ind, UP) — Billy Casper, winner of the Canadian Open fin a playoff, will defend the championship of the, $100,000 Speedway Open Golf Tournament starting Thursday. Casper is a two-time winner erf' the Speedway Open, having won the first Hme in 1962. Other forma* winners in the event include Bruce Crampton, Dow Finsterwald and Doug Ford, the latter twice champion hero. The field also includes Julius Boros, Frank Cupit, riguez. The tournament will a practice session Tuesday and a Wednesday- Yellow Jacket teams compiled a 16-27 record that included "three invitations to the annual Pontiac High School Baseball Tournament. Thompson taught journalism, worid, history and physical education at Avondale. He is a graduate of St. Patrick’s High School in Wyandotte. He attended Mississippi College and has an MA degree in physical education from the University of Michigan. He and his wife Mary have three children: Chris, % Amy, 5; and John Jr., slrf months. At least, two other area coaches, Wailed Lake’s Dave Smith and Royaj^-' Oak Kimball’s Herb Deromadi, this year hay? taken collegiate coaching jobs; while Birmingham Groves’ Jim Gilster is returning to schbol for additional studies. No replacement has been named for Thompson at Avondale. WIMBLEDON, England UP) - Kathy Harter, a pig-tailed American girl with a socking forehand drive, goes into the semifinals of tee Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Championships Thursday and says “I owe it all to Pancho Gonzales.” Miss Harter, 20, defeated sixth-seeded Lesley Turner of Australia 7-5, 1-6, 6-2 Tuesday for the semifinal spot in her second try at Wimbledon. It was the only real upset of the quarter-final matches. ★ ★ * “After last year’s Wimbledon I decided to stay in Europe to try and improve my game,” said the girl from Seal Beach, Calif. “I based myself in the south of France and got some great coaching from Pancho Gonzales. 1 owe the improvement in my tennis all to him. ” Gonzales, a professional for many years, is considered perhaps the best player the game has ever produced. Miss Harter had something to build on during her year in Europe. In the 1966 Wimbledon tournament she reached the fourth round before being eliminated by Nancy Richey of San Angelo, Tex., America’s No. 2 player. Miss Richey herself went out in the fourth round this year. FACES CHAMPION Now Kathy meets Billie Jean Moffitt King of Lopg Beach, Calif., the reigning champion, in Thursday’s semifinals. Kathy was realistic about her chances against Billie Jean, “I’ve Beyer taken a set off her in my life,” she said. Mrs. King, of Long Beach, Calif., overcame Britain’s Virginia Wade, 7-5, 6-2, and Rosemary Casals, 18, of San Francisco defeated Judy Tegart of Australia 7-5,64. The American loser was Mary Ann Eisel, of St. Louis, who went out 2-6, 64, 5-7 in a tremendous battle with Mrs. Ann Jones, the British No. 1 play-er. Wilhelm Bungert, the tennfs star with the ice-cold nerves, had a tough semifinals date on the center court today in his bid to become Germany’s first Wimbledon champion. He faced Roger Taylor, the tough British left-hander—the man he defeat-, ed in a Davis Cup clash last year. By The Associated Press Brother turned on brother and Juan Marichal was beaten by his cousins, but the Chicago Cubs’ family fireworks fizzled when they blew a chance to turn their backs on the rest of their National League relatives. The Cubs, baseball’s Cinderella team of ' 1967 after finishing last in 1966, needed only one victory Tuesday to stand-alone in first place. Instead they lost a day-night doubleheader to Atlanta 8-3 and 4-2.- ★ , * ★ Even when Joe Niekro lost to brother Phil—the first time in major league history brothers started on the mound against each other — in the opener, the Cubs still had a chance as St. Louis dropped, its single game to Cincinnati 14. But the second game defeat dropped the Cubs out of a tie for first and left them a half game behind the Cardinals at the Fourth of Jidy milestone, from which 58 per cent of the league leaders on that date have gone on to win the pennant. Marichael also got his comeuppance as the New York Mets ontslugged San Francisco 8-7 and beat the Giant ace for the first time in their history after losing to him 19 times. Elsewhere in the league, Pittsburgh outlasted Los Angeles 9-7 and Philadelphia swept a pair from Houston 9-0 and 45 in 11 innings. * The Cubs managed just four hits off Phil Niekro’s knuckleball while his younger brother left after Mack Jones’ .first of three homers for the day and Rico Carty’s first of two had broken a 2-2 tie in toe third. Phil, 27, and rookie Joe, 22, agreed the meeting was rougher on their father, Phil Sr., than it was on them. ' “He made his first plane trip to see us pitch," Phil said, “and it was pretty hard on him.” “I never dreamed I’d have two boys in toe big leagues,” said Phil -Sr., who flew in from Lansing, Ohio. “When Joe made it, I knew this would happen sometime. It’s too bad it didn’t happen, a couple of years from now. It would have given Joe more of a chance to get over toe shakes. Carty hit a two-run homer in the nightcap and Jones a solo shot, to com-- plete the disappointing day for the Cubs. Rookie Gary Nolan, 7-2, slammed the door on the Cardinals with a three-hitter, outdueling Larry Jaster. Deron Johnson drove in the run with one out in the ninth inning as the Reds ended a four-game losing streak. The Mets hammered Marichal for 14. hits, the last a two-run single by Ron Swoboda in the sixth for an 8-3 lead. Yankees Obtain Steve Barber MINNEAPOUS-ST. PAUL UF) -The New York Yankees, searching for starting pitching help, have taken on Stove Barber and his history of arm trouble. The Yankees obtained Barber, 28, from toe Baltimore Orioles Tuesday night for a sum of money they announced was over the $20,000 waiver price and two players to.be named later — one a major leaguer and the.other from too minors. * “Obviously, we think Barber can help us, or we wouldn’t have dealt for him/’ Yankee Manager Ralph Houk commented. “We know about his history, and we think he’s got a lot of pitching left Mays Is, Added NL All-Star Team CINCINNATI (UPI)—Wondrous Willie Mays of foe San Francisco Giants, who foiled to earn a starting berth in this year’s All-Star game for foe first time since 1956, was added to the National League squad along with eight other players' today. ★ * Jr who has a lifetime All-Star irted in 14 games from He finished fourth ip, for outfielders be-Clemente, At-Lou Brock of MID-SUMMER SALE CARPET CLEARANCE FOR QUALITY & SAVINGS Carpet + Pad+ Installation NAME BRAND HEAVY NYLON Carpet Pad Installation $R49 ** ya The price of 5.49, which includos sponge rubber padding and tackles* installation is equal ta the everyday value of the carpet alone. V\ For Convenient In The Homo Showing DEAL DIRECT 334-1177 REMNANTS WOOL 12‘x7Vi' Reg, 109 Kelly Green Sale Price 501 NYLON Reg Geld 9 MR8* Sale Price NYLON Regular $6 99 10-Year Guarantee INDOOR-OUTDOOR Reg Salo Price HERCUL0N PLUSH Reg 143 Sale Price THE WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 19K7 Pan key Close to Perfect No-Hitter Highlights A' Play Th« Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department's Class A baseball players had a big Fourth of July with season high points set in all three games Tuesday at Jaycee Park. Booth Homes’ Rick Pankey made the biggest impression with a no-hit gem against Oakland University — coming within one batter of perfect game. Pankey (34) allowed only a one-out second-inning walk In a 24 victory. The win kept the home builders a half game behind loopleading M. G. Collision who needed nine innings to down Holds 5-Shot Lead LISBON (UPI) - French', ers, led by Bligitt Varnagot’s 75, amassed a 228 point total Tuesday to take a five shot lead over England in the first round of the European Ladies Team Championships at the Penina Golf Course. ■ ■I CARL'S GOLFLAND • lm S. Ttltfraph ns. winless U. A. W. 653, 34, as Walt Miller set a season high of 20 strikeouts In pitching a one-hitter. The third game was the season’s longest. Lake Orion’s Cardinals nipped Talbott Lumber, 3-2, in 11 innings. Pankey tripled and doubled at Buck passer Has Family Success to Maintain NEW YORK (UPI) - Like father, like son — and a little bit like mother, too. Buckphsser, following the family tradition, overcame a 133-pound impost and a determined challenge by Ring Twice Tuesday to capture the $109,800 Suburban Handicap at Aqueduct with a blistering stretch drive. Ogden Phipps’ wonder colt, whose dam, Busanda, won the Suburban in 1951, moved toward the feat accomplished by his sire, Tom Fool, who in 1953, captured all three legs of the New York Handicap Triple Crown. Buckpasser, who gained the first leg on Memorial Day with a victory in the Metropolitan, now needs only to win the Brooklyn Handicap, July 22, to equal Tom Fool’s sweep and win his 17th consecutive dirt track race. TUT the plate, scoring the only run he needed on Dan Fife’s first-inning sacrifice fly. The slender right-hander posted five strikeouts in retiring the final 17 hitters ta order. The league’s only other no-hitter this season was an abbreviated five-inning performance by C. I. O.’s Rich Goldsworthy. Left-hander Miller (3*1) of M. G. whiffed the first five hitters he faced and 13 of the first 17 against U. A. W. He retired 11 straight batters in the latter stages of the game. Chuck Kirken’s two-run double broke the scoreless tie in the ninth. Kirken also had t w o singles in the game as did teammate Jerry Harkey. Ivan Mat-tines had the losers’ only safe- Lake Orion (5*7) climbed within a game of sixth place as Rick Eriksen eluded the catcher’s tag on a close play at the plate in the last of the eleventh. Earlier Eriksen drove in the Cardinals’ first run and scored the tying marker on Erik Erik-sen’s seventh-inning single. Jim HOrner, who saved Lake Orion’s upset win over Cranbrook Sunday, came back to blank Talbott over the final six innings. SOOTH HOMIS OAKLAI AIIM With RunawaVW(in The Pontiac Boys’ Club opened its First Federal Savings’ baseball program Tuesday with the Phillies shackling the Pirates, 14-3. Jeff Dalton blasted a home run and held the Pirates to one hit. 'Catcher Wes Powell homered twice to drive in five runs: Derrick Peoples’ three-run homer was the only hit for the losers. ' The program’s annual field day of individual events featured the pace-setting efforts of Mark White in the junior division and George Langton i among the older boys. West Team Improving Grid Work pMrwn rf 2 1 1 Sulims e » 0- Honchetl 3b 3 0 1 Mum by rt 2 0 Burton If I I I Quick p 3 0 Tttait 33 l I Totals tl • Booth Homos .......... too 000 1-3 I Oakland U. ........... OOO 000 0-0 0 DOUBLE — Pankoy. • TRIPLE — PankoV. RBI — Flto, Burton. PITCH- ING - Pankay 7 IP, f SO, 1 W; Quick 7 IP, 3 H, 2-3 R-ER, 4 SO, 3 W, WIN-NTR — Pankay | | ., . LOSER - Quick ATLANTIC UTI - “We were a lot better today,’’ West Coach Bob Devaney of Nebraska said after sending his team through a two-hour practice session Tuesday in preparation for. Saturday night’s Coaches All-America football game. * * A Devaney, unhappy after Monday’s lackluster drill, said, “We really seemed to know what we were doing. Our defense was pretty well coordinated and our quarterbacks Were throwing a lot better, although we’re still not completing too many pass- 58.” The East squad had one man leave the field early in the practice when Tennessee’s All-America linebacker, Paul Naumoff, pulled a back muscle. East head Coach Tom Cahill, of Army, did not seem to be too concerned over the injury. Cahill said the injury was minor and that Naumoff Bhould be able i go at full speed in 24 hours. Over 38,000 persons saw the game last year, the first time it was played in Atlanta’s new $18 million stadium. Previously, the game had been played in Buffalo, N. Y. FIGHT RESULTS TOKYO - Fighting Hsrado, 1 outpointed Bernardo Caraballo, New PT 100 » 4 HEAVY PLYS NYLON CORD CONSTRUCTION » Contour shouldor wraparound tread for extra traetien and stability. Armstrong’s exclusive full depth safety sipo for unaiatehed traetio.. ■ on wet and dry roads. LIFETIME- sue 110x13 Whitewalls $3.00 Mara. nmm Fad. Tax Ct.lt SERVING OAKL4ND COUNTY OVER 35 YEARS laielle Agency, Inc. ALL FORMS OF ■X INSURANCE zjljet- =P 504 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. Closed Saturdays—Emergency Phone FE 5-0314 Phone FE 5-8172 Yank Bowlers Try to Rally MALMOE, Sweden (UPI) -The favored United States bowling team will attempt to battle back from a surprising 11th place finish in Tuesday’s opening round when it goes into the second round today in the World Bowling Championships. Switzerland was the first round leader with 2,891 points, followed by Finland and Italy. Hie Americans piled up a 2,725 point total. California Sloop Leads LOS ANGELES (AP) - Kiloa II, a 73-foot sloop out of Newport Harbor, Calif, took the early lead Tuesday in the transpacific Ocean yacht race from Los Angeles to Hawaii. Audacious, a 73-foot’ yawl, was second as the field of 71 craft rounded the west end of Catalina Island. FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER SPECHL FREE BONUS GIFT with the Purchase of a Refrigerator Six 12-01. tumblers with tho popular rich look of burlap. Double wall ineulation — everything mat'* tGrv#d is a sastful trGat. Drinks •fay refreshingly cold or temptingly hot. Crafted of "Lustran/ the hew ifdih-reiiitont hfgh Impact matertal, they do not "eweot" or leave rings — coasters ore never necessary. From giant top freezer to spacious 10.98 ,cu. ft: fresh food section, it's made to store! Shelves are full-width, full-depth. Twin vegetable Hydrators hold up to 23.4 qti. — and deep door shelf holds even halfgallon milk cartons! Famous Flip-Quick lea Ejector takes thp mess and bothar out of .getting ice cubes. 11 Best of ail, it's 100% Frost-Proof. MODEL FPD-15TL-1 COPPER, GREEN OR WHITE RIGHT OR LEFT HAND DOOR @) consumers Power 8th ANNUAL OAKLAND COUNTY OPEN TENNIS TOURNAMENT Sponsored by the Pontiac Press and Pontiac Recreation Department • MEN'S SINGLES and DOUBLES • JUNIOR SINGLES and DOUBLES (Bey* 17-and-Undor) OMEN'S SENIOR SINGLES (33-tmd-Ovar) J JULY 14-15-16 JULY 21 -22-23,1967 OAKLAND UNIVERSITY TENNIS COURTS Events (please check entry) Men's Singlet Nam*................. Junior Singles (ENTRY 50c) Senior Singles (ENTRY 50c) Men's Doubles (tl .00 FER TEAM) Entry Deadline: 4 P.M. Wednesday, July 12,1967 Submit foe* with ontiy form* to: Pontiac Press Sport* Deportment or Pontine Roc root ion Department, City Hall American League Louis ...... _...cago ........ Cincinnati ....... rerk MOrn,n,M> 020—3 . Minnesota ......... 130 030 01x—I 1« Verbanlc, Monbouquette (5), Hamll — id Gibbs; Grant end Nixon. I 5-4. L—Vtrbanic, 3-2. runs — Minnesota Now York, Mantle, 3, (14). nnesota, Oliva (7). Washington 040 » Kansas City 700 000 01< Ortaga, Linas (I), Knowles Casanova; Krausse, Sanford Lemaster, Jorvlt ( Homo runs^-Atlonta, Carty (10), . lasanova, m oubgc, Roof. W—Ortaga, 4-S. Washington, Howard, ( Washington Kansas City . Prlddy. Cox (51 Casanova; Nash a Baltlmort Chicago Riche rt and Nertney. w— ootTooo ooo—o 110 300 OOx—4 . . Humphreys (7) and 000 021 01X—4 lebarran, John ant 7-5. L-RIChort, ‘ DO 003—3 t 10 OOx—4 7 Today's Gamas Detroit (Podres 3-0) at Cleveland (O'-lenaghue 4-1), night Washington (Moore 3-7) at Kensai Dobson 4-S), night New York (Parkins M,) at Minnesota Keat, 44), Inight) Baltimore (Adamson 0-0) at Cl Thursday's Gamas Baltimore at Chicago Only game scheduled.__________ Sets Hurdles Mark ZURICH, Switzerland (UPJ)-Italy’s Eddy Ottoz Tuesday broke the Italian record for the 106-meter hurdles when covered the distance in 13.5 seconds to highlight a 15-nation I track meet. Tuesday's Results Natienal League Morning Game , Oil 001 000-3 202 020 20x-K- ■ d Brand; Sh I, 5-2. L-GI Ison, Ellars (5), Somber* (7), Latin) and Adlaah; Sunning, G. Jack- IIS .Mitty xlOS 112 Milt Nashmont 113 HURRY! 3 DAYS , ONLYIi 122 Cusaalot xllO US Aural* Baa no 110 Count Graphic US 122 Bouncing Judy x112 110 'Johnny Plaaio 112 11S Tabby's Pride 112 122 Mlu Nancy C. 107 aiming. (Vfc Furlongs •t US Gordian US xlOS Mark Prlnca US I 117 Wheaty US X107 Big Plaasura 117 TUBELESS NYLON CORD FISK CUSTOM Love Conlura 1, Firm Bull Dally Daublei (S-l) Paid $77A* Peters Matusa Slava Soldlar Plana 4th—*2200: Claiming, Flowing Wall William Stavans Omnlgraph Sth—$2200: Optional I Tufty Twist a—T. A. Grissom 7.00/7.35x14 1 l/l 4th Milas Bya Bye Bird Mirada Hflr Astro Las 7.50/7.75x14 Orhher Dear Mika Francis U 10th—$3300: Claiming, 6.70/7.75x15 Protect. your bumper from exhaust stains. ... chrom*J>lated. I Fast spinning action .. .* get that needed leverage for loosening and tightening cor nut*. By the Associated Press Tommy John’s staying power has helped the Chicago White Sox cheat the undertaker again. But Minnesota’s rampaging Twins won’t let the American League leaders catch their breath. * * Sr John pitched a two-hitter and singled home Chicago’s first run In 31 innings Tuesday, leading the White Sox to a 4-0 victory over Baltimore. The slim left-; hander’s full-route performance was the first for the Sox in their last seven games. “His going the route couldn’t come at a more opportune time,’’ said Manager Eddie Stanky. “Our bullpen is exhausted and needs rest, especially with the four-game weekend with Minnesota coming up.’’ The Sox collide with the Twin?, who have won seven in a row, at Chicago over the weekend. ’ * * .•* p p Tommie Agee lashed three singles, drove In two runs and scared one to lead the White Sox’ attack against loser Pete Ricbert. OLIVA STARS Oliva, sound again after a series of injuries and ailments, lifted Minnesota past the Yankees In their nightcap with a run-scoring single in the ninth. Earlier in the game he had tripled a run home and singled. In the opener, he belted a bases-empty homer, drove in another run with a sacrifice fly and also had a single. While extending his hitting streak to five games, Oliva’s 5-for-9 day lifted his batting mark to .250. ★ * * Lost in the Twins’ sweep were a pair of first-game homers by Mickey Mantle that sent the Yankee slugger past Mel Ott into the fifth spot on the all-time list with 512. ★ ★ Tom Satriano’s two-run single capped a three-run burst in the second inning as the Angels built a 4-1 lead, then held off the Red Sox. Reliever Minnie Rojas survived a two-fun ninth to preserve rookie Rick Clark’s fourth straight victory. ★ * * Frank Howard’s 20th homer, a three-run wallop in the fifth, powered Washington past the A’s in their opener but- Jim Nash blanked the Senators on six hits in the nightcap. The split enabled each club to snap a four-game losing streak. The American consumer is now spending only 18.2 per cent of his dollar for food and drinks, as compared to about 24 per cent at the end of World War II. Minnesota’s Tony Oliva, meanwhile, drove two more coffin nails into the New York Yankees, stroking the key hits in an 8-3, 7-8 doubleheader sweep that carried the Twins into second place, three games behind Chicago. The double setback dropped the eighth place Yankees eight games under .500. After last July 4 they were seven under the break-even mark and headed for the cellar. son’s two-hitter, California checked Boston’s four-game winning streak 4-3 and Kansas City blanked Washington 4-0 after losing the doubleheader opener 4-3. John, 7-5, stymied the Orioles except for a leadoff triple by Luis Apazlcio in the fourth inning and a sixth inning single by the Baltimore shortstop. He struck out six and did not walk batter. STREAK CHECKED Elsewhere, Detroit whipped Cleveland 0-1 behind Earl Wil- Race Results, Entries ---- WYOssa You've got the number of a true bourbon. TEN HIGH is Hiram Walker Bourbon. Tro* Bourbon. Great Bourbon. Sip it slow and easy. Enjoy this exceptional 86 proof straight Bourbon whiskey, so sensibly priced. $4°s $25® Northville Entries WUDNHDAY ENTRIES l«t—**00; Conditioned Trot, 1 Mllai GN U. Colby Peter R. J. I I 1M King Echo Lou’s Jewel 110 Indian Gama Light Intention, 11] George Zoo . xllO 3rd—*3700: Allowance,. * Furlong, Brock Bruih lit e-KIng Jam** County xlll Almont More C* State Legislature. 3) Allows certain disabled per- 8) Adding new seven-day licenses for all fish priced at $3 for residents and 15 for non-residents. 7) Introducing a one-day, SI license for both residents and non-residents' to fish for trout salmon in the Great Lakes. Awaits Governor’s Signature. HOUSE BILL 2717 - This so-called "omnibus” bill makes several changes In the hunting laws, including: 1) Renewal of Commission authority , to allow elk hunting. 2) Deer regulations | 4* k?8*.'^ kills, embracingjgong j,unj small game from most of the Coroervation ^-Landing vehicles. 4) Bans use pertinent's 1967 legislative pro- of artificial lights to "shine” gram, have been passed by both|game unlesg any weapona are houses. . locked in the car trunk or stored ' . , . , lin a closed compartment of a Some have been signed into |station wagon or truck, law, and a number await Gov- 5) Makes it illegal for a ^ ernor George Romney's signa-|er ^ a vehicle uglng an _ WgKM *.fe c»^»'^^ncW dai light to fail to stop on sig-!must be submitted to tiie Joint of 0fficer Awaits Governor’s Committee on Legislative Rules each yew, whether of not Legi^ parks admission fee was de- ASHING LICENSES 'lature is in session, feated. 1 HOUSE BILL 2772 - Revamp 3) Deer archery season ini As of July 1, the scorecard onjfishing license fee structure by: southern Michigan extended to major legislative action reads 1) Raising the basic resident December 31, except closed dur-t like this: [fishing license from $2 to $3 forjing gun season. 4) Changes HOUSE BILL 2005 — Makes'anglers under 65. .2) Establish-[deer season opening date several changes in the basiding a separate 02 resident li- (House version sets. November| game laws including: 1) In ad-cense for .trout and salmon fish-il5 opener/ Senate prescribes ing, and replacing the present I third Saturday -in November — $2 trout stamp. jin conference). , 3) Extending t*he fishing] ★ * ★ IHHPPL________________________ license requirement to the Great 5) permits setting of antler- of $200-3300 for elk, 0100-3200 for iLakes. 4) Increasing the annual jles«. deer seasons on basis of deer and bear, 35-310 for small]non-resident fishing license fromjtraffic hazards. 6) Unlawful to game and waterfowl. The 35 to 36. 5) Establishing a spec- pegjess live skunks taken in money is to go into Game and|ial 33 rton-resident license for Michigan. 7) Prohibits taking Fish Protection Fund. jtrout and salmon. '0f cub bears (Senate version lonly), and "broadens Conservation Commission’s authority to set bear seasons in Upper [peninsula. 8) Clarifies law by 'making it illegal to kill morei [than one elk, one deer, or one bear during any calendar year. •) Allows raccoon trapping only daring muskrat trapping season. 13) Mink may be hunted and trapped only daring muskrat season. 11) Permits non-residents to hunt Boss Fishing Good on County Waters Bass fishing continues good on I hatches resulted in good catches Oakland County waters, but the above Mio on the Au Sable early take of panfish has started to I last week, but the expected NICE STRING—A netful of fine eating is shown in this picture. These walleyes were caught off Drummond Island in upper Lake; Huron. This area has become one of the wall-' eye hot spots in the state over the years. Fish up to eight pounds are being taken. Parasites to Blame Swimmer's Itch Breaking Out dition to fines and costs, violators must reimburse the state for value of game birds and animals illegally taken, at rates Chinook Salmon Added to Michigan's Sport Fish carried by certain kinds of Michigan's recently Introduced chinook salmon aren’t keeper size yet and probably won’t make much angling news for a couple of years, but they have gained official status as this state’s newest sport fish. The newcomers, hoped to produce trophy catches at upwards of 15 pounds in two-three years, joined the state’s growing sportfishing lineup last week when the Conservation Commission placed them under hook and line regulations already covering trout and coho salmon. The commission’s action, immediately put chinook on the catch list in the Great Lakes. It’s extremely unlikely .that these fish, planted at three inches in May, have reached the minimum size limit of 12 inches in these big waters where the season on them runs through November 30. However, judging from how coho grew in the Great Lakes last year, some chinook might well become legal catches before November’s end. The daily possession limit for Chinook in the Great Lakes and inland lakes is Jpcluded under the trout and coho salmon quo- upstream spawning, runs this fall. However, for the record, the Commission set the season on them from August 1 through September 10 in all inland waters in specially designated waters, already open to action on coho salmon, rainbow and brown trout., The minimum chinook sizej limit for these waters matches the one for trout and coho. In rivers and streams, the existing trout and coho limit of 10 fish or 10 pounds plus one fish was extended to cover chinook. Black Fly Bite Causes Death of Vacationer SAULT STE. MARIE, Qnti (UFI) — Canadian authorities Tuesday said the bite of a black fly brought on the heart attack-death of a vacationer from Michigan. , * 4r . $ An autopsy showed the fly bite that Arthur W.. Fateley, 52, Dearborn, received Saturday caused an infection in the larynx that brought on the fatal heart attack Monday . Fateley,. a Ford Motor Co. employe, complained about the bite minutes before he collapsed in \,a cabin on Buck Lake, author-ities said. <■ * lr fr 1 * 1 He had been vacationing in the northern Ontario woods with his wife and two friends only a few days when he was stricken. Bison Manager Picked BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - Don Zimmer, manager of Knoxville In the Southern Baseball League, #as appointed Tuesday night new manager of the Buffalo Bisons Of the International League, succeeding Lou Fitz-g era Id who will become the Knoxville manager. ta: five fish, not exceeding 10 pounds plus one fish. Swimmer’s itch, bane of summer .bathers, is breaking out again in a number of Lower Michigan waters, particularly in the southwestern part of the state. Michael Newton, aquatic biologist for the Conservation Department’s Water Resources Division, reports his unit recently received 20-30 complaints of swimmers itch, most of which came from the Kalamazoo and Paw Paw areas. Also reporting this week that the problem is picking up lasts about a week, in that part of the state was Louis Gray, the department’s law supervisor for the Plain-well District. snails. Snails generally shed these parasites in greatest numbers during hot spells and when ithey do, the little troublemakers seek waterfowl to plant their eggs. However, the real “rub” results when the small organ- ] isms come into contact with , swimmers and burrow into | their skin leaving tiny red | spots which swell, itch and fes-ter. Unless quick measures j are taken, discomfort usually sulphate, which combats swimmer’s itch. of a lack of legal authority, the division itself cannot buy chemicals or treat-lakes for swimmer’s itch. Hit Streaks Shortening? Those young chinook will still not be mature enough to make , . ,. . Iin«tnw»m .nauunino mnc this 12 > Ra)SeS f°r dUPllCate; deer license from 50 cents to Causing all the discomfort for swimmers are tiny parasites, called “cercar-iae,” which are The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed below, has been taken from Richard Alden Knight’s Solunar Tables. Plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory hunting in good cover during these times, if you wish to find the best sport that each day has to offer. intern DiyligM Tim* A.M. P.M. Day Minor Major Minor Mo|or Today 4)30 10:10 7:10 10:45 Thursday . . 5:10 11UW 8:10 11:40 Friday .......5:55 1!:» 0:05 12:35 Saturday ... 5:45 12:55 9:55 — 31. Passed by both houses, but differences yet to be resolved. HOUSE BILL 2408 - Makes a number of changes in fishing j laws. Among them: 1) Prohibits' sale of any fish oaught without! a commercial license. 2) Opens! bass season on Memorial Day instead of June 1. 3 ) All species of trout would have same size and creel limits. 4) Places size and creel limits on all trout caught in Great Lakes. 5) Allows brook trdut to be caught during special extended seasons, along with rainbow and browns. 6) Permits designation of lakes where pike under 20| inches can be legally taken if desirable as a management measure. Passed by both houses, but differences yet to be resolved, HOUSE BILL 2160 - Allows Michigan residents in military service to obtain free deer and small game licenses while furlough. Signed into law. CHICAGO - (NEA) - Long hitting streaks, many experts feel, may be a thing of the Best defense against swim- past because of the trejnd to-mer’s itch is to stay out of wat- ward multiple pitching change ers where it is reported or sus- during a game in recent years, pected, advises Newton, a mem-1 Evidence in support is: The her of the Water Resources longest streak of consecutive Division’s three-man team of games with a hit during the beach treatment specialists. j 1966 season was 28, by Ron * * * Santo of the Chicago Cute. If you’re not sure about the Santo’s skein was the longest threat of swimmer’s itch in wat- since Ken Boyer, then of the _ ■/'ll lers w^ere you’ve been swim- Cards, hit 29 in a row foiKPrvat on ClubiM1®a go**1 sh°wer after- IUII3GI vailUII vlUU>jwanjg and yours„if thor-n ill Arp loughly, says Newton. If you’re tied New Utticers already peppered with red spots, apply a drying lotion such as % iomine to relieve the itching! MANISTEE (AP) — Dr. John sensation. Si Gra"!l IJav®n has''COMPLAINTS FILED ' been elected president of th“ taper off. During the long, holiday weekend, several good catches of black bass were made at Lakeville, Orion and Valley lakes. i” R a p p a 1 a was a top producer. WWW Big b 1 u e g i 1 Is have started moving off the spawning1 areas to deeper water and the smaller ones have, taken over the shallows. Plenty of three 4-5 inchers are being caught. The angler who knows where—and how—to fish deep with crickets will be successful on the larger bluegills. Woodhull Lake has been yielding some nice perch. So have Union and Maceday. There have been no challengers to the current leaders in The Pontiac Press Big Fish Derby. Topping the black bass division is a 7-pound, 2-ounce largemouth. An 8-pound walleye leads the pike class. Anglers entering the heaviest fish in each class will receive 350 savings bonds. The deadline is Sept. 5. All residents of Oakland Cotinty are eligible and the fish must be caught in county waters. Entries must be brought to The Press sports department between 7 a.m. and 2 p.m. Monday through Saturday for weighing. BIG CATCH David Dodd, 6, of 431 Delcourt Lake Orion, battled a 10-inch bass into submission Sunday afternoon at Bunny Run Lake near his home. Dave Burtch, 4177 Morgan, landed a 5-pounder the same dav while fishing Woodhull. The caddis hatch on northern 'big” night never came. A few drakes also are appearing on the river. Camping 'Hot Line' Ready for Action The Department of Conservation has set up “hot lines” through its Roscommon Field Office and Detroit Information Office to keep recreationists posted on where they have the best chances to find camping space at state parks in the northern Lower Peninsula. Under this new service, campers may call Roscommon (Area Code 517) 275-5135 at their own expense daily between 9:30 and 10 a.m. and from 4:30 to 5 p.m. to learn which of the region’s parks have campsite vacancies. The same up-to-date information is available Tuesday through Friday by dialing the department’s Detroit Information Office: 868-1640. i 1959:1 trout is just about over. Fair Boating Week Is Under Way Governor George Romney has proclaimed this week as National Safe Boating Week in Michigan and is urging users of the state’s waterways to "learn and observe boating safety practices and emergency procedures.” With half a million watercraft plying the state’s lakes and streams, Gov. Romney stresses: "The more boats in use, the greater the potential hazard ... we must pay increased attention to the basic principles of boatihg safety.”’. ,000 member Michigan Conservation Clubs. He defeated Dr. Fred Brown Michigan residents suspecting the swimmer’s itch problem in their lakes may file complaints through the Water of Midland and Lester Newbold division to seek help. nf Uorrionn at fho nlnke* annual dm of Harrison at the clubs’ annual meeting Saturday. ★ ★ * Larry DeBow of Battle Creek, Louis Michalski of Detroit and Jack Sisson of Escanaba were elected vice presidents. Gordon Hornsby Jr. of Grand Rapids defeated incumbent treasurer Weldon Payne of Detroit. The division follows up these complaints by sending its beach treatment specialists to problem lakes where water samples are taken in an effort to find whether there are snails present that are carrying cercariae. If these specialists find snails with , the jtch-causing parasites, Salut Ste. Marie was selected (they will give lakeland owiiers as the site for the -1968 conven-| techical advice on applying a] chemical, usually copper [ Dedication Scheduled Ceremonies will be held Sunday to dedicate - P. J. master State Park on Lake Michigan in Muskegon and Ottawa WE USED OUR MIGHTY BRING YOU THESE VALUES!, 9 Save more every day at Bill Kelley's Seat Cover King—Expert workmanship — Lowest Prices — Instant Credit. *29“ Clear Plastic SEAT COVERS Oil88 Get set for the Summer and Vacation trips with smart, dear plastic seat covers especially designed for particular drivers. *90 AUTO TOPS WE REPUCE CONVERTIBLE REAR WINDOWS AND ZIPPERS VINYL ROOF 499S Look1 exactly like original equipment, All work done by skilled craftsmen, $«9.95 value. INSTANT CREDIT ALL WORK GUARANTEED! Bill Kelley's SEAT COVER Telephone PC M3M Open Daily • sjn. to 6 p.m. THE NEW HOME OF SUZUKI MOTORCYCLE Free! • Refreshments • Souveniers EASY TERMS AVAILABLE 1 MORE GALS PER MILE THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY July 6,7,8 - Stop in from 8:30 to 9 p.m. SUZUKI STINGRAY X-5 Come In! Register to Win a FREE MOTORCYCLE See it on display in our new showroom ‘•“'Um must he I S » - to mgistnr) 4667 Dixie Highway SCRAMBLER For powerful fun, wind up a crooked trail on the Scrambler. The ^OOcjc Dual-Stroke engine is teamed with a 5-speed transmission that puts 23 horses under you, leaves the quarter mile behind in 16 seconds. SALES AND I SERVICE (Across from Keeuey Electric) 673-6458 D—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 mm The following are top prices covering sales, of locally grown produce by growers and sold by ti -m in wholesale package lots Quota! ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Produce FRUITS Applts, Delicious, Rad, bu. Apples, Oallcloui, Rad, C.A., bu. Applas, Northern Spy, bu. .... Applet, Northern Spy, C.A., bu. .. Applet, Steele Red, bu. ........ Applet. Stoele Red, C.A., bu. Fees, Orton, bu. ............ Radishes, Rod. dz. bch. Radishes, white, dz. bch. Rhubarb, Outdoor, dz. bch. LRTTUCR AND OREENS NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market rallied vigorously early Wednesday afternoon as Wall Streeters returned to their desks, many of them after a four-day weekend. Gainers outnumbered losers by more than 2 to 1 as prices rose on a broad front, blue chips las well as the more volatile glamor issues. After a couple of weeks of decline, the market began to show some signs of life in Monday’s very slow semi-holiday when volume dipped to the lowest this year, six million shares. Escarde, Bleached, I Lettuce, Bibb, pk. t Lettuce, Beaton, dz. Lettuce, Heed. bu. Lettuce, Head, dz. Lettuce, Lent, bu. Lettuce, Romalne, t Poultry and Eggs Mr pound for ducklings, 31. vv5ffi& paid per dozen by first receiver* < Including UJ.): White Grade A |umbo, 33-3», extra large, 29-30i large, 26-28; medium, M-iIVkt small, 12. CHICAGO BUTTER, BOGS s c WEogs 82V* 8196 82'* -t I 1396 1396 1396 V4 40Ve 3996 3996 - 25 201* 1994 1996 4 80 4396 43V* 4366 4 6 30V* 3066 30'* - 31 2396 2366 2396 20 3596 3596 : 16 11096 II STaSi ’.to Occident .80b OhioEdls 1.30 PM 1* -N— 14 73VS 7294 73'* 4 20 451* 4596 4596 . 2 2096 2066 2096 . 24 2696 261* 2696 4-37 8094 80V* 80'* 4-37 21V* 21V* 2146 — 23 10696 1061* 106'* 14 49 4896 4896 — 0 461* 46 '• 461* 5 5996 591* ,5996 4- 6 311* *1096 3096 4-49 Si* 4194 4214 + 129 10246 101% 102% 4-1 1 5146 5166 5146 7 41% 4096 41'* 4- 4 71 77% 78 55 60% 591* 8016 + 23 701* 6994 70 . „ Petrol , PaeTRT U0 — * Sul .60 18 29% 2896 29% 4- —P— 16 '’3496 34% 34% 4-7 2696 24% 2696 -10 23% 23 23% .. 904 1496 14% 14% 4- 89 27V4 2696. 27% 4-358 3094 30% 3046 4-21 3396 3366 3366 I RR 2.40a -nnzeil 1.40 4 113% 112 113% 4-2 9 19% 18% 11% —1 3 #*/&.■ $ ..... 41 39 W% » 4-196 —R— 59 5096 5066 5096 4-3 27% 27 Vita, 3166 31% 3146- 29 16% 16% 1696 4- 34 V* 3366 3366 — 66 I 36% 38V* 36% - U II 36% 36% 36% - 32 2596 2566 2566 . 42 2296 2296 22’* - 94 6496 639* 64% 28 27% 2796 27% 10 61% 61% 61% 26 5096 50 5096 Federal Regulation to Stir New Debate Its contents were not revealed. But Gozailan was quoted as saying he and Nasser had discussed ways to increase cooperation between Egypt and the Red Sea republic’s government, which is deadlocked in a civil war with royalist tribes The tribes have supported Imam Mohammed el Badr since he was overthrown in 1962. In an interview recently published here, Sallal said Egypt and Yemen were expected to|MERE RIPPLES adopt some form of unity soon. I These two actions, though im- By JOHN.CUNNITF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK—Federal regulation of industry is going to provide some pf the hottest national c ontroversies ijnanyl months to come and could lead even to a^ new: look at the reg-j ulatory agen-cies themselves. The .chief sub-| ject will probably be cigarettes, but the CUNNIFF implications will go much farther and include many industries. That much has been assured by two recent events. ★ ★ ★ First, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has proposed that radio and television stations balance cigarette commercials with public service announcements warning of the dangers of smoking. S&ond, the Federal Trade; Commission (FTC) has found the health-hazard warning sign on cigarette packages to be ineffective and has recommended to Congress that the message be made to sound more deadly by sonable" number of announce^ ments? * * * At stake in such a decision would be the rights and good health of Americans, the rights of broadcasters, the rights of cigarette manufacturers and the rights of the federal government. The second decision, by. the FTC, indicates that cigarettes do cause death by cancer and News Lockout Is Ruled Legal NLRB Cites Court, Reverses Decision other diseases, a finding that the cigarette industry still does not concede as factual. MORE WARNINGS? This decision opens the possi- ’ bility, critics say, that an endless assortment of products, some of which have not yet been invented, may be required to carry warnings that will dampen consumer enthusiasm. Such problems as these cannot be worked out without fireworks, and so the sparks will fly in testimony and court cases before resolutions are,achieved. But understandings and compromises have been achieved in numerous previous cases. # * A In previous years, other in- , dustries have sat in the regulatory spotlight, among them railroads before the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC), the stock market before the Securities and Exchange Commis-(SEC), utilities under the Federal Power Commission (FPC) and corporate mergers probed by the Justice Department. WASHINGTON (AP) - The * National Labor Relations | Board, citing the effect of a * Supreme Court decision, re- J versed itself Tuesday and ruled that a 1962 lockout of employees Americans cannot ignore the by The Detroit News did not vi- ^ ^ at these agencies were aImIo *li4> t ohnr Polotinnc Ar»t . , ° , set up for the very purpose of olate the Labor Relations Act. The NLRB said the court de- adding “may cause death from cision wiped out any difference cancer and other diseases.’’ j between an offensive and a de- fensive lockout. 7294 726* 7294 4 Although Egyptian troops are keeping the Republicans in power in the areas of Yemen that they hold, Cairo has been silent on the unity overtures. TROOPS WITHDRAWN In the wake of Egypt’s defeat by Israel, however, Nasser is reported to have pulled thousands of his troops out of Yemen. Observers here consider it unlikely that Nasser would agree to outright union with Yemen, which would be a liability to him. But they think some measures of unity may be agreed to in an attempt to offset the withdrawal of the Egyptian troops. The board, in 1964, had found) the News guilty of unfair labor practices in \ocking out some of portant, are merely like ripples that later could become waves. That, at least, is the immediate reaction of some businessmen in advertising, communications and tobacco who have felt the first shock waves. First, they ask, if radio and television are to statef the other side of the cigarette story—the one that features bedridden cancer patients instead of playful young men and women—who is to determine what is a “rea- p^eSg jn jgg2 RECONSIDERATION keeping business practices within certain limits and that, legally and morally, they have an obligation to act in the publio good. FAILURE OF INDUSTRY Many of their activities, in 0 .70 _______d 1.40 1.90 2.50 St Packaging Stan Warn f StauffCh 1.80 SterlDrug .90 Steven JP 2.25 ‘ ebak JOg Oil lb ay^ T40V Tampa El .60 Tektronix Tenneco 1.20 -ixaco 2.60a (xETrrt 1.05 JXG Sul .40 Texeslnst .80 Tex PLd .35g Textron 1.20 ide Oil 1.10g imRB 1.80a ransWAir 1 ElXCont ,42g Young GOP Leader Says 111 Pill Arson Is Eyed | /s oJcoy! *»1 *UI 907,o ID I 0 0 I " \ in Two Fires /ni South Haven 27 18% lBVb t8V* — = 5 45% 45% 45% - l 1/ 49% 48% 49% + ^ 74 42% 41% 42% + 3. 36 59% 58% 58% + l 7 71 70% 71 + S 73 35% 35 35% - 1 49 26% 26% 26% + ^ —T— 55 116% 115% 11 9 19% mgm 21 74% ; 13 13% 13 13% 4 49 26% 26% 26% 4 17 77% 76% 77% 4 99 57% 56% 56% 4 UnOilCal 1.40 Un Pac 1.80a Uniroyal 1.20 UnftAirLin 1 UnltAfrc 1.60 “ lit Cp^.500 UGasCp 1.70 Unit MM 1.2i US Borax It I 50% 50% 50% 4 S 24% 24 24% 4 1 57% 57 57% 4 i 42 41% 41% 4 1 3 37% 37% 37% — % 79 73 72% 73 i M 18 106% 106% .106% 5 10% 10% 10% 34 43% 43% 43% > 34% ^34% .34% 4- % r 32W^52tr~32%4-- M i 65% 64% 65 4- VS J 44% 44% 44% — Vt 7 96% 95% 96% 4- Vj WarnPIc .50a WashWat 1.16 WnBanc 1.10 WnUntel 1.40 WestgEI 1.60 Weverhr 1.40 ““ifrlCp 1.60 51 38% 37% 38 + % 27 36% 36 36% 4-'“ 14 42% 41% 42% 4 —w— 79 27% 27% 27% - 76 48% 47% 48 4 1 5 22% 22% 22% .. 21 29% 28% 28% — 1 201 28% 27% 28 Va 4- ] 281 287% +8% ited by The Associated figures are unofficial: i otherwise noted, rati! n the foregoing table a » identified In t or semi-annual declaration. Special extra dividends or payments Sd nated as regular — *-*““*“ following footnofei a—Also extra — ______________ „ ........ rate plus stock dividend, c—-Liquidating dividend,., d—Declared or paid In 1967 plus stock dividend, e—Paid last year, f — Payable in stodc during 196 mated cash value on afodividend distribution Hate, a—Declared or i leciared r split & . r..l af... k—Declared ■ _____ _____■ _______...jlatlve Issue ... dlvMends In arrears, n—New Issue, p—Paid ibis year* tarred or nejicflon — meeting, .r—Declari.- IP .... ... .... — v* stdek dividend, t—Paid lb stock during q. y 1966, estimated cash value on ex-dividend Xn' . I—In bankruptcy or receivership ... being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such pa'nies, fn—Foreign issue sublect I -----. equalization tix.« SOUTH HAVEN (UPI) - Arson was suspected by authorities today in fires that destroyed a pavilion and damaged an apartment house and a resort on the Lake Michigan shore line. One of the fires gutted't h e North Shore Pavilion and destroyed 110 stored lounge chairs and mats, causing damage estimated at more than $5,000 early today. * The pavilion/built in 1916 as a ballroom, and its contents were owned by Ben Teitel. He said he had no insurance. The Lake Crest Towers Resort Apartment Motel, adjacent to the pavilion and also owned by Teitel, was scorched and damaged. Two blocks away another fire broke out an hour later. That blaze -was also^declared su& picious. It damaged Mendleson’s Resort where windows were cracked by the heat and smoke damage was incurred. Attendant Foils Robbery Attempt LOS ANGELES Stephen Morgan, a parking lot attend; ant, bided Los Angeles police to capture a pair wanted for the attempted robbery of clothing store. As two men jumped in a car on the lot one yelled: “Here come the cops.” Morgan stood in the parking lot entrance and refused to budge until police arrived and arrested the two men. able” to young Republicans as is California Gov. Ronald Reagan, the newly elected president of the National Young Republican Federation said Tuesday. Jack McDonald of Nashville told a Republican picnic here that Reagan, who was cheered Until American Ship, the J>iumbing and Heating division board said, it had regarded a of white consolidated Indus-bargaining lockout as unlawful u^gg Thjs division, formerly on the theory that a lockout in Lnown as Murray W. Sales effect punishes employees be-^ & located at 578 S. Paddock, when he spoke to the recent cau,se their bargaining agent is The division Jg continue to TO? cLSi.. te oLk. to S? .p*r.l* both their total,, tad -I o* ” “• had no right-to use the lockout‘“hded basis. ^ a\ifeniVn7?h^nhnarH W. T. Andrew Co. is a plumb-the other hand, the board re- . , v . . r. garded lockouts as legitimate in«- heatin« and P*Pm8 who,e-which were defensively motivat- sa(J*r> Net Changg Noon Wed. . Prev. Day . ■ %>■: ___ . ugo ... 1967 Huh .. 1967 Low ... 1966 High ... ind. Ralls Util. Slocks ...+SJ +1.3 +.< +1/ ...455.6 1954 168.8 325. . .4114 159.4 146.9 192: 537.9 213.9 170.5 369. ..388.0 143.9 130.2 269. Treasury Position Jana », 19*7 Juna 29, 1*86 Balance-8 lfc276J14, I Fiscal Year July 1— 162,356,457420.50 140,571,745,104.55 withdrawal* Fiscal Yaar— * 164,034,110,286.75 141,744, -Total * tdodes 1262412456.47 d 7-20lsUb)ect h> statutory E its employes when threatened fact, follow what is deemed to by a strike of the Teamsters be a failure of industry’s self-Union. regulation. The board said the News had .* * * made an agreement with De- The stock market, for exam-troit’s other major newspaper, pie, is supposedly a self-policing The Free Press, that if the Free activity. But when it fails to act Press was struck the News or cannot act to police its own would not publish. The News i activities, then the SEC enters stuck by that agreement when the picture. I the Teamsters struck the Free In the present hassle over cigarettes, the FTC indicated that the cigarette industry’s own .self-regulation had failed to de-The Supreme Court subse- j emphasize its dead aim on the, quently decided the Case of j youth market, a finding the ini’* American Ship Building Co. dustry may very well contest, versus NLRB.” and later sent1 the Detroit News case back to | the board for reconsideration. In its new decision, clearing the News of .misconduct, the board said “the Supreme [court’s American Ship decision has obliterated, as a matter ofj NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Former Vice President Richard previously drawn M. Nixon is “just as accept-hu Kftarrt 'ffpnsiVA Detroit Company Acquires Division Located in City by the board between offensive W. T. Andrew Co. of Detroit, and defensive lockouts, has acquired the assets of the Boyer - Campbell and Sales In American Ship, the board panded, according to a company added, the Supreme Court held spokesman. ‘that an employer could lock out, after an impjasse in bar- c gaining had been reached, for | tiie sole purpose of bringing1,1 economic pressure to bear on federation that Barry Goldwater had four years ago. * ★ ★ There is no total commitment to Reagan as there was to Goldwater,” the 33-year-old financial consultant said. “To say that Reagan now has the same appeal as Goldwater is simply not true.” In rating the “acceptability” of Republicans mentioned as possible candidates for president in 1968, McDonald labeled the union ^ t the empl Reagan more “acceptaMe > tiian bargaining posi-Jl Michigan Gov. George Romney, ' “ ,, 8 6 but said nomination of Romney/1 ’ would present no problems toi the Young Federation.” McDonald, regarded as a conservative, was elected by a wide margin at the Omaha convention. * ★ ★ He was committed to former Sen. Goldwater at the time he was elected a delegate to the 1964 convention which nominated Goldwater. McDonald, declined to state his choice for the 1968 GOP presidential nomination, commenting: “It will make my job a lot easier if I don’t disclose my personal choice.” The new facilities will be ex- *. Sycce$sfuhlnve$ting:% 1 Jf 5S ' 4* # % # 4* ,W’ (EDTi'OR’S NOTE: The uieuisiGas Service Company, a good expressed here 'are solely those Midwest utility yielding 5.8 per of the writer for which thisjeent. newspaper assumes no responsi-1 News in Brief Doris L. Harmon si 78 Pin-gree told Pontiac police someone entered her unlocked garage yesterday stole a power mower valued at some $100. Donald Schroeder of 2314 Montroyal, Waterford Township, reported to township police yesterday the larceny of a stereo tape machine and six tapes, total value of $80, from bis car parked in his driveway. Garage Sale — Thursday, Friday, Sat. — Bikes, tent, furniture, raise. 316 W. Iroquois Rd., Pontiac. —Adv. Mom’s Rummage Thursday, I i 12. Indianwood and Baldwin ds.. ' ' '' —Adv. bility.) By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am enclosing a list of my mother-in-lajPs holdings. She is 75 yeart old. At her age, do you think any of the stocks should be changed or sold? I would appreciate your comments.” W.L. A) If She were a younger woman, I would suggest building up her growth stocks at the expense of current income. I would probably advise the elimination of issues that have been slow-moving — the steels, Ford Motor and Royal Dutch, and the buildup of her position in General Telephone, Avco and Reserve Insurance. The latter stock represents one of the most consistently profitable fire and casualty companies and its performance has been unusually good. A ★ * I suggest only one change. American Motors {toys no dividend and is too- speculative for her. In my opinion. I would sell it and add to her holdings in Q) -“I have Series E bonds and would' like to know if they can be put in my younger brother's name as well as my own so that he could take them over without legal procedure in the event of my death. Also, what was the first E bond Issue which was extended beyond the ten-year maturity?” A.L-A) Series E bonds can be put jn two names, yours and your brother’s, as co-owners. Upon the death of either, toe bond becomes toe sole property of the survivor. The first Series E' bond was dated May, 1941, matured May, 1951 and has had two extensions. The life of the bond is now 30 years and toe extended maturity is May, 1971. To order your copy of Roger Spear’s 48-page Guide to Successful Investing, clip this notice and send $1.09 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, in care pf The Pontiac Press, Box llU* Grand, Central ’Station, fiew York, N.Y.» 19917. (Copyright, 1967) T-r'-E THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 D-T New Devices to Fight Air Pollution Wash Jobs for City Air The time-tested method of cleaning anything soiled by scrubbing it is'being applied^ to the air-pollution problem, according to some exhibits at the 60th annual Air Pollution Control Conference in Cleveland recently. Several of the devices swirl harmful fumes, containing chemicals and dusts from industry and automobiles through liquids for a quick wash job. THIS SCRUBBER works on a centrifugal principle for Wet' removal of fumes and dust from air streams. NOT A WASHER, BUT a WATCHDOG is the mobile test station, above, for measuring automobile emissions. Such stations will be needed for surveillance of In-service performance of exhaust control devices, as shown top center, required by federal law on all new cars Stirling with 1968 models. Top left is a machine that washes dirt from the air by means of water squirting from plnjets. At left Is a unit that draws arid fumes through ducts and scrubs them In a water and iaustie solution combination. Arabs Can't Expect Military Aid-Soviet MOSCOW (AP) The Soviet Union’s top leader indicated that the Arabs still can no Soviet military action aid them against Israel. 0 0 0 Communist party chief Leonid Brezhnev defended Soviet policy in the Middle East after informed sources reported division within the Kremlin high command over how far to go in of the Arabs, oo* Brezhnev told a Kremlin reception for military academy graduates that "looking back, we qan say with certainty today that our actions were correct ' ROMNEY PORTRAIT — Mrs. George Romney and artist Henry C. Shea of Berkley study his portrait of the governor, which, holds the place of honor during the Summer Af Mall Art Festival Art Festival which starts tomorrow at the Pontiac Mall. The governor’s wife said the portrait expressed all of those qualities she associates and admires in her husband. Romney Portrait Is Displayed A portrait of Gov. Romney will have the place of honor at the Summer Art Festival which starts tomorrow at the Pontiac Mall. The show runs through Jfuly 15. * ★ * Hie painting, by Henry C. Shea of Berkley, was done without sittings. Shea said he followed the governor, on a tour of speaking engagements to observe him in different poses and attitudes. The governor never knew he was being observed for the purpose of the protrait, according to Shea. The portrait is only one of many by local and metropoli- tan Detroit area artists which will be on display at the Mall every day from 9:36 a.m. to 9 p.m. The show is produced by Betty Baldwin of Livonia, director of the “Artists Show-place.” Shea said that his painting Pontiac Boy Hurt as Bike Collides With Automobile was inspired by his admiration for the governor. * * * He. explained: “It became challenge to paint the governor without his knowledge. I found he was a moving target. 1 think it is helpful to observe the various personal mannerisms that come to the surface when the subject is not conscious that he is being watched. Shea has studied and exhibited his paintings throughout Europe, He is presently an art teacher in Detroit. Police Action Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff's deputies investigated some 15T reported incidents in the past 48 hours. A breakdown of causes for police action: Arrests—11 Vandalisms—23 Burglaries—12 Larcenies—38 Unarmed Robberies—1 Auto Thefts—3 Assaults—22 Disorderly Persons—6 Drownings—2 Obscene Phone Calls—1 Arsons—1 Rapes—1 Property Damage Accidents—22 Injury Accidents—15 ►f A 13-year-old Pontiac boy was l* injured last night when his bicycle and a car collided m North Telegraph nea Premont Il-in Waterford Township. * ★ * || Listed in satisfactory condi-I jtion at Pontiac General Hos-§ I pita] is James A. Baldwin, son I of Mr. and Mrs. James M. II Baldwin of 179 Augusta. ★ * ★ | Township police said John S. 11 Ross, 34, of Warren was the *1 driver of th^ car. According to a witness, Ross was not at fault. The accident happened about 10:30 p.m., police said. Holdup Foiled by Attendant An armed robbery attempt at a Waterford Township service station, MGM Service, 3290 W. Huron early today was t e d by an attendant’s quick action, The attendant, Joe Meadows of 4381 Baywood, Waterford Township, told police a blond man wearing hornrimmed glasses and dad in a tan jacket flashed a revolver at him and demanded all the money in the cash register shortly before 1 Goes to Panama DETROIT (AP)-Col. Edward C. Bruce, Detroit district engineer of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, will leave for a! new assignment in the Panama | Canal Zone later this month, the corps has announced. Meadows told police h e ducked” behind the counter and ran out a door with the cash register key- as the bandit drew his gun. He said the intruder walked [over to the cash register, looked | around for a minute then ran door. 9 Nations Open Far fast Talks BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -Delegates from nine Far Eastern nations today opened the second annual ministerial meeting of the Asian and Pacific Council. It is expected to concentrate on the war in Vietnam and Red China’s H-bomb test. . Foreign Minister Thanat Kho-man of Thailand was elected chairman of the three-day session attended by delegates from Thailand, the Philippines, Malaysia, South Vietnam, Japan, Nationalist China, South Korea, New Zealand and Australia. * * *. Pravda, the newspaper of the Soviet Communist party, charged that the council is a military and political bloc endangering peace and security dn the Pacific. It said six of the member states are involved in ‘dirty American war against the Vietnamese people.” In opening speeches, Japan, Thailand and Malaysia stressed that ASPAC should not become solely an anti-Communist alliance. COUNCIL’S OBJECTIVE Japanese Foreign Minister Takeo Miki said it must be made clear that the council’ over-all objective is to bolster relationships of Far Eastern nations. the crucial days of the MiddU East crisis.” . Hie Soviet Union, he contin ued, “firmly and resolutely sup ports the Arab states and is ren dering them all-round assist ance.”» But he appeared to limi this assistance by saying Presi dent Nikolai V. Podgomy’s re cent talks in Egypt, Syria anc Iraq “will undoubtedly facilitati the coordination of joirit actior in the political struggle, in de fense of the rights and interest! of the U.A.R., Syria and othei Arab countries.” REFERENCE TO WEAPONS By assistance, Brezhnev pre sumably also referred to thi weapons which the Soviets re portedly have shipped to Egyp and Syria since their defeat bj Israel. But his defense of the lack of Soviet military action in support of the Arabs during the war indicated that Moscow’s aid will continue to be in the form of materiel and in the political sphere. Brezhnev charged that Israel was guilty of aggression and said “the aggressors are behaving 'like the worst of bandits.” H ★ * * “In their atrocities against the Arab population,” he said,p Arson Suspected in Destruction of School's Lumber State fire authorities were called to check the possibility of arson in a fire at Adelphian Academy in Holly Township early this morning in which four trucks loaded with redwood were destroyed. ★ * ★ The fire broke out about 2 a.m. and was fought by the township fire department. The redwood was a shipment to be used in school projects. BARGING IN - A 56-foot section of the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway droops precariously over the water, following a ramming by a barge early yesterday'. Authorities said the causeway—longest span in the world —will be closed at least one week. The causeway is the major link of New Orleans with northern points. No one was injured in the , accident. Deaths in Pontiac,Nearby Areas ‘they, it seems, want to copy| iiPC Pnlnh Rnhhinntrm iChurch, with burial in Mount .sisters, Mrs. David King and he crimes of the Hitler invad- P D°9 Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Robert Welch, both of the era.”, Brezhnev denied that the Middle East conflict was “a result of national strife alone between Israel and the Arab countries.' It , is, he said, “a struggle between the forces of imperialism and the forces of national independence, democracy and social . _ " -represented by the Soviet Union’s Arab friends. TURNS TO VIETNAM It was Brezhnevas first speech made public since the Middle East war. Riming to Vietnam, he said the United States will have to admit the lack of prospects for its venture in Vietnam and get out of there.” 'For several years Brezhnev said, the United States has been “conducting a bandit war in Vietnam. But the aggressor is not closer but farther from its aim. ★ ★ He told the young officers that the Soviet armed forces are adequately equipped. “Questions of our motherland’s fense are given priority in all our work," he said. There has been competition within the strained Soviet economy between demands of the armed forces and civilian production. Some earlier hints Brezhnev’s remarks seemed to indicate that military production now has the highest priority. day at the Gillies Funeral Home burial will be in Fargo. In the past 25 years, the trucking industry’s accident rate has dropped from 47.1 per million miles, or 2V4 times better than the accident rate of passer car drivers’ accident rate. Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Ralph (Ella) Bab-bington, 68, of lakeland, Fla. will be Friday afternoon from the Thornton. Funeral Home in Lakeland with burial there. Mrs. Babbington died yesterday. She was a member of the Maple Leaf Club, Order of Eastern Star, Pontiac Typographical Union Auxiliary and Women’s Auxiliary of Pontiac General Hospital. Surviving are her husband and ^brothers. Lehr H. Bishop Service for Lehr H. Bishop, 57, of 23 Williams will be 1:30 p.m. Friday at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights with burial In Oakland Hills Memorial Cemetery, Novi, Mr. Bishop died Monday. He was a member of the U n i t e d Presbyterian Church, Auburn Heights. Surviving are two children, Doyce of Los Angeles, Calif., and Gary of Dover, Del.; two brothers, including Wilson of New Hudson; and a sister. Clyde E. DeMond Service for former Pontiac resident Clyde E. DeMond, 79, of Greenbush will be 10 a.m. Fri- Mr. Deconick was fatally shpt Monday. A self-employed fruit grower, he was a trustee on the West Bloomfield Township Board and chairman of the United Fund in the township. He was a member of Our Lady of Refuge Holy Name Society, the church committee and the ushers club. He is survived by a sister, E. Kathleen DeConick, and a brother, J. Leo, both of West Bloomfield Township. A rosary will be said at* 8 p.m. tomorrow at the C. J. God-hardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. John Chamberlain MILFORD — Service for John Chamberlain, 85, of 505 S. Main will be Friday at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home with burial at Oakgrove Cemetery. Mr. Chamberlain died yesterday. Gary S. Cowell Michael Q. Cowell LEONARD—Service for Gary S. Cowell, 18 and Michael D, Cowell, 17, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Cowell of 321 W. Elmwood, will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Lincoln with burial following at 2:30 p.m. in Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. The Masonic Lodge will conduct a memorial service at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the funeral home. Mr. DeMond, a former composing room employe of The Pontiac Press, died yesterday in the Alpena General Hospital. A life member of Twin Lakes Masonic Lodge No. 523, Lincoln, he also belonged to the Order of Eastern Star Chapter 509 and St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, Harrisville. Surviving are his wife, Bernice; two daughters, Mrs. Beverly Pomfret of Coldwater and Ure. SfffrTey'O’Brjrii “of“Hoy;! two grandsons; and a sister, Mrs. Hazel Elliott of Pontiac. Russell R. New Service for Russell R. New, !, , of 1969 Woodland, Sylvan Lake, will not be this afternoon at Sparks Griffin Chapel but at a later date. Mr. New, a retired employe of Dicke Lumber Co., died Saturday. Ralph A. Powell Sr. Service for Ralph A. Powell Sr., 47, of 1400 Murray, Water-ford Township, will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow jn Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Powell, a lieutenant with the Bloomfield Hill? Police Department, died yesterday. He was a member of the Fraternal Order of Police. Surviving are his wife, Gertrude M.; his mother; Mrs! Willis A. Powell of Saugus, Mass.; a son, Ralph A. Jr. at home; two sisters, Including Mrs. Duane Schultz of Ortonville; and a brother . ^ • Edward Ef. DeConick WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Requiem Mass for Edward E. DeConick, 63, of 5847 W. Maple will be 10 a.m. Friday at Our Lady of Refuge Catholic They died Monday in an auto accident. Gary was an employe of the Bachan Manufacturing Co. of Madison Heights. Michael was a student at Oxford High School. Surviving besides their parents are two brothers, Darryl and Loren, both of Leonard; two Leonard; and their grandmother Mrs. Basil Doan of Hubbard Lake. Richard C. Greene BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - . Richard C. Greene, 25, of 216 Eileen was injured fatally last night in a motorcycle accident near Denver, Colo. The body is at Huntoon Fu-nearl Home. He was employed with National Cash Register Co. . Surviving are-his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James C. Greene of Bloomfield Township; three children, Laura A., Susan and James L., all of Sylvania, Ohio; two brothers, David of Bloomfield Township and Thomas of Bloomfield Hills; and a sister, Mrs. James Smith of Birmingham. Mrs. Samuel Luchkow PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - Mrs. Samuel (Bernice) Luchkow, *81, of 83 Tebeau Court died today. Her body is at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. She was a member of the Lutheran Church of the Incarnate Word, Bloomfield Township Surviving are three brothers and two sisters, including Mrs. Florence Davidson of Pontiac. William A. Mahar ORION TOWNSHIP- William A. Mahar, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Mahar of 3631 Hi-Dale, died last night. ■ .» His body is at the William R. Potere Funeral Home, Rochester. All 53 in Girls' Band Collapse in Wyandotte WYANDOTTE (AP) jjE All 53 members of a girls’ marching band from neighboring. River-view collapsed at a Fourth of July performance' last night in Wyandotte. Food poisoning, fatigue and hysteria were blamed. Doctors said most of the girls, ged 12 to 17, suffered from hysteria, brought on by Seeing others within their group collapse because of food poisoning. At least right were treated for exhaustion. The girls are members of the Praesidium Junior Drum and Bugle Corps of Riverview. Their Wyandotte performance in competition with three other bands at Roosevelt High School was their third' in a series of parades that started at 9 a.m. .Hugh Sloan, manager of the Riverview band, said the group was on the field about kp.m, when one of the girls feu; lowed by several others. “Then,” he said, “they started going down like flies.” A Lincoln Park hospital treated eight lor food jioisoning and 30 for hysteria. Ailments of eight sent to a Trenton hospital were treated for exhaustion, and another seven sent to a Wyandotte ; hospital werq treated for one of the three ailments. All were sent home after treatment.- Sloan said the girls had lunch p salad and roast beef and baked beans about 2 p.m. at Seits Junior High School in Riverview and had hot dog» and pop at Roosevelt High shortly after'arrival about 8:30 p.m. f HILLVIEW i MEMORIAL HARDENS:;:; 6573 Dixie Hwy., Waterford £ 625-5001 ?! EXPERT GUARANTEED TUNE-UPS AUTOMATIC . TRANSMISSION* f ASY TERMS | OUR SPECIALTY MOTOR EXCHANGE 1629 OAKLAND AVL I)—8 THE PONTIAC PlTBS3r^¥BPNESDAY, JULY 8, 1067 | People in the News By The Aaiociated Pres* Former President Hairy S. Truman and his wife, Bess, sat on the porch of their Independence, Mo., home to watch a Fourth of July parade. After the parade yesterday a crowd of more than 1,500 gathered at the Truman LK brary to mark the 10th anniversary of its open- Although his health has not allowed him to leave home in recent months, the former president sent his "good wishes and warm regards" to the crowd at the library grounds. Defiant Aussie Singer Plans LSD Trip on TV Singer Billy Thorpe will face prosecution by the New South Wales government if he takes a “trip" on LSD as he said he would on his television program “Go" in Sydney, Australia. “The minister of child welfare and acting minister of health, Arthur p. Bridges, said today, “The government will not hesitate to prosecute to the fullest extent Thorpe or anyone else who breaks the law by takingtdrugs." Thorpe said he would defy the threat and take a “trip” within two weeks. “I don’t condone it one minute but it is only right someone should take the test." Thorpe told a panel on his program he would take LSD under medical supervision and write his experiences for a magazine and describe them on the program. Bicycles Replace Car for 880 Miles of Trip “It started out as a kind of brainstorm," says Joyce Lindquist of the bicycle trip she and her children made from Orangeville, Calif., to Beatrice, Neb. “We drive back to Nebraska every year to see grandma, and it is always a nonstop trip. We wanted to go some way that we could see more of the country and we did,” said Mrs. Lindquist. She and her children, Dennis, 8, Pamela, 9, and Debra, 11, and Linda Lobdell, 11, rode 880 of the 1,400 miles after training for the trip a year. Linda’s mother, Shirley Lobdell, drove a van which carried the group’s camping equipment and food. They said they would stay in Beatrice about two weeks ' before heading back to Califomia-by car. Teen Painting Whiz Brushes Way to Victory John Sharkey is a 14-year-old fence-painting whiz. The youngster from Bay St. Louis, Miss., brushed his way to the winner’s circle yesterday in the national Tom Sawyer Day fence painting contest in Hannibal, Mo. For his speed, neatness and original costume, he received a 8100 U.S. Savings Bond and a trophy to be deposited at the Mississippi capital. ■ Glenn “Skip” Haywood, 11, of Madison, Wis., placed !uLTd^a"d M"rk Teachout* 13- Grand Rapids, Mich., was third. The contest is part of a four-day observance in Mark Twain s hometown. PONTIAC mss CLASSIFIED ADVEXTtSMO INDEX RavtoeS Jeae M, 1941 NOTICES Card jot Thanks . In Memoriam ... Announcements .. Florists Funeral Directors Cemetery Lots ... Personals ....... Lost and Found .. " r CITY OF PONTIAC COUNTY OF OAKLAND _ _ NOTICE OF HEARING Re: Petition to loeete, establish and construct an Intra-county drain I -City of Pontiac, Oakland County, •an. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that auant to the provisions of Chapter 20 .. Act. No. 40 of the Public Acts of 1954, as amended, a petition was filed with the pMhjy Crain Commissioner of Oakland County, Michigan, petitioning for the lowing prelect, to wit: Location, establishment and d structlon of an Intra-county drain " e located substantially as follows: Road and Genesee Ave- Genesee Avenue to Niagara Avenue and thence easterly along Niagara Avenue to an existing 72" trunk sewer which is the point of terminus, all In the City of Pontiac, Oakland County, Michigan. ' NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN; •that th Drainage Board for said protect has cor sidered the said petition and has made tentative , determination that said petitio.. Is sufficient and that the said protect is —-acttcal; has given the name "GUYER e* the name of said Drain anf "GUYER DRAINAGE DIS the name of the drelnagr DRAIN' the m TRICT' district _______ . .. . e determination that following pub- Michigan'— if etdte trtghs J Oakland — drainage to county highways. lie corporations should be assessed' the eost of said prelect, to — ................. PPM...........JZ — 1 July, 1947, at 10:00 o'clock a.m.. Eastern daylight Time, In the office of the Oakland County Drain Commissioner, 550 South Telegraph Road, in the City of Pontiac, Michigan, for the purpose of hearing any objections to said prelect, to the. petition therefor, and to the matter of assessing the cost thereof to the public corporations above named. At said hearing any public corporation to be assessed or any taxpayer thereof, will be entitled to be heard. Thl* notice Is given by order of the said Drainage Board for the Guyer Oral" DANIEL W. BARRY, Chairman of the Drainage Board for the Guyer Drain Oakland County Drain Commissioner CITY OF PONTIAC COUNTY OF OAKLAND NOTICE OF HEARING Re: Petition to Ideate, establish i wnsfruct an Intra-county drain In City of Pontiac, Oakland County, Mk ' gan. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that p„. suant to the provisions of Chapter 20 of Act No. 40 of the Public Acts of 1954, amended, a petition was filed with County Drein Commissioner of Oakli County, Michigan, petitioning for following project, to wit: Location, establishment and cor Structlon of an Intra-county drain t Fire Kills Artist DETROIT (AP)—Aji 80-year-j old amateur artist, trapped in .his .second floor apartment, died Tuesday in a fire that apparently started in a closet where he stored his painting equipment. Oliver McKellson died in the blaze. Police said McKellson’s companion, Lester Garrett, 42, leaped from a window to escape the blaze. He was hospitalized in serious condition with severe burns. Police Pay Hike LINCOLN PARK (AP) - Lin coin Park policemen are to re eeive a $500 across-the-board pay boost, raistng a policeman’s salary after one year to $8,000 as a result of the city’s ratifying a sole bargaining contract with the Lincoln PartiPolice Officers Association Monday. Bcgfrmlhg at the Cwitott'River at a point approximately 200 feet southwesterly of the Intersection of Herndon Avenue and Clinton River Drive, thence northerly approximately 500 feet te the intareedloh of veorhele Joed and Orchard Lake Avenue, -----—Merljr along Voorhels Rood B Rood, thence northerly I. Menominee te Chippewa Ro^WB alone OHwewe Road Road, thence easterly along Menominee Road to Iroquois Road, “-—i— SESSNUW« ■ NOTICE If FURTHER GIVEN, fhe Drainage’Board for said project has rwi.trWmi* M,. mu ■———• l Road -to Jf terminus, ~, Oakland ,,maie.,*1*eMi petition Is a prelect Jf pr__ . "BREWER DRAIN" , Prep fit, toe name "BREWER ON/ Atjs DISTRICT" as the name of WimjawJMrid therefor; and has to a tentative detornrtnaWow that the toll Mg public ooreoreHats- sheukt be ••oaod jar the cost of said prelect, to i ■ ^ State af .AMcBIpen r On account i drainage to state highways. . _t>qwy ei oaHwd — On ■ eccom NOTICE is FURTHER GIVEN, I Indians Strike CALCUTTA (AP) -r- About l80,000 workers at factories all over eastern India’s West Bengal State observed a one-day strike Tuesday., Hie strikers, protesting retrenchments, layoffs and closing of factories, central ground. Calcutta’s Dies in Kenyp NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) ’eny A. Fellows,, former I wit City engineer and one-tit manager of the City Airport, h died in Nairobi, Kenya, whe he lived in retirement. said Drainage Board I fW^'oS'^^Dreln'coS: Ji“toner. 550 South Tolenregh IKefCS fh* City of Pontlsc, Michigan, ter 1 purpose of hearing any object Ions to tl profed, to the petition thereto?, and the mettw of assessing the cost then e the public corporations above nairn. _ said haarlng any public corporalloO be assessed or any taxpayer thereof L Be entitled to be heard. Is gfvan to - * EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Male...........6 Help Wanted Female.........7 Help Wanted M. or F........8 Sales 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 Laundry Service ..........20 Convalescent—Nursing .... .21 Moving and Trucking.......22 Painting and Decorating....23 Television-Radio Service.... ,24 Upholstering.............24-A Transportation ............25 Insurance.................26 Deer Processing...........27 WANTED Wanted Children to Board..28 Wanted Household Goods...29 Wanted Miscellaneous......30 Wanted Money ..............31 Wanted to Rent ...........32 Share Living Quarters.....33 Wanted Real Estate........36 RENTALS OFFERED Apartments—Furnished .... .37 Apartments—Unfurnished .. .38 Rent Houses, Furnished ....39 Rent Houses, Unfurnished...40 Property Management... .40-A Rent Cake 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 Sale Houses ...............49 Income Property ...........50 lake Property..............51 Northern Property .......51-A Resort Property...........52. Suburban Property.........S3 Lots—Acreage ............ .54 Sale Farms ................56 Sale Business Property ....57 Sale or Exchange ..........58 FINANCIAL Business Opportunities.....59 Sale Land Contracts *..,... 60 Wanted Contracts-Mtges...60-A Money to Lend..............61 Mortgage Loans ............62 MERCHANDISE Swaps .....................63 Sale Clothing .............64 Sale Household Goods.......65 Antiques ............... 65-A Hi-Fi, TV & Radios.........66 Water Softeners..........66-A For Sale Miscellaneous .... 67 Christmas Trees.........67-A Christmas Gifts .. v..... 67-B Hand Tools—Machinery..... 68 Do It Yourself ............69 Cameras—Service .........70 Musical Goods............ .71 Music Lessons...........71-A Office Equipment...........72 Store Equipment .V........73 Sporting Goods ...........74 Fishing Supplies—Baits.....75 Sand—Gravel—Dirt ..........76 Wood—Coal—Coke—Fuel .... 77 Pets-Hunting Dogs .........79 Pet Supplies—Service.....79-A Auction Sales..............80 Nurseries .................81 Plants—Trees-Shrubs ....81-A Hobbles and Supplies.......82 FARM MERCHANDISE Livestock ................ 83 Death Notices father at Doves and Gary Bishop; dsar brother of Mrs. Marjorie Howolt, Wilson olio survived by three gtend-‘ 'idron. Funeral service will to ) Friday, July 1, at 1:30 p.m. the Harold R. Davis Funsrsl ns. Auburn Haight*. Informant Oakland Hills Memorial Gar-s. Mr. Bishop will llo In stoto tht funeral home. (Suggested CHAMBERLAIN. JOHN; July 4, 1947) 505 South Main Straot, Milford; ago 15; doar uncle of Mrs. Grace Sir east, Mrs. Robert McClelland, Mrs. Clifford Allen and William Chamberlain. Funeral service will to told Friday, July 7, at 3 p.m. at the Richardson - Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Interment In Oak-grova Cemetery, Milford. Mr. Chamberlain will llo In state at COWELL, MICHAEL DAVID; . 3, 1947; 321 W. Elmwood R< Leonard; age 17; beloved son of and Mrs. Raymond Cowall; loved grandson of Mrs. B Doan; dear, brother of Mrs. Ot and Darryl Cowell. Funtrol Michigan. Michael * In v Fargo, II lie In state (Suggested Raymond Cowell; beloved grandson of Mrs. Basil Doan; dear brother of Mrs. David King, Mrs. Robert Welch, Loren and Darryl Cowoll. Funeral service will to held Thursday. July I — -- - the Harold R mo. Auburn I_____ - .n Fargo, Michigan. ____ la In state at the funeral (Suggested visiting hours Rosd, west Bloomfield Township; aga 43; dear brother of Miss E. Kathleen DeConlck ----PNG Recttatloi. . ll to Thursday . a, me C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Funeral service will be held Friday, July 7, at 10 a.m. at Our Lady of Refuge Catholic Church. Intormont In Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. DeConlck will lie In state at the funeral homo. (Suggested visiting GREENE, RICHARD CLARK; July 4, 19471 214 Eileen, Bloomfield Hills; age 25; beloved husband of brother of Mrs, James-(Suzanne) Smith, David and Thomas Greens. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Huntoon Funeral Home. NEW, RUSSELL R., July 1, 1947; 1949 Woodland Street; age 72; beloved husband of Ruby Now; dear fathar of Mrs. Laurl Johnson and Mrs. Otis Book; door brother of Mrs. John Smith; also survived by nine gram..... | ' grandchilc rangements lar by the S Sparks-Grlffln Funeral husband of Gertrude M. Powell; beloved son ot Mrs. Willis A. Powell; dear father of Ralph A. Powell Jr., doer brother of Mr*. Duont Schultz, Miss Dorothy Powell and Donald Powell. Funeral service will to hold Thursday, July 4, at 1:30 p.m. at the Donel-son-Johns Funeral Home. Interment In White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Powell will lie In state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting Jwr- 3 to 5 a— - - ------------- SHARROW, CHARLES W.i July 3. 1947; 397 Atwater Street, Lake Orion; ago 55; beloved husband or Janette Sharrow; dear father of Mrs. Carolina Waltman and Joseph John Sharrow; dear brother of Oxford. Funeral service will b hold Friday, July 7, at 11 a.m. < the St. Joseph Catholic Churd Lake Orion. Interment In Esi Lawn Cemetery. Mr. Sharrow wl lie in stoto at the funorol homi 20; tolovod husband of Judith Woollard; beloved son of Mrs. Ruth Woollard; dear father ot Judy Woollard; dear brother of Mrs. Diane Dewey, Mrs. Phyllis Knight, Paula, Jeffery, Fred, Kenneth and Sptc. 5 Gordon Woollard. Funeral service will be held Friday, July 7, at 3 p.m. at the Bos-serdet Funeral Home, Oxford. Interment In Lakeville Cemetery. Mr. woollard will lie In state at “ irel home attar 4 p.m. tot Brewer BARRY, DANIEL ... Chairmen of the Drainage Beard I' * ... - - . ' for the Brewer Drain Oakland County Drein Commissioner July S and It, 1947 1 Meats T.. e Hay-Grain-Feed ..... ....84 Poultry ....85 Farm Produce ........ ....86 Farm Equipment AUTOMOTIVE - Travel Trailers .. 88 - Housetrailers ......... ....89 > Rent Trailer Space 1 Commercial Trailers.... . .90-A s Auto Accessories ; ....91 Tires—Auto-Truck ..... ....92 Auto Service [.,.93 Motor Scooters ........ , Motorcycles ........... Bicycles .............. ....96 ’ Boats—Accessories ! Airplanes .99 ! Wanted Cars-Truckt .... ...101 Junk Cars-Trucks ...... .101-A Used Auto-Truck Parts . ..102 New and Used Trucks ... ..103 Auto—Marine Insurance . ..104 Foreign Care New and Used Core .... ..106 Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS ADS RECEIVED BY 5 P.M. WILL BE PUBLISHED THE doy of publication aftar th* lust mod* ba turn to got your "KILL NUMBER." No odjuttmonft will bo givon, Closing timo for advortitomonti regular agato typo b?2 o'clock noon tho doy previous to publication. CASH WANT AD RATES Th* Pontiac Press FROM * A M. TO 5 P.M. IN LOVING MEMORY OF ROSE V Damerllan who possed away Juli 5, 1947. ’ . The depth of sorrow w# cannot tr1 Of too loss of C------' ■ And while r3i ‘sleep etoved s< Her memory wo shall always l&p. —Sayiy missed by Her Family., Want Ads Bring Advertisers and Prospects Together just-CALL 332-8181 CABANA club HAS OPENINGS. jftX.Pont&c T* ■« K^JasT<«5urch!NOR W§M,PTFiN|: BOX REVUES At 1$ a.m. tod a) there) j were replies at The) I Press Office In the fol-f I lowing boxes: t, 1, 14, 15, 20, 21, 23, 26, 28, 28, 32, 31, 47, 48, 51, 53, 82, 85, 72, .75*31, [ 85, 87, 97, 98, 99, ltfS, 198 Funeral Directers DRAYTON PLAINS PON ELS 7N-JOHNS Funeral Heme "Designed tor Funerals" Huntoon FUNERAL HOME » eagP/g1" SPARKS-GRIFFIN funeral home Thoughtul Service" Voorhees-Siple Cemetery Lets I LOTS, ACACIA CEMETERY, OLD section, SIMP. FE 4-1072.____ Personals 4-8 IN t GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING e friendly adviser, phone F" e S p.m. Confidential DAINTY MAlb SUPPLIES 2028 E. Hemmond FE 5-7801 bo YOU HAVE A DEBT PROBI.EM9 We can help you with a plan you can aftord. DEBT CONSULTANTS OF PONTIAC INC. 114 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. STATE LICENSED-BONDED START PLANNING NOW FOR your scout group, church, club FALL HAY RIDES. Enjoy a horse drawn ride through Helds, woods. Followed by a home cooked spa-gtt^dhSsr. For reservations, “L, UPLAND HILLS FARM weddIng photography by —■—1*1 Color. Free brochure 33S-9B79 anytime. GET OUT OP DEBT DN A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS Lost End Found 5 FOUND — DOG ON LEASH. SOME time ego. Identity. FE 4-7300. FOUND: BLACK AND WHITE DOG, vicinity Maytoe Rd. and Dvorak, independence Twp. 423-0429. LOST: SMALL F E MALE SEaL-point Siamese cat. 12 yrs. old. vicinity Middle Bolt and West Long Lk. Rd. Reward. 424-9274. LOST: MALE DOG, PART FOX, 2 yrs. old. "Sunny." Child's pot. Pontiac area. FE 5-4995.__________ LOST—BLACK AND WHITE, SMALL terrier dog. Vicinity of N. Jessie. Answers to the neme of Peanuts. 17 yrs. old. Coll 33M429. 1 Lakes. Child's p $400 FEE PAID PUBLIC RELATIONS TRAINEE M-35 high INTERI .-------grad., nn exp. nec. [RNATIONAL PERSONNEL 334-4971 $5200 UP HIGH SCHOOL GRADS and college men Interested In permanent employment. Many management trainee positions are $7,200 FEE PAID ( College Grqds-Engineers Management positions In -"aj|a||j "334^4f7L INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL , NEW COMPANY HAS 3 PART-time openings, married man 21 to 35 to work evenings, guaranteed $50 wk. Cell 335-5323, from 4 to A PART-TIME JOB A married man, 21-34, to work 4 hours j»r evening.. Call 4744520, $200 PER night.--•. MONTH AGRESSIVE YOUNG MEN Ngw office will hire and tn 5 young men for dutsfde on dept, and management. Must 11-24 and high school gradue Salary 0142.50 per week. Call A Fox. 33*1059, 9:15 j.m.-l p.m. O GARAGE PORTER ' - Meet Mr. IP Track, Frank ... Pontiac. BUMP AND PAINT MAN Experienced, reliable, able to give estimates. Will be in charge of shop. Stefa qualifications and sal-' ary expected. Write Pontiac Press Sox 0-104, Pontlsc, Mich. CLERK, PART-TIME, P E R M A-nent, every other night, 5-10 p.m. ovary 3rd. Sun. 104 p.m. Mills Pharmacy, Birmingham. Ml 4-5040. COLLEGE STUDENTS you can tarn hundreds of dollars per (month. Plus schotorthlpt and bonus's. Work In yOur home town. COLLEGE STUDENTS HIGH SCHOOL GRADS Summer work tor 12 man. First come, first served In our Order Dept. 0150 per wk. Call now Mr. Fox, 33B43S9, 0:15 OJIL-1 MW. DIRECT SALESMEN WANTED — Leads furnished _ FE 5-5130. DRAFTSMAN, FOR ClVILOhoi-neerlng and lend suryeylng. Office experience preferred. Attbur W. Gillespie Assec. Inc. IWSWfc Evtningt Part-Tims part-time evening wortL Must be neat, mature, married. and_ have good work record. Call 4744520, 4 p.m.4 p.m. tonight. . gxPEjH«WC«D CUHING TOOL MEN For manutoeftre of cutting .tools Largo busy union shop, lots of over tone, 15 min. bom Pontlsc. MA *4223 or JO ddEB. EXPERIENCED ROOFERS, TOP WAGES, R B T HI ■ M ENT FLAN, QUARANT R ED YEAR ROUND WORK. CALL 332-5231. EXPERIENCED S A L E S M A N. Wrlto your oton ticket. Sky's the limit. Wilt train. 13,000. Call Tom walls,- 234-2471, Inolllng A Shelling EkRlRIEtteRO AUTO BUMPER Needed In GM Dealership, Immediately- Lots ot work, and a Guarantee! Contact Frank Hopper at Body Shop — Vandeputto 1950 S. Wide Track, Fonllac P E RIB N C E D CARPEN- FLINT, MICHIGAN DRY CLEANERS Wo are an agqrnslvt growing company looking tor a plant man-W With experience Tn a 0300,000-1500,000 par yaar operation. You ' mutt have a successful background In both shirt laundry and D-c operations. Wa have both petroleum and pare machines and exparl-ancs In both systems Is essential. We art willing to pay top dollar for to# right man. Contact: L. C. Dortch. Ph: 742-2300, Flint, Mleh-Igan, FULL T todlan. graph. GEAR SHAPER AND HOBBER HAND AFTERNOONS Some experience required variety of prototype end small lot quantities, ^air-conditioned plant. Top Eonic, Inc. 464 E. HOLLYWOOD DETROIT -093-0100 An Equal Opportunity Employer sll&s t-tlme Immediate City ■toria^oponlngs. Mt. * Birmingham GrendBlvd "Detroit — LO *4152, 10-4 p.m. LOCKE OPERATORS AND LAWN trimmers. Also service Notion help, day mansger. 332-1237. MACHINIST, TOOL-MAKERsTjOIE retiree's hfre hired. Apply at 217 Cam I off S. Saginaw. Man With i-TON Available at 2 p.m. to deliver bundle of newspapers to carrier and singles to subscribers. APPLY H- M. STIER Circulation Deportment THE PONTIAC PRESS MAN TO WORK IN AUTO PARTS store as an auto parts clerk. Must have experience at this type of work. Inquire at Hollerback Auto Ports—273 „ Baldwin Avt. Pontiac. 31t-403i. MAN WITH MEAT EXPERIENCE to do grinding In tho lorgo. operation, Union wage*. Equal opportunity employer. H. Hoffman FE Tom Walls. 3J42471. Snailing A 14 for In NEEDED AT ONCE Experienced mochonic for Dealership, Pontlsc*, —. Bulcks. Apply , ...t at Homer Oxford. MANAGER TRAINEE-OVER 21. APPLY: LITTLE CAESAR'S, 5941 HIGHLAND. WATERFORD TWP. ORDER DESK AND STEADY OF-flct work. Industrial. For man over 30. Send complete resume to V Pontiac Press Box C-110 Pontiac, Michigan,___________________ PART TIME HELP WANTED. Mornings or ovenlngs, married. PART TIME, MARRIED, 21 AND ovar, *200 par month guaranteed.'. Coll 391-2334 between 3 and 7. VON REALTY GEORGE VONDERHARR, Realtor RESTAURANT MANAGER Cafeteria Experience Excellent opportunity for qualified 1 service ^manager looking for SHOE DEPARTMENT MANAGER. Women Shoes Position^ avajlable In our rapidly w dlvlsiojj. TE 34900 or apply office. 25 Parsons 1 Mon. through Fri. 3:30 p.f“ Clarke In Detroit, Winkelman's "STORES INC. SKILLS NEEDED Centerless of cutter grinders, 1 ret or engine lathes, vertical m cart. Halo arc welders, jeep 1 chanic. Many unskilled openli Bedford. 27320 Grand Rlvar Clawson, 45 S. Main Ferndato, 2320 Hilton Rd. employers Temporary Service, I 500. Call ,Tem Wells. 334-2471. Snslllng 2 Smiling.___ ritU^K DRIVER FOR WHOLESALE firm, must ba 21 or avar. 434-*174. _______ ■ TURNING W&'S 2 AC Operator Job let quantities, steady work. Top fringe banaflta, Including profit sharing. Air conditioned plant! Eonic, Inc. 464 E. HOLLYWOOD DETROIT (934100 An Equal Opportunity Employer ^WELDERS, FITTERS AND PRESS BRAKE, OPERATOR EXPERIENCED Excellent fringe benefits. Artco, Jje- W° Indlenwood, Lake Orion. $325-$400 GENERAL OFFICE Rscsptlonlsts, typists, , accounting clerks. Many varied positions. Fse •UM ph— - AAA-1 CORPORATION plats our .JSHn *Pont!sc of™ce. Must to lt-24, single end high school graduate. Salary ot S1S0 per wk. Cell Mr. Fox, 33S-0359 9 e.m.- ARTIST. A REAL KEY PERSON needed. Well known eompar — A Snelllng. peny. S4U. I. Snelllng Assistant to Managsr To hostess end supervise dlnln room. Need e mature woman wt has the ability to supervise. Got wages plus banaflta. Big Be Restaurant. Telegraph A Hurw For Interview call 3344503 bat. ATTENTION MOTHERS! Evenings Free? The Playhouse Co., Inc. (One of the world's largest to distributors) Is looking for worn# to sell toys, Aug. to Dec No exp. necessary — Wa train you. No collecting —no delivery. Exc. Commission PLUS valuable tonus gifts. Please cell; BETH WEBER FE 3-7377 or 412-1774 BABY SITTER, . 4*24112 after 4 BEAUTICIAN, 942 JOSLYN I er FE 8-4923. ~ BEELINE FASHIONS-NEEDS YOU FOR HOSTESS OR STYLIST— 1324131 IOK, SHORT ORDER, AAW ROOT Jeer Drive-In. 435S Dixie Hwy., Preyten Plohr COUNTER GIRL FOR DRY CLEAN-experienced |r ^ will train. DOCTORS AIDE. LAB TECHNI-' 9. Part or full time. S4lt. Call Ball. 334-2471. (netting A Snell- DRUG STORE CLERK, EXPERI-)d or will train, evenings. Lee gs, 4390 Dixie Hwy., Drayton _____n*.__________________ DRUG AND COSMETIC CLERK. Full er part time. Ruts's Country Drugs. 4500 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FASHION SALES Full and part time schedules to eult your needs. In Hadley's Specialty store In new fashion wing ot Pontiac Mall. Please apply Wad. Thurs., and Friday 1 to 5 p.m. at tto Mall office. HADLEY'S HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR W11 business me lor, full time summer, co-op during school s son, loco) manufacture, coll 3 HOUSEWIVES Earn S3 to S3 per hour In your spars time. Pick up and deliver Fuller Brush orders. For Interview phone OR S-5S74. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR 2 women for telephone work tor Dine-Out Club. Ideal hours for housewife or student. Phone 33S- - KELLY SERVICES “ 195 N. Saginaw . na-eiue EqualOpportunity > — 12:30 or i INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERS Manufacturer engaged in fabrication and assembly of major appliances and supplying automotive metal and soft trim components, has openings for Junior and Senior Industrial Engineers experienced im Assembly Line Balancing Methods Improvement Time Study Direct and Indirect Manpower Control Contact or Pend resume to: SALARY PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT KKLVlNAVQfl DIVISION ■' AMERICAN MOTORS CORPORATION 1S4S CLYDE PARK AVENUE GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN 49509 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 D—9 HelpWeatedFeaMle 7Help Wanted Female 7 NURSES, RN OR LPN, PAID SUM- MOTHERS WOULD YOU BELIEVE!! The Toy Chut otters assy SU, NEED SHARP GIRL, TO TEND >e* Ralph, Chalet Inn. 7* N. Saginaw. ' NJOifTSHIFT WAITRESS. OVER p, Ortonvllle. NA 7-24 Help Wanted Female NURSES - LPN* AND RN'S, PULL and pair time. Mrs. indlih Avon Cantor Hospltol, 651-9801. NURSES Raglstarad and lleansad. Full and part-time. For part tlma, you tan ut what hours and days you can work and we will fit you In. For those who have bean away from nursing this Is a wonderful opportunity. Contact Seminole Hills Nursing Homo. 331-7152, Ext. 40 for PAYROLL CLERK. CAN YOU ADD and subtract and accept responsibility? $455. Call Pam Fox. 334-2471. Snelllng A Snelllng. PRIVATE iECRETARY. SHORT-■“ d and typing. Sanaa of humor. I. Call Jo Sail. 334-2471. Snell-A Snelllng. Help Wanted Female 7 Help Wantid Female For business office. We net mature experienced secretary _______ Is an accurate typist and Is able to meet the public. Must work Saturdays and two nights a week, with m days off. Reply to Box C-2, Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan. WINKELMAN'S ’ OPENING SOON PONTIAC MALL INTERVIEWING DAILY 9:30 A.M. TO 4:30 P.M. SOUTH END PONTIAC MALL WINKELMAN'S SECRETARY. SHARPIE. THIS IS .. ball ringer. Gals hurryl S3M. Call Jo Boll. 334-2471. Snelllng A Snell- se<:r1tary For real estate YPIST. VERSATILE. MATURE gal — Interesting spat. Room 4 advance. $340. Call Helen Adai 334-1471. Snolilhgl,Shallfna. VACATION PLANS AHEAD? EARN a good Income dose to homo. Friendly, pleasant and profitable work quickly puls SO In your pocket* representing Avon Cosmetic!. Please cell FE 4-0439 or write P.O. Box 91, Drayton Plains. WAITRESS WANTED, FULL TIME. Harbor Bar, Kaago Harbor, 413- TELETYPE OPERATOR IMMEDIATE PART TIME OPENING FOR EXPERIENCED TELETYPE OPERATOR TO WORK ROTATING S H I F T S, TYPING SPEED OF 50 W.P.M. REQUIRED, AND ALL APPLICANTS WILL BE TESTED. APPLY IN PERSON, PERSONNEL DIVISION, OAKLAND C O U N TV COURTHOUSE, 1200 N. TELE-GRAPH RD„ PONTIAC- WANTED: WAITRESSES, COO MMT ’Is. Good wages. . B m — Ruth's Coffee i. Milford Rd,,mUM south of MS9. LADY FOR FOOD t, paid holler III FE 2-2634. WANTED TUPPERWARE HOME het openings for 2 I dealers. S45-S100 a weal alori. Free training. No li For Interview phono OSz-mw write Tupporwaro, 3329 Auburn R ~ " irn Haights. TYPIST AND GENERAL OFFICE work, mutt be fait and accurate. Steady lob. Apply Osmun's, Si “• Saginaw St. YVpIsfl bo YOU ENJOY PEOPLE and keeping busy? Loti of opportunity hare. S2S0. Call Pam Fox. 334-2471. Snelllng A Snelllng. WOMAN FOR TYPING AND oral office work. Plena tend pleta rotumo Including ago, lion, family status, fob an. ... Information to Pott Office Box 43. Pontiac, Michigan. WO WOMEN FOR HOUSEKEEPING DE-pertinent, cell after 9 a.m. FE a-7144 tor Interview. aVellety —OL_J4423_ ALCOA ALUMINUM SIDING XlUMINUM SIDING. ROOFING I Mailed by ''Superior" — yo authorised Kaiser dealer. FE 1-A BACKHOE AND DOZER SVC. Sewer end Septic Installation Basement Excavation—FE 8-2555 ll“cast iron sewersTw tor services. Condre. FE 8-044; BACKHOE. TRENCHING,. FOOT- ASPHALT AND SEAL-COATING, Fiaa Ettimatss. FES-im. SEPTIC FIELDS, DRY WELLS, TRENCHING, DIGGINGS. S» Luces tasto-’ *— tr Const. 4734240 DRAYTON ASPHALT. QUALITY paving and tool cooling, free -tlmotot. 474-0194 or 343-7(04. Eotlmotoe. FE ,ir*' CHAIN LINK AND WOOD FENCE contracting. 338 3784. 1. ______Auto Repair______________ WE SPECIALIZE IN REPAIRING, rebuilding, retooling automatic and standard transmissions. Bond ad-lustmonts. Fluid and filler changes. All makes. All models. Rochester Transmission 224 Main St. ““ 451-4120 Boots uad Accessories ■dquartei l fltargli liberals 1245 S. Woodward a Brick A Block Service BalMtm Modernhotien 1- A 2 CAR GARAGES. 20x22. $81 Additions, concroto work. Free 1: Springfield Bldg. Co._____425-21^ 2- CAR GARAGES. 20x20', SS75. WE aro local bulldors and build any else. Cement work. Free estimates. Pedy-Bullt Garage Co. OR 3-5419. COMPLETE REMODELING Service Quality work since 1945 Now It the best time to plan or A.1 COMPLETE LANDSCAPING specializing In broken retaining walls. Free H. Waltman. 338-83)4, MERION BLUE SOD. PICK UP OR delivered. 4443 Sherwood. 428-2000. 14 N. Saginaw G A ,M FE 2-1211 Free estimate* Tor«“ POR HOME IMPROVEMENTS^ Carpentry bathrooms. INTERIOR ,F paneling 4t Cement Work ANDY FOR PATIOS, D R r Mob*, tm—b “cement work of all ALL TYPES OF CEMENT WORK, Cement and Block Work Guinn's Construction Co. E 4-7477_________Eves. FE 5-9122 LltkffiSfD SIDEWALK BUILDER. Patios, drlvts, etc. FE 53349. MULTI-COLORED PATJOS. FLOORS, Dressmaking, Tailoring APPROVED AUTO D R I V school. FE S-9444. Free I Dry Wall Servjce HOT TAR ROOFING-SHINGLING, R. Price. FE 4-1024. QUALITY ROOFING. NEW ANb RE- Floor Sanding________ CARL L. BILLS SR., NEW, AND old floor sanding. FE 2-5799. !. G. SNYDER, FLOOR LAVIEg sanding and finishing. FE 5-0591. »Floor Tiling = BLACK DIRT FARM TOP* CHOICE Bl....._........ soil. Delivered. FE 4-4588. FILL. GRAVEL, BLACK DIRT, MERION BLUE AND KENTUCKY sod laid or delivered, new an" used railroad ties, grating er loading, back hoe, bulldozing er trucking. For free estimate phor 332-5584. 777 Scott Lake Rd.___ ^MERION OR KENTUCKY SOD ' • Del. No Lawn Mowing LARGE LAWNS PREFER RE reasonable. Rototlllfng. 394-0044. LAWN MAINTENANCE 338-0582 Lawn Sprinkling 1025 Oakland Maintenance Insurance Moving and Storage Painting arid Decorating Free estimates. UL 2-1398 •XPERT PAINTING / hanging. Call Herbie, < Piano Toalag UNING AND REPAIRING imMf Plastering Service Rental Equipment BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS-POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER-POWER SAWS a Joslyn ______FE *4105 beckhoes, Jackson's, 332-9271. rl NEW, REROOF - REPAIRS -Call Jock. Save the lack. 23*61 li OR 3-9590. Sand—Gravel—Dirt TOP SOIL. it*. iSmi a d top soil, f E *4924. rices. 673-0049.___ Septic Tank Installation Swimming Pools Tree Trimming Service 1 TREE TRIMMING BY BS.L Free estimate. FE 3-4449,6733510. L'S TREE TRIMMtNG, R!=MOV-al, free estimates 473-7)40 or 428- Help Wonted M. er F. » HOSPITAL DIETARY » B R VIC% Inc. ht$ immediate ownings tor cooks, bakers, diet aide*, soled girls, gon B in person 99RI 1201 W. University* ro!c^v,°2.*-m-,o WE NEED STENOGRAPHERS' SECRETARIES - TYPISTS Profitable Temporary Coll MANPOWER 332-83S4 -STERN OAKLAND COUNTY ^horeasDioirlo,|emen»a **ond,,cen* tral office? typing ait7 shorthand skills necessary, liberal fringe PORTERS FULL AND PART TIME__ DAY AND AFTERNOON SHIFTS NRW BUILDING CRITTENTON HOSPITAL ROCHESTER UNITS 1101 W. UNIVERSITY DR. INTEVIEWIND WED, AND THURS. JULY 5 AND 4 BETWEEN 10 A.M. AND 3 P.M. SEE MR. BOWEN IN HOUSEKEEPINGS DEPT. AAN OR WOMAN POR DETROIT FREE PREIS MOTOR _RpyriJN SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP, ORION TQWNSHIP, FOR FUTURE OPENINGS IN ALL OF Of" LAND COUNTY. CALL 334-2449. _________ livI In7 share chores, care of elderly mother, adlustablo schedule. 3 Write 17540 Dunbl4lne, B 1 HOME, 1. and 12' Help Wanted M. or F. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED All KH Positive *“ — positive S7.50 S10 SU MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER In Pontiac FE 4-9947 1342 Wide Track Dr. w. ion. thru Frl., 9 o.m.-4 p.r Wed. 1 p.m.-7 p.m. COOKS HOSTESSES KITCHEN ORDERLY HUDSON'S PONTIAC R now Interviewing for our Neu Store. You would enjoy those bene Purchase Discount Life Insurance Overtime beyond 40 hrs. Liberal Vocation Policy Paid Holidays Paid Training Period Many other Benefits Apply In Person Employment Office Basement HUDSON'S Pontiac Mall IfljfrWanted M. or F. > Wanted Miscellaneous^ ' 30 Apartments, Unfurnished 3B;$olo Hoasts MEN WANTED tl 42a week plus double ——tend lobe ova Limousine Drivers Also Women for typing, billing, and telephona work. Guaranteed salary, steady employment. Must ba Over 25. Call FE 2-9146. Requirements: Over 24— married — good driving record — excellent character — high school graduate — Pull time only. For appointment phono FE 1-1444 office own 7 a.m. to 10 __ R Grand River._______________ RETIRED MAN OR WOMAN TO work In laundry and dry clean-Ing, 1105 JOilyn. 338-2784.________ Sales Help, Mato-Female 8-A 2 EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE BON REAL ESTATE CO. NEEDS 2 more salesmen for Utica off), Exp. unnecessary, will train hi pitallzatldn. Up to *150 per v to start. Cell Mr. Hosted. 731-1011 CAN YOU SELL? If so, we have an opening l 2 people Interested in mekl money. Real Estate experlen helpful but not n--------- Pharmacist Full Time (40 hours) or part time (days or evenings) HUDSON'S PONTIAC IS >u "would Won|oyr these benefits. Fine Earnings Hospitalization Purchase Discount Life Insurance Overtime beyond 40 hrs. Liberal Vacation Policy Paid Holidays Paid Training Period Many other benefits HUDSON'S Pontiac Mall Can SALES COUNSELLOR. DO YOU like to work and have the to soil? Wo offer an exc. oc angle P telling. SHOES Men's Clothing Full Time and Part Time HUDSON'S Pontiac ing for our Ne onjoy those ban Overtime beyond 40 hr*. Liberal Vacation Policy Paid Holidays Paid Tralnln^J=erlod - Apply In person Employment Office Basement HUDSON'S Pcfntiac Mall EXPERIENCED MALE OR female beauticians special discern ' or purchases, hospitalization. Phi lip's Coiffeurs. 332-9270. Help Wanted M. or F. ___ IS THE TIMEI Michigan Bell 1345 Cess Ave., Detroit Phono: 3932115 i Wanted M. or F. motes. 474*1281 or 724-2495. “DALBY & SONS" STUMP, TREE, REMOVAL FE 5-3005 Mosquito Spray FE 5-3025 Care—Free Estimates i-ast Service—338-1314 TREE TRIMMING AND REMOV-Reaeonable. 391-1444. TREE REMOVAL, WOOD HAULED y, cut, stacked. Free est. 682-. 482-2752. GAO Enterprises. Trucking Mr (Jrlce* Any time. FE 6-8095. LIGHT- HAUUNOr REASONABLE FE 8-1344 or FE I LIGHT / HAULING, BASEMENTS, garauee dean. OR 3-4417. 623400. LIGHT aKd HEAVY TRUCKING, rubbish, fill dirt, grading and grew el and front-end loading. FE 30403 TruckReirtnl Trucks io Rent Vi-Ton Pickups IVSFTon Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Seml-Trallert ■ Ponrioc Form and Industrial Tractor Co. I 825 S. WOODWARD FE 4-0441 FE *1441 * i Dolly Including *— — Water Softeners BLOOMFIELD WALL C Wells cleaned. ,Reas. guaranteed. In------- Washer Repair COPPER. BRASS: Wanted ta Ront * OR 3-BEDROOM HOME. GOOD iterance*. 3344)44$. __ EMPLOYED WIDOW, WOULD LIKE infumlshed 2* or, 3room apt. • MIDDLE-AGED COUPLE desired Shorn Living Quarters 33 leaving the State’s — take current prospect file — hone not In the area. Many pi tional opportunities. Call EM 3-4703 —Hackett Realty for Interview. EM ■■ FE3946L WOMAN WOULD LtKE TO SHARE - |—ie with someone. Keego 391-2955.' OR 4-0304, eves. EM 37546. Wanted Real Estate ^ TtO 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PAR-CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARDEN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8165 Urgently need lor Immodlafe So lei Pontiac Dal& 'til • MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Rd. Enro today. A you. EM 3 by calling EM 3 NEED A GOOD SECOND INCOME? . no develop • franchised distributorship? START AS A DINEX DIRECTOR-MANAGER NOW to selling opportu- , .... ......fed potential. *arty Plan — I only need 2 di-■'— —' you may1 be one. ... ... appointment and fur-deteils on this exciting new This Call ACTION >e have many good buyoi. . homes In Pontiac. Cell us tor quick result* courteous service. SCHRAM REALTY 111 Joslyn FI MEMBER OF MLS ALL CASH For homes any place In Oakland County, money In 24 hours. YORK IR 4-0343 OR 4-0343 713 Dixie Hwy„ Drayton Plal ALL CASH 10 MINUTES even If behind In payments or i REAL ESTATE SALES FULL TIME AMBITIOUS SALES PEOPLE NEEDED. Will train call for Interview — Hog-strom Realtor, MLS, 4900 W, Huron — OR 4-0350 - 0.. nings OR 314229 and FE 4-7Q05. nings jk jiozzy ana re r/w, Peal estate, to handle re sort property throughout iMklagi Co. Flamy Of leads. Sal per wk. plus commission, necessary. Earn while yi Call Mr. Fuller, 4231333. Salary $125 I subdivisions. Models, tiBH ind Incentive programs. Cell ... 3. Smith, Waterford Rlly. 4731273. fesslon. /Model houses, subdivisions, ^ggegs for resak "— ible. Watertor Hwy. 473-1273. Instructions-Schools 10 riding Day camp, riding and —.... —— —to stable Riding 3430009. 11 ;e or Work WantBd Mato CARPENTER WORK WANTED OR 30514 ____ DEPENDABLE LAWN CUTTING gardening. 451-54**, PAINTING - INTERIOR. AND Eavestrough cleaning JMI I repair. No lobe too ^'SPERRVRAISD Vickers . 15 Mile and Crooks Troy, Michigan Has immediate openings for qualified Tab Machine Operators tor second shift. 2-3 years experience data processing machine pp< Liberal ^employee benefits Including pension end educational i tlstaneo program. Call 576-3411 for Appointment 8:15 A.M. -5 P.M. An Equal Opportunity Employer Work Wanted Female 12 Appointment Gladly Arranged -----st dr Obligation for Inter-1-— HOURS 9-7 P.M.—SAT. 9-5 p.m. " AID HUDSON'S Hair Stylists EXPERIENCED Male and Female ENJOY THESE MANY BENEFITS: Special discount on purchases. Apply in Person to Hudson's Pontiac Mall Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Road, Garden Plowing Convalescent-Nursing Painting tied Decorating 23 > YEARS EXPERIENCE I N T E R-lor end exterior palming, wet basement walls . repaired, free aotf. mate. FE 35344.' Pointing and Decorating 23 RAND VICKERS . 15 Mile and Crooks ■ / Troy,Michigan Has immediate openings for qualified . KEY PUNCH OPERATORS REM. RAND EXPERIENCE REQUIRED Second eh lit. High School graduates with recent Key Punch experience. Liberal lempletee benefits including Pension < Call 576-3411 for Appointment 8:15 A.M.-5 P.M. YfiC! FlLfcS, biiKj, MA-chinos. drptT' *“ OR 397*7. 3. Pontiac. Mich. n fl3$: BEDROOM, 3Vi ROOMS, 184, toy apt*. ISO E. Huron. ROOMS, BATH. STOVE. REFRIG-orator, utilities fern. Dtp. required — Elderly couple er lady. 338-13)3. ROOMS AND BATH, UTILITIES fern., 2 ladles or 2 gentlemen to 4-H REAL ESTATE OENfLEMAN'S FARM - 48 01 from Clarketon. Price *42,300 — J'il down, will divide. Cranberry Bitetee at --..^.wlU^Ol*' prlcelGJO. CITY LOT — On_paved street, 74'xl20' — Price SHOO. ROOMS AND BATH, UPPERS $9#!»44 DIXIE HWY. monfeplue depoelt. U48413. • . Open‘til 9p.i onniu wall to wall car. OR 5-0455_________________OR 4-201)4 utilities not furnished, i AMERICAN HERITAGE APTS. iTTRACTIVE 3 ROOMS. IN Pol tlac, refrigerator, utilities Mid. $: wk. Call Royal Oak, 398-0375. BfelCK APARTMEViT HOUSE LOWER FLAT ooms, bath, basement, tloo deposit. Valuet. FE 4-3? NEW APARTMENT BUILDING - ilr-condltloned, refrlger 427-3290 before 1 *135 up. No Chlldroi allowed. Carpeting, urspus, stove and refrlg. furnished, plus all utilities except electricity. In Drayton Plains area on W.. Walton Blyd. Call OR 4-3*03 after 5:00 p.m. weekdays - - WEST SIDE, 3 ROOMS AND B air condition, sec. dep., coupU *82-3100. ,_____________ '4231400 ROOM lH ACttp BiWTf^. ly landscaped. Fruit tree*. ,Slda La*?- Lk. prlv. liTml. to Rent Houses, Furnished 39 LAKE F large y family* 3-2193. CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTkACTS—HOMES WRIGHT i Oakland Ave. PS 39141 Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 BEDROOM HOUSE. SIN FOR | Ih# first and last months ram. In Highland, Call FE 4*2*2, Wed., rhurs. only between 10 and 111 p.m. and Sunday bet. 10 an FAMILY OF 4 3BEDROOM HOME, CLOSE TO GM plant, *125 per nr **** — — required. 851-0425. .. PURCHASER * CASH FOR A START- REALTY, 626*57 WANTED IN PONTIAC I----Ing. REAL VALUE tit NEED CASH? >vlng out of state? Need cash to ooRto debts? Need cash to buy another mhomo? Want cosh for iy?rwe will buy your Vhomoe',ft. cash today — Call Nick Back* lukas at O'Neil Realty, I 4-2222 or FE 34414 now) 49 WEST COLGATE (CORNER HOLLYWOOD) Ranch type home with large paled giving room, ■— mo. wfn' rJnMto ^oup?e * jth* cRft dren with certain reservation*. References reqmred.^T^o^g e t^h^e r Kenneth G. Hempstead Realtor FE 4-8204 — 185 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Ray O'Nell Realty, 3ull Pontiac. Lake Road WEST 0 room DriCK* i-------- , basement* $150. 673-6339. Rent Lake Cottages club. Write BILL JENNINGS, 37411 Grand River, Farmington, Michigan or coll 474-5900.______ dUlfcK CASH FOR YOUR HOME, SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA, OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 4-0351 0“ GRAYLING - LEWISTON,, SANDY beech, housekeeping cottages after 6 p.m. 772-0104. . _ LAKE FRONT, 2 BEDROOMS, MOD-ern, boat, /safe beach. Oft Round Lk. Rd. 9443 Mandon. 343-0139 or 427-7577,______________ LAKE FRONT COTTAGES AT LEW- L.EWIST6n, MICHIGAN, 3 - 6BD-room modern cabin IV* blocks off of East Twin Lake, 2V* block! from town of Lewiston. Close to many recreational activity c a n-ters. Rent for $55 per week. Call after 7 p.m. 474-0856. Apartments* Furnished 37 „j„ inquire et 273 Baldwin Ave. Pontiac, cell 3334054.________ ROOM APARTMENT. COUPLE only. *50 dep- 674-1581. ROOMS AND BATH, NO < 3 ROOMS AND BATH. PRIV4 Nicely furnlthed. Carpeted. 1 desirable location. Couplet i Rot. For details, 482-2548. voiu uxxNitnMeHii, « SESSIONS, BAD CREDIT,WiRH RASSMENT, BANKRUPTCY AND LOSS OF JOB. We have helped thousand* of people with creditor problems by providing o planned managed, organized program. LET US CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBTS WITH ONE LOW PAYMENT YOU CAN AFFORD. NO limit at to amount owed and number of credl-W« tor those who realize, "YOU BORROW YOURSELF OUT ROOMS AND BATH, BASEMENT, garage, $35 week, child welcome. Ml 4-1432. Allison St. 3 ROOMS WITH B IS-A 0 WORK, PLOWING, GRAD-w. top. salb grayel land manure. ADULTS ONLY, SPECIAL RAT to singles. 3339740. _______ ADULTS ONLY, NO CHILDREN, COLLEGE STUDENT, EXTERIOR, - Tty, ikfe. *----------------■— \ Detroit, LADIES DESIRE INTERIOR ^AINT-Watorfurd area. Free osti-OR 3004 or OR 329S4. PAINT, PAPERING MNTING AND PAPERINl You’re next. Orvel Gldcumb, 47 QUALITY WORK ASSURED. PAINT-hgt papering, wall washing. 673 Wantid Children la Board 28 Wanted Household Goads 29 CASH FOR-,GOOD CLEAN USED ' furniture. " t ' *‘—'“ Phono, MY 3M71. CASH POR FURNITURE AND AP-pBancot, 1 piece son's. FE 4-7881. CALL. THAT'S AU-I CASH FOR antique*, quality femltura -and BUM. M. H. Bellow, Holly. *37-5193 Sr 334-0742. _______ „„„ WORKING couple or retirees, utilities ggHI*- —4 side, no drinkers 3 ROOMS AND E Hac Michigan. ’ ROOMS AND BATH IN LAKE Orton. Utlities furnished, ..*35 a week. Dtp. recnilred. Call 493 M13. M8n.-Sat,,M_“ 4 NEAR CITY ROOMS, PWVATE B4 entrance, bachelor, no or drinking. Coll otter 5 ROOMS, NEWLY DECORATED. S35. No children — pet*. 482-3?"° ROOMS AND BATH, tottor. welcome —----**’ week, S100 dep. Baldwin, call 3334____________ ROOMS, FULL BATH, ADULTS. FE 4-0547. SMALL WWHPiSS per Inquire at 273 furnished, depotlt required,' call 10% DOWN NEW HOMES 3-BEDROOM TRILEVEL, finished family room, lVj-car garage. $12,-900 plus tot. i-BEDROOM RANCH with full basement, 2-car garage, aluminum siding, $14,900 plus lot. BEDROOM m baths, __ kitchen and dining 4 garage, paneled family room, *27,-RANCH MODEL NOW OPEN J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor Vi mile wet! of Oxbow Lokt 363-4404 10735 Highland Rd. (M59) i REAL- ESTATE COMPANIES hove tried to list this but no commission In this $22,500. 5 mln- oettng, quiet fenced comer. 583 3704._____________■ 72 MARK ST. 3 bedroom modem, 2-car garage. d bath. *3.000 down, Whit* ivileget. BREWER Real Estate ROOM HOUSE, EAST SIDE, Ik 41 -. ACRES, RANCH HOME, OWNER Clean Iarga 3 bedrooms, 11% bath*. 26x26 paneled family room. Full 1. FE 31325 after 5. $11,190 BRAND NEW. 3btdrm„ your tot, fir ■—— SULATED, —nay down. Y0UNG-B1LT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT * Russell Young, 33438*0 ____________ LA K | 2 bedrooms. 6234399. williaMs Lake front, Fukn-ished 2 bedroom, good beach. ~ week or for season. Ask for Taylor, owner. OR 4-0304, eves. BEAUTIFUL ROOM FOR PROFES-37111. LADY, WALK TO TEL-H U RON, Mall, bus. Can cook p.m. FE 33328. ______________________ SLEEPING ROOM, NO DRINKERS, SLEEPING ROOM. MEN. PONTIAC. Rooms With Beard Beat Office Space ATTENTION DOCTORS & DENTIST Establish your office In 44 J era Medical Building ne ------------- e now available. C Beat Business Property 47-A Adams. S52-3300. ig. gas heat. ........JHLAND ROAD, West .. Pontiac, 400 *q. ft. building ' plus tosdli^i do*, fenced yard, 31*T tront- B&TEAAAH REALTY 333*641, otter c -------- cell 332-3759. Sato Houses STORY A C M E L O R APARTMENT 193 Florence. 473-7951. unties furnished, BLOOMFIELD ORCHARD APARTMENTS Ideally situated In Bloomfield-B apartments available to Immediate possession from SI 5 per month todudlna carpetlnt Hotpolnt, air conditioning and a* pllances, large family kitchens, swimming pool and large sun deck — All utilities except electric. No detail of luxury ms been, overlooked In Bloomfield Orchard Apts, located on south Blvd. (20 Mile Rd.), between Opdyke and 1-75 expressway. Open dally and Sunday 3 to S p.m. For Information call 390-4545. Schram — 2-BEDR00M RANCH Possible 3 bedroom*, large tor, P car garage, alum, siding, fenccd-In yard. (12,500. Term*. FLATTLIY REALTY 420 COMMENCE RD. 3434981 BUSINESS WOMAN ONLY, airport, no children mo„ OR, 31943. OWER 4 ROOM. UPPER . dep...no drinkers. FE 5-9571. »tt6i' i-BEOROOM ap*R+mL. . . and nice efficiency apartment lust ad^^inu?...t«±: W, H^ronT^raoWE _________ante. 6731933. REDECORATED, 4 ROOMS, BATH. Screened back porch. 75 Marlva, ... 3-BEDROOM, C I T gas. basement, garage, privileges, commercial lot. >. OR 3724T -BEDROOM, NEWLY DECORATED homo one IVfc acres, beautifully wooded lot, Baldwin to Detovan, 3750 Lockawana. * BEDROOM dining room, gas heat, choice location. *11,500. Can be purchased on land contract. . TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE 1251 N. Opdyke ________332-015* 3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Drive but M-59 Just west of Lake Rd. to Csnde^jttdL Directly OAN MATTINGLY_________ 9 OL 1-0222 Brewer's Blue Ribbon Buy of the Week LIVE IN HAPPINESS living area on first floor, bast men! converted Into living area, bedrooms up, 1 down, Fireplace u and one down. Healed 2-car a' Itched garage. *12,70' must see this horn* ._ It. Call Mr. Edw. Cheyz. BREWER BEDROOM. 5 R full ba front y 950. Ortonvlllo - 427-2517. 1 EXCELLENT MODERN RANCH ARRO Ted McCullough, Realtor PRICE REDUCED, ATTENTION GI'S on this 2-bedroom aluminum elded bungalow, etormo end screens, port basement, attached garage, lot 100x150', *10,500, only closing costs down. ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES — Sharp 3 bedroom homo, double stainless steel sink, dlshmaster in handy kitchen, full beMrrwnt, gas heat, family room with fireplace, loads of storage space and extras. 1 Vi car garage, partly fenced yard. Priced et *18.- PH0NE: 682-2211 5143 Cass-Elizabeth Road • MLS_____________ OPEN DAILY 9-9 TTRACTIVE, AU. BRICK. Clarketon,. Cranberry Lake, 3 tad-rooms, custom bulli. All butIMna, many axtras, immediate possas-skm, 4548 Amy' Or, 4232837 AUBURN HEIGHTS, house. 2 bedroom . ment. Garage. Shaded lot a be 4 bedroom home. |15,900. Nix Realty, 451-0221, S53S37S. _ ATTACHED GARAGE, 3 BEDRM8. *9,930. Art Daniels, 434-1000, GA ATTRACTIVE and beautiful paneled welts, carpeting, dining room,, attractive kitchen, — *4"* -enclosed -eun -port. A must on your ’list see. SI 6,700 ato|tataM|tata| heat, _ 10x20 it to cant all located. 6 room home (real sharp) with fell basement, gas heat plus nice ■! room homo Warden Realty, AT ROCHESTER - 3 RANCH HOMES 3BEDR00M BRICK Family n fireplace, get heat, attached rage, *23,900 terms. BEDROOM BRICK, ns close to tchoole end six water, .sewor, paved drive. 2-car attached f -BEDROOM BRICK In BIO Mill, car attached garage, most beautiful yard, (33,500 term* with quick M?LTONnweAVER, Inc. Realtors Brown I Builders SI » 1939 , formal dining r Cantor. 3 Bedrooms LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS MODEL OPEN mCOLORADO 1:20 to 2 p.m.-*day week WEST0WN REALTY JFB 32743 day* __ After 7^30 p.m. — Ll 2-4477 ROCHESTER AREA. Attrecttv* old-- home ettueted on two large --- schools. Largo Hvlna • "ling room, fell . contract forma price *9,450. Les Brown, Realtor 509 Ellzotalh Lk. Rd. (Across from the Mall) FE 2-4010 or FE 435*4 BY OWNER. CAS3PONTIAC LAkij Rd*. bedrooms, attached 8Z BY~OWNER. 6 ROOM.. I STORY side, largo xg-rjssri all. finished bose-fl« 4/75 rono«roGi* D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY g, 1067 Sale Nooses 41 1 Ida Hea«et . 411 ■Y OWNER — WALLED LAKE took what 8*258 busy, 82250 wll tabs ever land contract of 8*8 < month for 10 yr». or lets, houai appraised around 810,006" S bad room full basement. 624-3771. I HOLLY AREA ■ 3 bedroom ranch hem* an 107x120' • shaded let. Priced at 811,500. 4 bedroom, 2 stor? elder horn* In excellent condition, alum, exterior, ’ large shaded lot. Priced at 816.500. j . CARRIGAN QUALITY HOMES INC-. 232-4922 OR 629-8415^ IV tiwtofk - i beDroom, PULI basement. 88958, with 81.000 down WM a mo. tor 12 yrt. Wallet Laka, 4244771. Formal dining room area. 3 baths Walnut panalad family room wilt matching walnut bar. Fenced. 2VS car attached garaga. Many extras 823,980. *5,080 down. Before 9 A.M or aflar 9 P.M., 674-15*1. C. A Akers. i HIITER ’ NORTHERN tilGH AREA — This nee* < 3 bedroom and bath, bullt-ln stove and oven, full basement, carport, 814,958 FHA or Gl terms. 1 > NORTHS IDE — Nett 4 rooms and l bath, ivy. car garage, 8100 down, > FHA terms. ' ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES -3 bedroom brick, finished roc room family room, 2'V -ar oarage, laka privileges, sea this onel ! 311,750 WE BUILD - 3 bedroom ranchers, oak floors, vanity In bath full basement, gas hest. on your lot. To see, the model call B. C. HIITER REALTOR, 3792 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. FE 2-0179, after 1 p.m. 682-6427. IDEAL WINTER HOME OR RE-tiremenf home In a beautiful setting, near the Gulf and shopping area on the Watt coast of Florida. 852-2438. CITY OF PONTIAC Neat 3-bedroom layout, with fill basement, gat heat, completly carpeted, 2 car garage, 2ERC dawn, 871 par month, Immedlati occupancy. YORK REALTY, OR 4-0363. CLARKSTON AREA Located within 1 block of Clark# ton schools. Modern 3-bedroorr ranch home with 1V5 baths, family room with fireplace, extra large lot.^ Pull price: *17,500. Terms to PLEASANT LAKE Yter-areund 3-bedroom lake-front home featuring plastered walls, hardwood floors, enclosed front porch, - all large rooms. An excellent buy at 817.500. Terms to suit. J. A. TAYLOR, AGENCY, Inc. 7732 Highland Rd. (MS9) OR 4-0306 Eves. EM 3-9937 or EM 3-7546 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION -5 acres and this lovely 3 bedroom ranch, with carpeting, basement and attached garage are waiting tor vour approval near Baldwin Rd. Offered at 124,950. Log cottaga, 84900, North of Clarkston. Green Acres Inc., MY 3-6262 or evenings MY 3-6473. Crestbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY 12-8 3 bedroom, family roam and 2 car garaga priced at only 815,990 plus lot. Located In new tub with paved IN TROY 2-bad room ranch. 11A baths. Family room, 24'x24' garage, to acre. TRolan 9-0326. streets, curb, gutter, sidewalks and city water. Drive out M39 to Crescent Lake Road turn right to Crestbrook street and modal. DON GIROUX REAL ESTATE 4511 Highland Road (M59) 673-7837 IN ROCHESTER Peaceful and comfortable describes this lovely 3 bedroom brick ranch on over an acre with lots of trees. Has fireplace In living ream. Large tamlly room* and lots of storage. 827.900. Be among th* first to see this new listing by calling 651- 'SHEPARD'S REAL ESTATE DRAYTON AREA Naw 1 bedroom, 1VV baths, full basement, large tot, clot* to shop ping cantors and schools. DON E. MCDONALD Llcbntad builder OR 3-2837 OR 3,2810 IRWIN ■ CITY FARM 2 bedroom bungalow with auto gas heat. Attached garage and storage shifd In rear. Situated on 3 7/10 acres of land. Insld* th* city. INCOME 3-famlly Income In Lake Orion. Has 2 apartments down, 1 up. Easy walking distance to downtown. 82,580 dawn on land con- GBORGE IRWIN, REALTOR „ MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 298 W. Walton FE 3-7883 DUNHAM LAKE Exclusive, executive type home with lake privileges on beautiful private Dunham Laka. 2 bedroom all brick ranch home. Landscaping exceptional, on almost I acre. Shown by appointment only 832.-800. LHP 36.14. HOWELL Town & Country, Inc. Hlghlnad Branch Office PHONE: 313-685-1585 FINE HOMES ARE BY: Beauty-Rite HOMES 3538 Pontiac Lake Road 673-1717 FIKST IN VALUE It'S WHAT'S INSIDE THAT (toUNTS A distinguished home with well iron and taste. Llvlnn rnnm h>n LAKE PRIVILEGES 1 NICE SIZE BEDROOMS, partial --------* Near schools and " prlca $7,580. Dan Edmonds REALTOR , 325 PonNac Trail. WelHid La 624-4811 RHODES ORCHARD LAKE AVE., S modern home, wall M *“ natural fireplace, 1' ixcellanf location. tirtmdnt : with excellent 60* lot, zoned commercial. Meal business site, only (20,000, ss.ooc down, balance lend contract. ALBERT J. RHODES, Realtor :E 8-2306 251 W. Walton FE 5-6712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 3ROYER Richard S. Royer, Realtor LAKE FRONT Newly decorated on Late Orl S rooms. 3 bedrooms. Storm v lows, storm doors and screens eluded. Your opportunity for l_._ front living. Low down payment lo Gl mortgage. SHARPI 49ICARN1VAL By Dick Turner WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD Extra eharg^ranch tame,, located o mediate posseeslon. Don't » welt tang. Selling for 115.500. YORK 4715 Dixie Hwy„ Drayton Plains « BUY WE TRADE Ml 4-0363 _____OR 4-0363 Wideman CITY WEST — Older home situated kltch*n?*faml (/"dining room, 2 bedrooms with possible third. Basement, gas FA heat. Garage. Quick possession. ONLY 50.250, 81,000 DOWN ON LAND CONTRACT. SUBURBAN NORTH, building lot, 100x150 ft. with shade trees. Lake! privileges. Full price, *2,995 RENTING $78 Mo. Excluding taxes and Insurance ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. OR COME TO 200 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN 1 REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 It with us. We have clients waiting. Call to discuss your buying—sell- one bedroom c ......dad, marble sms, i anc hslhs, charming kitchen with 1. For fast action and reliable service Complete Real Estate service. Homes • farm- ‘—’--------- retail - lake 6 is • businesses • Lauinger REALTY 674-0319 CARDEN SPOT IN WATERFORD Township — 6 room ranch, full base., Anchor fenced lot, patio, 2-car gar., many trees, shrubs, flowers. Fum. optional, 110,500. GAYLORD . This homo il tkm end only szz.oog. MY 2-2821. FE 04693. HIITER rec. room. Aluminum siding, car garage. 017,900 — Terms. NEAR WALLED LAKE - Th rooms and bath, new furnace, porch, large lot, lake prlvllt 59,900 — Terms. $11;7S0WE BUILD - 5 bedroom ranchers, oak floors, vanity In bath, full basements, gas heat, on your lot, To see the model Call B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3792 Elizabeth Lake Road. FE 2-0179. After 6 p.m. FE 4-7529. JOHNSON IMMEDIATE POSSESSION vy# also have a i sided 5 room 1 to mortgage. After 6* call A. Johnson & Son, Realtors 706 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-2533 KENT Established In 1916 NORTH BRANCH Nice 5 room garage 24x26. B I y large bedrooms, 816,000. BRICK 3 BEDROOM - Neat at clean. Attached 2-car garage Fen 500 down' 12Xl4' with 8 Floyd Kent, Inc., Realtor HOO Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph FRONT. JAYNO HEIGHTS. -—sive,_ modern, convenient — Owner. FE 8-9235, Sun., OR 3-2605. LAZENBY Williams Lake Front edrooms, full basement, pan-family room, .large 12'x20' g room, separate dining- R0YCE LAZENBY, Realtor Open Dally from 9 to 8:30 p.m. Sundays, 1-5 p.m. 4626 W, Walton — OR 44301 fverett Cummings, Realtor 2553 UNION LAKE ROAD HERRINGTON HILLS 3-bedroom all brick rancher. Full basement. Completely finished family room with accoustical tile ceiling. Gas forced air. Larg, tractive yard. 515,900. FHA 2-STORY INCOME Presently rented for 5250 ___ Large living room, kitchen, 1 bed-— , bath and torgatneloeed . 3 bedrooms, living . w>>„m.vi.an and bath up. Gas heat. West side toeatlw. 512,500 to qualified Vet only. Closing costs Sislock & Kent, InC. 1309 Pontiac Stats Bank Bldg. 5-9294 3339291 MODEL OPEN "IT'S TRADING TIME" DAILY 2-3 P.M. SAT. 2-6P.M. SUN. 2-6 P.M. "LAKE ANGELUS LAKEVIEW ESTATES" West Walton Bhrd. to Clilstonvllle Rd. to Subdivision 2859 Costa Mesa Ct. Ranchers, winged colonials and colonials from 525,950, Including base lot. Lake privileges — canal front and waterfront i Jots to choose from SEE THEM SOON. y KAMPSEN m St. HOMES ARC LIKE SHOES Balter If they fit - chad features of this home for your needs. S bedroems basementless . ranch, carport, SO x 145' tile ne -Union Loke. 813,900 — No dot Wi 0,lrt^, Are You A Handy Man? Yeu CM finish MeicGni 3 bedroo alum., sided ranch an 40x120' site near Creacent Lake. 895(0—81,000 ROSS Save at todays prices BIG 4-BEDROOM Homes Colonials... tri-level from $29,400 total house including lot . . golf course ... 10 mill boating . . . city water . . .tennl “^LAKELAND estates Dixie Hijjhwej^eCross from Open Dally and Sunday 1-7 p.m. ROSS HOMES MODEL: 623-0670 1941 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 44159 SEE THESE 3 AND 4 BEDROOM Colonials. Tri-Levels Quad-Levels-Bi-Levalt. Duplication prices from $26,800. 90 par cant financing available. Lakeland Estates. On Dlx1-Hwy. Just past Walton Blvd. aero from Dixie Fottery. Open Dally to 7 p.m. Cloisd Fridays. Ro_ Homes. 1941 S, Telegraph. 4234670 or FE 44591. _____ Frushour SUBURBAN LIVING At Ita vary bast — time la essence — to let's look charming 3-bedroom brick this weekend. Hare Is a sized kitchen with built-in.._ petlng, drapes and attached 2-car garage. The lot Is beautifully land-scaped. 520,950 — Trade-In — ceptod. 1-BEDR00M RANCH CLARK ONLY 5555 DOWN — F.H.A. TERMS 2 story Modern Family -Home, 1W baths, 23. ft. carpeted living room, fireplace, 3 large bedrooms, full basement, oak floors, plastered walls. Walking distance to schools and bur ““ Fries 817,900. “What’s all this hurry to get to the moon? There isn’t anybody up there to vote — or tax!" s existing ■BRHBPWBVP^-.-.'wnti win "SM0" lne,ud,nB ,,x“ ALUMINUM RANCHER Deluxe modal, features rooms, a main bath with ______ walls and floor with twin basins and a formica vanity, kitchen bullt-lns, and extra to bath, double sealed alum, wlnr— — screens, marble tills, wall at the dining basement and a large pa?*ted tor,l816,500non 10 per cent down or .JHPUM vour present horns.' Call tor de- JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor '30 Williams Lake Rd. ML 674-2245 Sob Houses . 49 MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR Shiawassee River frontage, treat, on tor home site In Holly — 1 year c _ ranch — walk out basement — gat hot water heat — 2 ball — 525,000, 05400 down. Underwood Real Estate 0665 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston 625-2615, EVes. 625-3125 SYLVAN LAKE FRONT Small cottaga, neat and dean full bath, excellent beach, all furnished. Ready to move Into. Only $0,500 — 02,000 down. Bal., 065 mo. K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lake Rd. 6824900 THIS IS A NICE 2-BEDROOM MajMwdfjtaWMMHdv^ located on i Pontiac, Im-asking $12,-r agent, OR 44365. TUCKER REALTY CO. 903 Pontiac State Bank 336-1545 WO FAMILY IN ORTONVIL|!e, S180 Income. $12,900, terms. 150‘ UOMtaijMril* M-15 FE 5-0541 or ontage. H E 4-0873.___________ UNUSUAL — DIFFERENT X' UNIQUE - EXCITING THE COMPLETE HOMe Timberline don Lake. _______ ... Church. By appointment at $15,500. The Rolfe H. Smith Co. 44 S. Telegraph Rd. 333-7040 UNION LAKE AREA 2 bedrooms and bath, also enclosed heated porch, hardwood floors, excellent condition throughout, part basement with new oil furnace, garage, large tot with plenty of shade. Only $12,500, plUi mortgage costs. K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lake Rd.____682-0900 VERY ATTRACTIVE Three bedroom ranch style south of Lake Orion, near I dean neighborhood. Panels --------if-stone fin >r, attached ■ garage. %r. C. A. WEBSTER REALTOR VILLAGE HOME Pleasant and comfortable, to_____1 of well maintained land, home In excellent condition, I Bad-------- large 16'x27' family mant and large 28': 010,900. Terms. large 28'x30' garage. NORTH PONTIAC 3 bedroom. Newly decorate.. ..... carpeting. Full basement. 2-car garage. Convantamljf ‘—MB —M down plus cpsts. ' INCOME 2 family home on main rd. . Only 0450 Full prlca only : CSCHUETT FE 3-7088 MA 3-0288 raj#^and small barn. 029,000, U “"'OPEN JULY 4 C. PANGUS INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 630 MIS . Orte. CALL COLLECT NA 7-2015 STRUBLE AUBURN HEIGHTS 3 bedrooms, Ito story, home, has a newly carpeted living roam, full sized dining room, plenty of kitchen cabinets. It has 1 bedroom down and 2 up. Full basement. Priced to sell at 011,500, terms. NORTH SIDE Almost new Is this a room 3 bedroom home. It has 15* square carpeted living room for easy furniture placement, W dining room, hardwood floors and a disappearing stairway to attic, gaa heat, alum, storms and screens, rear yard Anchor fenced. Prlca Is 013,- NO OBLIGATION. ’ Pontiac Northern Area Charming 6-room, lto-slory alu num bungalow. 3 bedrooms will large 23ixl1*7" living room wU fireplace, lto-car garage and for a bonus extra — the kiddles will get a charming playhouse. Don't be second — bettor call now Wa don't think It will last lov Only 013.350 bank terms. Lightning Strikes Twice HERE'S ANOTHER JOLTING BOLT Cute 2 bedroom ' ----out basement Blacktop street Aluminum siding Attached garage Close MATTINGLY Union Lake Privileges 3 bedrooms, carpeted living room ledgerock fireplace, fenced vert 2 car garage. $18,000 with 10 pe Silver Lake Privileges Beautiful Weinberger , resale* 3 bedrooms* 2 car garage# landscaped yard and patio. Many ax-cent down or fradt °° **** per Washington Park This spotless 3 bedroom home can be bought at 016,500 with 10 per cent down. Carpeting and drapes, painted basement, ceramic bath» today V,ri ,nd Baraga. Trade 4 Bedrooms — 3 Baths Sea this large ranch lust 2 miles from the Mall. Has 2 car garage* full basement and more closets TED'S EQUITY TRADE lake Living kT A LOW COST. NOTHING DOWN TO Gi'S. 3 bedroom Pome, lame living room, on'canal leadir- -Cast Like. Pull prlca 114,000. SOUTH SIDE 5 bedroom home In excellent condition, full basement, garage, 010, l floor. Carpeted living roor g room and TV room plus or 3 bedrooms. Air conditions, bright kitchen with dishwasher. Ful basement. 2 car garage, screenec patio with fireplace. Lots more and lust 526.500 on land contract. LAKE P R I V I LEGES, $9,950 full 5400 DOWN west side 3 bedroom home. Immediate possession. ”' * bargain features 1 bedroom ___________R * —. Tv room and lovely kitchen, gas furnace A water hei‘~ | VON —id at $12*900 A lot of peopla VON REALTY GEORGE VONDERHARR. Realtor 1 the Mall MLS Room 110 'BUD" DETROIT, MICHIGAN W. SEVEN MILE RD. bedroom brick. petlng, 2 bedrooms end down, 2 bedrooms and vy oatn up, full bastment, rec room, gas heat and hot water, garage. Priced at $19,900, FHA mortgage BIG" FAMILY HOME 4 bedroom split-level, excellent neighborhood, extra large lot, car attached garage, paved drive; includes carpeting and Priced at $38,500, shown by i polntment only. NICH0LIE-HUDS0N 49 Mt. Clemens St. FE 5-1201, after 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 Sale Houses Buzz1 BATEMAN NO. 24 CITY BUNGALOW 3 BEDROOMS; with c i movingsoutti. I > that you ci NO. 21 FOUR BEDROOM ENGLISH COLONIAL tq. ft. of living arat ............ city west-side location. Wonderful condition, lots of extra — beautiful large living n. fireplace, plus 2 car garage. This 's an exceptionally nice property vlth a comer location. daBiMB||i priced at $23,980 with ti by appointment ONLYI NO. 22 ' $500 DOWN FHA TERMS: on this tpz---------I — ■-—i on elly east-side, 2 HALL 3 BEDROOM — ranch In good Waterford location, all large rooms, plenty el closet space, clean Iliad Bath, 188x150 ft. tot, only 4I1M0 with 10 par cant down. Lai ana -our courteous tales people ah you this hemp. BEDROOM BUNGALOW - w lake prlvllegw an Brtndel Lai fireplace In living room, taper: dining room, 2-car garage, n I wooded lot, only 110,280 80 do plus closing cost only to ox-OI, CLARKSTON — 3 bedroom older story homo, 24 ft. living room w fireplace, largo enclosed fr-porch, finished and heated lly room, kitchen, hardwood fl and jilattorad walla. Ir lot. This homo lain \ condition. Lot us show B. HALL REALTY 6569 Dlxlo Hwy. 9-9 Dally 625-4116 -FFICE OPEN SUN., 2 TO * QUICK POSSESSION: ON C O t TRACT: 2 bedroom home net Pontiac Motors. Carpeted llvlr and dining room. Oak floor full basomant, gaa heat, Ito-c: garage^ Full prlca only 11145 CLARK REAL ESTATE 1362 W. HURON FE 3-78M MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE FE 5-8183 Thrao-bodroom bride bungel__ Living and dining araa. Kitchen. Full batemant. Newly decorated. Vacant. About SI,480 reqr‘ HARRINGTON HILLS Three-bedroom brick b Living ar" 8k|------ SOUTH SIDE Two-bedroom bungalow, end dining area. Kltchi utility. Vacant. About $ qulred. •> > SOUTH EAST SIDE nLllen§ Nicholie & Horger Co. Eve. call MR. ALTON, 6734130. 53to W. Huron SI. FE - li and a Real Family-type It's reasonably prlcod at 115,-Ith as little st 8550 down plus Better see this One Today) NO. 55 SUBURBAN 2-BEDROOM BUNGALOW with now Vh-r.tr healed garage. Nice wooded ... ...,fh lak, privileges on Wllllomr lust across ina f ‘ ' e work but If -yoi the hammer and r____., BMpi in get yourself a Real Bargain. I af 09508 With 82408 down on Contract. NO MORTGAGE i; NO. 81 BEAUTY & COMFORT BEST DESCRIBES t h I * spacious rancher on estato-stzad mi d oversize 24x26 ge. Bum in 1963 nicely land-id and laka privileges on 1 r Lake. Priced at $31,908 vajj^DupItea EM 3-4)71 SCHRAM WATERFORD AREA WE HAVE LOTS IN MANY A! 7 room Cape Cod —> carpet# Ing room, 21' carpeted living_ with split Pone fireplace, targe closefV space,' Itofbethk'basl gas heat, 1*0x168’ fenced lot . toads of shad* trees and 2 car garage. Price of 825,000 cash mortgage. Al PAULEY OR 3-3888 Eyes, 623-0808 Waterford You who am cramped for space will enloy this fully remodeled 4 bedroom older homo r- - Extra# Include full _ . fenced yard, garage, 81800 down plus costs — i-*-* -—-- L patio, $21,- 4548 Dlxl* N to u I .""T-atoi* FOX BAY I- bedroom colonial with ivy bath =ull basement. 2 car garage. No aider construction. 82048 Includi at. Peetaatlon Sept. l|f service is our Business Waterford realty HIGHLAND ESTATES Sham 3 bedroom home In Waterford, large family room, lib baths, bullt-lns, attached garage, paved streets, fenced yard. Prtr- — HURON GARDENS Sharp 2 bedroom home with garage, fenced yard, outdoor 1i|f becue, oil aluminum siding. FHA prlca, $11,750.* McCullough realty 5460 Highland Rd. (MSI) 674-2238 V 674-2239 V^l-U-Way OFF KENNETT 3 BEDROOM-BASEMENT RECREATION ROOM hires Include: hardwood oak flooi.. gat hoot, Iliad bath, plenty of cupboards and closets. Hem It the tow down—. ’ $600, HERRINGTON HILLS, This sharp 3 bedroom home Is located on a targe comer tot. Featuring a recreation room In basomant, convenient kitchen with ample cupboard space, comfort, bie living mom, tile: heal, awning covered 2 car garaga. 81500 n on FHA forms. i and i carpet, large utility mem, heat, blown-ln insulation, cer-lot, loads of cupboards and tts. Move In tor only tSSO. R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR1 FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Ave. Open 9 to 9 $1,000 DOWN- 1 bedroom, large living and dining area, full basement, gc J location, land contract, $550 TOTAL DOWN - Neat 3 bedroom, near new tin ping canter, walking distance Fisher Body. LOW DOWN PAYMENT- Large 3 bedroom on east tk_ dan can^be^used tor fourth bed- • List With SQHRAM And Call The Van KINZLER window, home ^to to bedrooms) family kitchen' wit., birch cabinets and fditnlca counters and large activities room. CL-hest. Only $17,500 and you i move right in, 10 per cent fine Ing. Better see Ihlt hew offer “liEW RANCH HOMES AH white aluminum exterior with attached 22x22 garago. 6 delight! ' rooms with gleaming oak flooi kltchon with bullt-ln ovon, rant-end hood, life Baths, walk-out basement for recreation. Gat haat, low taxes. Also a tow choice 10x300 scenic lota ait only 81,650 on which we could build your ranch or Wton'"‘ 52 ACRES High and scenic bn all good. Clean farm land. Naarly l mil* road front eg*. A good Investment or Ideal to divide Into acreage par- . CHEROKEE HILLS Excellent she tor new ranch, colonial or split-level. In new section. 95x160. Owner will furnish park "jOHN KINZLER, Realtor 5219 Dixie Hwy. _ 623-0335 Across from Packers Store yS \ He Listing Service open 94 BATEMAN REALTOR MLS FE 8-7161 377 S. Telegraph Rd ROCHESTER Br. UNION “L 1-8518 .. . . 10 S. Rochester Rd. 8175 Commerce STOUTS Best Buys Today OFF BALDWIN - 4 room and bath bungalow with lull basement on blacktop stasal Furnished with-the exception few Items. $1650 down and assume HORSE FARM - 10 acre farm Just north of Oxford which contains a -5 bedroom flam home with modern kitchen, baths, basement, oil heat, barn, ether outbuildings. An cellent pica of property, pr at $27,500 with term#. SWIMMING POOL this 3 bedroom alu- ---- - M located Giant size mlnum skied r Pontiac. 1966 bu...—. ------- basement. 2 baths 3> loads of petlng. Beautiful Panallng. S 2 stall bam with storage _________ for grain. Other extras Included. Owner lust reduced prlca to 819, 950. Warren Stout, Realtor 450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 641 Multiple Listing Service KAMPSEN "IT'S TRADING TIME" * CLARKSTON AREA A high setting overlooking the taka. Throe bedroom brick home that yeu will wantl 11b baths, nice kitchen with built-in appliances, carpeting and drapes Included. Full basement, gas heat, large let. Laka privileges. Asking $22,950 . ■ • TERMS OR TRADE. PINE LAKE PRIVILEGES Three bedroom brick rancher, ceramic tile bath. Nica kitchen with table space. Basement, gat ■ heat. Carpeting,^ stove, ^nrlrljs^-Two car garage, paved drive. Offered at S21.9M. TERMS. LOTUS LAKE FRONT 250' water frontage. Six room bilevel home featuring walkout basomant to large patio over-kMiriiMi flu lav*. Two natural hdrAM mediate possesion. Asking $32 TERMS. THINKING OF SELLING OR TRADING HOMES— C OUR ESTIMATE BEFORE V DEAL—Call Elaine Smith, D IRWIN SYLVAN VILLAGE: ■ If yeu have bean wanting I locate In Sylvan Village and c< use a 3 bedroom home taka look at this. One owner. NU 2 story heme. Pull batamanlk car garage. Pricai 31*488. WEST SIDE: Attractive 3 story brick #fL frama 6 room horn*. Carpeted JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS Raaltori 313 West Huron — Since 1925 Buying or Selling Call FE 5-9448 After 5:80 Call F> M844 GILES DOLL HOUSE you will ba proud to ewi bedroom, lull basement,^gi COMMERCIAL CORNER LOT ICe plain 4-room bungalow wil isement and oil hr~* -1'1- *“* all garage and offl< It on Auburn Raod. BUNGALOW Claude McGruder Realtor Multiple Listing Service — Open 9-|g| "ildwln Ave.______FE 5-4175 d office, 120' front- DORRIS S3i attaching the 22x24 ________... I cement drive and beautifully li scaped lot 81x125. , I 814,500 on reasonabli largo bedrooms, oak floors, i carpeted rage. IlSSoT *** ^ FINISHING TOUCH U moving Into ' i very nice starter home local-within walking oatanc* of Pon-: Motors and larg* north side separate dining f -‘ hill ROSE TOWNSHIP 23 44 acres, n##r Davisburg, SSM par aero, 811,220- oiiWO down. 7J3 frontage, slightly rolling land. WEST HURON & V00RHEIS Price reduced, janed tor oHIcao, modical clinic* t4r on Horan* 16 ACRES Ideal Industrial sit*, near Pantlaa Airport, 834.000. 25 per c#nl dawn, or may exchange tor other property. BATEMAN commBrical department • 377 $■ Talagraph Rd. S8-M41 Clarkston, 83,200. 12 ACRES OVERpLOOIKINO Tljtlce ACRES WOODED, $600 per sere, divide In 2 parcels only. MANY MORE desirable building sites Underwood Real Estate 625-2615 Eves___________*25-3125 5 ACRES road frontage, 660” data with dug besemenL^ots of ^4'^and down — 835 per month on land contract. 25 miles north of Pon-MLS. RIDGEWAY REALTOR »“ ACRES, W'O O 6 I IJ RIVEjl' Blech Bros. 623-1323, FE 4-4508. Vown'erL-cooley LAKE FRIV-llege toft, 3 to choose from r* "81.650 each. 125x125, r—■ — ad. 14 mile from Oman >.1 liege. 363-9515, offer 5,_ BUILDING SITES good building lots In Ketao H k Across from. City Hall. 84 impltla. JACK LOVELAND ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES ‘™ Landscaped corner lot.' High and level, excellent perk test. Suitable for any atyla homo. Largo beach and boating privilege!. $3,500. By Owner. FE 5-0198. INO^F'feNbSNCE' TOWNSHIP, COR- OUT OF THE BOX MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Incoaie Properly ____SO - LOVE- Lak# Property__________51 RIVER LOTS, ACCESS CASS 180 x 188, 86500 cash. 602-: ito* lAkefAont with sandy i washer* stor 200 FOOT ON P O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? THE BRIGHT GLOW OF PRIDE Will shin* In th* eyas of your wifi and children whan you say "Thi belongs to us." Located In the Fo: • area, this almost new rand __ing. Large toi...., ural fireplace, ivy baths, full base- ---' attached 2 car garage. $32,500. Ne. 3-26 NEAR WATKINS LAKE a neighborhood that peopl. ----... leave; they usually move around th* -srnar and that's axsctly what thas# lea folks art doing. Their graat big bedroom ranch home Is nor — bis for almost Immediate .Jon, time enough to enloy DOOM beautiful summer at th* lake. Thar* ‘ 4 big famth ------ ----------- full flnlatiSPeilRRRRPlPMH chad 2 car plastered garage. Full ice 829,900 Including a ippan range, wall even at automatic dishwasher, u'd Ilk* to Irad* your : mt tor this pretty one? L, ilntment at your convenience. TIMES WATERFORD Township offers you a cute and cozy 5 ream ranch' with If-- landscaped and fenced tot, gas. heat, Ito car garaga, privileges on Scoff Lake, far and appointment at conveniences. Only 818,508, money down to veteran, proxlmaftly 5500 dosing costs. UNBELIEVABLE mean |ui of living ■MnJH heated, tot 120x340. last but not least taka privileges an Williams Lake. WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" Times Realty No. 1-30 "HAPPINESS IS A BEAUTIFUL HOME OF YOUR OWN" and happlnasa can b* yours In Mill spacious 3 bedroom brick and alu-—'—i ranch. lVi baths, largt living (38x14), separata dining room —_ _ big 214 car attached garage. There la a larg# aaml-flnlshad fam- wtth all accassorlas. ----- j on a large wooded tot and priced at only *25,900. Why not trad* yaur present home? No. YOUR PRETTY AND LOVELY KIDS will lump with ley whan they sea this deluxe 3 bedroom beauty. Has a sparkling country style kltchsn cheerful living roam, paneled family room with fireplace, big 3to car garaga a" — — --------- . y anchor fenced, to keep those kiddles In. Just across the Is Laka Oakland with boatlnc - - iwlmmlng privileges. Just 819,' 500;* tot's tali; trade. No. 8-31 OUTSTANDING THREE I BEDROOM Contemporary brick ranch. Carpeting and drape* ar* Included. Pull barmen! with finished recreation roe attractively landscaped, 815,500 --------- -KB. plus ctosl last. Call tod tom, gas haat, lake privileges i quiet lake. Immediate posses-on, 8)1400. 435-5509. . Fowtor 3634613 pr 3634683. TO' Amy Dr. Phone 6 ELIZABETH LAKE FRONT Attractive 5 room hem* plus recreation room with fireplace. Per- KEATINGTON Beautiful lake-front and lake-privilege lots available. Plan to live on this beautiful new town In Orton Township. Models open 34 ' 114 Sat. and Sun. LAKE . LIVING. PONTIAC 15 N dies. Lets 8995, S10 mo. P beaches. On large lakes. N everything. Open Sun. Bloch B 633-1333, FE 4-4509._ LAWYERS AND into the open and fabulous COUNTRY DESIGNED EXCLUSIVELY BY MOTHER NATURE. 5 ACRES, within 1 mile of new essway, scenic, tor ful u r a a or Investment. 83.950, 8800 '/V ACRES. If you like trees end 1-75. S5.950, 11,000 down. 8 ACRES. If you can Imagine 2 full football fields — you've get the size. If you sea trees and rolling hills — you've got the picture. 15,995, 8400 down. 2 ACRES. Instead «f tmokt stacks, traffic lams or nerve shattering noises you will find clean air, hlgn creation or secluded winding stream, hill - Fenton area. & OPEN JULY C. PANGUS INC., REALTORS , OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK >30 MIS OrtonVIllo ____CALL COLLECT NA 7-2115 PRIVATE LAKE. CLARK S~T O N area at 1-75 Expressway. 15 min. Pontiac. Predevttoped tala on lot lOO'xlSO'. Your terms down. S45 mo. Blk. top. Natural gat. Prlv. beach Open Sun. Bloch Bros. 623-1333, FE 44509. TODAY'S BUYS 30 ACRES* 99V frontage on Indian-.. . m ------------Twp. — THE PLEASURE OF LAKE LIVING Curtom-bullt home on nice n.'*Tou?,rX r OPEN JULY 4 ' C. PANGUS INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 10 MI5 Ortonvllle CALL COLLECT NA 7-28)5 G. I. NO MONEY DOWN n a nice quiet (treat. Can today. No. 2-2 LIST WITH O'NEIL REALTY for 3 GOOD Reosonst W# think our stnta of vaiuae— Our list of good protpacto— And our tlraik* #tforts_ Will mak* you glad yeu. ballad. RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3530 Pontiac Lake Read Open Dally 9 80 * Sunday 1 to 4 OR 4-2222 MLS ' Call Waterford, Michigan. 623-3670, dally I to S\ p.m.) fa *-lormatton. \ yaart ______________ „„ ..vlng room, large ________________ kitchen, larg* bath with tub and shower, utility room, locate' block off of East TWIn Lake ton. Laka privileges, and boa dock*ga In arlyeta aubdlviston are# of Lake View Meadows. Fun prlca '89,000. Call 4760856 after 7 p.m. 4- BEDROOM RANCHER On I acres WMlKJ trout pond, Mm basement, :2 car gar*8*, laka — ----------and bMCft privileges, I Only 525,980 100'X250' WOODED LOT with beautl-'" at countryside. Near Cram aka, north el Clarkston. 25PaON STREAM. Blacktop road, RH pr>vl* Clarkston Real Estate S. Mein __________ AAA S-SM1 UNION LAKE — EXCLUSIVE COR--ir lot 90x150', paved street, lake . Jvlleges, welled Lake school sys- tan;. 363)2159.___V '______ WATERFORD .HILL MANOR, Beautiful vltws. All types at architecture possible an these lake-front, canal front, golf vtaw and inside tots, Prlv. beach. Prices start at (4.250, 28 par cant dawn. WATERFORD REALTY 540 Dlxl* Hwy. .. 673-1273 Multiple Listing Service Y PAY RENTt n mow l* let. 31 min- 80 TO 800 ACRES lower Michigan. Dairy, grain, at or hogsi Nam* your farm irm Real Batata ■Mae Realty Co., MRRMWIitoMBan. Dal* a. Dean Farm Broker and Auctioneer. Writ* or call 517-778-3377—days or 517-2784137—nights. CLOSE TO EXPRESSWAY—HORlil n — Ilka n r brick, ri S4t?M COMPLETE FARM BUILDINGS an sialseo-T*v available. iP Ortonvlll par act* w Underwood Real Estate S665 Dlxl* Hwy., C 425-3615, Eves. *i Sa»t Barium Property ff Leti-Acreage qoc nz«n 5 ACRE PARCEL. 466* FRONT-Gda-UOO/l age, 54,800. OA 0-2013. A. Sandsrt. GRES - OXFORD Block Bldg., fully rented showing good return. 827,800, farm*, BRICK OFFICE BLDG. On main paved street, mo *q, ft., plus full basement, air conditioned, 2 lavatories. Paved parking tot tor 10 Cara plus, next dbpr to city parking tot. 828400. Terms, Annett Inc. Realtors 38 '-E.* Huron St. . ■ IffTUI Off lea Opag Evanlngi lb Sunday 14 T THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, D—11 Ute Cltthli DORRIS UNION UKB CORNER - J ere* ii the Mil: way to dti thl« thriving community. Con elei comer — Mtxttt — Erick and aluminum tiulldlng 40x50 Z^:»'0TcL ty Nora. 129,900. SATIN PEAU DE SOIE A-LINE at In expoiur*. * commercial I 535?3dfni »*’ '^'Vr^oHIco? i other hat 3 overhead doors SINGER PORTABLE Do your patching and mend also soma fancy sawing. 133AD or IS monthly DORRIS *. SON, REALTORS %saftptsrt,— Listing service Sate or iKdiiEfo SI WANT:... RIAL ESTATE PROS-HAVE: ... Ability to solve them Tom Bateman, Realtor FE 8*7161_________ S9 Michigan. 7*5-4560. S3 ACRES,' davisburgT---- ----------- Only ORTONVILLE, 10 acres, Idei cation. Only *1,500. AJ. RHODES, REALTOR PE S-J306 AUTO REPAIR OARAGE. DOING ; volume buslnsss In a largo an well equipped shop, located o M-59 west ol Pontiac Airport, bulk Ino laaaa with notion to buy. Fo i call Don Pai meter, 673-0477, BUSINESS OPPORfUNITY MAN OR WOMAN Reliable parson from this araa I ----'** —d collect from automatic I i---------ee needed T YOU'D EXPECT TO PAV 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $277 1 SS.SD oar weak LITTLE JOE'S Bargain House II Baldwin at Walton, FE MU1 — ^raa Parking I. 'WU ez Term: lib; DRESSER, *20; desk, nit Em— sat. S40; llvl table sat. *20; _ Stove, S37i dinette, *301 dining sat, *60; wim mirror; COUCh, $20; sac $30; e marble top dresser; , oak table; round bad; mlsc. Llpperd. 53V N. Parry. monthly Ineem*. Full time r irk, Minn. HSU. DIXIE HIWAY — BAR eluding 5 conditioned b with til et dancing facilities. ., Cleat C hr-— opportunity f Annett Inc. Realtors M E. Huron St. 33MMI Office Open Evenings *. Sundey * 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89 Solid Vinyl Tile ........ I Vinyl Aebeetea tile ...... 7 GROCERY - BEER, WINE NIC* nelahborhood grocery nti Willed Lake. Good local trad*, wi Warden Realty 1434 W. Huron, Pontiac , 333-71 If no enewer call 335-1)90 . PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" APPLIANCES ANO VACUUM mere than pays rant — FE 4-7*13^ SPORTING EQUIPMENT STORE On* of the largest In the Thun tree. Shows good profit. $2MDl down will put you In 1 PIFEP REALTY. Phone Sold land Contracts 6 1 TO SO LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us bet or WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE Mil $1200 DISCOUNT Payment! of SIM per mon... Interest rata 7 par cml — Amount fo handle. S7.M0 — Good Wr" Side location. WRIGHT REALTY S47 Oakland Av*. FE 3-tl "Caeh for all kinds of property" ACTION Broker. 3792 Elisabeth Lake Road. _____ CONTRACT FOR SALE — Mr. Hackett — EM 3-4703. LAND CONTRACTS FOR SALE CON- Wanted Coittracti-Mtg. 60-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See ue belo WARREN ST0UT,i Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE Ml*. _____Open Evee. ’Ill I p,m._ Cash for land ^ontralts. , J. van s R 3-1355. 0 Dixie ► NEED LAND CONTRACTS. SMALL discounts. Earl Garrets. AAA 4-5400. OUR OFFICE.....SPECIALIZES land contract collections FLOYD KENT, REALTOR oatk N. Saginaw_____FE 54105 LOANS TO $1,000 dually on tint visit. Quick, fro y, helpful. FE 2-9206 - • Is th* numBar to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 302 Pontlacstata Bank Bldg. LOANS nstosijno li surad Payment Flan BAXTER !• LIVINGSTONE LOANS Swaps * ^ 63 COTTAGE IN NORTHERN 1 RESORT ana far property In or-- R*«to48g»l339- > \........ NICE Lgt ’oN STANLEY, STREET for Ml* or for what ■ 3»mml RELAX-A-CIZOR - WlL mt* w*r *d Chelnrwrs H-3 C,L dqulpoed logging* 334-1017# between 2 aw PontiacPress Want Ads Pdy Off fast Sab Neaeebeld Goads condition. 1347 Dorchester, Bln SCRATCHED REFRIGERATOR* Any Raasonabl* Price LITTLE JOE'S_______PE 2-4*43 I monlhl) SINGER ZIG ZAG Sewing machine. Cabinet tt_,.,-. Automatic "Piir** MeiisT** makes ‘ tons, buttonholes, _____________ Pay aK $53 CASH Or Payments Of $6 Per Mo. UNIVERSAL m ^ 4-0905 Faint sprayer. . I_________BEDROOM fit—good condition. mWi a . WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At eur IS Wl Pike Star* Only BARGAINS GALORE ^nywoeabad, c_ I u Guart-d Rafrlg. . S4M5 -—jji wringer Washer mdlx Dryer . S5S.S5. a TV * »Edbe 6( .. USED TV ..... ...... ms Walton TV. FE 2-2259 Open 9-515 E. Walton, corner of Joelyn 3 Rooms Furniture BRAND NEW $288 $2.50 Weekly PEARSON'S FURNITURE I E. Plk* PE 4-7l|t Between Paddock and City Hr" Open Man, end Frl, ml » s# 4-PllCE BEDROOM set, (brand new) .00 *2.3* weakly PeARSON't FURNITURE i E. Plk* PE 4-7111 For Sale Miscellaneous 67 3-LANE SLOT^CAR JJJACK. 14‘Xir. ca!t“ PIECE DECORATED DINETTE ect, Honduras mahogany and 't>| delwood, *500. *52-2*61. COMPLETE HOUSEFUL $295 Sofa, chair, 3 tabias, 2 lamps, 4-piece bedroom, 5-piece dinette, — stove end refrigerator, $2*5. Terms 255-POUND SET OF WEIGHTS. ----- $25; 2V' TV, $25. 331-3220. ANCHOR FENCES MONEY DOWN FE 5-7471 MiW BUFFET GOOD CON-ettron, *' special clothes. Cane's. 70 Chamberlain. BOOKS, COFFEE AQUARIUM, 23 GALLON, ALL AC-easaorta*. 451-1774. AQUARIUM — IS GALLON, STAIN-less steel lighted hood, fitter motor, 2 heaters, thermometer, plants and tropical fish. $25. EM 3d*7»._____ IE GENTLE, BE KIND, TO THAT expansive carpet, claan I* Blue Lustra, Rant electric pooer $|. Hudson's Hdwe., Walton. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE tale, BRAND NEW. Urge and email els* (round, dratoleaf, rectangular) tablet In 3-. 5 and Tpc. eats. *24.95 up. PEARSON’S FURNITURE 210 E. Plk* ___________ FE 4-7SS1 PEARSON'S FURNITURE i Joe's - FE 2-4*42. ESK CHEST, ELECTRIC DRYER, Maple double bed. 391-1776. __ DOUBLE BED. FRAME, spring and mattress. I good condition. $35. 482-3 G. Harris, FE S-27S4. 474-2430;_____ ELECTRIC STOVE, *2S, GAS STOVE $35, Refrigerator wlf *r $47, Wringer W*i Harris. FE 5-274' GAS STOVE — YEAR OLD. GAS ' T*ca, 2 years aid. 343-7318. GAS OR ELECTRIC STOVE - up. Used Maytag washers _ $3*. Goad refrigerator* from 135. Used furniture of all kind* at bar- fcffl^EPA^T. WlN*T WALTON. FE >4842. —4 new, dow* condition. FE 5-1705.___j HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL Hvlng room aulM cocktail table, 2 0) »'xi2' rug Inc 7plece bedroom i WYMAN FURNITURE CO. !. HURON PE H»1 11 Crump Electric KENMORE DELUXE 30" NEARLY NEW WOOPWAfcJfe BM Iran labia and 4 matching ih cushions, SIS, Cost *220 NEW'67 ZIG ZAG PFAFF AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG Stpslng machine — deluxe h tori*. — maple cabinet. ''Ear * American" design. Take over pi ! mams of $5 PER MO. OR $49 - w REESE AND DRAW-TITE HITCHES SoM end Installed HOWLAND SALiS AND RENTALS . 1255 Dixie Hwy: OR 3-1454 PIONEER CA^PtR SALES BARTH TRAILERS G CAMPERS TRAVEL SwjUttl CAMPERS MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS «"-27"-35" covert) ALSO OVERLAND I, COLEMAN Rent Wog-N-Moster Tent Camper—I Sleeper at low a» $55 weekly Holly Travel Coach Inc. >2io Holly Rd., Hatty me 44771 — Open Pally — Sundays —___ travel With Quality Line travel Trailers BOLBS-AE RO-TRAVELMASTE R FROLIC-SKAMPER SALES—SERVICE-RENTALS Complete I.T.S, parts center. Opdyke end Mt. Clamane —FE 2-9*97 This-week Ipeciac custom SIS. Fret pickup and „ vies, satisfaction guar-Excal Faint and Bump, 4*2-0173. MotercyclE* ‘Instead of going out, Mrs. Thompson sends Bobby andj' the baby sitter to a movie and relaxes in her lovely home!" TRAVEL TRAILERS Your dealer for -LAYTON, CORSAIR ROBINHOOD, TALLY HO . 20 new end used fallen In stock NEW SERVICE DEPT. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 17 Dixlo Hwy,________425-4400 TRAILER SLEEPS 5 6A 5-SPEED DUCATI Full price, 0795, easy terms. ANDERSON SALES 0, SERVICE 45 S. Telegraph FE 3-7102 $5 HONDA SCRAMBLER,- CUS-lom parts, $500. OR 3 ) 344. ___ 1945 HONDA 305 SUPER HAWK -■y tr T" "1965 YAMAHA I0CC. 4,000 mT *225. 474-3241.__ _____ D. SPRINT H. tXC. CdN- FE -2-75492. anytime, 473/ 1944 HONDA SUPER HAWK, PER' . .. —n, $550. Call 482-5327. Hey—Grain—Food 84 AT AND WHEAT STRAW. 40c PER bale, Holly. 434-9054. ' 8 -85 FANCY PIGEONS, BEFORE 4 54*7. Form Produce 861 PICK YOUR OWN STRAWBERRIES AALE, YEAR-OLD * A DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC, $10 down. JAHEIM'S KENNELS., FE l-A POODLE CLIPPING, *3-up. Soreiote. FE M54*._________ A-l CHOICE OF UTTER. TOY poodle pups. " EnM 3354792, FE 1 . MINIATURE APRICOT - - week* 145. 334-27*3. V LOVABLE toY N MONTHS OLD BRITTANY DOG. 4*2-2444. ■. ' I:- ' ' WEEK OLD KITTENS, HOUSE-broken* fro*. 423-0515._________. ______ 87 ROW FORD CULTIVATOR* MAS-tey Ferguson 7' mower, good c< aitien. 4254141. : CUTTING HAY? FERGUSON TRACTOR WI1 SIDE MOUNTED SICKLE B7 MOWER. Only *595 MANY OTHERS COME IN NOW AND SAVR KING BROS. Ft 4-1442 FE 4-0734 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke Rd. TRACTORS AND MA-enmery. loo used tractors, loaders, dozers, beckhoes and , trucks. Between Holly ' ------- CLARK'S : MALE SILVER POODLE, 1 o. old, will eecrlftoe *50. *74-1510. : TOY COLLIE PUPPIES, *15 iwn. Older females free on f------- ud service. 3944)271. ■MT DAVIS A4ACHINERY CO., Ortonvllto^ NA 7---- WANTED: USEB~1954 MODEL-NAA Ford tractor for peris. 425-4945. Travel Trailert 88 V TRAILER* SLEEPS 4* 1525. frldgt. stove. 152-1591. 1944 10'4"_STUTZ TRUCK CAMPER, BRITTANY SPANIEL, MALE, seks, *50. PE 5-00*1._ AKC BASSETS, MALE YEARS, -----> 3to yrs„ also female—9 Tri-color, roes. 959* Dirt- off Whipple Lake Rd. •____ ALL PET SHOP, SS WILLIAMS ST. — ■ _______Female parakeets started. 451-3445. BASSETT PUPPliS, A K C, SR s, dog tr « Pet Shop trimming. Uncle EXTREMELY GENTLE -half Englilh Seftar. 4V« yrs. 474-3241. ___________ FREE TO GOOD HOME, BIR6 FLUFFY KITTENS. 2 GREAT DANE, 10 MONTHS OLD. ' 1^451-3007._ AND FEMALE REGISTERED e, reas. Phone Pack, Mich., MINIATURE_SCHNAUZER PUPPY, :glstara<* 473-0193. _____ NOW TAKING RESERVATIONS ' r AKC Alaskan malamute pup-•s from show quality stock, will i ready Aug. -let- *150. Also PIANO LESSONS Pontiac Music Store Equipment POODLE POINTER PUPS, 7 WKS., retrievers or pete, $10. 424- Spnrting Goods 10x12 TENT, PUPPIES, 5 WEEKS OLD, ALL females, $10 each. PE 54540*. REGISTERED APRICOT TOY die*. Chihuahua puppies. Stud Ice on ell FE 2-1497. WHITE GERMAN SHEPHERD “m ~ *lh$, while and fawn Pekln-i 4 months. Both AKC regls- GENE'S ARCHERY—714 W CLAY PIGEONS — *2.59 1 Opdyke Hardware. FE $-6646. $whMHwH--PM /6 l-A SAND AND GRAVEL, ALL 423-1347, Wetor- 1-A BUCK DIRT State tested; else topsoil, ----- and gravOt, till. Builder* supplies. Delivered. 473-11 to your satisfaction. OR »««»& CROWN SAND, GRAVEL AND TOP-"I. EM 3-7722. qARK, RICHj.FAjWjfOPJplL r MS del. FE 4-45**. : 4-1944, FE GOOD TOPSOit . JMW —*- FE 541214, COPEMAN SANb-GRAVfa.. dirt, FE S-llil,. PONYiAL LAKE BUILDERS SUP-pljF.^Send, aravet fill dirt tENTAL, DOZERS, END LOADERS, trucks, top sail, peat/ *"* ---- FE 4-7941, 391-»Bfc »l-l RUSS LEMON, SAND, GRAVEL --*• “-"'TiPEjMSO- THE WEbK OF JUNE IS, WE AN-nounced w* were excavating a a series ef basements In tbe Drayton, Union Lake, Airport, and Waterford Areas. This dirt, consisting of mostly fill sand end ^------p. ■ it iwantlee—esftaoi or 4*2-0927 Door Prizts Eve Consignments W—.. B&B AUCTION STAN PERKINS-SALES-SERVICE Auctioneer wertz Cretk 435-9400 gelding horse. 363-0202. . old buckekih APPALOOSAS, QUARTER HORSES. Reg. Also stud service. 420-3015-ARABIAN MARE AND FILLY — *- “ white, complete feck. ARABIAN, WELSH, SHETLAND, POA at *tud. KenLo. 427-3792, OUBLE D RIDING STABLE HAS all newv*to6kjMHWMMk W- >Rses and tack for. sm.e w trade. 425-4597, or 434-301*. „ KLENTNER RIDING ACADEMY; boarding^ and rdnting available. MfeW BALD MOUNTAI N RIDInG _____________Clinch •Me 35 cSrtl«b»^44 YAMAHA 250 CC, EXC. ( Owner In service. 493-1*91. BETTER BOAT BUYS! Ski-Beat, Jehnaen Motor, BIS9S. Fishing Boat, Johnson Motor, *3*9 weeres Pontoon*, tow a* *175 PINTER'S BIG SALE AT TONY'S MARINE ON ALL BOATS, CANOPS. PONTOONS AND SAIL BOATS. Your Johfwon -Dipljf^V Complete lino ef fishing tackle Scuba dlvmg equipment Little League baseball supplies Hunting supplies and general sports Many fin* used complete outfits ef boat.motor and traitor at ig par cent down. All guaranteed. PAUL A. YOUNGJNC- v ,„f*30 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plain* 9-Mil J *| - Lean Laka Opan dally 9 e.m.-4 p.m. M0NICATTI Boats and Motors UTICA 731-0020 5250 AUBURN RD. (M59) , NEED-TRADE-INS We cerry all Chry*tor Lena Star, Glaslron, mfg boat*, and sail boat*. Riviera cruiser pontoons, complete service of outboards — Mercury outboards 3.9 to lie h.a-and Merc-Crulser authorized daal- :uf)ypr,,, o,r-w __GRUMMAN CANOES DEALER Fiberglass canoes....... *149 . H.F. Mercury Outboard *169.95. TradeI Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Spoils Certer GLENN'S 1947 Triumph Bonntvlllo. 2,700 ml. Real Sharp. , * L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. HURON ST. E 4-7371 FB 4-1797 Many Moro to Chooaa From hArley chomper Custom nr - “ HONDA IN LAPEER OF BIKES* _______II town deal- ptraonnai. 6644872. SEE THE NEW SUZUKI X-15 SCRAMBLER A FULL LINE OF ALL NEW. Suzuki Cycles & Accessories Come In and register tor a frr-motorcycl* to be given away Ju i. You must be 1* to register. MG SALES AND SERVICE 1447 Dixie Hwy>;__Drayton Pleli USED~1946 60 CC YAMAHA. *11 Used 1*45 *0 CC Yemeh*...tt Used 1945 9* CC Honda...*2: Used 1944 150 CC Suzuki .*31 Used 1944 250 CC Suzuki X-4. M ‘ d 1965 30* CC Honda ...S3 Wanted Cars-Trada Gale McAnnally's California, Texas and pi Top dollar paid! Shop im get the best deal herein 13*4 BALDWIN *139.95.1 cycle accessaries. . Highland. Right Phone 629-2179. YAMAHAS ALL MODELS AVAILABLE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY^ K. & W. CYCLE SALES *, SERVICE free pickup on all malor repair 14 Auburn , Utk (E. of Pontiac nr. Diquindre) Boats — Accessories ? betwee ................ . fiberatos run-about, *795. 15' flbergSs.ru about 1499. 14' Fiberglas *54*. BUCHANAN'S 9449 Highland____________343-23 FIBERGLAS RUNABOUT. . i. /Mercury, elec, atort, exc. co Ion, 331 4531 ask tor Mlkt;_ Tone star FiBtRDLMS, hp, Evinrude, electric motor K tor trailer, *75*. Call after 4 FE 5-5316. __ 17' CHRIS CRAFT UTILITY, cover, convertible top and er. 105 M.P. Nice *950. 5791 for ' 1964 CHhiiT ............... access. 673-0402, 262* Desmond. Williams Lk._______ MT MERC ilRY 39, 3.9. HORSE- power, regular $213. Now SlfS. Karls Boats *. Motors, Laka Orion, MY 3-1400. 1947 KAYOT STEEL RAFT *'xl*'. Fiberglass covered deck. 20' pon-toon. paneled aluminum rollings, canopy, *795. Now 1947 15' Sloury fiberglass Lapstrake runabout. 71" baam. 5 yr. warranty. 1947 40 h.p - ' - . Controlled battery 1““ tors, Famco trailers. Toko to W. Highland. Right on Hickory RUga Rd. te Demode Rd. L«“ and follow sings to dawso SALES AT TIPS ICO LAKE. Phone 429-2179. HOUSE TRAILER FOR SALE | 1942 "Oetrattar" 44 ft. . mobile home. In excellent location tor H«raato" immediate occuptn-k Ralph at FE «-7l4t. Barrington > Has Everything! Just ini State Approved Swim Markers Dealer Distributor for , URS0N Boats k ’ Specializing in Grumman Canoes and Fishing Boats Aluminum and Wood Docks Do it yourself—easy to install. We will show you how. HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS Evlnrudo Dealer) FE 7-4033 Rent Trofler Spoce W "^LA^Geianniu^^ GAS PICKUP COVERS, *245 UP. 10*4" cabcovers. $1,295 and up. T B R CAMPER MFG. CO. VILLAGE GREEN MOBILE ESTATE — New and dlfferent. 22(5 Brown Rd. Hoar 1-7* and M-24. 3354)155. The famous . GRAND RIVER BOAT SALES ■ Grand Rivar GR 4-7336 4 blocks east of Middle Balt Rd. 1 MEMBER OF MMDA . .... y Rd. Opan Dally a; ME 4. SPECIAL ’ Carver boat with top-ski bar-cover and gages. 75 h.p. Johnson Motor with l| gal. tank. Heavy duty traitor with space wheel and tire. Only *14*5. CRUISE-OUT, INC. e. whim open 9-a fe .*44ia USED CRUISERS INBOARD *. OUTBOARD imBWn. Sleeps * “ Pamco trails Crestllner. Fiberglas l-D 11* hardtop. Stand up head, trailer. Complete .............. 11695 | , Trojan Express Crulssr. Full Canvas. V-l angina. Newly palnf-ed. Nice ...'.......... 12295 MANY,MORE USED BARGAINS Outboard* speed boats* cruisers AUTHORIZED DEALER Chris Craft ~ Slfckcraft ~ ws Evlnruda. LAKE AND SEA MARINA Blvd. at Woodward FE 4-9S67 Airplanes PRIVATE G R O UN D SCHO desses starting July 11, ADI, ft Pontiac Airport. Wa teal wa < offer you th# bast tralnlno ; facllltlas. Sign up n 101 DOWNEY Oldsmobil© Used Cars TOP DOLLAR FOR CLEAN USED CARS 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road 334-5967 3384)331 EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Pan, ESMM. 673-5224. ALWAYS' BUYING JUNK..CAR end scrap. wa tew, PI 8-**48. £6Pi>EC BRASS/ RAOIAtbftSl Used Auto-Track Paii» 101 * SO HP. ENGINE VW. I J*XcJ 1 goad, 1 gas heater for Vw. 2 whitewall tires, 175. Call mornings. FE 2-1*74. MOTOR AND ransmlsslon, 335-8482 befofa 4. 1*59-1*40 PONTIACS. FOR PARTS, stick and auto.# both run good. PE 2-0401 befort noon.___________- f& JwWViAC HYDRO TftAMSWTt tion, 825; 1*58 Dodge Torque-Fllte _ 820, Mopar 4.10 sure-grlp, 3.54 ring pinion, $40. 473-7448. 2*47 FORD 3*0 ENGINE. 1*47 FORD 28* engine. 1*44 Mercury 41 gine. 1*47 Chevv 283 engine complete. 473-4413._______________ II makes. Terms. 537-1117. #ORb SIMM ENGINE AND OT ere. 327 Chevy Bell housing, el mlsc. trlpowert-sllcks. HAH Ai Novi and Used Truck* 103 Now and Used Truck* 103 1967 GMC i-Ton Pickup Heater, defrosters, backup lights,- seat belts, 2-speed wipers, washers, padded dash and visor, traffic hazard lights, directional signals, inside rear-view mirror. $1828 including all taxes PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 t*S7 FORD Vi TON PICKUP f?57 FORD V4 TON PICKUP 1*40 Chevy t ton stake 2*42 Ford 4 door station wagon. 12*» S. Hospital Rd.__________ 2*58 DODGE 5 YARD DUMP, GOOD />.ll 1M 4CM 1ZA I nr. , TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS , 1*42 CHEVY V4-ton pickup, fleetslde, «-cyl. standard tran mission, 87*5. On U.S. 10 at M Clarkston, MA 5-5071. 2*42 FORD ECONO Call FE 4-0412. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1*44 CHEVY VMon pickup, fleetslde, 4-cyl. standard transmission, 81,1*5. On U.S. 10 at M15 Clarkston. MA “ TOM RADEMACHER , CHEVY-OLDS 1*44 FORD W-ton pickup, r f side box, automatic, 81,0*5. U.S. 10 at Ml$> Clarkston, SPECIAL $1875 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 or EM 3-4154 Press Want Ads Do So Much For So Little. Ph. 332-8181 FarelflE Cars 1W MORRIS-MINOR STATION WAGONr perfect condition. FB M057. OPfeL. 1*5* WAGOtJ. 87i 1*40 OPEL for parts# $25. FE 4-7V23. New eiud U»ed Car* 106 1*42 BUICK CONVERTIBLE, automatic, full power, excellent condition. Nothing down and weekly payments as low as 87.24. KING AUTO SALES, M-5* and ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD. FB 8-4088. 1*43 LeSABRE, POWER, EXCEL-lent condition. FE 2-7142. 430 Boyd, Aato Insurance Marlnal04 Mini-Cost Mini-payment plan (Budget) BRUMMETT AGENCY acle Mile , FE 44158* Foreign Cars TIRES, FULL PRICE IMP ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments Of *6.72. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Sparks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 4 MGB, RADIO, WIRE WHEELS, rooden steering wheal, low ml., xc. condition. 405-2442 or 442-*524. *44 VOLKSWAGEN, LOW, MILE; ACE. $1345 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. M VW CENTER 85 To Choose From -All Models— -All Colors— —All Reconditioned— Autobahn AirthoH tecf VW CDe» ler to mile North of Miracle Mile New uud Need Cur* 106 BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Can Finor.ee You- 1*41 CHEVY BEL AIR .2 DOOR, standard, 6 cyl. 8200 OR 3-18*1. 1*61 CORVAIR, GOOD CONDITION. 1*42 CHEVROLET NOVA CONVERT-Ible 84*5 with nothing down and weakly payments of 53.12. KING AUTO SALES, M-5* and Elizabeth 1*45 i AIR-CONDITIONED - - - - -Sky Lark, loaded, every factory option Is 4 BUICK SPECIAL 2-DOOR WlfN ucket seats, $10*5 at MIKE SA-fOIE CHEVROLET, Blrmlr-1—-II 4-2735. 1*44 BUICK RIVIERA, SIL\ with red Interior, $1,545. F McGuire, 120 S. Telegraph, ! NEWEST DEALER IN PONTIAC VANDEPUTTE BUICK-OPEL *47 FIAT-ABARTH 1,000 SPYDER. LEAVING COUNTRY MUST SELL FAST Convertible, Morris Minor 1*45. opproxlmataly 15,000 ml., $1500, needs front fender, repair. Will do and sell for 5650 or sell "as Is" tor 5395. Cal afternoons and evenings Ml 4-K2J Take a Good Close Look at These No Money Down. ASKING . i. One owner, real sharpl < 1963 OLDS “88" Hardtop 4-door, with automatic, power. Midnight blue. Minor a ege fender dqmege- AS IS SPECIAL et Only * 373 1964 FALCON Futura Hardtop, with a let black finish, vinyl Interior, full fac- & nir tory equipment. No money down. ASKING ONLY .. . . ?, 1965 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury Hardtop, with 4-speed, vinyl top, loaded, w down. ASKING ...................... 1964 FORD Fastback with a fire engine rad finish, automatic, full power. One V igo7 owner. 545 DOWN, and ASKING ONLY ............ }l/7/ 1963 PONTIAC Grand Prix ’ $1595 SPARTAN DODGE 855 Oakland FE 8-1122 down and weekly paymen HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 8. WOODWARD AYE. BIRMINGHAM__ Ml 4-75 1965 BUICK RIVIERA. A I R-CO ditlonlng, elec, windows, g o e •Iras, 52.275. F.A. McGuire, 1 S. Telegraph. Savoy Motel. ■’ 1*60 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE *3*5. Save Auto.. FE 5-3278. i960 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE, full power air conditioned, $5*5. COOPER'S AUTO SALES 674-2257 4278 Dixie__Drayton Plain* 1*61 CADILLAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP urfdt. finish with white yd neck .Hull power. 54 ■iwn and as :ly payments. ■is, *4“ -~ MARMADUKE :Aullfte OPEN 9 TO 9 P.M. Transportation Specials 1*42 CORVAIR Stick ........ *39: 1*61 BONNEVILLE Convertible 55*: 1*40 OLDS Hardtop ......... S3*: 1*42 BUICK Special .J.... S4*; 1*62 CHEVY sedan .. 85*: 1*42 TEMPEST, Wagon . *49: 1*44 MERCURY Monterey .... *7»: 1943 DODGE Dart ......... 55*: 1*40 FORD Wagon ... ti»: 1*40 PONTIAC Auto. 81*: BUY HERE-PAY HERE WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING CALL MR. DAN AT FE 84071 Capitol Auto 1*43 CORVAIR 2-DOOR, 4-SPEED New and Used Cara 106 Kessler-Hahn CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH RAMBLER-JEEP 4473 Dixie Hwy. _ Clarkston MA 5-2435 DODGE * PASSENGER 880 611 East Fourth St., Pontiac. 1*44 CHEVELLE MALIBU SUPER Sport, 4-Speed. *550 or best agM 343-3411.___________________■ 1*44 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR WALL TIRES, FULL PRICE t»85, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume Weekly payment* of *8.»2. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Park* at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1*64 IMPALA CONVERTIBLE, POW-er steering, A-l condition, —* sell, 332-0084.____ 1*44 IMPALA CONVERTIBLE, ... tomatlc with power $1495 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birtnlng- 1845 CHEVY V-8 S K 81247. FULL LUCKY AUTO 1*40-W. Wide Track 1945 CORVAIR, 2-DOOR HARJ-'TOP, automatic *13*5 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. “• 4-2735. nothing i AUTO SALES, ‘ M-5* and ELIZABETH LAKE_ROAD. FE 8-48*8. 144 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE, 4-DOOR hardtop, full. power. a r-condltlon, 820*5 of MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. to 4-2735.___________________ ... CHEVY 2 DOOR AUTO., i cyl. radio, heater, runs like new full price 1*95 no money down and *11.18 per week. Standard Auto, lW East Blvd. S. FE 8-4033 ____ AIR CONDITIONED CONVERTIBLES $AVT $3495 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth ’i. Woodward Mi 7 late model JEROME MOTOR SALES On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 Weak Credit? No Credit? Bad Credit? 1 Young? N Ip — Try 1 it you in a new or /! CALL BILL FOX CHEVY Rochester, Michigan 451-7000________ Now Is The Time To Save On A Newer Model MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4647 *58 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE — floor shift, rich green finish. | -excellent car for tne summer. 1965 RAMBLER Classic ...........................$1595 2 doer hardtop, 770 with vinyl Interior, power steering, brakes, V-8, automatic. ' 1967 GRAND PRIX .................................... $AVE 2 door hardtop, with full power, plus many many extras. Bright rad with black cordovan top. 1964 CADILLAC Hardtop...................... ,,--$2595 Fleetwood, with full power, and silver glaze, cadioi oversized whitewalls. Extra sharpl f 1962 BUICK Convertible .................. ....... $1195 Power starring, brakes, automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls, black with rad Interior. 1963 VW Convertible ........... ....................$1095 With 4 speed, whitewalls, radio and heater. 1965 PONTIAC Convertible........................, .$1995 Catalina with power eteerlng, brakes, hydramatie, whitewalls real nice throughout! , . ' 1964 BUICK Convertible .................... . . $1295 Wildcat with buckets, automatic, power steering, brakes, radio, ' steering, brakes, i $1895 PONTIAC-RAMBLER Open Daily 'Til 9 P.M. On M24 In Orion MY 3-6266 1*40 CHEVY STATION WAGON *135. 442* Wlndlete, Waterford 623-0847.. ___ 1*41 CHEVROLET GREENBRIAR, a real good running car. Only. $495. ROSE RAMBLER. EM 3-1 THIS WEEKS SPECIAL 145 CHEVROLEt Impale. 6, Automatic, Low Mileage. Very TOM RADEMACHER CHfVY-OLDS —"TTE eonver* 4-speed, new-car trade! Blue wit.. - - ----top, 82,0*5. On U.S. 10 at M15, Clarkston, MA t-5071. MONZA 2-DOOR AUTOMATIC, *15*5 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, BirmlngtwrmJjjagigfBa 144 CHEVY 4-DOOR BISCAYNE, auto, trans., radio, heater, “■*>»•-s, 51550. 3*1-3522. By Anderson and Leeming New eud Ueed Cara Mi we may* *■ firaiiportetkm 9 thm* car* LUCKY AUTO 1*40 W. Wide Track FE 4-1(108 a W *•'*** 1*45 COMET V^ AUTgNlAJlC^Bm. “He’s a good turner, but a terrible jumper!” •Iflce. 478-2373, Metemora.--_ ; 1964 ~DODGE 440, 2 DOOR SEDAN, rTnp,!Cgood'cond. Wi'ssKnT New and Utad Cars 106 ■________ TRANSMIS- SION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, PULL PRICE 1485, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments Of,84.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, 1965 DODGE olara hardtop-with factory air cot tidlonlng, power equipment, euti malic transmission, r«llo an heater and whitewall tires, *u price 814*5, only $4* down an weekly payments of 81288. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 $. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-751 1964 FALCON STATION WAGON, cylinder automatic, $5*5 with no Ing down and^pairmgMs ^jow^ SALES, M - 5*‘and ELIZABETH LAKE RD. FE 8-4088. • KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Sales and Service ' I OA B-1400 1*34 FORD, 301 CHEVY ENGINE, dual quads, open drlv- ■*“" 682-530* after 5 p.m. t, automatic transmission, i dio and heater and whitew tires, lull price,*12*5, only 1^ down and weekly payments of HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 $. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM____Ml 4-75 ' ™ BURGUNDY. Ileage, *1,1*0. S. Telegraph, 1*41 FALCON STATION WAGON, automatic. 32,000 miles. 343-3843. 141 FORD, 4 DOOR GALAXIE, 144 CHEVELLE MALIBU SUPER Sport, hardtop, good condltton, will sell reas. FE 2-5201 or 482-15*7. *64 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE, 427, 4-speed, light green, side pipes, *3450. 673-1674. 1*66 CHEVELLE -SI Igfnal miles. 3*4-0052. MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-2735 1966 Chevy Sports Van Bui wjth white end green flnlshl On $1695 HOMER HIGHT STAR AUTO WE FINANCE LOW WEEKLY PAYMENTS '60 CORVAIR ... $197 '61 MERCURY .... .... $297 '61 CHEVROLET ... ... $297 '62 CHEVROLET ... .... $397 '59 CHEVROLET .... .... $197 '59 PONTIAC .. ... ... $197 '62 DODGE ... $397 '61 RAMBLER ... $197 '62 FORD .... $397 ‘61 CHEVROLET ... .... $97 EASY CREDIT ARRANGEMENTS 962 OAKLAND AVE. FE 8-9661 $2495 ’Birmingham • Chrysler-Plymouth 0 S. Woodward Ml 7-3214 $395 FULL PRICE Ford Wagon. 8-cylihder, a latlc, low weekly payments > $4.48. No money down. A5cP *63 GALAXIE 500 2-DOOR, automatic 87*5 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. **■ 4-2735. 1*43 FALCON CONVERTIBLE W I T H AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE 8785, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of **•*-CALL CREDIT MGR. 2-DOOR HARDTOP. Brakes, radio, heater. s Ford Dealer. 451- Pretty Ponies 1965 & 1966 MUSTANGS SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDT0PS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 As Low As $39 Down And $39 Per Month HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM |— Mew mi U«ed Cura If 1*43 CAtALINA I DOOR HARDTOP, iSjft, double power, tlraa Ilk# now, condition. PE +M44,_______________ )»43 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, •-?* body and white top, Mu* rlor, radio with rear seat speak: heater, ■whitewall tlraa, buckel it, aluminum wheels, make ot-Call after £bj». dffHMti' _ 1943 TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE.^ cel lent condition, Auto. ELgln 0800 or 3*1-3433. ■usaSgSgS Lincoln Mercury 8*1**. 47* S. 1*43 OLDSMOBILE STAR; TOMATIC TRANSMISSION, -MS 5§,CME0N^Dg8rW^ SKS7 c^Srf’MGR.**^: Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, lyi 4-7800. 1944 BON NEVILLE 4 SUBURBAN OLDS HOME OF Quality One-Owner Birmingham Trades AT LOWEST PRICES^ TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1*45 OLDS Cutlass 2-door top, with V-8, automatic, steering, radio, heater, BEEN BANKRUPT?,BAD CR1DITT need A CAR* C*H PI S-4 ask tor tfe White. King. VALIANT - BklGHT RtO, automatic tranamtalon. second ear tor the fa 1963 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE, Automatic, V-S, 4-dr. Ivory. condition Inside and out. OVERSEAS. J595. Call 754-4527 attar Nbw ood U«ed Cora II* DON'S USED Cm , Small Ad—3ig Lot' » CA«S TO CHOpSa PROM Clarkttdn iMo'or3 ba»T8far7M»oiS5." lea Pontiac bonneville, ex-cellent condltton, mar" “**■■ 81,450. FE >2454 attar 4. 4 PONTIA CTEMPEST LsMANS, Wwt, good condition, "■“1‘ 1 seats, radio, outo.. 1*45 TEMPi*! CUSTOM CONVERT-Iblo. Dark blu* whlta Bower too. Power broke* Beautiful r--81,4*5. EM 1*44 PON 1*44 1*44 TEMPEST custom station-wagon with V-S. automatic, peer-steering, radio, heotor, whlti walls, $1,2*5. On U.S. 10 at . Ml Clarkston, MA 5-5071. 1*44 PONTIAC- CATALINA COUpI $1147. Full prlco. No monoy dowi iLUGKY AUTO .prlco. No monoy Cl..... LUCKY AUTO 1946 PONTIAC CATALINA 8-DOOR 1 hordtoP. Factory air. auto. 22,00# ml Call 441000 or 3*1-3433. 1966 PONTIAC DtMU'S Save over $1,000. All with full tWh torv equlpmont, powor sto 1*45 GTO 2-DOOR HARDTOP, ^'.raE*W*5 PLYMOUTH CONVERTIBLE sport Fury (ovorythlng), *1550. 651- *44*. ■ ~ ' - ......., 1*45 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR HARP; TOP, automatic *1345 SAVOIE CHEVROLET, 1*45 PONTIAC. 4 , DOOR DOUBLE power. Total price $1347. Can be purchased with no money down. LUCKY AUTO 1*48 W. wide Track FE 4.1004 ■Ct - -*45 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4-DR. hardtop, air condltlonlnc. power windows, staarlng, brakes. Vinyl Interior, Immocuwta c—I *“ Coll 447-1872. t»45 PLYMOUTH SPORTS FURY, auto, all the extras. 480 N. Cranbrook, Birmingham.___________ 1*45 LaMANS HARDTOP, 1965 STARCHIEF 4-door $1895 HAUPT PONTIAC MIS at t-75 Intarchajga^ condition. run , BONNEVILLE. newer, call after 4, 474-2170. CATALINA CONVERTIBLE. 1966 EXECUTIVE 2 door hardtop, power stearin br.k.L only-2595 HAUPT PONTIAC On M13 it 1-75 Intarchenca Clarkston MA 5-5500 >66 CATALINA, j auto. Irons. Powor otoorlnB ond brakes. FE 4-0255, 1942 RAMBLER, 4 CYLINDER, beautiful irad, only 04*5. Rose RAMBLER. EM 3-41S5._______ *43 RAMBLER WAGON, 440 series; *750. FE 5-4*63. RAMBLERVILLE USA VILLAGE RAMBLER idward VER—30 1*47 RAMBLER* In Stock, PETERSON A SON BAM- BLER In Lapeer, large satoctlon- usLdlWs and parts. MA4811. 1*45 RAMBLER. RED CONV1RTI-bit# v-«# power. Nice condition. 363-0433. 1966 VW rada-ln. Only o this gas — saving' bug. I __ j be approclated. $1495 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE GRIMALDI IMPORTED CAR CO. 900 OAKLAND FE 5-9421 =ORD &ALAXIE 500. 2-DOOR. — /sharp. 343-0001._______ 1964 THUNDERBIRD. AIR-CON6l-tioned. Full Power, Blue wljh love* whR' toSs *taauW^^1ced_ to nil at only S1,**5. BOB BORST Lincoln Mercury Sales. 47* Woodward. Ml 4-4538.______ 1944 PLYMOUTH SPORT FURY, 8200 down, taka over 045 pay-j manta, 425-44*5. 1944 FALCON 2-DOOR *095 AT MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blr-mingham. Ml 4-2735._____- aW.t' AMKEUSAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. FALCON SPRINT. Rad li 1967 BELVEDERE 2 DOOR HAR6-top V-8 power steering many ex- tras 82,200. Call 335-1198._ >59 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4 door hardtop. Full power and factory air. You must sea this one to 7 believe nil SEAT COVER KING, 754 Oakland. FE 2-5335. 1959 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE NEW top and paint 5275, 334-1779. 1*60 PtWiflAC, STICK SHIFT, RIjtH emerald green finish. Must be a real bargain at only S1V*. I Marvel Motors 251 Oakland 1945 FORD 4-DOOR, 6 CYLINDER. ■«m special, white with red in-»r. radio, hoitor, private own- BEEN BANKRUPT? BAD CREDIT NEED A CAR? Call FE 0-4000 in $1395 LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wldetrack HUH ________power. _ BOB BORST Lincoln Sales, 479 S. Woodward 6-4538._______________ ily 82495. kns G.M.C. SUBURBAN, AUT6-tic trasmlssion, beautiful blue I white, this vehicle-is Ir — t condition and priced ti ht. ROSE RAMBLER. E $1295 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth ) e. Woodward 1 >40 CATALINA 2-DOOR HARDTOP red, automatic, power r*—Mg brakes, 0395. COOPER'S AUT^ SALES BrSy’tdhaP^il WOULD YOU BELIEVE- NO GIAAMICKS - NO GIVE AWAYS JUST Right cars at right prices NO CASH NEEDED-BANK RATES $399 . .'41 Pontiac Star Chief H *“ $399...'42 Chevy 2-door $299...'59 T-BIrd -$399...'62 Ford Galaxle $599.. .'43 Tampatt Coupe 324 $599.. .'62 Pontiac Catalina $599 '62 Pontiac Sta. Wagon $599 '62 Chevy StaNWagon ----DOZEN CARS AT $99 0PDYKE MOTORS >30 Pontiac Rd. at Opdvke FE 0-9237 FE 0-923* | 1961 TEMPEST STATION WAGON, low mileage, real nice, 333-7542 Riggins, dealer. t THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING Troy—Pontiac—Birmingham Ar— 1*50 Mapla, across from Borz Airport THE HEART OF OUR BUSINESS IS THE SATISFACTION OF OUR CUSTOMERS 1965 BUICK Special deluxe, automatic, V-8, power staarlng, radio, #14.0C heotor. Newest one In town. Low mileage. 1965 PONTIAC Venture 2-door hardtop. Automatic, powor steering and C17QC brakes, radio, heater, new whitewalls. Hurry on this one I ▼ / 1964 CHEVROLET Impela convertible. V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes, new whitewalls. A lew-mileage garage-kept ^395 1964 CHEVELLE Super Sport 2-door hardtop, V-8, automatic, radio, twator. *1995 A one-owner dark blue beauty ..... ▼ 1966 GTO V8, 4-speed. 3 deuces. Radio, heater. Sharpest one In 39195 1965 GTO V-8, 4-speed. 3 deuces. A sllVtr-bliA> beauty. Hurryl .... $1895 1966 MERCURY Monterey 2-door hardtop. Automatic, power steering and ennge brakes, radio. Black vinyl top. Lika new. 1960 COMET Deluxe 2-door. Automatic. 4-cyllnder. A one-owner, low- * xgc mileage beauty............ * HTJ 1964 FORD Galaxle 500 convertible, V-8, automatic, radio, heater, ciinc power steering. A sunshine special ....... 173 1962 MERCURY LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland ■ 333-7863 good co 3-0382. 1 COMET.'AUTOMATIC TRANS- atlon ang>eclat at only S495. i BORST Lincoln Mercury Sales S. Woodward Ave. Ml 4-4538. 12. R IggjM. De a ler. COMET WAGON, MUST SELL, Mt 4-75001 best offer.-48*4949; 1966 CHRYSLER door with, full power, ai transmission, radio and ncqic.. whitewall liras, full price 82095, only $49 down and weekly payments of 115.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-75001 BEATTIE FORD 1964 Falcon 1962 Mercury $895 r Monterey 4 door, with automatic, double power. Ready to go 1963 F6rd Galaxle 500-4 door sedan, with 1962 Ford V8, automatic, power steering. Only— >A ton with 4 cyl. stick, radio,' $1095 barter. ^ 1964 Pontiac 1964 Chevy Catalina 9 passenger Wagon, power steering, brakes, Only - <1 Ton. 4-cyl., stick. Only — Si 495 $1295 1961 Chevy Vk ton Pickup; only— ‘ $99$ 1965 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury Convertible, V-8, 313 angina, automatic, power sheering. Beautiful white finish, blue $1645 $1695 1963 BUICK 2-door hardtop. LeSabre V-8, automatic, power staarlng, whltiiwaila, with a radio. Blua with a whlta tap— ^ 1965 Fury in with V-8, automatic, power staarlng, whltowalta, jMMb beau- OAKLAND 'Chrysler-Plymouth 724 OAKLAND AVE, FE 5-9436 WANT AIR CONDITIONING? We are prepared ta offer you a deal of all deals, by installing air conditioning, in most any used car you buy from us DURING THE MONTH OF JULY!!! And for nominal fee you, too, can BEAT THE HEATI 1945 CHEVROLET Impala 2-Door -Mordfepi-Ha* power steerlng; V4 engine, autematlc transmission, radio and heater. This one f* a real) cream puff from bumper to bumper. S1795 1941 CHEVY Hnpela Wagon, with power steering, brakes, V-i auto-mafic, beautiful, white finish, sharpl St295 1*44 PONTIAC Bonneville Convertible. 20,068 guaranteed actual miles and one owner. Bucket seats. A real draamboat ... $15*8 1944 BUICK LeSabre 2-Door Hardtop with power brakes and power steering, automatic, radio and heater, beautiful whlta finish with blue Interior, locally owned and nlca. .. . *1495 1945 PLYMOUTH Fury 1. Has automatic transmission, air con. ditlonlng, radio, hertar, 1 owner, 20,000 actual milas 81495 1*44 PONTIAC } + 2. YM folks, this 2 4-2 Is ready and rarln', bucket seats arid the storks. $14*8 1945 PONTIAC 9-Passenger Station Wagon. Nice white finish with rad Interior. An Meat ' car tor your family vacationing this season ■ $2095 1*48 BUICK" LeSabre Hardtop, new car factory warranty, and brought hare new. Buy now^and 1*48 PONTIAC Bonneville Con-vertlble, with only 25,000 guaranteed 'actual miles, ena-owner and locally owned, Yet folks It hat all the goodies 113*5 1945 BUICK ELECTRA 225 4-door Hardtop, factory air conditioning, full power end meny more accessories. Folks, fhtt Is FIRST CLASSI S2J9J 1*44 CHEVROLET Impala Con-vertlble with power brakes and staarlng, autematlc transmission, radio, and heater. A 1-owner car and still real fine *1495 1*43 CHEVY Bel Air 2-Deor Sound' Ilka9 naw?1**kertly tops.^wiS 1*45 FORD Pickup Track. Haa standard transmission, realdean and ready to do a good day's .stork .....UTT.1 BIlM 1M4.TEMPEST 2-doer Sedan, with 3400 guaranteed actual miles, Yes folks—Brought - hare—Service hare and srtfh, a naw car factory warnntY' r--.zsr...... B7*» 1948 PONTIAC BonravUI* Hardtop. Seeing is believing, 1*,080 actual guaranteed miles. Bought .hpr* new l $13*5 “ r; 1*44 CHEVY Impala Mocr hardtop. Yes, tolks-thts has all the goodie*, nice maroon finish, and a black tntartor. Only. .t.... S14»5 1*43 CHEVROLET Wagon, *-Pae-sangar. Beautiful dark aqua «n-ish, one owner and locally owned. Almost ijka new ............ «MM 1*44, GRAND PRIX with factory ! air-conditioning, 3-way powsr and all the other goodies. Only ora In stock llkk this beauty i *27*1 1*42 RAMBLER. Folk*, tllla It • hot rod special wlflt a -bubble on the. hogd. Act fait! .......... OBT i»45 CHEVY Impala Cohvartlbia. Folks, tola la luat a* naw as raw, guaranteed 4,500 guaranteed mile*, •till het new car factory wartw ty, look no. more *I»M IMS PONTIAC Catalina t-Deor hardtop, power steering, brakes, automatic, I7,ooo actual miles, qnaewner $18*5 1*5* BUICK LeSabre 4 door sedan, with this car you mutt tea to appreciate; still haa apantung showroom , condition, * CREAM PUFF *5*1 1*M -PONTIAC Catalina Mtoor, with factory ^FcdniWtoibW*'' power steering, brakes, afM automatic. Must »ra ' to aptraala. Only S«W IMS gto 2-Door Hardtop. Standard transmission oh the floor, with power, 244)00 guaranteed actual miles. Almost Ilka raw. 11 to* Pat Jarvis, 'Hasty SKeltort, T&tyny Thompson, Scfles Mgr. PONTIAC-BUICK * 651-5500 OPEN: MONDAY and THURSDAY TILL 9 P.M. 855 S. Rochester Rd., 14 Mile South of Downtown Rochester THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 D—18 —Television Programs— Programs furnished by stations listed In this column era subject tachenge without notice Charmsltt a-WiSK-TV. 4-WW.MV. 7-WXYZ-TV. t-CKIW-TV, SO-WKID-TV, SS-Wrys"" TONIGHT • 00 (2) (4) News (C) (7) Movie: “The Kettles on Old MecDonald F q r m ” (1957) Marjorie M a i n, Parker Fennelly, Gloria Talbot. (R) (50) Superman (R) (C) (56) Mlsterogers 6:15 (56) Sing Hi-Slng Lo ' 6:30 (2) News—Cronklte (C) (4) News—Huntley, Brink-ley (C), (9) Twilight Zone (50) Flintstones (R) (C) (56) What’s New 7:66 (2) Truth or Consequences s (C) (4) Juvenile Court (C) . (9) Bat Masterson (R) (50) Munsters (R) (66) Antiques 7:M (2) Baseball — Cleveland Indians host the Detroit Tigers. (C) (4) Virginian — A 16-year-old Eastern girl sets her cap for the Virginian. (R) (C) , (7) Batman—A huge magnet traps Batman and Robin. (R) (C) (9) Movie: “The System" (1953) The chief of a huge gambling operation fears an investigation of a newspaper. Frank Love-joy, Joan Weldon. (R) (50) Make Room for Daddy (R) (56) Living for the Sixties 1:66 (7) Monroes—Two riders in a race compete for Kathy’s affections. (R) (C) (50) New Breed—A playwright is threatened. (R) (56) In Our Opinion -Former Gov. Orville Fau-bus of Arkansas is interviewed. 6:36 (56) Asking for Trouble I (2) TV Features INDIANS VS. TIGERS, 7:30 p.m. (2) IN OUR OPINION, 8 p.m. (56) LOYAL OPPOSITION, 9 p.m. (4) STEVE ALLEN, 10 p.m. QUEEN ELIZABETH io p.m. (9) . 7:55 (9) Morgan's Merry-Go-Round 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) People in Conflict 8:30 (7) Movie: “the Texas Carnival’’ (1951) Esther Williams, Red Skelton, Keenan Wynn. (R) (C) (9) Window on the World 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (4) Living (C) (9) Romper Room 9:55 (4) News (C) , 10:00 (4) Snap Judgment (C) (7) Girl Talk , (9) Hawkeye Illinois Prof Sees Growth of Small Localized Papers CHAMPAIGN, 111. W — The metropolitan newspaper of thej future may become more q news magazine than a media 9:00 (4) (Special) Loyal Oppo* of record, a University of Hii- sition—An analysis of the growing strength of the Republican party and report on two major candidates: Gov. Georg Romney and Richard Nixon. (C) (7) Movie: “Ma Let’s GO” (1961) A group of Marines brawl the way across Japan on their way to the front lines in Korea. Tom Tryon, David Hedison. (R) (C) (50) Movie: “June Bride' (1948) An editor and reporter become Involved with an average family in a small town. Bette Davis, Robert Montgomery. (R) (56) Mathematics 17 9:30 (9) World on Stage 9:45 (56) British Calendar 19:00 (2) Steve Allen — Guests are Paul Lynde, Dayton Allen and David Frye, who join in to present a Shakespearean play — hipster style. (C) (4) I Spy—An English girl in Burma fakes a kidnaping in order to support guerrilla activities with Uie ransom. (R) (C) (9) (Special) Queen Elizabeth — Highlights of the Royal couple’s visit in the capital city. (C) (56) Big Picture 10:39 (56) Navy Log 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News (C) (9) News (50) Movie: “The Case of the Howling Dog” (1934) Warren William, Mary Astor. (R; 11:30 (2) Movie: “Jungle Girl and the Slaver ” (1959) Marion Micluel, Adrian Hoven, (R) (4) Johnny Carson (C) (?) Joey Bishop (C) (9) Wrestling 12:30 (9) Window on the World 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) Untouchables (R) 1:36 (2) (4) News (C) TOMORROW MORNING 6:16 (2) TV Chapel .6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:26 (2) News (C) 6:30 (2) Spectrum (4) Classroom (7) Seven Seas (C) 7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (C) (4) Today (C) (7) Morning Show professor said. Prof. Gene Graham, speaking before a faculty forum, said smaller, localized papers were beginning to serve people on an “intimate interest level” better than large city dailies. ★ ★ ★ He said the trend in American life away trom “giantism” has begun to affect the role of newspapers. We have just passed through a trend to giantism, to nationalization of thought and more than a degree of conformism for which the mass media are great measure responsible,” he said. Teachers Learn on Ocean Floor MIAMI (JPl - Dade County! oceanography teachers, seeking broaden their knowledge, are being sent directly to the source of their material — the nearby ocean floor. Donning masks and snorkels, the teachers are taking special underwater courses in oceanography. 10:21 (4) News (C) 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) (4) Concentration (C) (7) Dateline (9) Hercules (50) Yoga for Health 10:56 (?) Children’s Doctor 11:06 (3) Andy of Mayberry (R) (4) Personality (C) (7) Supermarket Sweep (C) . (9r Canada Outdoors (50) Dickory Doc (C) 11:25 (9) Tales of the River-bank 11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R) (4) Hollywood Squares (C) (7) Family Game (9) Luncheon Date TOMORROW AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) News (G) (4) Jeopardy (C) (7) Everybody’s Talking (9) Communicate (SO) Dialing for Dollars 12:25 (2) News (C) 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Eyp-Guess (C) (7) Donna Reed (R) (5tf) Movie: “42nd Street" 11933) Warner Baxter, Bebe Daniels. (R) (9) Movie: "Trouble in the Glen” (English, 1954) Orson Welles, Margaret Lockwood. (R) 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:55 (4) News (C) 1:09 (2) Love of Life (C) (4) Match Game (C) (7) Fugitive (R) 1:25 (2) Jackie Crampton (C) 1:36 (2) As the World Turns (4) Let’s Make#a Deal (C) 1:55 (4) News (C) 2:00 (2) Password (C) (4) Days of Our Lives (C) (7) Newlywed Game (C)1 2:30 (2) House Party (C) J4) Doctors (C) (7) Dream Girl (C) (50) Love That Bob (R) 2:55 (7) News (C) (9) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (C) (4) Another World (C) (7) General Hospital (50) Topper (R) (9) Matches and Mates (C) 3:25 (News (O ' , 3:30 (2) Edge of Night , (4) You Don’t Sayt (C) (7) Dark Shadows (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (£) (7) Dating Gama (C) 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (C) ' (7) One Step Beyond (9) Fun House (C) 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (C) 5:00 (4) George Pierrot “Bangkok to Hong'Kong’’ (C) (7) News (C) (9) Woody Woodpecker (C) (50) Alvin (C) 5:30 (7) News—Jennings (9) Stagecoach West (R) (50) Little Rascals (R) 5:30 ( 56) What’s New 5:45 (56) Friendly Giant 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall (C) Singer Is Sued Over Forest Fire OAK VIEW, Calif. (UPI) -The Federal government has fUed a 1125,000 suit against western singer Johnny Cash, charging he inadvertently started a 500-acre fire in Los Padres National Forest in 1965. a- * a The suit charges that Cash was driving a camper truck with a defective exhaust when the vehicle backfired and touched off a grass fire in the Sespe area north of the Ventura County community of Fillmore. The blaze, on June 27, 1965, was controlled by 450 fire fighters aided by aircraft dropping chemicals. Also named, in the suit 1 Donald G. and Reba Ann Hancock, of Oak View, who owned the camper Cash was driving. W ★ ★, The suit seeks to recover the costa of fighting the fire and payment for damage to a destroyed watershed. Boilermaker Pact DETROIT (AP) - Some 600 Detroit area boilermakers returned to work today after six-day strike. Local 169, Boilermakers Union, and the building trades firm reached agreement on a new contract Monday, but neither side would disclose tails of the contract. Aromatic Traps Will Be Set to Catch Japanese Beetles NY Sleuths Investigate Carriage Drivers' Rates NEW YORK s glfAP)—City sleuths who dressed like cam-era-toting tourists say some drivers of horse-drhwn carriages charged up to four times the legal rate for a ride around Central Park. License Commissioner Joel . Tyler revoked the licenses Tuesday of seven drivers and suspended another driver for 45 days, after receiving the report of his investigated, ★ ★ ★ The investigation was touched off last month by the complaints of young cbuples- who said they were overcharged ' when they went for evening rides in,the park after their graduation proms. The legal fare is $5 for the first half hour and $2 for each subsequent half hour, LOUSY UPPERS’ “Even the 'five bucks Is too mueh for iune of the tourists,” ne driver commented. 'They’re lousy tippers anyway. The best riders come late at night—the couples in evening clothes.” Work orr Election KALAMAZOO (AP)-The Kalamazoo Board of Education took the preliminary steps Monday toward arranging an early October election on a proposed $13.8-miUion school building and modernization program, including two new high schools. Radio Programs- WJW760) WXYZQ 270) CKLW(800) WWJ(950) WCAH(1130) WRONG 460) WJOKQ SOOlWHH-fMCPST) TONIGHT fits—CKLW, Ntw«, Tor SIMMMI WJR, NOW*, Sport* WxVXi. WCAR, New*, Jack Sander „ WPON, New*, Sparta , WHPl, Uncle J»y Show fist CKLW, News, Music j WWJ, Today In Review 1«!«—wjr, Lowell 71*”!** 7:eo—WJR, News, Sports •WHFI, Dinner Cancer* CKLW, Newt, Duke windier i, Sports Music 7:15—WXYZ, JI6 _____I___ 7:30—WJR, Tiger*/Indians 0:00—WHFI, Curtain Cell WXVZ^News, Devi Lock- f:00—WHFI, Montage iiito—WJR. Newt, Mutie, Sports WWJ Newt WPON, AH 11:10—wenR, Medical Journal 11:15- WCAR, Rod Rose THURSDAY MORNINO 1:00—WJR, Music Han WWJ, NOW!, tordors WXYZ, Music, Now* ' , wcar. Neve, Deiuii CKLW. Now*, Sud Dowio* WJBK, Marc Avery, Mu 7:W-WPON, Newt, Musi WHFI, New*, Almanac WJR, New*, Music Kell 7:S0—WJBK# Sports I:M-WJR, N*W*. WCAR, Jim t_____ WWJ, New*, Neighbor wifi, Oncie Jav CKLW, News, Joe vsh 10:00—WJBK, Newt, MlttM pgtrlrt, . . • .. WXVjb WHFI, mum- '{. Bill Bovi IN, New*, A WP©N,1_______ WJR, Newt, MutIC 11:00—WJR, Hum. a I, Boyle ; THURSDAY AFTBRNOON 11:10—WWJ, News, Market, Emphasis WJR, New*, CKLW, MM WPON, New*, WCAR, Roo t WHFI, N WXYZ, * WJBK, New*, reirics MUSIC . 1:00—CKLW, -NOWS, whfT, Sneer* wwj, News, Marty WJR, News, Music tilt—WPON, News, M WXYZ, Oeve Prince 3:00—WWJ, N*w*lln* WCAR, New*, jack S_.--.. WJBK, News, MMK> Tew* CKLW, Newe, T*m Shannon Anewer to Prevlou* ftiadt tZ Air (comb. I®*■" bSf® 68 Feminine 5#Mtlon to 18,000 ;l‘5r»*ten your _ test —”, (pi.) 1 Son of Isaac * Unit of wtljpit [gib 0 3 Procter* 9 Weird 18 Leather etrlp *Qrown 32 Hops’ kiln 34 Female sheep 36 Pratt drink 20 Price 94 Sinbtd’i (myth.) „ . 26 Coarse hominy of Edom 27 Oocroed again 48 Trample Ivy 28 Bristle (hot.) 47 Headland <“*—■*'* 48 Hosten* 4 Scanty 28 Fondle 6 Numbers (ah.) SO Passage 6 Larrison 31 Fuss 33 Observe i r 3 4 r" 6 7 •i 9 10 r 12 13 14 IE 16 IT 1ft 1ft 26 21 22 y /. . 2ft 26 27 W 29 30 SI 33 r 3ft Sr 66 sr 42 44 46 46 l) 48 49 r 62 63 54 66 56 61 sr 59 66 5 LANSING UP) - Sniff, sniff, sniff . , , like that smell, little beetle? Come a little closer, right into the yellow plastic cone ■— you’re trapped. The aroma drawing the Japanese beetle into the cone, then into a can from which he has a hard time escaping, is part of tee plot hatched by die U.S. and Michigan departments of agricultnre. Their aim is to control, if not eliminate altogether, the. Japanese beetles in the state. * ★ * This week and next; the business of bagging beetles begins in specified areas of Michigan where the unwelcome Japanese insects are most likely to turn up. Some 20,000 of the aromatic oil-cone-and-can traps are being set. They’ll stay out through the end of August or the beginning of September. A HITCHHIKER “The Japanese beetle is a hitchhiker” explains John Dreves, assistant chief of the Plant Industry Division of the Michigan Agriculture Department. “He most often comes into an area on products like tomatoes or in soil or even on automobiles. He’s most likely to be found in places where there is a lot of commerce.” Dreves says that, although similar traps have been used since 1932, this beetle-trapping season marks only the second year the agriculture departments have set as many as 20,000. ★ ★ ★ “We’re the most trapped state around,” he says, “because even though we are not in a quarantine area, northern Indiana and eastern Ohio are under quarantine, and we want to guard this site.” FEDERAL INSPECTION The quarantine calls for treatments or federal inspection, or both, of commodi- ties which may transport the beetle. That includes numerous quantities of plants and the soil they, grow in, Why get rid of the Japanese beetle? He feeds on more that) 200 varieties of keful plants, and Japanese beetle ■-bies (larvae) feed underground to damage lawns and other coirs. Experts estimate the beetles cause $10 million in crop damage each year in the United States. ★ ★ ★ Thus, to help cut down damage, which Dreves says is low in Michigan, traps are set and “beetle collectors” check each cone-and-can contraption one* every two or three weeks. SOIL INSECTICIDE If there is a beetle in the can, the land within a 150-foot radius of die trap is treated with a soil insecticide to kill all beetle larvae. “Die insecticide lasts from four to five years,” Dreves says. The bettle patrol program is paid for on a matching basis by the agriculture departments. Even insecticide spraying after a beetle is found costs the property owner nothing, Dreves said. ■k ★ ★ Traps will go up by the end of next week in: Chikaming Township in Berrien County; the communities of Dowagiac, Cassopolis, Marcellus, Vandalia, Battle Creek, Grand Rapids, Lansing, Bay City, Ypsilanti; Riga Township In Lenawee County; southern townships of Monroe County. Hi it it Also, Detroit and the suburbs of Royal Oak, Ferndale, Hazel Park, Madison Heights, Pleasant Ridge, Clawson, Highland Park and Hamtramck, and the cities of Northville, Plymouth, Romulus, Belleville, Waltz'and New Boston also Wayne' County. 37 Mother of (myth.) 39 Early period of Cenoioic ora 41 Bird v: 43 Creek market place 45 Ancient capital WILSON More Reel Violence Cuts Real Violence, Soys Villain ' x.; 'V' -eSs By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—Die Italian westerns are bloodier than the Hollywood westerns . . and Lee Van Cleef, a westerner from Somerville, N.J., who became a star , in the Westerns made around Rome, claims that if American westerns had more blood, we’d have less violence on thef| N.Y. streets and in Central Park. “In the Italian westerns yoU' see the bodylBL roll right up to the camera and you see th*wl| bullet hole and you feel sorry for the guyf^® who dies even though he's the heavy ... 1 “If you had that In American westerns, f ou might prevent some of the bloodshed here ! because the kids would see what violence really fj They don’t have violence in the streets ini Rome. Why, I’m afraid to walk the streets in* New York." Six-foot-two, scowly, evilly mustachioed, sideburoed and almost bald, Van Cleef teamed with Clint Eastwood in the boomingly successful new film, “For a Few Dollars More,” playing a bounty-hunter ... all because Italian director Sergio Leone liked his face when he saw it in Hollywood. *“He told my wife that when he saw me, he knew that was the face he wanted. “Which was a put-down for me. What have I got to do with my face? ,An gcior likes to think he’s an actor because of his talent, not because of his face!” ★ ★ * Another change coming on the Johnny Carson TV’er—band leader Milton DeLugg leaves in October. (Trumpeter' Doc Severenson’ll probably take over) . . . Sign in a First Ave, tailor shop: “We Shorten Miniskirts’^ (seen by Ira Emerich) Bess Myerson returned from a two-week visit to Israel; she visited the newly conquered territories in Sinai and Syria, was escorted by Gens. Dayan and Rabin. ★ ★ ★ Joe E. Lewis met Czech dancer Inka Vostrevzova (of the Las Vegas Frontier Hotel show) and asked, “Weren't you in Jimmy Durante's act—as Inka Dinka Doo?” THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . , The Playboy Club signed a new improvisational group: Joey Bishop’s son, Carl Reiner’s son, Alan Arkin’s nephew ... Bantam’s first paperback printing of “Valley of 4he Dolls” is a huge 3,250,000 copies . . . Paramount’ll turn Its “Gunn” film into a series . . . The Crystal Rm. brings in a new act July 13—an all-girl topless band. Skitch Henderson, in weskit and shirtsleeves, worked behind the bar at his colorful Daly’s Dandelion saloon, a bright addition to Third Ave. Mimi Hines brought him what every new saloon needs—a live duck . . . Sheila MacRae, at the Las Vegas Riviera, was backed by a home-grown r V r duo—dtr* Heather and son Gordon Jr. . . . Secret Stuff: A famous actress, about to divorce her husband, has friends phone him to ask what price- he’ll take for his plush home—so she’ll know how much alimony to ask. WISH I’D SAID THAT: People sometimes whistle to keep up their courage, and it’s even more effective if you use a police whistle.—Arnold GlasoW. A fellow phoned his bank (reports George Kirby) to request a loan. The banker asked-how sewn he needed the money, and the guy answered, “Well, to give you an idea—this call is collect." That’s earl, brother. Art Gallery Owner Stages'Flood-In' VANCOUVER, B.C. - Douglas Christmas sealed the ground [floor of )his Vancouver gallery with plastic and flooded it Tuesday with half a foot of cold water. ★ t 4 Cote slides and movies were projected on the walls and bounced off the surface of the water while ^guests who paid $1 each jumped up and down, splashed each other and kicked balloons around. Christmas claimed the flood-in created "total environment,” suggesting Vancouver and its scenic marine surroundings. ' U.8. GREETS QUEEN — Scores of boats follow Queen Elisabeth’s yacht, the Britannia, as it passes under the American span of the Thousand Islands bridga across the St. Lawrence river lit Kingston, Ont.t today. Most of the boats were from the United States aS’Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip came here on the last lap of their six^day tour of Canada. Policemen Enjoy Hippie Love-In in Long Beach LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) - Even the dozen policeman on duty found this loVe-in a happy event. As 3,000 persons gathered at Long Beach recreational park, a young hippie gave one police-an a marigold. “I never had so many people say hello to me before—not just the hippies but everybody around,” said Police Lt. Forest H. Smith. ‘I wouldn’t mind if they came back again.” HOUSE ADDITIONS HOME IMPROVEMENT IS MY BUSINESS “$Y” DEAL DIRECT PERSONAL AND DIRECT SUPERVISION ON your job. Call FE 8-9251 No Salesman's Commission—No Middleman Profit! BBBp \J:- • DORMERS • REC ROOMS • GARAGES FAMILY ROOMS. io?.. *1,295 e KITCHENS e iathrooms e ALUM. SIDING • FREE PLANNING NO PAYMENTS T|L AUGUST 1967 Mamba* Pontloe Chomber of Commerce (.nil Anytime ..» FE 8-9251 FREE ESTIMATES ■ ■ w (No Obtigattoti) 320 N. Pet;?, PONTIAC D—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 CJunior Editors Quiz on— LICORICE QUESTION: Where does licorice come from? * ★ * ANSWER: Although Ijcorice can be spelled in the two ways shown in the drawing, many people pronounce the word “lik-o-rish.” It Is most familiar to us in the form of the rubbery black candy the children are chewing on in our picture. As this suggests, some go for it, others dislike it heartily. .Licorice is obtained from a plant belonging to the pea family (upper right) which grows in southern Europe, Asia and parts of Louisiana and California. The long root of this plant is the part from which the sweet-tasting licorice juice may be extracted. The roots are often mashed and boiled over an open fire. The liquid is evaporated into a solid form, often rolled into sticks. Not all the licorice flavoring goes into cahdy; it is used to conceal the disagreeable taste of drugs in certain medicines as well as to flavor tobacco and some kinds of soft drinks. Firm Blends Old and New PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) The Research and Design Institute, a nonprofit, independent organization which seeks for-' ward-looking ideas in design to keep pace with a char ' world, practices what preaches in its new offices here. A blend of old things and new thinking, use of space based on actual work-flow data. Offices have no wplls, and use 19th century furniture and equipment found abandoned in the former Brown & Sharpe! plant which is its headquarters. Orange and lemon trees borrowed from a local park add to the unusual decor. Dean Appointed DETROIT (AP) - Dr. Henry Dzuiba, 49, has been appointed dean of the University of Detroit School of Dentistry, replacing Dr. Marvin E. Revsin, who is leaving to direct a project at the University of Saigon in Vietnam. CLEARANCE - of Fine Shoes SAVINGS Up to 50% VITALITY Shoes for Women ALL SUMMER SHOES - PLUS SOME YEAR-AROUND PATTERNS Reg.13.05 to 16.95 $6 and $IO FLORSHEIM Shoes for Women DISCONTINUED PATTERNS Reg. 17.95 to 21.95 NOW *I5*# FLORSHEIM Shoes for Men DISCONTINUED styles REDUCED TO $i7a#-»ai80 ! HUSH PUPPIES* DISCONTINUED STYLES AND COLORS Men's 7.99 ; Women's 6.99 CHILDREN'S SHOES CLOSE OUT ENTIRE STOCK Reg*7.95-9.95 NOW 4.00 BALL-BAND SUMMERETTES For Woman —DISCONTINUED STYLES # 'V Reg. 3.95 to 6.95 NOW 2.95 MW. DOWNTOWN SHOE STORE Open 9:30-5:30, Fri. to 9 Serving With Quality Footwear Since 1919 CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON, BICYCLI THEM WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE. 332-8181. SELL PIED AD. You Can Count on Us ... Quality Costs No More at Sears Pick Your Paint Shots Easier With Balloons? SANTA FE UR - A shot in the arm might not be so painful if there Is a balloon in the other hand, the State Health Department figures. So it is ordering 50,000 balloons to promote its vaccination | Irani, to be used in conjunction with an immunization coloring book also being prepared. New Pure-Pure White House and Trim Paint Regular $8.50 Guaranteed 1-Coat Coverage Saves you cost and work of frequent repainting. Covers any color Vith one coat, stays white and bright. Non-chalking, rinses clean. Non-staining and non-yellowing. Resists smog, fumes, gasses. Use this smooth, durable paint Adds beauty, protection to all siding. Its self-priming qualities mean more savings in time, money and effort for you. Diies in 30 minutes. No drip, no splatter, no mess! Dries in only 30 minutes to a velvety finish. Yon can even scrub this finish and it keeps its fresh beauty. Soapy water cleans brushes and rollers. 3-Point Tractor Implement Hitch Sears Price 18** For all Custom" tractors. Takes all rear-mounted implements. Easy to install. A four-shank cultivator with four 6-in. sweeps. Converts to betweeh-row tiller. Sears One Coat Durable House and Trim Paint Regular $6.99 Dries Tack-Free Overnight You’ll get exceptional wear on hard-use areas with this beautiful, tough finish. Special zinc oxide Inhibits mildew and mold; won’t discolor or fade. For wood, masonry, primed metyL *, Sears 6-HP Recoil Start Tractors Regular $439.95 Tractor Only >388 Heavy All-Steel Dnntj» Carts ■ Sears Price For hauling, dumping, riding ,18-gauge Heel, welded for . extra strength. 10 cu. ft Adjustable 30-In. SteelDisc Harrows Sears Price 44** V Lea you plant... levels and gulyerixes soil, after plowing, iscs adjust to 3 positions. NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Flan Engineered to give yon more spare time, to make lawn ana garden work more fim ... with a 4-speed transmission, comfortable contour seat, separate, choke, throttle Control*. Enjoy taking care of yotir lawn this snmmerl; Reg. $539.95, Electric Start............ $488 “Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back" SEARS D°Wr,">”pho”'iF! 5-4171 g The Pontiac Press Offers $1,000 Rew$f The Weather U.S. WMtlwr Bureau Forcestt THE PONTIAC PRESS VOL. 125 — NO. 128 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY. JULY 5, 1967 —52 PAGES united*pwssT^!ternational National Road Sets Holiday Toll Mark By the Associated Press Traffic accidents during the long holiday weekend have claimed more lives than any previous Independence Day period. ' The record toll, however, did not reach the proportions first predicted by the National Safety Council. sands of traveling Americans, jammed the roads. PRESSURE UPS DEATHS At the final hour of the four-day holiday, 678 persons had been reported killed on the nation’s streets and highways. The previous record, 576 deaths, was set during a three-day weekend last year. The added traffic pressure, compared to a normal four-day period, increased the deaths, the council said. An Associated Press survey of a four-day nonholiday period, June 16-20, recorded 630 deaths on the highways. During this year’s Memorial Day holiday, also a 102-hour span, 608 persons died, a record for that holiday. The safety council originally had predicted a toll of 700 to 800 deaths. Highway police went (Hi extra shifts across the country as hundreds of thou- Howard Pyle, safety council president, said that last year an average of 6.6 persons were killed each hour in traffic accidents. The hourly figure from reports for this July 4 period was 6.54. The states with the highest counts in* illite m PEG-LEGGED PONY — Sugar, a 13-month-old Shetland pony, doesn’t do much galloping, but she manages to get around on her artificial leg. The pony, owned by Mrs. George AP Wirephoto Donaldson of Phoenix, Ariz., lost her leg when struck by a car. Mrs. Donaldson says the peg leg works fine. GM Ready to Fight UAW on Guaranteed Income Bid Reward Raised in Slaying The Pontiac Press today offered a $1,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those involved in the slaying of West Bloomfield Township trustee Edward E. De-Conick Monday night. By ED BLUNDEN West Bloomfield township officials today were raising a reward in the robbery-slaying of Edward E. DeConick, 63, of 5847 W. Maple, a township board trustee. Police Chief Melvin Will labeled the crime “the most vicious” in his experience. He said information gathered by State Police crime lab technicians at the scene is being tabulated, and other clues are being pursued today. DETROIT (JR — Five days before contract talks open, General 'Motors has served notice that it will fight guaranteed annual income, the pet demand of United Auto Workers chief Walter Reuther. The giant of the nation’s auto-makers produced yesterday a 12-page booklet detailing some income guarantees already given to UAW-represented GM workers. year, has warned he will sign no contract unless it contains GI, as the demand has been dubbed. DeConick was brutally slain and his sister, Kathleen DeCofflck, 73, shot in the head at their home Monday night by four intruders. However, there are no positive suspects, he said. Detroiter Drowns in Cass Lake Bay Miss DeConick is in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital today in fair condition. She required surgery on her right eye. A Detroit man drowned yesterday in the Grundegut Bay area of Cass Lake, Waterford Township, while swimming from a boat, Larry R. Josey, 21 Tailed to surface after diving from the boat during a water outing with friends, Oakland County sheriff’s deputies were told. The pair was viciously beaten by the robbers and the fact that Miss DeConick survived and was able to tell of the crime surprised hospital officials, considering the woman’s age. She is under police guard at the hospital. Officials at the Township Hall, 4460 Orchard Lake, said discussions have been held on raising a reward, both by office-holders and private citizens. Township officials said anyone wishing to contribute reward money should call the township police. From Miss DeConiqk’s description, police reconstructed the robbery-slaying: • About 11 p.m., a woman knocked on the DeConicks’ door and said her car was disabled and asked to use the phone. Hie action was a public indication of what GM executives have made plain in private, where, with newsmen, they have scoffed at Reuther’s “scheme to pay people for not working.” “We can’t guarantee anybody’s income until somebody can guarantee us a market,” one said. “If a guy can draw his pay even if he isn’t working, who would work? I wouldn’t,” The development gave strength to fears that this year’s auto-labor negotiations have as much strike potential as any previous sessions. The red-haired labor boss has not revealed his GI plan in detail, but he has called it the major innovation in the UAW’s “longest and most ambitious list of demands in history.” GM’s booklet said workers’ income guarantees already were substantial. Then it added: THERE’S A LIMIT “We all realize that there is a limit to now much money can and should be paid in wages for time not worked. LABOR HISTORY Reuther, claiming his 1.4 million-member UAW will make labor history this “If a person were to be paid nearly as much while unemployed as while' working, an important part of the incentive to work would be destroyed. OakfanH. Drowning Toll in ’67 said 14 Last Year to Data 16 Josey decided to take a swim while the boat was near the center of the bay about 3:50 p.m. When he didn’t come up after diving, a friend attempted to save him, but was unable to see in the silty water, deputies said. Sheriff’s department divers, also hampered by poor visibility, recovered Josey’s body about 8:20 in some 30 feet of water. • When the door was opened, three men, brandishing 2 shotguns and pistols, pushed their way in, beat the pair with a shotgun and tied them up. • They ransacked the house and took with them a cash box and floor safe. Before leaving, they shot the pair, DeConick fatally. Miss DeConick was apparently left for dead. After the bandits left, she was able to frfee herself from her bonds and summon help from a nearby farm building housing laborers. Police said “a large amount” of money and securities were Taken, but family members denied the amount was anywhere near $50,000 as had been reported. Thursday Forecast Sunny and Warm “It would not be fair to the majority of employes-those who are working-to be paid little more than those who are not working.” Here’s good news. The weatherman predicts sunny and warmer weather tomorrow with the high about 70 to 74. Fair and cool with a low near 68-is tonight’s forecast. For the next five days Pontiac area residents may look forward to sunshine and showers with the total rainfall measuring near one-half inch. The UAW had no immediate comment. While details of the GI plan are lacking, it is known that this demand is one already marked as a “strike issue” by top men at the Big Three auto-makers-GM, Ford and Chrysler. This means the company leaders would prefer, at least at this stage, to fight a strike rather than yield to the union’s demand. Contract talks on a new three-year contract ope.n Monday. The existing pact expires Sept. 6. EDWARD E. DeCONICK In Today's Press DeConick served as township justice of the peace from 1947 until he was elected trustee in 1953. He had served on the board of trustees since then. Percentage chances of rain are: Today 10, tonight 5, tomorrow, not more than one eighth. The low recording prior to 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac was 53. At 1 p.m. the mercury had moved up to 65. U.N. Out to Save Face on Mideast MOWBial W. Bloomfield Twp. . Young movie maker an award I winner — PAGE A-4. Archaeological Find | Discovery at Midland may § date to 900 B. C.-PAGE B-10. g Negro Aide Woman tells of work helping 1 teacher in all-white school — 1 PAGE B-14. Area News ............... A-4 1 Astrology .............. C*8 1 Bridge ...................C* 1 Crossword Puzzle ........D-13 Comics .................:.C-S Editorials .............. A-6 Education Series ..........A-ll Food Section....C-l, C-9, C-12 Markets ................ D-6 Mystery Series .......... B-7 Obituaries ...............D-7 Sports ............. .D-l—D-5 Theaters ................ C-4 Tf and Radio Programs ■ D-13 ' Wilson, Earl.....I’}* —D-18 s Pages ......B-l—B-4 Romney in N. H. for 4-Day Visit, Political Talks 51 Members, $67,000 Club to Aid OU Growing | MIRROR LAKE, N.H. ^-Michigan Gov. George W. Romney has arrived at the summer estate of a friend for a four-day visit and political talks with New England Republicans. “Our Chancellor’s Club at Oakland University is barely a year old,” said Romney, who arrived last night by plane, made plans for ah early morning round of golf with his host, J. Willard Mariott, a Washington, D. C., restaurant operator. At a stop in Boston en route, the Michigan governor told newsmen he had not decided whether to enter the New Hampshire primary — the nation’s first -hot that if he did, he did not want Massachusetts Gov. John A. Volpe as an opponent. With Volpe at his side as he commented, Romney Mid, “I’ve indicated I would rather not have him enter in New Hampshire. That’s a decision for Gov. Volpe to make.” M Chairman L. C. Goad, “but we have 51 members and $67,000.” Members give a thousand dollars a ■year for 10 years after which they become honorary life members. If the contribution becomes burdensome in the years ahead, the university steps aside with complete understanding. The bulk of the money goes to scholarships. “All big universities have similar organizations,” says Chairman Goad, “and with hundreds of thousands of alumni to draw upon, they are tremendously important “At Oakland University we have only a handful of graduates, and they haven’t had a chance to win financial success. Hence, we are directly dependent upon residents who have prospered here. Through a definite part of pur lusty and rapidly growing institution, they know they are playing a part personally.” Full details can be secured by a letter addressed to Chairman L; C. Goad at Oakland University. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (JR - Die-hard diplomats at the United Nations cast about today for a face-saving token resolution on the Middle East after rival demands for Israel’s withdrawal from Arab soil failed to pass the General Assembly. Assembly President Abdul R.a h m a n Pazhwak of Afghanistan called an after- Related Story, Page A-3 noon meeting to “finalize” the work of the emergency session that began June IT- i l ,, * elude Texas, California, Illinois, Ohio, Indiana, New York, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Virginia. Early in the period six Illinois teenagers died iu a head-on collision near Grand Ridge, 111. Another head-on crash near1 Bradford, Pa., early yesterday killed four persons, including a father and two of his sons. Six persons died Monday near Emporia, Va., when their car skidded out of control on Interstate 95. Police said a tire blowout may have caused the accident. , UPWARD SWING Five persons died near Flagstaff, Ariz., Monday in the collision of a truck and a car on U.S. 66. This year’s Independence Day record continues an upward swing of traffic deaths that have set records for most recent holiday periods. The record death count for any four-day holiday was set last Thanksgiving when 748 persons were killed. , Since the start of the Independence day at 6 p.m. Friday, boating accidents lulled 46 persons, and 175 persons drowned. He contends a worker must know at the start of the year what his base pay will be for the next 12 months-and that thq worker must draw this pay even if laid off during that period. Pontiac Breaks Sales Records Pontiac Motor Division announced today that sales of Pontiacs, Tempests and Firebirds have set an all-time record of high sales for any one quarter. Records were also set for the month of June and the June 21-30 period. John Z. DeLorean, a Generl Motors vice president and Pontiac’s general manager, reported sales of 250,999 cars for the second quarter Of 1967 which erases the old record of 231,599 cars sold in the same quarter of 1965. DeLprean also pointed out that the cars sold last month topped the 75^361 units sold in June last year by eight per-cent. Pontiac dealers sold 30,623 new cars during he June 21-30 period this year as compared to 28,506 cars sold last year. “All of these new Pontiac sales records indicate that our dealers are presently selling cars at the rate of a million a year.” DeLorean said. New Latin Canal May Be N-Blasted WASHINGTON UT> - U.S. engineers are considering underground nuclear explosions with a force of up to 10-million tons of TNT to blast out a new sea-level canal across Central America, it was learned yesterday. An Atomic Energy Commission source said that would be 50 times bigger than any underground atomic explosion yet tested by the United States. The AEC source said Army engineer specialists, making preliminary studies, believe the largest single excavation explosion might range up to 10-million tons, or 10 megatons. The smallest might be the equivallent of 200,000 tons of TNT—about the size of the largest below-ground test in Nevada. Attention was focused on the canal question anew last week when it was announced that the United States and Panama concluded agreement on new treaties dealing with the possible building of a new sea-level canal and opera-tiop of the present Panama Canal. But some delegates expressed belief that if the assembly recessed for a few days, they could muster the needed two-thirds majority for a vaguely worded draft expounding general principles and shunting the real issues back to the Security Council. LI’L ONES The 122-nation assembly defeated four resolutions yesterday calling on Israel to withdraw its troops from land occupied in Egypt, Syria and Jordan during the June war. The assembly overwhelmingly approved a resolution calling on Israel to rescind its annexation of the Old City of Jerusalem and a Swedish proposal appealing for aid for Arab refugees and other victims of the Arab-Israeli war. “Janey Said she’ll knock you ; silly. Beth wants to break your arm. Cindy thinks you’re a crud. How do you rate’” V. jm W1A01WW THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 106 Marines Killed in 4-Day Battle SAIGON (AP) — Heavy Communist rocket and artillery fire pounded U.S. Marine outposts and sweeping forces today just below the demilitarised zone where ground fighting or gun duels have raged for four days. A ★ ★ The U.S. Command said IS Leathernecks were killed and SI wounded in eight enemy bar* rages in the past 24 hours. This brought the unofficial four-day casualty toll to 106 killed, 321 wounded and 6 missing. WWW The Marines have reported 168 North Vietnamese killed but believe the total enemy casualties are far higher. Each North Vietnamese barrage was answered by the Marine guns, but the Red batteries were evidently well dug in at solidly prepared sites. Associated Press correspondent Steve Stlbbens reported from the battle area that the forces of the 90th North Vietnamese Regiment, which had been fighting the Marines since Sunday, had pulled back at least temporarily. CLUSTER OF BUNKERS Pushing forward to recover the bodies of Marines killed in the big battle last Sunday, the Marines ran into a rabbit warren of abandoned, battered bunkers., The fortifications two miles above the sandbagged Marine base at Con Thien indicated the Communists are again pushing down in force from the demilitarized zone from which they were cleared by a Marine invasion in May. Sweeping forces protected by tanks, two of which were knocked out by gunfire, have See Story, Page B-13 now recovered most of the missing from the opening battle Sunday. The official toll now stands Marines killed, 170 wounded and 6 still missing in that fight, in which the Marines reported at least 148 North Vietnamese killed. Marine battalion pushed across 600 yards of the battlefield without opposition. It was honeycombed with tunnels and bunkers. Whjle the threat along the border zone overshadowed action elsewhere, there were skirmishes and small-scale battles throughout the country Tuesday. Despite this almost all American units took a few minutes off for Fourth of July observances. Only 11 miles west of Saigon, American soldiers and South Vietnamese rangers hit a guerrilla band with a sudden heli-copter assault. In the melee, a recoilless rifle shell exploded beside a descending helicopter and wounded eight U.S. soldiers. In all, 22 Viet Cong were killed, and the assault force had lone man killed and 15 wounded. South Vietnamese forces reported 19 Viet Cong killed in clash near Tra Vinh, in the Meking Delta south of Saigon, t I 4 ★ American pilots, after one di of bad weather, found fair ski< over much of North Vietnam Tuesday and flew 115 missions, most of them against the rail, highway and waterway network around the heavily defended Haiphong-Hanoi area. AIRFIELD HIT Air Force pilots again cratered the MIG airfield at Kep northeast of Hanoi and reported destroying or damaging about 35 boxcars, most of them on the' northeast rail line from Hanoi to Red China. W. Germans Protest 'Kidnaped' Koreans BONN, Germany 4UPB — The West German government stepped into the case of 13 missing South Koreans yesterday and issued a sharp protest to the South Korean ambassador about Seoul secret service agents’ activities in Germany. ★ ★ * The director of the Foreign Ministry’s political section, Her- British Can't Confirm Arab Execution of 6 LONDON (AP) — Britain’s Defense Ministry said today it has heard nothing to confirm a report that six British soldiers were executed by Arab nationalists in Aden last week after being tried as “war criminals.” ★ ★ ★ The ministry said British troops had been involved in no serious incidents in Aden since 18 Britons were killed and 22 wounded in an Arab police tiny June 20. ★ ★ ★ Newspapers in Cairo carried front-page stories today reporting the execution of the six soldiers in the Crater district which the nationalists seized last week. British troops retook the area Monday. ★ ★ ★ Egypt’s Middle East News Agency said the report was brought to the Yemen town of Ta’izz by travelers who had witnessed the trial of the soldiers. According to the agency, the arrivals said the six Britons had “attempted to infiltrate” Crater. IWr‘ ★ ★ “They were sentenced to death as war criminals and immediately executed,” the report said. “The trial was witnessed by many people of the Arab south who packed the court.’ mann Meyer-Lindenberg, mer South Korean Ambassador Gen. Duk Shin-choi to question him about the disappearances. A ministry spokesman said Meyer - Lindenbnrg told Gen. Dnk “The South Korean Secret service must cease its activities immediately.” He also asked the South Korean dipol-mat whether there was a connection between the activities of the secret service and the missing South Koreans. German newspajiers reported today that South Korean secret service agents were investigat-I Koreans in Germany in connection with a Communist North Korean spy ring recently uncovered in Seoul. W A. W The disappearances came to light a week ago when the Liberal Students Union at Heidelberg University said a Korean student studying there had been kidnaped by South Korean secret servicemen. MISSING KOREANS Over the wekend, the number of missing South Koreans in Germany increased and by yesterday it had reached 13. Among the Koreans who have peared were a physicist and his family, a children’s doctor, nurse and seven students. ★ ★ ★ The doctor, Suk Il-lee, wi visited by three South Korean Embassy officials shortly before his disappearance June 20. His wife later received a letter saying he had to travel for a while. * * ★ The nurse, who was not identified, was last seen by her colleagues entering a restaurant in Offenbach with two Sout' Korean Embassy officials. She later wrote to her friends Germany she returned to Korea of her own free will. But the riends said she left all her clothes and belongings in Germany and had taken no luggage with her. MONROE M. OSMUN School Board Elects Officers S. Korean Soldier Killed, 12 Wounded SEOUL, South Korea (AP) North Korean regulars killed a South Korean soldier and wounded 12 others south of the demilitarized zone today, but South Korean police reported killing a North Korean guerrilla ' capturing another in a gun-fight 150 miles south of Seoul. ★ ★ ★ In Pusan, riot police used tear as and clubs to repel 2,000 university students demonstrating against irregularities in the June 8 parliamentary elections. Two more national assembly-men resigned because of alleged irregularities in their districts. The Weather lUmspilBMi Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly sunny and a little warmer today. High 67 to 75. Fair and cool tonight, low 59 to 83. Sunny and warmer Thursday. North to northeast winds five to 10 miles today, becoming light and variable tonight. Friday outlook: showers and warmer. Percentage chance of rain: Today 10, tonight 5, Thursday V«. Tuesday In Pontine ,» • o.m.: Wind Velocity 5 m.p.h. Direction: NartlWMt Sun otto Wednesday Sun rises Thursday at 6:03 a.m. —"*i Wednesday - is Thursday Downtown Temperatures Highest temperature ................ 68 Lowest temperature ..................53 MoOn .temperature ...................61 Weather: Mostly sunny dayi rain Inches lata afternoon, evening Monroe M. Osmun has been returned as head of the Pontiac Board of Education along with two other incumbent officers. Reelected as board officers with Osmun were Russell L. Brown, vice president, and Mrs. Elsie Mihalek, secretary. Vernon L. Schiller, schools business manager, remains as the board’s treasurer. Osmun, 65, who is beginning his 22nd year on the board, has been president five previous times. He is a well-known Pontiac clothing merchant ’ Both Osmun and Brown were reelected to the school board last month- Brown, 57, is starting ond four-year term on the board. He is a social studies and mathematics teacher at Bloomfield Hills Junior High School. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Mihalek has been on the board for nine years. Her current term expires in 1970. She served as vice president in 1963 and 1964. Osmun resides at 2094 Lake-wind, West Bloomfield Township; Brown at 483 Lynch and Mrs. Mihalek, 1592 Vinewood. City to Weigh Extension of 2 Contracts Spending Cut Instead of Tax Hike Is Urged WASHINGTON (UPI)^-Chair-man William Proxmire of the influential Senate-House Economic Committee today called Congress to reduce federal spending rather than raise income taxes. 'If the government has to allocate more of the national resources to defense purposes, we should cut down on the government’s other claims on resources,” the Wisconsin Democrat said in a statement. “Why should the government go on consuming more than ever when it asks the private sector to consume less?” Proxmire’s comment came as the Johnson Administration neared a decision on how much of an increase in personal and corporate income taxes it will ask of Congress, and what date to make the increase begin. ★ ★ ★ Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara and Nicholas deB. Katzenbach, undersecretary of state, plan to fly to Saigon this week on. a mission that is expected to provide an answer to how many U.S. troops will be sent to Vietnam above previously planned and budgeted levels $5 BILLION INCREASE Proxmire estimated sending 100,000 more troops than previously planned to Vietnam would send defense spending about |5 billion above the 822.4 billion currently budgeted for the war during the next 12 months. The extension of two contracts will be considered by the Pontiac City Commission tonight, one with the American Transit Corp., the other with the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO). Kenneth Totten, manager of the bus line which operates the Pontiac Transit Corp., has requested the city renew the agreement for another year under the present terms. The OEO is asking that the city extend the lease on the war on poverty office at 7 W. Lawrence for six more months. In other business, the commission will receive a report on the 81.8 million bond issue which will finance the Galloway Creek Sewer and pumping station to be built on Opdyke. The Michigan Municipal nance Commission recently approved the sale of the bonds. OPENING OF BIDS The opening of bids on the bond sale is scheduled for the Aug. 8 City Commission meeting, with construction bids on the project to be opened a day earlier. Another report will be submitted to the commission regarding bids bn the construction of a new emergency building at Pontiac General Hospital, and NATIONAL WEATHER - Showers and 7 are forecast tonight in southern Florida and the lower > *Wppi Valley. Showers also are expected in the norLnau runuac ucaeni nospnai, ana oama uov. lAirwen nrauaoe ib greeted on Plains and southern Plateau region. It will be cooler in the Itbe remodeling of the hospital arrival today at the M.D. Anderson Hospital Carolines, and Likes region and the northern Rockier. lto bring it tq* to code. I in Houston by Dr. Randolph Lee Clark, di- in the fifth border incident since President Chung Hee Park’s inauguration for a second term Saturday, North Korean regulars threw -grenades and fired automatic we | close range into a guard post on the central front 1,000 yards south of the demilitarized zone between North and South Korea. The guard post returned the fire. It was not known if any of the Communists were hit 17 DEATHS Seven South Koreans and 10 North Koreans were killed and five South Koreans wounded in the other skirmishes Saturday, Sunday and Monday. The gunfight with the guerrillas occurred near Changsong as squads pf police and soldiers were pursuing 15 North Koreans who had been reported in the area. They encountered a band of eight, but six escaped. The pursuit continued. ★ ★ ★ Six North Korean guerrillas have been reported captured ' 75 killed in the past month, the highest total since the 1953 Korean armistice. Fifteen soldiers and policemen have been reported killed and seven wounded in antiguerrilla actions. ★ ★ ★ Student protests against the parliamentary elections subsided somewhat in Seoul with only three demonstrations of 300, 200 and 30 students occurring. Most universities in Seoul have started summer vacations early. Pusan University adopted the same tactic after the demonstration there today. ★ ★ ★ Both the assemblymen who resigned today, and another who resigned Tuesday were among eight assemblymen that Park had purged from his ruling Democratic Republican party for alleged voting irregularities in their districts. LAWRENCEBURG, Tenn. (AP) — A danger still exists at the water-damaged Laurel Hill Dam, but officials of the Tennessee Game and Fish Commission say it is less today., Two valves were r opened Tuesday, increasing to nearly 130 million gallons a day the water output through a sluice tunnel, and thus reducing water pressure which threatens to break the earthen dam. ★ ★ ★. The 24-inch valves, along with another valve which has been partially open since Friday, will lower the water to a safe level within two weeks, les haun.^j. commission engineer, predicted. Bob Galloway, manager of the lake which is operated by the Game and Fish Commission, noticed increased seepage at the base of the 840-foot-long dam a week ago. Engineers began working Friday to lower pressure on the structure to prevent its collapse. ★ ★ * The lake has been closed to all activities. About 200 residents of three communities below the dam have been alerted _ evacuate in event of a break. Hie lake held about three billion gallons of water. ’The status of the dam is still it was last Wednesday,” Haun said after the valves were opened. “But we feel a little safer as the water level lowers bit at a time.” Italians Deny Strafing Report GENOA, Italy (AP) - The owners of the Italian freighter Agostino Bertani said today they had received a radio message from the ship’s captain which made no mention of being hit during a U.S. attack on Haiphong last Thursday. East Germany’s official news agency, ADN, reported Friday that U.S. planes strafed four foreign ships, including the Ber-taini, in the harbor of North Vietnam’s chief port. Danger Eases at Dixie Dam Valves Are Opened to Lessen Pressure Birmingham Area News Maple Parking Curbed 2 Hours Each Weekday BIRMINGHAM -Par k ing along Maple in the central business district will be prohibitied on the south side of the street for two hours each weekday for the next six weeks. The parking ban, approved by the City Commission Monday night, becomes effective Monday between the hours of 4 and 6 p.m. Monday through Friday. The removal of parking during the rush period is intended to relieve congestion and allow for the easy drcnlation of traffic during -construction of ring road projects. Police Chief Darryl Bruestle said today that signs warning »gM mm NANCY MOORE Woman Sets Fire to Self, Is 'Critical' LOS ANGELES (AP) young woman drenched herself with gasoline Tuesday and set herself afire, police said. She was listed in critical condition today in Los Angeles General Hospital with third-degree burns. ★ ★ * Hie woman was tentatively identified from a driver’s license and library card as Nancy L. Moore, 24, Twin Falls, Idaho. The library card was from Portland, Ore. Police quoted attendants at a self-service station northwest of downtown Los Angeles as saying they heard a scream and saw the woman ablaze inside small cashier’s booth on a center island of the service station. ★ ★ ★ r A religious picture was found with the woman inside the small building, officers said. mm LURLEEN ENTERS HOSPITAL - Alabama Gov. Lurleen Wallace is greeted on rector and surgeon-in-chief. She entered the hospital for tests to determine the extent of a recurrent malignancy and for possible surgery. 1 Mercenaries Dropped Into Congo Cities KINSHASA, The Congo (AP) -h Congolese radio said today foreign mercenaries had been dropped into the cities of Kisangani, formerly called Stanleyville, and Bukavu. It told the nation to stand by for a special address by President Joseph D. Mobutu. Hie radio said the situation in the eastern part of the COngo was very tense. The broadcast did not give any immediate indication whether the parachute drops 'were tied in with former Premier Moise Tshombe, who Js I under arrest in Algeria. The Congo is seeking his extradition to face a death penalty here as a traitor and plotter against Mobutu’s regime. “Hie dark forces of imperialism have set off their Machiavellian plan against the Con-the broadcast said. The radio said the situation was quiet in Kinshasa, the capital formerly called Leopoldville. the motorists of the ban will be placed along Maple' between Bates and Hunter immediately. ★ ★ ★ Initially the police department had recommended that parking be removed from both sides of the street between 4 and 6 p.m-, but later decided the ban on one side would be sufficient. HAD OPPOSED Hie Birmingham - Bloomfield Chamber of Commerce had opposed the removal of parking on both the north and south sides of the street, contending the results would be disastrous to bus-ness. A report on a 30-day test ban along the major thoroughfare last month was to be presented'to the commission next Monday,. but Brnestle said that it would be delayed at least a week. All the information has been gathered, but the city’s traffic consultant is out of town and won’t have time to evaluate the data, according to Bruestle. ★ ★ * In an interim report to the commission, the chamber 0 f commerce said that its own survey showed that all retail and service businesses on Maple experienced an “appreciable loss in dollar volume and store trade during the trial period.” The chamber asked that if parking had to be removed, it be banned only from the north side between 5 and 6 p.m. In another action, the commission gave tentative approval to the hiring of the architectural firm of O’Dell Hewlitt and Luck-enbach to design a parking structure proposed for the city parking lot on Pierce between Merrill and Brown. New Mexico Rebel Gives Up CANJILON, N.M. (UPI) -Baltazar Martinez, allegedly the rebels who attacked the Herra Amarilla Courthouse a month ago, surrendered to police without incident at his m 01 h e r ’ s home late yesterday. Martinez, 23, was taken into custody after his mother negote his surrender with an off-duty Albuquerque policeman'on fishing trip. She said she did not want to see her son harmed. Martinez, who at one time had dynamite strapped to his chest and was described as “the most dangerous in the bunch” by State Poice Chief Joseph Black, was not armed. He offered no resistance when Albuquerque Detective Fred Gallegos met him in the home of his mother, Mrs. Anerilla Martinez. Gallegos said Mrs. Martinez had contacted him about the possibility of the surrender, and he discussed the matter with Black. School Board in Waterford Will Organize The Waterford Township Board of Education will hold its annual organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. To be elected for one-year terms are a president, a secretary, a treasurer and a chap-most dangerous of the band of l®ln- Officers can be reelected. Current board president is Robert E. Field. He was elected in January following the resignation of Norman L. Cheat. Tomorrow night also will mark the first official meeting for new board of education trustee Lewis S. Long, who was elected to a four-year term June 12. Long succeeds Mrs. Dorothy !. Barningham who did not run for reelection. ★ ★ ★ Incumbents Donald W. Porter and Michael G. Patterson also emerged victorious in the June 12 election, Porter gaining a second four-year term and Patterson a three-year seat. In other business, the board is slated to open bids for the proposed new Crescent Lake Elementary School and for an interior remodeling project at -Waterford Township High School. Hearing on Land-Fill Due Tomorrow in Waterford The decision whether to grant a permit to operate a land-fill off Maceday Lake Road will lie squarely with Waterford Township Planning Commission following a public hearing on t h e issue at 7:30 tomorrow night in Waterford Township High SchooL t Advocates and opponents of the proposed land-fill will be given the opportunity to present their cases at die hearing. The nine-member commission could render a decision directly after the hearing or could defer action. The issue was referred to the commission for final action after it was determined by township attorneys that the body should handle such matters as specified by the zoning ordi- The Township Board originally held a public hearing on that issue last Jah. 30, but failed to take action. When it appeared that the new board would decide the matter at its May 2 meeting, attorneys ruled that the planning commission legally should conduct tiie public hearing and render a decision. The Township Board, at that time, voted to go through proper channels to amend toe zoning ordinance so that board members would have the final say on permit requests for sanitary land-fill operations. However, amending an ordinance is time-consuming. \ # * Sr And land-fill applicants Donal Freeman and David Ward of the Waterford Processing and Reclaiming Co. requested a n d were granted a public hearing at the commission’s May 28 meeting. LAND-FHX SITE The proposed land-fill is located on a 50-acre site hear Ward’s Gravel Pit. The entrance is about onohajf mile north of toe Maceday Lake Road-Williams Lake Road intersection. SSZ sasfjrms SSJBSVmm CL JfltliN Locml AtfvtrlStl&f Mtnti'r Meadow Brook in Its Fourth Season Meadow Brook Music Festival is off to its fourth season, following three that progressively surpassed the preceding one in attendance and appeal. This summer's Festival offers an eight-week 32-concert program by the Detroit Symphony Orchestra highlighted by a galaxy of guest artists as compared with the first season’s four-week 12-concert offering. (2,200 in the Howaxd c. Baldwin Pavilion and 6,000 on the grassy slope contiguous), attendance at the concerts has climbed steadily. More than 10,000 turned out for last year’s opening performance that featured Van Cusubn. The orchestra, under direction of Sixten Ehrling, has from the inception of Meadow Brook thrilled thousands with the brilliance of its renditions. As icing on the cake of this season’s program schedule, the New York Pro Musica, directed by John White, gave special ooncerts last night and a week ago. With an audience capacity of 8,000 Significantly, the Festival carries its own financial weight, the cost Of the programs (this season’s is budgeted at $500,000) being ihet by ticket sales and support hum private sources, without recourse to Oakland University funds or other sources of public money. The Press again commends the administration of OU> the Detroit Symphony Orchestra and those of the citizenry who have joined forces to provide the community with this annual cultural delight. Rerun Slated for Waterford Landfill Hearing Waterford Township residents are getting a rare opportunity: Two public hearings for the price of one. At issue is a request for a license to operate a sanitary landfill near Maceday Lake. There was a marathon public hearing held January 30 before the Waterford Township Board. It was attended by more than 400 people. Following that hearing, township officials, acting on legal advice, decided that under Waterford's present zoning ordinance, the decision to grant or reject* this proposal lies in the hands of the Waterford Township Planning Commission — not the township board. We recognize that adequate waste disposal is a problem facing Waterford and many other growing communities. However, on the face of evidence produced at the first public hearing, there appears to be a strong Chance that the location of a sanitary landfill near Maceday Lake could, over a period of yean, result in pollution of Maceday Lake and possibly Pontiac Lake. Thus, a replay of sorts of the January hearing is slated for 7:30 tomorrow night in the Waterford Township High School cafeteria, this time before the township planning commission. The need for a waste disposal site was heightened when a dump on Cooley Lake Road serving township residents was closed early this year. That immediate need was eased somewhat in April with the approval of a contract whereby township residents can use the City of Pontiac’s sanitary landfill on West Kennett Road on a fee basis. Should we take such a chance? We think not. Maceday is one of our finest fishing lakes. It is one of two Oakland County lakes which contain lake trout. Bass, rainbow tront and pike fishing are also good in Maceday, not to mention panfish. Should Pontiac Lake become polluted* we would lose one of our first rate fishing and recreational bodies of water. Recently, we praised the fight residents of the Maceday Lake area are putting up to prevent possible future pollution of Maceday and Pontiac Lakes. This is a big chance to take. In recent years, the county and its residents have taken big steps, at considerable expense, to preserve our lakes and assure adequate water levels. It would seem that approval of a sanitary landfill operation in this location would, in part, be contrary to current local and national efforts to preserve our water resources and maintain adequate lake levels. Now that the township has obtained the services of the Pontiac landfill, it seems a good opportunity to take some time to search for a solution which will eliminate the risk Of water pollution. World Suffered a Beating in 21 Days Voice of the Peopled T Reader Seeks Answers fumto mm on Who Must Fight War Many of us think of all our American boys being killed in Vietnam. I lost a brother in World War II but my husband was lucky and came back. What is wrong with the government? Big shots of the government are in the paper every day with fancy parties, having babies, etc. What about little folks like us who don’t have much? Let’s hear what some of .the readers think. MRS. E. G. MAGER HIGHLAND Change in Time Prompts Readers’ Views Wait another 20 years and the advertisement for Michigan will be “The land of the midnight sun." D.A. 'He's All Yours!' Have you noticed that God’s time never changes? Birds herald the dawn at the old appointed time and the sun’s light varies at the old given hours. Speaking of God’s time, Hie Bible tells us “now is high time to awake out of sleep; for now is our salvation nearer than when we believed.” Do you have the right time? MARY ALLEN 9024 MILLWARD UNION LAKE David Lawrence Says: Cuba Steps Up Aid to Guerrillas As our Legislature had voted to remain on Eastern Daylight Saving Time as allowed by the National Time Act, how could a three-member board of canvassers legally cancel that act of Legislature, even on petition of one-tenth of the people? Even Mr. Romney or Mr. Kelley had no such right. We must obey the WASHINGTON—The United States is confronted with the possibility of a half-dozen or more Vietnam-type conflicts. The Castro government of Cuba, has instigated a series of guerrilla wars de-signed to iuuwss governments in Central and South Ameri- all necessary individual or collective measures ... to assure this.” A compre- LAWRENCE mm* I1 agreement was reached* in 1962 between President Kennedy and the Khrushchev regime to'dismantle the missile bases set up in Cuba, it is not certain how many weapons remain. The House committee declares that a large supply of arms is present in Cuba as well as about 5,000 Soviet nationals. A “military assis- tance group” of around 2,000 “helps in maintaining and operating the Soviet equipment turned over to .Cuba,” law of tiie land — or must we? ARTHUR B. COTCHER 98 S. TILDEN It is clear that Soviet military aid has increased since September 1966. Hus, the committee says, could be “a Soviet replacement and resupply program for the equipment introduced in 1962.” Cuba’s air defense capability is being modernized. ^Filmstrips Valuable in Teaching Students’ Our upper grade teachersi have been using the Visual Education Consultants News Filmstrip Service this past year which was provided by The Pontiac Press. We again found the newsstrip very helpful and a valuable part of our instruction, CHARLES E. HAZEL, PRINCIPAL CARL MALKIM ELEMENTARY SCHOOL hensive report, just issued by a subcommittee of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, declares that Castro has expanded his list of target countries, and is bolding on July 28 in Havana a conference of Communist parties in Latin America to plan more subversive and terrorist activi- Bob Considine Says: Lindsay Scores at Parley With Demand f or Funds ‘Auto Graveyards Are Disgrace to Area’. I read Federal funds are available for screening auto graveyards in Michigan. I would like to see Congressman McDonald or Broomfield work on that eyesore between the City and Oakland U. on what used to be Mt. Clemens. It’s a disgrace. ROCHESTERITE Tie report says, “there are guerrilla movements of significance” in Venezuela, Colombia, Guatemala and Bolivia. Details of these operations now are furnished by tiie House committee, based on investigation and public hearings. Are some of the principal countries ty the world going to cooperate with the United States in preventing Cuba from carrying out its plots? Ruth By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - If the world was indeed created in seven days, it is awesome to contemplate how closely man came to de-straying it during the 21 days! of our vaca-l tion. While sunned our-| selves b the sea, scaled I dimpled sand dunes, and ^ . 'strolled through Montgomery pine forests absorbing the mysterious beauty of moss-draped cypress trees, a war was fought and lost in the Holy Land. Lost, because all wars are lost in dvfliZed society. Doublylost, because once again greed and hatred had turned the land of David and Jesus and Mohammed into a bath of Meod. bribe three weeks while our back was turned to the typewriter, American planes bombed Hanoi,1 and North Vietnamese slaughtered UB. tions, and the leaders of the world’s two most powerful nations held a summit conference to foster “Hie Spirit of Hollybush.” Where so recently Jews had been forbidden to pass through tiie MandeBiaam Gate to pray at the Wailing Wall, they new possessed boththrough force of arms. Israel swore never again to surrender old Jerusalem, but Britain, and Russia backed Arab demands that it be returned post-haste to the kingdom of Jordan, and Utacle Sam sat on the fence wheedling, “Come let us reason together.” the spot where Mohammed Is said to have ascended into heaven on at white Is it too much to hope that ail three faiths might one day share joint custody of this sacred spot? The House committee makes these findings: “Cuba is still receiving considerable assistance from our ‘friends- and allies.’ “The British are trading with Cuba mid recently completed a credit guarantee for a large fertilizer plant. “Other counfries have granted credits to Cuba, including Spain, Japan, France, the Benelux countries, Morocco, the United Arab Republic, Italy and Canada. Canadian wheat, purchased by the Soviet Union- and shipped to Cuba, amounted to 208 million dollars in 1965.” When a nation is virtually ia a state of war with other HONOLULU - John Lindsay of New York was the star of the recent annual conference of U.S. mayors held in the host town they all love best His good looks, flair, the way he wore his leis and the fact that he brought the wife and kids along combined to win CONSIDINE him the most press coverage and TV and radio time. But what endeared him to his fellow mayors was his demand, roundly endorsed, that the federal government earmark $400 million over tty next two years to fight crime and corruption in the cities of the nation. He wondered why, in face of this urgent crisis, the government was pursuing a colos-saily costly war in Vietnam, a space program, and spending millions storing surplus cotton. - Mayor Cavanagh’s particular target was the supersonic airliner which will be largely paid for in ^development stages by federaTfunds. He questioned whether it was worth it because, as he put it, there are only four or five cities in the country whose location of air terminal facilities will be able to handle it. Hie mayor would have had more to say but he had to hurry back to Detroit. His police were threatening to strike. ‘Purpose of Gty Group Is to Help Mothers9 The North Oakland Opportunity Center at 7 West Lawrence has a group of mothers called Mothers for Better Living, We are mothers from low income families and we need more members in order to help ourselves and our community. Meetings are held each Wednesday afternoon and transportation can be arranged by calling the center. R. COLLINS Question and Answer Was the Washington Monument built by private funds or government expense. CURIOUS REPLY It was started in 1848 and slowly built to 156 feet in 1854, when $300,000 had been raised by popular subscription. The work became controversial and contributions ended. It was finished when the Corps of Engineers resumed the work in 1880 at government expense. .____________________i Mayor James Clarkson of Southfield, Mich., noted that a poll of the mayors taken six years ago at the convention showed 50 per cent of them strongly opposed to federal akj. “Today* not one voice is raised against it,” Be observed. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Capitalists The Richmond New leader Surely, however, there it someway to establish Jerusalem and nearby Bethlehem as open vcities administered by an international tribunal of council of world faiths. the aggressor. CUSTODIANSHIP We would even dart to aug- The world prayed for the emergence of a wise Solomon, who by threatening to cut tiie baby in haif might discover the rightful mother. But where is such a leader today? And what should become of Jerusalem? Communist China detonated its flnt H-bomb as Red Guards clucked their raucous way through the land like a plague of locusts. Something dangerously akin to a death rattle sounded in tiie tifroat at the United N«- JOINT CUSTODY? That city, sacred alike to Moslems, Christians and Jews, had been tiie most feughtrover real estate in the world. ■« The site of the temple built Jiy King Satymou where once rested the Aik if the Covenant, and where later tiie boy Jesus astounded the priests with his kaawledfe, is else hoty groands to Moslems, whose shrine marts gest that the entire Jordan River Valley from the site of Capernaum on the north shore of the Sea of GaBlee to the Dead She, embracing the lovely spot whene John is said to have baptized Christ, be placed raider similar custodianship. Israel would lose exclusive rigits to the Sea of Galilee, and Jordan would give up its land west of the Jordan, it’s true. But era* state was artificially created such a short time age and bar lived with so mtich frictioh that a buffer zone between them could be a blessing. This may hot >be the best possible solution, but. certainly it is high time for men of good will to solve the age-eld problem of the waning Holy Land. The Organization of American States (OAS) has already condemned Cuba for “aggression and Intervention” and recommended suspension of diplomatic relations as well as |ratie. and shipping. Only Mexico has not complied with the 1964 decision to cut off relations. fW W . '|r'4 , The OAS has also gro> claimed the right of it* members to engage in individual or collective self-defense. The Soviet Union is on notice to keep missiles and other aggressive weapons out of Cuba, and the OAS has urged that “member countries tike Mayor Lindsay had another popular demand to make in connection with the first. He would have the federal government give the money directly to the cities, not filter it through the governors of tiie states. Verbal Orchids Charles L.OHe of Birmingham; 83rd birthday, Mr. iadMro. j.B.Hebert of Birmingham; 62nd wedding anniversary. Mir. aad Mrs. Roy Gillespie of Goodrich; S7th wedding anniversary, . “You could put in your eye what style governments know about police science,” he said, and it appeared that the assembled hizzoners might carry him around the hall on their shoulders. Hie most harried mayor present was the chairman, Cavaftagh of Detroit. First off, he was more or less wounded during the benediction which opened the proceedings. The Ityv. Dr. Abraham Atarity swung a soaking wet 11 frond over toe assembly and a sluice of water ctyty Jerry in tife eye. It supplied additional tears for Jerry’s, speech, which dealt bluntly With the tragedies flit Cur towns — poverty, insufficient housing to take care of the masses moving into cities from toe farmlands, crime, pollution, juvenile delinquency. Hie social science magazine, Transaction, reports on a study made by Barry M. Richman of UCLA’s graduate school of business administration, o f capitalists who work behind the bamboo curtain in Red China. These capitalists number more than 300,000; the Rad Chinese regime tolerates their presence because it needs their experience in management Far his services, Wu receives about $152 a month, as well as about $32,000 in annual interest payments on tiie $6.4 million he has invested in the factory. He lives a typical bourgeois life: He resides in a large home, drives a Jaguar, and collects antiques. He banks much of his income, because modern China provides few material goods on which be can spendlt. quirement is that he not flunk out or be kicked out. Hitherto, there has been no such clear-cut procedure in student deferments. Draft boards have generally granted deferments on request and on condition that the student maintain a certain position in his class. AH of them have been screened and found free from ties with Chiang Kai-shek. A typical “tame capitalist” described was a Mr: Wu. 1 ■' \ Wu fled China to Hong Kong in 1958, but the Chinese Communists two years later induced him to return to manage his textile factory in Shanghai. He now holds the top administrative position in the factory, although the state assumed joint ownership of the business in 1955. Those Chinese confronted by the living example of tile rewards of capitalism may be led to question the truth as interpreted by that great truth-teller, Mao, They may conclude that if a capitalist can make more money than he can spend, and live well, too, perhaps the profit motive might be more than just a paper tiger. Hie latter requirement has been the cause of much dissatisfaction among students and educators. Some colleges and universities have stopped compiling class-rank lists, and others have protested the lists’ use to determine whether a man will be called up or be permitted to finish his course of study. v Draft Deferments The (Portland) Oregonian Under the new law, an undergraduate student in good standing may be certain or his deferment until be leaves school or reaches the age of 24. Wien his deferment ends, he goes to the top of the eligible list Mr. Richman also says that toe capitalists fill a role by providing a graphic example of bourgeois decadence so that the Chinese people can see what they’re fighting. The new draft law now in effect retains the principle of student deferments, but in a form significantly different from that of tiie expiring law. Under the new provisions, a student enrolled for full-time study in a recognized institution will be entitled to de-t ferment as a matte: of law, on his request. The only re- cL i THE PONTIAC frRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 B—7 Intrigue-suspense at its best house or CAWS by STANLEY ELLIN An the Random House novel. Copyright Q 1MT (f Stanley EMo. Distributed by Kba» Feature* Syndicate. CHAPTER 21 IT WAS ttupefyiag news, but 1 Edmond Voslers’ tone eon* vineed me he was telling the truth. In that ease, how had Paul been removed from the pension unseen T Then I under* stood how. In the hall closet on the top floor was the ladder to the root. One could travel over a few rooftops and come down by way of a fire escape into the alley alongside Papa Tlssou's butcher shop.' “Monsieur Voslers,” 1 said grimly, "I think the police are going to arrive here very soon. You and I have only a little time left in which to reach an understanding.” “I fail to comprehend." "Then listen closely,” I said, and in very few words gave him a summary of the day’s bloody events. At the end of the account he looked at me skeptically. "And you mean our little Paul Is the only one who can confirm, this extraordinary alibi T" "There's also Madame Cealra. The murderer Was the man who delivered Paul to her. She could certainly testify to that.” “Could she?" Voslers shook his head slowly. "And what If 1 tell you that the child was driven up to her door all alone in a cab, and in i state of hysteria, too. Believe me, she’d gladly see you guillotined for that.” No matter how I looked at It, I had been driven Into a corner where there was only one way out. One desperate move, to make that would either win or lose everything for me. “All right,” I said to Voslers, “we still have to reach Pur understanding. I suppose you came here from your office to close the house and then Join the family at the Chateau Laennac?" ' "Yes.” ‘ "I’m going with you.” Voslers stared at me In disbelief. “And make the chateau your refuge? But tomorrow the papers will be full of you!” "Let me worry about that. Where is the chateau ?” "Near Dijon." "Then I'll be there In time to talk to Madame de Villemont tonight. I must see her. Once she gives instructions to have Paul brought back here to appear with me before the police "You take too much for granted,” Vosiera cut in nastily. "What If no one wants to become involved in your problems?" "I'm not the only one the papers will be full of. Think how INSTALLMENT No. 21 delighted Uiey'ii be to discover that the daughter-in-law of the sainted General Sebastlen de yillemont, no less, is up to her lovely neck In murder. You’re wrong about her, monsieur. She ip. Hubert Mormon's mistress, not mine, arid when I tell.the police how she and Morlllon arranged the murder of her husband in Algeria—” "You’re mad!" gasped Vo-siers. ‘Then you’d be wise to humor me, monsieur.? "Look,” said Voslers, "I'll give you money and the run of the house. Then, when you tpink it's safe to slip away—” "No, you’ll drive me to Chateau Laennac and make sure the police don’t get their hands on me. It they do, ril have Mo-rillon's name and the name of everyone in the family in headlines the next day.” The way I said It must have convinced him that my patience was fast running out, T suppose the sooner we leave, the potter,” he said sourly- ‘It la But I can’t travel looking lUp this. You can keep me company while I clean up.” I had been through Anne’s rooms on my first trip upstairs but not in my quarters. Now when I followed Voslers into my bedroom, making surd he was always within arm's reach, I couldn’t at first believe what. I saw. Everything I owned h%d vanished. Books, typewriter, clothing, folders of manuscripts —everything. I pulled out drawers, peered into bathroom cabinets. Nothing was where it had been only a few hours before. "What are you looking for?” demanded Voelers. "All my things. Where are they?" He shrugged. “I have no idea. I thought you had them removed.” "I didn’t. But whoever did left me without a clean shirt and jacket I’m afraid you'll have to help out with your wardrobe.” Hand on his collar, 1 steered him to his apartment There I stripped off my befouled clothing and scrubbed down in tpe bathroom. One of Vosiera’ shirts fitted me well enough, but I couldn't get my shoulders into any of his jackets. I finally settled for a cashmere sweater which made me look as if I were set for an afternoon of tennis. We went down the stairway of the rotunda, Vosiers leading the way. It was not to' the cellar he led me, but to the gun room. I had never been in it before. Now I I saw that it was a small room handsomely paneled in oak, with a Variety of rifles and shotguns mounted on the wall and with a glass case in one corner displaying a collection of antique pistols. In the middle of the room was a large workbench with rows of shallow drawers in it. It must have been In one of those drawers, I thought, that Anne had found cartridges for Colonel de Villemont’ gun. But there was nothing out of the ordinary about the room, nothing to give one pause. Then | Vosiers slowly anduawillingly roller. the glass case away from its corner, and I saw something 1 very much out of the ordinary, j He leaned his weight against the wall there, and a panel of it j silently swung outward. It eras a Jow-ooftngad room but tmmansa in wkm aad as full of working equipment ad a flev. risking machine sSmw, i n—eg-; nisod the «=S2Siawey. I bad spent too much Usm hi armorers wagons on the hattllfrasit tn1 Korea not to. This was the ap-paratus for the repair aad aaain-tenanee of weapons, aad while the sixe sad shape of the metal packing cases on the floor might suggest they were meant to store gardening tools, I knew that thpy contained something far more deadly than rakes and hoes. I was indifferent to politics; my reading of the daily paper was perfunctory; I had always tried to steer clear of discussions about governments and the riots and rebellions endlessly stewing against them. But I had lived in Paris through the Algerian crisis, had aeen with my own eyes the terroristic tactics of the outlawed OAS—f Organisation de VArmee Secrete—as it made its fanatic, bloody last-ditch stand against the official decision to give Algeria its independence. Now as . I looked around this room which was so beautifully equipped to plastiques and repair machine guns, I thought of the high-toned family of colons inhabiting the luxurious apartments above It and of their friend Mo-rillon; and all the Intrigue I had been blind to since the day 1 first came to the mansion was illuminated as brilliantly as this room itself. “Monsieur,” I said to Voaiere, ‘‘you were right I have been a fool. But now that I’m so much wiser, what do you, as a member of the OAS, suggest we do about it?” Davis makes an attempt to reach Anne. (To Be Continued Tomorrow J gram th* Random House novel. Copyright C 1967 by Stanley Ellin. Distributed by King Features Syndicate. Finns, Sweeds in 2 Towns Shun Border; TORNIO, Finland (UPI) Traditional Scandinavian cooperation has become downright chummy between this community and neighboring Hapanran-da just across the Swedish frontier. The natives of the two towns, which lie at the head of the Gulf of Bothnia 48 miles below the Arctic Circle, have set up what amounts to a thriving free trade area. The usual customs regulations are cheerfully ignored and for practical purposes the border hardly exists at all. Tornio and Haparanda. And it is clear that close cooperation is paying off on both sides of the frontier. In Haparanda the Domus department store—large and plush enough to be at home in the more cosmopolitan surroundings of Helsinki or Stockholm — owes much of its success to Finnish customers. Some items are real bargains for Finns. Coffee, for instance, costs about one half as much at Domus as it does half-a-mile away across the border: A Pleasure to Wear! Finnmarks can be spent freely in Haparanda and Swedish crowns in Tornio without the usual bother of visiting a money exchange. Though the Finnish language is seldom heard outside its na-. tive country because of its exceptional difficulty, it is .widely Spoken among Haparanda’s Swedish residents. ★ * it The close cooperation has even produced a bilingual newspaper, Haparandanbladet (in Swedish) or Haaparannanlehti (in Finnish). RED DEFECTORS It alio has made the two towns the gateway to asylum for occasional Communist defectors — usually sailors who have jumped ship in Helsinki and are seeking refuge in Sweden. The frontier is marked by a bridge that lhiks one of the Tornio River delta islands on which the town 'of Tornio is built with the Swedish mainland. ' When I crossed it recently with two Finnish friends, we did not have to check out with the Finnish authorities. And Swedish customs waved us through without checking my passport or my friends’ identity cards. In fact, about the only indication I had that we’d entered another country was - a traffic island that switched vehicles to the left side of the road. Even that will disappear later this year when Sweden changes to right-hand driving to conform wjth the rest of Europe. Hiere are approximately 13,-000 persons in this border area, about equally divided between Q OMEGA THE WATCH OF PROUD POSSESSION (Jut pride in being able to offer Omega watches ; i to tjie customers of this store is two-fold. First, only the finest jewelers are privileged to offer these exceptional timepjeces. Each jeweler is selected on the basis of nigh , technical standards and its reputation for integrity. Second, the expert watchmakers in Pur store proudly rec-ommend Omega watches. They know the inside facts and why it takes many times longer to make ah Omega than an ordinary watch. Every Omega movement undergoes 1497 quality-control inspections from blueprint to final assembly to assure peerless accuracy and long service. Sold with a world-service guarantee...honored in 163 countries, Omega watches for men and women are priced from $65 to over $1000. Aek for free style brochure. REDMONDS Jewelry 81 N. SAGINAW, PONTIAC Free Parking in Rear of Store Authorized Omega Agency...the Worlds Most Wanted Watch Shoo in your crew. We’ll shoe you all at savings up to 5o%! Bloomfield Miracle Mile Where\EverTk YouWMayl Go. Go Pontiac State Style for a Happy Start With These 6 Summer Services: Travel in style in e new cer. Toke off for distent sights in e new model. Or bey e used cer thet’s like new end pay for It easily with e Pontiac State Bank Auto Loon. Only $4.50 per hundred EXPO '67 TICKETS ON SALE AT ALL OFFICES iy e beet or teke to the weeds. A whole won* irful world of fun awoits you skimming olong e woter or relaxing at a beautiful campsite. >t Pontiac State help you finance that boat cpmping equipment. Be sure the valuables you leave behind era safe. Put your jewelry and important papers in a Pontiac State Bank Safe Deposit Bex and forget pny worries about fire or theft. Tiny cost rei^ Pontiajc St^tejs ready to help| owt^ The Bank on the “GROW" lurseif go. Make it the dream vacation always premised yourself,.. new ward-exciting excursions, luxurious accommo-oney from Pontiac State, pay it back Take Travelers Checks. They S| but they're safer because you con get y money back if they're lost or stolen. Get th at Pontiac State epd enjey a carefree voeeti Pontiac State Bank Main Offica Saginaw a^ Lawrence — Open 9 A.M. Daily Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation with Deposits ?fou> Insured to $15,000 bf F.DJ.C. ; 12 CONVENIENT OFFICES What Does The Rest of The World Thiak?... Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays, The Pontiac Press brings editorial comments from distinguished publications across the continent (and occasionally from Europe and Asia). Hundreds hdve appeared, mostly from this list of publications as GUEST EDITORIALS . . . The first half of 1967. Ann Arbor News Atlanta Journal Bay City Times Boston Globe Buffalo Evening News Charlotte Observer Chicago Daily News Chicago Tribune Christian Science Monitor Cincinnati Enquirer Columbus Evening Dispatch Dqily (Oklahoma City) Oklahoman Dallas Times Herald Decatur (III.) Herald Denver Post Dubuque Telegraph Herald Hamburg Die Zeit Hartford Courant Hillsdale Daily News Holland Evening Sentinel Istanbul Yeni Ufuklar Kansas City Star Knoxville News-Sentinel Lansing State Journal Lapeer County Press Life Magazine London Daily Telegraph Los Angeles Times Louiisville Courier-Journal MacLean's Magazine Miami News Midland Daily News Minneapolis Star Montgomery Advertiser Nashville Banner National Observer New Orleans Times-Picayune • Newsday • New York Daily News • New York Times • New York World Herald Tribune • Norfolk Ledger-Star I Orlando Sentinel • Philadelphia Evening Bulletin • Port Huron Times Herald • Portland Oregonian • Richmond News Leader • San Diego Union • Saturday Evening Post • Saturday Review II St. Louis Globe-Democrat • St. Louis Post-Dispatch • St. Petersburg Times • Tucson Daily Citizen J 1 . Washington Star The Pontiac Press is the only publication existing that keeps you abreast of the developments in your own area, your own state, your own nation, and the wide world. The Pontiac Press for Home Delivery Dial 332-8181 JMii 1 Hi 1 Cl 4 N k the PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 Ifl* m MARKETS f The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by tt'sm in wholesale package lots Quotat' ns are fufnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Product . FRUITS Apple., Delkftcui. Rad, bU. . Applet, Dellcleus, Bad, C.A., t Applet, North -n Jp7, bu. . Applet. North*. a spy, c.a., I Applei/ Steele Red, bu..... Applet, Steele Red, C.A„ Strawberries, V li H vsSrr*BL*s i, bu. NEW YORK (AP)—The stock market advanceid early Wednesday in active trading. \ Several leading issues .rebounded from recent selling, continuing a process which they underwent in the semiholi-day session of Monday. With Wall Streeters back from what was a four-day weekend for many, there was a note of vigor in the proceedings as gains outnumbered losses by better than 2 to -1. The Dow Jones Industrial Averaige was up about 4 points. Control Data and Polaroid Spinach, bu..................... Turnips, bu. ............ LETTUCE AND OREENS Poultry and Eggs CHICAGO BUTTER, BOGS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago MarcantlU buying prices unchanged; W score A* <4; 92 A 66; 90 B 63'/.; >9 C 59'M, cars 90 B 64; 99 C MM. Eggs steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged to 1 higher; per cent or better grade A whites 25; mixe< mediums 19%; standards 25; check Gains Double Losses Active Stock Mart Advances gained about 3 points and IBM 2 while advances of a point or better were made by Rayette, Texaco, Eastern Air Lines and du Pont. BOUNCED BACK International Nickel bounced back a hill 3 points after losing 2V« on Monday. ' McDonnell Douglas advanced more than a point, drawing encouragement from a supplementary contract award from the Navy amounting to some $123 million. Boeing, off about 1%, continued weak on news that it is con- sidering a call for redemption of a $129 million issues of convertible debentures. The stock fell 2% to 102 On Monday. Opening blocks included : General Development, off % at 11% on 30,400 shares; Pan American World Airways, unchanged at 30% on 9,000; General Foods, off % at 75% on 8,800; U. S. Steel, off Y« at 44Y« on 5,500; and Xerox, up 2 at 281% on 4,500. ★ ★ ★ The Associated Press average of 60 stocks on Monday rose .i to 323.2. The New York Stock Exchange AlrRtdtn 1.50 11 S2Vfe 52 + 7 53% 53% 53% ■+ 7 6 1% 40*6 40% - 22 23V* 23V* 23V* + 12 42*6 42V* 42V* + 52 27** 27% 2716 .. 2 10% 10% 10% .. 10 60V* 40V* 68 V* + 10 25 25 25 + 16 37% 37*6 379* 4 10 32V* 319* 32V* 4 0 24V* 24 10 84% 04% 52 41V* 41V* * 42% OiVMV . 87% 07% 87% 4 t 42V* 42% + 6Fdy .90 t Cl 1.90 Am T8iT 2.20 Am Tob 1.80 AMP Inc Amptx Corn Amphenol .70 ! 10*6 10V* 10% 4 i 24V* 26V* 24V* . changed; Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)—Frl< per pound lor No. I live poultn type hens, 19-20) roasters hea' 27-29; whites, 19-21. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)—(USOA)—Hogs 4+00 1-2 190-225 lb butchers 23.00-2375; 1-3 21ft 2M Ito 2275-23.25; 1-3 350-400 lb sow. 1 i»nib eiaughl»r,Ve£ere 27.2^27.50; itigh choice ° 1.100-1,400 lbs 2675-27.00; choice 000-1400 lbs 25.50-2675; high cholceand prime OSM.IOO lb slaughter h^lert 26.00-26.25; Choice 800-1.100 lbs 25.00-26.00. Sheep 200; choice end •— slaughter I Armour 1.60 34 37V* : All Rich 2.80 Atlas Corp Avco Cp 1.20 Balt GE 1.52 Beat Fds 1.65 Beckman .& BeechAr .80b 2 13% 13% 13% 4 54% 53% 54% 4 i9 48H 476* 4744 — H i S?.............. * Braun Engineering : Citizens Utilities Clas Petrex Chemical . I 277) 25.6 26. .4.3 6.5 .144 15.4 ...,................ 207 21,. _.J Coital ..............142 16.6 Frank** Nursery .....UaX jf| Kelly Servleai ........ Mohawk Rubber Co............ Monroe Auto Equipment — North Cehtral Airline* Units safren Printing . ....... Scripto . . .•... Wyandotte Chemical ........ MUTUAL FUNDS Affiliated Pugg ...... ..... Chemical Furtd.....V..,..... Commonwealth Stock ....... Keystone income K-l ....... ,J:S Isnay ,40b -1st Seag I ! DomeMln .80 DowChm 270 Dresslnd 1.25 DukaPw 170 dupont 2.50g Duq LI I.40 DynamCp .40 > 4554 4556 — ( EatonYa 1.25 iGStG 70 ElBondS 1.72 Electron Sp 13.44 14.49 End Johnson 1046 ii 62 ErleLack RR I EthylCorp .60 — SuintPH* 4AI, 2 30Vi X 86 19 II —E—V- 69 SO 41 k 1.60a 31 134% 134 24 90% 89% 90% 4*1% 15 -34% 34%,;M|wii S 28% 28% 28% 4- % 5 18% 18% 18% 1 739* 739* 739* 4 Treasury Position ■ * | Fansteel Mil WASHINGTON (AP)-The cart petition FedStr „ I FlSroM1 7 24 2364 2364 —F— 2* 9* 9559 9 5’/a 10 26 2564 255. 4 57(4 57 57 >4 14 238b 2364 235b 3 <7 (7 . *7 . .. 1.20 200 £64 3364 3364 + 'A 5 32Vk 32 Vb : ’ 7,718,613,315.39 S 12+74+14,509.53 Flintkota 1 Deposits Fiscal Year July 1— pie PLt 1.64 162,356,657,020.50 140,571,745,104.551 Fmc Cp .75 wmWfEWW'Fiscal Year—, i aCxSZi Food Fair .90 ltA2M.11ft22t.7J 141,744,117,127.05 iFordMot 2.40 X-Total Debt— For* Datr 70 _ 326,920,958,280.10 320,749,228435.45] FreapSul 175 24 55(9 13,109,014,754.06 13,434,073,403.211 (X) — Includes «42+12+56.47 debt not .. aublOct to statutory limit. A + 88 75V4 7514 75(4 — 29(4 296b TV 426b 47(4 .............1 24 2964 286b 2284 + 5b 10 55 5464 546b - M 4 3464 366b 3464 4 7 676b 67 67 - 8 536b 536b 536b + 210 15(4 1514 15(4 + 7 606b 406b 606b + 38 446b 44(4 446b + 4 466b 44(4 14(4 . . . 8 26(4 24(4 26(4 — (4 19 29(4 286b » + 6b 6 29(4 29(4 29(4 1 44(4 44(4 44(4 HawPack .20 Hoff Electron Hoi Id Inn Jo III Cent 1.SD Imp Cp Am IngerRend 2 Inland Stl 2 InsNoAm 2.40 InterlkSt 1.00 19 225s 2264 226b 3 41 Vk till 61(4 1 J46b 546k 146k + 13 4564 4564 456b 5 74(4 756k 74(4 + 10 14(4 14Vb 14(4 + 5 81(4 805s 0064 + 10 44 4364 4364 + 58 785b 776b 78(4 + 7(4 • 19(4 -1 43(4 4 44(4 4414 — Vb « as vs 336b 3414 + V 8 48(4 48(4 41(4 — V 2 29(4 29V4 29’/a .. . 42 501(4 500(4 50) +2 3 396b 396b 3Mb + ( 12 336b 336b 3364 — (. 29 9364 9164 9364 +3(4 2 12 12 12 39 2964 2964 2964 I 296b 296b 296b + I 5164 5164 5164 + 8 L 2.70 10 57 KlmbClk 2.20 Koppers 1.40 Kresge .90 Kroger 1.30 ____Sleg .70 LehPCem .60 Leh V Ind 2.01 g LOFGIs 2.80a LlbbMcN .231 Llggett&M 5 Uftonln 1.541 Llvlngatn Oil LockhdA 2.20 Loews Theat tones Cam 1 Longl.Lt 1.16 Lerlllard 2.50 LTV 1.50, Lukens Stl 1 34 231* 2286 13 + —L— 31 31% 30% 31% + ! 14 12% 12 12% 4 12% 1 31 100% 100% TOO3! 72% 72 100% 100V. 4% 0% a» 66% 66 ___ . .. • 73% 73% 73% , 4* 11 17% 17% 17% + 2 19 20% 20 20 - 9 27% 27% 27% — 2 57% 57% 57% .. 2600 150% 148 150% +3% _____d 2.08g MagmaC 3.60 Magnavox .80 “nrathn 2.40 ir Mid 1.40 irquer .25g ...jrftnMar f MayOStr 1.60 Maytag 1.60a McDonD .40b-McKess 1.80 MldSoUtll .76 MlnerCh 1.30 MinhMM 1.30 MobilOil 1.80 Mohasco 1 12 17% 17% 17% — 3 56% 56% 56% + 7 81% 81% 81% - ■ 2 24% 24% 24% — % 7 56% 56% mm 24 227 22% 81% io 20 39% 40 35 43% 43% 43% + * 2 30% 30% 30% — 1 14 23% . 23% 23% + i 10 35% 35% 35% + 1 25 110% 109% 110% +1: 5 24% 24% 24% — = 1—N— ‘ 6 73% 12% 73% -t- ’ 4 45% 45% 45% + 1 7 35% 35% 35% . . 5 97>/4 97 97% ... 25 36% 35% 35% — 1 4 46% 46% 46% 11 28% 28% 28% Lead 1.50g at Steel 2.50 at Tad .00 NEng?! iSt NYCent 3.12a NlagMP 1.10 NorflkWst 4a NA Avia 2.B0 NorNGas 2.40 Nor Pac 2.40 NSta Pw 1.52 'l70 NWBan 1.90a lorton 1.50 Sorwlch 1.30' OhloEdls 1.30 OlInMath 1.80 Otis El*v 2 Outb Mar .SO * - lif i-« ■ Papl ’i n \ 134b + z leva zuw 205b 26 246b 26Vj 2464 + 29 2064 20(4 1064 +1’ 32 215b 21(4 21(4 1 *0(* 59(4 *5 1 51(4 51(4 51Vb +;4gi 226b 2S6b - ( Pan A Sul .40 Pan Am .40 SHVVP 1-60 HiWfci la PeebCqel f ■a PwLt 1.52. 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RyderSys .40 Salaway 1.10 StJosLd 2.80 SL SanFran 2 StRegP 1.40b Sander* .30 Schenley 1+0 Scherlng 1.20 Sclent Data SCM Cp .40b Scott Paper 1 SbdCstL 1.10 31 226b 2 68 ao'* 79% tt +1« 79 *484 436b 44(4 + 84 21 2764 2784 2784 10 61(4 43(4 61(4 Sinclair 2.40 21 7284 726b 7284 ''ngerCo 22 0 27 ' __illhK 1.80a « SoPRSu 1.27g t 14 .. .... 5784 576b + 11 # 47(4 <084 + 15 »>A 37 37(4... 57 245b 256b 26 . 11 346b 34(4 W6b + 27 30 296b 10 StdOIIInd 1.90 StauffCh 1+0 SterlDrug .90 StevenJP 2.25 Studebak ,50g 54(4 56(4 a 52(4 50 pan -r 85 61(4 406b 61(4 + 15 44(4 44(4 44(4-24 146b 14(4 146b + 8 526b 52(4 52(4 + 5 456b 456b 456b — I 4184 4282 + 586b 59 + . .. TORS 71 + 49 35(4 35 35(4 — 43 24(4 241* 24(4 + —T— 1 29(4 29Vb 29Vb .... 40 456b 4414 456k +16b i 346b .. Texaco 2+0a 34 72 7084 716k +1(4 TexETrh 1.05 6 206b 206b 206b Tax G Sul .40 47 1256b 124(4 125 . 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US Lines 2b USPIyCh 1.50 US Smelt lb US Steel 2.40 IS 44(4 t 14 2584 I i 258b + . 3484 34(4 3484 + 35 52(4 -52V4 52(4 + 32 4584 44(4 446b + 49 448b 44(4, 44(4 — 5 95(b 958b 958b — 84 2 » 5864 59 ' “ mm i 40V> 4 ________1.10 WnUnTel 1+0 Westg El 1.60 -feyerhr 1.40 .Jhjrl Cp .1+0 White Mot 2b WlnnDIx 1+4 Woolwonh 1 Worthing 1.50 i 38 + 6b 53 2764 27(4 2754 - 67 41(4 475b 48 + 5 22(4 226b 2254 ... 12 50 496k 496b + t 378b 376b 37'/ I 545b 5354 5384 . ■ I 398b 3954 39(4 — 14 4284 4284 4284 ' 55(4 5454 5554 ■P 21 6114 61'A 61 —X—Y—z— 248 287(4 281 I 31'A 31(4 — 14 stock dividend or split i _______________on the last quailarly semi-annual dtclaratTon. Special or ___-a dividends or payments not designated as regular are Identified following footnotes. « a—Also extra or extra*, b—Annual rate plus slmc dividend, c—Liquidating dividend. d-Oaclarad or paid In 1967 plus stock dlvkttnd. *—Paid last ---- f — ^Payable In stock during 1967, SZm m —, k—Declared _. ________H accumulative I with dividends In arrears, tv—New h p—Paid this year, dlvMaMI omitted, deferred or no action taken at last dividend meeting, r—Declared or paid In 1944 plur stock dividend, t—Paid ini stock durlnt - Mmalocl cksn value oh ex-dlvidenc sfrlbuHon date, is in full. ■ tiled, x—Ex dividend, y—Ex dlvl dend and Mies In full, x-dis—Ex distribution. 7MM2,i .xbMWfiww "mm rents. wW—WKn Swranls. wd—When trlbuted. wl—Whet) issued; nd—Next dkeuvgry. VI—In. bankruptcy or receivership _ being reorganized under the' Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such o— 1 panles. fn—Foreign Issue sublect to ||ir‘ equalization tax. .157+1-2+5 . 254.44—0+S .131.65+0.24 315+1-0.5* 10 Higher grad* rail if fagond grade rail io Pt^ umma. . Kay Jewelry Strs Unit-Buck Fit J -fl* Q '-'7-12' Yemen-Egypt Unity Hinted Vice Premier Meets With Nasser in Cairo BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Talks in Cairo between Yemeni officials and President Gamal Abdel Nasser today strengthened speculation that the republican regime ip Yemen is trying to bolster its position by uniting with Egypt. RpH* Middle East News Agency said Maj. Gen. Abdullah Gozailan, vice premier and No. 2 man in the republican regime, had delivered to Nasser a message from President Abdullah Its contents were not revealed. But Gozailan was quoted as saying he and Nasser had discussed ways to increase cooperation between Egypt and the Red Sea republic’s government, which is deadlocked in a civil war with royalist tribes. The tribes have supported Imam Mohammed el Badr since he was overthrown in 1962. ★ ★ * In an interview recently published here, Salial said Egypt and Yemen were expected to adopt some form of unity soon. Although Egyptian troops are keeping the Republicans in power in die areas of Yemen that they hold, Cairo has been silent on the unity overtures. TROOPS WITHDRAWN In the wake of Egypt’s defeat by Israel, however; Nasser is reported to have pulled thousands of his troops out of Ye-len. Observers here ‘ consider it unlikely that Nasser would to outright union with Yemen, which would be a liability to him. 'But they think some s of unity may be agreed to in an attempt to offset the withdrawal of the Egyptian troops. By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK—Federal regulation of industry is going to provide some of the hottest national c o n troversies for many| months to come and could lead even to a new| look at the ulatory agen-j cies themselves. The chief sub-| ject will prob-j ably be cl____ ettes, but the CUNNIFF implications will go much farther and include many dustries. That much has been assured by two recent events. • A ★ A First, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has proposed that radio and television stations balance cigarette commercials with public service announcements warning of the dangers of smoking. Second, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has found the health-hazard warning on cigarette packages to be ineffective and has recommended to Congress that the message be to sound more deadly by adding “may cause death from cancer and other diseases.” MERE RIPPLES These two actions, though important, are merely like ripples that later could become waves. That, at least, is the immediate reaction of some businessmen in advertising, communications and tobacco who have felt the first shock waves. First, they ask, if radio and television are to state the other side of the cigarette story—the one that features bedridden cancer patients instead of playful young men and women—who is to determine what is a “rea- Arson Is Eyed in Two Fires in South Haven SOUTH HAVEN (UPI) in was suspected by authorities today in fires that destroyed a pavilion and damaged an apartment house and a resort on the Lake Michigan shore line. One of the Ores gutted the North Shore Pavilion and destroyed 110 stored lounge chairs and mats, causing damage estimated at more than $5,000 early today. The pavilion, built in 1916 as a ballroom, and its contents were owned by Ben Tettel. He said he had no in- The Lake Crest Towers Resort Apartment Motel, adjacent to the pavilion and also owned by Teitel, was scorched and damaged. ★ ' . 'it * Two blocks away another fire broke out an hour later. That was also declared pidous. It damaged Mendleson’s Resort where windows wore cracked by the heat and smoke damage was incurred. Attendant Foils Robbery Atfempf LOS ANGELES UB—Stephen Mosgan, a parking lot attendant, aided Los Angeles police to capture a pair wanted for the attempted robbery of' a clothing store. As two men jumped in a car on the lot one yelled: “Here rorne the cops.” Morgan stood in the parking lot entrance and refused to budge until police arrived and arrested the two men. BOND AVERAGES Complied by The Associated Press 22 IS ' If 13 IS Ralls lad. UHL Pgn L. Y 71.3 91+ 81.8 91.0 111#, >t 2:30 D.m. in Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. The Masonic Lodge will conduct a memorial service at 8 am. tomorrow in the funeral home. Mr. DeMond, a former comoosing room employe of The Pontiac Press, died yesterday in the Alpena General Hospital. A life member of Twin Lakes Masonic Lodge No. 523, Lincoln, he also belonged to the Order of Eastern Star Chapter 509 and St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, Harrisville. Surviving are his wife, Bernice; two daughters, Mrs. Beverly Pomfret of Coldwater and Mrs. Shirley O’Brien of Troy; two grandsons; and a sister, Mrs. Hazel Elliott of Pontiac. Russell R. New Service for Russell R. New, 72, of 1969 Woodland, Sylvan Lake, will not be this afternoon at Sparks Griffin Chapel but at a later date. Mr. New, a refired employe of Dicke Lumber Co., died Saturday. Church, with burial in Mount E. Kathleen DeConick, and a brother, J. Leo, both of West Bloomfield Township. A rosary will be said at 8 o.m. tomorrow at the C. J. God-hardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbpr. • He was employed with National Cash Register Co. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James C. Greene of Bloomfield Township; three children, Laura A., Susan and 1 James L., all of Sylvania, Ohio; John Chamberlain ‘wo brotbers, David of Bloom-i field Township and Thomas of MILFORD — Service for John Bloomfield Hills; and a sister, Chamberlain, 85, of 505 S. Main Mrs. James Smith of Birming-will be Friday at Richardson- ham. Bird Funeral Home with burial at Oakgrove Cemetery. I Mrs. Samuel Luchkow Mr. Chamberlain died yester-J p0NTIAC TOWNSHIP - Mrs. Gary S. Cowell Michael D. Cowell LEONARD—Service for Gary Cowell, 18 and Michael D. Cowell, 17, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Cowell of 321 W. Elmwood, will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Burial will be in Fargo. They died Monday in ah auto accident. Gary was an employe of the Bachan Manufacturing Co. of Madison Heights. Michael was a student at Oxford High School- Surviving besides their parents are two brothers, Darryl and Loren, both of Leonard; two sisters, Mrs. David King and Mrs. Robert Welch, both of Leonard; and their grandmother Mrs. Basil Doair of Hubbard Lake. Richard C. Greene Hope Cemetery. Mr, Deconick was fatally shot Monday. A self-employed fruit grower, he was a trustee on the West Bloomfield Township Board and Chairman of the United Fund in BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — the township. Richard C. Greene, 25, of 216 He was a member of Our j ElUeeii was injured fatally last Lady of Refuge Holy Name So- Ljgjjj jn a motorcycle accident ciety, the church committee near Denver Colo, and the ushers club. The body is at Huntoon Fu- He is survived by a sister, neari Home. day. Samuel (Bernice) Luchkow, 61, of 83 Tebeau Court died today. I Her body is at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. She was a member of the Lutheran Church of the Incarnate Word, Bloomfield Township Surviving are three brothers and two sisters, including Mrs. Florence Davidson of Pontiac. William A. Mahar ORION TOWNSHIP- William A. Mahar, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Mahar of 3631 Hi-Dale, died last night. His body is at the William R! Potere Funeral Home, Rochester. ROMNEY PORTRAIT - Mrs, George Romney and artist Henry C. Shea of Berkley j study his portrait of the governor, which ' holds the place of honor during the Summer Art Festival which starts tomorrow at the Pontiac Mall. The governor’s wife said the portrait expressed all of those qualities she. associates and admires in her husband. Romney Portrait Is Displayed A portrait of Gov. Romney will have the place of honor at the Summer Art Festival which starts tomorrow at the Pontiac Mall. The show runs through July 15. * ★ ★ The painting, by Henry C. Shea of Berkley, was done without sittings. Shea said he followed the governor, on a tour I serve him in different poses and attitudes. The governor er knew he wss being observed for the purpose of the protrait, according to Shea. The portrait is only one of many by local and metropoli- tan Detroit area artists which will be on display at the Mall every day from 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. The show is produced by Betty Baldwin of Livonia, director of the “Artists Show-place.” Shea said that his painting lowed the governor, on a tour n__i* _ U,,,i of speaking engagements to ob-| rOnTIQC DOy riUfi as Bike Collides With Automobile was inspired by his admiration for the governor. He explained: “It became a challenge to paint the governor without his knowledge. I found he was a moving target. I think it is helpful to observe the various personal mannerisms' that come to the surface when the subject is not conscious that he is being watched. Shea has studied and exhibited his paintings throughout Europe. He is presently an art teacher in Detroit. Police Action Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sher-i iff’s deputies investigated j some 157 reported inci-i dents in the past 48 hours. A breakdown of causes l for police action: s Arrests—11 i Vandalisms—23 I Burglaries—12 Larcenies—38 Unarmed Robberies—1 Auto TTiefts—3 Assaults—22 Disorderly Persons—6 Drawnings—2 Obscene Phone Calls—1 Arsons—1 Rapes—1 Property Damage Accidents—22 Injury Accidents—15 A 13-year-old Pontiac boy was injured last night when his bicycle and a car collided North Telegraph nea Premont in Waterford Township. ’ Listed in satisfactory condition at Pontiac General Hospital is James A. Baldwin, son of Mr. and Mrs. James M. Baldwin of 179 Augusta. Township police said John S. I Ross, 34, of Warren was the 'driver of the car. According tc ;a witness, Ross was not at fault. m The accident happened about f 10:30 p.m., police said. Holdup Foiled by Attendant An armed robbery attempt at Waterford Township service station, MGM Service, 3290 W. Huron early today was thwarted by an attendant' quick action. The attendant, Joe Meadows of 4381 Baywood, Waterford Township, told police a blond man wearing hornrimmed glasses and clad in a tan jacket flashed a revolver at him and demanded all the money in cash register shortly before 1 Goes to Panama DETROIT (AP)—Col. Edward C. Bruce, Detroit district engineer of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, will leave for a new assignment in the Panama Canal JJone later this month, the corps has announced. Meadows told police h e ducked” behind the counter and ran out a door with the cash register key as the bandit drew his gun. He said the intruder walked over to the cash register, looked around for a minute then ran out a door. s£T' New Devices to Fight Air Pollution Wash Jobs for City Air The time;tested method of cleaning anything soiled by scrubbing it is being applied to the air-pollution problem, according to some exhibits at the 60th annual Air Pollution Control Conference in Cleveland recently: Several of the devices swirl harmful fumes containing chemicals and dusts from industry and automobiles through liquids for a quick wash job. THIS SCRUBBER works on a centrifugal principle for wet removal of fumes and dust from air streams. Ralph A. Powell Sr. Service for Ralph A. Powell Sr., 47, 61 1400 Murray, Waterford Township, will lie 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Powell, a lieutenant with die Bloomfield Hills Police Department, died yesterday. He was a member of .the Fraternal Order of Police. , Surviving are his wife, Ger-1 trade M.; his mother; Mrs. Willis A. Powell of Saugus, Mass.; a son, Ralph A. Jr. at home; two sisters, Including' M r s. Duane Schultz of Ortonville; and a brother . All 53 in Girls' Band Collapse in Wyandotte WYANDOTTE (AP) — All 53 members of a girls’ marching band from neighboring River-view collapsed at a Fourth of July performance last night in Wyandotte. Food poisoning, fatigue and hysteria were blamed. Doctors said most of the girls, aged 12'to 17, suffered from hysteria, brought on by seeing others within their group collapse because of food poisoning. At least eight were treated for exhaustion. The girls are members of the Praesidium Junior Dram and Bugle Corps of Riverview. Their Wyandotte performance in competition with three other bands at Roosevelt High School was their third in a series of parades that started at 9 a.m. Hugh Sloan, * manager of the Riverview band, said the group{ was on the field about 9 p.m. when one of the girls fell, fol- lowed by several others. “Then,” he said, “they started going down like flies.” A Lincoln Park hospital treated eight for food poisoning and 30 for hysteria. Ailments of eight sent to a Trenton hospital were treated for exhaustion, and an-/ other seven sent to a Wyandotte hospital were treated for one of the three ailments. All were sent home after treatment. Sloan said the girls had lunch of salad and roast beef and baked beans about 2 p.m. at Seits Junior High School id Riverview and had hot dogs and pop at Roosevelt High shortly after arrival about 8:30 p.m. HILLVIEW I | MEMORIAL GARDENS!;:! 6511 Dixie Hwy., Waterford;:;! | 625-5000 625-5001g z sms MAO 3WW THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1967 [ Junior Editors Quiz on LICORICE QUESTION: Inhere does licorice come from? ANSWER: Although licorice can be spelled in the two ways shown in the drawing, many people pronounce the word “lik-o-rish.” ...... It is most familiar to us in the form of the rubhery black candy the children are chewing on in our picture. As this suggests, some go for it, others diplike it heartily. Licorice is obtained from a plant belonging to the pea family (upper right) which grows in southern Europe, Afia ud parts of Louisiana and California. The long root of this plant is the part from which the sweet-tasting licorice juice may be extracted. The roots are often mashed and boiled over an open fire. The liquid is evaporated into a solid form, often rolled into sticks. Not all the licorice flavoring goes into candy: it is used to conceal the disagreeable taste of drugs in certain medicines as well as to flavor tobacco and some kinds of soft drinks. Curator Tells TrueTreasures PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) -The Research and Design Institute, a nonprofit, independent organization which seeks forward-looking ideas in design to keep pace with a changing world, practices what it preaches in its new offices here. A blend of old things and new thinking, use of space is based on actual work-flow data. Offices have no walls, and use 19th century furniture and equipment found abandoned in the former Brown & Sharpe plant which is its headquarters. Orange and lemon trees borrowed from a local park add to the unusual decor. Shots Easier With Balloons? SANTA FE HU — A shot in the arm might not be so painful if there is a balloon in the other hand, the State Health Department figures. So it is ordering 50,000 balloons to promote its vaccination program, to be used in conjunction with an immunization coloring book also being prepared. Dean Appdinted DETROIT (AP) - Dr. Henry Dzuiba, 49, has been appointed dean of the University of Detroit School of Dentistry, replacing Dr. Marvin E. Revsin, who is leaving to direct a project at the University of Saigon in Vietnam. Mid- CLEARANCE of Fine Shoot SAVINGS Up to 50% VITALITY Shoes for Women ALL SUMMER SHOES - PLUS SOME YIAR-AROUND PATTERNS Reg. 13.05 to 16.95 $6 and $10 FLORSHEIM Shoes for Women DISCONTINUED PATfERNS Reg. 17.95 to 21.95 NOW »1»*# FLORSHEIM Shoes for Men DISCONTINUED STYLES REDUCED TO HUSH PUPPIES® DISCONTINUED STYLES AND COLORS Man's 7.99 Woman's 6.99 CHILDREN'S SHOES CLOSE OUT ENTIRE STOCK Reg. 7.95-9.95 NOW 4.00 BALL-BAND SUMMERETTES For Woman—DISCONTINUED STYLES Reg. 3.95 to 6.95 NOW 195 DOWNTOWN SHOE STORE Opan 9*30-5:30, Fri. to 9 • Serving With Quality Footwear Since 1919 CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON, BICYCLE? . THEM WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 332-8181. Can Count on Us ... Quality CostS^o More at Sears Pick Your Paint Sale! One-Coat Acrylic Latex HOUSE PAINT Regular $7.99 46 Colorscape Colors One coat covers all but the most extreme exterior color changes. Rugged durability and water resistance only in acrylic latex. Selfpriming, non-chalking latex applies so easily, dries in Vi hour. Comes in 46 colors professionally coordinated in 8 color families. Shop at Sears and save! Seurs Paint Department, Main Basement Durable all-purpose to usr. Applies oil, latex water-based paints evenly. Fast Dry Exterior Latex House Paint Sears Price 2^ Kasy, smooth application and <-lean-up with soap and water. Ideal for fences, odd jobs. White only. New Full-Bodied Formula Latex Wall Paint Regular $6.99 27 Colors A „ Gallon Extra creamy, full-bodied paint smooths on, so easily. No painty odor, pleasant fragrance makes painting tun. Magical latex dries-in ¥i hour, cleans up in soap and water. If Pure Pure White House Paint (1) yellows, (2) stains from rust or copper, (3) chalk streaks on bricks or (4) fails to cover anycolor paint with one coat (ex-' cept on shake shingles) when applied according to directions, we will supply additional'paint, or if you prefer, refund your purchase price. , Good Quality! Interior Latex Flat House Paint New Pure-Pure White House and Trim Paint ft9 VJGal Regular $8.50 Guaranteed 1-Coat Coverage •7 'Gallon Saves you Cost and work of frequent repainting. Covers any color' with one coat, stays white and bright. Non-chalking, rinses clean. Non-staining and non-yellowing. Resists smog, fumes, gasses. latex -SPOUSE PAINT Tough Durable Acrylic Latex House Paint Regular $6l99 Self-Priming Paint Use this smooth, durable paint. Adds beauty, protection to all siding. Its self-priming qualities mean more savings in time, money and effort for you. Dries in 30 minutes. Here’s a good quality paint at a down-to-earth price. Good hiding power. Dries in one hour to a smooth, even finish. Easy to use. Easy soap, water' clean-up. - Sears Dripless Latex Flat Paint No drip, no splatter, no mess! Dries in only ■ 30 minutes to a velvety finish. You can even scrub this finish and it keeps its fresh beauty. Soapy water cleans brushes and rollers. 3-Point Tractor Implement Hitch Sears Price 189S For ail Custom tractors. Takes . all rear-mounted implements. Easy to install. Sears One Coat Durable House and Trim Paint Regular $6.99 Dries Tack-Free Overnight You’ll get exceptional wear on hard-use areas with this beautiful, tough finish. Special rinc oxide in* hibits-mildew and mold; won’t discolor or fade. For wood, masonry, primed metal. Straddle-Row Type Cultivators Sears Price 39^ A four-shank cultivator with four 6-in. sweeps. Converts to between-row tiller. Sears 6-HP Recoil Start Tractors Regular $439.95 Tractor Only >388 ««• Heavy All-Steel DumpCarts Sears Price 7495 For hauling, dumping, riding 18-gauge ateel, welded for * extra strength. 10 fit. ft- ivo MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Adjustable30-In. E ineered to you more spare time, to make lawn Steel Disc Harrows prden worfc more fun... with a 4-speed transmission, Sears Price 4495 comfortable contour seat, separate choke, throttle eon- , , . trols. Enjoy taking care of your lawn this summer! Reg. S539.9S, Electric Sttrt................»«* Discs adjust to 3 positions. tl! A D C Downtown Pontiac "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back" Phone FE 5-4171