Fire Danger High-Water Level / Perils Employment Help! Help! Fearing a fire which could wipe put a large section of the city because of a water shortage, city officials last night took drastic steps to prevent such i holocai’st^5* Our fire ' fighters cpuldn’t ittpp' it, Asst. Gity^Man^ ager David S. Teel said, dis-j ^ ^ —rrrJ\ cussing the grave situation!^, \lTr Thousands of autft ^iwlrOrsf A I . A (*T | J PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1963-20 FAG^S „ — WATER Tu HisItE— An Oakland County Drain Commission > employe shows where a dismally low Watkins Lake in. i960 would reacli when tne court established a legal level at 950 feet above sea level. Water from the Clinton River provided the extra three ‘feet of depth._. •V/ ♦• ■ ■ Waikins-lake-Residents Second Confab Set to Probe Vague Offer could 1 dSyoE a month by a water [failure, which would come at aj critical time With new models j about' to begin. Violators of the lawn sprinkling ban will be fined, city of-! ficials spid, If the situation I grows worse. Heat Breaks ' ■« Slipped 38 Degrees to Chill Morning . After a 9-day siege of blistering ! 'Mayor Robert A.- Landry promised the City Commission , would . ;back an order to fine violators, ... . - r I 1 the sprinkling ban if it be.leather temperatures tumbledi Solve Low-Wafer Prob em .. VWIVI11 water shortage Monday night( ^ 3a drop will keep! Rv nirv HAMCftw - ■J- pwt ^ res,den^l residents cool through today then | • •,, , By DICK HANS0N ignoring Lebanon water usage.” !temperatures will start climbing Oakland County was suffering the effects of another *n addition to the. need for again for Fourth of July celebra-j hot, dry summer in 1959 when Watkins Lake rteidflnta'Mff J , 1 1- j. Vi , . water is the life blood of Our in- Tonight’s low will drop to near; decided to do something about-the lake that was drying dustry - , .. 58. Tomorrow win be partly 4 ZERO IN! —’ Preparing To fire a 105jnm.... •Howitzer are ffrom l^)/Pvt7Tiahe Kimball, 568 ET Columbia; Cpl. Donald Wilson, 3890 Aquarina, Waterford Township; David Poling, * 17-Glark: and Sgt, Pat McEIroy, 5653 Hickoek. As members of Pontiac’s Army Reserve 4th Artillery Battalion, they are undergoing two weeks’ field training at Camp McCoy, Wis. up in front Of their homes. I “By taking it away from in- ^They recalled with longing when the lake rose almost djistry, we are putting many too high. It had threatened*—------—-—jg------------1 n,cn #ut of W0Pk- tQ inundate their hpines in the spring of 1942. Since that high-water year, however, Watkins Lake declined steadily—as had many others in where boathouses and decks were marooned several yards from the waning water's edge. And once-pleasant sandy beaches no longer .lined-the lake. As the lake continued to shrink, it was surrounded by a growing bank'of baked mud. Bulrushes poked their countless blades up through the shallows w{here residents used to swim. The lake was no longer a scene of nature’s beauty. “EyeryonrwM'talte the sad state (Hat-had befallen our lake that summer," Pontiac attorney William Hartman recalled. tils home at 3970 Pitt Is one of several hundred built around the lake. , A friend and neighbor, Donald Newman of -40J.S Lakewood, approached Hartman one day In July to ask what could be done legally to restore the lake. Newman had the Idea that Watkins Lake .could he raised-by digging a connecting ditch -to. the Clinton River flowing a half-Vnile to the north.* Hartman pored over Michigan to the Clinton and contributed “Persons-whO do not observe' Statutes to drain -commissioner could legally empowered to raise lake | heVpless' levels where such action wouidn’1 cloudy with d ’high of 80 pleasant day for parades and pic* nics, For the next five days temper-atures are expected to average Weather Provides Clue in Plane Crash Probe State Hospital Admits Godfrey .. . , , , ithp hon nn —-......„„ “ ROCHESTER, N.Y; (tf)—Extremely -rapid and severe' find that the county, e l)an on nonessential, use. of .near the normalhign of 84 and . ,, . , >-v_ r, ., , missioner could beiwater are «riPPlin8 industry and normal; low. of 64. Rhinfali wili;w6ather changes within a 10-minute period provided rendering jpu fire department total about .2 to ";3; of art Inch vestigators j Sixteen-year-old Douglas God-ifrey, admitted murderer of his ^>f--ai?mother with a sniper bullet, was Speech in Germany I n elude s '-Kremffn |) l Nonaggression Deal Aw pH rNGT .0Worst i—President Kennedy met {with top advisers bnce to- , day and scheduled a second jneeting later to weigh I SovietRii^mVe^KhTusli-Ichev’s tague bid for hah-[ Ring nuclear tests everywhere but underground--tand^or^an EasFWest nonaggression pact. T Tjie Russian leader set forth his suggestions in a-maior.speech . in East Berlin. T .White House Press Secretary Pierre SaJirigOr told reporters: ‘‘The President considers Mr. j Khrushchev’s speech a matter of ! importance.” V j Kennedy met for an hour , this T morning to assess all the implies- o ’j tions of the Address, in , an effort' to determine how ' much might be simply .propaganda and how much might represent an opening for1 an East-West accord. Among those who talked things over with the chief executive this morning—and were, told to come back at 3 p.m. (Pontiac time) for a s e c 0 n d round—were Deputy Secretary of State Averell Harriman, a ..airliner crash that -took seven lives and thfured^36 ^r- 'a -gtower orders the aiTBOriJ—fccdf«i^-Mro-.-urged--8teppqi-ciosed, of course, the pilot may; up enforcement of the ordl- School Board in Waterford The. Godfrey boy has bpen at .the center since Feb. 5, when he admitted killing his 38-year-old mother be e a u s e “she bugged me." He said he fired *Tfc:allber bullet Into her head from outside the kitchen win-nance. .: . ]*•*, - dbw of their home at 98$ Dur- The. amendment will be'sehed- sley* Bloonifleld Township. not take off. Claude W. Chapman, weather bureau metcorolouist said I aj,«llUlllum Will W5 8UIIUU* ■'V' ""“'"f, ".................“ uq oeiween a nuciear cesi the weather nvi>r ih« RochMtoo. u*e<* for Pu^ic hearing .and final Judge Adams ordered the com- in the atmosphere and a1 ' adODtinn at. n future f.ltv flnm. mitmanl flflar a linranila -.aaiihI oaoMeetaa sHMAmAiit Kal and any interpretation until today’s meetings wete nver* . Even afterward, he said, he was not 1 promising any state- The press secretary* .mission meeting. ihearing, ' East and West military alllancos, _................... "'"7.;.... ^ ------r ( U.S. Refuses to Free Red Pair WASHINGTON (AP) — The A State Department spokesman j State Department by the rank- I (j.k. secretariat personnel officer, United States received and fnvjsaid this country rejected the rc-| hig Soviet, diplomat here, [and his wife, Aleksandra Eo-mediately rejected today a Soviet'quest with a reply that the iirf-^ J demand for release of a Russian munity of such U.N, employes iharge d’ affaires GeorgF Mv igorv. 39. UUB0KII1iiiPil HR m. RHH Kornienko, In a 20-mhiute ses- Pieked up here in'|he 8ame es. U.N. employe and his wife ar-|do were established last night. 'IL will serve as of the bullillng committee, consisting alajyiLGhcar' and Porter,---------- , [—TClHon Roscgart, Who wl|l be the j| I board’s chaplaliyTor the coming' {year, heads the personnel and I policy commlttea. Working with I him on this committee are Cheal, i j Bdifrdman jnd- Potftr | | NamecTchalrman of the school II names committee was Mrs. Barn-11 inghcifjn, who will work with Fred Pooleind Roseg^rt. ; 7 ,TWO THE PONTTAC FRKSS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 8; .1968 NAACP Plans Northern Drive CHICAGO jAPPfte National 'Association tor the Advancement of Colored People will undertake This summer a nationwide drive 4o end What it calls *‘Jim Crow. " i” in Northern schools, » Robert L. Carter, NAACP general counsel, said the drive would concentrate upon local school •di§-Jrlcts “where segregated housing * conditions result in schools of predominately Negro enrollment. •Carter, in an interview at -the HAACP’s 'annual convention, also made these points: WAKE POINTS *1. Gradualism and compromise « in the Negro drive for equality «is eflded. “Hiis convention spells the end tu any lingering belief that there can be any slowing down of • the civil rights drive,” Carter said. "2. The NAACP will work . feat for re-election any congressman or senator who fails to vote for a civil rights bill at this sion of Congress. ' Carter said that a strategy meeting of various NAACP state oouBsels- wiH"be~heid Thursday to determine what can be done at the state level to end what he termed racial unbalance in Northern-schools._____ - •' T expect to have at the conclusion of the conference a plan and program for the drive,” Carter wrwB Breakdown is Claim TO SEEK RULINGS Carter said that where possible the=NAACPTvili seek ijilings out-lawing racial “unbalance” by state education commissioners similar to one' recently made in New York. “ Where we can we.’ll act on the state level,” .Carter said/“Where we ..can’t we’ll try to get local school boards to rezone school dis* tricts. “And if that fails we’ll use protests, parades and demonstrations and fikcouEt^uitS-itneedbe.’’ Carter, was—asked - WASHINGTON UP) - The chief negotiator for the nation’s rail-reads said today there has been / a^eomplete breakdown” in negotiations with five railroad unions oh a dispute over wprk rules. ■ ” *-•- • W • ★ * * J. E. Wolfe, chairman of the National Railway Labor Conference, said the operating unions had refused to accept any part of either of two sets of presidential board recommendations to settle the dis- NAACP’s. approval of direct pub-Hc protest constituted a departure v froffTThe organization’sfpbUcyof fighting the civil rights battle in the courts. ‘The courts have laid the groundwork. But more is needed. We-have not so-much departed from our previous policy as en-it to include more than court battles,” Carter replied. An 8 - year - old Detroit boy drowned yesterday afternoon in Walled Lake while his family w a s picnicking He said the unions’ refusal has “brought an end .to the hollow-mockery of collective bargaining on the issues involved.” . at Novi Township Park, adjacent to the lake. ' The body of Lhrry Kellums, son of Mrs.. Shir- _ “Thus, the period of grace requested by President Kennedy and agreed to by both the unions and management, will end on July Id with the featherbedding dispute remaining unsolved,” Wolfe told a news conference. “The issues involved here have twice been submitted to impartial ' presidential boards of the highest competence and the railroads have accepted the recommendations of these boards even though they “contained more than generous concessions to the unions.” Wolfe said that since every step pf the railroad labor act has been exhausted in an effort to reach an agreement with the unions, the companies today notified the %itonrthat the new rules will be put into effect at 12:01 a.m. on July 11. Detroit Boy, 8, Drowns in Area Level of Wafer Drops Further (Continued From Page One) for repairs and two for lack of water. All five are in the Clinton River' well field stretching’ from Orchard Lake Avenue to East Boulevard. “Money is not the problem in repairing the three broken wells. It’s time. It would take three or four weeks to get them back in Service and by then we should be using Detroit water," said Birmingham* Area News Sumrrier Class Series Set at Art Association BIRMINGHAM-A summer art class series tor both adults and children wMl begin next week at the Bloomfield Art Association. Six-week adult class** in weekly tor two and a This sessions will be held from At Photo'*! PRESIDENT RETURNS - President Kennedy leaves his jet plane at Andrews Air Force Base near Washington, D.C., curly today after a busy IMay tour of Europe. He is followed-by a secret service agent and navbl aide Capt. Tazewell Shepard Jr. County i'obli^al Cast Studied by Broomfield A brief respite from Washington duties to feel Oakland County’s political pulse for a few days this week may help Republican William S; Broomfield decide in which of the county’s .two new congressional districts he will seek re-election next year. -Broomfield said today he is ‘getting around the county” and talking to constituents and supporters- about his choice, which he says he may make by the first of September. awaiting his decision before an-noundng’ their own intentions. Oakland Drowning Toll in ’63 ley Kellums, 4124 Toledo, recovered in Jive feet of water, 200 fqet from shore, by three boys who said they "stumbled over the body.*’ Mrs. Kellums told police that she hadn’t* realized that Larry was midsing. She said she had fed the boy only 30 minutes before his body was discovered. The youth was one of Mrs. Keflum’s 10 children. Eight were at the beach at the time of the drowning. The three boys who found the boy dragged him to shore where Novi police officer Richard Faulkner and- later the NoVi Township Fire Department attempted to revive him. ‘I’ve beep getting a number of letters from people in both districts urging me tq run in their districts, he said. Broomfield, currently in his third term representing the entire cminty, faces the decision as result of the state iegi reapportionment of congressional districts to fit in the new 19th district received by",the state after the 1960 census. '•*..'. barrjr was pronouncediteafrat p.m., one hour after his body was discovered. The Weather mmmmm Full U.S; Weather Bureau Report , PONTIAC AND VICINITY Sunny and cooler today, lilgli 78. Fair and cool tonight^ low 58 Thursday partly cloudy ■I wjji Hi........... ’ . - ds 12 l0 20 miles. Broomfield said a primary contest between him apd Murphy “would not split, the "arty” in the county. “It would be on a very high level and would he in die best interests, of the par-ty. It should be up to the people as to whom they want^to repre-sent.them.” He did not feel there was an urgent need for an Immediate decision, the congressman said, pointing out that' the election will not be until November 1964. Broomfield . said he arrived back in the County Sunday tor restajjd'relaxation with nisJam-iljnts well as the informal survey, on his selection problem. He. will return to Washington Friday. DISTRICT REDUCED The reapportionment reduced the .18th District from its countywide size to the county’s southeastern corner — the area south of 20-Mile R6ad (South Boulevard) — and put the rest of the [county, including Pontiac, into the new 19th District with Livingston County. Though Broomfield’s Royal Oak home remains in the 18th. he has the option of seeking re-election in either district. -“It’s a difficult problem and there are many factors to consider,” Broomfield said, adding that pressing problems facing lhe..natiQnJiave.kepthim busyJn Congress and prevented any concentrated thought on the matter. The possibility of a primary clash with ’County CV^k-Reg ster Daniel T. Murphy if Broomfield should choose the 18th- was not significant factor In his decision, Broomfield sa:d. Murphy has said he plans to iun -for the Republican nomination from the 19th ■ jatv 33 of Brumfield's choice. Other potential candldiates are reluctant to oppose Broomfield and are Hold Dr Ward for Vice Trial LONDON OP) Court today ordered Dr. Stephen Ward, U.S.-educated osteopath, held for trial on vice charges. Police! cjalm Ward, SO, is a central .figure In the John Pro-fumo-Chrlstlne, Keeler sex and lecurlty scandal which has shak->n the Conservative government to its foundations. After a three-day preliminary hearing, Judge Leo GradweU ruled that Ward must answer before a jury charges ranging from living on the earnings of prostitutes to procuring an abortion. !R - Fair to partly cloudy skies are .‘expected for the entire country tonight with no significant pre-ftpttttlon forecast it will be cooler from the Ltikes 8tiid tnid Mlaililppl Valley eastward to the norther* and middle Atlantic states. It will continue warn) tn south Atlantic and Gulf states -and be warmer In northern Plains. the trial will be held In (.ondon’i famous Old Bailey court, probably In September. Ward has proclaimed his innocence, He has not denied .that Miss Keeler, a 21-year-old redhead whose Involvement with Profumo led to the lattpr's resignation as war minister, jtvas’hla protege, along with various other party girls, • ! Crash Probers Eye Changes' in Weather (Continued From Page One) Monroe County Airport w a s changing rapidly when the plane took off. Eight minutes before takeoff it i overcast, with eight-mile vis- ibility, Two minutes after takeoff sediment plugging he said, thunder, pain and hail pelted the "field and* visibility had dropped to a half-mile. The plane was headed for-Newark, N. J., via White Plains, it fell into mud about 80 yards off a runway. The airport is several tmiles southwest of Rochester. One w i n g 11 p apparently struck the ground, a witness said. The plane bounced, broke in two like a matchstick and caught fire. Airport firemen extinguished the flames. Solve Lake (Continued From Page One) country and had lo be tracked down as far away as Arizona. Once the task was completed, several objections Were raised by a few of the owpers. Some disagreed with the preliminary survey, feeling that the cost of such a project would be prohibitive. A couple of owners were simply not interested, said Hartman.. Others said it would be far cheaper to dig wells to feed the lake instead. • ★ ~w~ % (Wells were tried at Hammond Lake in Bloomfield Township, but afforded no -permanent solution: The lake is still low as are many others in the county.) ANOTHpt STUDY With a vast majority of the, Watkins - Lake: property' owners in accord, the drain commission undertook ’8 more thorough study. -After surveying the entire lake front, engineers recommended raising* the depleted lake’s level three feet to 950 feet above sea-level as most desirable. ‘ They proposed doing, this by pumping water , via a ditch from Clinton River during peak flow periods. He said the experience of Watkins Lake residents and others should be useful for many other lake residents disheartened by dropping water levels in th county. - ■- Most of the countyx iakes can be successfully fed to reach desirable levels from the Clinton, Shiawassee and Huron rivers," said Barry. —— 1 up to the residents to initiate the,'action in most instances, he added! Many havp, and tlie drain commission Is now engaged in maintaining the levels of six lakes and proceeding to have-the levels of 25 more established in court. -Thusrdivertlng-some-of theex-■ess flow would'have no adverse effect .on other lakes connecting further downstream, both the A Magistrates drain commissioner and engl-neers agreed. The petition Snd the drain commissioner’s report were then filed in Circuit Court for a final decision whether to proceed, , Immediately after a hearing Dec. 21, 1960, the court established the Watkins Lake level at 950 feet as recommended in the engineers' report. Actual construction began early next spring,~and by Aug. 1,1961, pump on a newly created backwater of the Clinton River was busily pushing water through the ditch and Into Watkins Lake. The flow can also lie reversed In the event the lake should threaten to climb too high, Commissioner Barry The total project cost assessed property owners $44,706, Including reimbursements tor .right-of-way and a |0,831 contingency fund. The Jake level has since been successfully , maintained by t h e drain commission at no additional cost to the property ojvners, Once contingency funds have been used, the property owners will be periodically assessed to maintain and operate the pump. The cost will be minimal to each, said Baity, and “should never pose any problem*” Water Superintendent Herbert P-to. Mondays and from .---” 0-30 a m tn nnnn TiiMriavn and Parker. it “The Baldwin Avenue water tank went dry Monday night because there waijn’t enough water pressnre in the system to refill the tank faster Rum it was being drained by the heavy demand. ’ “In periods of hot, dry weather like ‘this, even all 22 wells couldn’t handle the demand un-the sprinkling ban was in effect.. , 19 MILLION GALLONS “Yesterday, we pumped 19-million gallons, The capacity for «,-waiigj$..Moot Ions. This morning the tank whs full and demand had eased some-whiTlvith ^()oior--w£ather, but lack of rain still drove "ffiff ground water table lower,” Parker added. Both Fisher Body and Pontiac Motor Division production employes were sent home .around 10 p.m. Monday when the water tank went dry. Waterford OKs Yesterday’s work stoppage on the first shift was due to This condition was created by a reversal of flow when the tank went dry, according to Parker. It was corrected by flushing the mains. NO DELAYS SINCE The second shift resumed production as scheduled, and there have been no delays since. About i075 employes had been sen home at Fisher Body and ,spme .,200 at Pontiac Motor. .... ■ ; . Chief White said that in a serious fire, about 8,000 gallons of water permtouteWSilbe normal requirement. “Our pumpers range in capacity from 750 to L2&0 gallons per mtodte.' The National Board of Fire Underwriters’ recommends- that a city of Pontiac's size be able to furnish 11.5-mlllion gallons pei day for fire service — more tnar half of the city’s total pumpage yesterday. , Embezzler Told to Reprace $2,650 A 2l-year-old Detroit Woman yesterday was placed on three years’ probation and ordered to make restitution of $2,050 she. admitted embezzling from an Oak Park doctor who employed her as* a receptionist. . >- ^ $500 immediately, and the rest at $50 a month, Miss Kushirii "pleaded guilty May 9 to- embezzling the money from Dr. Murrqy H. Gray, 22100, Coolidge, during a five-month period, last year. \ 9:30 a.m. to noon Tuesdays and Thursdays. Robert Broner will instruct the-evening students and Dorothy Siddell those .attending In the morning. - The Young Peoples Art Workshop, to be taught by Betty Conn, will begin July 11. Two-hour classes will meet at Rev. Harry Clark of the Pine Hill Congregational Church will return to his pulpit Sunday after a trip to the National Congregational Church’s convention in Hartford, Conn., and a weeks va-oittozL-, 7r ' The Benevolence Society of the church will hold Its last meeting of the summer at the home of Mrs. Jarred Welsh, 8314 Dakota, at 10:30 a.m. July 19. Officers are to be elected. Mrs. Lester Olmstead, who also attended the meeting in deliver a report Site to Bo Location ^T Third High School Waterford Township’s .third high school will be located at the 'northwest corner of Scott Lake and PontiSfc^Lake roads. Final plans for the congregation’s church wiltrbe presented at a July 14 breakfast at the home of • Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Cork,~l905 ~N Hammond Lake, . Pontiac. Construction of the new school plant, however, is several years away.— Moving forward with Its expansion plans, the school board last night authorized purchase of (he high school site lor future development and also voted to buy an elementary . Thev70-acre high school site, recommended by the board’s building - committee, will cost $2,400 per acre with $30,000 due now and the balance upon sale of bonds. ACQUISITION REASONS The building committee suggested acquiring the secondary school location now due to a scarcity of suitable locations in this general area and the imminent appreciation of land val- Supt. of Schools Dr. Don O. Tatroe said that only the rear portion of the parcel will be used for the school plant. He indicated that the frontal acreage nearer J h e Intersection might\ someday be resold by the district. ‘ . Also acquired was an approximate 10-acre elementary school site on Farm, directly behind Waterford Towns hip ' High School. Purchased for $22,499, this site is earmarked for a new school withhrthe next two years, itr the first stage of the school system’ five-year building program. In other business, ‘ the board authorized an expenditure of $12,986.75 tor improvements 6A an elementary school site Section 12 purchased last month. 16f,m. Thuradiys tor six weeks for students in gradas ieven through MU . *------------ - Those in grades one through six will meet from 10 a.m. to noon Fridayi. ‘Information and applications can be obtained by phoning the association, 1016 S. Cranbrook, daily except Monday. ?y! Breakfast, directed by Jack C. Marshall, chairman of the board of deacons, will be served at 9 a.m. The congregation now meets in the Pine Lake Elementary School. 3333 W. Long Lake, Or* . d ^ George C. Best Service for George C. Best, 62, of 172 E. Lincoln, was to be 2 p.m. t o d a y at tiir William R. Hffttolltoh. Funeral—Home Bell Chapel with cremation following in Evergreen Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. Best died yesterday after a brief illness. He was an advertising salesman for the Society of Automotive Engineers. A son, Robert B., of Birmingham survives. Refuses Release of Russian Pair Delores Kushim was sentenced by C i r c ti ft Judge Arthur E. Moore, whaortiered her to payA-sohoqlwilLbo-built here also within two years. The- improvement funds Will come out of an escrow account Of $25,000 earmarked for road and water - main construction and tor platting remaining loti in the parcel. (Continued'From Page One) Baltch, Americans who were un-aware their Identities had been appropriated. MUM ON NAMES There was no immediate report on who the Washington couple really are. The State Department had no immediate comment on the de-mand for release of those arrested in New York. ' _ v Kornienko said he carried io the State Department a Russian protest against the “unlawful arrest” of The 'Egorovs and “requested their immediate release.” The precise ground tor the demand was not detailed at once. The Soviet representative referring indirectly to the U.S. expulsion order Monday against a Russian diplomat here on other spy charges as well as the later case, said: “Such acts cannot improve in any way American-Soviet relations in favor of pronouncements that have been made more than once here.” Decision Expected WMMtm N-Prod uction Cut? WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Kennedy administration is considering a reduction in production of fissionable materials for use in nuclear weapons. While no immediate cuts appear lihminent, the larg'd stockpile of U.S. atomic material and the money to he saved' by a decrease are ex* tkm-cuttlag decision in the next few years. lit Intense Department sources recently suggested that the output of nuclear explosives tor A-bombs and H-bomb triggers can be reduced by $1 billion a year. ★ . * * The Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) has been spend; Ing $2.8 billion annually, most of it for weapons and the costly material that goes Into them. A.$l-bi|lion reduction would be equivalent to ’closing down 'a big Industry and would mean job losses for thousands of persons. MANY INQUIRIES-Reports of the contemplated cutback have caused1 many con-: gressional, and regional Inquiries. ,, Dr. Glenn T. Seaborg, AEC chairman, said In a Voice of America interview that “atud-ies are under way to see whether the mijitary requirement* are such that the rate of production of fissionable materials can in fact be decreased.” Seaborg said the question is whether capacjtv to produce these materials “has reiched the point' of being larger than Is actually needed'. 'V In a separate statement- the AEC said long-range studies of military requirements are being made, ’ but that “decisions havd not, yet been reached as to specific changes in the AEC material! production program." * It was noted that the commission. has h*e> tapering off raw material purchases and that a 17 per cent ent in electric jtywer consumption is scheduled by next June 38 at the ‘ plants producing fissionable nranlum-M, , But Informed source* say there has been no lowering of military requirements for nu-clear explosives In the fiscal year which started July 1, and none has yet been announced tor next year. * ' . • I. •I: m The f cut may only affect fiasionabie material that goes imp weapons,/The AEC has forecast a great increase In peacetime nuclear power pro-year! after d fiction in 1970. Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy provided a hint today that the couple arrested In Washington were based In Russia and about to return there when seized. Asked by newsmen why the FBI chose last night to capture the couple. Kennedy said, “We theladyand gentlemen were about to. leave toe country.” Asked where they were going ho said it appeared they were being “recalled” to the Soviet Union. Man Indicted for Murderof Medgar Evers JACKSON, Miss., Iff) - The Hinds County Grand Jury , in-dieted Byron de La Beckwith yesterday for the murder of civil rights leader Medgar Evers. Beckwith was Informed of the indictment as he sat In his jail cell In Jackson. ArralgnmeiU was scheduled tor 2 p.m. today before Circuit Judge Leoa Hendrick. * Evert, Negro field secretary tor the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, was shot la (fee back .. L WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 1963 How ToHold FALSE TEETH Moro firmly In Place temM by slipping, dropping nr woB-Wm when you sst. Isush or talk? "fust sprinkle * little MITBITH on your pistes: This elknllne inon-eotdi powder holds teles teeth mors Ormly •AO mom comfortably No gummy. breath) Get FABTKETH t Go Unseen by Cubans MIAMI, 'Fla. (AP)—Exile? fleeing Cuba report they have,seen none of the $53 million .worth of food and medicine the United 9tates*shipped Fidel Castro in ex- aboard the carrying the final pea ted assertions by earlier exilbs that they could not find any evidence of the food pr medicines. Many of the items were stamped with a small copy of the Stars I and Stripes. Jose Montes, 73, a retired language professor, said that an epi- sum MORE ON SAVINGS SAVINGS IN BY THE IOTH OF THE MONTH EARN FROM THE 1ST AT Arivanppfl Pavnuwit —■—mifcuivvu i ajmam ■ Shares Certificates . Current Rate CURRENT RATE vm ' IF HELD TO MATURITY AVAILABLE IN UNITS OF $8Q PER SHARE Etlablinbed in 1990 — Never missed paying a dividend. Over 72 yean el round management — your assurance oi recurity. Anett now over 80 million dollars. CAPITOL SAVINGS A LOAN ASSOCIATION 75 West Huron FE4-0561 Southfield Office: 2721S Southfield at 11 Mile Road KE 7-6125 Home Office: Laniihg Member Federal Home Loan Bank System . demic of gastroenteritis, a stomach ailment, was running out of control in Camaguey because no drugs were available. Many, many- children are dy-ing," he said. "The drugstore shelves are bare." He reported that rationing becoming more restrictive. "People right in Camaguey are starving,” he saisl ind Courtroom ew Jurist a new administrative wing of the courthouse in February. . ★' .★ Hr While the building js still Up for sale, the County Planning Commission was scheduled Jkpnovfe today from overcrowded quarters roger a. authier PATIO STONE CO. 10570 HgUand ltd. I M« WnI If hafci ttptf EM 3-4825 Opon Pally 8 to I The circuit' judges County have found for the seventh judged o^e of two to be appointed Sept. 0 by Gov. Romney. With only six circuit courtrooms in the court toper, the County Board of Auditors has been consMering^shiftlng die seventh judge fromonc to another as they become available. Also under consideration was using one of twn county supervisors’ auditoriums. The judges this-week recommended using the neary completed new supervisors’ auditor-lumas a courtroom, r 1* ★ ★ - They also recommended providing the seventh judge with chambers and his staff with offices »in what is intended as committee rooms in the' new auditorium wing, if The judges said the auditorium could still to; made available for meetings of Jibe County Board of Supervisors as origin-" The board meets about 20 times a year . ★ ★ - ★ After hearing the.rec tions, the board of agreed "that the rjud| have the best solution problems in the court TO COMMITTEE The judges’ recomr will.be presented to th< ors’ buildings and groi nds committee at a .meeting scheduled for July 10. The committee air ady‘ has approval to hire.architects Tor remodeling space originally intended for a sixth judge in the court tower to squeeze in the seventh judge and his staff as well.' .../! The remodeling is still in draw-Hij|Ma^NiMN§--No~ plans have] i ■ being added as a wing . to. the courthouse is scheduled for com-pletien early. Jn September. As another possibility, the board of supervisors could continue to meet in the old auditorium at 1 Lafayette. Quiet Buddhist Service Staged in Viet Nam SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) —A Buddhist memorial service was held without incident yest£r~ building nil day despite expectations of 'vicT lent protests against alleged government persecution'. ' It is possible that other growing Buddhists gave no reason for departments; wilf. h* movod-teto •• • The county has been unsuccessful in efforts to sell the five-story building at this location since, county offices were moved out to "350 S. Telegraph'. 1 Lafayette' as well until such time as the building might be sold, -Robert. Lilly, secretary of the board of-auditors, said, ' '-1c- It Selling the building would make money available to construct an-] other wing planned for the courthouse at the County Service] Center on Telegraph. included two planned suicides. ' UNITED SHIRT DISTRIBUTORS .Tel-Huron Shopping Center THREE The„ largest potash deposits Ini the U S. are found in western Nebraska. ‘ > " HOUSEWORK and MONEY Have Yoer Furnace Cleaned NOW M, A. BENSON 00. Heating and Cooling Division DONT DELAY! BUILDING SUPPLIES ELECTRICAL PLUMBING HEATING LUMBER ; MAKE THIS THE SUMMER TO DO YOUR REMODELING TASKS Ideal, ihort-cuti combined with low-coif, quality'building lupplia* at Wkko* makes It •ailor to do-it-youroalf. Eatiar an your pockot-book, tool ......................j________ ■ , GOOD QUALITY WEST COAST DOUGLAS FIR 1 Construction and Bottor 25% Standard ——--- iO©OBEM!T,-s 2x6,8 to 20’ Lengths...... 109.50 2x8,8 to 20’ Lengths.... . • 113.50 2x10,8 to 20’ Lengths..,.. 11 T.50 2xtl,Bto20’Lengths... ..121.50, DRY WHITE FIR UTILITT WHITE FIR • 25-30% Standard, Kiln Drltd 1000 SD. FT. 2x4, 8’Lengths .V... $101.50 ] YOUR COMPLETE BUILDING SUPPLY CENTER —- WESflft'NrmNfV SHEATHING Kiln Dried - Full 25/12" Thick 1x6 No. 4 Surfoood 4 tide.. 1x11 No. 4 Surfacd 4 tide.. Ixl Shlplap No. I Pondarota Pine ,95.50 Ixl No. l Oentermatoh Fend. Fine 19.80 INSULATED SHEATHING Alpha It Impregnated ’/i”—4x8 Square Edge .... $40.00 25/82” - 2x8 V-Joint ... . 81.00 CASH AND CARRY PRICES PHENIX OVERHEAD BORG-WARNER 3-PIECE i BATHROOM SETS S.&et.len Rell.up Win light., Olned 1x7,. SKI.. .,., 67.50 10x8 t S2.S0 •Xl .. 81.16 19x1 ...... 128.68 •HI.. .... 11.10 18X1. ...... 111.80 Set Inclufleii ) ^ ' 5 ft.itool hath tub, 19"«17" ’ , vltreou. china lavatory, Waih-down clout, Tub Pillar, Tub Trip-Lever Wait., 4" Lavatory Faucet with pop-up, Wood onhmolod Toilet uat. i i - STEEL WHITE $OT95 COMPLETE....... Of FINANCING SERVICE AVAILABLE • INDEPENDENT TRUCKING SERVICE OPEN 7:30 to 5:30 MONDAY thru' SATURDAY HIGHWAY M-53 m MILES SOUTH OF v 4..V UrtlV*. ... . 2x4 8 Ft. thru 20 Ft. length,.. $87.50 WESTERN WHITE SPRUCE 2x8, Random Lengths.... . $92.50 2x8, Random Lengths.;it. 93.511 2x10, Random Lengths.... 93.511 DOUGLAS FIR PRE-CUTS 29% Standard, It. ______ 2x4, V 8V.” Long........,. $99.50 - ASPHALT PRODUCTS by CERTAIN-TEED >19 lb. Tuf-Tobl! White only...... M.0S1 115 lb,Tul-Tobs. All colon..•... 11.81 IN lb. lol-T-Lokl. Whit# andAAInt Fro.t.. 95.1} IN lb. tooldoni. White and Mint Frail... $|.0C A.phalt Felt — IS lb. 432 loot roll......roll51.11 30 lb. 216 foot rolli......roll Ml Roll Roofing - 45 lb. Smooth................roll It .19 55 lb. Smooth -.roll 2.N 65 lb* Smooth ...........roll t.tB 901b. Slot#............ roll t.OB KITCHEN SINKS toss trim 14x21 Oast Iren Single Bowl 12x21 Dost Iron Double Bowl...... 24x21 Fpraelaln Steel SlngloBowl Slxll Porcelain Steel Double Dewl 24x21 Staln|eee Steel Ilnile.i Dowl PHONE LUM0CH, BUILDING tUPPLItS 752-3501 NUMIIWNUTINO-tLIOTIUOM. 752-3504 THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street WEDNESDAY- JULY 3. IMS HAROLD A. F1TZOKRALD ...tnd Publisher Howaib M. PtTMHALD n 5u»lnM»'l* ^**fr**W,nt &nd ■ ViM President end Idltor Pontiac, Michigan Jonh a. rust Secretary end Advertising Director City’s Water Shortage IS Serious Problem Pontiac today is in one of the-most dangerous positions a city can ever be in. / , Our water supply is so low that a fire in the north side of the city . might develop into an uncontrollable holocaust. • ★ ★ . ★ Up until now, the city government Has merely been asking residents for their cooperation in not sprinkling lawns and using water unnecessarily.: But how it’s beyond that, v; \ ★ ★ : ★ Water must be conserved! and the City is going to enforce the ban. , When the Detroit water arrives August I, there will be no problem, tf we weren’t hit by another heat wave, there would be no ^problem. ★ ★ ★ ' But with another session of steamy days predicted, THERE IS A PROBLEM, and the only solution right now is curtailed use . of water. This is a citywide situation, and every resident of Pontiac is called upon to help alleviate the situation by careful use of water for necessities rJw r : ; ~T 7~ “Sleeping Bear* as Park Would Be Boon to State Seldom has an Issue so split an area’s Inhabitants as the Sleeping Bear Dunes Federal park project, , . Battle Hnes were long since drawn over the 1961 proposal of Michigan Senators Philip A, Hart and Patrick Y. McNamara authorizing the U. S. Department of the *. Interior to acquire by condemnation 77,000-aeres of some ofthre i State’s most appealing scenery. . ★ ★ ★ The proposed park site north of Frankfort takes in an 8-mile depth of 32 miles of Lake I Michigan shore-| line. But it also takes I in 1,600 ho mes, I cottages and busi-I ness places; and it lis for the most part I the opposition ■ formed and propagated by this core •that has so far stymied action on the plaHi • , ; . finv. Romney has indicated ap-_ proval, and a Senate subcommittee arrives July 4 to survey the area and hold the last of several hearings preparatory to making recommendations to the full Senate Interior Committee, pen. Hart, in espousal of the development, points out that only 367,-000 acres of publicly-owned land in Michigan—one per cent Of the State’s total area—is suitable for recreation.' Much of that, Is in the Upper Peninsula.___________i_ ._________ Estimates from the National Parks Service are that 1.2 million persons would visit the recreation area each year and spend $11 million once the park is well established. The original bill has twice been rewritten by the Senator in an ef-fort to assure permanent private ownership and occupancy of existing homes and resort land, and otherwise safeguard rights and privileges of private property. ■’ * ★ jt. But historically, progress and advantage for the many has often been related to disaffection or inconvenience tor the few. JPriyate property gave way: to right of eminent domain as the Country's Vast complex of rail linens spurred de-velopment and prosperity across the land. ■ .. f The same may be said about establishment of the tremendous airport facilities dotting America, making possible the air age undreamed oy'a > generation ago. .★ ★ ★ -■ ..v., . Finally, the network of state and national super-highways promising benefits impossible to . foresee came 'to fruition only through the instrumentality of this inexorable law of social progress. While not unsympathetic "with the understandable attitude of residents ofthe area, The Press strongly favors this Hart proposal for development of the Sleeping Bear Dunes National . Park as a boon to the State and the general citizenry. “A Pentagon officials says the Defense Department could and should save more than $1 billion a year by buying only what it needs.”—Press report. What a radical idea: Why, it • sounds almost un-American1 ’ Voice of the People: *Sunday Driver’ Editorial Disturbs ‘Safe’ Motorist The Toll Gate It wAs recestly revealed it didn’t cost any more to live in April, than it did in Mlarch. And-it-wasn’t worth anymore. (Note to grammarians*: If you wish, you may delete the forego- David Lawrence Asks: Will U.S. Have Envoy in Vatican? tag "any” ’s.) WASHINGTON—There must be Only by the.calendar did Presi- a “wall of separation"JetweeiL dent Kennedy age only one year from May 29, 1962 to May 29, 1963. HighCourtJurist Works Long Bar By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON — Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan Jr. writes in longhand and then scrubs what he writes, even if it takes months, as it did in his recent opinion on the school prayer case. ★v .★ ★ In an interview,’Brennan, 57, gave a rare insight into a justice at work behind die doors Of the court’s marble church and state, says the Supreme Court of the United States. In public schools supported by government money, even a brief prayer is not permitted by the court. 1 Now some hew questions are being asked here: Did President Kennedy, wisely or unwisely, ignore the- separation doctrine when he presented, as a gift to Pope Paul VI, .a gilt desk box on the*lid of which are engraved not only the papal -but the seal of I the President of] the United States', which is usually LAWRENCE reserved for imprint on official communications? Was this -symbolic, rather than indicative, of a formal relationship such as might occur naturally between heads of state? developed, and Gen. Clark requested that his nqme be wltly drawn from nomination. No other nominee %as submitted for approval by the Senate, and die whole plan was dropped,. ★ ★ *: . So there is at least a precedent for proposing diplomatic relatione with the Vatican. Talk of Itoften arises largely because of the desire toachieve a liaison status with a most influential instrumentality in the world of diplomacy. Whether this will ever come about while a Roman Catholic is President of the United States or whether it will be achieved some day when a Protestant is President is one of the questions which is the subject of considerable speculation among political observers. V ★ ★ S •—It ig given renewed attention whenever a president and a pope engage in private conference at Rome. Rob Considine„Says: Yes, the creeping pestilence' is back. You smart hot rod drivers think you are the only ones who have a right on the -highway!: Remember that we who have brains enough to drive at a safe speed help pay for the roads. _ You say weshouldtaks a borss and stonebeat Aa e«r farms on Sunday and go lor a ride. One thing sore, they would be paid for. Yow smart alecks afe sneering at the older people who have ^ forgotten more than you will ever know. Why net fine you smart people who drive 100 miles per hour? - _ ■ • • ••.+ * * -J-------------------------■ —~When you throw stonee at the older people, It just shows how ignorant you Ire. . ’ Gertrude L. Johnson Walled Lake ‘Try Christian Way - to Solve Race Issue’ I Have not noticed any silence In The Press in regard to the status of minority groups. I noticed an Increasing amount of discussion by the President and high officials. The violence has been brought on by* dogs, fh\. hoses, denial tfof voting rights, bombs, mobs and gunfire. .. * * ★ This country 'has tried the . un-American and unchristian ' philosophy of segregation and has made the white man afraid and the Negro resentful. ', ★ President Franklin D. Roose- eluded Brennan.- wi Verbal Orchids to— Mr. and Mrs. Tngol Burton of Ortonvllle; 51st wedding anniversary. , Mrs.‘Thomas O'Connell of 174 ISemlnoie; 84th birthday. ■ v Albert Charteni / of 2000, Woodward; 98th birthday, r Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Raymond olPonoveri'lilst wedding anniversary. C. Taylor to the Vatican as his personal representative during World War II. Mr. Taylor continued In the 1 same capacity under The Truman administration until 1950. {{resident Truman in 1951 submitted to the Senate (he name of Gen. Mark W. Clerk to be American ambassador to the Vatican. * It vfas a formal move to1 establish full diplomatic relations. Strong opposition to the /Idee ;,l. NAPLES—Fifty easy'Ways to get along in Italy, without whisky or romance, were suggested to the throng of correspondents who have been tnjipjidg around ' after JFK during, his stay. Each writer was supplied with a dandy basic Italian vocabulary, courtesy of the U. S. Information :Servicer THaught-us enchanting and inscrutable Italian words for telephone (telefonata), passport (passaporto), photographer, (fo-tografo) and fruit, which goes by the baffling term of fruttav A fellow could live pretty. weH in Italy on that sort of- fare. -J * Sat>, beside Ireland’s grand old man, Eamon de Valera, on Aer. Lingus s cial ■ that flewl him from Dublin L ___ to Rome for the CONSIDINE coronation of Paul VI., The snow-crusted Alps, 20,000 feet below,, offered one of the earth's most spectacular scenes, and the plane buzzed with talk o( their terrible beauty. Dev did not look out of the big oval Viscount window, i “It’s a sad handicap for a politician to be blind,” he said in a matter-of-'fact voice that was not in any way a plea for pity. “A politician needs eyes. But one manages to get along, somehow. After all, there was your Roosevelt and his Inability to walk. Yet look what he accomplished. “You are Considlne—a County Clare name. I’m* a Clare man, you know. Had a lot of help* in the did days from Consldines. All good Republicans.” We asked him how he was enjoying the flight. “It’s most pleasant,” the towering and couriiy old Irish patriot said. “More comfortable than my first flight. The vary (bought of Hying terrified me and so I used to put off any invitation to- fly by saying "not until Lindbergh hlmself ls the -pitot" ' , ■ ! EXCUSE GONE “Then one day Frank Aiken telephones me int Dublin. He says to come right out to the Dublin Airport. /Lindbergh was tn^re. My alibi was gone. So they dressed me up in flying suit, boots, helmet and goggles mxt off iro took. I'll never forget the look of his head in the ope/i seat ahead of me looking first one way and then the other. He was like a hawk.” A lady asked to take a- photo of the president. “I'd be honored” he said With a bow. She aimed the camera at him and snapped the trigger, But the bulb did not flash and she went to fetch another one. Old pev sighed. “You know, I could have sworn I saw the flash,” he. said. By United Press International Today is Wednesday, Jply 3, the 184th day of 1963 with 181 to follow. i The moon is approaching the full phase. ' The morning stars are Venus, Jupiter and Saturn. -The evening star is Mary. On this day in history: • In 1863, the tide of the Civil War was turned at Gettysburg, as Union forces crushed the charge of Confederate Gen. George Tickett. ' - In 1890, Idaho became the 43rd state to enter the Union. In' 1898, the U* S. Navy defeated the Spanish fleet In the harbor of Santiago, Cuba, in the Spanish-American War. In 'i960, United States soldiers met the North Koreans in battle for the first time. ——. . ik — A thought for the day —the Greek Philosopher Plato said: “Of all the animals, the boy is the most unmanageable.” Country Parson knife as attempt to settle a' disagreement with a s h a r p Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Fluoridation Commercial 4 Appeal ■; Foe of fluoridation recently announced with a leer that dentists don’t enjoy working on children’s teeth. We have news for him. The kids don’t dare a whole lot for It, either.— Should Feel Pity The Wanderer (St. Paul.) A Baltimore postman, William L. Moore, walking through north-* em Alabama as "part of a one-man demonstration against segregation, was shot In the back by persons unknown. * . ★ ★ Overnight the murder of William L. Moore became a national story.'Gov. Wallace! denounced the crime as a “dastardly act,” and posted a $1,(08 reward. President Kennedy rightly termed It “an out-rageoue c r I m e.” Memorial pilgrimages were swiftly organised. Plainly, Moore had been klUtd because of the stand he took in a controversy of great national concern. Plainly, such cold-blooded murder could not and should not bo condoned undor any Clrcum-Glances. However, It strike* us as somewhat peculiar that, although the airwaves and press reported almost every last detail leading up' to this crime, it never-tholess failed to report, ** National Revjew pointed out, thit In the cart which Mr. Moore had bean draggini behind him at tha time of his death through this “Bible-bolt” district of the solid South “was a Urge painted sign that hid nothing to do with atom bombs or wltn integration (or maybe, if you like: everything to do with them). It read: 'Wanted— the capture of Jesus Christ. He was an impostor.’ ” (National Review* June 18th, 1983). While this added bit of information surely does not excuse the crime in any way, it might well have had some further bearing on ijt. In any case, it makes one feel even greater pity for Mr. Moore to think that he died toflng such an inglorious banner. Want T(uth The Port Lauderdale News In view of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev’s warning that the world may face a more difficult crisis than the Cuba confrontation last October unless the United States adheres to its “promises” in the Caribbean, speculation again arises as to whether or not the American people have been truthfully informed about just what “prom-Ises” have bwrr madirby President Kennedy. * f , * Time and time again tha American people bnva been told that U view of the failure on tha part at Russia, Caba and the United Nations to .provide •ny International on-site Inspection to verify the withdrawal of Soviet missiles from Caha, our “no Invasion” pledge could be surface and didn’t expect any of those promises to be broken. ! “It le c 1 o'a r,” he warned, “ffiitlf the" AmefteHirgovem-— ment does not follow tiw prom-lies It has made to Cuba the world may find Itself in a more dangerous situation than last year. In such a case we will have to fulfill our International duties and obligation^ to Cuba ' and come to Its aid.” •* • From what Khrushchev has inferred, these “promises” go a great deal further than what the American people have been told. If he is wrong in this respect then we feel the administration owes it to our people to come right out^d flafly^ata4ie-ls--. wrong. And if he isn’t wrong then we think it is high time our people be let in on the cozy, little secret of what w* actually did “promise” in return fori Khrushchev’i agreement to withdraw his missiles and hit bombers from Cuba. Last Word The Brooks (Alta, Canada) Bulletin The last word In an argument li what a wife has. Anything a fiuiband says after that is die beginning ef another ar- tel Prem 1 vr Khrushchev doesn't seem to think the lack of any on-sit* Inspection has minified pur "no invasion” pledge, as he talked yesterdsy llke aman who had been promised a lot more than has appeared on the I ,*»- I j THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY/ JULY 8, 1963- FIVE Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas . ' MRS. JOhft J. HILLMAN Service ioTMfs, John^.^ear-rie L.) Hillman, 73, of 0844 Seline, Waterford Township, will be at p.m. Friday III St. Stephen Lutheran Church with burial in the Drayton Plain* Cemetery. Arrangements are by the Coats Funeral Home. Mr|.Hllln»n,^member bribe St. Stephen Church, died Monday .after 4L4engHltaBss.- ------- • Surviving are her husband; a daughter Mrs. Milford Mullins of Waterford Township; three sons, Elwin E. of Davisburg, Wallace Mrs. Margaret R. Pinckard of Hinsdale, IH.; a sister, Mrs. H. W. Robinson, Lake Orion; five grandchildren and two greatgrandchildren. The family suggests memorial contributions be made to St. Mary’s-In-The-Hills Episcopal ^Church. B. and Maurice, bod) of Water-18 grandchil- ford Township; dren. ; ; ARTHUR C. RICH Service for Arthur - Gv- Rich, founder and operator of the former A. C. Rich Hardware Store on North Saginaw, between Pike and Lawrence, will be-at 10:30 am. Friday In Sparks-Grlffin Chapel. Rurlal will follow In Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Rich, 88, a native of Pon. tiac, was one of Pontiac's oldest citiseni. He died Monday at his residence, 103 Franklin fclwd., after a long Illness. After retiring from his hardware business in 1926, Mr. Rich bought and sold real estate. He attended the Baptist Church. Mrs. Rich died in the- 1630s. - ^ JOHN^ BARRY,"3! WIXOM — Service for John j] Barry, 83, of 29280 Beck, will be to a.m, Frlday ai^t._WilU«n Church, Walled Lake. Burial will follow in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield. Mr. Barry died unexpectedly Monday of a heart attack. He'belonged to Holy Name Society. The Rosary will be recited at *8 p.m. , tomorrow at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. : . Surviving besides his wife Mary are 10 children, John, Patrick, Mary Ann, Thomas, Japies, Karen, Sharon, William, Margaret and Kevin; all at home, and a sister. EVERETT G. CAMPBELL HOLLY — Former -resident Everett G. Campbell, 55, of Stone Fort, HI., died unexpectedly last night. His body Is at Coato Fu-nsral Home, Drayton Plains. Mr. Campbell was retired from General Motors Truck apd Coach. He belonged to First Baptist Church here.. Surviving besides his wife MU-dred are five sons, Gordon L. of Flint, Larry G. of Roily, Jerry D:~of thn -UiSr-MflrinftS- al-Btinned at Guanticb, Va., Robert A. of the U.S. Navy, stationed in Wilmington, Calif., and James En stationed with .the Air Force at Lincoln, Neb.; three sisters; and nine grandchildren. MRS. CHARLES C. LeFORGE LAKE ORION - Service for Mrs. Charles C. (Maude R.) LeForge, 70, of 210 N. Broadway wllj be 11 a.m. Saturday at AL ten’s Funeral Home. Interment will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy; Mrs, LeForge died today after a four-day Illness. She w*s -ai member of St. Mary’O-foThe-Hills Episcopal Church and ttys ’ ake Orion Women’s Club. Surviving are a son Kennett M. Of Kalamazoo; a daughter,'Alliance. will follow in SL Michael’s Cemetery, Richmond. - — Mrs, Polka was killed in.a,tractor accident Monday. She was a member of the Polish National The City Commission last night in the last tl LORI ANNE McMARTIN UNION LAKE-Graveside service for -Lori Anne McMartln, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McMartln, 9885 Pal-moore, was held yesterday Commerce Cemetery. The baby died shortly after birth Friday. : Surviving' besides her parents are her grandparents,,-Mr. and Mrs. Raymond McMartln mid'Mr. and Mrs. Da'niel Curdy, Ml Of Union Lake; and her great-grandmother, Mrs. Eva Curdy of Berkley. MRS. JOHN POLKA WASHINGTON - Service for Mrs. John (Bella) Polka, 63, of 21311 29-Mile Road, will bo 10 t.m. Friday at St. Mary Mystical Rose Church, Armada. Butjj^hKk VATICAN CITY (UPI) — Vatican sources said today that Pope Paul VI may become the first pontiff In hlstory to vlslt the United State*. The sources, commenting on the Pope's meeting with President Kennedy yesterday, said he probably would take an opportune occasion .to go to the United States after completion of the Ecumenical Council. Driver Take* Unscheduled Dip. Into Lake Roger Yoder, 87, of 520 N. Glenhurst, Birmingham, took an Impromptu dip in EloabetK Lake- j early this morning who he drove his car through guard rail on Cooley Lake j Road. ______....„ Yoder told Waterford j Township police that an unidentified car heading east crossed Into his west- | | bound lane at 3:27 a.m I forcing his far off the | I road. I Yoder was Uninjured ] I and his car was hauled out i of the lake by a wrecker, j IfMMimmiwim'gmmmmmM The Rosary will be recited at 8;30 p.m, tomorrow at Roth’s Home for Funerals, Romeo. ~ i- her husband John are a daughter, Mrs. Irene Brzozowski of Richmond; two sons, Edward of Washington and Thomas of Midland; and a grand- The membership -of Local .125 *"* finai appeal to contracts,of Pontiac hasn’t, fiStenlw 8121,425.82 for the city’s limit yet, but it’s possible we wfll. tag new contract agrsenwnt l963. 8treet jmprovement pro- Hauling distant are Uraited gram. ~—U—[because asphalt must be laid at The contracts for paving IJff*10 teraPeft»ture for best ($91,552.32) and resurfacing /“jr8, ($29373,50) went to A & A/ Asphalt Paving Co. oTBtrmtag/ himy reached only- 34 TToTFfT earlier with Baldwin Rubber Division. By a voice vote, the rubber workers approved the one-year agreement. child. Michael McAleer, president of Local 126, reported thaMhe-cotu tract calls for a six-cent im- Report Pope & The council opens its second sessjon Sept. 29. No closing date leenset. WtbettMorr Ratifies Pact for One Year Awarded by Commission . MANAGUA, Nicaragua. (UPI). —The U.S. Embassy announced approval yesterday of a $1 mil- to Nicaragua for lengthening Las] Mercedes Airport to accommo-j date Jets. ioMkre o'Wcal ikivlii PONTIAC MAU OPTICAL CINTIR BAZLEY’S THURSDAY SUPER SPECIAL ~~The-tetaPwas-welL below the provement -In health for employes; a no-strike claure'^pb ^ pbng. or‘g^ally estl* which binds the union to 10'dayl|?natod pavm* and re8urfac’ Ifheated too much-at the plant, it can be burned. If it’s top cool when applie30 A.M. to 9 P.M. SaX TIIE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JULY 8, lflflR- To Reign Over Celebration HOLLY TOWNSHIP -The con- onsiders 2 Hot Issues Holly to Select The nation's largest teacher organization must take -a stand on.racial segregation and the related questions of “professional negotiations” and “sanctions.”——^. . * The latter issue will be debated tomorrow in a meeting on teachers’ salaries, at the Statler Hilton Hotel. BUSSES BEAUTY - One of the first to step up atW kiss Audene Clark after she-was chosen Miss Romeo of 1963 last night Was her today. Audene’s first official be on the Romeo Peach festival publicity float" tomorrow in the Utica. Lions Fourth of July parade. .Pick Brunette M Romeo From Among 13 Contestants BY LEE OLSON Area News Editor ‘ ROMEO — Thirteen proved to be a lucky number "for pretty brunette AudeneClark lasH tendants will ride on the Romeo ish, instructor at the John Rob- She won the Miss Romeo title in competition with 12 other attractive contestants before a, packed house in the Youth Center. Over 350 persons jammed the center auditorium to walch-the preliminary event 'of Ihe .llst annual Peach Festival to be held over Labor Day weekend. . JUNE GRADUATE A June graduate of Romeo High School, Audene, 17, ij the __daughter of Mr. and -Mrs. J. E: Clark, 7390 West St., Washington. She hopes to become an airline stewardess. Chosen first maid of honor was Judy Owen, 18-§gg| year-old daughter 111S _ of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Owen, 65625 Romeo Plank. A , blue-eyed blonde^ she attends Indiana University, majoring in. occupational therapy. Second maid is JUDY 18-year-old Rosalie Lesinski, , .niece of Mr. and Mrs. Philip C. Davidson, 385 S. Main. Also a June graduate of Romeo High, Rosplie plans to attend Central Michigan University next fall and major iq art or .English. ■ • She is a brunette with blue eyes. —1 ■ — ~— Miss Romdo and her two ,at- Peacti Festival publicity float in area parades throughout th e Northlaridr summer. The trio’s first official appear-jance will be to-[ morrow in the lytie.a Lions 4 Fourth of July ROSALIE; parade. The new -title-holder also will represent the village in the Romeo Peach Queen Contest early in August. The winner will reign over the three-PeacluFestival Aug. 31-Sept. In last night’s competition th) IJ candidates paraded before the judges first in street dress to be introduced to die audienCe. They returned on stage later in formal attire for interviewing by emcee Richard McLean. The judges rated them poise, personality, beauty, personal appearance and public speaking ability. The field then was narrowed "down to six finalists who were given three questions each to answer extemporaneously. Besides the three winners, the other three finalists were Susan Quinn, Bonnie Lowrie and Jacquelyn Edmunds. Miss Romeo of 1962, now Mrs. Howard Bjornstad, crowned her ert Powers- School, Detroit; and Charles Alton, chief hair stylist at Bernard’s French Salon, Also competing for the crown were Zita Miklos, twins Marilyn and Carolyn Sieger, Gloria McLeod, Helen Suidara, Sandra Zochowski and Sharron Dietiin. new outfit purchased with freewill contributions given during the contest - ‘ • Judges were Mrs; Betty Le-vick of the Rochester Area Cbam-ber of Commerce, Marilyn Ben- Mansfield-Black Vows Wed in Methodist Church CLARKSTON-The First Meth-: County 4-Hers JoSeeXdlege- noon- Entitled “Coping .with the Vigilantes, Censors and Critics in 1963,” the discussion will feature five talks fFpm newsmen, historians and educators.----------nr-- Local representatives to the NEA confab will raise a technical issue of their own. The county delegates, headed by Melvin Leasure, of Ferndale, will file a petition for a change in the NEA bylaws, Leasure said the petition asks for Study of a proposal to set up a judicial branch of the NEA. Called the board pt reference, the new branch would be separate from the executive branch or officers of the teacher group. HfcHCOURT Leasure is head of the Oakland County department of classroom teachers. He said his-proposal would, in essence, set up a supreme court within the NEA. . Michigan State Trip Planned Next Week Thirty-five members of Oakland County 4-H clubs will get a glimpse of college'life next week ojrthe Michigan State University campus. On the group’s agenda are a preview of college life in various academic areas, a study of life in other countries and meetings with student representatives. Mr. and Mrs- Gary McDowell will attend as leader chaperones. She Is the former Janet Long, “Miss Young America in 4-H” In I960, and Oakland successor who will be given a 1 Cniintyi-Hqueen. InlflSfl, Making the trip are Sandra Moore,, Busy- Fingers; Sandra Brooks, Oak Hill; Joanne Kos-lowski, Ortonville: Lois Clark. Milford; Ronald Stiles, East Orion; Dick Cold; Ro-Hi; James Hawley, Northwest Oakland; Louis Norris, Seymour Lake; and James Mickleson and William Hugo, both of Avon Gardeners. Also attending are Donald Wentz, Seymour Lake; Ronnie Hollis, Galloway Lake; Allen Bess, Tim Stayton, Gall Stayton, Sheryl Tilton and Sharop Minard, A bouffant veil fall from her jail of Ortonville: and William odist Church of- Clarkston was jeweled coronet. She carried a Rathburg, Nancy Beraud, Sam the scene of Judith Arlyn Black’s cascade of double Cymbldlum or-Chapin, Dennis Waite, Philip marriage to Richard William chids, roses and Stephanotis, Vincent, Linda Sto, Janis Mc-Mansflekj Saturdhy afterhoon. I After a honeymoon at Niagara .Lachlan, Renee Donovan, Joan .. .a... a it.. •__________hi ii... i_ Tfnrtilr nnH Ann Falls, the couple will live in Hurtik and Ann Whims, all of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W, Black, Clarkston. This fall, the bride- East (Wan. |j 6140 Lakevlew, are parents of. the groom will resume his premedi- bride. The bridegroom is the son, cal studies at Albion College, of Mr. and Mrs. William Mans-9 field, 6593 Clarkston. , Three of the bride’s sisters » took part"In her wedding; Bonnie Black as maid of honors Denise Black as junior bridesmaid and Paulette Black as I1 fldwer girl, Douglas St. Clair/ Clarkston, i served as best man. Ushers were • Edwin Glennie, Frank Strother j and James Mansfield, brother of j the bridegroom, all of'Clarkston. Cecil* Caverly, Mary Ann Baer, Oakland County delegates expect one other issue — censorship —to attract considerable notice from the convention; The entire question of censorship in schools will be discussed tomonw^rftoi^fin^'Ki^M,TOr”^r*ef^ues^o^ The winner and four mem- Questions of ethics and disciplinary problems are presently handled by the executive branch of the NEA. This should be changed, according to Leasure; ~ so that a separate judicial department could rule on them. Racial segregation within the NEA was raked earlier this week by the department of classroom teachers. The teachers adopted a resolution which urged “local, district ’ ’state association!? to n their membership doors to all teachers, regardless of race, color, or, creed.” > The resolution was dimed at 11 Southern states which maintain separate NEA affiliates for white and Negro teachers. Professional negotiations and the use(of Kanctions need clarify-ing, according to some Oakland County delegates. The NEA convention rung through Friday. School Bonds Sold in, Novi vsSfc NOVI - WlthFtaancliigH& a $985,000 secondary sclioql completed, the board of education is looking forward to letting construction contracts. The bonds have been sold to Merrill, Lynch, Pierce, Feriner and Smith of Detroit, the lowest irf four bidders, Interest rate will be 3.43 per cent. The board expects to let com structlon contracts w i t h i n month, according to' Supt. Tom Culbert. test for queens to reign' Holly Township’s 125th anniversary celebration has attracted 22 young ladies and 28 very young ladies from throughout the ★ it ’ it Besides the queen, who will be crowned before a coronation ball Saturday night, judges will select a cherub queen from entrants to.6 years old/ The younger queeri Will be chosen at .a contest following the Fourth of July parade .tomorrow afternoon. The older gkls will appear in bathing suits lor the afternbon judging, slated to start at 1:15 or ' p. m. BRIEF QUESTIONS Ten finalists will be picked during an evening program, during whiqh the girls, dressed in for- bers of her court will be announced at a % p,m. ceremony at Holly Township Beach Saturday. FAEeo^^ purpose rbom of the high school will be held immediately afterwards to conclude the anniversary festivities. Marilyn Henry, queen of the last Holly Fourth of July celebration held in 1956, will crown the hew queen, who will receive $50. Miss Henry, a mezzo-contralto, has just finished two years as performer, coach, and teacher with the Tri-City Opera Company in Binghamton, N. Y. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Henry, 110 Lake, Holly. All of the contestants, 16 to 21 j®O*0RD^AnBa'uTaway truck' and the four new cars on-it demolished and the train which hit them immobilized in a downtown accident yesterday. None of the persons involved was injured. Traffic was blocked on two streets for three or four hours until the 78-car freight train could be moved.’; •\ Its three diesel engines had been damaged and its air compression lost so that the cars could not be uncoupled. ALTERNATE ROUTE Douglas. E. Thomas, 48, of Lansing, told Milford police he had thought -the truck .he was driving would not be able to pass under To Break Qfomdior Hospital FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP -Ground * breaking for Botsford General Hospital, Grand River and Oxford, will be 2 p, m.Sat-urday. Officials have invited all area residents to attend the -ceremonies. Construction is scheduled to start June 15, with completion of the 200-bed facility slated for late 1964 or early 1965. Cost, of the new hospital is estimated at $3.8 million. A federal grknt of $1,152,585 has bedn approved for Jhfc-pmjefit._ A five-story building will hpuse -hospital rooms and adpiinistra-......................offices. tive and physicians’ offices. An adjoining- single - level Services building will contain surgery and x-ray departments, delivery rooms, laboratories, an enter-gency section, kitchen and cafeteria facilities. The new hospital will serve 10 communities in southwestern Oakland County. The school, first unit of a pro- . A reception followed the ceremony in the church parlor. The bride’s parents gave a dinner for out-of-tow;) guests after the reception. ‘ V *. «. ’• */ A gown of sheer white silk .and, Alsncon lace was chosen by the k bride. It featured a fitted bodice and bouffant ijfkirt extending into , a ohapal train. Jessica Jockwig, all of the Clarks- posed $1,385,000 program Is to be ton Happy Helpers; Harvey Hart, completed by September, 1984. Seymour Lake; Pqjrlcla Parrott, .., - Galloway Lake; Marilyn Dentoh, Oak Hill; Karen -Sehoencnberger, Busy Fingers; and Terry Cook, Bloomfield;- will also make the trip. • ^ Approve Contract Sale Tax Group Invites Romney to Meeting DETROIT (J1 — Mayor George , I Kuhn of suburban Berkley said in Detroit Renewal Plan yesterday the VlgilancaJkut-OonF nvrantoim -m, tr u » Irnlttee haednvtwTGov. George DETROIT Urban Re-. nQmney t0 altend ,t8 next meet. uewaL ^ministration has ap- lng l0, discuss fiscal reform, [proved oj contract for the sale of.. , * * *• i23 acres of redevelopment land In downtown Detroit for' the pro- years old, will appear on floats in the Fourth of July parade. -CONTESTANTS Participating from Holly - are Cheryle Burgess, Mary Brum-meler, Sue Creque, Norma Car-rick, Kay Doty, Jeanne Lawson, Karyn Morgan, Marilyn Morgan, Ann Moritz, Janie Powell, Sue Riddle and Pamela Long. Holly Township contestants are Sandra Brown, ElspetiL. Grate, Gail Herrington, Nancy Hawley, Carole Starr and Sandy Vackv Pam Hayes. Cathy Henriksen and Karen MacKenzie are from > Township and Connie Ma-from Springfield Township. Judges for the event., are Aid-rich Locke, Paul Botticelli and Ray Hunt, Fenton businessmen. AVON TOWNSHIP - Construction-will begin this year on the 9 new $1.4- million facilities of Avon j Center Osteopathic Hospital north -of Rochester. , The new 160-bed general hospital, to be located on a 24-acre ; on Rochester Road, north of . Tienken, will be used for treat- -ment of acute pases. -» > i Haulaway-Train Collisk Blocks Traffic in Milford flag down' the traln that wlf approaching from the north, according to police. . ......: . —— Fireman Phillip. Kramer, of Bay City who was operating the train, applied both emergency brake systems but to no avail. The collision split the truck in half, the cab and a car falling on one side of the track and the trailer and three carr on the other side. the North Milford Road viaduct so he tried anotherjouter "The truck got caught on the tracks at the Liberty Street I_________Is meat. Thomas and twO other persons ran up the tracks attempting to Signal crossing apparatus was also demolished in the accident, which ‘occurred shortly after 10 a.m. By 2 p.m. the track had been cleared. The truck was being cut up tills morning fQr removal. Plan to Start Avon Hospital. Slate Building Daf# ,on Avon Twp. Clinic 3 The most modern equipment for surgical' units, obstetrical care, emergency and outpatient departments, laboratory, X-ray and physical' therapy dfpart-ments will be installed. The present 40-bed hospital ikt -55 E. Avon will be maintained as ; chronic care facility. * T h e new building will be • financed by. mortgagee-donations— and loans fronL-Jmedical staff membersr 2 About 175 area persons will be * employed. The payroll Is A-JI pectedto^totaTTfSO^ annually. Joseph P. Evangelista and As- ^ sooiates of Bkrmingham will de- » sign the structure. Village en- Z gineers Ayres, Lewis, Norris and -May of Ann Arbor are making a 2 study of the site. Announce Engagement for Melvindale Girl ORION TOWNSHIP-Announce- J ment Is made of the engagement y of Mary Elizabeth Weekly to C; ) La Verne Beach by her parents, -Mr. and Mrs. James P. Weekly ! of Melvindale. , * The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence ; Beach, 1230 S. Lapeer. The ' wedding will take place Aug. 24 * in the First Methodist Church of -Melvindale.----------- Contest Set ROCHESTER - The Rochester k-H Trail Blazers are planning riding competition and a barbecue for their seventh annual horse'show ^this weekend. The competition will begin at noon Saturday at the Oakland County Fair Grounds -and run through Sunday afternoon. Pro-■ceeds will go into a college fund for members. Riding competition in jghgiish, pony and h a 11 e r classes is planned for Saturday afternoon, A trophy will-be awarded to the club tallying the most' points. A chib may retire tlie trophy by winning it three consecutive years. Western riding and contesting will be featured In Sunday’s show, beginning at 9 a.m. Barbecued chicken will be served from noon to 3 p.m; The Trail Blazers are looking for more members, Horse owners between ages 10 and 21 should contact Rusty McNary, secretary, 725 W. Buell. Meetings are tlie first Wednesday of the month at the Avon Pavilion. Area Man Is Named fo State Apple Group p^sed International village. The Detroit iCqnunon Council also must approve the $3,236,099 ;ohtract. It has scheduled a public MRS. RICHARD W. MANSFIELD {hearing op (lie sale fpr July 18, ; ‘ vT, *-■7 ... ^‘.W :-J'-Sk He said the-meeting will be held in Warren July 13 or 20, whichever date is convenient for the governor. jV' The committee, headed by Kuhn, Is made up °I representatives pt 69 squtheastern Michigan suburban communities. Mr. and Mrs. John Hubbard of 510 W. Third, Rochester, announce the engagement arid approaching, wedding of their daughter Nancy Suzanne to James William Krdft. The prospective bridegroom’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Willlaih F. Kraft Jr. of CaseVIlle, former Utica residents, An Oct, 19 wedding Is being planned. FARMINGTON-Paul Button, 34600 12 Mile Road; has been appointed to succeed Jerome E. Schoof, 70640 Camp Ground, ; ^ Romeo, on the State Apple Com-miasion BiT Governor George Romney. Appointments to the seven-member commission require Senate confirmation. School's' term will expire April 1,1966. I Traffic peatht Mount LANSING (UPI) - State Follde said today the 1963 traffic death' toll hag mounted to 771 today. This compares with 665 persons ! killed on state roads in thq same period 1^st yelr*. V WESTINGHOUSE This ejlm new 19-irich* JWestlnghouse portable TV is an amazing value even without its gleaming, prass-finished roll-around cart. With It -- lt'$. an even greater buy! Its 19" screen is filter-shieldra for ih-creased clarity', , , gives you top picture quality, Indoors or out. Speaker Is wide-range, for superb sound.,,. Tflffcoping, antenna Is butiMnr Why pay more for a new TV, when Westinghouse gives you all this value—plus this unique triple guarantee; 1, 90 , days for parts and labor. 2. 1 year for pictUre-tube, 3. 1 year for Circuit board (if it falls, you get a new set). .1 . ____ You can be sure...if it'$ Westinghouse I SYLVAN STEREO TV SALES Op«n Mm, and W. 'til 9—Turn,, W*4., Thun, 'til 8—Sat. 2363 Orchard Lake Rd. (Sylvan Center) '612-0190 »• 'ffl t •0199 r ■JjL £ mi m vY 1 ME) ,‘t. 4s 1 .'’j * P: %. w.jk THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 3,1963 SEVEN; ■ Sneezing Bloodhounds Stoll Search for Man HILTON, N.Y: (AP)-Two blood-hounds were taken oft a search Mohday because they began snooting after inhaling powdery dirt, state police ssdd. The dogs wwW hunting for Thomas. Harrell, wanted in connection with the fatal stabbing of his roommate, Eugene Peterson, at a migrant labor camp near this western New York community., NOW) At* Saccharin is several hundred times sweeter than the conventional varieties of the cane or Did Lola's Temper Get Best of Her? 7:00—1.1:20 HURON .5 Omt Start Challenge You to Cum tin Disguised Roles they Play I STORY SO FAR: Marin* Ore**. aauUful icraan and. atafa alar, and er huiband. Jaaon. Rudd. brilliant roduetr. bur Oouinston Rail and at ur* r ana gracloumy ... _ own untouched Mrs, Badcock; die* from a Idee. Marina believe* *h* era* KSSysJfc was for takijhg the greetings going on at the top. Lola Brewster wgs just ahead of me on the stairs. "Didn’t know her at first. type, list time I saw her it t there eta* a her face and < shade of auburn. br a nice * out of order—' By AGATHA CHRISTIE Installment XXVII Helen Badcock wasn’t the kind of woman who’d have been interested in other people’s secrets,” McNeil said. "My view of her is of a woman who invariably talked about herself.’ “That seems to be the generally accepted view,” agreed Craddock. *$o We come to the famous Marina Gregg. I'm sure there are lots of wonderful motives for murdering Marina; Envy and jealousy and love tangles, ali the stuff of drama. But who "did it? Someone with a loose screw, J presume ^wreT~Vmi*ve^anTv valuable opinion. Is that what you wanted?” _JiNot-tbat- alonc. I understand that you arrived and came up-the stairs about the sa/ne time as the vicar and the Mayor.” “Quite correct. But that wasn’t the first time I’d arrived. I’d been their earlier.’1 I didn’t know that.” Yes.. 1 was on a kind of rov- There was a big dark man with her, American. I don’t know who he was but he looked important.” “Did you look at Marina Gregg herself at all as you were coming up?” . 'Yes, of course I did.” 'She didn’t look upset at all or as though she'd had a shock or was frightened?” ’ “ft’s odd, you should say that. I did think for a moment or two she was going to faint.'-’ ' NOTHING ELSE? _ _. “I see,” said Craddock thoughtfully^ “Thanks, There’s nothjn’g else you’d like to tiell me?” —McNeill gave-him a-wide innocent stare. ■ v. / | “What could there be?” .■ “I don’t trust you,” said Crad-dbckr “At the Savoy, sir. Suite 1800. She’s expecting you.” “And Ardwyck Fenn?” “He’s at the Dorchester. First and read them through again before shoving them into his pocket. He Smiled a moment to himself over the last one. “Don’t say I don’t do my stuff, Aunt he murmured under his breath. • She’s an absolute sweetie, you know. Everybody loves her.” “Including “I’ve always been devoted to trouble about "eleven or twelve years ago?” dren. It’s so important, isn’t it, that the Children should have a| home?” 1 ..... Yet. people say that* actually He went out and made his way to the Savoy, . In Lola Brewster’s suite Lola went out of her Way to welcome him effusively. With the -report he had just read in his he studied her carefully. Quite a beauty still, he thought, in-a lush kind of way, what you “Oh that.” Lola waved it away. ;“I ’ was • terribly nervy and distraught, and Rob and I had been having the most frightful quarrels. We were neither of us normal at die moment. Marina just fell wildly in love with him and rushed him off his feet, the poor pet.” “And you minded very much?” 'Well, I thought I did, Inspec-. Of course I see now it was one of the best things that ever happened for me._ 1 was really BLUE SKY Dtiwe-J!* Thobe, 332-3200 STARTS TONIGHT! It’s the great*to*be alive, great-to-be* * in-love motion picture with the Fabulous FABIAN and ttuYBim DENIM* .Presenting TARZAN Itwicvuat peeping ■urn TTT r f,’ VI' I SqfeOSfflf ! ing commission, you know, going here and there. I had a photographer with me. -“I’d gone to take a few local shots of the Mayor arriving and throwing a hoopla and putting in a peg for buried treasure, and that kind nf thing. ~ “Then I went back up again npt so much on the job, as to get a drink or two. The drink was good.” “I see. Now can you remember who else was on the staircase when you went up?” “Margot Bence from London whs there with her camera.” “You know her well?” “Oh I run against her quite often. She’s a clever girl, who who made a success of her stuff. She. takes all' the fashionable things, First Nights, Gala Per-ftTrminrpff, iptfjallttfi in Photo-graphs from unusuaTangles: Arty! “She was in a corner of the half landing very well placed for taking anyone who came up and .“But you seem quite sure I didn’t do it. Disappointing. Suppose I torn out to be her first husband.. Nobody knows who he was except that he was so insignificant that even his name’s been forgotten.” —Bermot- grinned;— “Married from your prep school?” he asked, “or possibly in rompers. I must hurry. Fve a train to catch.” afraid rd’already realized;’ that way. A completely difte^at Bob-and t wereineompatlj "enftype, orcourse, from Manna!^,, Gregg. The -amenities over, Lola Ipffied^bacFTRSF^^ hair, drew her generous lip-sticked mouth into a ,provoca-tive pout, and flickering blue eyelids over wide brown eyesTlmarriage, because ot the chil-llidr—— YOU, TOO? “Hive you come to ask me> a lot - more horrible questions? Like the local inspecter “I hope they won’t be too horrible, Miss Brewster.” There was a neatly docketed, a pile of papers on Craddock’s E desk at New Scotland Yard, i He gave a perfunctory glance through -them, then threw question over, his shoulder. -Where’a Lola Brewster~Jta.v-ing?” # . . ’001 Fabulous Adventures ibo^lHlouOrouo Sights 10Q1 Legend’s Mightiest Warrior..,. His Greatest Adventure! NOW PtAYING AT. PONTIAC ■mPSMveso MWLAm, cmv, AREAS.... OUY HI1DI WILLIAMS - BRUHL 'AND— THAT MCADSTRONG , Bob. Anita i Hope EKbeiS txnosts AFRICA AND BAM A, ORIAT NEW SRtClBS ... MtKBtM' caiuwe Btfana” K ADAMS / LIONELtlEFFRIES * ARNOLD PALMER 104 POLAR-TRAPPEP GXe loathe army's champ 1DNYCURUS JANET HIGH “Jr m Furlou^T _____ 0b v 1 TggfffWbfvit RHOWH rmumflr nrviLi uliuii Bimfwuvia otta makegood iETVkiAAm A..V . AM- 1 A NIGHTMARE COME TO LIFE! FROM THE NOVEL THAT FRIGHTENED THE WORLD! THE DAY OF THE TRIFFIDS IN COLOR .mil CINEMASCOPE Howard KEEL* Nicole MAUREY • Janette SCOTT • Kieron MOORE An AUIED ARTISTS RoloiMi \ -cm- A STRANGE AND COMPELLING STORY ASKING A CURIOUS QUESTION..... .MfTRO-GOlOWVN im }!■■}% ■ I WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 1963 F.ntUe Preli Photo. I'm Glad I'm Not Leading a Dog's Life I'm Pleased 16 Meet You, Sir Lancelot. - My Name Is Guinevere 9RWP>i^ x Wofta They Mean—LET the Cat Out of the Bag? We're All Good Pals—the .Dog's Sherman", the Kitten's Maomi, and I'm Johnny Hsu Will You Look at the Dress She's Wearingl New Foundations' Q OMEGA WATCHES OWo’/?vrtnem/fe* yrat/turiien tiny /o* 0 /tjfetim* tot// / aft @msyt* ma/c/i is//of/e& trfown am in po/ci ttn/n rfott* matwem REDMONDS , JvwelSrx—Optometrist \ 81 N. Saginaw St. ' FE 2-3612 Whole new lines of’ bras • based on the stretch stra|> are being brought out by some found ation manufacturers. It's one of the hottest sellers of all time, the - makers report. * Most People Rub Cats' Ears/ but I Pub People's Ears fympatfy'flpwm You can express your deepest sympathy without struggling over words —flowers say it so much better. Their * comfort will be remembered always. We send Sympathy flowers anywhere ttar ----BESE f? Aren't They -the Cat's Pajqmas? One picture Just led to an-other. The one oHj^ree little kittens at the lower left has been in the files for some time. As diversion for a hot afternoon the day before the Fourth of July, feline pets of some Pontiac area residents -are pictured. Readers may This Is an Invasion of Privacy/ and I Won't Stand for It Salmon? What Salmon? amuse themselves- by putting -their-own-captions in place . of the ones there. -Theindepen^ nature of the cat was never more evident than when the photog-' rapher1 war-ready to shoot. One, no doubt psychic, hid in the fruit cellar before Phil Webb’s arrival. Across the, top row: Pep-permint, shown with his distress Cindy, belong to the [ Lloyd D. Fays of Utica Road. Guinevere is the pampered You Mean She Actually Told You That? darling of the Howard McIntyres, Henry Clay Avenue. The snarling cat and the one directly below are the same animal and live in the Harry Eagleton residence on Exmoor Street. Letting the cat out of the bag are! Kathy and fiiliTor-ley of Delaware Drive. Johnny Hsu Is the son of Dr. and Mrs. 'John Hsu, State Hospital grounds. —The ear-rubbing tiger cat— belongs to Pontiac Press women’s editor Janet Odell. All other cats shown were, photographed at the Michigan Animal Rescue League Shelter on Featherstone Road. A Girl Can Always Rise Above Background, You jKnow Her Celebrations Are Apt to Be Costly By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAFf- A B B Y: If I’m wrong, please tell me and I’ll keep quiet.' Please don’t think I’m stingy, but I’ve been married ill years, have had five babies and I never gave any'sort of a party .where a gift was expected. We moved into a new hoine, too, and have entertained for our wedding anniversaries, but we invited only our immediate family. warming parties, and six baby showers. Why can’t people keep their celebrations to themselves? NO GIMMICKS DEAR NO* I GUK$$ THEY JUFT CAN’T REdIT SHAR- ING EVERYTHING WITH FRIEND!. DEAR ABBY: Speaking of unusual names, here is one I found in the Philadelphia phone book a few years ago— 1 ‘Wolfeschlegeisteinha use n* berger, Hubert B., Jr.” , d Sincerely, C.H. DEAR C. H.: Thank yog. He’s probably changed -his -4 name to "Wolfe” by how. And the woods are full of DEAR ABBY: Our little ipanclsoivwho-l^tix yearr old, lost three teeth last week, so we have been busy playing "Good Fairy.” »-(The child puts the tooth under his pillow at night, and during the night the /’Good Fairy” takes the tooth and leaves a dime.) >. , Color Television $ IIIAI^IAIITFIK Complete Stock of Radio Batteries TAPI RECORDERS . . ... $29.95 Up I /». yf Lt, Television and Radio 2A WpWWW Sales and Servlca Mfeh. T.K.H.A. N«. IIS* " ' “ TWO D,AltV DELIVERIES TO DETROIT AND * 1 Si INTISMIDIAII POINT! >v US7 W. Huron -v.1 V tit . 4 1 *7 ' ■/ .'Iv...kStj'i f VJ ' 1 V mm I m T • DEAR ABBY: I don’t suppose this will be news to the people of Texas, but When I read your column on unusual surnames I was reminded of the Texas governor whose name was HOQG. He named his two daughters UR A HOGG and IMA HOGG. * CLARENCE F. M. DEAR CLARENCE!' I know you aren’t feeding me a line , because no less than . 900 readers. Included those |uimes in thhlr odd ‘name round-up.'.■ fH Well, if "Ma," who la annoyed because her husband leaves his choppers” grinning at her from the top of the dresser, wants to play a cute trick on "Pe,”. she should take hie "choppers” and leave $3.20 In dimes in their place. She should tell him that the , ”Opod Fairy" thought he didn’t need them any more and took them. / Then when the Joke le aver sm could, present them to him ‘ in a Jeweled plajitlc box with a lid on It '-n available In any five-and-dime. „ , SENSE OF HUMOR Ms; rV ;■& iili THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 3,1963 .NINE' Tour in North Wedby Candlelight Lakeland United. Presby-terian Church was the setting for the recent candlelight vows of Linda Jean Cum* mings toCharlle CarltonLed-better. Rev. Roy Lambert officiated. The Orval F. Cummings of Whitfield^ Street and the Ly-man Ledbetters of Franklin, N. C., are parents of the couple. — imported Frendr lace, for , the bride featured, a crystal bouffant skirt with pleated j,ulle ending in a chapel train; A pearl tiara secured her French illusion, veil, and she held white carnations and lilies of the valley. Attending, their sister were Mrs. Harlan Bunion, honor matron, Sandra Cummings, plus the bridegroom’s sister Mrs. Willis Els, the latter , wefe^ SfldWBnalds. They wore identical blue taffeta sheaths With overskirts and carried white roses and blue-tipped white carnations. Debbie Lynn Runion was flower girL and Eddie Dills carried the rings. Dear Eunice:. 1 am making a sheath dress with an elastic drawstring at the waistline to form a bloused top. ° j Unfortunately, I didn't measure before I cut the buttonholes! for the elastic—and they are too low. Is there any way to rectify this mistake? Mrs. B. J. ML Dear Mrs. B. J. M.: You didn’t go into much construction details, but I’ve checked several patterns, and find most them have the casing for the elastic ending several inches on each side of the center front. m MRS. C. C. LEDBETTER with Best man was Willis Dills. FOR YOUR WEDDING... Whether If. planned (or day-time or evening.. • fermal or (tmMermal, yew’ll find the parf.ctattire In «ur outstanding^ collodion. Correct In every detail... la complement your lovely bride an thlo vorylmportent doyr-And ~yow'l dlieever H'i to e RANDOLPH SK- Barmnod CUSTOM TAILORS UNIFORMS 908 W. Huron FE 2-2300 Harlan Runion seated guests itlrTom Roman.----- After a reception in the VFW Hall, Walton Boulevard, the newlyweds left for a northern Michigan hone yJ moon. They will live in Drayton Plains. If this Is like your pattern, make the buttonholes and casing Jn die exact spot that looks best oh you. Make two email, faced tabs and attach them Just above the end of the casing at each U0er, - » v:7V:' ' They must be long enough to cover your original buttonholes. Sew them down at this point, attach a small button at the point of each tab, and'run your'belt through them and tie at-the center front. This might be more attractive than the, original pattern.— Clever details often are the result of a small mistake here toere, you know the old saying, “necessity is the mother of Invention." Layers of Water Stop Bath Steam When running arlwsTbatfif you can prevent steaming,up the bathroom and uncurling feminine hairdos by first covering the tub with a layer of cold'water, and then adding hot water, or a mixture of both, until you get the temperature and depth you prefer. Dear Eunice Farmer: “When I make a pleated skirt, the pleats always spread at the hips. Is it possible to make a pleated skirt that will lie smooth at the hips? '• Mrs. S. S. „ -ir ★ Dear Mrs. S. S.: You are not allowing enough fabric at the hip line. When you have completed the pleating, it must lie flat and measure slightly more than your hip measurement. . The additional width is held at the walitllne hy making the pieats deeper, or, In the case ef a box-pleated skirt, darts between eachgleat,.....• •• - - ‘. The usual amount of fabric needed for a skirt of this type is three times the hip; measurement. Suede Is Coming Look for subde to come on strong ... in hand stitched coats and suits for fall. Professional ,,r PERMANENTS Styled as YOU Like Itl HAIRCUTTINO — TINTS IMPERIAL BEAUTY^ALON 219 Auburn Ave. FE 4-2878 No Appointment Neceuaiy Dear Etlnice: How can I sew straight hem tape around the curved edge of a facing at the neckline of dresses? My hem tape Will never lie flit. Mrs. R. M. .• • ft ft ir_____________________“______________— j Dear Mrs. R. M.; Wet the hem tape and iron it dry. As you press, stretch the outer edge in a semicircle and ease in the j ■ 1 ■■ M ! SAM anrfWAiilR J Dalicloue Sautana J S Miami lain ShOMM S CAREER GIRL Open 9:30 a.m. la 9 p.m. 1 Early Week Special! 1 BUDGET WAVE ...... ■ I CALUE’S beauty shop *6“ 116 North Perry to .. lot GRESHAM iron out your oloaning prdblomt! Summer fun begins with a crisp, fresh-as-new look* ing wardrobe. Only professional drycleaning through our expert cleaning processes can utnre you,, confidence you’ll look your flues! wherever you go. Get, off tore good Hart and call Greihamr for convenient pickup and delivery service. 605 OAKLAND AVE» FE 4-2579 SEW SIMPLE Eunice Farmer m iJJis-Reid-Vows Sa by Candlelight ■, Wed by candlelight recently in the Joslyn Avenue United Presbyterian Church were Judy Ann Reid and James Douglas Willis, with Rev. Edmond Watkins officiating. Daughter jof the Frank W, Reids, East Columbia Street, foe bride chose whiterRschelle lace and tulle over taffeta, with chap-el train. Nylon illusion veiling and a cascade-of white roses and Carnations completed her ensemble. Nancy Reid, her sister’s honor maid and bridesmaids "Mrs. Larry Threet, Janie McEachero and Dianne Hunter, wore orchid and white embroidered nylon organdy. Their bouquets were orchid carnations. Flowergirl a n d ringbearer were Debbie Gillott and Michael Carrie. /■ Bill Willis stood as best man for'his brother. Their parents are Mr, and Mrs. Bill D. Willis of Niagara Street. The bride's brother Frank Reid ushered with Larry Fisher and Roy Mize. The couple, left for a northern honeymoon after a reception in thw UAW Hall, Baldwin Avenue. They will live in Pontiac. mrnrn COOKIE CUTTERS I For my granddaughter’s play clothes, I use the animal I designs from cookie cutters as decorations. Outline them on I contrasting fabric, cut them out and applique then to The i play clothes. -,/ I I use my zig-zag attachment and they really turn out I well Bells, hearts, trees; ete., can also be used. I Mrs. Elmer Arthras, St. Charted, Mo., Is this week’s % winner of a Tailor Trix pressing board with this, clever sug-4 gestion. ’ Your hem tape will now follow the contour of any curved edge and should lie nice and flat. ANY SUGGESTIONS? —7 Several readers have asked for directions for making roses out ■jof ribbon. The best directions will btrawardeTT Tailor Trlxp ing boat'd. YOUR SEWING GLOSSARY: Topstitching: The use of thread as a trimming. This stitching could be on the edge or almost any distance’from the edge and is usually done with silk buttonhole twist. ....ir - ★ ★ If you’re making summer garments that require thin shoulder straps, send, a self-addressed, stamped envelope and 10 cents for my pamphlet, “Spaghetti Straps and Rope Belth,” Address Eunice Farmer, In care of The Pontiac Press. ——------- Lose Weight-Keep Beauty Perhaps the resolution most often made .and the hardest to keep is when you decide to lose those extra pounds. Of course any serious diet should be prescribed by a physician so that you maintain your health as you lose weight. You will find, however, that when you are dieting, your skin tends to become dehydrated from lack of moisture and lubrication. To maintain your beauty, therefore, extra precaution mu^t be taken in the care of your skin. AVC ivoid web-like wrirtkles through the use of an active moisturizing lotion and a cream that will act as a cup of youth for your skin. If you apply these moisturizers just before retiring, and use the active moisturizing lotion before applying your make-up, your akin will be assured the necessary and important-24-hour lubrication and moisturization and it will look lovely, not onjy while you reduce, but for the years to come. Because’weduclng breaks down the fat mid often leaves the muscles withobt tone, a very important accompaniment to dieting is exercise for your face is well as your body. At every Opportune moment, when no one is looklhg, pull your face and grimace In the mirror. Work every muscle hard until your face tingles and you will revitalize and strengthen muscles which you seldom use. Cute Container for Odds 'n Ends A pretty pitcher or china mug makes a decorative con-.tainer for pencils, pens and rubber bands. Wqx Regularly Wax wood floors every six to eight months. : Eraser Cleaner-far Children Eraser cleaner for school' children can be had by gluing a square of sandpaper on the back of a notebook. REDUCE EAT and LOSE TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! EASIER TO TAKE AND MORE EFFECTIVE THAN THE POWDERED AND LIQUID FOOD SUPPLEMENT, AND COSTS LESS INCLUDING CAPSULES SUITED TO YOU INDIVIDUALLY BY Lit. PHYSICIAN, M. D, NO GASTRITIS OR IRREGULARITY WITH-MEDIC-WAY CAPS. DON'T DIET — IUST EAT! AS THOUSANDS HAVE DONE. YOU CANf LOSE 5, 50 OR 100 LBS. AND KEER4TOFFJ - MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 -MnSrUmSD7WTtLfS OFFICES IN OAKLAND AND WAYNI COUNTIES—ONE IN MIRACLE MILE Rainy-Day FurT^ for Kids at Home Hold a hat-making contest as a rainy, day activity for -children. Materials needed: scissors, paste, feathers, paper plates and doilies, discarded veils, flowers, pins, beads and crepe paper. Award a small prize to the ’one who designs the most attractive hat.---- Sickroom Idea for a Child A convalescent child may be entertained by giving him a large needle, threaded with heavy cord, and a box of buttons. Let him sort and string together all buttons of the same six and cblor. i^Keumade nude heel 82 N, Saginaw St. BUTTERMI1K T^Cl^ . 7swGet ..; mellow ... a great summer sip-along. Dual ThermaL0QTifiDr^suresllTirBeatroHreslwess4n-every glassful. Order a quart today. # Staple £ea( DAIRY 20 E. HOWARD ST. FE 4-2547 Prptect Woolens . Wool should be treated for moth protection — Wow. STEREO HI-FI CONSOLE AT 60 EXTRA $^98 Far Album IS ALL YOU PAY G08T Ip Mtmlwrt 2 Year Mombarthipe 2 Albums-*4 Albums—6 Albums Pit Month Choose the Record Library You Desire— STIRIO HI-FI Dollvorod Immodiately! AMERICAN RECORD LIBRARY 15,Wait lowrence, Pontiac , Rhone 114-7,600 r*i*>*'* ir ir irit'ir.ir'icitiridiCrkfkMiriririr. * *;*■ ** ftft’fr’A'ft.'AbM: t«% TO 50* PRE-MOVING SOLE. -r. We are moving to Hammond Lake Estate, between Middlebelt and Telegraph on the corner of Birchland and Orchard Lake Road. Must Move All Merchandise Sofas, Tables, Lamps, Chairs, Dining Room Suites, Bedroom Suites Come in Early for Best Selection Free Parking In Hear and Side of Store ★ CLAYTON’S ★ Quality l\urnUure Priced Riffht! 3065 Orchard Lake Hd. Phone 682-1100 ( OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS TILL 9 P.M. * FREE PARKING ift REAR AND SIDE" OF STORE Z imma A 4:'V ■i.di'hKiw; v,V'WvV i •viH , A v,' Vi M h JAMAICA SETS 60 FOURTH... AND SAVE IN SPARTAN'S SPECTACULAR SAVINGS SALE! »f 1 Ladies'. Terrific! ] SR*- SEAMLESS 45-PIECE | Sfe; ! NYLONS DINNERWARE |i 34” 088 SET ,j RR Beautiful | 4R . . Patterns ' ■ : I • Moth or Plain • Sixes 8 Vi to 11* ! • First Quality *> Sylvania and | Whispering Rose J - mi Beautiful 4-Pc. 0$fM - ’•/i ' wr»P %gj 10-Lb. Bags ! c CHINA PLACE CHARCOAL 1 SETTING BRIQUETTES f 09* SET Excellent Starter Set 50daily...SUNDAY 12 noon to 7 p.m. " CORNER of DIXIE HIGHWAY & TELEGRAPH ROAD IN PONTIAC */. ‘ 4th OF JULY SjrORI HOURS: 9:30 AM, TO 7 PM, .. 1 v ‘ v.*. ‘.A ^v. \ m 11 gONTIAC PRESS .WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1068 JPONTIAC, MldHIGANr ELEVEN ontinue Hex on liger Batters Twins Score 7-4 Decision Over Bengals U.Stigman 17th Lefty to Beat Detroit in Only Half Season DETROIT W— Among Th e multitude of problems Charlie Dressen Inherited from Bob Schefflng when the Tigers changed managers is one that defies all baseballvlogic: Why are the Tigers, dominated, by right-handed batters, push-: ... overs for leftrhanded_pitching? - ~ The accepted principle is that right-handed hitters do better . against southpaws and vice versa. But the Tigers were beaten last night for the 17th time by a left hander, losing 7*4 to Dick Stlgmtfn and the Minneso-ta Twins. Detroit has beaten ~ left handers only twice — and the season is nearing the halfway point. Against right Zanders th e Tigers arr27^r»lmast^500. The imbalance'of these statistics is something that Scheffing was unable to'exptoto. Now Dressen, despite his 45 years in base-bal, is at a loss to discover the reason for the 2-17 failure against southpaws. . * .(‘We’ve got some pretty good right-handed hitters here — Al Kaline, Rocky Colavito and my two catchers, Bill Freehan and Gus Triandos. With them the record should be better left-handed pitching.” * The big reason for the Twins’ victory -r- their eighth straight-* . was th'ey hit their homers with ’ men on base. The Tigers had mi haae, too, but not when the homers were hit. TWO-RtJN HOMER Bob Allison clouted a two-run homer in the third when the Twins broke a 1-1 tie with three runs. Jimmy Hall belted a three- Gale VII Sinks in Gold Cup Try ms&J&JKKtmSfc Not* t • DETROIT (UPI) — Despite craft entered in the race at 9,100 nearly ideal weather_cbnditions|poands, nosed, to the bottom lad 7 for the past two days, only four remained there as other hydro-boats,have qualified so far.to race 'planes took tothecourse in their in the Gold Cup next Sunday, in- qualification attempts. .A boat must average at least - 90 miles an hour for three laps --- to qualify in the race Sunday. The boats to make it so far* were Miss Thriftway, Miss US-5, driven by Don Wilson; Don Mus-son’s Miss Bardahl and Mariner II driven by Fred Alter. Alter’s boat qualified seconds before the . 1 p.m. deadline at a slow speed of 96.8 mites/'aiT hour, Muncey'turned "in the fastest lutes withBraves’. star ter Warren.ersouL front by. one-half game; ter, 45, trying to make a c^'Mi^^riftwav8^ Qnalin iho 19.tfonr.nlrl loft.hanrlar ntrar iho PoVrliribld sirlfVv fho ibirrl. hark flftpr hpltlff in SPmi-TP.tirP- ^ Mays Ends Long Pitchmg Battle eluding last year’s winner i Thriftway, piloted by Bill Mtoi-] eey: ''„ - ..Time trials for qualification on the Detroit River course off Belle Isle resumed today. Two-time cup winner.Danny Fostei; escaped serious injury yesterday when his hydroplane, Gale VII, threw ,a propeller and sank in 28 feet of water. . The accident happened, as Fos- ut»; A DOUBLE TROUBLE - Detroit Tiger Norm C&ph has double trouble waiting for him as he tries jp slide into .second base. Second baseman JohnTtor-y4-topk4he throw from shortstop Zoilo Vcrsalle and doubled Bubba Phillips at first. The Twins won thegame,7-4. V -:j mjj The Associated Press , ,,in, ..y, ,»u. ■...... —yuvnu.. ..., , --v—© Not* even Carl Hubbell would Spahn, the 42-year-oid left-hander, {over the Cardinals, with the third- back after being in sCmi-retire-] .. . . . .. , deny that the Giants have a newThen Willie Mays hit one pqt of place GiAnts another one-half'ment for seyen years^roaFed out j - * ★ ★ Meal Ticket—Juan Mariehal. Candl&tick park with one out in game back; FouM-pIace 'Cincin-'of the second turn on the three-) . Rardahl’s three Ian aver- 1................................W* ™ ,e: EARLY SPEED ; % slightly higher than Muncey's. Foster was hitUng a speed of Mueson turned in the fastest Houston8 * 8 64 c^ecsl0n .over nearly 100 miles an hour as he;three-tap average with a 113.849 ' ^ ^ ~r [hit the back straightaway oppo- mark. The fifth-Dlace Chicano Cubs 8ite the Pits* ^ the ProP ftew ne nun Place ^‘^^“^Joff and wentthroueh both Exactly 30 years—to the day—jthe last Of the 16th, bringing*a affer Hubbeii, thoT>riginal Mealfdrahratte and TSqdden ending to Ticket, pitehed bis greatest’game jone of baseball’s greatest pitch-by hurling the* Giants to a 1-0; | tog battles. 18-inning triumph, over St, Louis, LONG STRUGGLE Marichal came up with in amaz-| The struggle stole the National ingly similar performance in a 1-01 League spotlight from the Los An- Hander who earlier -this" season dale .five-hit pitching pitched a no-hitter, battled into Fairly’s run-scoring single, the night for 4 hours and 10 min-1 The triumph moved the Dodg- yyy r—;-,r—-** —> -■-,ilTn1minH r , ■ ^T~utyoff -and WenMhrough both the ^funcey is generally regarded" 16-inning victory over Milwaukee | ge |es Dodgers, who took over first uowneq tnc New York Mets 4-Ijuun an(, Foster cot wet onlv na fh“ oddUU fa„nri*<> ♦© «,i« th© Tuesday night. • place from St. Louis by beating g* Pittsburgh edged Philedelphia \ : hjs knees ,n # quic£ rescue * Marichal, a strong-armed right-[the Cardinals 1-O on Don Drys- i~L- Maridfal. bringing his record to!— !l3-3 with his ninth straight vie- Gale VII, the biggest as the odds-on favorite to win the $10,000 first prize and tie Gar Woods’ record ot five triumphs in the Gold Cup. , Rookie Hurlers Shine in AL — Itory. scattered eight Kits, and! 1 . struck-out 10r Mays-saved him! Cpfe Davtann Mark jin the fourth inning with "a rifle 0GT5 ua/Tono /v*arK. throw from center field that cut' ___down Norm Larker at the platp r in the sixth. Kaline got toe Tigers ahead 1*0 with his 17th homer , in the first; Billy Bruton slapped a By The Associated Press Fastballing young Al Downing fired the New York Yankees along with a sparkling one-hit pitching gem, and teen-aged right-hander Dave Morehead pulled the Boston Red Sox out of a spin with a two-hitter. But the Minnesota Twins flexed batting muscle to keep their drive | going in the American League] Tuesday night. Downing allowed ORly a bouncing single up the middle by Ca* milo Carreon with two out in the seventh inning in pitching the pace-setting Yankees to their fifth straight victory, a 3-0 triumph over the Chicago White Sox. The 19-year-pld Morehead lost! his nchhirmwTrermitfteid’s] second victory ’in seven games this year with the White Sox and in the process defeated Ray Herbert, who had shut them out twice previously. Tony Kubek singled across the first Yankee run in the third and Hector Lopez gave Downing some working room with two-run. homer in the fifth. Downing, winner in three bf,year-old St. toul) OMpB fw si w* Ans«l*» (Kouf»* Tw)i nlWt , • ' f ItMlkoi .(L4mut«T4.4) it, s*n Fr»n- (tatVstl . >•» j»‘ »>«••«" N«« ' *l Chl<,*E° Only |tmu uhtdulod & Country while Martin , Swas unset bv Elks Jerry Meger had a single, was upsei ay r*msi. .. . ... . «■ b A Daniels, whose only two victories this season are over the Athletics, turned in his Jfirst complete game in nine starts." The Senators settled things against loser Orlando Pena with three unearned runs in the fifth on three Kansas City First Victory for Mrs. Hume double and triple and Frank Au-l Mr8 John Hurae, past Women’s gust threo singles to lead theDlstrict Qolf Association cham- In the "C" circuit, Berry pushed its lead to one full game by topping Jet Bar, 11*10. The other loop contest ended a 1541 HftHtmoro auccess for Bud ti Lou’s Bar over Local 653. ’larrey Aveslan was the big show for Arro, Hit right-hander backed his ll-strlktont hurling with a single—double-home run performance /it the winners’ offense. Spencer gained a two-game lead in the township B league when it whipped Westside Lanes, 6-2. Trailing 2-1 to the fourth, the went on top when Harry Dearborn rapped a two-run toslde-the-park homer. Jack Nelson pitched O five-hitter for the victory. Lakeland Pharmacy -won Its His homer was a three-run shot In the fifth Inning that put the contest out of reach. Elks spotted Martin’s five runs In the first Inntog.but came back wlt)i a five spot of its own in the final toning to gain the win. j “ Chuck Graves and Jack Avery bom had lead off homfere for the winners. Avery’s came In the , plon, has been runnerup In WDGA. activities consistently this season.1 She finally shed the bridesmaid i role and won her first WDGA weekly tournament yesterday at! Grosse He with a 89-41—80., j Last weekend she was runnerup to the 54-hdle medal play tournament to Susie LeClair. Mrs. Le-( Clair wasn’t in the field yesterday. Runnersup yesterday was-Mrs. fourth straight to top "C” loop by Dorothy Thompson of Oakland beatfng Rockcote Paint, 14-4. Hills and Mrs, Bruce Hllkene of Vern Cork, capped the game with Indlanwood with 82’s. a Uiree-run circuit clout In the 41!tt,T'la.a,IT3»-4i-w bottom of the f(fth that ended the mn/''0ln,,*0n' .* contest on the ten-run rule. ‘ H” 8Lm*.iHX He had a single, two doubles j and the homer good for six rbi's to the contest. , v; A Class C twin bill tonight will conclude this week’s league play final toning and ignited the win- at the Dfaytbn Plains park. Mm. K. 0. Mtroutrdl, Qoytnlo 4)4 Mix* Naiioy Bmlih, n*»ch Orov« <1-4 Mm Robert Otmblx, Loohmoor 40-4 re. Fronk Compete, Oroeee Oroieejn* .. .... N. T. Seniorrt, Beooh Ol Re 44-48—88 CIO 4341—14 ... EVERY DEAL A STEAL!!! tnttnn DODGE 211 South Saginaw FE 8-4541 •JSL. i »s, pBBBpp' wlgp ’63 DODGE This beautiful, luxurious Dodge ia priced right down, with Ford and Chevrolet. Come get thp ,year's, biggest bargains! Easy terms! smart> way to buy... two at a timw Right now, many stores are featuring speoiai "Pick a PaiP drsplay produots... including Budweiser. KINO Of MIN* ANHiUKK BUSCH, INC. • IT. LOUIS • blWAHK. 10S ANfltltS • 1 TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1968 Has Spine In jury SEATTLE (AP)—Brian Stern berg, who has pole vaulted higher than any other athlete in the .world, lay partially: paralyzed in a hospital, today as the result of an accident while working out on friends, teachers and strangers a trampoline. Sternberg, whose 16 foot, 8 inch vault is periding a? a world record, was hurt Tuesday night as he practiced With the University of-Washington gymnastics team. .He is rated as one of the country's top trampoline performers. Doctors said X-rays indicated A dislocation of the ceyvicle vertebra and possible damage to the spinal cord. They described the injury as critical, but ruled ouf immediate surgery. NECK BROKEN Doctors would not say .'Sternberg’s neck was broken, but did gathered to talk about one of the school’s most .popular and. most famous-athletes; not- discount the possibility of 8| fracture in the intricate series of bones involved. Sternberg was placed in traction, while on the hushed campus flhny the Outlet Trail USED Good Quality $088 ■ Good Selection £ CITY m £ Perry at Paddock FE 8 0900 J modest, personable blond, Sternberg set the pending world record at the Compton Invitational meet June 7. He first conquered the 16-foot barrier at Milwaukee last March when-he soared 16-3V4. He cleared 16-5 in April and 16-7 two weeks before his. world record mark. Only a sophomore this past season, Sternberg never was defeated. „ Bob-Hall, another Washington gymnastics star, was working viltLStembergwhenthe^accident lappeped. He' said Sternberg was doing a double-back somersault - pjwith. a full twist when he lost mo-Bmentum and fell, partly on his -neck and shoulder. rg knew he was ly hurt. Hall said, and told Hall not to move him. Help'was summoned and the entire 'trampoline was taken to the university hospital. Sternberg was conscious p throughout. |l The Washington star was to 'ihave competed for the United ^States in Russia later this month, Pink Salmon Caught in Lake Superior's Keweenaw Bay New Fish Mystery for Experts 121 WAYNE n FE 4-4900 ---ImVwtmH ofiomnnm Pontbe----- Behind FedrnnTt Dept. Store Open Weekday* 9-5:30 -3af.8-4t30 Ne-sooner had the monkfish mystery of Lake St. (Hair started to die down, then along came, another problem: How did a pink salmon get into.._Lake Superior? According lo Dr. Gerald Cooper, director of the Institute for | Fisheries Research in Ann Arbor, a fish caught recently off the month of Falls Creek river in, Keweenaw Bay was .a pink salmon. * Dr. Cooper, who sent his i the fish to the Con- servation Department, said the asms in pink salmon only spai fresh water. Experts are now trying-to determine where the fish came from, other than a trip via the St. Lawrence Seaway. Two Oakldbd County ja£es are scheduled to be stocked by the Conservation ' Department this month. (i Grass Lake! will. become the new home for 10,000 largemouth black bass fingerlings. Over 20,000 young walleyes tire to be planted in White Lake. A total of *86,100 targe-mouth bass; northern pike, walleyes and mnskies are to be released in 28 lakes around the state. All the releases will be from th& department’s Wolf Lake fish hatchery. Except in the case of largemouth bass, planting stock has been reared froth eggs collected during the spring spawning season. The Macomb County Kennel Club’s all-breed dog show and obedience trial will be Sunday at the American Legion ball in Utica. Obedience sporting and working dogs will be judged outdoors. Mrs. Karl H. Greimel, Rochester, and B. W. Ziessow, Frank-are among the . judges the licensed show. Ziessow will judge breeds and the sporting group. Mrs. Greimel will judge obedience. The show is unbenched. mean-ing the dogs can be removed from the grounds once eliminated, and is scheduled to run from 8 a. m. to 8 p, m. Work being complete at Pontiac municipal airport has manager Homer Hoskins hoping that a winter' flying hazard will be eliminated. 'We removed a stand of small trees near the terminal building deer were using quring the' winter,” Hoskins said. “The deer would move in on us and M.G., Clippers Post Easy 'A' Victories The "Clippers and M. G. Collision posted big innings to coast j to victories in a Class A baseball doubleheader last night at Jaycee No. 2 diamond. REBUILT «ENGINESa wHBmrnmm. Fast 1 Quality Work AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSIONS OUR SPECIALTY — Motor Exchange — 401 S. Saginaw St. FE 3-74I2v | The league leading Glii. had a six-run second inning to down Local 594, 10-4; and M. G. scored six times in the third and eight more in the fifth to upset Talbott Lumber, 16-3. The pace setters'pushed their loop advantage to one -full game with the aid of three runs batted in by Stephen Haynes. Felix Brooks boosted his batting average over .500 with two hits in three attempts. There were too many Lam-pheres for Talbott which lost its third game in eight starts, two of them to the Collision nine. Dick Lamphere hurled a five-hitter and whiffed six. Truemaif and Larry Lamphere each singled three times. * Action among the Class D and E league teams was highlighted by a sterling pitcher's duel between Cranbrook’s Bill Price and Rochester’s Mike Konley in “D’ Play- The latter made off with a 2-1 triumph when his team pushed acrosi-twajcuns in the sixth inning without a hit.___A walk, a hit batman, two sacrifices anS^ error were the undoing of Price who permitted four hits. Other “D” scores saw St. Fred’s Larry Walter onthlt the Class—Rseofes-say Eastern Hi-Y take the Braves, 13-0, Pontiac Boys’ Club beat Oxford, 10-7, Lakeland A. C..top Great Lakes Giants, -11-7, and the Pontiac Merchants whipped Cass Lake, 9-2. M.O. COLL. (I || Aly 2b , 3 2 1 Crawford 3b 1 __________„ 4 3 1 Dabbs s> Buehey If----3 11 Offlctr « 4 3 1 Powell lb 3 0 i _ | Hancock If ........| .33 Blron p-rf Chedlater 3b 1 I 4 F.John'n rf-o ra-baae hit* — Triplet! Marcum. ...... Batted In—Buihey (3), T. Lamphere (t), Lily, R. Lamphere. Kind, Novell; Gilmore (|), Craig. Winning Pltoher—B. Lamphere. Losing Pitcher— Duffey. ‘ LINS sooat M. a. OoUlelon ........0M *3—15 14 I alkoll l umber .......000 M— 1(4 Oliver Biiick leam In a 16-6 win and Pontiac Optimists take Arnold Drugs, 7-4. Walter had three safeties, permitted only two by the.losers and fanned nine. Smallmouth bass are hitting very well In Southern Like St. Clair. Fishing on grea lakes has just about been nil during the day because of the high temperatures and very little breeze. Anglers are getting out early in the morning and during the evening. LOCAL 1*4 (4) _______ PL*, ff Stephana of 3 3 1 Kelly of 3 3 Brooks rf 3 2 3 Taylor If 4 1 “—lUUh 4 3 1 I.ovcll 3b 3 0 4 12 Bongo ' 30 3 3 1 Colo pr 0 0 1 0 1 Heaton lb 3 0 4 0 1 Woodhull rf 3 0 lio Woodmoro 3b 2 o 10 0 Abel p 0 0 0 0 0 Qorhard p 3 0 DougMs^lf nderaon p Hay nee smi Irooks, Kel-ia Batted In Homo Bun*-jTaylor, i_______ ____ ~ —*1 <3>. Honchell (3), Douglas, -liar; Taylor (8), Borg. Win- Clipper; A place fo£ Evcnythui^ Idoal building* for iforing household item*, garden tools Olid wheeled good*. ‘ Smartly designed — dur- . able construction. Pro-auomblod doors on piano hlngot. Portable, limply, oatily assembled * Primo painted for oaiy application of your own choice of flnioh color. All units shipped knocked down In convgated carton*. Horses to lnvade Romeo Overall ilmi 60” x 84” x 76” high. Wide double door opening—75” jvlde > 66” high, Shipping weight: 330-lb*. Ilardbmrd floor oplionsl: Ship. Wt. 60-lb*. The Romeo Rotary Club will Sponsor its-- fifth annual Horse Show tomorrow at tho Romeo Golf and Country Club.-| Activities will begin at 9 a.m. I with a special 4-H event featuring saddle clubs from several counties. The winner of the 4-H exhibition will pe awarded the Royal 'Holt Memorial Trophy., The horse show will feature 16 money classes and two trophy classes. As an added feature, Jim Jones will present a dressage exhibition on Miss Prince. The Lapeer County Sheriff’s Posse will also make an appearanceduring the intermission, performing a drill exhibition. The ahow is approved by the Eastern Michigan Horseman’s Association and a number of the events (qualify for points in their annual competition. Cut camping and travel aoitt * with tho now. compact “STAR" CAMP TRAILER Avdifafifi Only Through STAR CAMPER MFG. <3. Mayka* xd.. Hr.'-.- then run across the runway when a plane was either landing or taking off.” The trees were growing along the Whitfield drain and in order complete the removal, and also do some needed repair work on the drain, a small pond was formed. . Leaders in The iTess Big Fisn Derby remain the same: Pike—11 pounds 9 dances; black bass—5 pounds 9,ounces; blaegill—1 pound 8 ounces; rainbow „ jrout-6 pounds 3 ounces. The Derby is open to all residents of Oakland County.1* The fish must be caught in county waters other than private, commercial, Lakes Angelus and Sherwood. BiueglUs are in deep water again signaling the beginning of cricket fishing. Best bets for gills are Union, Crotched, Greens, Big Silver, Elizabeth and Brendel Lakes.____________ Solunar Tables The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed below, has been taken from John Alden Knight’s Solunar Tables. Plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in good cover during these times, if you; wish to find the best sport that each day has to offer*. A.M. lor M.Joi ) 3:40 Today , Thursday Friday . Saturday 1:30 1:13 r 1:10 1:40 Titan Gridder Sign* BUFFALO, N. Y. flJPD - The American Football League Buf- falo Bills today signed former University of Detroit center Frank Jackunaa to a 1968 contract. ; A SIGN ROAD YOU ^OSED/^y NEVER SEE AAA Travel Bulletins constantly keep Auto Club travel counselors up-to-date on road construction areas on the major highways all ina Cs over the United States and Canada. This information is passed dong to you~ihHfoe form of a routing to and from your destination-that by-paaaes detour areas.___ Up-to-the-minute highway information's just a part Of our service to you as an Apto —Club member. Stop in to see us soon! AUTOMOBILE CLUB VISIT OR PHONI YOUR NIARIST OPFICI H. I- HIUMANN, MOR. ;■ 76 WILLIAMS ST. — FI 5-4ISI R. A. Warken, 111-1515 K. 0. Tynan, tlLllll B. fc. Taft, FIS 3-3513 H. W. M«N*ll»y, OL^MWl C, B. Wlleon. *35-3531 J**k House, FE 5-35lt 'C. B. Bara*. PB 3-318* - O. W. Zlefler, SB 4-14*3 K. V. Keener (Holly) D. B, Allen, 6*5-1840 tee Uni page of loeol phene Mek* for UNITED TIRE SERVICE VACATION TIRE TIRES MOUNTED FREE Open Mow, (hiy fH. 8 lo 9., Sat. 8 to 6-Cloied Sun. UNITED TIRE SERVICE “WHERE PRICES ARE DISCOUNTED-NOT QUALITY" 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Alt-Steel Outdoor Storage Cabinets Mud«l K-SO2-60” * 82” x SOW' bliih, - Slti Model K-6-32-72" x 82" x 56 Vk'* Itiftlt, - Ship lluuhlr doom with full Icrigtli pimm liiiipt--. Fiiirli mmlel liit-lu*a. i (May 31 to June 91): Better afiLnrafmffi juee. Cycle I* better for REST-INO than Jor IfBSJSflNO. Malta plana, .... Eopli ana YmW“— jtllnt hop)* and ambition*. _ foe elfinl dltooverl** today. gl'loate V'-”" anecl *potll(W* I ilatlnn. Avoid , * H deny yourtelf- CEO ( Jfriy »_ to,. A.. .... SIMPLICITY. Don't complicate plana bv Making ehortoute. Tajtr route. Good lunar aar" is*' AppIlea Oapeolally to family mem-younier peraon*. A imlle oao * tremely frenlr, ^ v OKNnnAl, 'mtNDBNOIttSi1 New* 00n-‘ To/help get such a lad off dead center, have him undergo tests at the local, state employment office to determine his aptitude for jobs available. The experts may discuss with him the educational requirements for sueeess in various fields. This at least will give him; a' clear picture, of what he faces in the work world. OUTSIDER MAY HELP Military recruiting offices have tests that he can take. They will give him a picture of the educational requirements for hundreds of training programs. For example, the Air Force is looking for bovs who have taken courses in machine shop, matEematlcs and possibly electricity and chemistry, Jto serve in direst support systems on air base/ : Of 'course the teener, with. his habit of rejecting all plans offered - for the future, may still reject the possible alternatives. . So he says “L haven’t decided yet” when asked what he is going to do with himself. The wise parent will not accept this as an answer. If you have trouble talking to the boy—and many a parent allows himself to drift into such a situation—it may help to get another respected adult in on -th* act.. (il|W*»ili*l»m) By Neal Adame ./ THE BERRYS DRIFT MARLO By Carl Grubert IT WAS NOTHING SERIOUS. HE JUST FELL OFF • ^FHESWING... 1 n mm 9+CHRDSeMe4* Q—The bidding has been: South i Wert North li 1 * Pass 2 ¥ Pa 8N.T- Pass 3V Pass f.. You, South, hold: *A«8iSB ¥18 8 4KQ7 *K8« What do yon doT A—Pass or bid four hearts, aU depends on how MOaervai your partner is. TODAY'S QUESTION Instead of bidding three hearts your partner bids three elubs over your two no-trump* What do you dof By Dr. I. M. Levitt, Tom Cooke and Phil Evans SOMETHING® ’WORRYING By Y. T Hamlin We THOUGHT PERHAPS THE JOB WE HAVE IN MINP ^ MIGHT BE BENEATH ( COUU> THE DIGNITY OP BE...WHA1 WHATS YOUR 1 1 HO0N? FEEUNG ' V 3PE-ABOUTLUNARn EXPLORATION?, ..I PID THAT J BUT THIS JS YEARS J/A PIPPERENT AGO/ X PROPOSITION IT'S A PRACTICAL ACTUALLY, OUR APPLICATION OP INTEREST IS OSCAR'S SLACK - HE PROJECTION LIGHT TO MISSILE ITSELF NOT PROJECTION------- CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner "But if there were such a thing as a time machine, I’d like to go b|ck to the good old days!” BOARDING HOUSE <2UANOARV/ MY TAiLO PETTIFO<&6SR HAS M& CORMEffEP LIKE A CAN^.' X HAVE RACKED MV ' INGENUITY FOR A WAY TO ESCAPE MIS VlSE.'-^ ITS Beyond MyoNoeRSTANo-in<3 why x became so GENEROUS AS TO SPONSOR t A TOTAL STRANSERFORA KSU1T OF CLOTHES/ WONDER WHY YOUR. TREASURE-HIDING ANCESTOR NEVER TOOK THAT FINAL LOAD O’ f •GOLDTO HIS HIDING. ■■■ -----RITA? / MAVBB HE ■ ^ WAS CAUGHT WITH HIS NSXT TO ' T LOAD, KILLED! MORTY MEEKLE \ - . By Dick Cavalli NOUteEAtWAV^ COMPLAINING TO M& ABOUT THE BILLS' SOU &£^6HOXD KELP= ■ ROLLON THE RICH KID, IS OOINQ ON ANOTHER VACATION AGAIN ______ OUT OUR WAY OH* ROLLD— WHERE ARE YOU PLANNING- TO GO THIS TIME ? ■ firm By Charles Kuhn DONALb DUCK By Wait Disney I AT s ;■* • V THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY; JULY 3, 1963 / MARKETS < Thefollowing are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and. sold by them in wholesale package lots, Quotations are furnished by the-Detroit Bureau of-Markets .us olj noon Monday. Produce 1st Hour Trades Top Million Shares Oils,Airlines Garn i ^EWYORITCAPj — Oils andjthan-seasonal gain for construe-[proxy fight.rumors, carriecTover some airliries were strong as the lion outlays in June as well asj?rom the previous session and ap-I stotk Tnarket continued to “rally word that JBethlehem and seven |Peared to stimulate buying in a word that/Bethlehem and seven Pear«» to stimulate early this afternoon_in- active other been'fTStiy a ■ dieted cm price-fixing charges.110” was «P near y a The steel end huilding material P0^- Tidewater was particularly $J Stocks carried through their re- The steel and building material on ■ ^ ^ -------o cAccinq issues _ were mixed, however, a showing no particular reaction. i ■ « covery . of .the. previous session • sojand first-hour trading topped a Ijo million shares for the first time $5 5o in several sessions. Broccoli, do:, bch. Cabbage, red. bu. . Cabbage, curly., bch. CabMge, standard, b Cauliflower, .doz. .Celery, doi. stalks sof Brokers regarded .the fise as a Big Three Motors, chemicals, rails, utilities, tobaccos, electrical equipments, drugs, farm imple- ;8!resumption of the “technicaljments, and mdil order-retails Ij. bounce” whicli brought a sharp'were mostly higher Parsley! curly, b Potatoes, M-Ib, Rhubarb, bob. ........... Squash. Italian. Mi bu. Squash, Summer. " *■•• ,oo rise yesterday after , the market !.i i sojhad dropped low enough to reach ! i!» a generally anticipated support lioojlevel where prices once more ; [mI seemed attractive, jjaj BUILDING GAIN | iooj The news included a more- The Associated Press average of 60 stocks was up 1.0 to 272.6 fairly sharp advance—with industrials ahead' 1.6, rails up .5, and utilities up .3. OILS ACTIVE SJWO-Shares Transactions and block..of,10,500 op which it rose % to 26t/b. Texaco and Universal Oil Prod-' ucts gained about a point, Jersey Standard and Royal Dutch fractions. , American Stock Exch. . Figures after decimal points are eighths Musk P Ring . 14.1 Barry Declines Talk Invitation jhM Near Official Price Was Asked to Speak at County Ox Roast By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - The price of silver on the futures market In London has been pushed above the monetary Value of U S. government stocks. And the Cash; The Treasury, can use this released hoard (or its increasing coinage needs without competing with other consuriferrin theJLon-don market. And silver dealers say the Treasury stock bangs over the market to prevent any price in New York has risen this runaway prices for industrial or Potential presidential candidate. §en.-Barry Gold water of Arizona was invited to speak at the' Oakland County Republican party’s Sept. 7 Ox Roast, but declined the invitation, it was learned today. Main purpose of the Invitation was tohavea “good drawing card” to insure a Mg turnout at the annual GOP event, according to Jack Slater, executive secretary of the county GOP.- ... ------ -...: week almost to the official, price. But don’t start melting dowq, your silver coins. They’re worth more as they are than in the metals markets. The U.S. Treasury has enough silver on hand to I maintain it3 effi-| cial valuation, thanks to the recent-direction by Congress toJ aft uses here at home — although consumers are resigned to having to pay more for their sup- gust deliVety/Jthe priee went td $1,297 or higher, with as much Is In June 1964. JL PRICE LIFTED The monetary value of the U.S. government’s silver stocks 1st $1.2929 an ounce. In New York the cash price was lifted by dealers 0.3 cent an ounce Monday to Plies. But the price rise on the world $1,288. markets*-and the steadily mount- The spurt in price this week was credited to active buying In i London due to increased demtind ing demands that back that in-Jy some Earopean-natioii3_for crease—comfort many mining op- ? vtVTtt— o H .. „,Dtno8 qn jhoth coinage and industrial uses.' erators in the United States. 8il-| Consumptlon of sliVOT ;,as been verthusbecomesforthemaprof- . we|1 above mine output; •table by-product of their main ..... lines of copper, lead and zlnc- DAWSON and at a time when lead and zinc prices are firming. .. The spot price for silver on the Electronics and various . age devices have increased the use of the /metal. Affluent societies both here and abroad have increased their buying of houses stop backing $1 and $2 bills with key London market rose on Tues-' w and other silver objects. And ih6 metal Iaou 4a tl OOO on niinoo Vai* Alf_« -TT: i • . .. . • Slater said having. Goldwater « I day to $1,292 an ounce. For Au- InterOst in Pure Gil, becausejSKS1', 7.8 Technlco Tomatoes, hothouse, b Turnips, bob.......... Turnips, (oppod. bu. Cabban, I II The New York Stock Exchange here“could hot possibly-be interpreted as an endorsement of Goldwater” for the GOPJs presidential nomination because the Ox Roast committee did not make county GOP policy. . At least one member -of the committee, Victor F. Carbaugh, 1679 Graefield, Birmingham, said he thought it rather ‘‘odd” that Goldwater should be invited to i IS I speak Jn thfe^homfr countv Of Gov. ' Romney, another potential GOP presidential nominee. Romney, however, vited York’s Gov. Nelson Rockefeller to Visit Michigan and give the state’s citizens an opportunity to become better as-quainted with them. ; The governor also has said he «, would not be a candidate, him-£T self, although a member of his staff has been quoted anonymously a$ saying Romney would I accept the nomination if offered. jRomney also was invited to the {Ox Roast and said he would put in an appearance if his schedule. permitted.---------~ Goldwater sent word through U. S. Rep. William S. Broomfield, R-Oakland County, that he was not able to take on new s p e a k i n g engagements this year. • Slater said invitations also were declined bv formfit-U. Vtar^fesId^t Richard M. Nixon ■U..S. Sen.. Ky. 1 The invitations were sent by a subcommittee of the Ox-Roast + Committee, whose 'chairman, —-I Robert D. ,Dodge, was unavall-- <41 able for comment- County GOP Chairman Charles L. Lyle also * qould. not be contacted.’ Romanians, Soviets Meet Am id Dispute MOSCOW m - Two high Officials of Romania met today with Soviet leaders amid growing signs of estrangement between the Soviet Union and that Deputy Premier Alexandru Birladeanu was here for,a regular meeting of the executive council of the .Soviet-Bloc Council for Mutual Economic Assistance. Armed Forces Minister Leon-tin Salajan headed a top Romanian military delegation meeting with Soviet Defense development in favor of _ emphasis on agricultural production'. Accused Sniper to Stand Trial Westerners here have noted evidence that the _______________ their pride stung by the blow to their ambitions, to become an industrial power, have withdrawn their support of Soviet Premier Khrushchev in his Ideological fight with the Communist Chinese. Among the evidence they cited were: Accused sniper Garry S. Good-rum yesterday was found men-telly fit to stand trial by a Gir-cuit Court jury after a sanity ‘ ’ Arthur E. Moore. The Romanians’ publication of - excerpts from Chinese attack on Khrushchev that was suppressed in the Soviet Union and other Soviet Goodhum; 22, of 26145 W. Nine Mile Road, Southfield, was returned ..to the county jail under $20,000 bond to await trial on a charge of assault with intent commit murder. :------------ Roma n i a n party Boss Gheargriw Dej’s boycott of the Soviet bloc summit meeting with Premier "Khrushchev in Berlin weekend. Three psychiatrists testified that Goodrum was mentally 111 and needed hospitalization, but a fourth doctor and Goodrum’s minister said he was mentally Competent to stand trial. The jury of seven women and five .men deliberated almost two hours before announcing’its decision. The arrival of a Romanian cultural mission in Peking at a flffiO when East European contacts with Red China have been reduced to a minimum. As Chinese Communis! newspaper’s explicit praise of Ro-s the second European nation after Albania to join the Chinese side in the Moscow-Peking feud. the number of silver coins need- ed &r sending machines, turnstiles and generally higher consumer purchases has put a att ain bn many nation’s mints. Also, one source of newly mined silver has been very er-j ratic. Red China releases silver or withholds it at will, as do oth-erCommunist bide producers. mi is w . , „ ,, In the United States the old all- Min ster Marshal Rodion Y. silver mines have declinod to. Malinovsky. ward the vani^hin^ point>with Birladeanu was presumed to silver becoming largely a ny. be pressing oht« ettom s to-product of other mining,—- -COMECON plans for Romania’sj -in the United States one unex-"Tiiture in COMEGON-^ooperA-rpected^ demand has been a re-tion schemes. The Romanians cently growlhgTKipttiat4tyTJfir_jn* are known to be strongly op- Ver dollars. The governmenl ' posed to Soviet-sponsored hkq; mints stopped making the big posals to curtail their industrial coins in 1935. At that time'Uncle —‘" Sam had 500 million in storage and the demand for them was Goodrum is accused of firing r sniper bullet Jan. 30 at Mrs. Gertrude'Race, 40, while she Was in bedroom-of her-heme-aL 28000-Dixon, Novi. The shot narrowly missed her. - > The hearing was requested by the county prosecutor’s office “after preliminary reports by the psychiatrists indicated possible mental illness. Bucharest leaders appeared to be using their Independent line in the Soviet-Chinese dispute as tevar tn force Russian eco-norrtic concessions ~ specifically more aid for Romania’s industrial expansion plans. News in Brief A camera and attachments, valued at $165 were reported stolen last -night from a car owned M^ilby N«ii Isbell of Romeo in the 04 4 Huron Theater parking lot, 941 W. Huron. The car’s convertible top was slashed, 'according to Waterford Township police. A set of golf clubs and accessories valued at $250 were* reported stplen at 2:16 a.m. today from the car of Leslie Frisch, 5224 Durnham, Waterford Township, parked In front of his house. JaiAes Lafnear, 2279 Evadna, Waterford Township, told police yesterday that a set of golf dubs of undetermined value , was stol in from hli car parked nt the' Fontiac Lake Recreation Aren. Rummage Saljt, Friday, July 5, 9-1, CAI Building, Drayton Mother Slngerg, ’ ’ —Adv, In observance of the Fourth of July hotlduy, the Stock exchange Will dote tomorrow. Stock market listings will to resumed on the market page Friday. falling fast., But this has changed. And re- ^ cently the U.S. Mint said demand has been rising at about'a.five-million-a-year clip, with the supply down to 88 million or less. The problem: If the mint makes a lot of new silver dollars. it Will be using up metal that could make many times the amount in silver dimes and quarters. And the demand for them is rising, too..... By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am 60 years old, n widower, own my own business, and don’t intend to retire until I wear out. I have over____ $100,600 in banks. With some $200,000 in stocks and substantial real estate holdings, my Income bracket is high and I don’t want to push It higher. I am thinking of municipals. Can you give me any suggestions?^’ A)Xyn only too glad to do so, since there is nothing I enjoy more titan the work which I do in this thedjum. ..I infer that your income Bracket must i^e at least In the 50 per cent area, where a 3 per ceht municipal yield’is equivalent to 6 pel" cenrfrom a taxable source. _____________..____ I suggest that you buy equal amounts of State of Tennessee 3's of 1983 at 100 (when Issued1), Massachussets 2.80’s of 1083 on a 3 per cent basis, «City of New York 3’s of 1080 ,at 100, and Cincinnati Ohio, School District 1%’S of 1967 on a 110 basis. Q) My husband had a sudden heart attack from which he iljiow recovering. He is a wonderful man, a steady worker and good provider: but I future. We have 35 American Telephone, 50 Republic Steel, 20 General Electric, ample Insurance, and $14,000 In sayings. What changes would you suggest to increase our capital, In the event of early retirement?” A) I am extremely aorry to hear of your husband’s illness, but it is pleasant Indeed to hear you speak so warmly of him. Your objective, l think, ahould be to increase your capital by keeping It invested In shares which over a period can appreciate in price through, continued earnlngr-gain. I would hpld Telephone and General Elactrlc but sell Republic. Steel) which has Timllld appeal. 1 would' put hajf my savings Into Avon Products and Bristol-Myers, two strong consumer stocks. , ■ Mr. £p*>r* cannot answer all mall personally but will answer all questions possible In COlUKUl. . i‘ V his (I mmm ■ my 'vW-17 Fx~ • ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, jTULY 3/1963 FIFTEEN Death Notices \nrci Barry; ucau -tntuai w tmun. rw •MjUrtl terra; dear brother I Jl service will July. 1 at 10 o.tn, at .mi Gktmh' with Rev. Jonei offlola" men, in holy Sepulcher Mr. Barry will lie In i Rlohardeon-Blrri Pun* walled Lain, ..CAMPBELL, JULY 2. 1961, EVER- St Gordon. Stone Port, III.; at* ; beloved husband of Mildred • Campbell; jtaar father of Cordon £>., Larry O., Jerri D., Robert A. and James C. Campbell; dear brother of Mrs. Olen (Alice) Holloway. Mrs. aeorgo (Mabel) Johns and _.Mm. .Lowell (Lillian). Rled. Also survived by nine giand-onlldren, Funeral arrangements .are pending at the Coat! Funersr Home, Drayton Platai. where Mr. Campbell will fie w state. glLLMAN. JULY ST 1101, CARRIE HETTS* ••line. Waterford; age 71! beloved wife oCJohn J, Hillman: dear mother qPMre. Milford (Onaleei Mullins, Mauriee. Wallace B. and Elwtn E. Hillman; alio survived by 1} grandchildren. Funeral service will be. Friday, July 17 at 1-p.m. at St,. Steven Lutheran Church with Rev. David Ludwig officiating. Interment in Drayton Plains Cemetery. Mrs. Hillman will lie in elate at the Coate Funeral Home, Drayton Rich, july i, ISor Arthur c., 102 Franklin Blvd.; age 00; jur-vivid by one niece, Mri. Fred B. Watrath, Atlanta, Georgia; an nephe~* MR ,n Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Rich will He In state—at-the Bparke-Orlffln Funeral Home. Tell Everybody About it witlxg Pontiac Press . r^^ Want Ad To Buy, Rent, Sell pr Trade Use Pontiac Pres* . WANT ADS Office Hours 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Cancellation Deadline 9 a.n\, day following first insertion Classified ins_yp Classification 106 for the car of your choicir Region ‘ * Dealers And Individuals.... , Keep this column fresh __with -daily listings: of your favorite modpl and make at cpm|»etitive prices. BEAD THESE ** ffryou ARE IN • THE MARKET NOW -— or sOon to be Consult . -Classification 106 for Fast Results Today! Dial FE 2-8181 —FOR- FASTAOTION-NOTICE TO All error! ehould ported Immediately. blllty for error* othe to cancel^ the charg.i ^ for Insertion of the advertlie-ment which he* been rendered valueleit through the The deadline for cancellation of tranidont Want Ade in i a.m. the day of pub- wniiin' When ^anoetlMlone your iVKlLI. NUMBIR," Vo adjustment! 'will be given ■ without It.. Pontine Press Want Ad* doling tun* for artvortlitr menti containing type elm larger than regular agate type le la o'clock noon the day previous to publication. CASK WANT AD RATES H' ifii An additional charge of 501 cent* will be made Jor, uee of Pobtlae Prill Box number!. The Pontian Press ■ FROM S A.M. TO I PM,' Card if HwUla 1 WE WISH TO EXPRESS'Otm SIN-eere appreciation for the kind-“«»«. empathy and floral offering. extended to ueby our Mende end nelghbbra during the loes of ■M M"1!* btupaxuT and father. , Donald B. Smith, and a epeclal thank* to tey.JJbeilea Coleberg. —The Donald Bmith Family. tnMemorlom' In loving memory of Id ward Vanderworp who paieed away July S, loot. , / Often a lonely heartache and But alwayi beautiful Of i the one we loved ew dear. Sadly missed 'by hie GET OUT OP DEBT ON A PLAN " you can afford. '• SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT -----COUNSELORS----------- 209-Pehtlae State Bank-Bldg, „ GET OUT OF DEBT with payment# ae low ae $10.00 BUDGET SERVICE tloni, feo tor Pay Off Your .Bills *—1-----without aloan-------- Payment* low aa lid wk ' Protect your job and Credit _ Home or Office Appointments City Adjustment Service- 714 W, Huron__________FE 5-1)281 ELDERLY RETIRED 8! Funeral Directors - GOATS" FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS OR 3-7757 SPARKS-GRIFFIN , -- FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtful Service" FE 2-8041 D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME Invalfi Car^Bervlce Donelson* Johns ‘ FUNERAL HOME "Designed for Funeral*" HUNTOON Ml 4.3840 Between Crooke and Coolldge FURNACE MAN, MUST BE ------------ ■round mechanic; able to do duct work and service. Top wage.. FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac for 59 | 79 Oakland * — FE 2 Voorftees-Sipfe FUNERAL HOME 'W***837T Established Ovtr 40 Years 4-A Cemetery Lots 3 ORAVES TOGETHER AMD 1- B*N- gla. In Oak Hlll^FE 5-8027.__ WHITE CHAPEL, S LOTS 8ACRI- flce. Choloa location.. OR 4-0234.__ LASTING MEMORIALS " Two aectlona with 4 graven each In beautiful Oakland Hifla Memorial for^etaila. pleaae can 673-5979.PKr ' LOTS, WHITE CHAPEL7 DARDEN -• "....recilon. FE 4-1152. . WILL Personals 4-B IN T Y MAID SUPPLIES. 739 h *workln|r8lea§er»n* g ly skilled on preclalot -*ortj chilrira FE 5-7808. _______ OR WOMAN a friendly adviser- nhon# ... FE 2-5122 o answer call ON AND ^AFTER ^THIS^D^TE^JULY .than lmynelf° Joseph R. ^Haines, 0513 WOULD YOUNQ > Jtme-Mr6»2-03W, r, Help Wanted Male 6 3 MEN WANTED* WITH EXPERL heater out Roohaater Rd. '625 52 PAYCHECKS ——A. YEAR sales or sale* acrvlce exp/rlei ypu may qualify for thla T„ A RETAIL ROUTE Buslribes that aervea 50 established cuatomara every day. 2. A MINIMUM income of 0100 per week 3. MERCHANDISE Truck and truok expense* mid by oompany. 4. PROTECTION Family medical and hospital .irance and to- l quail t progi ARC WELDERS—CERTIFIED, Capable of passing Navy Weld Tost. O urt Time**avail. able. FE 4.9539. ' AUTO MECHANIC” '" ' Prefer experienced with Oldamo. bile. Phone OL I-97A1. Houghton h Son Oldimoblle Rambler. Rooliea. 'J!^Xfter 6 P.M. ....... .PAHT3UME — , OuarantecdlWO ihbhlmyreF P»l. tiled man. 11.40 neat appearing amj good ^worker^to^ atari linmedf. tiwf^fpin. OR s!»22.,0r BOY TO WORK EVENINGS AND • -weekenda, must drive. Apply 7 I p.m, 1302 W, Huron. Low Cost Press Want Ads Work for You Day and Night -iiox um.iica- i Alls it.m. Tnrfny thrm ! wore roliIlM n( ’I'M Press | ofllne In Urn following . knxm " . t, 3, 5. 6. 8. 14, 31, 34, 35, 38, 45, 57, 80, 61, 84, 88. 89, 72, 73, 74, 75, 78, ]' “ BETWEEN 43 AND M YEARS OF •ge7Ol30 p.m.-4:30 a.m. 5 night* • week, Wage* 31.28'a hour, chauffeur lteenae req. No eonvletlone. jp.o. Box 407, Pontlae, Mleh. . Blood Donors URGENTLY. NEEDED' HT BLOOD .9 SOUTH CASS FE 4-9947 Are Ypu Management Potential^. This la what you’re looking for Ploaeant dignified work, steady year around tncoma. annual cash bonus, management opportunities, many fringe benefit#—group Insurance. No collecting or delivering. I require 2 representatives to re* Kaea promoted personnel. Will In-rvlew married men 25 and over with auto for loeal travel. Call Merritt Smith, personnel director T&C -Food Co,. Inc.vPontlac. Fee 8-0438 for poraonal U/ervlew appointment. iUS BOYS: 11 AND OVER^ltPPtY alter 5, Hawaiian Gardens; 4501 JOrange Hall Rd., .Holly. GRILL COOK Tad’e have an Immediate opening for a grill eook. 22 to 45 yeare of age. paid .vacation. Insurance benefits, apply In person only. -----TED'S- - WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE RD. EXPERIENCED STATION ATTEND-ant. mechanical ability required. Dave's Ashland service. Auburn Heights. apartment, utilities furnished tor services; 673.5349._ A Management Position Due to opening of- new store;'.: ambitious and neat appearing anei are needed to learn busbies*. Ex perlehce hot. necessary but help iul; Salary, bo ftti. Age 20-35 OR 341922_»-7 p._ -ENGINE LATHE “ (OPERATOR' 5 to 6 .years aircraft and missile experience. McGREGUR MFG. , 2785 W, Maple Rd. I Mr. Pact needed. Shell, Telegraph and Long NEED 2_MECHANICSr_PLENTY of work, service Manager. Kaver ley Mercury. 420 Main St.. Roch WRECKER DRIVER $ perlence. Over 21. FE «-v .. tlao TyWlng." • ' - YOUNG MAN WHO CAN permanent position,* exr. ITH EX- established In-' Help Wanted Female ARE YOU INTERESTED IN Accumulating In excess of 91,000 In less than ona yr., for college education. wadding trouseau.; Or. to use ae you see Ht. Born Ihle plu* room” and board as. ltve-ln mother’s helper. Call MI 4-5367 after 8 p.m. BABYSITTER "WANTED; COL.UM-bla and Joelyn area. FE 8-4451 - after . 6. ~ ..-— ■ ■ BARMAID — APPLY IN PERSON Five" Spat, 3085 Dixie , BEAUTY OPERATOR, E X P E R-leflted, full tjUie. FE 3-7M4. _ BOOKKEEPER - EXPERIENCED preferred. Permanent position, 6129 Highland Rd. (M89), BUS GIRLS AND PART-TIME WAIT-resaes, 10 and over, apply after 5; Hawaiian Gardena, 4501 Grange Hail Road. Hoiiy, . . ‘ir-• CURB “GIRLS, APPLY AT' BIG* Boy Drive In, 3490 Dixie Hwy. COOK WANTED MUST BE EX- fullaney’a Fine Food, to. __________ RK — COSMETICIAN, d. -Full or part time, igs. 450 E. Pike, FE 3-. br Tues ’ iThura Sat'' CEMENT WORK AND BRICK WORK .wanted, FE 2-3701. . _ CONSTRUCTION WORKER. PAINT- s!cr helper wan— HIGH SCHOOL^ BOY WANTS LAWN K DRIVER. 32, 7 YEARS EX* cncc On double, bottom: desires >;around work. 7313164. . ; WANTED; CARPENTER' WORJK, Work Wanted Female EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. DAY * Reel's Drive-In, OR 3-7173._ EXPERIENCED GIRL FOR* SHIRT wrapping and markingr Ask for Mr.*Mttchell, MI 4-0222 - Liberty WOMEN WANT WALL WASHING ..*. and houae cleaning, FE 3-7881. I P™ DAY WORK', L A U N D E*R Y AND cleaning/ Exp. 61.25 per Ttr. "FE MA 6-5069. GENERAL-HOUSEWORK, CARE OF • ' dren. 5 day wk.. a couple ;hts, ref. req. Between 6-8 FOR CURB RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL1 Baldwin""Ave'"CaU 338-405T building and remodeling. John W. — -______- --------- CaplesV MY 3-1128; I 2 LAROE ROOMS. PRIVATE RATH USED LUMBER 2x0x121 FEET 1 _anU entrance. 1^ 2-5689.—-------------- - k 2x6x12 teet 6.90. Clean, 2 ROOMS AND BATH. UTILITIES. 2-7260v v............r «20 a week. 332-3446. Business Service ■ -.15’. MAN FOR DRY CLEANINO ROUTE over 25. Apply Main Cleaners. 4489 Elisabeth Lake Rd. -____ MARRIED MAN PHYSICALLY AC-" , able to drive. Interesting. por in for—mechunicully—Inclined. _In 4083 Baldwin Rd., Oingelvllle._ HOUSEKEEPER-COOK, MUST LIKE ^—rhilriren. «wn quarters. ex«. pay. Bun. ancT Mon, uff, I'ocant rcL | MA 6-1702._______' DEALERSHIP, HOUSEKEEPER. COOklNq, OEN-—. e r a 1, references, experienced, must be able to drive, likes 2 teenage girls, Sunday and Monday off. 9 through dinner dishes, 640 a. week. MI 6-6215.______ LEGAL SECRETARY 21-38. DOWN-' town . office,' typing and shorthand req. Reply to Pontfac Proas Box 60. portunlty 1 week. Phon I 670 I $150 per arnlngs, working qi night? If you are r 21 and neat appearing qualify — call 334-25?“ MXchine rebuilder foreman i machine rebullders. must have i, 14011 WT11, Mile Rd.. Oak. •tNEEDI'.D: 7 MEN AT ONCE * NO EXPERIENCE’ ' NECESSARY : xe« • •7 p.m *sTn*e*s II Managei Permanent position hi Fljnl. ^MIch deslred,*in fst^ Roidy to'^Box *11 Pontlae Press. _____________- OCCUPATIONAL THERAPIST 1. 2 Michigan Civil Service /enefllf plan. lMuat possess^a bachelor' degree la occupational Ihcreapy from an accredited college; or registration with the AmerloAn Occupational Therapy Association for both levels: and have , one year of axperlenoe as an Occupational Therapist I. or equivalent experience outside state aervlca for “imtrmVHsh- MI c h. Employment Security Comm., 242 Oakland Ave. appt. tor Interview with Mr. A. Loy on 'July 10. 10 a.m.-4 p OIL COMPANY Operating nationally. Has or Ing for solos representative age 93 to 63 In looal protected nr" Should have some knowledge farm, construotlon, or ol heavy equipment. Attract ONE ltl-C needed f ^Pelgn*11 ?ork*all ^m*lr*can<'Paiid foreign cars. 772_ Baldwin. Pontic._7 rk(!Rnt ifisc'i i arc ;TTi VETERANS and HlGtl SCHOOL (iRAl)UATKS cali'Afr^Turncr PMon/through F "’TTcnrw^tTm: iHwiiio*.- - S UR FAClf”(i R1N bT!R S , Precision alrorift and mlRcllc Lake, hoc openings on first see. ihlfls Musi he highly el...._. Top wage* and fringe benefit!. Send complete resume Inclmlf-work history and penonal data Box. 74, The Pontiac Press. UIW6RM SECURITY OUARD“Ai ^jaln • olpdics - — — Call Mr! Bchru WANTED: IlYDHAMATic MliCHAN- |,(,hl VOOoUufllL Apply Nil pOrnui Jerume Miihu Aktgf. Acrvlre Dept 280 S Sgg'.naw. WaUtPio im m win a io) ij y *"wf a N" g R«,Vh'V«!r. m 4 iloS anunupt'Kll^Um(.'/WrU« gS* jelgl, u|)cpl. MCO 000.1101. Frei it essential. n Civil $7,350 annually * 1 service benefits, excellent state eontribuk., . and an outstanding, rel plan. Must possess a ba . degree In occupational from an accredited coll registration, with the A Occupational^ Therapy ^ Occupational* Therapist SnSSS'sKH 1963. -An equal opportunity cm GRiLrCQQK' for a grill c n Immediate openin ition, Insurance bent fifripply - r TED’S WOODWARD AT 8QUAftE LAKE RD. RACTICAL MURSES FULL TIME tours of duty — good personnel '80 — $4.2i;o annually Mo^ Ho^Uah*60?v!roodward,k'X ^E11” Television-Radio Service 24 HAVE YOUR ‘0 AND TELEV" t WORK DON! YOU SHOP Trained Servloe Men. prices. Free Tuba Testl: Montgiqnery Ward___Pc Traneportotion LEAVING JULY I WANTED: RIDER TO SHARE EX-_S51y_V Or'V EM 3-3026. >CU’ BftV " Insurance 26 ■INaUltANCill^ FjjRE^ WINDSTORM^21) Wanted Childrenje Board 28 A RELIABLE LICENSED HOME UCENSEDYhoSE BY DAY OR Wanted Houeehold Goods 29 AUCTION SALE EVERY SATUR-(Uy at Hlii* Bird Auction. We'll buy furniture, tout* and appliances. _Ol( 3-6047 or MEIrose 7-tl96. CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP-ion'i!>*F* $681. °r lou 8 "' ”r l.ET US BUY IT OR SELL* IT FOR ..... .....O R D COMMUNITY Jack W nidi. 70.1 W. Clarkihm Ril.. Lake Orion. MY 3-1671 or MY 3-8141. Wanted Mlscellanisous 30 0X7,^aARAGjp^ DOOR,^ USED, EX-POOR. USED MIMEOGRAPH. LAKE. 2-BEDROOM, ime. 660 a mo. MA Rent'Houses—Unfurnished 40 2-BEDROOM BRICK TERRACE. IN-quire 120 8, Edith. TB 4-6378. 3 BEDROOMS. "CRESCENT LAKE. Nice yard. . No children. Ref. FB 9-d733. BEDROOM HOME. ' NEWI.Y' bEC r FOR NOVA r*aeonablo.n,tRBAL W VALu4. V0»l a 3canai r gentlemahjj'gltijjfjjo]^ house, INQUIRE AT VlbjL 2525 Elisabeth Jjike Rd. FE 8-2525. 3 APARTMENT HOUSE WITH OA-rage. 878 per mo. Option to buy. Corner of Raeburn end Edith. Alio 2-bedroom house needs work. $35. 2335 Dlxle^hihway. Pontiac. -_ BEDROOMS ON west ii6E*ti5 ^RO<3m“HOU8K," yULLBASffMERI I ROOM HOUBE, $55 A MONT 304 East 6t. Rochester, MY 8A M ’ WARWICK HAS IN" 8YLV, Lake, 3 bedroom brick, carpo hike prlv. 0130 loase. 662-2820. 6 Rfw'3 Si 4 BEDROOM HOME” 207 w. Yale at Stanley KKNT OFI’ION , $59.89 A MO. lmmedfate oooiipanry Model open dairy-Sundaye Mlchaele Realty 333.7583 WE .3-4200 UN 2-2282 BOULEVARD HEIGHTS $75 Per Mouth esldwit MAin USED OFFICE FURNITURE, ham WARiC|t~HA8 IN SYLVAN & wkz s m m.......................m................ 3J7II7 Of Mif f-9444, ____ ')7|4 Wanted to Rent 32 w a t hi1 WillihH *lo "pay premlmn j'f' iAnted -- a bji k1* III Kill ou* , ill I’OllSIU Rent Lake Cottagey 41 I MEDIIJIOMB.^ NDRTH (jUP PON f- Nkr*COt'fAfjBsT 6l$ lA'k) and rlveri ultra-modern, by day e week 125 a week up. Rulsell Blael. •tt. Beaverton. Miohlyan. ip 8.7437. bAKd FRONT COTTAGlo ON" l.akH. Lswlktim. FE B-13i)B. afti COTTAGE FOR RENT ON LOON Lake. 3 miles from Hale, Mleh. 20 ml^ W, of Tawas City, $50 wk, , 3 BEDROOMS. OR 3-1087. 42 5 AND UP, 4540 DIX4E —unfurnished. LEW HILEMAN, sIe.C. Realtor-Eixchangor Mil W. HURON ST. ' FE 4-1579 BEDROOMS IN WASHINGTON ■ ' recreation room. I 1' fenced back : payment. 338-2811. •BEDROOM. BRICK. FULL BASE-ment, garage. $14 ‘BEDROOM UNION LAKE. FACE brick ranch, utility room. $2,000 down, 6100 mo. on land contract. EM 3-6703^HACKETT REALTY, 5 ROOMS AND BATH, MODERN, garage. In Pontiac. 363- miM 3-BEDROOM BI-LEVEL. MAR OA-rage, built-in*," hot water heat, ee- ----- **’“' “anlty In hath. —$t$c—-------- !td. Large MA 6-3900. cash. Call al____ "apartment HOUSE. $ and "4-bedroom nou*a_ r down. 4335 Dixie Hwy. immediate posseealo 1158 Lynsue Line 0 rooma- #nd tile bath, large ; paneled 10x33 family room, large '.lot. Full price $13,500, $1,000 appt. OR 3-galfcj AUBURN HEIGHTS AREA Coxy 5-room bungalow with baser-•ment. large lot. Only $700 down. Call Newlngham Realtor, UL 4 Auburn*"_______________ Ar HANDYMAN’S SPECIAL Large home- near Ellzat^th La Efwood Realty ____________• 802-2410 BEAUTIFUL NEW TRI - LEVEL brick-front aluminum aiding, eliding glass doors in' dinette and -recreation room, 1-car garage, wiring-in and part_of. plumbing, yo ufln-lsh and save. Phone MY 3-3231. CIVILIANS BUY ALMOST NEW homes, nothing down if you qualify. M. N. James Realty. GR 4-5464. COLORED. NBW_FAMILY HOUSES CHEAPER THAN RENT NORTH PONTIAC ...160 DOWN New 3-bedroom home Everyone qualifies, widow, dlvorceea -Even persona.with a credit problem featuring Wall to wall carpeting Call anytime dally. Sat. and Sun. Salee Hoaeee « 4f . COLORED''MODERN I BEDROOM home, financial ref, req. FE 2-2014. . NMY Liymo den. All one floor, no st^e. Easy clean tU*4 floon. Carport. Mtgmi . shed, slow to schools. $9,500, $275 down, 156.44 mo. plua taxes and Ins. KAGSTROM REAL ESTATE, ----W. Huron. OR 4-0388. Eve- can 683-0435 or OR 3-6229, LEVEL baths, la-'" ________ ... .. acre corner. bullt-bi kitchen, diahwaabir, <---- FOR SALE HOUSE. 7 ROOMS. ■ FE 4-6429. .- . .. >* LAKE FRONT HOME. 4 BEDROOMS “bath and 3 lavatories. Large living 530m. summer porch. tached 2-car garage near ; HI - VILLA SUBDIVIBION NEAR Lake Orion, 3 bedrooms, owner wlU sacrifice. No down payment to responsible huyae,. FE 5-6029. L aTWcTe ^ 3-BEDROOM IE AT 4-ROOM HOU8E ON 3 LOTS, Auburn and Dequlndre area. Only\ ■ $400 down. $4,060 total Price. UL \ 2-3280. bedrooms',- 2- baths £ake%rivUegesg W.L900. Nelson Bl* 4 LAROE 11 basement. — Woodqd Iqt. ’ OR 3-81 'NEAR OAKDLAND UNIVERSITY . on Walton. 3-bedroom ranch with ■—4amlly.:room, 2-car garage. 60.500 .. cash. Call OL 1-858S for details. FRANK 8HEPARD REALTOR NEW 3 BEDROOM RANCH. DINING room, ltk baths. Full basement. Wooded lot. Lake privileges. Nelson Bldg. Co. * *’** built 3 I -4449- Lane MI 4-7070. SUNDAY 2-5, 115 FOOT | ’ “ke frontage, custom >drm'. ranch,- $50,500, Lake Rd.- (off Quar- , W. Kurth, Realtoifr ermf MA 6-31 $750 down; an/save money. Any, size with or without basement. No down pay' . ment on your lot. Small down payment .on oura. We .have. 7 models, to ebow. 2. 3, and 4 bedrooms. A. C. Compton & Sons, 1900 W. Huron OR 3-7414 Eves. OR 3-4650___;_FE_2:7056 ----WATERFORD - OAKLAND • LAKEFRONT 100 foot lake frontage. 3 bedroom', 2-story.-hdme. full'basement,- 1V4 baths, large living room with stone fireplace, enclosed front porch overlooking lake. Priced for quick sale. 617,500. Terms. famUletr:$b200 down.* ----, WATERFORD REALTY - 2091 Dixie Hwy. OR 2-1271 I'. ' Qohk Aluminum Siding Architectural Drawing Asphalt Paving : sEalers ai eed. FE 2-71147. Batteries KAR-L1PB BATTERY CO.1 Senerators— Regulators—Starters Boat Batteries, $7.95 303 Auburn______________FE 5-1014 Building Modernization Additions. Houso Raising f PAUL ^ORAVES CONTRACTING ^ - -GUINN- - CONSTRUCTION ' Tforne-- ddlllons. All^ typen of coj Delivered Laid FC 4-7917 A-l MARION OR KENTUCKY SOD Carpentry lawna. Free estimates. Greece Landscaping. FE 2-0141, FB 8-3392. Carpet Service______ Custom Carpet Layers ‘ All work guaranteed. ... ......... OR------- UR CARPET BEL.---- Cement Work A-l CEMENT VhptlK, WALKS* AND drives. EM 38926 -. ALL KINDS CEMENT WORK, REA- eonable. Jensen. 682-2528.____ CEMENT. CONTRACTOR. Licensed city sidewalk builder — terms. . FBI 5»0122.__________ LICENSED SIDEWALK CONTRAC- loured Concretil Walls* Rockwall Go. KB 7-2000J__or_____OR 3-9408 __Chair • Table Rental SILVERWARE, COFFEE URN. equipment, CMnYP V4373."nV>W° " Dressmaking, Tailoring ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES. KNIT dressi t 3-7193. Electrical Centractori Excavating BILL MANN, BULLDOZING, hour sprvtfiik. MA 1U121 or i 3*6652. _____R T SHAW, NO EkTRA charge tor Sat, or Sun. 363-7209. 6TIS JONES EXCAVATING AND Grading. Fg I-*’*"* Fencing Floor Sanding ARL' L. BILLS 8R.. FLOOR Sanding. FB 2-5789; 852-5068,__ JOHN TAYLOR, FLOOR LAYING, sanding and finishing... 25 years experience. 332-6975. ROOF REPAIRS. 610 UP. FLAT d steep roofs. UL 2-1000. Television, Radio and HI-FI Service 3480 Elizabeth 1______________ Tree Trimming Service antced. COMMERCIAL MOWINO, WEED mowing: and traetor work. MA 5-1629, OR 3-0868. MERlOfl HCUE BOD, PICK UP OR delivered, 2691 Crooka. UL 3-4843. SEEDING, SOPDINO. BACK* HOE-'iiK., bulldozing. Free esthnatest EM 3 2418. SOD LAWN MOWER REPAIR, IS YEARS experience. I to 3 day aervlca, pick up and delivery, OR 3-0529, licensed Builders GENERAL-CONSTRUCTION I. A. ROUSE Alsvnlte luminous celling, remo NEIDRICK BUILDING SERVICE --FHAa|*rfcRMS. ' rti 4-8000 .TALBOTT. LUMBER. -Glees—Installed- In. duurs ami win-dows. Complete building service. 025 Oakland Ave.____EE 4-4808 Painting N8ID1 AND OUT. WORK OUAR. anteed. FB 8-4823 or FE 4.1196. Piano Tuning ____ AAA 1PIANO TUNING . . PlaiterlngSemce I PLASTERING AND REPAIRS. Reasonable. Pat Lee. FB 2 7922._ ,A8TERlNO~FREE ESTIMATES. Meyorr—---------- Plowing FOR LAWNS AND GARDENS UL 2.2730. Rental Equipment Wallpaper Steaimer EAVESTROUOH IN O, ____________ shingling, aluminum aiding, free estimates, Harahbargar, FE 6-8783. CUT THROAT TREE REMOVAL Call around — Try our low bid 52-4070 Lowest prices 332-3623 General Tree'Service ay size Job. FB 5-303S Trenching Trucking Haulino And rubbish, name your prloe. Any time. FE 6-0006. LIGHT TRUCKING AND HAULINO. --- OR 3-6043 LlCl111 AND HEAVY TRUCKINO, rubbish, fill dirt, gradlni and gravel and front end loading. rE 2-0603. OP SOIL.'PEAT. BLAdt bnT, road griivel. and fill dirt. EM 3-3411 WE HAUL DIRT, GRAVEL. SOIL, FILL DIRT. MID RUBBISH. CALL PONTIAC TOW1NO.. FB 2-2(116 or FE 2.0910. ' Truck Rental Trucks to Rent i-Ton—pickups— IVk-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT . Dump Truck* — |8eml-TraUera Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 62 S. WOODWARD E 4-0481 FB 4-144 Open Dally Including Sunday , Uphostaring it «i OtiSQN UPHOL8TBR1NO 3-2892. Free Eel. ri 8-1864 lioMAs’unifiHSflRiNo, 4499 W, WALTON BLVD. B1.00MFIBLD WALL CLEANERS. Wall! and windows, Reas. Sails-faction guaranteed. FE 2-1631, . . Wanted Household Quads FOR FAST ACTION Urn mwmm -■ or SERVI6E HERE '7 DIA1 *1, SIXTEEN r-** jr** ' ^ # a the PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAYS JULY 9; 1963 1 before 10:30 CHEAPER THAN 1; ■ -; ; RENT ..; north Pontiac $69 Down WSW 3-BEDROOM HOME $55 Month Furniture finished cabinets -Special- - *A¥-0’NEIL, -Realtor 363 S. Telegraph Office Open 0 to i MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE -COLORED J-BEDROOM. TULL BASEMENT __' MO DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS FIRST MONTH. NO PAYMENT tfURRYl • HURRY! HURRY! PRICE8 FROM 00.200 TO 010.900 WESTOWN REALTY 494 Irwin off East Blvd. FE 8-2783 Eves. after 7:30. LI 3-4877 Salat Houm ; 49 5n0 MONEY DOWN Just one year's taxes wUI mo you fa. 1-bedroom brick rsnc Clark*ton school area. ReeepL*. decorated. Payments cheaper than rent. Call today Waterford REALTY~OR 3-1273. ___ ■ Model G. FLATTLEY, BLDR. ^60 COMMERCE ROAD Mi-Owl . ■ Eves, EM 3-041 NEW HOMES 3*BecJroom Ranch ' With AttAohtd Oarage . 3-Bedroom Brick With Pull Basement 1 $69 MONTH INCLUDtNO ALIO 4-Bedroom— Full Basement Tri-Levels and Colonials All Large Rolling Comer Loti See Model Dally 13 to 3 ASK ABOUT OUR TRADE-IN PLAN NEWJiOMES Eull Basements $00 DOWN $68 .- per mo. : Fisher Body. OPEN 10-8 DAILY SPOTLITE BLDO. CO. FE 441933 Ask about out1 trade-in plan . HAYDEN 3 Bedroom ~ Tri-Level $$995 $1,000 DOWN Family Room 83' Lot l'/a-Car Garage Gas Heat OFFICE OPEN7 Mon. Thru Sat. 0 tojO p.m. T. C. HAYDEN, Realtor EM 3-0004 10781 Highland Rd, 11 JotJyn FC . - SPECIAL .. LAFE-rnpHT LQ-T -[ H.m- BAY O’NEIL, Realtor 363 8 Telegraph Office Open 9 to 0 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE _ Home ami income Duplex — tat living, dlnlm. front and ret Ketgd Itsrhor IWtSok »f* Vacant^ • 9 bedrooms —vary-nto* at constructed boms. Bsiemenl mall? bsai, lei Is small. . buy r #7,200. Terms le suit. JACK LOVELAND 3100 Case Lika Rd. ■ »- - or iHf TRADE THE ' saw. 307 W. Y*l, New 3- 4-bedrodi baaamanl — pa... 0 Down—$59.89 11 Excluding Taxi Model open dell: 333-TMO . ■ Associate NO MONEY DOWN Mixed Neighborhoods Land Contract*. VA, FHA •Last Chance No Down Payment -—No Mortgage Costs FHA Terms . - No Payftient 1st Mo. 3-Bedroom Brick-Faced With pr Without: __Basement or AIL Oarage. •—••• Optional:- Jven and Range Storm* and Screens Cyclone Fence - Modle Open Pally From 1 p.m. Cor. Kinney ana cofWtn, f-block east of Oakland. 3 blocks north of Montcalm. FE 0-2763 1 to 0 LI 3-7337 10 to 13 A.M. or Eves. WESTOWN REALTY wp». bail -floors, plastered walls, brick trim, 09.596 on your lot. TO sea model, call Hitter Realty. 3-0179 or FE 4-3990. Sale Houses IMMACULATE Nothing down' to qualified I tached garage, 4' mues n. or was-ton Blva. 37 per month inoludaa -everythings 10.800 full price, excellent condition. Call Colwell, Dloratt Bldg. Co. FE S-0133. COLORED No money down, no doting oroi nice 3 • bedroom home. 307 p month, •RUSSELL YOUNG 240 S. Sanford . *780 down on .a land contract will move some nice folks In this newly redecorated S-room bungalow, with stairs to- an -unfinished attic, there Is - a lull baaament, oil heat and big backyard, available alto for 01. Selling aj $9,500 and U'g ready for you to move In. •—-t Frushour NICHOLIE E WONDERFUL HOME ..... Beautiful yard and patio. LARGE living and dining rooms. MODERN kitchen. BIO family rm. powder room, four bedrooms, and bath upstairs. CARPETING Included. PERFECT condition. Gas boat. By appotntmant only. CLARKSTON 3-bedroom ranch, carport, recently I CARNIVAL By Dick Turner. Sals Houses $9,500 I 3-bedroom ranoh-etyle jamr This nice 6-Jroom home, gas heat, 4 lota plenty of fruit tree*, city tewen, gat and water. 115,900. TODAY -Large 2-acre plot, baaemoitt and well are In. nice otart for a future home. $9,ooo.- AND SAVE On. this brtok 6-room, full base-ment noma, mixed neighborhood. Call today for — Open Sun. I to 4. — CRAWFORD AGENCY 289 W. Walton . FE 9-3299, 999 E. Flint MY 3-U43 GILES WHITE LAKE FRONT 99 ft. frontage, 9 rooms, 10x24 knotty pine paneled living room with brtok fire-place, large glassedfront poreh overlooking the lake, aluminum storms and screens. Completely furnished., Only $9,999 full price. OWEN SCHOOL AREA 3 bedrooms, ' ’ large kitchen, full basement, recreation room, get heat, fenced lot. Close to eohooli and stores. NORTH SUBURBAN 3 • bedroom! ----| M modern Callfornle^deetgn.1 LAKE PRIVILEGES Evenings C$11 Mr. CasteU . CUSTOM BUiLl HOMES YOUR LOT OR OURS, Ross Homes, Inc. , FE 4-0591 TRADE. LOVELY 2-BEDROOM RANCHER IN NICE ‘NEIGHBORHOOD — OAK FLOORS — AUTOMATIC HEAT — LOTS OF CLOSE™ SPACE «** ‘EXTRA LARGE LOT WILL TRADE FOR CAR. ITRAI ER OR WHAT HAVE YOU? WRIGHT FE 2 12 Oakland A' ....KEEP COOL 1 S-bedroom trl-level homo . acre, ceramic ' b a t K, full wall Tann. Mdge-rock fireplace In living room. Fully equipped, low cost maintenance 24x55 steel swimming pool, Rochester aron, <23.990. OL 2-3724._ HIITER ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES, 3-bedroom brick, built-in Stove and oven, plastered walla, lull basement, lake privileges. Bee this today, 911.990. Terms. WEST SUBURBAN. 8 - bedroom; bath, wall to wall carpet, lange ^{(l^airfek0,}e.fce,11tCr;; NEAR DUCK LAKE, 4 bedr bath, largo sun porch, gas ___, nice ehady lot, only 19,250. Low down payment. terms. Call B C. Hlltcr, Realty. 3890 Elizabeth Lake Road. FE 2-0179 or FS 4-3990. Eve. FE 6-7999. "OPDYKE ’AREA1 WILL BUILD On your lot or ours Your plan or otirs DON MCDONALD Licensed Builder ■ * OR 3-28! Over 2 Acres.. North Side... ►owble K»»ruge. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION I Ward Orchards AREO LAKE FRONT. NEAT 2-BEDROOM HOME with stairs to floored attic. 27-foot living room, oak flooi —screens, washer and dryer.” ] ’ privilege). Only 18.890, terms. 3-BEDROOM BUNOALOW. LAROE LAKE FRONT — lift Teat on Bio ter, |>lus 2-bedroom bungalow, a porches,' 19-foot pontoon -raft _ 12-foot Flberglaa’ runabout include*! In price of 8ll,98p. 514$ CASS • ELIZABETH ROAD PHONE 682-2211 ' MULTIPLE LISTING 8ERVICE ANNETT tlfully landscape $1,200 dn. plus c< ue. Wall-to- West Side Colonial Beautifully decorated 2 rm.- homo in excellent .... dltlon. First floor completely carpeted and drapes Included. Xge. llv. rm. natural fire--place, full alee dining —-den, modern klteben. 3 nd largo $rea on tl > partially finished. d f\a< t. LR with flreplatv, it wiUi bufl*-l•*,, lit. g2,200*rd ; ' * * Lake Angelu! w Chrysler Ex-d M-59. $32,600, Front fully landscaped lot, 170 ft on lake. LR 15x22. lge. dining space, master btdrm. .13x19. 2 ceramic bathe. wij|||jdgwii . . WILL TRADE Realtors, 28TE. Huron St. Open Evenings 4i Sunday 1-4 FE 8-0466 SCHRAM flroom Ranch Brand new with 14*15 ' room — 10x15 combination k! anji ^dinette, ^ full basement recreation space. Small down cate on your lot or dura.' Bloomfield Orchard^ 3-bedroom trl-level, 14x15 living ---- 10x17.. kitchen with dining Carpeted living r__ . ener. garage, etc. On o: $10r.95O°wlUi°,^?2'lpL...--ing taxes and Insurance, GILES REALTY GO.-. FE 5-4175 221 Baldwin Art • Open 9 a:m. to 9 p m. MULTIPLE USTINO SERVICE WATERFRONT. 9-ROOM. 1W BATH. AT. LAST tohod garage ml, Including finished 13x24 “Talk about underprivileged kids! I hear he has to take a bak) every day!” pletely shrubbed end sodded, deeoranens by Interior decorator. • real «M house. Full price only $11,309, 91,296 down. 97$ ner . mo., sweetheart Homes. FE 3-9123, Near General Hospital A solid 9-room frame, Inti. 9 bedrooms on corner lot. Plenty of elbow room here for a large family. West Side Income' 2-famlly Income hit Florence street. 9 ‘room* down, 4 up. The tennant on the second floor will pay for It. Easiest way to pay for a noma that Iknow of-Ask to saa It. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron _333-7197 LAKE ANOBLU8: BATEMAN Brand New Ranch WATERFORD TWP. 3 bedrms. U4 barbs, built-in range and oven, well out baeemenl end 3-ear garage. Many nice features and Ideal Tor large family. Built In 1993 and lust as you would have- bi - self, see it today etHHTri 21,790 dwn plus cost).-— LET'S TRADE Lakefront PONTIAC IfAKEi 3 . be tra sharp, nice sand bs beautifully laodseaped lot._... heat, boat dock and garage make this a i real plus value . with $2,060 down and costs. See this one NOW. LET'S TRADE Canal Front JUST OFF CASS LAKE; large brick rancht located on 2 tots. * bedrms.. family rm. sod 2-car i tached garage. Ideal place for power boat fans. Budget priced at 313.450 with 91.390 down plus coat -LET'S TRADE Log, Home Beautiful wooded setting amoM trees and close to Clinton Kh ... 2-bedrm., real nice end only 5 yrs. old. A steal at 99,490 with 9990 down ^plus costs. Cell today. Will • r * ■ ■ i3V'g TRADE Whipple Lake Privileges just across street. ’ 2 largo bed-rms., basement and attached 3-ear garage. Spaoe galore, approx. 1-ecre parcel, Nle* . swimming beach and real- suburban setting. Priced to soil faat at 319,990 with $1,199 down plus coSto. USTSTRApB * Lake Privileges For family enjoyment these h . . days. 3 bedrms. glassod-tn porch. Good -W Bloomfield location with |rivtlff« on. Middle StralU ^Lakr 1799 down plus costs. _ LETS TRADE 3-Bedroom Brick Almost new. Owner transferred quick possession Full baaem. area of all new homes and winding blacktop streets. Large extra pi-landscaped tot with excellent la privileges. Just 914.290 ahd ia over present JHA mortg^wUh costs. Don't tall to see this, TRADE THE BATEMAN WAY TOW you nan .avoid Ilia risk of oi ^ng two holies. Ws; guarantee sale of your present home, so e today for an appointment at y< earliest convenlene*. , Realtor FE 8-7181 Opan M ■ VU Sunday 1- >77 S. Telegraph __ "HURON GARDENS Xlx rooms and bath In Huron Oat aens. Three bedrooms, large dining room, full oeramle bath and r'1 REALTOR PARTRIDGE Is the Bird to See __ tOBO W. Huron, FE 4-3681 'TRADE "Your eqtiily Is money”—Use It I Off Joslyn—E. Beverly Here’s a goody—Two bedrooms down, one up. Oak floor*,-plastered wallr basement, ges neat. Only 8300.99 down on FHA terms. Brand New Four bedroom colonial, now under construction In pt>pular_An~ U«iua ClfiK-BeJs--Eet«tro."Teatur--fng ground floor laundry room Bloomfield Area Owner leaving tha state — offering their lovely 9-room modern brick ranch bungalow with 3*car attached garage, Bome-complete-ly carpeted. Fireplace In living room. Tiled bath, axtra shower an# toilet — Screened patio. .Largo finished recreation —— Gas heat, Sewerage. landscaped lot 10—■ field 8111) "schools. contract or FHA terms. Shi by appointment. Brewqr Real Estate' ra 4-9191___________Eves. 8-1 100X205! Bloom- CLARK 9- DOWN. 990 MONTHLY! Quick 91,000 DOWN, 4 BEDROOM. Webster School District, dining rot^ ' baths, full basemant. garage. 91,999 DOWN; LeBaron School_ Nicely decorated bungalow wltb lull basement. Separata . dining :- garage, fenoed In back yard, ment includes taxaa a lnsuran CLARK REAL ESTATE TO BUY, SELL A TRADE 2101 W. HURON FE 3-7888 Evenings call OR 3-1978 or FE 9-36r‘ ____Multiple Listing_8ervlc*__ O'NEIL OPEN DAILY 2 TO I 3992 SHAWNEE — Beauty Rite's newest Idea Horn) of Oakland County 1$ decorator furnished and professionally-landsoapod for your approval' and^tnspectlon. All tha vary are**£sre, *the 'auisfen' living room, the ultra kitchen, the . glamorolfs bath and family room, plus tha laundry room all on a single level. Tha basement provlt ——. living i 1 - BEDROOM. GARLAND LAKE ... History—3 bedrooms down r~ room for 3 more up. Prteed to l*U feet At 112.909, 12.900 down on lend eontreet. * 2 BEDROOMS; splc and apan. North side location. Wall-to-wall carpeting, new lVi-esr garage, fenoed In book yard. $1,lOO down,-04» s mdhffirin- • eluding taxes and lnsuranos. KM lovely t brand ni St- r full bath with formica vanity up, Raoraatlon room. 2 • oar garags. Wall landtoapad. f a n o a d. Asking ^14.909 and^ w* oan loolt anyf . WEST SUBURBAN 3-brlck ranch, oarpettn living room, dining all, good kltoh- Clarkston High bfdroorp brief w HHIa ftree. b $500 Down plus a 2'i-ear garage. $90 moves you m. Full prloa 99.(09. RAY O’NEIL? Realtor 3(2 KTBLEORAPE OFFICE OFEN 9 to I FI 3-7163 OR $-9933 MULTIPLE USTINO SERVICE_ $8,950—Auburn Heights pretty as • picture. ■ 4 rooms Sols Houses Why-Pay Rent? IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - -Everybody Qualifies Small Down Payment 3 BEDROOMS OA8 HEAT Phono 334-0988 ELIZABETH LAKE PRIVILEGES 5-room bungalow In wooded a ........ .. .. bl-levol lake front home. 15x25 living room with ledgestone fireplace, dining room, 11X19 kitchen with bullt-lns. fruit wood cupboards. Intercom system aifiT fiitfly extras. 4 bod-rooms, 2D baths, carpeted thropgh- Uy'roor 1 laundry_____,________ 2D-cer attached garage. Under Tround - sprinkler eyst*m, non dock, beautiful view of late. Show) by appointment. BLOOMFIELD RANCHER: Lovely brick ranoh home In eg "‘"-ut condition. Large living roon. 1 T beautiful r..... — F~_, .„v* kitchen. 8 bedrooms, ID baths, paneled den. ......t floors, many extras. Oai mmeS Leslie R, Tripp, Realtor ' 78 Waal Huron Stroet - (evenings FlT»4Wi) ■ BURNED HOUSE ON TWO LOTS FE 3-M33 or FE 8-7901. mm WmSor^ B SASHABAW E n toil bolween i, 1300 down. M liliil RENTED BY i to men only: Ms Income: «uu, rental loeatiett: only 919,091 Trade, or Gl term*. PAUL JONK REALTY, PE 4-8089. ~A OOOD 1 INCOME PROPERTY in tlistob condition nnd in ex ceptlonalljr good j*»T*. Four apartments plus doetor'a office. Rentali are $410 per month. Located on Oronard Lake Ave. near Williams St. *29.600 with $4,900 down, or wlfl trndo for olnor «oc property. You ptust tee thle be i frmSjSiK i w; Huron. Flf MW*;. .. - ‘A Real Income Brtok ahowin SU in tool ....... .... at 128,900. be anrangoa. IVAN SCHRAM Realtpr FE 5-9471 TAifp1 ling, i CONTRACT. basement, 18.308+-. 8-room. kCT. I home .ln^ 1 I t I n « reort.J..Jhown^b? carpeting and drape*, t 3 bedroo-— . , KT................ storms and soreont, 2Doar__... large, weli landscaped lot. Priced at $21,750. shown by appointment. n WILLIAMS LAKE FRONT: „ O . w-n. 8pacWu, bi level in excellent condtlon. . , 2 kitchens, carpeting COLORED ' TTl. ...........^-------- 3-room bungalow, 11 vIngiroogU—shown by appointment, dining roonL—ktteben—and"'Y~Bed. -room* basement, gas beat, $8.- NIAGARA STREET 800 : 91.000 DOWN ON LArND MHi CONTRACT. PONTIAC NORTHERN 3-bedroom homo, vary n an, full basement, aaa. recreatlon - aWa 2-car gara paved drive, nice lawn ana trt FULL PRICE, $11,490. CITY WEST* . CUSTOM BRICK COLONIAL 7-room 3 large bedrooms, oeramle tils bathe, wall-to-v... carpeting in living room, dining' room and dan. Flroplsee. full basement, gas heat. Beautiful lawn and shrubbery. Many- other ex-oeilent features. OWNER SAY8 3-bedroom brick ranch home In excellent condition, kltohen with Ms carpeting. Smith Wideman John K. Irwin' 8i sons — Realtor* 313 West Huron — 1928 •bone FE 5-9446 — Eve. FE 2-8903_ SYLVAN LAKE Beautiful axtra larg* lot, 3 bedroom. nloo large living room with fireplace, 2 oar attached garsige, 'paved street, all In exs. condition, only 337,890. K. L. Templeton, Realtor, “9 Orchard Lake Road 6(2-091)9 2.BEDROQM FURNISHED LAKE front oottaga. 9890 down, r — mo. Full prloa only $2,(00 _P. O. Box US, Lapeer. Mich. BEAUTIFUL LOT 80 ft, by sow. sunny roach. Walters caas noar Clarkston. swimming fight" two sandy beaches. dOoklng. il down, 88 *_ month. MY 8-6iW, 129 FEET OF SAND SHORE I , Beautiful ground*, hut* troai, fins neighbors, an Immaoulato home In wonderful setting. Lovely larg* carpeted living room and dlnlr------------- cut stone fireplace, dandy master bedroom, and ohud' paneled family room, full bs_______ oil furnae*. garage and pretty guest house. Unusual and appeal- t kltohen, waterfront $ /exc. condition. 111_ , . . FE 4-4509. Bloch Broe.- Corp. ' ELIZABETH LAKE 2-bodroom, gas Lakefront Homes Deer Lake, S-bedroom brtok, $49,906 Oxbow Lake, J-tmdroom brick 929!990 Dollar 1,like, 2-bedroom . *9900 Lake Orton, Colonial .. 942,900 Lake Orton, 9-bodroora remodeled. 139.000 10-aore estate, 3 homes . 338,800 Lot, Lake Oakland, wooded, high. $3,900 Wards Point, Cass Lake .... 114,099 Rolfe H. Smith, Realtor 244 S. TRLEGRAPH FE 3-7848 ____________MA JM431 Watkins Xake Lot* Claudia Drive off MS* _____FE 8-2474 and FB 9-6088 LAKE-FRONT LOTS. WATKINS AND Pontlao Lakes. AUL JONES REALTY — *---------- LAKEFRONT Vary livable, modern, walk -basemant. Beautiful view of Good beach. Electric stove an frlgerator Included. Priced at 38,690., Vary attraettve terms. Dorothy Snyder Lavender. Highland Road (MS9) West of Tels^aph-ljuron I ACRE I ttsLdo W18M MUat BALD EAPLE^Ak”80 HARDXOPIND 30 ACRES with straam and woods 81.800 down, , / with mnSMl, barn and small lakt. Hera to i«a( at (23.000. Terms. . ' 1ft ACRE PARCELS WltHin 8 mil** -'<* the Chrysler Expressway. Clpa* to Clargitoa. Beautiful rolling land with wood*. 94,380. 10 par aani down.-- MODERN 3-BBDRQQM hous* near »,» Sust 9960 down,, C. PANGUS, Realtor ^ NA 7-3818 Wanted!! ""6 vv'Qoded acres Beautifully wooded hUI side bnlld-Ing lit*, for , bettor homes. In a quiet- and saoludsd location — yet oiOy 3 miles west of Pontlao. XCarl r 80S Community Natl Bank Bldg, fB 4-42U Evas. FE 5.1303 3 LOVELY LOTS; WOODED .*• cleared Vugden Lake, 1415 Bath* gate off Bogla' Rd. Saorlfloe for UNDERWOOD LARGE LAKE and stream lot just . off U8 10 - restricted — 93.790 -up. Terms. desirable lot,' Just - « — oi.Soo 5-ACRE — wooded Clarkston - 33.750. 10-ACRE — rolling 16 ACRES - known as Pina Lana — l block from Mlt — trout stream and pond Also flowing well — good roatrlotion — 318,800, 9-2619______9969—Blxle. Clarkston Bloomfield Township St Hugo Parish RORABAUGH 'E 2-9992 Realtor Woodward at Square Lake Road "WEBSTER LAKE ORION-OXFORD 1 Acres parity wooded with frontage on 2 roads. Vary good building •lies. 17900 with (199ft down. ! Acres, partly wooded, live stream, handy to M24. Oft,009 With 91,906 i Darn a )gf. 00)00$ lot. LU)(ltO*POd. larg*1 family. I*avtd ’ front- Triced attractively. Terms.■_ school bus at door. Only, Dorothy Snyder Lavender ...>0° wlu* 7091 Highland Road (M99) MT, LEMENS RD. ~ Large 101 qI WyMMfrHurgP x290 lot Included with this S room! 3’3TO Ev#a- FE Hw bungalow, located right at entry | • to new Chrysler ^Exprpsway. pp; tunltyj KENT SYLVAN MANOR — Attractive : y kitchen, laundry ri cpfaoe! DAvisBURO AREA - carport. Only OMd iirnttir . SCOTT LAKE AREA — 1 , plus modern 3 . ranoh1 horn*, baaomont, oil heat, fully Ihsulr'' wNhUNNH screens, one .lots. $ 111,190 with 1 a nlce S- pPac2St downJN??.TH - Hm k •- brimrmrTiomeraa tt; .... full bath and modem kltohen. fully 8SK$aktt sw-WUisSH ff, *P,UrdMbMk CITY BRICK -North side 9-rm. Warren Stmifc,-Realtor MILLER BRICK AND ALUMINUM TRI-LEVEL west suburban, doit In. Nearly new and In narfaet condition. erly p i. # Lp Floyd Kent The.. Realtor 2200 DIxo.Hwy. at Telegraph FE 2-0f28 - Open Eves. . free Parking i ■ r---IN ROCHESTER "~r Sharp 2 bedroom home with base menf. big kitchen and dining area. JMftSX g“M,t onlir M'100 PRANK SHEPARD OL LAKE VIEW 7 room* and bath with Perm as tone exterior overlooking Sylvan Lake. Large enclosed porch. automatic *1 3 bedroom with view o lot. Thl* one at oniy TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE '* 2291 N. opdyks Road Fg 2-0199 . FE 34187 |.Val-ILWay. THREE BEDROOMS . * CORNER LOT NICE 9 BEDROOM BRICK HOME ■ “l*t fijU ^—‘tnt, Hnh im COLORED GI SPECIAL MO MOVES YOU IN 2 FAMILY HOUSE. 0 ROOMS AND ___ nnd 020-1186, See our ad under SALE HOUSES J. A. Taylor OK WALTERS L A K B, PRIVILEGES lots, 110 down, 910.00 month. ClairlM-tlon Orlpn Road to Eaton Road t dales office at 8998 Mohawk Drive -SYLVAN. 682-2390 — <25-1896. PLEASANT LAKE VETERANS Just^ 1400 moves you Into this wide carpetln«n0hfomUy - rframf*'mrdng .room; ,2-oar garage. Nice pr!v‘-bo inch. Full price 917.900 VA or J. L. DAILY CO. UNION LAKE. MICHIGAN EM 3-7114 round homes, fireplaces, r petlng. sxtras—extra 7-1 _J or ajl. OR 3-7909. S^UARE LAKE FRONT Almrol % ' JtlluLg,—_ .frontage rlgli .......... ...... High, overlooking beautiful Square Late. Ineludea 100 — a rigid on the - R. J. (Dick) VAJ.UET REALTOR ’I’E 4-3531 348_OAKLAND AVE. OPEN beat'thk heat lakefront with a lovely transferred to Colorado!. Onh 911.404. Tarmi. State Wide—Lake Orion Northern Property U 1-9938 51 A NEW 3 BEDROOM HOME. GLASS front pofeh. overlooking Muskego-River, few monr'liuiii THg Hsp’di term*. 39.090. OR 3-1491. TORCH LAKE AREA. 9 . ACm R«iori Proptrty__________”12 MpBILB‘%ITE8. DON'T RENT, BUY V« acre, (M down, 910 a month. OR 3-1298 BlOoh Bros. Crop. _ OEtiuiNE “hEfiwdbij famth modern cottage ahd lot. 3-be1- iKoWXlLn, 'WsH blqmblng, ohromotrlm. 4 celling bath llgiit, 3*0 rang* roespCile mr j»»Rt»r.: also, pump,'m,. sink! i?o®tQ8mk Rd*^ & mjLjl SAVE $390 broker fees by buying from owner, .WSpit month, in-nudes Interest. No closing costs. Small down paynamn to miles ...it — gjTanjT $ iy», Sundavs^WrllV inurq,. m|p^ pjji. fe1 nemus ..... t. Weekday liurday*. Sur... 1iliims/,r,Aarryidn ■ ■■wimwi mOnSMPV M$»7+ Biri55WA3i3mf^^ lot. North resort area, adjoining stats forest. Hunt, fish, swim. 81195. $10 dn. lit mo. Jsrry Morrow, Gladwin iBkoels). Mloh. iata-AcrMfi . M 40 ACRES- FOR SALE. IS.noo CASH. l,«|M*r County. 61* A. Tennyson. » f-k I LLV ILL AG E Dsaullhil subifrban homesltes In a prolrelsd oomtnunlly With winding paved Streets Many sltol on hill ov.erlooktna tha emmiryilda f o r miles. Excellent water and drainage. J1(»U60. LUW as $1,680. LADD'S, INC, IS38 I,sneer Rd. (ferry MM) FB S-Mpl or OR »-!»[ after 7:10 \ Open sun. 11 to I building* in- t Farm jMtted only 14 Ml.4 off paved highway m-38, Near good schools end ehurehee. Price# to down and eaey JJ®:x°re level dairy farm with.4 Holstein cattle, 1000 lb. baae. ii,?. and full Ijne of equipment t»l. bulk tank, herringbone pai 1,>r <0 wores. tlled, laterals 50 P apart. Total prloa 990,000. i»ltor -a»d—larger - farms,- - UNDERWOOD 40 ACRE DAIRY FARM -of Grand Blano — good s bedroom horn* — 334,000. — -j buildings and 40 at,... Mi aral* for $2$,0M, I VACANT 89 ACRE - paroall 8 mlnules from US. 23 or n* -3379 per sore. ACRE! — j blook from U.B. 19 —view -of Hotly ski- Jump - river on properly — lake possible — term buildings — $39,000. 19 9*18 9989 Dlalei-Glarlsetow— Salo Buiinen Proparty 57 SQUARE FEET BUSINESS ter small manufaefurlng, IddTiEEnrRtfN'fAge 6N bAsHa'-baw Road al tha expressway .exchange 1-79, motel or apartment 20 X 130 AIR CONDITIONED store, with modern wall Natures, 881 moo*0 *hopt>>nft c,nt,r, ftTivan, WE'LL_BUILD~tO SUIT. WATER-rara Twp, sell or lease, wsrthou** iydW^V^^lf; 1 BY OWN B R - COMMERCIAL > «SP‘**5 Oakland‘Av*. >®i| 37r, Income bom*. Terms. FE Oakland Avenue •COMMERCIAL PROPERTY A REAL HOT SPOT RIGHT ON BUSY pIXlB HWY, INCLUDES A 8-ROOM H O * Brewer Real Estate B 4-9181 Eves, PB 8-9831 Buiiittll Opportunities 59 TAXI BUSINESS Good money maker. 3 cabs, wall established, high; gross, good net. Only 19,394 required. Widow must m OH 34811 Jl 3984418 or OR 1-432ft !Y'7X' THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1983 SEVENTEEN Burtnw Oppwfwltlw, 59 WANT TO BUY A GAS STATION? .CONTACT^AftTKIIJOE IPSO w. hurok m twi $20/OOO-$50,0OQ* ANNUAL . . INCOME investigate the ELSA COOPER SCHOOL FRANCHISE t MANY' desirable market! are atilt avalls-ble. The Ilia Cooper franchise It free to qualified investor*. SALES ■ oriented peraone with food aoedem- ■ people, providing. eubatantlal relume end capital gelna. Management peroemiel la available In aome markets.^ PROVEN advertising, aalea and educational material u provided, together with eontlnueue advlaory and eounaeluig aervlce. EXCELLENT growth potential can be demonstrated In any appropriate market, fib,000 to 040.000 ahouid be available lor lease — hold Improvement* and womlng capital. ELSA COOPER SCHOOLS, INC. PranoMM Department It Clifford Detroit M, Michigan •Substantiated by CPA statements too POINT MILK ROUTE AND truok in and around Pontlae, MA S.770S. ■■ _______________ '------ OVER $10,000,000 WORTH ©P CHOICE Business Sind Investments IN THE NEW MIOHIOAN . • BUSINESS OUIDE TO OJ5T YOUR COPY SEND SI TO Partridge & Assoc., Inc. 1050 W, HURON PQNTIAC WANT TO BtJY A PRINTING SHOP? CONTACT PARTRIDGE 1000 W. HURON____ PE 4-3881 CLEANINO VILLAGE eoln operated laundry In Royal HHw- "* “00 per -year' i by hired “WWW I! 0-0057 or 062' tAUT Y SHOP._UNION—tAKSrt-' Shopping Canter, lame fl-chalr. Reasonable. Altar S MA 4-1030 or OR 4-7007. - *1.400 DISCOUNT—. M per cent off a OO.SSO contract. faf* W-M per month ineiuding 0 per cent nlereat, deed security. Purchaser has S year* seniority VAL-U-WAT LVilM oWwp AV«- Wwitsd Clstfwii—Mtf. 60-A Earl Oarrele, EM I-7011_ Land Contracts AbsoLuTELVTFBJfl1 fUKUt'JiSi Hon on your IjwS contract. Cash cash for land contracts - HTf. Van Welt, 4040 Dhpa Hwy. NO WAITING Immediate salt for good a—..., land oontraota. Por a quick deal calf 333-7157. WARDEN REJ'*^ $25 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE PAST, CONVENIENT (LtoansetT Money Lander) Auto or othar Security *4 Months to Repay ~ Home & Auto Loan Co. ‘ PERRY LOANS BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN-_ _ BORROW UF. TO $500 Wailed Lake—Birmingham LOANS SIS TO 1900 —---------OfTONL ik Building lAXTBR-LtVlUdlfbNB •ontiie State Rank Bui'" FE 4*1538-9 TEAGUE FINANCEXG "‘■n;main ROCHESTER ROMEO 214, E. ST: CLAIR LOANS SIS TO $900______, "Prlendli'. Service1' OL 1-970 WANTED—IN THU AREA. MOTEL with IS (a » units for —U— ~ ~ w0r »ai|i>iM fidentlai. Realty. 13 to si unlteror' euafoiher ,rt.ff«ar?rfeg?; IV S-1I3Tevening! 4(9-4476. ..... Located In PontlM, Panton. Can be operated Grossed more thk/rfMOO Price *450. Call Holly. part lima. ME 1-3700'. OREETINO CARD ROUTE, NO selling. Service retail stores. MAOS required. Reply Pontlae Press, Boa Big lot, living quartan .old retiring. Must sal) this money maker. Terms. Ryan- 008-4930. COOKIE JOBBER: SELLINO CEL-lophan* packaged cookies to food maronwta. Oood income, email —,) investment, Schramm Cook PriM' NATIONAL 1143 OrfhTr^ Lakcf*”* ^FB 1-7041 ““WANT ToBUY A ___/—GUN~SHOFr~ CONTACT PARTRIDGE 1000 W. HURON PE 4-30S1 MARINER8-A PLUSH STRAIGHT Trading Is, Our Business, e What Is YOURS? Mr. J. Robert Oreenhalgh / Mr. W. Article Giles Mr. Prod Hamilton BATEMAN Realty Company ' .. Open 9-9 Sun. 1-5 V COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT PontlkO FE 8-9041, Detroit WO_8-2823 READY TQ GO Qae i.nt (nr Went. HO’ Frontage on West MonYcalm 8TT TJEklamtr RKSTALRANT >' —«-",«■! st. Doing a real 3 very short hours. is.- Owner- retiring. 1% COUNTRY STORE Located In a small town In the Thumb area. Doing n good bust-ness, Has up-to-date fixtures ahd equipment. 037,000. terms. CLARENCE C. R1DOEWAY . FE 8-7001 . Broker, 308 w._j7slton WANT TO 'BUY A MARINA? CONTACT PARTRIDGE 1000 W. HURON____FE_4-3581 COFFEErand DONUTS Located In Waterford Twp, area ----------- axebllent over » ...... to RENT:" N»WlV DECORATED diner to right party With ref. MOO Dixie HWy. _________________ GROCERY WITH BEER AND WINE, oxoflleni Income building, priced to sell. MS Ferry, fb 3-0304. XRklOUSTO 8« LL~QUICKf CALL Ryan. S8M888. ______ POOL ROOM FOR BALE: LOCATED at 17 W. Wilson Avt. 4 lahlos, business good all year, gas Trlno Bun-ofisi, 1M Rapid St. FE 4-d77«. _ Independence, Day TAa, r leiiow. It' laying to Of !JT,»te'c WARDEN DAIRY QUiy|N_^. Heart of the lsftf~TTfflT~Tikr art vantage of the fuu season. Terms. MICHIGAN Business Sale*, Inc. JOHN LANDMtfSSER, BROKER Wl Telegraph FE t-lW Sal* land Contracts 40 El AN tl^^D^I^SALE ft Land Contracts See us ■ bsfors you deal. Warren Stout Wtor^TiH. gailnaw m. - WHEN"YOU NEED $25 to. $500 STATE FfNANck7 CO. Signature AUTO or FURNITURE ■> Up to M months to repay PHONE FB 2-9300 OAKLAND LOAN COMPANY 202 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Mcirtgiiga ioEHi. 42 •' GASH Loansto$2,5QQ monthly payment. . . Family Acceptance Corp, 317H*tton*l Bldg. 10 W. Huron Telephone FB 0 4023 HOklE OWNERS CASH UNLIMITED Bxoluatva plaq. Remodel y o homo/ Pay —‘ ** ------- 61 Conwlldate need same." cW~ anytime? . Bear Construction Co. Ffe 3-783j. dFT your Payments one-ha!> Sol* Househeld Poods 45 1 oonjewEAii i 21-INCH TV, SET. ¥4nCeT COM-blnatlon. 140.09. Terms available. WALTON TV, PE 2-2287. QpOn 94.* 13 b.wallon corner of Joalyn. TV PE 2-2257. Walton.------ ALUMINUM SI'S. WALTON M. 811 E. l. 128. S8S Weabrook. maSyo^herbuys BEDROOM OUimTINO CO. 61 Dixie Drayton Plains 220 QALLOEVJin, TANK, . healing aioOVk with mtlnga, OR uaiiv, IflMUl VUUIKUKHH, OeaigOB. etc.. Ml. 10 monthly payment* or balance, *32.60. Michigan Necchl-Bins. FE Ewll, • , - AIR CONDITIONBR -$139.90, dryers, MMv, washers 149.80. TV's I MS Refrigerators 830.08 ADMIRAL TV, VERY MICE. 80" elec, stove, good ae new. Oak tables. ebalrs, very nice. Oood aturdy couch rummage sale. 334-1SSS. 574 Bi Madison. - ABOUT ANYTH7RO YOU WXf?T FOR TUI HOME CAN BE FOUND AT I 4 8 SALES. A little out of the way but • lot loos Id pay. Furniture and appliances of an kinds NEW AND VMD. Visit our trad# -dept.. * “ roiu nargalni. — We buy. ssll or trade. Como . and look around. 2 acres of free Phono FE 5-0241. to Sat. Mi ■ MONTHS TO PAY miles B. of Pontlae or. 1 mile E. of Auburn Hoifbto on Auburn. M89. UL 2-3300. A KlftfiV iwiil— r „ |H__________ tlon. Lato modil like new with all attachments including"power polisher, buffer, sprayer, eto, Sola now for over (200,00.; Take .over last 7 payments of 07-82 monthly on company account. Call FE 3-7623. Electro Hyglono Co. .. APARTMENT SIZED REFRIOER-' sleod sag stove. Call OR S-Mf " Salt Household Goods LEUY^J ;es. ^rlgtdalre ’I and dryers, ... . havo 47 plooes of previous model appliances eonelsttns of Frif- ldalre refrigerators, r-- —J Magic Chef gas ranges. ana Hamilton washorg EM ______ freexer* and RCA combination washers and dryers. Those are floor model* that are priced to fit your, budget. Also a selection Rjod used appliances avaUabl urry in for best selection. Chari or Budgetplsn. Power-Gor 28 W LAWRENCE PONTIAC PE 1-7812 Big Value" Specials ' __ .. portable TV, new . 8 99.93 Maytag- electric dryer .......giis.r- Kelvlnator 12 ft. refrigerator ilP.f. Easy Spinners, new .......... fits.00 Speed Queen wringers ..... .$ 88.00 OOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP OF PONTIAC 01 W. Huron St, PE 4-1680 LOSING OUT I ALL FLOOR SAMPLES Open .9 'tn 5:80 - Ml g springs and n oom acts, chi and tables, Bedroom sots, t tress, living rockers, hunt ohests, dressers, oeas, Dunn ns EVERYTHING MUST OOI .‘Easy Terms bedroom ouTPrrmro co. 4763 Dixie Drayton pall OR 3-0734__________ ;....1 «c wr t Pin8tic Wall Til* Vinyl. Flooring 6 Tile, I 40c sq, j 6 W, Hur 55t ypt „ _____ dash home loan up L 43.900 from Voss and Nuoknor, 10 W, Huron Bt., Room 200. Ph. . PE 4-4730. m6Rto*oe on 6nE a^re 1 up. With 150-foot frontage. No apprslkat fee B. D. Charles. Equitable Farm Loan Service. 1717 8. T/Jlegraph, Swops 63 loss PONTIAC SELL OR TRADE for 8 ft. pickup rover. 463 2174. 1001 CORVAIR 2-DOOR, NICEt oar, trailer, or you name It at down payment. C. PANGUS, Realtor - - ORTONVJLLE - ... B | - ~ NA-Y CLEAN JEEP WAOON. WILL for ptokun, Gordon'e Pure rvlce. 1001 Joslyn, FB 0-6I90. COMPI.ETE^SKiNblVrNd " OUT-fit, $70_or equivalent. MA 8-1980. FOOT CfmCE DK8K >OR OOLF . dub«. OK 3*3281. MODEL A/COUPE/ WITT! OLD8 EN-NEAI : “ Wl)r atreept-emall down or vacant BLAIR ESTATE ,_________OR 8-1708 NEW PORTABLE TV FOR POOL tablCjOr sale. FE 8-7|20._ ■WAP l(i4 OLbs'lS jfO.NN IN O rondltlon for toed aluminum boat, FB 4-58*7 after 4 p.m. “___• SWAP 0 ACRES. TUSCOLA COUN-ty ter ft (on pickup. S14 I. Tenny- 800 Sooitwood. Pontlae. SWAPS t-BEJUl OO M HOME - '60 MONTEREY -"WllL SWAP FOR LAND CONTRACT, EQUITY IN CAR - TRAILER - FULL PRICE -UliL-llDUflE iM.UBjf, .WRIGfir^ SSS Oakland Ave. FE 2-B141-2 _ Open Eves. 1887 CHEVROLBT~FANRL FOR M LIKE NEW 1RONBR, REFRIOER-ator, shulfleboard table, large (or-mica kitchen table, For boat motor or 77 or io|!i 088-2974. Sals Clothjng 44 MATERNITY DRES0E8, BUMMER tod winter, slit 12-14, good oon-dltlup. OR 1-8U8. _____ ■ Sals Household Goods 65 I YEAR OLD COMPLETE BED-Skiile*''!'® Idilw. ‘ Ur"' ll" f-HEDliboiii “slilTil,'1 I pi rifrlgeratiori, (18 and 340. Eloo, and sac sieves, KM. New bedroom and living room, cheap. Terms. Call FB 8-1181 after 8 p m. 1 COUCH m t CtoPFEE TAfaLh __M0. 1 Motorola TV 826.33I1-287#:- 1 UoOMS' furniture WITH RaSoe-RlfloffaERATOR $319—$15 MONTH • Beautllul living jtiid bedroom 8Ulte factory seconds' about ha f price, (79, New furniture of ail kindsi ALSO 80 USED STOVES, REFRIO- rooms (W up, clothes dryers 830, big picture TV 118, aparlipent gas and elec, ranges mb up. ibid beds, chests, dressers, itlilft.rohes, mink mower sweeper, —............ _ i-wift. r°°fn ’ DAVENPORT, CHAIR, END TA- ELECTRIC STOVE. iftONER. OObli condition. 197 Voorhels Rd..______ ELECTRIC STOVE IS INCHES ON lood condition. “* S piece*. TIZZY By.Kata Osann Musical Goods n BABY ORAND PIANO, REASON- able: Hammond. organ, eh----1 model: sacrifice at si,850.. 97 AMPRO -TAPE, RECORDER' used' instrument BARGAINS > ' Practice plane.' recondltlooed tuned and- delivered, >138, Spinet piano, (480. Model H gulWansen organ, 11.095. Used band instrument# and guttara at bargain, prices. MORRIS MUSIC 14 S. Telegraph Rd. 1 FE 2-0567 Across from Tel-Huron Summer Hre. 0:30-5:30 Mon.. Tues., Thurs.. Sat., elosed Wed. afternoon. Open Fri. e»e. 9:30-9:00 PIANO SALE ^ BAB AUCTION SALE! WEffr WEDNESDAY "-^7:3 EVERY FRIDAY EVERY SATURDAY EVERY SUIWAY Sporting'goods — an uuc» Door Prises Every Auction We ln»—sell—trade, retail 7 days ■“39 ,h> 17-lncb Motorola ...... SYLVAN STEREO-TV VOCALLiNE CB UNIT, TUNABLE —or imm crystal*, also , W 6-9221. , new tube 682-0199 Sals Misceilantoub 47 SPACE HEATER AND OIL tank. 16 and S MM projectors. 8 mm camera, stereo, Polaroid. FE 2-3428. MEYERS JET PUMP. ntRiOAT-Ing pump. 1% HP eleetrle motor. 9 HP Wisconsin engine. IS Inch tire*. ** “ ’-It, 682-3288. PLAYER PIN-BALL MACHINE, USED OAS CONVERSIONS, burners fully guaranteed, will Insult. Act Heating, OR 3-4884. 4Vs-h6rsb ^power'’ SIMPLICITY tractor, 24” rotory mower and anew blade, FE 8-8840/ 24" ELECTRIC FANS. COMMER-clal else, FB 8-6798.__... 30 BAR STOOLS. ____ FB 2-9644,____ 1 MAHOGANY .DINING I Rattan sofa, chair, >l«l iisoT Bar ir~ —J ~ $38, O-l ismHrswr, e letlc workout MMe. (is. tides, owner learns a 0-8494. ___ A1R CONDITIONER, " Condition, $80. 33L0434 after 3-ROOM TENT. 8x20, 890 SMALL covered utility trailer 870. 1941 Ford 3-door (iSO. PbUgaa stove (10. 003-3460. __________ YESI UP TO 40 PER C Por free catalog and chewing how you can I prices. 047-1877, 9-8. vegetable it milk. A-l RUOOED -VINYL SIDING That Hall will not damage IP YOU ARK WILLINO TO PAY MORE to get a aiding made to last the life of your nome, call JOE VALLELY CO, FE 6-9848 1 pha Terms ' Licensed, Insured, References. AIR COromONBR: USED VERY AIR CONDITIONERS Phlloo Deluxe Commercial 22,500 BTU, 1329.95 FIRESTON STORE * iro-U.-aednsw PE 44170 AMERICAN STANDARD OIL FIRED ’ ■ water boiler with controls, el- OE STEAM AND DRY IRON, gg; travel Iron tn ease, 88; wasting-house roaster, with timer, (30; bsthroom lifater, (8; 4 Samson folding chairs, *10: Sunbeam eof- - . . fee maker,...JiL-JX 4-7S07. . AXPHOR l'ENCES GOOD AIR CONDITIONER IfoN'RO MONEY DOWN-----------84424- traller, floor model, S3S. 683-1074 : ^gxOMAfiC P1RMUTIT WATER HAND dyed ORIENT* LRUO. 9xl2. softener. End-00. Cost new, 0400. between 80'to 80 years old, good leil for 3m_MA 0-3117. ^condition. Call 074-1643. _ _ BEEF ANU PORE — HALF AND HOUSEHOLD ARTICLES FOR BALE cheap. 338-960l - . . kfeLViNATOR elSStrIc BSMST Wlaard washer and dryer, 050 each, OL l-0f“* CWINa R6&ti ........ Duncan Pliyfe dining Mlse. turn., semi antiques. LOVELY ZIO ZAO BEW1NO MA-chine, only S montha old. signs, buttonholes,^ ete, by control. Cash price 843.9S or ... aeeept (4.99 per month, Capitol Bowing Center*. FB. 6 9407. heater. Hardware, 4 crook and pirn and Bfotheri PalM, Su and Ruiteleum. HEIOHTS SUPPLY 3088 Lapeer Rd, PE 4-8481 boat aniTmotor, 1M7"CHEVY, girden irioior *nd tr»ii«r. FB 14011. i' , . ■ ,» garage oj Hood condition. 089-1390.______ ftSnWS nlifB (BRAND N1CW) living room, bed-room, ' dinettes, Bunk Beds, . trundle hert*. sll-kluds sof* heOS. roll-away btds, an* and elertrlo slovcs,-refrigerators, rugs of all kind* and stsei, - oolfee tables, step tables, lamps of all kinds, bpokoases, utility cabinets, kit- in, e MASK*, ■P packaged all 10x20, 1206.00 plus tax. Pateau Breese poll, all steel, 10x20x7, (1M.00 plus tax.. King's Welding,Werlt*_ ..... 18058 VanPyks Ave. Twinoroek 1-0560 Bottle Gas Installation CAB1NKT SINK, COMPLETE WITH cabinet, from 049.08. G. A. Thompson, 7006 M-60 West. CLEARANCE BALE, M "PER CENT of! on used typewriter, .adding m*. «hi„. Hn«v eh.irs and other of* OR 8-WS7 or MI at bargain pr.,.— layaways, Pearion'* Furniture, 4? Orchard Lake ave. FB 4-7S6I hlCW CARPff AND PAD. yards. SSS Whltlsmor* Street. _| REFIIIOBR ATOR, 828: ELECT sfove. 3251 It" television, 840: trio dryer _|W1 ^washer, 8251 stove, .lb. FB 6.2760. V, Harris, hIncimu 'consoub zig2a6 Largg selection. OR i-"*' curt* h I atop SPECIAL 820 A MONTH BUYS I ROOMS OF FURNITURE — fionf— -2-piece living room lulu lablas, 1 cocklall Ubl* . lsniue, . 7-piece bedroom guile with do dresser, ehefl. fuu else bed Inneriprlns matlree* and box eg to match wtih i vanity lampi S-pnSedlnetle let, 4 chroma ch formica lop Ubll, 1 bookoaa 9x18 rug Inoludod. Alt for (881 WYMAN ' FURNITURE CO. U * HURON „ FE 4; J--- — 2-ljMI nliaiiiivl, EM 8-4114,' v MlmM MACHINES CONVBNt | tibnah aulomatlc pump, (126.50 value SffiiO, koraloiiOdc No down Michigan Fluorescent, DELTA JIO SAW WITH ATTACHED 1-8 h.p, motor, 840. Kenmoro washer w^^tlmer. good oondltlon.180. EVANS EQUIPMENT For Bolens — Awheel Horse trao-tore, tiller* and mower*. 0 model* of riding mower*, l Hld*ma»ler, rote-tiller*, eto. used. 1 FREE/JBR UPRIGHT. Last VBARM year*18129 value 0180 •oratohed. No down payment*. Mlohlxan Fluorescent 391 Orchard Lake, --------------——!~~r' FLOOR FURNACE AND TANK. cheap. 682-2865, ________ “FOR DUSTY’CQNCRETB FLOORS Use Liquid Floor Hardener simple'Inexpensive Application, noire Builder Supply FE 8-IIS* dOOD USED OAS'W6HaMSj,A It H Salsa, MA|Mk 3-1801 or ,M6l>l* AS FORNACE^TOtoTT^N >«W. Call FE 27104 . CiutxJ Used Lumltor X 1*8 Bo (In. rt, ■ i'a ....,.u.lie tin: ft; ft. Sfif'^rsM orchard Lake.—43, ' •T WATER z.n";L . Free' Dellvi 'heater, jo gal-Consumers approved a M8.8S and I49.V8 Hehlgan Fiuorsiosiit, Sale Miicellaneous HEAVY DUTY DELUXE 8WXNO set, exc. eondltlon, also mlse. —Rems, rich top soil. reas. F” ■ IRRldATlON FUMP8. 30 OP1 S88.50. Complete with 1 bp mi tor. AUo Is rger site. a.-. ........ 7005 M-80 “ ' INVENTORY CLEARANCE ■ SALE Used Organs.. Lowry Thomas ‘ " .. Gulbransen —. - Wurlitzer, - ... ahU grocery ft ford^OA 8-2881.__ OUT OF _ BUSINESS^ MUST_ SELL TOSC. 3*7376.__ STOVE. ORILL, COUNTERMAND stools. JktL. Resale, 44; N, Paddock. QpenSun. r (800. EM Sporting Goods 74 new pLastic boil Fipe For your cabin. Lightweight, easy to InetaU. durable "a■ * mn«t with: oode ballcock Supply. 1SS V 0-4713. dih BURMIR,________ . ... saraso set up S». OR 3^441/ “the ’£e*t buy ! glve camper11 Paradise a try. Michigan's largest Apaoho dealer' ORNAMENTAL IRON PORCH AND Btep. Railing corners, and posts, room dividers. AVIS CABINETS, 1070 Opdyke. FE 4-43S0. PICNIC TABLES: 6-FOOT 83(1, 7'— $33, S’—(34 . 4148 Greenfield, Berkley, S40-8173. ' (9.08 value for ,______ _. — Wilson, corner Airport Rd., Dray-ton Wains, , , *' GO-CART 4 CYCLE. EXCELLENT _____________ BARGAINS FREE. Standing toilet, (18 93; 30-gallon beater,. (40.05 ; 3-plece bath seta. $89.65. FlbsrgUs laundry tray, trim. HAND OUNS. SHOTC *19.95 32-tncn shower stau. trim, new and used, buy. • (32.95, 2 bowl sink. $2.95, lavs..!- Burr-Shell. 378 S. T up. Pl-, ;— and threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO., 172 8. Saginaw, FE 8-3100. PLASTIC PIPE. NEW LOWER Plywood Dli PLYWOOD RD.......(3.49 >RD .....(4.99 ■ ____________IRD .....' (4.90 4X0 BIRCH ...... .(12.05 PONTIAC PLYWOOD CD. 1409 BALPWIN________PB 3-3949 REOINa’ MUSIC BOX. OVER"100 years old. FE 3-2009. UNDAMAGED FISH IN O RODS, spinning, spin-cast, easting. Factory lire lost, you can sell ANYTHING, if the price and quality It right. The quality is Orest Lakes, yalues to 113,00 tale priced from SI.80 to $4.94 ske at 8068 Wilson, corner Airport Rd.. Drayton Plains.____ HA?ro~auNsV SHOTcnms. RiPLgs, ____________________Telegraph. MATCHED OOLF CL U B 8. ALL ther hag. 3 woods, g - Ironr tldbig Bobby Jones personal W:U charge*. Over 30 Apache----------- display at all timet plus $8,000. tn stores, sleeping bags, cots, lanterns, coolers, tables' and other special camping equipment at, reduced prices. Open dally S a m. to 0 p.m. Sunday. 10 a,m. to 6 p.m. BUI Collar Apache Camping, Center, l mUe east of M-24 on M-21 Lapeer Sand-Gravel-DIrt 76 DARK RICH FARM TOP SOIL. 8 yard*, $10 delivered, FB 4^800. ' . [HT M^ jflTYAinjrBtACK DIRT OR PEAT-REFRIOER ATOR, ELECTRIC DRY-1 OR, 3-9644.Prompt detirory.----— GOODYEAR SER\ ioieT|A NEW GRAVEL PIT! SEPTIC FIELD STONE .$3.00 yd. - handle at pRIVEWAY ORAVEL .70 yd. weekly. Capitol Sewing DRYWELL ROCK 2.80 yd. _ Centeri^FE 8-8407._______|BEACH SAND ilNOER SWINO ’ NEEDLE AUTO-— -----4ft .a matte In modern console. Blind PorTp5SS. J'l1 iT Sl „ ,d' hem*, appliques, designs, etc. Juatl “iff:.*.6! p Mi fashion dial# Pay $4.18 month viftT/f AAniNn tinder bins ^HcALLaManW^^ Elna. FB 8-4821. ---—----1-"~" b* SPEED'S'PLACE HAS MOVED TO, 258 Osmun SI. New *nd,Uied<>Blket. > sand, gravel. OR 51850._ OOOD RICH. 'BLACK -T 1......i [TALBOTT LUMBER - QR Olu»* Installed In doors and win-,CRUgHEDjSTONE, r-1 road dirt 30c/I 1025 Oakland Ave,____FEjh THIS "WEEKS SPECIAL . Am-rlcan B,on. rroauow. owe w.?i.uPftai2!,^.'Sud.Mh Shashabaw. Rd„ MA 8-21S1. walnut finish 7vi cants each I *' _. m^'V t/**tf Natural Finish 7Vko each v MEL S TRUCKING 1-.T> A-l lop soU, black dirt, fill dirt. DRAYTON PLYWOOD 1 land and gravel. FB 2-7774. 2811 Dixie Hwy._____OR 3-8912 BAND, 6'rXvEL. FILL, CEMENT. RED SHIELD NTOItE ply. 7(08 Highland Rd. OB 3-1834. _ its west Lawrence . sand, oravelT top sot,, black Evsrythlns te meet your need*.! dirt. fill. FB 4-8039. _ Cl^lng ffurolture, Appliance*. I BANDroRAVEiTTOP sAiL, iSlACfe USED LUMBER. MORE THAN I dirt, beach Ir-J — ■* enough to buUd a 3-oar garage. OR 3-0470. -1178. Phone 803-3782. 1183 Coshoc-1 "sT”- ion, Pontlao, UTILITY TRAILER, 4‘x6‘ BOX, 4' •take itae*. All light*, fender*, x **c ernmu. good tires. $100. TO 5-4808. Detroit. pups. FE 8-2803 WAt»B ANDLUMP FLMP(! new .! X POODLE "$60 Pets-Hunting Dogs 79 2 AKC SPRINGER SPANIEL MALE frig- down, 01.28 a vise* mb- o^mi_e.veii|itge till o Avr mmimiTTiien a ..... ... ........ Used refrii *TStori «730U2 -Midwest Pluini 30" by M" Aroro'roroJn"" glaoo 30" by 00" bronae soreen (13.00 Pupplea, $30. MY 2-5601. ______ Cement and Morter color* hiKC COCKER PUPS. BUF1*;--7 4" drain tU*. cash and oarry 10 per weeks. H. Burney, 3M0 Allen Rd. M" lump tile, 2 hole* (6.50 Bald Eagle Lake, Ortonvllle. Mich. BLAYLOCK COAL AND SUPPLY ...n,,™..* „„ vm Ml 81 Orehard Lake F* 57l#rAKC REGISTERED, SILVER HI,UK ei orchard Lake F«_»-7l0l nl„. Poortl, Puppie.. ,63-7303. Hand Toon—Macnimry 68 Vvc ’ white poodles, reois- ----------------------------tered. male, 10 wk*. 004-00(4. MU- FACTORY • BUILT TANDEM LOW-1 ford._________________ boy. FE 4-0000.____________ AKC DAriLMHUND PUPS. Mb ! U ad Y~MALE ”p AR'JTlCEKTa" iroT. ......- ' " --------. OL 1-0372, REAL BUYS IN ANYTHING IN MUSIC AT THE WORLD'S LARGEST • MUSIC STOKE GRINNELL’S ■ 27 I. Saginaw Bt. PIIONE FB 8*7188 Elisabeth Lake and Telegraph PRONE Ofi■Mill 'V XfifioWlAN A-1 SHAPE, iisoT'oR Store Hours July--August Saturday (:30 a.m. to 1:00 p,m-LEW BBTTERLY MUSIC COMPANY Ml 0-8002 Free Parking In rear Agrees from Birmingham Theater --ufwiTFWANsruif - 602-1OIIS lft(il.( p.inr 1 “ ilJBCTRlC PIANtTT--- WURLITZER ELECTRIC PORTABLE/ . PIANO I VERY SPECIAL.AT ’ $295„ «. [ '• GRINNELL’S P0NTIAC DOWT-, . . We have financing up i . . . One, two or three bed-oom models available-... We havh reconditioned op out today, you’n be glad u did. Bob Hutchinion —LONE STARS— Riviera Crutitti Raft. 18’ and 20* Starting at 9750. *’— “V Cruise Liner n 1963 Mercury* . Cliff Dreyer’sj Gun "and-Sports Center ’ 15310 Holly Rd. Holly____M*_4-C771 LIGHT - WEIGHT CANVAS BOAT canoe type .15'. 992-4619. Many .Used Bargains Aluma-craft Queen Marie with ’8 h,p, Johnson. and gator-trailer. • 16’ Lyman with 28 h.p. else. Evln- Thompson cabin cruiser with 73 h.p, Johnson and mlchlgan loader com- -plete with everything. 5' Olaas Empire with 28 h.p. Evln-rude eleetrle. 61- Chl-ts-Craft Inboard with 45 h p. Gray marine and trailer. ---------=- USED WOOD RUNABOUTS. $25 up Pontoon boats from 1449 up 12’ Alum, fishing boat*. 1119 up. PAUL A. YOUNG, Inc. 1030 Dixie Hwy. OR 44)411 •' —Open 7 days a week— MARINE INSURANCE $2.00 ’ >ER “** and up. Liability $10,009 for Hansen Agency. FE' 3-7503. MUST SACRIFICE, BOAT. MOTOR Parkhurst Trailer Sales FINEST IN MOBILE UVINO -Featuring New Moon — Owosso— Venture — Buddy Quality Mobile SHORTS MOBILE HOMES lood Used home type trailers. 0 PER CENT DOWN. Cars wired ,nd bitches InstaUed. Complete d bottle gas. 3-POINT HITCH BLADE. ( Phone Hartland 2511.__ EE US FIRST AND SAVE. JOHN HDeere, HARTLAND AREA HD WE. Phone HARTLAND 2511. FRASER ROTO-fr'lLLER, REVERSE gear, snow1 plow, 7Vi hp. $200. UL 9-1(72. TRACTORS. TILLERS, MOWERS EVEN'S EQUIPMENT 6507 DIXIE HWY. 025-1711 NOT LISTED_ USED -TRACTORS «. KING.BROS. FE 4-0734 FE 4-1112 i uard New rentals. Jacobson Teller Sale,. 5090 Williams Lake .1, OR 3-8081._ 23 ' TOOT7 SELF—CONTAINED^ 1LUMINUM SPORTSMAN. 20 FOOT to go. Bargain. 1057 Myrtle Ave., JPonllac. e______ FamSuSTaWoN TRAVEL-TRA)L. era. 10' utlf eonlnlned $1498. 18' Deluxe *1 $1250. .14' standard with- new axle,1 good Condition,. |1S 325ft Dixie Hlithway.__ AIRSTRICAMYiOHI’WEIOHT TRAVEL TRAILERS v TRAU.L TIMI1 J^S|| ELLSWORTH AUTO and-TRA fLER-SALES- 5077 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-140 Century Custom Built TRAVEL TRAILERS NEW RENTALS NOW inn:i l t.5' CHEN ’ (Sleeps up lo 0 people) . HOLLY TRAVEL COACH NC. 15210 tgib WHdii^gu^VE i-ani SALES ahd RENTALS I SriuWFl'te, lt!r.bT2 Mc'h.7 , * Creei)—jFantl' y F fiui kliti*—Sired m) i n e Nomads*—Skampers , -STOP OUT-4-Open DAILY 8ml SUNDAYS Holly 'Travel Coach, In 15210 Holly* Hd,, Jlolly, MB 4-87 ^occesaorlee. Boh Him we n'eeiTyour trailer I Anv size—any type - BUYERS WAmNan WE BU^0-WE*8ELL^^E TRADE Holly Travel Coach Co. 18210 Holly Rd.. Holly ME 4-6771 Kent Trailer Space Tires—Auto-1 ruck TRUCK TIRES • 24 'Hour Service dn Recapping — Lugs 825x20 — 900x20—1.1000x20 Hwy, CALL FE 2-9051 Dick Curran Rome 333-7917 Firestone Store We»t Huron Auto Service 93 CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN _______ Cylinders rebored. Zuok Male shop. 23 Hood. Phonr |jk Motorcycles $75 - 1942 4ft HARUEY. CALL OR :i-0802. alter 8. 1956 INDIAN 500 CC. EXCELLENT - «mrtlll,m 1478 OR 3^1407,______ ~ 1059 HARLEY 'DAVIDSON, ~ - FE 4-9020. 1959 200CC DUCATI: A-l SHAFe. MY 3-3543._ AJS-1955 MOTORCYCLES, WITH ‘ill climbing tires, unit In good •ndltton. eiOO. Oxford Trailer -' i, MY 9-0731, Bicycles Ing quality new. and uaed Scarlett's Bleyole • 8 Hobby 20J5. Lawrence St._____________FE ' BICYCLES ...I Boeton " YEARS EXPERIENCE IN ^ELL by mqp FB 3-7841 BOY'S 8CHWINN 28-INCH, EXCEL lend condition, hand brakes. Ml 7-1747, NILS 1108AEN._________ Boots—Accessories ” 97 6 root HYDRO. A-l CONDITION. offer. (I20.B9S1, days. trailer, 10 horse Mercury motor, $175. FE 4-0732__ 12 FOOT ALUMINUM RUNABOUT, -in Horsey-power Bvlnrude. New 12 FOOT MOLDED PLYWOOD WITH trailer. 25 horse Soott motor wll' controls. $300. OR 3-3267. . _ m-foWboat. motAr and trailer, $000. FE 4-0031._ fi FGClT So AT, 10 HORSEPOWR motor, trailer,' $210._673-5415. R FOOT FlflKROLASp Ski BOA; 4 FOOT RUNABOUT, 28 H. i Evmrmle. exo. condition. 8428. OR is foot FIBEROLAS BOAT.’ MO- TTSot BoitUM, T5 !rtOR#il'W inrude, chnvtrtlbls top, sleeps 2. M Sllsr, e#sy term*. oA 6-1372, i? FOOT INBOARD. *SKNt AND equipment Included. 882-3487. 30AT AND TRXjOCR. JOHNSON uuitor. oompfelo. $175. FB r kl'”l O iitld vJ OLABTMoit TERMS ' CRUHH^OuT BOAT SAUDI .. 13 '1f!, Walton 1) Ml 8 ^ Fill _ 8-441 JRUUiRi jfNdOllpdRATBbV 11 Ft. Rdnabtuit: 30 H P, Mereur electric:‘lilt (raltor; 8(10, OR 2 KESSLER'S rergiast fully 78 hp Mer-m. FE 5-9373. is St.. UL 2-5214. PONTOON TYPE BOAT OR FLOAT Everything for the boat OWENS MARINE , SUPPLIES' 80S Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-0030 STOP-LOOK—SAVE Fabulous Hydrodyne Comboards Larson-Duo-Chetek-Feathercraft Id TR AILERS Sylvan Pontoon Floats Alum and wood docks Grumman, Old Town Canoes "Your Evtnrude .Dealer” . . Harrington Boat Works 1899 S, Telegraph Rd. 333-8033 3pen Frl. ’til 9 p,m„ Sun. 10 to 3 STATION, WAOdN FOR' BOAT. Call Bob Southern, MA 4-1331. 8UNFISH, ALL FIBEROLAS"*BAIL nylon tall, • Top Trade-In Dollar for your mous boats — Sea-Ray, MFO, PINTER'S 4-0934 TERRA MARINA HOUSE BOATS 02,998. to 15,898 CARSON’S BOATS WE TRADE 23080 Telegraph at 9 Mile KE 3-9847 VISIT LOOMIS BOATS "A BEAU-tlfui Marina”. Gunphy, Glassmas-ter, Wnterblrd boats, Johnson Mo-tors. Wig FsKimjmJhiilgeim^ WALT MAZUREK’S LAKE & SEA MARINA Pontiac's Largest Display New - Owens, cruiser 25' 84,898 Chrls-Craft speed boat 17’ (3,548 Thompson lap' stroke i(’ SMS )wens and Chrlat-Cratt floerglaa STM MANY USED RIOS WANTED ---- ---------mT» xi.r. Highest price*, Immedlata PAUL- ArYOUNGr^Inc.- - 4030 Dixie Highway OR 4-0411 Open 7 day» a w$«k Wonted Cari-Trucks 101 HI D&LLAR, JUNK CARS AND — ■ QR 3-1005. A better deaL , Junk Oar* and trUokl - -Pick-ups anytime,. FB 5-2929 FOR THAT "TOP DOLLAR" ok SHARP LATE MODEL CARS r " 1 Averill's lOSO Dixie Hwy. V FE 2-9870 Ft 4-0090 Hi BolLAr, mUk carsaFd trucks. FE 2-2000 days, evenlnis.^ ALWAYS A BUYER OF JUNK CARS LLOYDS" BUYING —GootL dean' CaaL_/^ 2023 Dixie Hwy. -MANSFIELD Auto Sales 1076 Baldwin Ave. 335-5900 *f: Wt*pay more. yl)Uf **'* l*“>d M & M MOTOR SALES More Money FOR SHARP LATE MODELS . OUT-STATE MARKEtS 2527, DIXIE HWY, ; , OR 4-03DS OR 4-0308 $$'tOpOOLLar$$ __ pad ", CleanUaia ~ Cart— JEROME "Bright Spot" °-r°FL B-O^y* LISPS' A HR Foil RERmBAIW', , _ BIRMINGHAM CURYSLEH-PLYMOUTM INC, . ' 12 m .. ■■ Woodward . ., . »J Jsl 7’(()4 ,‘Y $25 MOftT“ 45/ip buii mim*h 3'1559* * < ■= tv # THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUlY 3,1963 N$w and Uied Can 106 N»w and Und Car* MARMADUKE «JUNKLCABfr-FBi?E%WM TOP W»—CALL FE Mitt . 8AM ALLEN » BOW QIC. 1959 CHEVY STATION WAOON, 4 door, ode owner. $1.150, bftl., tak< >r peymente, 603-0160 otter 8 p.w By Andenop & Leeming Wgg'">lS."8 Kill' ll. IW U,1 6 Cart New and Used Cart 106 Htw esd Ufd Cwt | N»w indlfiid~Ctrt - -UHL.. OPDYKE MOTOJl SALES GLENN'S wANiiO: 1051-1961 cars Ellsworik-H ’ * AUT(D SALES . 6577 Dixie Hwy. iveruoie, raaio ana b white top. v $1695 Pontiac ^RetST d Auto-Track Parti 102 1»5« CHEW COMPLETE ENGINE. BDICK ■ __Id White <1__________ clean, -lull prica $295. Store Marvel Motors 65 Mt. Clemens. St. J RE 3.7954 • '- SOyllrider. TOT $-1279- . J32 FORD ENOINE, 312 FORD engine, 2 - '51 Fords (or ports. HUTtHINSON SALES - . 3935 Baldwin Rd. ft 5-2141 — 957 BDICK STATION WAOON, with automatic transmission, power steering ' and brakes, extra nice. 1961 CORVAIR 700 2-OOOR, POW-ergllde, radio heater,* whitewalls, 2 to choose (rom $1395. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 8. Woodward Ave.. Birmingham, Ml 4-3735._______. New and Used Trucks 103 1957 Buick Special . RSo!’ heater^gcSd condUlon- i lor only $495. ____ $1395. OH 3-2702. for only $405. ^ ^ __ Q ~ PATTERSON^ ^EVRqLig^X).. Used Trucks ; : GMC .ing condition. Fir I ' very good ruimlng Mgdltlon. Flret m r9M VlYMOUTH WAGON.' boob Pontiac convertible. setting so jazy he won’t even rsurjs« rgfi-QMc V.-TON : 15b VSn'Camp Chevrolet w AUTO, INSURANCE ANY ©RIVER fc’US • ’ • PATTERSON -.1958. Chevy 4goor 1961 Dodge Wagon . SflpS Mj 1111 n 1 UTO .SALES ■|1^ 5wfth 1961 Buick AUTO SALES 5,_______ 1958 Ford 4-©oor Sedan , ;ii n BEATTIE .. ,___________ , ........._ PATTERSON Motor Sales, Inc. If. ’ Renault ,AuOLlVER?r’ BLJICK and JEEP r«ra M&rve' Autobahn Motors, Inc; t vw'B&s.'Ti : Sport Car, Ipc. FB 5-1511 FORD A'%T&r- "BRIGHT SPOT" JEROME Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 T95S*Mercttry~MeHrt€lai MOTORS HOT °D AYS- Marvel Motors LOOK! obahn ^Motors,"Inc. 1957 Ford 2-Door Sedan "BRIGHT SPOT" JEROME rd I * ' \M Orchard Lake^t e you been privilege of 1 ir recently b BEATTIE bankruptcy? I-f «6, 1 you have a steady job, and a $5 bill to down then I can get R 4 R MOTORS SLll 338-4068. Ask (of oaw Mr. Cook. 724 o, King Auto Sales Bhr NOTICE r and Used Car*_____ ^-NfiED-ROOMl- 'CLEAN. NOW . SPARTAN Dodge, Inc. OLIVER BUICK- FORD 1 a 961 Falcon WILSON PONTIAC CADILLAC. BUY MORE PAY LESS SHELTON'S in Rochester ! .• f^ll,0:&n«lu^iij ......- RETRACTABLE. I "Liquidation '1 King Auto'Sales .gg'HF'gj-. WEDNESDAY ONLY • 1961 COMET 2-Door DODGE '&SE.5ISS $I2J0 — SHELTON MATTHEWS-. HARGREAVES “STTARF USED CAR9’AT BILL ROOT CHEVROLET,* Jlas Opening for All Late Model Used -Cara '‘631 Oakland a? Cass, TOP PRICES / OFFERED WE HAVE King. Auto Sales dfIjos MUST GO! -.1 1963 RAMBLERS WILSON PON’TfACCADI Lt-AC ‘; 1350 N. woodward Select From NO MQXOWJ>0\ Sell You a Car OLIVER BUICK TeW ■ ©OWN-" BILL SPENCE. ' * Rambler-Jeep CLARKriTilN ' M"y" *l MA 5-6561 IT’S SO EASY t PONTTACPRESS A , CLASSIFIED AD ! Just Dial F^ 2-8181 UNIVERSAL .AUTO SALES FULL POWER Matthews-Hargreaves/ .631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547 PONT IAC-BU1CK 223 N. Main OL 1-8133 ROCHESTER, Mich. . Hatfpt'Pontiat—^ Open Monday, tueulay and Thursday unttl 9 p.m. One MUs Norte of V S. lO on MlS 1952 TEMPEST BPOltTS COUPE, mletlon. radio, heater, lha Ideal i'£tiiil^a..the ..iu.ilillc.Jh.. . 1-350 N. ■ Woodward mileage, sliarp car, l year parts and labor warranty. * HASKINS Compact .Car Sale WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 135QN. .Woodward SIMMONS DEMOS- -Formerly Universal Auto Exchange- UQUDATION/LOT -Pontiac’s Only Authorized [V^«S5,^,!«iSSj FISCHER BUICK HASKINS/SIMMONS , Chevrolet-Old^ MA 5-OOTr * ““ 'MA 5-1M4 U 1960 Opel ■ NO 1956 Linqoln to go, Buy h«n Cf? >107 - — pay her*. — , fti A r~7 , kp4yt 1959 Ford $397., '56 Plymouth ■ iuHyuaa°?iriri,fle*d 10 £t MvJInLi DOWN V.. 1957 Olds ant» a-’ . $597 195$ Chevy . NO , CREDIT $47 1955-Chevy ' ' $297 : PROBLEMS $197 '57 Mercury l-poar Hardtop, full Frl(.- $397 . . SPOT DELIVERY -ACAR FOR’EVERY PURSE-. < . U , 150 S. SAGINAW ST. .'fKaSp; . Open D«nyv-»rj5»t. 96 1 , ■ • 'PHONE 3JU-W71' | ,r :>- , 338-4072 ■v THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 3963 ■NINETEEN —-Today's Television Programs^- Program* furnished by ttattoni listed In this column a re subfect to C ChormNa-WJUMV dwwwl4.WWi.TV Charwiy^WXYWV Chonr^V-CKtV^TV Channel W-WTM TONIGHT 6:00 (2) New*, Editorial, Sports, (4) Deputy (7) Movie: "The S Spoilers.” (In Progress) (Oieapt.JoUy and Popeye (M) whaj’s New 1:25 (4) (7) Weather, News, Sports 5:15 (2) Highway Patrol (9) Yogi Hear ... ^ . (56) Discovery' 7:00 (2) Story of an Artist (5) Best of Groucho (7) Rebel (9) You Asked for It (56) Turn of the Century . 7:30 (2) (Special) TaX Cut 1 (4) (Color) Virginian (7) Wagon Train (9) Movie: "Monkey on My Back.” (1957). Cameron . MitcbelL___'"', (56) Face of Sweden 8:00 (56) Dubliners 8:30 (2) Dobie Gillis *" (7) Going My Way 97«> (2) Beverly Hillbillies (4) Mystery Theater (9) News Magatine 9:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke . „ (7) Our Man Hi$tfns (9) Front and Center 10:00 (2) Boston Symphony ~__J4) Eleventh Hour (?) Naked City ~~i9Mia®s, Weather, Telescope UAW —-7-'^—J 10:30 (9) Ted Lindsay T0145i9)-Playhouse 15 11:00 (2) (4) (?) News, Weather, Sports (9) Pioneers 41:25 (7) Movie: ‘Miss Grant Takes Richmond.” (1949). Lucille Ball, William Hold* en. (4) (Color) Tonight-Carson (9) Movie: “DestinaUon Tokyo.” (1943) Cary Grant. THURSDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) Meditations 6:20 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) News ■* 6:30 (2) Spectrum 7:0042) News * (4) Today (7) Funews 7:05 (2) Pun Parade 7:30 (7) Johnny Ginger 7:45 (2) King and Odie 8.00 (2) Captain Kangaroo 8:30 (7) Big Show 8:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry - Go ■ Round ItOI (2) December Bride (4) Living (7) Movie: "Because of Him.” (1945). Deanna Draw bln, Charles Laughton, Franchot Tone. (9) Muffin and His Friends 9:99 (2) To TsU the Truth (9) Sing Ringaround 9:41 (9) Friendly Giant 9:55 (2) Editorial 10:09 (2) Connie Page (4) Say When (9) Robin Hood 10:31 (4) News ~ 19:10 (2) I LoVe Lucy (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch (9) Movie: “Snowbound.’ (1947, English). 10:45 (7) News 11:09 (2) McCoys (4) (Color) Price Is Right (?) Jack La Lanne 11:30 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) Concentration (7) Seven Keys THURSDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love or Life (4) (Color) First Impression (7) Ernie Ford (9) Hawkey# 12:35 (2) News (7) General Hospital 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best (9) Dr. Hudson’s Journal 18:45.42) Guiding Light , 12:55 (4) mrara— 1:00 (2) Star Performance (4) Leave It to the Girls Move to Avert Building Strike LANSING W - The State Administrative Board withdrew a subcontract to a low bidder on a Grand Valley College project yes- » terday and gave it to another to avert a possible stlke by union employes.—.————. The work stoppage was threatened by the Michigan Build lag and Construction Trades Council because the tow bidder, Veiling Contractors of Grand Rapids, is a nonunion firm.— s —-A^roricstoppa^-cpuld have halted construction on a $1.7-mll-iion project involving two classroom buildings and a student center, being pushed to completion for classes hi September. Veiling’s bid ef 841,001 was withdrawn and the project was given instead to the second tow bidder, J. D. Armstrong Landscape Co., pf Fraser, at $43,290. Armstrong is affiliated with the building fund construction trades council. The board, in taking the action. noted thqt procedure since 1050 24 thrush has been to award subcontracts only to union firms on projects where the prime contractor Is union-affiliated, in order to avoid union and nonunion employes from, being put to work side-by-side bn the same project. Four-Day Rain Kills 34 Personi in Japan TOKYO UP) -vA four-day rainstorm that lashed southern Japan killed 34 personi, national police headquarters reported today. Six others were missing and 43 were injured. \yA' * A Police said nearly 43,000 homes v Were flooded and 216 were de-V strayed. Most of them were in northwest Kyushu Island. . ’ The government estimated demage to public fadiittoa at 095 million and to drops at $10 mil- (9) Movie: “Jlvaro ” (1054) Ferando Lamas, Rhonda Fleming. 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Best of Groucho . (7) GW Talk 2:00 (2) Password >■ (4) (Color) Ban Jerrod (7) Day In Court ^till^4HV>^ISws-2:90 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) Jane Wyman 3:00 (2) Star Playhouse 1 (4) Loretta Young ! (7) Queen for a Day 3:15 (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) JColor) You Don’t Say! (7) Who Do You Trust (9) Vacation Time , 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) American Bandstand -----1t)-Razrie DSzsle U05-(4)-News--;f^-- -4:30 (2) Millionaire (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) Discovery ’63 (9) Mickey Mouse Club 4:55 (7) American Newsstand liM (2) Sea Hunt (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: "Pride of the Bluegrass.” (>069). (56) Rocky and His Friends (9) Larry and Jerry 1115 (56) Industry on Parade 5:10 (2) Whirlybinb „ (80) What’s New 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends . 0:55 (4) Carol Duvall HOLLYWOOD - No why Hollywood can’t play the Tom Switty game. \ ‘ a A * If you’ve been at ill alert during the past few weeks, you know what Tom Swifties are. You don’t? Weil, you remember reading Tom Swift books. And how the author usually modified the dia-togufwithan rawibr^inro says I can’t go over Niagara Falls in barrel?” said Tom bravely. Now folks with HOthing- better THOMAS to do have been fashioning adverbial puns along the - lines of: “I had trouble with my power saw,” he said offhandedly. Hr A A j. Before the fad flickers out. Hoi-lywood should make use of it. For instance, you could tell the entire TV Features Study tax Cut Plan j-tAX CUT, .7:90 p. m. (2) Report on national controversy over JFK’s proposed reduction in federal taxes and possible effects it might have on American economy. MOVIE, 7:30 p. m. (0) “Monkey on My Back.” (1967), Barney Ross, boxing champion and war hero, wages tong battle against craving for narcotics. Cameron Mitchell, MYSTERY THEATER, 9 p.m. (4) Hugh O’Brian stars in drama In which dying man confesses to murder for which another was executed. MOVIE, 11:39 p. m. (9) “Destination Tokyo.” (1943). Submarine captain ordered-fo maneuver sub inside Tokyo Bay to . land several men on shore. Cary Grant, John Garfield. . I Hollywood's Likely Spot toPlay Tom SwiftyGame ByBOBTHOMAS plot of “Cleopatra” thualy: APMovie-Tetov^ Writtf'-‘^MuUddwajJo make an entrance, my dear,”saT CKLw] Bud Davlec_____ W 110 iii 7 Tetrachord (music) 9 Wrong (prefix) 9 Abuse > 10 More shipshape 11 Eject 10 William Tell’s weapon 20 Choppers ~—r—*, 23 Storehouses 25 Happy Island 27 Headland 28 Before (prefix) 33 Malay sword 34 Spatulata 30 Cresent-shaped 87 Newspaper executive /3$ BrlsUelike organs j 40 Duelling weapons 43 Bedouin 44 Repeat 45 Feline cry 48 Household god 50 Bohemian (ab.) Answer to Previous Puzzle conquer the world,” Cleopatra in other local fields of social corn-said earthily. ’ said sinkingly. I seem to have no other choice,” he added piercingly. ‘This is the end,” said Cleopatra venomously. Si l...a ’★ ■ a - Tom Swifties coold aiso be used ment. ’in certainly glad I changed name,” said Cary Grant ‘Make thine a martini,1 Dean Martin drily. REPLIES PUNCHDLY “Here’s one way to reply to col-umnists,” said Shirley MacLaine puntjil^r-r—1 , Desllu Studios will be on the ball this year,” said the president lucidly. / May I Have this dance?” Fred Astaire asked gingerly. / “I simply love to pose-for men’s magazines,” Jane Mansfield barely yf~~------- All right, what wise guy stole my7 toupee?” cried Jack Benny distressedly. We are getting this company AP PhoiofM CAPTURED — Harvey John Couey, 39, of South Denver, Colo., sits dejectedly in the Phoenix, Ariz., city jail foUowing his arrest after the recent holdup of a Phoenix bank. FBI agents are checking nut crimes in Michigan in which they say the admitted robber my be implicated. Couey is suspected in the 87,000 holdup of a Grand Rapids bank and a 8300 Western Union robbery, both in December. State Negroes Protest Arrests BENTON HARBOR (IV-About 500 Negroes some throwing rocks and bottles — roamed Benton Harbor streets last night and this morning in an apparent loosely organized protest over the arrest of two Negro youths, police said. City police called In extra manpower as objects were through the windows of a scout car and private automobiles. tag the demonstration, but several Negre leaders went Into a private conference with Police Chief Merle McCarroll and Berrien County Prosecutor Ronald Lange. The arrest of two Negro youths allegedly for fighting with three white youths Monday apparently touched off the disturbances and demonstrations, Sgt. Lyman Keigley said. ★ ★ Sr Robert James Pitts, 20, and Louis Isaac Hayden, 19, both of Benton Harbor, were being held on 8LOOO bond to answer felon-ous assault charges. The same charges were filed against the white youths, Larry Leon Bradford, 25, of Millburg, .anijlohaSUnglandr19, and Lonnie Jones, 17, of Benton Township. They were held under (1,000 bond each. Police said the five were Involved in a fight at a plsza restaurant popular with area teen-agers. All demanded examination -at their arraignments yesterday. Between 20 and 30 office city officers, sheriff’s men, and township police were called on patrol, police said. ★ * ★ The disturbances lasted about four hours, Keigley said. Youths began appearing in groups On the streets about 9 p. m. and were dispersed by about: 1 a. m., he said. Police cordoned off one streej in r predominantly Negre sectloa where much of the demonstrating took place, Keigley said. ' James Alexander, president of the Negro Young Men’s Improvement Club, asked the crowd to disperse on condition of a meeting between Negro representatives and authorities. A meeting of Negroes and city police tentatively was planned again today, Keigley said. LANS IN G (fl -- Michigan’s climbing traffic accident and fatality toll is the target of a comprehensive program of short-range action and long-range proposals being mapped* jointly by state officials and leaders of outside organizations. ... ★ He? * In a two-hour meeting in Gov. George Romney’s office yesterday, the group backed* a seven-point plan of action which in-eludes recommendation for q depth analysis of Michigan’s present activities in the field of traffic safety. — ’ _ Suggested among 11 long-range possibilities were several pe^eflegistationtostrength-en'traffic laws, inefeage state police personnel and reinstate the Michigan State University Traffic Safety Center. Among possible new laws disP cussed in the conference was ode to require periodic safety inspections on vehicles, such as are in operation in other states. Woman Publisher Dead in New York NEW YORK (UPI) -7 AUda Patterson, 56, editor and publlsh-of the Long Island tabloid newspaper and a member of the Patterson -- Medlll - McCormack publishing dynasty, died at Doctor’s Hospital here late y ester-day. / • - ., She has entered the hospital on June 20 with an ulcer condition, and in the 24 hours preceding her death at 10:26 p.m. (Pontiac time) yesterday underwent three emergency stomach operations. Miss Patterson, who founded Nowaday in 1940, was a member of tna family group which directs the New York Dally News and Chicago Tribune. Her broth-,e(, James J. Patterson, now is assistant managing editor of the News.' V / Rules on Salaries of Court Officers LANSlNG^—TheAttorney General’s office has issued an opinion saying the legislature can change the salary status of justices of the peace and Circuit Court commissioners. A A A The new State Constitution authorized the legidaturo Jo jbojish the two offices prior to Jpn. 1, 1969, when they are otherwise abolished, the opinion said. Ban Alcohol j in State Park Alcoholic beverages with be prohiblted at Dodge State Park No. 4 at Cass Lake effective next Mon- |v day, park manager Carl- 1 ton. Althoff announced to- 1 day. Althoff said State Dl- 1 rector of Conservation ■ Gerald Eddy was sip- I Ing an order establish- I ing the drinking ban 1: because of fighting and | rowdytopi at the park ■ I by persons under the I Influence of nlcohol. 1 Previously in effect for I the park's beach area, the I ban is being extended to | the entire park, Althoff # said. 1 He also cited an "exces- |1 live number of brokenJf bottles” and "badly cut I feet and hands” os rea- | sons for the new restate-tlon, which he said was | the first such park-wide | ban for Dodge state parks. | on his. feet,” said Darryl F. Zan-uck foxliy. ;./ Andhopefully—for the swifty to end swifties: “I believe in the New Frontier,” Peter Lawford ‘ ihhlngly. |" Building Dips in Waterford Permit* Show $653,586 Drop Building permits issued in Wa? ferford Township for. the first six“" months of the year are valued at $3,809,844 compared to 84,463,430 Outline Baffle on Road Toll for the same period a year ago. In the month lust-ended, 118 permits were issued at a valuation of (636;699'in contrast to 151 permits in June, 1962 at a ^lVOll,-. 135 valuation. / ^A total of 35 permits were issued for^houses in June this year, two more than for the same month in fl962. But the valuation of the June, 1962 housing permits amounted to 8615,012 compand to 8572,330 in June of this yejta. Two commercial building permits were issued last month at. a valuation of (147,360. One of these is for a new A & P Supermarket on Dixie Highway at a $144,000 /valuation. The other, valued at/$3,360, was issued for On office building on Sylvertis. The meeting, resulted from concern expressed by the State Safety Commission, which earlier endorsed a series bf proposals and presented them to Rorfiney for consideration. VOICES CONCERN Romney echoed the safety commission’s concern over statistics showing traffic accidents rising over the past thcee yeat-s and a sudden jump this year, in the number of fatalities., ‘ Deaths have been ranging more than 100 ahead of 1962. A A A In a telegram sent to state police and all sheriffs and local police chiefs in Michigan yesterday, Romney1 asked foil cooperation in strict enforcement of traffic lawsi the July 4 holiday and through the rest of the year. “I urge you to use every resource at your disposal to beta cut this tragic toll,” said Romney ,termtog the increase in accidents and deaths "an emergency situation.” The next'step in the short-range program, the governor said, will be a meeting with law enforcement officials^ including < judges, “to secure their cooperation in more effective application of trait* Tic laws throughout the state. ” AAA The meeting will be called in the near future, he said. Among the other building^per-JnitaJsiued last month werelf~ for house additions valued at $42,33^; 32 for garages at $40,723; 20 for home remodeling at $14,-435/ and one for remodeling a commercial establishment at $1,* ./ Nearly two 41 . I mit valuation for the first six months of this year is in housing with a total of 148 permits Issued at a valuation of $2,521,-990. Just 10 commercial permits were issued during the half year at a valuation of $826,644. A total of 545 building permits were issued during the Jaiuary-Jude period. Mailman Retires; Served 40 Years William J. Brown 110 S. Til-den, retired last Friday after 40 years of government service. Brown, who served as a letter carrier under eight postmasters, carried mail on Saginaw for 26 years. He is a past president of the local letter carrier’s union and also Is a former president of the Metropolitan Club, Spirit No. 6. . A A. "A......... A hunter and fishermen,-Brown plans to Spend winters ta. the south and to remain here the,remainder of the year. He is a former, fish king , ef Oakland County. Scott Carpenter Picked for Sun Eclipse Flight l HOUSTON (AP)-Lt. Comdr. M. Scott Carpenter, termed the most sciehce-minded of the original seventh . astronauts, has been chosen to. join a team of scientists In a Jet airliner to observe an eclipse of the sun over western Canada July 20. A A * A Officials of the Manned Space-j raft Center said Carpenter's Chief j task will be to study a puzzling phenomenon of the night sky, the zodiacal light, which also Is vis* ible during eclipses, _ j Aiding’ nbji In htol^ylvlll^ Dr. Jocelyp R. Gill, an astronomer with the Goddard Space Flight Center at Greenbelt, Md, She said it is hoped to improve the ability of the astronauts to observe the flights. GE 1962 Refrigerator 13.2 Ou. Ft. NO FBOST BOTTOM FREEZER 329’- WITH A WORKING TRADE-IN TBRMS AVAILABLH FE 4-2525 ELECTRIC 825 W. Huron COMPANY Fisherman Land* Pal WHITBY, England (UPI) British pop singer Frankie Vaughan went (Ishlng yesterday and caught a* trombone player -*•; fellow fisherman Alec Mclnnes who was pulled out by Vaughan after he fell into the jftlver Esk. I COLM TV SEBVtCS ; UNLIMITED SOFT WATER RUSt-FREE *3 PER MONTH F* Service A It Makes LINDSAY SOFT WATER CO. DMllM Of Mick H*otlng, Inc. A' 10 Newberry It, Ft I-W2I ANtfeNkAS INSTALLED AND REPAIRED SWEET'S RADIO Rosamond William* SONOTONI it a, corn*!: v ; re *-:* OervlM* and luaalte* to? ALL MARINO AIM E Bill •* TWENTY . i . v •; >f y\%Zi' , 1 ' . Pj THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, J0LY, 3>» 1968 Iceland's Great Geysir Can be coaxed into shooting boiling water high into the air with a..charge ot surface * tension -relieving detergent. Pontiac City Affairs JL*__________ Juvenlla Division. OK Urban Renewal Note Sale J5;j The City Commission last aight{ In a move to jiurry completion lor|unanimously approved the sale of: of an interior loop road, to circu* $3,750,000 in urban renewal tern-late, traffic inside the perimeter porary loan, notes to Community! road .’a public necessity reaolutic National Bank. .. jwas,pass^Jpi^-paving^xtenslons ■yr^-^ef-vhiyneand Lafayette. the staid It was the sixth loan to pay for; ‘“be hSm operations in the R20 project, all)' Wayne is to be extended sbuth SonSe’inI®f which have been financed by|from.Lawrence to. Pike; Lafay-...................... ' " ‘ ette east from Oakland to Perry. jnthe^name oi the people of-Michigan, you ere hereby i the hearing on said- petition ’ at the Court .House, Oalclf Service Center, In the. City ol . »»» . . mf -roiyj Community National Bank. tme'ar*npery5OTialliry atrta?0Oh*ftrlnKdCd t°! • Previous, loan notes'expired anS%*«^w ‘taeSix months. This one will ex- • ahall be served by publication of a copyj nirp _ vpnr one tveelc previous to said hearing in P,re ,n a year. 1® Pontlac^-Press, a newspaper printed - - , ‘fiS^e^H^i^aMorman r. The local bank was low bidder Bernard, judge of said court, in the I asking an annual interest rate ot M# 4ft Cou.nly' Mth|i.65 per cent on the notes. , "j (Seal i NORMAN R. BARNARD r r cow l ' SITE IMPROVEMENTS DELPHA A. BOUQINE Deputy [ Final approval was also given ~ >Vv, v contract with MaAAJrCje. ^ ^ J" 1Ws yrar., «TATB OP. MICHldAN - In ttie .Pro-struction Co. for some $78,806.751 . j ot 0»U“nd l.,,^«V, nf cilo imnmuompnto in the|CUrP’ gUtter’ S1™5* The finished “loop” will consist of 'Perry, Pike, Wayne and Lafayette. Traffic will flow one way in a clockwise direction on the Interior loop, while perimeter road traffic flows way in a counter-clockwise direction. ’•* ley, Pontiac attorney, for legal services in 'the RitO ~ tion case and appeals to ipreme Court. One.contract covers unpaid legal costs in connection with the Condemnation case concluded in Circuit Court last December. It totaled $29,000, of which the] city had already paid about $19,-■A, ‘The other contract cajls for! a maximum payment of $8,000 for legal services connected wlf awards and fees agpeaied'lffthe highercoyrL- LONDON (UPI) - The Rank Film Distributors organization, laid today lt-had ^ name of the movie, “Freud,” to ‘The Secret Passion” in order marJtet-'-Westem clothing, the la-( txrbyy a sweater from the tourist. to “introduce sex into the title;”t A ^public necessity resolution f the petition. 6 of Michigan, you are hi (lift 6«arra(r on-aaid -pe «t the Court House. -Sel*vtce-Center. .In-the In ‘said County, afhntt .' A.D.. 1963. at ill “ worth of site improvements in T R20 project area. ,rj Commissioners also approved ^ contracts for public liability and d property damage insurance on d] city vehicles and workmen’s 01 compensation insurance cover-*i irig waste collection and dis-f{ posal employes. “Botfr program. Work is proposed-on parts of Tallahassee, Sarasota; Columbia, Arlene, Clara, Astor, Seward, Fuller and tin extension of'. Linda Vista.’' " '■ i Soviets Execute Youth Linked to Black Market MOSCOW 8r(l> approved because the flhn also j , Approval was given to two contracts with Harold W. Dud- __Liu.8. TREA80RY department- INTERNXt'REVENUE BERVICE “ NtlTICE OP PUBLIC AUCTION SALE authority i Pursuant Section 631 C«S8e, the following desci hiiB^hctn islnrri fgr nOnpi Him,tent Internal revenue t ......m PhUllp 1440 Baldwin 8t.. Pontiac, {Michigan, The property Will be sold In accordance with the provisions of Section 6336 of the Internal -Revenue Code, and the regulations thereunder, at public-auction p.m., at East ^owii Col......... Saginaw St.. Pontiac, Michigan, fcripllon of -------------- ' bid on workmen's compensation1, generally conceded to be a f high risk policy. A resolution was okayed where-! by the city agrees to the proposed closing of part' of- Sanford for future extension of East Huron in state highway department plans for the M59 freeway. st ofj Making way for development; jj‘{ojiof a civic center district, com-[ 1 missioners approved vacating of[ Bliss, Chandler and Hill streets! to ‘be aftt* Cberry Court. d Final approval was also given r H vacating Walnut south of Wes- i .! sen for a community center de-j velopment on the old water 3 works site. puts your colon back to work—gently relieves .constipation overnight. You feel great 1 Get clinically-proved Colon aid today. Introductory size 436 JUNK CARS WANTED USED AUTO PARTS FOR SALE -FE 2-0200 'Ml1 ,< The Weather | ' V.I. WcMher Bnraiii ratiuil Fair, cool tonight; partly cloudy tomorrow : <0«UU« P««f t> . PONTIAC PR ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERN ATION AL PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 1^03--32 PAGES Fire Danger High-Water Level Dips; Perils Employment I f EJelp! Help: Fearing a fire which could wipe out a large section of the city because of a water shortage, city officials last night took drastic steps to prevent such a holocaust. ! Our fire fighters Couldn’t stop it, Asst. City Man* jager David S. Teel said, dis-J jctissing the grave situation. Thousands of auto workers j could be put but pf. work for a WATER.TO HERE * An Oakland County Drain Commission |SL?rJLiSSr where• <*"*.>•*.L,ke--If 1“°lu^lZ?wSl, reach when the court established a legal level at 950 feet above sea*level. Water from the Clinton River provided the extra three feet of depth. gin. Wafkins Lake Residents Solve Low-Water Problem AT LAST! Heat Breaks Slipped 38 Degrees to Chill Morning { - Violators of the lawn sprin-| kling ban will be fined, city of' | ficials said, if the situation grows worse. I -Mayor Robert A. Landry prom-Jised the City Commission would back an order to fine violators of the sprinkling ban if it be-% comes necessary. I |J Tepl emphasized that the grave (today. .water shortage Monday night The 38 degree drop will keep • ‘ “Was due In part to residents'residents cool through today then!' , By DICK HANSON ^ 'ignoring the ban on water usage.”(temperatures will start climbing j Oakland County Was suffering th$ effects of another J In addition to the need for'again for Fourth of July celebra-hot, dry summer in 1959 when*Watkins Lake i^sidents]5*£^*.flE?^#JtSLjl!^?lJ^ttti^^ decided to'do sdmething about the lake that was drying up in front of their homes. After a 9-day siege of blistering] weather temperatures tumbled from a 92 degree high at 4 p.m. yesterday to a chilly 54 at 5 a.m. K s Ban Bid Bit Too Vague for Washington Officials to Weigh Propaganda Effects of Satellite Speech ZERO IN! — Preparing to fire a 105-mm Howitzer arc (front left) Pvt. Dane Kimball, 566 E. Columbia; Cpl. Donald Wilson, 3890 Aquarina, Waterford. Township; David Poling, 17 Clark; and Sgt. Pat McElroy, 5653 Hickock. As memebrs of Pontiac’s Army Reserve 4th Artillery Battalion, they are undergoing two weeks’ field training at Camp McCoy, Wis. “water is the life blood of Our in-1 Tonight’s low will drop to near They recalled with longing when the lake rose almost too high. It had threatened^ to inundate their homes ini dustry. 58. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high of 80 — a pleasant day for parades and picnics. f For tlie next five days temper* Persons who do not, observe[atures are expected to average “By taking it away from industry, we are putting many men out of work. Weather Provides Clue in Plane Crash Probe School Board Picks Officers WASHINGTON UP) —President Kennedy met With top advisers once today and scheduled a second meeting later to weigh (Soviet Premier Khrushchev’^ vague bid for banning nuclear tests everywhere but underground and for an East-West nonaggression pact. The Russian leader set forth . I his suggestions in a major speech in East Berlin. J White House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger told reporters; “The President'considers Mr. Khrushchev’s speech a matter of importance.”. Kennedy met for an hour this morning to assess all the implications of the address, in an effort to determine how much might be simply propaganda and how much might represent an opening for an East-West accord. Among jhose who talked ROCHESTER, N.Y. UP)—Extremely rapid and severe] thoi.snrlnv nf to Ao .'statutes to find that the countv W* ban on nonessential use of hear the normal high of 84 and' '. • „ ’ tA - , . > ... .... , . : Robert’E. Field, 147 S. Avery, flu__iL*A t.uL ■......... • ’ Lrnin pnmmicciAnnr r*Aii1rl hn !water are crippling industry andinormal Iqw of 64. Rainfall Wiii>eather changes within a 10-minute period provided in-! was eIected a ’ nri 'tprm things" over with the chief ex-enitiv u 'drain commissioner could belwater are crlPP»n« industry and|normal Iqw of 64. Rainfall will,wedUiei cnanges wunm a lu-rmmue period proviaea m- was eIected to a second term as Since that high-water year, how- ^ rendering our fire department total about .2 to .3 Of an inch vestigators today with a major elite to the cause of an nresident of th* ever, Watkins Lake declined j ,e8a|ly empowered to raise iake I heiDiesg» u -I . * . .. . . . (President of the Waterford Town-1 of Sta . ... . . ... i levels Where such action wmiMn’t I ’ “ itive this morning—and were to come back at 3' p.m. Pontiac time for a second -were Deputy Secretary [about Friday. stpnriiiv « h.H levels where such action wouldn't Im , I™1 * * airliner crash that took seven lives &pd injured 36 per- ship Board of Education at the MtJTcHw'***.•*».i*^****-- mo* oine' 1 [miles per hour will become north) Weather has assumed more importance in this last night. where boathouses and docks were marooned several yards from the waning water's edge. And once-pleasant sandy beaches no longer lined the lake. As the lake continued to shrink, It was surrounded by a growing bank of baked mud. Bulrushes poked their countless blades up through the shallows where residents used to swim. The lake was no longer a scene of nature’s beauty. “Everyone was talking about the sad. state that had befallen our lake that summer,” Pontiac attorney William ’ Hartman recalled. His home at 3970 Pitt is one of several' hundred built around the lake. A friend and neighbor, Donald Newman of 4015 Lakewood, approached Hartman one day in July to ask what could be done legally to restore the lake. Newnian had the idea that Watkins Lake could be raised by digging 'a connecting ditch to the Clinton River flowing a half-mile to the north. Hartman pored over Michigan ments.. 11 p.m. So, Hartman and Newman . * * * (to northeast at 12 to got 33 of their neighbors around “There's ho doubt about it today, the lake to Join them in ask- he said today, “the water short-! ing Hie drain commissioner to age is very serious. A fireman j' solve their problem. [who doesn’t have water is in real At the direction of Drain Com- trouble.” mi8sioner Daniel Barry, the ap- The water table went down I plicants bought up a right-of-way again today, to the Cllntbn and contributed , . a total of $600 for a preliminary ..ZTJZ L jLfS? °b‘ engineering studv servatlon well established an- ■ * , y' other all-time low, standing at I SOLUTION FOUND 130.5 feet below ground level, j The atudy, s u b s e q u en 11 y ..We are strictly prohiWUng carried ou by the drain com- j nonessential use. of water by missioner indicated the proposed res|dents for 8uch things ag ,aw£ <■ ° feasible and garden sprinkling and wash- ing cars from 8 a.m. to. 9 p.m. dally; NO SPRINKLING m,p.h. vestigafion tHari itt most.” a Civil Aeronautics Board 'The^rpercury had climbed to 75(official said. A twin-engined Mohawk plane With 40 ditch would afford solution, The next step was to circulate a petition1 among all lake-front property owners, requesting that the drain commissioner carry out necessnrv construction and establish a special assessment district to pay the cost. It took six months to a year to reach all of the property own-Hartman recalled. Several •were living elsewherq in th (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) “The city requests that no Godfrey Admitted to Hospital" (passengers and a crew of three crashed seconds after takeoff yesterday in,thef~*—t—T'~~‘—T----- storm, which was accompanied by high winds and] Qjfy May Hike hail “It Was like flying into the deadj jof the night,” said one survivor (from his hospital bed. “The wind grabbed Us the Fine on Dogs OtherDfffters selected for the coming year are treasurer, Norman L. Cheal, 275t North-lake, and secretary, Mrs. Walter Barningham, 2856 W. Huron. Mrs. Barningham begins her fourth consecutive year as board secretary. As treasurer, Cheal automat-I ically becomes a school board rep-] resentative on the township’s recreation board. Elected to serve of State Avereli Harriman, ) former ambassador to Moscow; Undersecretary of State George Ball; Secretary of Defense Robert- S. McNamara; William C. Foster, head of the government’s disarmament agency, and his deputy, Adrian 8. Flfh- They sat with Kennedy just ahead'of a cabinet meeting which was billed in advance as a discussion largely on domestic affairs. The session followed by oijly Allowing dogs to run Joose mayl with,.him on tha* board was new-ja liule more than nine h consisting also of Cheal makes the decision abou^lwheth- j amendment to the dog ordinance and p#rter-er to take off in questionable [which would fix a $10 fine for; Eldon Rosegart, who will be the weather, although the con t r o 1 (letting dogs run loose, (board’s chaplain for the coming tower may advise him. If the con-1 The present line is S2 ' year' bea<*8 the Personnel and trot tower orders the airport ( Ledford , d d } policy committee. Working with immediate comment. ™ur8e- the P,,ot may enforcement of the ordinance. I him on this committee are Cheal, Initial private reactions among not take off. j Boardman and Porter. other officials ranged widely from Claude W. Chapman, weath- j ^ n*. *, * . U J I xt *,,*"** (speculation that a break in the er bureau meteorologist, said amendment will be sched- Named chairman of the school, c61d war log Jam may be In sight the weather over the Rochester- lul,ed,, Public „hearin8 and final names committee was Mrs. Barn- to an assessment that Khrushchev. Hnont inn flf n future PHv rnm. innhnm urlm will. iuauIt iirlik CVafl u _______1__i_ (Continued on Page 2, Col. day, four-nation swing around ★ ★ * 'Europe. School board committees also A radio-monitored text of Khrushchev’s speech began arriving at the State Department Tuesday as Kennedy headed home* ward. , Washington authorities promptly started a careful analyv sis, but found many questions unanswered. A State Department press officer, Robert J. McClosky, declined adoption ?t a future City Com-jingham, who will work with Fred .intends only to reap a propaganda 'mission meeting. I Poole and Rosegart. harvest at the West’s expense. Nabs 4 on Red Spy Charge WASHINGTON (AP)-The FBI Tuesday by agents in .Washington four arrested Tuesday conspired'hearings before U.S. commisslon- Jh«rir'TlniiMn0U|lle8«to0«!! f ^ ^ "J6**1 b;v,with ut least two Soviet milltaryfcrs Tuesday night. The,hearings cnarges ot conspiring to steal one dav a U.S order for exmil- . . | ■ . . . ■ data on UfS. missile bases and sion of a Soviet Embassy uffidal ^Rf",^ "iS* ‘° »ra'ismi , Jp.were postponed tp July 18 to give "lher..ml,itary informatl°h- for for attempting to recruit a Rus- mfiitnry^^nstail^^^s11 anc|,ntro<^>'C0U|)les lime to secUre law' movements. Moscow. |sian-born U.S, intelligence official One of ihe couples is Russlanjto spy for the Reds. The FBI -the husband .is a personnel of- said there is no link between the fleer in the U.N. secretariat, Jtwo cases. I Seized in a raid on a Flushing, These included top-priority jLong Island, apartment were Ivan missile bases, it was learned, i Dmitrievich Egorov, 41, and his n f , According to a complaint filed| The, lour were ordered held wift'’ Aleksundra E8or°v- Dramatic arrests of the four In a New York federal court, the I without bail after preliminary, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) | Psychiatrists wlio testified at the hearing said the boy was. seriously mentally ill but might respond to treatment. : 7 Czechs Convicted VIENNA. (UPI) - A Czech court ha« sentenced seven’ more young Czechs to prison terms ranging from four months to two years for fighting with African and Npar East students, «Prugue Radio reported yesterday. j MRS. IVAN EGOROV THE I*6NTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1968 NAA Northern Drive CHICAGO (AP)-The National Association for the Advancement of Coined People will undertake this summer a nationwide drive to end what it calls “Jim Crow segregation” in Northern schools. Robert L. Carter, NAACP gen-eral counsel, said the drive would ^concentrate upon local school districts where segregated housing “conditions result in schools of predominately Negro enrollment. * Carter, in an interview at the NAACP’s annual convention', also made these points: MAKE POINTS 1. Gradualism and compromise In the Negro drive for equality is ended. “This cohvention spells the “end to any lingering belief that there can be any slowing ddwn of (Jje civil rights drive,” Carter 2. The NAACP will work to defeat for re-election any congressman or, senator whp fails to vote for a civil rights bill at this session of Congress. Carter said that a strategy meeting of various NAACP state Counsels will be held Thursday to determine what can be done at the state level to end what he termed racial unbalance in Northern schools. . I expect to have at the conclusion of the conference a plan and program for the drive,” Carter said. TO SEEK RULINGS Carter said that where possible the NAACP will seek rulings outlawing racial "unbalance” by state education commissioners similar to one recently made in New York. ' Where we can we’ll act on the state level," Carter said. “Where we can’t we’ll try' to* get local school boards to rezone school districts. ’ „ Rail Ta Breakdown Is Claimed WASHINGTON UP) - The chief negotiator for the nation’s railroads said today there has been a "domplete breakdown” in negotiations with five railroad unions on a dispute over work rules. “And if that fails we’ll use protests, parades and demonstrations md file, court suits if need be.” Cartel* was asked if the NAACP’s approval of direct public protest constituted a departure from the organization’s policy of fighting the civil rights battle in the courts. The courts have laid the groundwork. But more is needed. We have not so much departed from our previous policy as enlarged it to include more than court battles,” Carter replied. J. E. Wolfe, chairman of the National Railway Labor Conference, said the operating unions had refused to accept any part of either of two sets of presidential board recommendations to settle the dispute. He said the unions’ refusal has “brought an end to the hollow mockery of collective bargaining an the issues involved.” “Thus, the period of grace requested by President Kennedy and agreed to by both the uqions and management, will end on July 10 with the featherbedding dispute remaining unsolved,” Wolfe told a news conference. “The issues involved here have twice been submitted to impartial presidential boards of the highest competence and the railroads have accepted the recommendations of these boards even though they contained more than generous concessions to the unions.” Wolfe said, that since every step of the railroad labor act has been exhausted in an effort to reach an agreement with the unions, the companies today notified the unions that the new rules will be put into effect at 12:6l a.m July 11.' Detroit Boy, 8, Drowns in Area An 8 - year - Old Detroit boy drowned yesterday afternoon in Walled Lake while his family was picnicking Oakland Drowning Toll in ’63 at Novi Township Park, adjacent to the lake. The body of Larry Kellums, son of Mrs. Shirley Kellums, of 4124 Toledo, was recovered in five feet of water, 200 feet from shore, by three boys who said they "stumbled over the body.” Mrs. Kellums told police that she hadn’t realized that Larry was missing. She said she had fed the boy only 80 minutes before his body was discovered. The youth was one of Mrs. Kellum’s 10 children. Eight were at the beach at the time of the drowning. The three boys who found the boy dragged him to shore where Novi police officer Richard Faulkner and later the Novi Township Fire Department attempted to revive him. Larry was pronounced dead at 4 p.m., one hour after his body was discovered. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Sunny and cooler today, high 78. Fair and cool tonight, low 58. Thursday.partly cloudy and mild, high 80. North to northeast winds 12 to 20 miles. (Continued From Page One) for repairs and two for lack of water. All five are in the Clinton River well Held stretching from Orchard Lake Avenue to East Boulevard. 'Money is not the problem in repairing the three broken wells. It’s time. It would take three or four weeks to get them back in ce and by then we should be using Detroit water,” Water Superintendent Herbert Parker. PRESIDENT RETURNS r- President Kennedy leaves his jet plane at Andrews Air Force Base near Washington, D.C., early today after . a busy 10-day tour of Europe. He is followed by a secret service agent and ’naval aide Capt. Tazewell Shepard Jr.. County Political Cast Studied by Broomfield A brief respite from Washington duties to feel Oakland County’s political pulse for a few days this week may help Republican William SI Broomfield decide which of the county’s two new congressional districts he will seek re-election next year. Broomfield said today he ‘getting-around the county” and talking to constituents and supporters about his choice, which he says he may make by the first of September. I’ve been getting a number of tetters from people in both districts urging me to run in their districts,” he said. Broomfield, currently In his third term representing the tire county, faces the decision as a result of the state legislature’s reapportionment of congressional districts to fit in the new 19th district received by the state after the 1960 census. awaiting his decision before announcing their own intentions. Broomfield said a primary chntest between him -and Murphy “would not split the nnrty” in the county. “It would be on a yery high level, and would be in the best interests of the party. It should be up to the people as to whom they want to. represent them.” He did not feel there was an urgent need for an immediate decision, the congressman said, pointing out that the election will not be until November 1964. Broomfield said he arrived back in the county Sunday for rest and relaxation with nis family as well as the informal survey-on his selection problem. He will return to Washington Friday. DISTRICT REDUCED The reapportionment reduce* the 18th District irom its countywide size to the county’s southeastern corner — the area south of 20-Mile Road (South Boulevard) — and put the rest of the county, including Pontiac, into the new 19th District with Livingston County. Though Broomfield’s Royal Oak home remains in the 18th, he has the option of seeking re-election in either district. "It’s a difficult problem and there are many factors to consider,” Broomfield said, adding that pressing problems facing the nation have kept him busy in Congress and prevented any concentrated thought on the matter. The possibility of a primary clash with County Oerk-Reg ster Daniel T. Murphy if Broomfield should choose the 19th was not a significant factor in his decision, Broomfield sa:d. ■ Murphy has said he plans to in for the Republican nomination from the 19th'' jaiv ss of Broomfield’s choice. Other tenttal cahdidlatcs are reluctant to oppose Broomfield and are a risen Wednet HlihMt i Lowest tempereturs . Mesn temperature . Weather: Bunny. Hlllhest temperature Kansan City 9 NATIONAL WEATHER — Fair td partly cloudy skies are expected for the entire country tonight wfth no significant precipitation forecast. It will be cooler from the Lakes and mid- MiaslsiFpi Valley eastward to the northern and middle Atlantic t will continue warm in south Atlantic and Gulf states Hold Dr. Ward for Vice Trial Crash Probers Eye Changes in Weather (Continued From Page One) Monroe County. Airport was changing rapidly when the plane took off. Eight minutes before takeoff it was Overcast, with eight-mile visibility. Two minutes after takeoff, he said, thunder, rain and hail pelted the field and visibility had dropped to a half-mile. The plane was headed for Newark, N. J., via White Plains, It fell into mud about 80 yards off a runway. The airport is several ' piles southwest Of Rochester. One wingtip apparently struck the ground, a witness said. The plane bounced, broke in two like a matchstick and caught fire. Airport firemen extinguished the; -flames. Solve Lake Problem (Continued From Page One) country and had to be tracked down as far away as Arizona. Once the task was completed, several objections were raised by a few Of the owners. ' Some disagreed with the preliminary, survey, feeling that' the cost of such a project would be prohibitive. A couple of owners were simply not interested, said Hartman. Others said it would be far cheaper to dig wells to feed the lake instead. successfully maintained by the drain, commission at no additional cost to the property owners. Once contingency funds have been used, the property owners will be periodically assessed to maintain and operate the pump. The cost will be minimal to each, said 1 Barry, and "should never pose any problem.” i (Wells were tried at Hammond Lake in Bloomfield Township, but afforded no permanent solution. The .lake is still low as are many others in the county.) ANOTHER STUDY With a vast majority of the Watkins Lake property owners in accord, the drain commission undertook a more thorough study. After surveying the entire lake front, engineers recommended raising the depleted lake’s level three feet to 950. feet' above sea level as most desirable. They proposed doing this by pumping water via a ditch from the Clinton River during p«*ak flow periods. He said the experience of Wat-kins Lake residents and others should be useful for many other lake residents disheartened by dropping water levels in th county. Most of the county’s lakes chn be successfully fed to reach desirable levels from the Clinton, Shiawassee and Huron rivers,’ said Barry. It’s up to the residents b initiate the action in most instances, he added. Many have, and the drain commission is now engaged in maintaining the levels of six lakes and proceeding to have the levels of 25 more established in court. LONDON 141 — A Magistrate! Court today ordered Dr. Stephen Ward, U.S.-educated osteopath, held for .trial on vice charges. Police claim Ward, 50, Is a central figure In the John Pro-fumo-Chrlstine Keeler sex and security scandal which has shaken the Conservative government to its foundations. In §• m After a three-day preliminary hearing, Judge Leo Gradwell rilled that Ward .must answer before ,, a jury charges ranging from living on the earnings of prostitutes to procuring an abortion. , The trial will m held in London’s famous Old Bailey court, probably in September. Ward has proclaimed his innocence. He haa not denied that Miss Keeler, a 21-year-old redhead whose Involvement with Ptofumo led to the letter’s resignation as wai; minister,, was his age, along with various other [■ girls. V , mmt vw Thus, diverting some of the excess floW would have no adverse effect on other lakes connecting further downstream, both th drain commissioner and engl-icers agreed. * The petition and the drain commissioner’s report were then filed in Circuit Court for a final decision whether to proceed. \ Immediately after a hearing Dec. 21, 1960, the court established the Watkins Lake level at 950 feet as recommended in the engineers’ report. Actual construction began early next spring, and by Aug. 1, 1961, pump bn a newly created backwater of thesXlinton River was busily pushlngStater through the ditch and into Watkins Lakfe. The flow onn also be reversed In the event the lake should' threaten to climb too high, Commissioner Barry pointed out. The total project cost assessec property owners,$44,706, including reimbursements for right-of-way and a $5,831 contingency fund. The lake level haa slnqe been Level of Water Drops Further * BIRMINGHAM—A summer art class series for both adults and children will begin next week at the Bloomfield Art Association. Six-week adult classes in painting and drawing will meet weekly for two and a half The sessions will be held from 7-9:30 p.m. Mondays? and from :30 a.m. to noon Tuesdays and Thursdays. “The Baldwin Avenue water tank went dry Monday night water pressure in the system to refill the tank faster than it was being drained by the heavy demand. “In periods of hot, dry weather like this, even all 22 wells couldn’t handle the demand less the sprinkling ban was in effect. 19 MILLION GALLONS Yesterday, we pumped 19-million gallons. The capacity for 17 Wells is about 20-million gallons. ‘This morning the tank full and demand had eased somewhat with cooler weather, but lack of rain still drove the ground water table lower,’’ Parker added. Both Fisher Body and Pontiac Motor Division production employes were sent home around 10 p.m. Monday when the water tank went dry. Yesterday’s work stoppage on the first shift was due to sediment plugging water mains. This condition was created by a reversal of flow when the tank went dry, according to Parker. It was corrected by flushing the mains. :< . NO DELAYS SINCE The second shift resumed production as scheduled and there have been no delays since. About Robert Broner will instruct the evening students and Dorothy Siddell those attending in the morning. The Young Peoples Art Workshop, to be taught by Betty Conn, will begin July 11.' Two-hour classes will meet at 10 a.m. Thursdays for six weeks for students In grades seven through 12 Those Jin grades one through six will mdet from 10 a.m. to noon Fridays. Information and applications can be obtained by phoning the association, 1516 S. Cranbrook, daily except Monday . Rev. Harry Clark of the Pine Hill Congregational Church Will return to his pulpit Sunday after a trip to the National Congregational Church’s convention in Hartford, Conn., and a weeks vacation. ' home at Fisher Body and some 1,200 at Pontiac Motor. Chief White said that In a serious fire, about 8,000 gallons of water per minute was the normal requirement. Our pumpers range in capacity from 750 to 1,250 gallons per minute.” The National Board of Fire Underwriters' recommends that a city of Pontiac’s Size be able to furnish ll.5-million gallons per day for fire service — more than half of the city’s total pumpage yesterday. Embezzler Told to Replace $2,650 A 2l-year*old Detroit woman, yesterday was placed on three years’ probation and ordered to make restitution of $2,650 she admitted embezzling froirt an Oak Park doctor who employed her as a receptionist. Delores Kushim Was sentenced by Circuit Judge Arthur E. Moore, who ordered-her to pay $500 immediately and the rest at $50 a month. Miss Kushim pleaded guilty May 9 to embezzling the money from Dr. Murray H. Gray, 22100 Coolidge, during a five-month period last year. Birmingham Area News Summer Class Series Set at Art Association 3. Lester Olmstead, who also attended the meeting in Hartford, will deliver a report on national missions. r Final plans for the congregation’s church will be presented at a July 14 breakfast at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Cork, 1905 N. Hammond Lake, Pontiac, Breakfast, directed by Jack C. Marshall, chairman of the board of deacons, will be served at9a.m. The congregation now meets in the Pine Lake Elementary School, 3333 W. Long Lake, Orchard Lake. George C, Best Service for George C. Best, 62, of 172 E. Lincoln, was to be 2 p.m. t o d a y at the William' R. Hamilton Funeral Home Bell {Chapel with cremation following in Evergreen Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. Best died yesterday, after a brief illness. He was an advertising salesman for the Society of Automotive Engineers. A sot, Robert B., of Birmingham survives. The Benevolence Society of the church will hold its last meeting of the summer at the FBI Nabs 4 on Spy Charge (Continued From Page One) L075 employes had been sent Egorov is a personnel officer in the U.N. secretariat. The FBI said the couple resisted arrest and the woman “put up terrific struggle” and had to be carried qway by agents. Later Egorov told newsmen .with a grin, “This is a comedy,” and his wife casually obliged when a photographer asked, in Russian, for a picture. DENY GUILT The other pair seized in a Washington apartment denied their guilt at a hearing in which they didn’t have to say anything. , While the FBI called them John and Jane Doe” in its complaint, it said’they were living under the names of Robert Keistutis Baltch and Joy Ann Garber, or Joy Ann Baltch. The names were taken, the FBI said, from innocent citizens—a Roman Catholic priest and a Connecticut housewife. The only declaration I wish to make is that I deny all of the charges,” the balding, middle-aged man called Baltch told U.S. Commissioner Sam Wertleb. “It has to be proven — they have to have witnesses and it has to be proven,” whispered the tall, buxom brhnetto. The FBI said the pair had shared the apartment here. The FBI would not discuss the background of the Baltch couple —even to say whether they, too, might be Russian. Both spoke with a slight but indistinguishable foreign accent. home of Mrt. Jarred Welsh,. 6814 Dakota, it 19:36 a.m. July' 16. Officers are to be Waterford OKs Land Purchase Site to Be Location of Third High School Waterford Township’s third high school will be located at the northwest corner of Scott Lake and Pontiac-Lake roads. Construction of the new school plant, however, is several years away. Moving forward with its expansion plans, the school board last- night authorized purchase of the h 1 g h school sito for future„ development and also voted 1 to buy an elementary school parcel. The 70-acre high school site, recommended by the board’s building committee, will cost $2,400 per acre with $30,000 due now and the balance upon sale ACQUISITION REASONS The building committee suggested acquiring the secondary school location now due to a scarcity of suitable locations in this general area and the imminent appreciation Of land val- Decision Expected N-Production Cut? r WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Kennedy administration is considering a reduction In production of fissionable materials for use In nuclear weapons. While no immediate cutr appear Imminent, the large stockpile of U.S. atomic material and the money to 6* saved by a decrease are expected to produce a production-cutting decision in the next few years. Defense Department sources recently suggested that the output of nuclear explosives for A-bombs and H-bomb triggers can be reduced by $1 billion a year. The Atomic, EneVgy Commission (AEC) has been spending $2.8 billion annually, most of It for weapons and the costly material that goes Into them. i $l-blllion reduction would be ulyalent to closlrig down a l Industry and would , mean Job losses for thousands of persons. MANY INQUIRIES ' Reports of the contemplated cutback have caused many congressional and regional Inquiries. Dr. Glenrt T. Seaborg, AEC chairman, said In a Voice of America interview that “studies are under way to see whether the military requirements are such that the rate of production of fissionable materials can in .fact be decreased.” Seaborg said the question Ir whether capacity to produce these materials “has reached the point of being , larger than is actually need- ' ed.” In a separate statement the AEC said long-range studies of military requirements are being made, but that "decision!, have not yet been reached as to specific changes In the AEC materials production program." /. It was noted that the commission has been tapering off raw material purchases and that a 17 per cent cut In electric power consumption Is scheduled by next June 80 at die three mammoth gas-cotts diffusion plmts producing fissionable uranium- Supt. of Schools Dr. Don O. Tatroc said that only the rear portion of the parcel will be. used for the school plant. He indicated that the frontal acreage nearer the intersection might someday be resold by the district. Also acquired was an approximate 10-acre elementary school site on Farm, directly behind Waterford Township High School. Purchased for $22,490, this site is earmarked for a new school within the next two years, in the first stage of the school system’s five-year building program. In other business, the board authorized an expenditure of $12,586.75 for Improvements on an elementary school site In Section 12 purchased last month* A school will be built here also within two years. The improvement funds will come out of an escrow account of $25,000 earmarked for roa. bag. Potatoes, 30-lb. bag . . Radishes, red ...... Radishes, white ..... Rhubarb, boh. .... Squash. Italian, % bu. Squash, Summer. Vs b Tomatoes, hothouse, bsa, ....... i.w Turnips, bon.............JJf Turnips, topped, ..... GREENS : ' Cabbage, bu. Collara, bu. Kale. bu. ..................... Mustard, bu. ....... Spinach, bu....................... Sorrel, bu. ................ ..1.00 Swiss Chard, bu................ Turnips, bu. ..........1 LETTUCE AND SALAD GREENS Endive, bu. ...........,..........$1.75 Endive, bleaohed :............... S.r“ Bsoarole, bu.............. ....... 1. Escarole, bleaohed ............. 3.i Lettuce, Blbb.-pk. .............. LI. Lettuce, Boston, dos. ....'..... 1.38 Lettuoe, head, dos.............. 3.38 Lettuce, head, bu... 3.00 Lettuoe, leal, bu.... ........ 1.25 Romalne ....................... 1.80 Poultry ond Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT, July 1 (APi—Prices paid per pound at Datrolt tor No. 1-quality live poultry: ' ' Heavy type hens 10>30; light typo hone 0-10; heavy type roasters over 8 lbs 38-38; broilers and rryefs 3-4 lbs whltss laVa-so; Barred Rook 31-33. Comment: Market steady. Supplies moderate and ample to a lair demand. Trade centered on fryers, DETROIT itOOS DETROIT, July 1 (API — Egg prloas paid per dozen at Detroit by first receivers (including US.):. White grade A jumbo 38-44; extra large 34-41; largo 33-37; medium 21*30%; small 90-92;' browns grade A extra large 34-30; large 83-33%; medium 37-38; small 18-18: cheeks 34. ' Comment: Market steady. Production declining. Undergrades Increasing due to continuing hot weather. Over-all supplies moderate and clearing satisfactorily. Offerings of jumbo and extra-large light and snort of need. CHICAOO BUTTER AND EOOtl CHICAGO. July 3 (AP)—Chloago Mercantile Exchange—Butter eteedyf wholesale buying prices unchanged; 83 score AA 87Vi; 92 A 87Vi: 90 S 86%; 89 C 64%: ears 90 B 88ti; 89 C 88V«. Eggs steady; wholesale buying prices 1 higher to 1 lower; 70 per cent or hotter grade A whites 83; mixed 83; mediums 36; standards 38Vi; dirties 36Vi; checks CHICAOO POTATOES CHICAGO, July 1 (AP) - Potatoes: Arrivals 333. on track, 148 (new and old combined): total U.8. shipments: Friday 847; Saturday 418; Sunday 83; supply liberal, demand good at slightly lower prices; market allghtly weaker; oarlel 'rack idea: California Long Whitts 3.68-: Gains of key stocks went from fraction* to about a point. Pan American World Airways and National Air Line* each advanced more than a point following news1 that they will exchange the capital stock of each held by the other. For a while there seemed a chance that National would unload its Pan Am stock on the market. Steels edged higher on average despite the indictment of Bethlehem and" seven other companies on price-fixing charges. Bethlehem and most other major steelmakers gained ‘fractions. U.S. Steel, not among the indicted firms, was off a fraction. IBM and Xerox advanced about 3 each, Polaroid about 2. Chrysler, up nearly a point, was die best gainer in a slightly higher auto section. Twentieth Century-Fox made a similar gain following a published report that a profit is expected for the second quarter. ir Jl *1 Allegheny Corp. rose a fraction following a report that control of .the company is expected to switch back to Allan P. Kirby soon. Bell and Howell was easy. It was reported that Charles H. Percy, Chairman, would seek the Republican nomination for governor of Illinois. Du Pont advanced more than a point. Texaco, American Telephone, and Illinois Central were about a point higher. Fractional gains were scored by Control Data, U;S. Smelting, Kennecott, and Sears, Roebuck. American Stock Exchange prices were mixed, with many unchanged. Syntex rose about 2. Tampa Electric, Occidental Petroleum; and Kawecki Chemical were among gainers. Corporate Bonds .were steady on balance. American Stock Exch. Flgurei after decimal point! are eighths American Silver Rate in U.S. Near Official Price Steel industry Indicted By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK ~ The price of silver on the futures* market in London .has been pushed above the monetary value of U S. gov- The Treasury can use th}s re-1 gust delivery the price went to leased hoard for its increasing $1,297 or higher, with as much as coinage needs without competing] $1.3085 an ounce bjd for delivery with other consumers in the Lon-jin June 1984. don market. And silver dealers! say the Treasury stock -diangs r . . . PRICE LIFTED itary value ot u s. gov- mu monPtflrv value of the tJ S stocks. And the -cash over the market M prevent “J* eminent stocks. Ana me casn i ai.v„ 4th Time in 15 Months Pric? «" New York has risen this|nmaway prices for industrial or an ^ ,h New York ^ week almost to the Official price. f*rt uses here at home — al- The New York Stock Btchange NEW YORK (AP)—Following Of (elected itock trxniectloni " York Stock Exchange - —-A- NEW YORK (AP) - For the fourth time in IS months, the federal government has brought price-fixing charges against companies in the steel industry. Eight firms in the $75 million-a-year steel castings industry were indicted Tuesday by a federal grand jury. Nine executives were named, including two who were fined last year for fixing prices of steel forgings. The Justice Department charged the eight companies conspired new york (ap> — American itocks: from 1958 to at least 1961 to fix SSei^pw 3| mSUp Rini; ml the price of steel castings. It said impTblc*1L'SwwW "iinthe firms controlled 80 per cent 14.3 Of the nation’s sales. Mead Jobs fj _------------CASTINGS USES The castings are used in construction, ship building, mining and oil production. ‘ Indicted were Bethlehem Steel, Baldwin v Lima-Hamilton Corp., Blaw-Knox Co., Erie Forge and Steel Corp., Textron Inc., General Steel Industries, Inc., Birdsboro ‘*Corp. and the Penn Steel Cast- But don’t start melting down your silver coins. They’re worth more as they are than in the metals markets. , The U.S. Treasury has enough s0ver on .hand, to maintain its offi-1 c i a 1 valuation, thanks to the re- j though consumers are resigned to having to pay more for their sup-] cash price was lifted by dealers 0.3 cent an ounce Monday to - | plies I*1288- But the price rise on the world The £ Pje wef markets-and the steadily mount-1 credited to active buying in ling demands that back that inJ^nd°n ^ to mcreased demand, crease-comfort many mining 00- Eur^a" "fT for erators in the United States Sii-|boih coinage anJ f*' ver thus becomes for thenVa orof-l Consumption* silver has been itable by-product of their main running well above mine output. 8*l*i (Ml.) High Low 41 34% 34‘/« 3444 H 81 40 Va 3843 40 H 2 14% 14% 14% . 16% 18% + 47% 48% + ings Co. 20 44% 44% 44% ... 3 23% 23% 33% + 22 44% 44 44% + 10 78% 78 78% + 3 33% 32 . 32 — 6 %%3 +36%36 .% 6 63% 03% 63% + Individual defendants are Erb Gurney of Bethlehem, Sylvester J. Moran and Benjamin P. Hammond of Blaw-Knox, Emil Lang 51 «% » 82 7 % of Erie Forge, Thomas F i4 2i% «% 2i% + %iand Clyde L. Hassel of Textron’s 33 9% 9% 9% + % Pittsburgh Steel Foundry, How- 4 33% »% 33% 7 % ard F. Park Jr. of General Steel, 14 i9% »9% 89% t % G. Clymer Brooke of Birdsboro, ■ “ “ | and Alvin M.1 Andorn of Penn Steel. Lang was fined $10,000 and Gurney $7,500 last Oct. 25 for fixing prices of steel forgings, is p : | INDICTED EARUER m »% 16% 3o% + % Bethlehem and Baldwin-Lima-62 h% i5% j4% + % Hamilton were indicted April 2 on 3 28% 38% 28% + %|charges 6f conspiring to fix prices i6 «% 74% 78% +i on train wheels and other steel 39 68% M% M% - %| products. Bethlehem and Erie 11 89% 60^ + % Forge were indicted last year on “ ?>% VW* - %icharges of fixing prices on steel - - J % forgings. I jL 28% - % Defendants in the latest case + could receive a year in prison. 32%- %|xhey and their companies could 38 + * ibe fined up to $50,000 each. 3o% + % Textron said that Dorsey re-M% + v*!tired as president of Pittsburgh 14% + % steel Foundry last January. company spokesman said: “We were not aware of any facts indicating violation by officials of the Pittsburgh Steel Foundry Co.’’ Romania met today with Soviet leaders amid growing signs of estrangement between the Soviet Union and that East European satellite. Deputy Premier Alexandra Birladeanu was here for a regular ’ meeting of the executive for Mutual Economic Assistance. Armed Forces Minister Leon-tin Salajan headed a top Romanian military delegation meeting with Soviet Defense Minister Marshal Rodion Y. Malinovsky. Set to Regain Control of Firm Financier Nearly Has Alleghany Corp. Soybean Opening Delayed by Trading lines of copper, lead and zinc—lElec^onfcs ?nd various space niIBenv .and at a time when lead and zinc age devices hf? T"*08? 3? DAWSON ices ai;e firming . use of the metal. Affluent sod- cent direction by Congress i»| The spot price far silver, on the iSSJS? their buyinfof^lous'e6 stop backing $1 and $2 bills with key London market rose « Toes- |day to $1.292 an ounce. For Au-' number of gilver c'ins naed. ed for vending machines, turnstiles and generally higher consumer purchases has pqt a attain on many nation’s mints. # * *. Also, one , source of newly mined silver has been very erratic. Red China releases silver or withholds it at will, as do other Communist bloc producers. In the United States the old allsilver mines have declined toward the vanishing point, with silver becoming largely a byproduct of other mining. In the United States one unexpected demand has been a recently growing popularity for sil-dollars. The government Romanians, Meet Amid MOSCOW (ffl — Two high of- council Of the Soviet-Bloc Council Birladeanu wap presumed to, mfnts stopped making the big be pressing objections toico*ns ^ At that time Uncle COMECON plans for Romania’s! Sam had 500 million in storage . future in COMECON coopera-jand the demand for them was tion schemes. The Romanians]^falling fast, are known to be strongly op- But this has changed. And reposed to Soviet-sponsored pro-1 cently the U.S.Mint said demand postils to curtail their industrial j has been rising at about a five- development in favor of greater emphasis on Agricultural production. million-a-year clip, with the supply down to 88 million or less. The problem: If the mint makes a lot of new silver dollars, .it' will be using up 'metal that, could make many times the amount ' in silver dimes and quarters. And CHICAOO LIVESTOCK CHICAOO, July 1 (API- Hoa», 6,000: butchori moitly 26 hlfhor, Initonoii 6(1 hlxhir; aowi itiody to moitly 28 higher; ihlppin took ground 46 per cint of ixl-1 obl« lupply; 1-2 190-226 lb butoheri 18.78-19.00; ground 300 lwxd »t 19.00 me 90 h«gd lortld gt 10.26; 1-3 106-330 lb. ie.96-18.76: 280-360 lb! 17.76-18.36; I eri ovor 280 Ibi vory loirce; 1>3 lb eowi 14.78-16.76: load groiind ouv .» 16.36; 400-460 Ibi 13,78-14.76; 3-3 460-BOO Ibi 13.36-14.00; 600-000 Iba 13.00-13.30. CoiUo 3,000 : 30 oglvei: ilgughtir itooro modergtely getlve, iteody to ntrong; holforo itaody to 08 hl$hor oorly; now moitly itagdy: oowi gnd bulb iteody; looti* moitly prime ground 1,300 lb ilgughtor.itoen 34.00; mixed high oholoe end prmlme 1,100-1.400 Ibi 33.60*84.201 gt ..... ohotg, 00-1.300 CHICAGO MV- Heavy trading % yesterday in soybeati futures %i forced a delay in opening trans-i' wti' io%’ io% + % actions Of that commodity and o sift bi'4 67% +1 j its byproducts on the Board of iso $2 ij% 77% X %lTrade today. Clerks in brokerage 66 4»% 47% 47% - % firms were described Jo io% it is “. ‘iswamped With work in posting 04 30% 38% 30% + %Uiwmi«*« 4 42 41% 41% + % accounts. •V— | The opening was deferred until 11 a.m. , Trade began at the usual time in grains, however, with corn strong and others mostly firm in fairly active dealings. Corn moved up more than 2 cents a bushel at the extreme % on buying which appeared to be % largely speculative short cover-.Jing and some reinstatement 'of long positions. Brokers said there was addi- .......— tional hedge pressure in wheat ■Z— I but that it was well absorbed by commercial demands. , NEW YORK (AP) - -The stage was set today for Allan P. Kirby, wealthy eastern financier, to recover control of Alleghany Corp., a holding company overseeing! assets of $7 billion. Kirby was ousted from the Alleghany c h a i r m a nship 26 months ago after’a spectacular proxy battle mounted by brothers John D. and Clinton W. Murchison Jr. of Dallas, Tex. However, Kirby remained as Alleghany’s largest single stockholder with an estimated 3.3-mll-lion share holding, and subsequent Kirby - Murchison feuding brought an impasse to corporate affairs. Sale by Bertin C. Gamble of 1.6-million Alleghany shares { to Kirby and two associates was to be consummated today in Minneapolis, a spokesman for Kirby said. Westerners here have noted evidence that the Romanians, their pride Itufig by the blow to, their ambitions to become an j the demand for them is rising, industrial power, have withdrawn | too. their support of Soviet Premier --------------~ Khrushchev in his ideological fight with the Communist Chi-| Among the evidence they cited were: The Romanians’ publication of excerpts from a recent Chinese attack on Khrushchev that was suppressed in the Soviet Union and other Soviet bloc countries. Romanian party Boss Gheargriw Dej’s boycott of the Soviet bloc summit meeting with Premier Khrushchev in Berlin; last weekend. ★ ★ ★ The arrival, of a Romanian cultural mission in Peking at a time when East European contacts with Red China have been reduced -to a minimum. Chinese Communist newspaper’s explicit ’ praise’ of niiiniiiu Successful Investing * » * # By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am 60 years old, a widower, own my own business, and don’t intend to retire until I wear out. I have over $100,000 in banks. With some $200,000 in stocks and substantial real estate holdings, my income bracket is high ( and I don’t want to push it higher. I am thinking of municipals. Can you give me any suggestions?” A) I am only too glad to do so, since there is nothing I enjoy “Our end of the transaction was completed here yesterday,” he said. “Mr. Gamble has given his word and .we have no reason to doubt it.” With transfer of the Gamble K:'k, shares in the hands of by and of Interests friendly to him rose to 59 per cent of the 9,8-miIlipn Alleghany shares outstanding.- Two months was expected to be required to formally reinstall Kirby as Alleghany board chair-and chief executive officer. Gamble, head of a big Minneapolis-based retail chain, has directed Alleghany affairs for several months—since shortly after he bought some of the Murchison stock holdings and arranged to buy the remainder. .09% | Gamble will retain the 1.5-million shares he bought outright from the Murchlsons last fall. Alleghany controls the 2.5-billion' New York Central "Railroad and Investors Diversified Services, a 84-billion investment company. ^ papu a CApu\,n piaioc vi iiv,—»-------- ---- -------v - _ * ~ mania as the second European niore than the work which I do in this medium. I infer that your income bracket must be at least in the 50 per cent area, where a 3 per cent municipal yield is equivalent to 6 per cent from a taxable. nation after Albania to join the Chinese side in the Moscow-Peking .feud.1 Bucharest leaders appeared to be using their independent line! source, in the Soviet-Chinese dispute as] i, suggest that you buy equal lever to force Russian eco- amounts 0f State of Tennessee nomlc concessions - specifically 3’S 0f 1983 at 100 (when issued), ’ more aid for Romania’s Indus- |Mftssachussets^ 2.80’s of 1983 on a 3 per cent bails, City of New YOrk 3’s of 1980 at 100, and Cincinnati, Ohio, School District 1%’s of 1967 on a 2.10 basis. trial expansion plans. News in Brief camera and attachments valued at $165 were reported stolen last n|ght from a car owned by Neil Isbell of Romeo in the Huron Theater parking lot, 941 W. Huron. The car’s convertible top was slashed, according to Waterford Township police. A set pf golf clubs and accessories valued at $250 were reported stolen at 2:15 a.m. today from the car of Leslie Frisch, 5224 Durnham, Waterford Township, parked In front of his house. Q) Mv husband had a sudden heart attack from which he is now recovering. He is a wonderful man, a steady worker and good provider: but I must now think more about our future. We have 35 American Telephone, 50 Republic Steel, 20 General Electric, ample Insurance, and $14,000 In saving*. What changes would you suggest to increase our capital, In the event of early retirement?” MmSmI Rtf ‘7!' IsygBill BMOTjSU*1:::: : Mill, fnvutori Trull ....... growth , i Elietrontoi ...... S,w iLaumttiioni ; , Oii/sk 1.90* 3... ... ... I $*%m& /** 48 I4^V* 34% - jt iyav sFkt:| wjj is K- aft (I Preen I Ip I 38% “• »■' J % James Lafnear, 2279 F.vudnn, Waterford Township, ,told police yesterday that a set of golf clubs of undetermined value v/as stolen frcun his car parked nt the Pontiac Lake Recreation Area. Rummage Sale, Friday, July 5, 9-1, CAI Building, Drayton Mother Singers. — Adv. I DIVIDENDS D*ll*r*S wjtob M A) I am extremely sorry to t hear ,pf your husband's illness, ‘ but it is pleasant indeed to hear -you speak so warmly of him. Your objective, I think, should be to Increase your capital by • keeping It Invested In share* which over a period can ap-. predate, in price through continued earnings gain. I would hold Telephone and General Electric but soil Republic Steel, which he* limited appeal. 1 would put half my saving* , into Avon Products and Bristol-Myers, two strong conaumar stocks. ' j Mr. Spears cannot answer all mall personally nut will answer STiall questions, possible in his > iV column. J , T ’i) •'