The Weafher U.l. WMlIwr lurM* ftncH Cool THE PONTIAC JRE^ COLORS Memorial Day Edition VOL. 124 — NO. 96 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY, MAY 30. 1966 -34 PAGES -I. ■. Area Accidents Kill 3 r;, "C' Three persons lost their lives in two area traffic accidents yesterday. A two-car collision on Ben-stein Road near Oakley Park in Commerce Township early yesterday morning claimed the lives of a Commerce Township man and a Wixom woman. KUled were Arthur N. Gris- som, 36, of 9130 Pittsfield, Commerce Township, and Mrs. Eugeee E. Rutiedge, 34, of 1300 BeU ^oney, Wixom. Fatally injured in a motorcycle-truck collision near Imlay City in Lapeer County yesterday ifternoon was Carf D. Anderson, 18, of Detroit. Grissom’s car and an automo- Two More Buddhists Take Lives in Anti-Ky Moves bile driven by Mrs. Rutledge’s husband collided head-on shortly before 2 a.m. CROSSED CENTER-LANE Oakland Couhty sheriff’s deputies said the position of the cars indicated that Grissom crossed the center lane just prior to the mishap. Both Grissom and Mrs. Rutledge were pronounced dead at Pontiac General Hospital, Grissom of a crushed chest and cardiac contusions and Mrs. Rutledge of a massive hemorrhage, skuii fracture and crushed chest. State Leading Nation in Toll Since Friday Death of Four Young Persons Worst Crash; Two Triple Fotolities VISITOR FROM EARTH - ’This is an exact Kennedy. The white turret left of the mast houses counterpart of the Surveyor spacecraft that was a television camera. On top of the mast are di-scheduled to be America’s first attempt at a soft rectional antennas. The hoodlike arrangement on landing on the moon. It was to be launched this top is composed of solar cells to provide power, morning on an Atlas-Centaur rocket from Cape JSALGQN, South Viet Nam Two more Buddhists committed suicide today in a new wave of fanaticism aimed at forcing the United States to withdraw its support from Premier Nguyen Cao Ky’s military regime. Two others burned themselves to death yesterday. The moderate chairman of the powerful Buddhist Institute appealed for an immediate halt to such “self-sacrifice.” The statement by the monk Rutledge is listed in serious condition in Pontiac General Hospital. Anderson-was ktHed-whetrlhc motorcycle he was riding collided head - on with a truck two miles north Du of Imlay City L«rt Y«.r on M53 at 3:05 Oakland Highway Toll in ’66 Lunar-Landing Craft Poised for Launching Temperatures Take a Tumble CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (ilV-A spidery Surveyor moonship with a revolving camera eye was poised for launching today on a quarter-million-mile journey that hopefully will produce America’s first soft landing on the lunar surface. Surveyor, whose development problems have delayed its launching three years was scheduled to ride an Atlas-Centaur rocket skyward. The firing was to trigger a two-pronged U.S. assault on space. Gemini 9 astronauts ’Thomas P. Stafford and Eugene A. Ceman are to try again Wednesday to rocket into orbit Mild holiday weekend temperatures fell 14 degrees within bnd hour Saturday evening, with accompanying high winds. ’The mercury continued its de-■ dine from 8 p.m. Saturday until 3:30 a.m. yesterday when a reading only 35 degrees was recorded. Today’s high is expected to be near 17 degrees. Fair and cold is the forecast for tonight, with lows of from 35 to 42 degrees. 1 their rendezvous and space-walk mission. If there are no hitches. Surveyor will be transmitting pictures from the lunar surface Thursday when Cernan takes Tomorrow will be mostly sunny and slightly warmer with high temperatures in the 63-to-70-degree range. Fair and somewhat warmer is Wednesday’s outlook. In downtown Pontiac the lowest temperature prior to 8 a.m. was 38. ’The temperature indicator registered 61 at 1 p.m. Thich (Venerable) Tam Chau indicated a sharper division among Buddhist leaders as a result of their failure so far to bring down the Ky government. The new wave of Buddhist protest suicides began yesterday with two women who immolated themselves in Hue, the Buddhist stronghold in the northern part of South Viet Nam, and in Saigon’s main pagoda. They were the first immolations since seven monks and nuns burned themselves to death in the months before the overthrow of the late President Ngo Dinh Diem in November 1963. ’The new suicides reflected despair among Buddhist extremists of rallying enough support fei the streets to bring down the jtinta. Today a Buddhist monk set himself aflame in the .main pagoda in Dalat, MO mijes northeast of Saigon, while a young girl in the mountain resort slashed her wrists and said that her blood should be used to write “letters in support of the Buddhist cause.’’ Boy Drowns in Pond Near Lapeer Home By the Associated Press Michigan was leading the nation in traffic deaths today for the three-day Memorial Day weekend a^ at least 32 persons lost their lives. Twenty-one were killed over last yeaPsMemorTal DaY^ end. ’Those killed since 6 p.m. Friday include: Four young persons lost their lives early-today in a two-car head-on crash on M203 in Hancock in the worst accident recorded for the weekend. The driver of the truck, Howard J. Ferguson, 32, of May- . ville, was not injured. Anderson was accompanied by two companions, also on motorcycles, who witnessed the accident. / Other deaths: Aline K. Goodwin, 17, Lincoln Park, and James Me Everts, 16, Marlette, when their car went out of control on M46 in Elmer Township, Sanilac County, late yesterday,----------------------- A 10-year-old Lapeer boy drowned in a pond near his home Saturday afternoon while wading with two companions. They told deputies that Anderson looked back at them as they approached a curve and crossed the center line into the path of the truck, which was traveling in the opposite direction. Police said John Sanders, son of Mr. and Mrs. Morris M. Sanders of 56 S. Court, slipped into water over his head in the Turnbull Mill pond about 5:45 p.m. Two other boys tried to pull him out but his struggles prevented them from holding on to him. They ran to a nearby house and summoned help. Richard Daniels, owner of Lapeer Ambulance Service, found the boy’s body in 10 feet of water about 30 minutes later. The truck driver was not held. Veterans, Hilton Hotel Back on Good Terms CHICAGO (UPI) - The Hilton Hotel flap apparently was over today. COUPLE DIES ___ William Riley, 22, and his wife Mary, 20, of Owosso in a two-car head-on crash near Saginaw, yeste^ay. Christine Jiles, IS, Detroit, as a passenger hart in a two-car Detroit intersedioa crash yesterday. George E. Gregory Jr., 12, of Fennville, when he dashed in to the path of a car yesterday from a bridge on M89 near Fennville where he had been fishing. ’The boy was pronounced dead at the scene after revival attempts failed. Andy Borg, national commander cl the Veterans of Foreign Wars, after an on-the-spot investigation, has accepted an official apology from hotel magnate CiHU-ad Hilton after the Chicago Hilton refused to make room hi its nightclub for wounded Viet Nam veterans. Borg said Hilton’s statement “was just what we asked for.’’ MISS ROCHESTER-Sherrie Elliott, 18, of Royal Oak was crowned Miss Rochester Saturday night. She will represent the village in the Miss Michigan Pageant at Muske-kon in July. a lengthy space walk. ’The Surveyor flight plan called for the 2,194-pound craft, which resembles a giant spider, to execute several intricate maneuvers as it vaults across an alien weightless world toward the moon, gently touching down in the Ocean of Storms about 1:38 a.m. Thursday. Tom Gaston, 22, of Grand Rapids, when his car careoied at high speed through guard rails and down an embankment off the M89 exit from U.S. 131 near Plainwell yesterday. HEAD-ON CRASH Carl Douglas Anderson, 18, of Detroit, in the head-on collision of his motorcycle and a truck (Continued ipn Page 2, Col. 4) Wins Driving Contest DETROIT UPI - Tom Hostnik, 16, a student at University of Detroit High School, beat out 4,000 teen-agers Saturday to win the Teen-age Road-E-0, a safe driving contest sponsored by Detroit Jaycees. In Today's Press Romney Still needs to file petitions before name goes on ballot - PAGE A-4. Prep Baseball Waterford wins in tournament — PAGE C-1. SHAPE MovO of allied command in Paris will uproot 9,000 — PAGE A-5. Astrology B-10 Bridge B-10 Crossword Puzzle . . C*ll Comics ............B-10 Editorials .........A-6 Obituaries .........C-4 Sports C-l-C-3 ’liieaters ........B-11 TV-Radlo Programs C-11 Wilson, Earl ......C-11 I’s Pages B-1—B-3 A key midcourse maneuver was scheduled for early tomorrow morning about 15 hours after launching. At that time a ground station planned to send a radio signal to jockey the craft on to a collision course with its target. JOURNEY TIME ’The journey was to last 63 hours and cover 231,483 miles. Surveyor was designed to being a terminal maneuver about 2,9M miles from the moon, half an hour before touchdown. It carries a retrorock^t to slow its speed from 5,880 miles an hour to 250 miles and three smaller control engines to further brake the velocity to about eight miles an hour on landing. This would be less of a jolt than that felt by a parachutist hitting earth. ’The landing impact was to be cushioned by crushable foot pads and shock absorbers under each of the thrM large legs, and by crushable aluminum blocks inder the frame. Ll’L ONES Memorial Day Gets Little Attention in Viet SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — For 98 years, Americans have set aside May 30 as Memorial Day to recognize their fighting men struck down in battle. ’This Memorial Day the Communist Viet Cong-by bullet, grenade and booby trap—will add another dozen names to the list of more than 500,000 American war dead. — ’The Vietnamese war has added 3,411 Amerl-« can dead to those honored each year on Memorial Day. Inexorably the toll goes higher, averaging 90 a week. Within three months, Viet Nam seems likely to hold dubious distinction as America’s fifth most costly war, ranking just behind Korea where 33,620 died. HASTY ATTENTION While Memorial Day will be noted with ceremonies and speeches across America, it will receive only hasty attention in Viet Nam where the men are falling. At all American installations — from the bomh-scarred embassy hi Saigon to the sandbagged 1st Cavalry command post at A Khe — the U.S. flag will he flown at half-staff until noon. From the battalion level up, brief, noontime services will be held in tents, huts and open clearings in such places as Cu Chi, I^a ’Trang and Blen Hoa. “Let’s make a deal, Dad. You eat my spinach and I’ll eat your ic^ cream.” * “’They will have as many of the troops present as possible under combat conditions,’’ said the Rev. J. G. Gessell of Rochester, N.Y., acting chief of chaplains in Viet Nam. BRIEF CEREMONY At Tan Son Nhut Airport where Army headquarters is located, the top U.S. commander, Lt. Gen. William C. Westmoreland, will speak at« brief ceremony to be closed by a bugler sounding tops. A year ago there were ceremonies at Tan Son Nhut each time a new flag-draped coffin went home. Now the steady shipment of sealed coffins is Green ie for remembrance. It is also for the Memorial Day may someday be just that - a a this immediacy of Viet Nam where men still move day for memories in a time when the world is at change from a year ago and the indications of out on patrol in furtherance of the dream that peace. rougher days ahead. ^ di ' 1 A—2 THK rOXTlAC PRESS. M^NDAV, MAY 30, 1966 Yanks Stalk Big N. Viet Unit Deaths Accelerate; Toll Estimate Hiked Pontiac Proof Photo GUEST SPEAKER — Checking notes are Harlan Johnson, president of the Oakland County Association for Retarded Children, and Mrs. George Romney, who delivered the luncheon address at the associatioh’s Infor- mation Day Saturday at Oakland University. A panel discussion. “A Continuum of Care” and a movie, “Selling One Guy Named Larry,” comprised rfe balance of the program. Osleopaltis Qaira MDi Mediators By the Assodated Press | The lowest death toll for a Hour by hour, throughout the | Ihree-day Memorial Day week-country, holiday accidents 1 end came in 1948 when 204 per- claim^ an increasing death toll sons died, this weekend. ! For comparative purposes The National Safety Council j The Associated Press made a revised its estimates upwards nonholiday traffic fatality suras the death rate continued to vey from 6 p.m. Friday May 13, climb and predicted at least 540 to midnight, Monday May persons would be killed oft-theflfi-The traffic-deatl^loll^^ ' nation’s highways in the 78-hour'for the same 78-hour period of period which began 6 p.m. lo-|the cprrent holiday weekend, cal time Friday and ends at' * .* * midnight today. | The nation’s death toll ★ ★ ★ j streets and highways was 49,000 j A council spokesman said that;last year, a record. Traffic acci-the worst period would come as! tlonts in the first three months thousands of weary drivers be-^of 1966 totaled 10,710, a 7 per gan the long trek home this aft-i^^nf increase Over a similar ernoon. 1965 period, the safety council i Traffic accidents had claimed: reported. more than 370 lives by early this i ; morning. ! MILD WEATHER Sunny and mild weather throughout the nation brought! additional thousands to beaches | and lakes. Twenty-four persons Board Probing Battles Fierce Two Jungle Clearings Centers of Struggle SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) - A brigade of American , infantrymen stalked a regiment of 1,000 North Vietnamese regulars today in the jungles and ntains west of-Heiku near the Cambodian frontier. Two jungle clearings used as American landing zones were the center of the cat-and-mouse struggle which began Saturday. Rocket Failure ied_ in_ boating mishaps and, ________________ 'Hoaxing’SlateonCollege Try to Avert Utility Strike another 61 were drowned. In Somerset, Ky., five persons, including four members oft two vacationing Ohio families, died in a three-car collision. Setback May Effect Lunar-Landing Plans Since then the 3rd Brigade of the U.S. 25th Division and units of the North Vietnamese regiment have locked in half a dozen bloody firefights — with American casualties reported from light to moderate. Communist losses numbered perhaps one-quarter of the force engaged, a spokesman said. GOOD INVESTMENT — Edward I. Elicofon, 62, lawyer and art collector bf Brooklyn, N.Y., paid $500 for a pair of paintings 20 years ago that may be worth $1 million today. Experts say the works were painted by the German master, Albrecht Durer (1471-1528). Elicofon stands by a re- ^ ^ -production- of one^-4he-Mwks^ The-originals are- in » lively identified through the the spokesman said the North Last year a record 474 deaths The Michigan Association of| “If the osteopaths want more ^ere counted in traffic acci- Osteopathic Physicians and Sur-josteopathic physicians turned detroiT (AP) — Federal dents for a three-day Memorial geons has charged medical doc-j out, fine. I don’t think they to Day weekend. The worst Memo- tors with “iwrpetrating a hoax ish^ld use stale fu^s.” company and rial Day traffic fatality record on the people of this state in, Dr. Henderson stressed that representatives in an ef- was set during the four-day 1963 opposing a proposed osteopathic!he was4ic_'disputing the qualityg threatened holiday when 525 persons died. coUege in Pontiac. !of osteopathic 'strike'by 747 linemen of the, The worst toll on record was Dr. Philip Adler, associatmn But, he said ^anding exist- Detroit Edison Co. established during the three^lay president, said Saturday that mg ..-phere’s not much question Christmas period last year medical doctors, whom h e a ™re economical way of tram- y^gj g j :^hen 720 persons died, termed “the allopathic profes-mg new physicians, . ways apart.” said James E Sion,’’ are trying “to stop the ------------^------------- osteopathic professions^ anj^ cost,” Air Tragedy Averted in 2 State Mishaps Oliver, business agent for Local TnnirciAnC^ Rsca international Brotherhood of IflCUfjlOnS dl Ddse Electncal Workers. Adler disputed claims I>y_ iiriil ■ * * * the Oakland and Muskegon Vniir J \ W^m|nn County Medical Societies that Jpui U.J. TTUIIIIliy ^g 32 Are Killed on State Roads BAY ST. LOUIS. Mis.s. (UPl) ■ A board of inquiry investigating the explosion of a second stage to a Saturn 5 mooni rocket announced last night it| would attempt to determine only; the nature of the accident and why it happened. ' ®>’ 0*^ Associated Press isuburban hospital were Miss The board, headed by Dr. Lives cf 77 passengers were]Katherine Maddick of Pitts- Kurt Debus, director of the endangered in two pearly tragic'hurgh and Mr. and Mrs. Mar- Kennedy Space Center, issued a I air mishaps in Michigan over ! vin Dernier of Arlington, Va. short statement after a meet- the weekend. But only three ★ ★ ★ ing. jpersons were hurt, and their in- There was no panic aboard, . . J . ij I 'juries were minor and Michael Taper of San< no c3e7Sn toTsesSl! The three hurt were aboard a ‘‘It was amaz- The fighting we.st of Pleiku the extent of the damage to Northwest Airlines Electra a landing we was part of Operation Paul Re- hb rocket or to reXry 'which blew thrbe tires and skid- made. Wo expected a far more vere that began May 10 but did Dlans and scheduled adjust- Aed 100 yards off a runway in '‘“Seed crash. not meet with major contact ment for the Appollo moon ! an emergency landing Saturday FLUID LACKING | until Saturday. T^e Americans landing program. might at Detroit’s Metropolitan Daniel Wilson, Northwest op-|°*'‘*'."^^*y thought only a Com- lAirport. Another 32 were shaken erations supervisor at Detroit,'“^t battalion was invo ved ,,n -11 i. . . I. • 1 thio octimafa %i;aa raiQAn a« up. said loss of hydraulic fluid pre-; questioning of 15 prisoners. He said the unit was an “old outfit” that had been in the area for some time. PITCHED BATTLE The series of pitched battles was taking place in rugged country where a spur of the Ho Chi Minh Trail branches into South Viet Nam after passing through Cambodia. Intelligence sources have reported several fresh North Vietnamese units are being held in readiness in Cambodia, although Cambodia denied this. jtions,” a spokesman said. The linemen have threatened County Medical Societies that .......a to walk out at midnight tonight establishments of a $55-mil- , unless a new contract is lion osteopathic school at Pon- ! WASHINGTON (UPI) — The reached. Company spokesmen tiac over the next 20 years [United States has warned Cuba said their jobs would be per-would be an uneconomical use 'that further incursions of armed formed by supervisory personnel of money, Cubans into the Guantanamo | and that a strike would not se-j _ __ “The osteopathic profession Naval Base could mean “grave iriwsly affect the power supply.I'city. has no quarrel with expanding and regrettable consequences.” Detroit Edison and members| ^eiviovne cneioecK -ru , ^ c , ------------------------------ the medical faciUties at either; The wording of the note was of another union Local 223, Util-; ^ of hiding when his car ! The f-"iillion pound. Saturn 5;^ent County Airport outside Wayne State or at the University:disclosed Saturday by the «‘y Workers of America, agreed, second stage a ground tes (-,rand Rapids. It carried 42 North Central reported of Michigan,” Dr. Adler said. State Department when it was ,Fnday on a ^o-year contract^ ^ , version almost similar to flighttpasgengers. - ★ ★ * announced the Cuban govern-'covering 3,000 maintenance,! :version, exploded during a “ There are needs beyond ment had refused to accept the transportation, yard workers] Arthur Norman Grissom, 36, pressurization test at Mississip-expansion of the existing medi- protest - a snub in diplomatic I and meter readers. of Union Lake, and Mrs. Veilajpi test facil ty here Saturday, cal facilities .,. . and at least'protocol. SUBJECT TO RATIFICATION!Rutledge, 35, of Wixom, in a,injuring five persons. None was /o .• J ^ X ! up." said loss ofTvdVauiic°Vlidrnro’‘1^^^ (ConUnuedFromPag.One) |oau,e.nd»e,l,. yesterday on M53 near Infilay basis for jts recommenda- Earlier, a North Carolina Con-fro„, going down sufficiently to ★ ★ ★ Ivair, with one of its two engines turn on a light indicating locking! The spokesman said the last dead, made a safe landing at pad been accomplished. ,serious contact was at noon to- day. Then the North Vietnamese the two more medical facilities-onej The note was the latest de-of which could be osteopathic-[velopment in a series of events are needed to combat the grow-ithat began a week ago when a ing shortage of physicians in the.Cuban was discovered on the State of Michigan.” base and was fired at by U.S. “I’d love to see more phy-l Marine guards. The agreement, subject to ratification, includes an immediate 3.4 per cent wage increase with another 3.2 per cent boost [on June 5, 1967. Oliver said the two major is- sicians turned out.” said Dr.j A second exchange of fire was between Local 17 and the Worth W. Henderson, president!reported subsequently between aIgg^jpany ^g^g pgy and the^''“^^' ® of the Oakland County Medicaljgroup of armed Cubans and!handling of hot wires. yesterday. head-on collision yesterday inj seriously hurt. Oakland County’s Commercedestroyed Township.^ ^ ^ I National Aeronautics and , ,, .Space Administration (NASA! Battle Creek, wh^ ^ ^'destroyed the second and last S T «o„nd stage firing stand. Society. I Marines on the base. Mumps Make Rounds of County Official Sainton Are Branded With an Icy Iron MarlT Detroit Edison has proposed that linemen be required to handle lines carrying up to 13,200 volts with gloves, Oliver sai(l. Under the current contract lines carrying more than 4,800 volts handled with fiberglass NIGHT CRASH Bernice Czarnik, 42,^ of , Detroit, in a Detroit collision Saturday night. Edward Lee Mills, 11, of Flint, whose bicycle was hit by a car Saturday on Dort Highway in Genesee Township , SEATTLE (ffi—U.S. fisheries JACKSON, Calif, iff) — Of-i workers have branded 500,000 _________ ficials of Amador County re-Chinook salmon fingerlings so rods. cently had a swell time. far this year. The small brand-! Oliver said the union original- outside Flint. Myron Questo, chairman of ing iron is cooled to 6^ degrees ly asked for a 20 per cent in-' Mr. Delores M. Koelbl, 45; her the county hoard of supervisors,^below zero. The intense cold crease over the $4.03 current daughter, Louise, 15, and Mario joined a city councilman, a leaves a white mark. [hourly wage for linemen. They!Sculati, 63, all of Iron Mountain, California highway patrolman,! A branded fingerling can han-jwould be willing to settle for lo|jn a collision that happened two sheriff’s deputies and the die itself better in the wild than I per cent, he said, courthouse custodian in having a fin-clipped one, fishery work-the mumps. ________ers say. i Rrr\tktexrc cl«-iir a n&^assing ' DrOTfi^ro I crashed head-on Saturday with the Keolbl car on M95 north of The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Sunny this morning, becoming partly cloudy this afternoon, high 60 to 67. Fair and cold tonight, low 35 to 42. Mostly sunny and slightly warmer Tuesday, high 63 to 70. North to northwest winds five to IS miles. Wednesday’s outlook: fair and a little warmer. to 5 Slayings in Virginia ■ when, state police said, Sculati attempted to pasS another vehi- Iron Mountain. RICHMOND, Va. (UPI)-An 18-year-old boy was charged early today with being 'highly emotional” killer who killed four victims with repeated gunshots. His 24-year-old brother was charged with a fifth murder and police investigated still another slaying. Police said Thomas Lee Penn surrendered yesterday after the Federal Bureau of Investigation was called in to help search for hllm. Penn was immediately charged with rape and attempted murder in the assault on 14-year-old girl. NATIONAL WEATHER—Showers sfre expected tonight In the northern Rockies and northern Plateau and along the central Gulf Coast. Cqoler weather is predicted for the East and West, while the Midwest will be warmer. t Police Chief John M. Wright said Penn Ipter was charged with the murder of three men and the rape-murder of a 16-year-old girl, Cynthia Johnson, in a sixweek crime spree. Meanwhile, Henrico County police charged penn’s brother, William Penn, 24. with the I murder of James C. Carter, 52, whose body was found in an abandoned shack. Robbery appeared to be the motive in two of the slayings. Dale Erwin Cribbins, 27, of Saginaw, in an intersection collision Saturday night in Saginaw. GIRLS KILLED Marcia M. Madeline, 19, her sister, Margaret, 15. of Attica, and Karen Rider, 15, of Imlay City, in the collision of their car and a pickup truck Saturday outside Imlay City. Charles Houck, 24, and his wife, Edna, 20, of Twining, in a intersection crash In Roscommon Saturday. Rickey Allen Matlock, 13, of Buchanan, hit by a car Friday night. • Barbara Ann LaBo, 16, of Rockwood, a passenger in a car that swerved off a Monroe County road, jumped a ditch and hit a tree Friday night. Carl M. Guelff, 26, of Detroit, whose car ran off a Detroit street and into a tree Friday night. Carrier R. ^'lener, 34, of Jack-son, when a car in which he was riding ran off U. S 223 in Monroe ^nty today and struck an embankment while being pursued by police. Conrad R. Pierszak, 25, of Taylor, in a head-on collision yesterday in Van Buren Township. IL..Jwaa-blow to plans to launch the first three-stage Saturn 5 from Cape Kennedy ■» January. “Determination of possibli impact on the Apollo-Saturn program will not be possible to estimate until after an examination and survey by the Space Flight Center team is complete,” NASA said in statement. iConvair's engine conked The four-engine, turbo - prop some five piiles before it reach-Northwest plane’s crew was un-;ed Grand Rapids. The pilot ac-able to get its left landing gearjeomplished a normal landing to lock down properly. They j with only one engine turning, circled the aircraft for more' than an hour attempting to correct the fault. GROUND LOOP Four fire trucks and two ambulances stood by as it landed, careened crazily and served off the runway, plowing a long furrow in the grass and swinging around in a ground loop. The flight had originated in Washington and had made stops at Pittsburgh and Cleveland en route to Detroit. Treated and released at a A significant delay in the first Saturn 5 flight could push the entire Apollo moon landing program schedule back. The target date is to land men on the moon by 1969, using the Saturn 5 rocket to propel them there. Stroke Is Fatal to Woman With Heart Device NEW .YORK (AP) - Louise Ceraso, given an artificial left ventricle by surgeons 12 days ago at Brooklyn’s Maimonides Hospital, died today. She suffered a stroke Saturday. Pontiac Boy Sustains Burns on face, Neck A 4-year-old Pontiac boy sustained first- and isecond-degree burns on his face [and neck yesterday in an explosion caused when he dropped a match into the gasoline tank of an old truck. Neil Ross, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ross, 40 N. Astor, was listed in satisfactory condition at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital this morning. The explosion occurred about 1:30 p.m. yesterday behind the Ross home. A North Central spokesman said loss in oil pressure apparently caused the engine to quit. It was en route from Chicago to Grand Rapids. JUST A MILKSOP-A 4-week-old flying squirrel is held by Lisa Briggs, 10, of Severna Park, Md., as It receives milk from an eyedropper. The. squirrel, which is three inches long and weighs about four ounces, was found in a bureau drawer in a guest room. faded back into the jungle with 25th Division soldiers in pursuit. While the 25th fought near Pleiku, the Vietnamese army engaged in an equally heavy battle in Quang Tin Province on the coast just below Da Nang. In four hours of pitched fighting, the Vietnamese claimed killing 160 Viet Cong ind seizing 58 weapons, includ-ng f two machine guns. The Viet Cong pulled out at daylight. A U.S. Air Force spokesman said clearing skies over North Viet Nam had enabled Navy and Air Force warplane to fly 77 missions, many conrenlrated on the supply lines around Vinh and the Mu Gia Pass. Contracts Go to GA4C Truck General Motors Truck & Coach Division was among firms receiving defense contracts in the $8.4 million awarded last month by the U.S. Army Tank-Automotive Center. (ATAC). The local GM division was awarded contracts for $923,445 and $183,138 for dump trucks. Seventeen state firms received contracts in the expenditure by ATAC. The 63-year-old widow had been in good condition until suffering the stroke. A hospital statement said in part: “Mrs. Ceraso ... was not able to respond to measures taken to sustain her following her cerebral vascular accident.” City Building Inspector Is Given Promotion Robert M. Gerds, a city building inspector for n e a r 1 y six years, has been named senior building inspector, succeeding Carl F. Alt, who retired. Gerds of 1367 Jeffwood, Waterford Township, attended Lawrence Institute of Technology from 1956-59. Says Red China 'U.S. Strafed Boats' TOKYO (UPI) - Communist China today charged U.S. warplanes bombed and strafed a fleet of Chinese fishing boats in international waters killing three persons and wounding 18 in a “flagrant, serious provoca- tion.” The official New China News Agency said the attack took place Saturday in the Gulf of Tonkin which lies between North Viet Nam, China’s southern Kwangtung Providnee and the Communist island of Hainan. The agency said the Chinese Ministry of Defense registered I strong protest against this ‘act of American aggression.” The dispatch warned that such actions stirred violent hatreds among the Chinese people who ‘concentrate our hatred at the point of our bayonet and in the barrel of our gun and be ready at all times to deal a stunning blow at U.S. imperialism, the common enemy of the people of the world.” According to the Chinese r'e-ports the attacks came in two waves. Two American planes flying separately from the southwest and northeast dropped seven bombs and made repeated strafing runs at a fishing fleet sinking one boat, damaging an-other, killing a fisherman named Huang Fengyen and wounding six others, the agency said. SECOND A’TTACK A short time later two U.S. planes attacked four more fishing boats in the same area killing one woman and her three-year-old daughter and wounding 12 others. The Chinese said the attacks were another provocation by U.S. imperialism and that similar attacks had been carried out April 7 and earlier this month. < THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 80, 1966 A—8 All Was Routine, Then Company A Had a Date With Death ByTOMTIEDE Newspaper Enterprise Assn. —TAN^tJYENrVrerWam - It should have been a routine mission ... a one-day sweep through the jungle, possibly light contact, probably nothing more. In and out and then back to base. It was far from that, however Ing for help. One trooper couldn’t call, how ever. He was hit in the side and choking on lungs filled with blood. He would have died in moments but was saved by a medic’s impossible trick. The aidman rigged a needle u was i^irom inai, nowever . ^yj,inc io a pliable plastic was blown to hell. jlo the dying man. and squeezing The men had been moving for five fruitless hours. Theirs was the nsual method of march in thicket, several the bottle furiously, sucked the victim’s lungs completely clear. Others were not as fortunate. Ther^ are no rem^ies for a snakellnes or protm; rf eii bullet in the bfaih. tripping on giant vines, punching through webs of branches, and slapping at the armada of flying and crawling insects. It was hot, of course, and the ageless dust of decomposition muddied the sweat on the parched and puffing soldiers. "What I wouldn’t give for a beer,’’ somebody sighed. "Knock it off!’’ By midday they were deep into the woods. And there it began. SUDDEN nRING Rifle fire crackled suddenly from the front, heavy and about ^ee high. The men Instently fell prone, but for some it did no good. ’The level of enemy shot was too low for them to escape. It was a perfect trap. The Viet Cong had hollowed out firing tunnels through the wall of underbrush, each almost Impossible to detect. Thus the enemy stood—many meters away and shoulder high in protective trenches gleefully blasted lifeless pockets into the tangle of helpless human beings. Alpha Company returned fire, of course. And stiU the shelb fell. And still the air was fouled by automatic weapons. And stiU men were dragged away by their lUeless legs. It continued for an hour, until finally jet aircraft roared into action and dropped cluster bombs on the entrenched enemy The air detonations showered the Cong with millions of harsh fragmentations and reduced their defenses to rubble. But at what? And where? BOMBS FOLLOW And then the mortars began to fall. The company was zeroed in. Movement was useles Squads shifted and platoons maneuvered, but the explosions of 60mm bombs always followed. CasnIaties began to mount. Survivors were split into two groups — those rescuing and those being rescued. Some, like Lt Ra^ Southard of Red Oak. Okla., qualified for both. He was wounded in the back but stayed on to help organize evacuations. The lieutneant spent hours limping back and forth between the helicopters and hell. He would move, hit the ground when a shell exploded, get up, count his legs and move again. HEARD A THUD Once while down he heard thud to his right. It was a mortar, a dud, buried 12 inches from his head. Such rounds were uncommon, of course. Most of them worked and transformed t h e area into a chaotic composite of craters and corpses. A dozen men had died and scores Writer'^ Book Shows Insight in Viet War Prowling in the deadly jungle Jewel ‘Vantage' Men’s and Ladies’ Watches A watch that looks ond performs like watches costing $50 or more ond doubly guaranteed by Simms and maker. "Vantage' watches ore made by a division of one of Americo's lorgest ond finest watch mokers. SERVICED Here of SIMMSI $11.95 to $29.85 SIMMS..™. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. For Fast, Quality Processing of Your‘MEMORIAL DAY’ Pictures, Bring ’em to SIMMS First Thing Tomomiw! 24 hr. Developing FILM Service Black ’n White Prints Enlarged to Super-Size Save at rM SIMMS LOWER D Par PRICE W Print Guoranteed perfect prints from all popular sizes—enlarged to super-size, dated and decaled edged . . . ond pay only for the good prints. The Best-Genuine ‘KODAK’ Color Film Processing Mailed to Your Home $1.85 Value —Now 1 39 8mm roll super 8, 3Smm—20 exps. 127 ; super slides or Instamotic slidM. Mailed direct to your home. Limit 10. FREE Photo Album With KODACOLOR Pnicessing Leave your Kodacolor film here for fast, low cost processing . . . and when you pick them up, you'll get a free flip-page photo to hold the pictures. 620-120*127 and Instamatic KODACOLOR Processing ByTECHNICOLOn A4Q Pre-patd mailers for the above size films. 12 exposure rolls processed and mailed to your home. Limit 10. COUPON ITEM m. Fresh slock hi-power batteries h' for most transistor radios. Limit [ 9-V Transistor Battery 12* 1’/s-V Penlite Battery 5* Fits many model transistor radios, penlight, magnifiers, toys, etc. Limit 10 per coupon. Stock up on fresh batteries now. :SIMMS.™ ICamoras -Main Floor CLOSED TUDAY For ‘MEMORIAL DAY' 9jm.fo II30p.m. Tuesday Morning NRKFREEInSi«mtLet Across From The County Jail-JastlNStaiM to Simms Stere Famous ‘Early Bird’ Discounts for Tuesday Morning BARGAIN SHOPPERS SI MMS..™...HS I MM$.™...HS IMMS.™.. tgjlBiiliig/ Super Discounts in Every Department, On Every Counter, On all 3-Floors 2S Tablets Alka Seltzer 39c 63c volue, pkg. of 25s, eilervescenl, analgesic olkalizing tab- Be Here When Boon Open A,N. Tuesday Merning VALUES GALORE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT SAVE on these DOOR-BUSTER VALUES! This famous 3Vk-Heur Sale is only at Simms and at usual you ore getting extra discounts for this event. so plan to be heie Tuesday morning with your friends and neighbors ... take d leisurely stroll through the store — picking up the advertised items — and keeping on eye out for the hundreds of un-odvertised specials found everywhere in the store. "Rights Rssvrvud to Limit all quantities - all prices subject to stocks on hand. Sorry, no mail or phono orders at these low prices - all these specials for 3 Vs hours only. UoiiU of 300 Aspirin Tablets 29" e volu». 5 grain USP enghi tobltli (or (wad-ha rt(ia(. Drugs-Main Floor Saccharin Tablets 29" Tampax Tampons 29" Right Guard Deodorant 59" $1.00 volutg A Llvfng Gloves 89? $1.39 voiu., IrM .xtra right hand gtova InduiM. Drugs—Main Floor Bryten Tooth Paste 39" Drugs — Main Floor Auorted Group Infants’Wear Regular *6'9c val-, a ?99" Assorted shirts, pants ond Sizes rtoL."*'^*'^ —MoinFlopf Waih ’n If ear {lotion Children’s Shorts Regular 79c values, vrosh 'n wear coHon or cotton knit shorts with elastic waist, 3100 Asserted Stylet Ladies’Knit Shirts Short sleeve knit tops with V necks. Reg. 69c value, red only. Sizes S-M. — Main FIf. 39< Roll Top^White & PatteU Ladies’Anklets-6pr. top anklets. Size 9'A- W fl 10 only I -Main Floor ■ 6100 Wa$h 'is ITear Cottons Ladies’Capri Slacks cotton slocks with side zipper. Green- or blue, sizes 32-34 only, —Main Floor 1" CotUtn-Polyester Blend Ladies’ Blouses Tailored bio shades. Reg, $1.29 value. Sizes 8-14. —Main Floor 49' mmmm^ 3 Styles In ' Ladles’ Hese ' Irr$. of 79c pr. 19' Choice of hose with seams, self seams or dork seams. All sizes S'/z 1. Limit 4 Pair. — Moin Floor Assorted Cotton Famous ‘Red Label’ Brand Men’s Tee-Shirts 1 00 Irregulars of fomoos Ameri-mokers of fine Tee-Shirts. Size small to extra-large. 9x12 Ft. Rugs Simms 'Price Royon-viscose loop rugs in 9x12 ft. room size. Foam backs. Green, brown and white tweed only. —Basomont Aluminum-Footed Type Angel Food Cake Pan 4 Vi" deep, 10" diameter, removable bottom. Easy to clean aluminum. Housewares —2nd Fir 59' Genuine ‘Wearever’ 2-Piece Aluminum Cookware Set Starter set includes covered skihet and' saucepan. Ideol tor gift giving. Housewares— 2nd Floor [99 Teflon Coated—Kon Sticking 10-In. Chicken Fryer Big 10-inch chicken fryer with no stick, no A gn •teflon finish. ^ V Stainless Steel Blades Steak Knives-6 for Set of 6 steak knives with i Set of 6 steak knives with j seroted edges. Stainless g rrt:..-2ndFloorDO AU Metal-King Sloe Tray SnackTables-Setofd Bar-B-Q Grill Needs Giant Tongs. e..... 59c Fire Rake ... e.... 39c Charcoal 10"lb..... 50c Charcoal lighter.. kt. 29c Patio Noodt — 2nd Floor EUctrie Barber Outfit 5«* PRICES SLASHED! TREMENDOVS SAVINGS! 98 North Saginaw St. SIMAS.S.. Sundries-Main Fl^r Alarm Clock 299 $3.98 Value - New windup alorm clock with parchment finish. 'Fayeile' model. Sundries—Main Floor FaelarrSpmlat Cigars Box 50’s 133 Electric Shaver 9™ SI9.95 lilt value - model Razor* - Main Floor Bat and Ball Sat 39" plasHc bat U 32" tong Sundriee-Moin FIom Key Chain 49" SI volue - police vAhrie CIgaretta Lighter 488 $6.95 list Comet V< RmmtHMfm 66 Electric Shavers 17.44 S31.S0 till - lurglcol Sint culWr. — 34S cueing •dg.1. With cord. Rozore — Moin Floor Pocket Watch 199 r Sundriet—Moin Fteoi Alarm Clock 169 *WHhrSmp«ri9 Electric Clippers gas Auto-Home Shaver 18™ S32.S0 lilt-work. 0*1 aoiort-Main Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY^. MAY 80. 1966 Gov. Romney Needs Petitions to Get on the Ballot LANSING (AP) - When Gov. George Romney announced for reelection this week, that didn’t automatically put him on the ballot. ‘ Like all statewide candidates in a primary ielection, he still must file nominating petitions. Unlike legislative and county of<-fice candidates, however, he does not have the option of paying a filing fee instead of the petitions. I With June 14 the deadline f r 11filing petitions for the Aug. 2 > j I primary, you may run into a sanctions. At right is a statute of Cecil John Rhodes, British colonial and imperial Slates-nian for whom Rhodesia is named. \ candidate asking for your signature. Candidates for governor must submit enough signatures to equal i—per cent of the vote cast for their party’s candidate for ^etary of state in the last general election. JOHNSfm LANDSLIDE Because the Johnson landslide helped Democratic Secretary of State James Hare to a nearly 2-to-l victory lnJ964, this means foraecretary^ state. Republicans. They must file 19, 336 and Republicans must file 11,303. U.S. Senate candidates filO petitions under the same formula. ★ * ★ District candidates such congressmen and legislators who file petitions must have signatures equal to 1 per cent of the vote cast within the district for their party’s candidate ’nGHTENING GRIP-The mood Rhodesia and its capital city, Salisbury, is growing increasingly tense under tightening economic Major Economic Lifelines Outsiders Hold Key to Rhodesia's Fate WASHINGTON (NEA) — How|omic cycle can be briefly their smelters from hydro pow- long the rebellious white gov-summed up as follows; To run er to oil in six weeks, eminent of Rhodesia will last jjgr industry, she must imporV ★ ★ Rrifich P^y ‘he oil, shei\They also are gradually build- £ '"‘VP^®fS^niustsell to an air fleet which may be decided^ “ “"J*^y|ufactured goods. ev^ally lead to the bypass- At present, virtually all of her!inglf the railroad. Even with' rJoi' ‘s being trucked in from the ^bian copper, the Rho-I if V. 7 South Africa and from a large desian ^ of the road is losing ^]-epresent“Rt!Wle5trrTnatCTn’^^*‘^ “" "" ” ..— maining economic lifelines. , FUTURE CREDITS' Zambia h' ii s already begun US diplomatic sources cur- ' ^he is paying for it in Rho-cutting back on nonessential im-rently detect winds of change •‘‘esian pounds and future cred- ports of goods from Rhodesia, in all three countries, winds Gambia is buying a large ^meday, it will decide to cut that wUl intensify the Dfessure part of Rhodesia's industrial pro-; off most of the rest, a State on Rhodesia. ducts. Nobody is buying her to-: Department source predicts. . bacco. Though the current London, „ .. . negotiations between Britain and I Zambia has bttio sympathy Rhodesia could produce a sud- ^ den breakthrough on the com- “^^es of Modesia. The eco-promise front, most observers' doubt they will add up to any-: “*®P**‘- ------ --------, _ thing more than a precedent fori The world’s leading producer; purees estimate, Rhodesia future talks when “Ian Smith’s|of coppr, Zambia depends on importing 160,000 gallons of oil (the Rhodesian prime minister)jRhodesian industry for practic-,a day — about equal to daily; Knees are a bit closer to the ally everything but food. consumption. The country’s pe-ground.’’ | * ★ ★ troleum reserves are not known. While State Department The vast majority of her cop-sources refuse to predict the per exports are railroaded out But the imports have been defate of Smith’s government, in through Rhodesia, and her creasing since the United Na-background interviews t h e y mines depend on power gener- tions decision to back the British paint a convincing picture of thei ted from the Kariba Dam. oil embargo, effectiveness of Britain’s eco-j The dam is a joint venture' And there is a good chance nomic boycott and oil embargo. | between the two countries, but that current U.N. sessions could, n't understand why Bri- Rhodesia controls the gen- result in the approval of an oil that the Democratic candidate for governor must file nearly twice as many signatures as Legislative and county office candidates, instead of submitting petitions, can post a $100 filing fee. Although posting a fee is simpler, most candidates prefer to submit petitions to demonstrate their support. Candidates who run firSt or SMond get their filing fed returned, but others lose it. ★ ★ A Appeals, circuit and probate judge candidates must also file petitions based on the last vote for secretary of state. Supreme Court candidates are nominated ^ by party conventions. Any Incumbent judge also can get on the ballot simply by filing a declaration of candidacy. Some candiddteSj rather than going through a pritniyy at all, are nominated to the general election ballot by party conventions. These include aspirants for lieutenant governor, secretary of state, attorney general, the State Board of Education and three university boards of control. * ★ ★ • One point — don’t sign peti-thro^for two men seeking ihe same office—That’s against the election law and your signature won’t count for cither. South Africa and Mozambique present an opposite picture — sympathetic to the racial policy, but independent economically. From the two countries, U.S. tain hasn’t done a real public relations job on this,’’ says one. “Rhodesia’s plight is becoming desperate. Things are happening very undramatically — but just about exactly on schedule.’’ “T hey (Rhodesians) have ^ been living off their fat for the last four months,” adds another. “A further tightening of the screws must be truly frightening to Salisbury (Rhodesia’s capital).” erators. Zambia also felt the petroleum pinch. But an emergency airlift by Britain, Canada and the U.S. (now discontinued by the latter two) have built up a reserve of 25,000 tons of oil — two months reserve. The country also is importing i stream of 17,000 tons per month, 5.000 more than it consumes. The copper companies Land-locked Rhodesia’s econ- now claim they could embargo against South Africa and Mozambique — a prospect pleasing to neither country. U.S. sources point out another reason for the changing winds in South Afripa. The country, which has not insisted on foreip exchange in payment for her oill has a high stake in the stability of the Rhodesian pound. It is reported that at Rhodesia’s secret tobacco auctions, nobody is bidding on the crop. are' savings days at Come in - look around... Open Sunday 10-6 P.M. - Doily 8-8 P.M. America’s Most Glamorous FOIDING open GbII 336-9462 SUNDAY rn'ffi 2M00 W. Eight Mile Rd. IH Mils West of Telegraph I **®'’*'*'^ I 1 BirminghamSoulhtield ( Toledo ■ • PR. M8101FL 5-94521AV. 5-35951 Royal Oak 117-27001CH. 8-4261 We Design • We Manufacture • We Install • We Guarantee Von Can COoiit tin .No Moi c-’ Paint Sale Guaranteed ONE-COAT Latex Flat GUARANTB^J^,^..... one coal • ww^uible • ^ one coal • woitluible • (olorp^ ^ LATEX FM Saveli" Regular •6'” intenor iv GUAR.\NTKi: If Purr Pure White Houjr Paint (1) yellows, (2) stains from rusl or copper, (3) chalk streaks on bricks or (1) fails to cover any color paint with one coat (except on shake shinnies) when applied ac-cordinn to directions, we will supply additional paint, or if you prefer, refund your purchase prit-r Guaranteed 1 coat coverage — dries in V2 hour Guaranteed colorfast — 27 non-fading colors Guaranteed washable, spot-resistant finish Odorless, lead-free, tools clean with water mmmmm Guarantee If one gallon fails >to cover any color with just coat when applied at a rate not to exceed 4S0 sq. ft. per gallon, or fails to be colorfast or washable when washed as directed, or fails to resist spotting from sosp, wster or detergent, we will furnish freo additionil paint to assure coverage or refund complete purchase price. Pure, Pure White House, Trim Paint 1- Covers in 1 coat R«-«ular $7.99 2- It's non-chalking 3- It's non-staining 4- It’s non-yellowing 622 Latex Flat Paints are Thrifty Buys Polls or brusites on smooth. Hides well. I.ead-frre. Water cleans tools. In 8 colors. Recommended for best application of our 4-v\ay guay* aiileed interior latex paint. Tray holds 3 quarts. V2-HP Utility Sprayers Reg. $139.95 119** Heavy - duly use for liihrira-lions, air cleaninit. Inflates toys and tires. Get lOU psj. » 22** Mrdium-lieavy capacity. J-in. flat rungs, J-in. 1-heain raih, spring locks, sure-grip feet, easy-slicle lop rollers. Ollier Sizes Reduced. Masler-Mixctl Quality Smooth, Jet-Black Driveway Coating Quality Wood Uiider-Coat for Our House Faints Exterior Master-Mixed Sears Latex House Paints Regular $7.39 58« Resists Mildew Regular $6.49 549 Regular $4.99 397 Stops graying, softening and breaking up of blacktop. Protects from gasoline, grease, oil deterioration. Simply apply with broom for long-IasHng beauty. Dries hard in four houTSsv/ Prevents bleed-through, staining of latex top coat. Improves adhesion. Use on new, bare or porous wood, or over-thin paint. Paint Dept., Main Basement 'lion "iiarantfv'f] or voiir money liack'’ SEARS Needs no priming. Apply even after rain when surface is still damp. Resists chipping and peeling. Dim iilimii INiiiliai' I’hoiw I K .->-1171 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MAY 30, 1966 A—5 SHAPE Move Will Uproot 9,000 PARIS (AP) ^ When Supreme Headquarters, Allied Powers, Europe — SHAPE leaves French soil some time belere next April H wiU mean an exodus of 9,000 persons. SHAPE, first headed by Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower after the North Atlantic treaty was signed in 1949, is located just west of Paris in a tempofary, rambling building. France, Britain, West Germany, Norway, Denmark, Belgium, Holland, Portugal, Luxembourg, Turkey, Canada, Greece and Italy. The” 15th member, Icekmd, has no military forces and is not represented. 430 CIVIUANS There also are 430 civilians, about 80 per cent French. Many are involved with support oper- Working there are 600 officers bus driving and maintenance and 2,500 enlisted men from 14 jobs, countries — the United States, Dependents of the non-French^ military staff total about 6,000 and some live in SHAPE Village, which has 400 apartments. SHAPE Village also has a sdHJOi Tor l,800”pupTrs, run ty the French Education Ministry. President Charles de Gaulle as said he will withdraw the 60 remaining French officers from SHAPE by July 1. But French sources hqve said that the bulk of other French military and personhei' wilTTen^r^ mittM to remain to help keep SHAPE operating and assist ii^ moving when the time comes. A timetable for the move may be blocked out for review by the ministerial meeting in Brussels, Belgium, June 7-0. A decision may be readied then on where SHAPE will go. Most speculation centers on Brussels. Besides SHAPE l^eadquarters located near Paris, there is a secret underground command post designed to withstand atomic attack and continue to officiais will not discuss details. Also given moving orders by de Gaulle is Allied Forces Cen-' tral Europe Headquarters at Fontainebleau. It has 2,250 military and civilian personnel. Lottery Tickets Seized in New Orleans Raid NEW ORLEANS (AP) -About 5,000 packages of lottery tickets from England and Jamaica which arrived through the mails here were seized re-cently by postal officials. (AtfvtrtlMiiMiri) On June 8th a “blizzard” comes to Pontiac Postmaster A. F. Fairley said I it is illegal to use the mail tor; lottery purposes. ' Misses' Proportioned Stretch SLACKS Reg. .6.99 *3 99 70% Rayon ond 30% Nylon. Assorted' colors and block. Side zipper ond stirrups. Sizes 8-18. Sportswear ... Third floor' Mosaic Print CULOHES 99 Special ^5 Mosaic print 1-piece culottes In wash and wear cottons. Many colors. Misses and half sizes. Dresses . . . Third floor Print Junior BLOUSES $299 Reg. 4.99 and 5.99 famous make lawn print blouses in roll and long' sleeve styles. Many colors. Sizes 5 to IS. Blouses ... Third floor Ladies' Terry ROBES 8.99 47 Tri-tone solid color combinations. Royal, loden green. Petite, small and medium sizes. Loungewear ... Second Floor Ladies' Famous Make Girdles and Panty Girdles Reg. 8.95 Nylon, rayon acetate and lycra spondex girdles and panty girdles. Siztss S - M. White only. Sllmweor ... Second floor >3 84 Girls' Summer ■■ DRESSES $3^8 Many fabrics and styles to choose from. A wide assortment of lovely colors. Sizes 7-14. Girls' Wear ... Second floor Boys' No-Iron SHORTS Reg. 3.50 $2 84 50% fortrel polyester and 50% Cotton. Wash and wear for easy care. Sizes 8 to 12. Boys' Wear . . . Second floor Nationally Advertised Children's Shoes Reg. to 9.00 $2 90 Group of children's white dress shoes. Some patents and some calfi. Not all sizes. Children's Shoes ,.. Second floor Misses' All Season RAINCOATS Reg. 12.99 - to 44.99 $79 Choose from plaids and solids ond reversible! in pastel colors and dorks. Sizes 8-IS. Coots ... Third floor Assorted Junior SWIM SUITS choose from 1- and 2-piece swim suits in'knits, ond lostex ond cottons. Sizes 7to 15. Swimwear . . . Third floor Famous Make Bulky Sweaters $099 Reg. 7.99 to 10.99 SWIM SUITS Reg. 14.99-17.99 fomous make poor boys and slipover sleeveless orlon sweaters. Sizes 34 to 40. Sportswear... Third Floor Ladies' Bunny SHIFS Reg. 4.00 $2 87 Choose from solids and prints In wash and wear cottons. Smocked top, 2 large pockets. S • M - L Loungewear ... Second Floor Girls' Summer. DRESSES Choose from/a wide selection of beautifully /tyled dresses. Many lovely col^s. Sizes 3 - 6x. Children^ Wear ... Second Floor Boys' Knit SPORT SHIRTS eg- $0 .00 Reg. 3. 14 Fine cotton knit sport shirts with stylish Henley collars. Many colors. Sizes 6 to 20. Boys' Wear ... Second Floor All Human Hair WK5LETS and HAIR PIECES Reg. 18.00 to,25.00 »15 Ideal for summer fun at the beach, shopping or even at home. Charge Yours at Waite's. Millinery ... Third Floor Women's Canvas PLAY SHOES Reg. to 5.50 $400 Group of canvas ploy ! your choice of 2 styles. Charge Yours. ^ Women's^hoes ... Street Floor I- and 2-plece styles. Many assorted colors and black. Sizes 8-18, 7-15 and 38 to 44. Charge Yours. Swim Suit! ... Third Floor KENTFIELD PAR-ELEGANCE SHIRTS Choose from a wide range of solids and patterns In a-wide variety of colors. Dacron polyester ond cotton or 100% cotton. Wash ond vreor. S-M-L-XL Men's Wear ... Street Floor Reg. 5.00 3-»10 BELLEAIR ANTIQUE SATIN Tfftfc^DRAPERIES Reg. 7.99 t T24 SWx84-inch ^ Made of 65% Cortcaulds Coloray® Rayon and 35% Celanese® Acetate. Color guaranteed for the life of the fabric. Never fades in sun. Won't change in cleaning. Decorator designed with custom detailing. White, Champagne, Gold or Flax. Draperies .. i Fourth Floor Ladies' Coc^ GOWNS Regular 3.99 Choose from dacron polyester nylon cotton blend. Lace and eyelet embroidery trims. Pink and maize blue colors. Ideal for yourself or as gifts. Use your Convenient credit. Sizes S-M-L Lingerie ... Second Floor Women's Famous Make DeRoose DRESS SHOES $900 Regular 13.00 Our Famous DeRoose shoes in pumps, straps, ties and Spectators. White, bone, navy and block potent, ond Coif skin. Mid heel or demi heel. Sizes 5-10. Women's Shoes ... Street Floor ROOM SIZE 9xl2-FT. REVERSIBLE OVAL BRAID RUGS shop.4 $26^^ Compare • No rug pod needed • American mode • Green or brown-Approximate size • Limited Quantities SHOP WAITE'S TUESDAY 9:30 TIL 9 Men's Henley Collar KNIT SHIRTS Men's 100% Polyester DRESS SHIRTS --3-2J5- S' $3^9-- 100% combed cotton knit ihirts in solid colors with contrasting trim or competition stripes. Men's Wear... Street Floor Permanent press 100% polyester shirt! in modified spreocT collars. White or colors. MVz - 17. Meo's Wear . .. Street Floor Men's Assorted NECKTIES Men's S.S. Knfee Length PAJAMAS "lo 75^ Choose from stripes, underkndts, solids and paisley prints. Light and dork tone colors. 1 Men's Wear... Street' Floor 2(or^5 Cool crisp cotton shortie pajamas in coot or middy styles. Many colors. A-B-C-D. Men's Wear... Street Floor Ladies' Knee-Hi CASUAL HOSE Women's Straw HANDBAGS If Perfect Q $r) 0 pr.^Z Choose from solids or patterns In slight irregulors of better quality Knee-Hi hosiery. Stretch. Hosiery... Street Floor Reg- $047 3.00 Z. choose from wicker or soft straw in several lovely colors and styles. Charge Yours. Handbags... Street Floor Ladies' 401 NYLON HOSE Sheer seamless nylon hose in your choice of beigetone or taupetone. Sizes 9-M. Hosiery... Street Floor Print Cotton TABLECLOTHS Reg. 2^99 Reg. 3.99 Reg. 4.99 52x52-inch S2x70-tnch 40" Round ^ Of 52x90" $]17 $217 ^$017 First quolity cotton tablecloths ore completely washable. Several patterns and colors. Charge It. Tablecloths... Fourth Floor Print Cotton TERRY TOWELS Large selection of potterns in o wide assortment of colors. 100% cotton terry. Charge It. Domestic ... Fourth Floor Belleair Percale SHEETS Reg. 2.49 Reg. 2.59 Reg. 1.39 72x108" or 81x108" or Coses Fitted Fitted $]77 $197 Snow wfiite cotton percale sheets bottom fitted hove elastic corners. Charge It. Domestic... Fourth floor Dacron Filled COMFORTERS Assorted Decorator PILLOWS Reg. to $“797 14.99 / Choose from o wide assortment of lovely prints in polished cottons ond acetate. Charge It. Comforters... Fourth Floor Reg. 9 f $422 3.99 Z. for ^ Choose from round or square pillows with boll fringe trim. Kapok filled for long life. Domestics... Fourth Floor 5-Pc. Samsonite Card Table and Chair Set 19-INCH ROTARY POWER MOWER 41.75 $9 ft 00 Value 4-vU SturtJy exclusive slidelocks on all legs. White top and contrasting beige legs. Furniture ... Filth Floor Shopand $0 “700 Compare O / All steel housing for long life. Throttle control on handle. 216-H.P. 4-cycle. Charge It. Garden Shop . .. Lowei* Level 100% Virgin Nylon 9xl2-Ft. RUGS 50-Piece Stainless FLATWARE SET *64“ 9xl\2-foot oval accent oreo rugs in 10 populor colors. Easy to clean. Charge It. Rugs ... Fifth Floor Reg $797 9.98 / Complete service for 6 includes sugar shell and butter knife. Charge YoUrs. Housewares... Lower Level THE PONTIAC PRESS « West Huron Street BiuUmm Ukn>(cr MONDAY, MAY 30. 1966 HAROLD A. FItZOBRALO Vie* PTMlSut and Ultor Aiu> iKCtoEr ...... Circulation Kanater ’ Pontiac, Michigan John A. Rilit Sacraiary and AdTartlflng Director New Sense of Memorial Day Told by Viet Nam Veteran (In keeping tvith our policy of publishing gjiest editorials from time to time, our ' Memorial Day editorial has been written by Corporal William F. Nesbitt Jr., U.S. Marine Corps.) By CPL. WILUAM F. NESBITT JR. As I grew up, Memorial Day meant little to me except that it was a welcome holiday. Any sentiment or memories connected with it belonged to an older generation. p-- -f But now, home^- ’ after 10 months Iv in Viet Nam, the Day has new meaning for me and the quarter-million boys f i g h t i n g 10,-000 miles away to / protect our Amer- CPL. NESBITT ican beliefs. Considering the division of opinion I hear at home about U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia, there is surprisingly little disagreement with U.S. policy among the men in the battle zone. ★ ★ ★ They believe wholeheartedly that we are in the right place at the right time and that it will turn out right in the end — though the end may be many years ahead. Despite the youth and limited outlook of our troops in Viet Nam, almost to a man they foresee the consequences of a Communist take- , over there — a certainty were we to desert the South Vietnamese now. Laos would soon fall (adjacent Cambodia already is Imed up with the Reds) and the Commie tide would gradually overrun Thailand, Borneo, Indonesia and the Philippines. Australia, to the south, would be isolated and could easily go the way of the others. India would also feel Red pressure on its eastern flank in addition to that now present on the northern. What would that do to the power and influence of the free world, already greatly outnumber^ by the two foremost Communist powers — Russia and China—to say nothing of their satellite countries? After seeing communism at work in South Viet Nam, I wouldn’t like to think about its spreading evils. It is to safeguard the ideals of the couHti^lirwIifth they^were"" raised that the thousands of American soldiers endure the hazards and hardships of fighting communism in Viet Nam. In their bull sessions, you often heard it said that those now in action . would rather have it that way than to have younger brothers or sons someday have to face up to a biggef and more destructive war. Have peace demonstrations and kook propaganda at home affected the morale and determination of the American fighting in Viet Nam? Yes—but not in the way it might be supposed. It has made him not dispirited but mad—mad that some people would undercut his effectiveness against the enemy and more determined than ever to getjthe job done and get home. ★ ★ ★ While I wouldn’t suggest it as a basic course in Americanism, a year in the undeveloped, poverty-stricken, hopeless climate where I have been gives you a fine and thrilling feeling of what the Stars and Stripes stands for. This Memorial Day and the ones to follow will stand for memories that will never fade— memories that sustain what I was taught in school: that America is the greatest country in the world and worth fighting for. All Work, No Play Makes ‘Jack’ A Dull Joy Here’s some very valid advice which It seems appropriate to repeat at this season when most people’s fancies lighty turn to thoughts of vacations: “Every now and then go away, have a little relaxation, for when you come back to your work, your judgment will be sure. since to remain constantly at work will cause you to lose your power of judgment . A Go some distance away because then the work appears smaller, and more of it can be taken in at a glance . . The author: Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519). Lady Bird Pushes Tiny City Parks By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON—Pocket-size parks are the “new look” in Lady Bird Johnson’s beautification program. This is the word from Elizabeth Carpenter, thej first lady’s press secretary, who says that hereafter thej emphasis will be on taking parks to people in congested! urban areas, rather thanl getting people to parks in| the country. The wealthy have been subsidizing art since the days of the De Medicis, but Mrs. Johnson is blazing a new trail by jwrsuading them to become patrons for living flowers instead of still-lifes. Within the past few days, she has dedicated two parks in blue-collar sections of New York and Washington, after sweet-talkin’ the Vincent Astor Foundation out of $900,000, and Laurence Rockefeller out of $111,000 for these new-type beautification projects. The one in New York is a pocket-sized piece of land at the Rlls Houses Plaza, a low-income housing project for J,7$8 families. Mrs. Vincent Astor, president of the Astor Foundation, okayed the grant which has made possible an ampitheater—Lady Bird calls it a round-the-clock outdoor living room — to provide entertainment cn hot summer nights; plus an adjoining (kiddie area with tree houses, cubistic poles, mazes, igloos and pyramids. The Watts branen parkway project fi-anced by Laurence Rockefeller has replaced Junked refrigerators and abandoned cars with lovely wooded trails, park benches, flowering bushes, and the latest in playground equipment including a lil-liputian woods, a tot house, and a climbing bridge across the sparkling stream which was previously a clogged Washington eyesore. SYLVAN RETREAT This sylvan retreat will serve a densely populated, low-income neighborhood of the type that breeds juvenile delinquents. Seventy per cent of our U. S. population is now crowded into one per cent of our land. Since many slum-dwellers have no cars to take them to the country. Lady Bird wants to bring the country to them by taking advantage of little triangular areas, vacant lots, and neighborhood dumps. ★ ★ ★ * It’s a new wrinkle for foundations, to buy beauty and happiness for downtrodden masses who previously had to play in squalid alleys, or sit on curbstones to cool off. PROOF OF PUDDING The rest of the pudding will come a year or two hence, after rechecking the condition of the parks. If they again become dumping grounds for neighborhood trash, if the bushes ere trampled and the equipmept maliciously broken, the great experiment will have been in vain. ★ ★ ★ But If those who use the parks tend them with loving care. Lady Bifd Johnson may long be remembered as the sturdy pioneer who led us out of the jungle of city slums and into the urban oasis. Voice of the People: China Military Among Dissidents' By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent Influential elements in Red China’s armed forces appear to have clashed with the ruling Politburo, producing a deep internal crisis which has persisted for six months. Dissident forces seem to be losing out, but the struggle may be far from ended. Among the dissidents apparently were armed forces figures who considered the dljl-nese military backward in a perilous time, and who regretted the loss of Soviet technological help in 1960. Such elements may have wanted to find a road to ideological and state-level peace with the Moscow leadership. A clue to all this turned up this week in a Chinese account of an air force political organization’s conference. ★ ★ ★ The armed forces paper. Liberation Army Daily, said the meeting was told: “The first problem we military men must solve is whether we want to carry out the revolution or whether we should let revisionism prevail in our country.” ★ * ★ “Revisionism” is the Chinese party term for Soviet ideology. ‘SOME PEOPLE’ The meeting criticized “some people” — a favorite label for dissidents — for asking, for example, what good an air force was if its planes could not fly. Chose who complained said the weak link in the armed forces was technology. This was considered wrong thinking. The paper fonnd technology less important than building a “proletarian-minded” armed force. It indicated the dissidents were losing the struggle. ★ ★ ★ “The mentality of the armed forces,” it said, “has undergone a great change since comrade Lin .^iao’s instructions about giving prominence to politics were carried out. However, some people are not yet fully aware of the seriousness of the class struggle.” POWERFUL LEADER Defense Minister Lin Piao, a powerful, doctrinaire member of the Politburo with an anti-Soviet outlook, evidently shunned the theory that Soviet technology was important to the Chinese armed forces. In those “instmetimu” he said: “What is ttie best weapon? Not artillery, nor airplanes, nor tanks, nor atom bombs. The best weapon is Mao Tze-tnng’s thinking.” The “instructions” were issued Nov. 18. The date is important. Before then, the press now says, certain plotters used prominent writers to spread “poisonous weeds” and an anti-party line. ★ ★ * Said the Peking People’s Daily: “A sudden change of situation on the Socialist cultural revolution front took place in November 1965. A new repulsing battle broke out, and Wu Han, the collaborator of Teng To, was brought to light.” PURGE DRIVE Wu Han is Peking’s duputy mayor and a member of its party secretariat. Teng To is a party secretary and former editor. . Both now can be linked-wlth a purge drive in the armed forces. Through the murky jargon of Chinese Communist language, one can detect evidence that the old-line leaders who came up with Mao still have the upper hand. ★ ★ * But the indications are that the purge has reached deep into the leadership of the party and of the armed forces, and that before it is over some people in high places will be brought down. Advises Vet Facts’ Re Pending Gun Legislation A letter in your Voice of the People asked if anyone cared to support Sen. Dodd’s legislation. I do not and no one else will who takes the time and effort to delve into the facts. ★ ' ★ ★ I suggest the writer obtain a copy of UJS. News and World Report of May 30 and rea^ P^ge 11 for some of the facts presented to a meeting of at-tomeys-general of the fifty states in Cleveland. ★ ★ ★ If it had not been for sportsmen’s clubs, hunters, target shooters and the National Rifle Association, we would long ago have lost the right to own and use red tape as to make it useless to even try. The danger in the Dodd bill is how it would be interpreted by tho$e^ who enforce it. RUSSELL P. EDWARDS BLOOMFIELD HILLS Shall Red China Be Accepted in the U% N.? So the UAW is for seating Red China in the United Nations? is what former medical missionary-and ex^jongrmnian ,. Walter H. Judd says about it: ★ ★ ★ “Admission would represent for Red China the greatest possible diplomatic victory. It would give the Mao regime the stamp legitimacy and add immeasurably to its prestige and power all over the world. Why has every Communist government, party, and front in the world worked tirelessly for fifteen years for Red China’s admission, if that would be bad for Communism and good for us?” ^ ★ ★ ★ As for being cautious in Viet Nam, the more cautious we are in our bombing of strategic areas of the enemy, the more of our boys will die. E. SORENSON WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Announce Billy Graham's New Crusade Will you announce the Dr. Billy Graham religious crusade at Earls Court, England, beginning June 1st and ending July 2nd? I have been one of the prayer partners for some years now. ★ ★ ★ We are looking forward to seeing notices of the Graham crusade in England this June. ADDA HOPE KLINE ORCHARD LAKE, MICHIGAN (Editor’s Note: We have already run several stories and will continue to print dispatches from the wire services of the Graham crusade in England.) Bob Considine Says: Daughter Really Knows How to Hurt a Father NEW YORK Dear Deb: Cut out that nonsense about being 18 today. I refuse to permit you to be 18! A father wants his only daughter to stop all her clocks at the age of. Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Bone of 2310 Maple Crest; 52nd wedding anniversary. Charles E. Lee ^ of Holly; 90th birthday. dress, a new hat, a ring with a green stone, a junior miss brassiere and a football.” Christmas afternoon in the yard of the old place in AI-lenhnrst we practiced passes with the football. You threw the ball like Sammy Baugh, even though hampered by that optimistic brassiere. ★ ★ ★ Well, time flies for you. Ypu now have a license to drive a lethal two-ton earth-bound missile called an automobile at speeds up to 60 miles an hour. QUADRUPLE MARTINI The great state of New York and many others give you leave if you wish to step into any bar and order up a quadruple martini, with a fifth of scotch for a chaser. If you move to Georgia or Kentucky, and have no criminal record, you can now vole. You’re S years older than Jnliet, baby. ★ ★ ★ Oh, yes, time indeed flies for you. Big plans to work as a copy girl on a magazine this summer . . . rent a car for weekends at the beach ... buy something wild with your first week’s salary ... get things ready for going to college in the fall. . . dates.. . . IN FATHER’S MIND But time doesn’t fly very fast ih a father’s mind, where a daughter is concern^. Funny thing, when I talk to your three brothers I find myself using a different voice, and a lot of my statements seem to start with, “Well, when I was your age . . .” or “If you’ll take my advice, you’ll . . I was never your age, and for you I have no advice. It would be superfluous. ★ ★ ★ Have a nice time on your double dates this weekend. I had halfway planned for us to play golf as we used to when you were the best little 12-year-old girl golfer I ever saw. I’ll pick up somebody to play with at the course. Love ya. Dad. Question ami Answer How many brothers and sisters does President Johnson have? I TEXAN REPLY One brother, Sam Houston Johnson, 52; sister Rebekah Johnson Bobbitt, 55; sister Lucia Johnson Alexander, 50; and sister Josefa who died in 1961. The Belter Half “This coffee tastes like it’s been keeping Itself awake nights.” Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Deceit... The News-Journal Diplomacy is the art of saying "nice doggy” until you have time to pick up a rock. It Pays to Advertise ... Grand Rapids Press The Republican gubernatorial primary in Pennsylvania came out as expected: Raymond P. Shafer easily outstripped two opponents, including Harold Stassen. But the Democratic primary produced a surprise winner — a millionaire named Milton Shapp, who beat State Sen. Robert P. Casey, the man who had been indorsed by most of the state’s Democratic leaders. ★ ★ ★ The significant thing in the Democratic primary is that Shapp went ail out to win. His close associates said that he had spent between $800,000 and $1,000,-000 of his own money advertising his candidacy. He bought advertisements in newspapers all Over the state, and also thonsands of radio and television “spot” announcements. Hundreds of billboards also carried his , “message.” It definitely pays to advertise. It remains to be seen, of course, whether Shapp dollars can produce a victory over Shafer in the November election. Pennsylvania is another of those states in which Republican and Democratic votes are about evenly divided. Knowing the price paid, will Pennsylvanians fear the reputation of being a state whose favor can be measured in cash Premier's Visit The Israel Digest Mr. Seretse Khama, Prime Minister of Bechuanaland, completed a six-day visit to Israel at the invitaUon of the Government, accompani^ by his wife. His Southern African coun- Tlw AisoclaM Preu li witllWd axcluilvaly to ttM uw for ropubll-catkM of all local nawi printad In nawa dlipatchat. The Pontiac Prata la dallvered by carrier tor SO canto a wook; wharo mailed In Oakland, tionesao, Llv- ■------ ---------- Lapaer and I It to S1B.0O a try attains full independence in September and will thenceforth be called Botswana. This is his second visit to Israel, where he spent 12 days on a study tour at the end of 1962. ★ ★ ★ Mr. Seretse Khama was addressed by Prime Minister Eshkol as “the future President of Botswana” at a gala dinner in Jerusalem. Mr. Eshkol also referred to the problem of arid lands and the quest for water, which Israel had in common with Bechuanaland. In his reply,'the Bechuanaland Premier expressed his admiration for Israel’s efforts for peace in the Middle East and spoke of the similarity of his own country’s position. ★ ★ ★ Israel has agreed to extend technical aid to Botswana after It receives its independence on 30 Steptember, the visitor told a press conference in Jerusalem. An Added Trouble ... The Tulsa World Lawn mowers are getting a complicated we soon will b required to have drioert li censes to operate them. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. MAY 80. 1966 KEEPS PFIICTES DOWN BALANCING ACT—If you imagine this is a bit of trick photography, guess again. The ones tossing the curves are these four flamingoes at London’s Whipsnade Zoo. If you aren’t aware of it, flamingoes have two kP PhoMax legs apiece. Here, the extra four legs are tucked up under the birds’ feathers. Rather hard to strike a balance, but these birds are hard to figure. Special Lab Could Double Mars Tests By Science Service jNewport Beach, Calif., said the ANAHEIM, Calif. — The num-weight of an ABL’s integrated ber of experiments that could system would be 715 pounds, be done from a capsule landed compared with the 1,200 pounds on the surface of Mars can be estimated for the average con-doubled by using an “automated^ventional payload that performs biological laboratory,” it was’only individual experiments. • reported here. } The ABL concept is being In- ♦ * * [vestigated by Aeronutronic for The capsule would carry, the National Aeronautics and equipment flexible enough to | Space Administration, conduct a wide range of scientif-rDIRECT MOVES ic experiments as directed by I The idea is to integrate command from earth. Later [equipment and materials so that tests could be varied depending «arth-bound scientists can direct upon results of earlier analyses, liife^ietection experiments on An automated biological lab- I planetary surfaces, oratory, or ABL, is a pos- [ xhe system includes acqui- The ABL would be programmed on earth to perform 35 eJtperiments after landing on. the Martian surface. It could then be directed to make additional tests as commanded by the scientists interpreting the data previously received. SOIL PROCESS About three pounds of soil must be processed to support one cycle of the 35 experiments considered. If three cycles are made each season for two years in order to chart seasonal changes, 36 pounds fo Martian soil would be sibie payload for the Voyager | planetary probes now sched- 1 uled for launch during the | 1970s. 1 sition of samples, chemical processing and sample analysis, Hostetler said. 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WitI t^ I 19 97 Deluxe AIWA recorder Keystone Super J movie camera . . . adjusts itself Electric drive, always ready to shoot, always in focusi Adjusts light. 69 97 A—8 THE rONTIAC PRESS, ^l6XDAY, MAY 30, 1966 Polish Police Quell Crowd of Catholics GDANSK, Polai^ OP - Hun-. dreds of P5IIsR Roman Catho-j lies destroyed a government signboard Sunday during Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski's visit to Gdansk. , ★ * ★ I ■ - :•** Riot police dispersed the , crowd of some 350 persons withi no apparent violence. Witnesses! ' said more than 20 persons who' >2. helped tear down and burn the | large signboard were hustled i into police vans and others were! arrested later. FOLLOWS SERMON The incident began shortly after a sermon by Cardinal Wy- EXPANDED FACILITIES—Pontiac Motor Division has szynski to a congregatwn of 22,-1 moved into the new test headquarters shown above at the 000 inside the Basilica of St.j General Motors Proving Ground near Milford. The 25,000-Mary. Loudspeakers relayed the -sermon to a cheering ^crowd of 100,000 in the streets. ★ ★ * Fresh from the flower-throw-j Ing ovation for the Polish Cath-I olic primate, a crowd of home-l bound .worshipers stopped andj attacked a signboard in ai square opposite the main rail-! road station. TB on Navy Ships Probed __Outbreak oft Coffiw rnvestigated by Drs. By Science Service SAN FRANCISCO - Six outbreaks of tuberculosis since 1959 have occurred on U. S. Navy [ships in spite of preenlistment [screening by X ray and tuber-iculin tests, i One of the most recent scares I was on the carrier USS Wasp iast December when it was I standing by as the prime recov-ery ship for the Gemini 7 astro-Inauts. square-foot building accommodates both the vehicle and road test sections of Pontiac’s engineering department. Test drivers accumulate 3*3 ihillion miles of test driving annuaiiy. British Schools Hear Graham Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas THOMAS J. DABLING iship will be. 1 p.m. tomorrowiof 776 Laird will be 2^ p.m. to-LONDON iJt — Billy Graham Service for former Waterford at Roth's Home for Funerals, morrow at the Orion Township, Four ill crewmen, suspected I of having TB, were flown to I the mainland for examination. - In all, 21 crew members were I admitted to the U. S. Navy ,1 Hospital, in St. Albans, N. Y., ! for study, Capt. Donald C. Kent, chief of medicine, told the annual meeting of the Na-I tional Tuberculosis Associa-;! tion and its medical section, ! the American Thoracic Society in San Francisco. Only three had active’TB, but Business, Negroes Should Hold Talks By WHITNEV M. YOUNG JR. Executive Direetpr National Urban League When friction recently developed between French and American businessmen over joint economic and national c o n -cerns, a high-evel group consisting of a ' 0 r m e r secre-ary of the Treasury and the heads of eight of the largest corporations in Amer-ca flew to Paris to meet with their peers French industry to try to work out their common problems. This was a case where the two groups realized that their problems could not be settled satisfactorily without a direct confrontation of the most influential business leaders, aided by their technical experts. The approach is a good one, nd I feel that business leaders here should take it as an YOUNG iiiciais, iiiuiiuw eii uic v/i lull iuvviidiii|j| The two posters displayed preached at Britain’s two lead-|Township resident Thomas J. Romeo. Burial will be in Lake- Community Bible Church. Buriap*’.® ..w .. -- Communist slogans against the ing colleges yesterday speak-Anaheim, Calif., ^jUg Cemetery ^ P^^ry Mount Park ^ tuberculin skin example of an enlightened at- Catholic hierarchy’s campaign __„ons at Oxford ^ ® ^ ‘o'^^rrow in the „ „ Cemetery. Pontiac, by the Lew-‘est showed. An intensive in- jack on current problems, nf fnpaivon»cc fnr ■ P^^sons at uxtoru , Funeral Hnme . ^ '^rmer. Mr. bang ^ Funeral Home, Clark-'’‘^stigation showed no evidence There is of forgiveness for the Germans. „jonnn .r- u j The government has conducted Carnbndge. a determined campaign against a letter the Polish bishops wrote to the German Catholic bishops Oxford from small groups op- 1, * J IS Hi. wini runerai nome, i..iarK- mere is no,reason why, for hart died Saturday after a long Hassenzahl died Sat-of dmical tuberculosis among example, a similar group of last November proposing Polish-German reconciliation. Car Runs off Road, Injuring Local Man A 71-year-old Pontiac man was injured yesterday morning in a single-car accident on White Lake Road near Cuthbert in White Lake Township, according to Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies. Forest Lawn Funeral Home, Cyprus, Calif., with burial there ---..........—.............—- .in the Forest Lawn Cemetery. | surviving are a son. Clare of There was some heckling at Mr. Darling, a member of Romeo: a daughter, Mrs. Fran-^^"®''^' Technical Cen- Elks Lodge No. 810, Pontiac, ees Anderson of Detroit; and died Friday morning after a three grandchildren, brief illness. 1 Surviving are his wife, Har- , however. posed to the visit, but the American evangelist parried them with quips. His sermons dealt mostly with the revolution among students everywhere. “Students are taking part in political and social action today,” he said, “leading and directing, and in some parts of the world overthrowing governments if they feel that the political form of government is wrong. riet; a son, James W. of Long Beach, Calif.; two grandchildren; and a sister, Mrs. Frank Sheridan of Pontiac. MRS. PASKAL EVANOFF Requiem Mass for Mrs. Pas-kal (Victoria A.) Evanoff, 58, of HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP Service for Albert E. Dinsmore, 76, of 2165 Davista, Highland Township, will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford, with burial in Highland Cemetery. Mr. Dinsmore died Friday af- ment to secure equal rights for all, he said: “I intend to call a White House conference of scholars, and experts, and outstanding Negro leaders— men of both races — and officials of government at every level ... the theme will be ‘To Fulfill These Rights.’ ” And so, 2,500 people from all walks of life meet in Washington to take steps to implement the goals and ideals which move men to greatness. This unique conference has been convened to secure for Negroes the rights advantages long denied' them because of race prejudice. A preliminary conference was held last November, and since then task force groups of business and other experts have been preparing proposals on economic security and welfare, education, housing, and the administration of justice. These proposals are far-ranging in their potential effect and hold promise of a far brighter future. That so many people have given so freely of their time and energies to make this conference a reality is truly inspiring. The chairman of the 30-member council appointed to set the policies and plan the conference was Ben Heineman, chairman of the board of the Chicago and North Western Railroad. The honorary chairman is A. Philip Randolph. Deeply involved in the con- bigh-ievcl businessmen should not join in a conference with ter. he was a member of Mount A person with active TB in a their peers in the Negro busi-Gilead Lodge No. 285, F and closed group such as occupies a ness community, to deal with AM, Crystal. Navy ship can spray the air common problems. Surviving are a son. Dale J- With Negroes knocking on the| ferenee are business leaders, of Lake Orion: a daughter, Mrs. "“clei. Dr. Kent explained. industry for more and! labor leaders, university pro- Morris Beal of Fort Wayne. Ind ; NO IMMUNITY better jobs, with the Negro mar-: lessors, industrialists, civil four brothers, Charles of Clay- The closed community has not ket for consumer goods ap-' rights leaders, government of-ton, Arthur of Adrian and Earl immunity by prior ex-Proaching the J30 billion perj ficials, and churchmen. All and Frederick, both of Pontiac: p^sure ^yj,ich is true of an in- year level, with the civil rights will sit together and try to two sisters, Mrs. John Hopkins p^ggsing proportion of the movement making its influence I work out real answers for the and Mrs. Joseph Duggan, both population today. every corner of the land.j problems which heset us. 175 Wenonah will be 9 a m. to- ter a long illness. dren. Although the vaccination of „ggg 'jn both communi-!„„^;^ If fh. Pr»? ChuTclT Buria/S^^^^ Surviving besides his wife.| MRS. CHARLES KINGSTON be^n fuKes"^'b’y some o*^ Jjf® '^'’^‘ ident of the United States, who.se Snt HoS mety "^^f WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP - smersTK^t Believes th!: „ ‘determination to right the past Mount Hope temeiery g^j Earl Kirby, both of Ohio;Mrs'Charles (Helen is not necessary or even ad- Representatives from the Ur- wrongs done our Negro citizens Rosary will be recited at 8:30 three daughters. Mrs. Lelia ^ ,0330 ^ ban League or .similar organi-has r ade the meeting possible. zations can be at hand for tech- — ■ tiac General Hospital is J 0 h n;gf g^t generations. D. Panos of 297 Chandler. | The Panos’ vehicle went out|R'^'^TING A CAUSE of control, running off the road, j Graham said “students are ----------------- I rioting almost every holiday — Temperature, rather than!students looking for a cause.” light, influences many physio-|R® said their cause should be logical processes in plants. For|8°od works, according to the instance, com will grow at night | Gospel, if the weather is warm enough! Graham begins amOntlfsT:ni-to enlarge and elongate cells, sade in London Wednesday. fnHuu ar far itiAro iwoaij w inrcc Ucluglllcl iVlFa. LfCild ^are of7eVroLms rcinTIs Smith, Mrs. Pauline Lopez and belo'a m^'tomorrow at St .......... """ There have been other meet- the w7ld than smdLu ^^s. Virginia Norton, all oLpatrick’s Catholic Church with Such vaccination would mean nical advice and assistance. It lings to study the problem, in- -enLations ” ^ burial in Lakeview Cemetery tuberculin test as an seems to me that such a meet-ldeed one might say it has been CEMETERY MARKERS MONUMENTS S«« our largo display priced to fit your budget. Quality, craftsmanship and permanent beauty are found in every marker and monument we sell. They are backed by the industry's strongest guarantee. MONUMENTS MARKERS froi ^95 from *35 COMPARE OUR PRICES BEFORE YOU BUY Memorials for Over 72 Years INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Perry FE 5-6931 Bronze Plates for Memorial Park Cemeteries at Below Cemetery Prices NORMAN H. HORJICK dren and 14 great grandchil- Service for Norman H. Hor- ______might say it__ nn. D II „ ua.1 oiinfection because ing can be as fruitful as the one studied to death. What makes The Rosary wd be recited at vaccinated persons become tu- with the French, and conceiv-; this meeting different is that it tick 58 of 48 Bennett will be sr, * c-. nve-n ^ ^ important to U. S.jhas concrete solutions to offer. Vn’nfo.;„rr2 ft inrHiin Early detection is a key point industry as well. , * w * toon Leral Home. Burial wiu| TROY - Former Troy control pre FUTURE COURSE 1 g, ^bat be in Christian Memorial Gar-iPontiac resident Mrs. Elmer a. 7°"'"8 a brief illne . gram. Dr Kent Emphasized. M i„ fact, the future course ofjthis conference is but a first dens Cemetery. Avon Township.; (Flora) Floyed, 71, of Mount' Surviving are her motber. soon as the disease is diagnosed the movement to achieve equaljstep. I am hopeful that it will be Mr. Hortickdied Saturday. He Clemens died vesterday after a member the com- rights for all our citizens makes [followed by other such meet- was employed by General Mo-;,-__ „er bodvU at the manding officer of he station h imperative that Americans ofijpgs, nge tL one I am propos- tors ; long Illness. Her body is at tbe^ftygy^g. g son, John J. Hudson or ship from which the patientrall walks of life meet and bringw between business leaders of Surviving are one son.-ileraldI°f Union Lake: H grandchil-,came is notified. their particular gifts of knowl-j,he two races. Increased con- of Avon Township: one brother: I ERNEST J HASSENZAHL dren; six great-grandchildren; a | All contacts are gven a chest [edge and interest to bear on|tact and common resolve are two sisters; and three grand-i 7 ' 1 . brother. Melbourne Cash of Mil-jX ray and. if not previously this great problem area of ,nec«,sary, and the White House children j ORION TOWNSHIP — Service ford; and a \sister, Mrs. Royjtuberculin positive, are tubercu-| American life. This is one of the conference points the way for Carl Oy. O)onelion m J)onaU 3£. The Confidence of The Workinji Man ... Is one of our highly prized possessions. We ore proud that we provide funerol services for the working man and his family. Bill .illlHIIII Biiih % JAMES W. MITCHELL Service foi* James W. Mitch-j ell, 76, 5038 Thornapple, Waterford Township, will be 3:30 p.m.j tomorrow, at the Kinsey Fu-, neral Home, Royal Oak, with[ burial at Oakview Cemetery;! Royal Oak. Mr. Mitchell died Friday after long illness. Retired from Ford Motor Co., he was a member of the Canadian Legion Post 84, Royal Oak and the Fraternal Order of Eagles. ; Surviving are his wife, Sadie; a daughter, Mrs. Avard Troope of Florida: a son, Norman John-ison of Crescent Lake; two sisters; two brothers; six grand-!children; and six great-grand-1 children. WILSON BANGHART WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP -Service for former resident Wilson Banghart, 84, of Ray Town- News in Brief A white 1962 Grand Prix Pontiac and an adding machine ra^, portedly were stolen from M and M Motors, 1150 Oakland, between 2 and 7:30 p.m. Saturday The car was valued at $1,0M and the adding machine at $150. Monte Heclo of Ferndale reported to sheriff’s deputies Saturday the theft of camping equipment, fishing gear, a radio and an air rifle, total value of about $100, from a campsite on Long Lake in Orion Township. Rummage Sale; Wednesday, June 1, St. Andrews Church, Hatchefy Road. 9:30 to 1 p.m. —Adv. for Ernest J. Hassenzahl, 54, Smith of St. Clair Shores. A Junior Editors Quiz About- POT OF GOLD ilin tested. Imost important aspects of the At three-month intervals for I White House Conference on Civ-a follow-up period of 12 months, >1 Rights, June 1 and 2. i positive tuberculin reactors are When President Johnson I again X-rayed and the tubercu-t gave his famous speech at lin test is repeated on negative Howard University last year. all of us to follow. ' reactors. pledging the federal govern- with. The voting age in Bermuda was lowered recently from 25 to 21 and the extra vote given landowners was done away (Phone federal 4-4511 Pondion Patldnq a a., -Aohm 8»ii 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC Highland Twp. Crash Hospitalizes Woman A 53-year-old woman is reported in satisfactory condition at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital following a two-car collision late Saturday afternoon on Highland at Milford road in Highland Townshjp. Injured was Ethelyn Chase of 255 E. Livingston, Highland Towriship. The other driver was Robert ,F. Turner, 41, of 4901 Rioview, Independence Township, according to Oakland CoUn-i - QUESTION: Is there a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow? ★ * * ANSWER: This idea is purely an imaginary one, connected with the world of fairies. It is quite easy, however, to understand how such a quaint conception may have-, originated. We could give you an exact scientific reason for the formation of a rainbow, showing how the sunlight rays wereiT bent or refracted from drops of water vapor, forming a bow of beautiful colors. But such a description would hardly convey the thrill the delicate rainbow gives us; so we use a bit of imagination and fairy lore to express how we feel about it. Further imagination brought in a special fairy, the leprechaun, as connected with the pot of gold. There is a mystery to that spot where the transparent shimmering rainbow touches the ground. What more natural that some ancient believer in fairies should have imagined a pot of gold glittering there? These little shoemaker fairies had an instinct for money which enabled them to quickly grab the pot of gold at the foot of some rainbow. They were suspicious of everybody, because it was thought that if you could grab a leprechaun, he would tell you where his pot of gold was* hidden in order to get away. The only catch was that leprechauns were never supposed to tell the truth. ■k -k it FOR YOU TO DO: Are you confused by this story of the leprechaun? Don’t take it seriously. It’s all in fun. Ck)lor the picture with all the gay pretty colors you can think of. Meanwhile, enjoy stretching your imagination a bit, even if you really know that fairies, leprechauns and pots of gold under rainbows don’t actually exist. Here’s Where I Save Money! SHOPPING SAVINGS— Pay the Lost of Your Newspaper Many Times Over • YOU'LL PAY LESS at the check-out counter too, if you carefully plan each shopping trip with the aid of the food pages and grocery ads in your newspaper. By making a list of specials and timely bargains, and clipping the cost-cutting coupons, you’ll ea.sily save dollars each week, as well as time and energy. SUCH SAVINGS are welcome dividends from your regular investment in this newspaper — the small sum you pay the carrier each collection- day! And they are definite proof that your newspaper does more to help you shop and save, than does any other medium that comes into your home. YET THIS is only one of many ways your newspaper serves you best. Even more important perhaps, are its unmatched new*-and-picture coverage, its entertaining features, its helpful articles and spMial services. Isn’t it just about the best-paying small investment in your household budget? THE PONTIAC PRESS Oakland County’s im-PRESS-ive Newspaper For Home Delivery Dial 332«8181 b THE PUNTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. MAY 30, 1966 A—9 A HONEY OF A JOB-Victor Franklin is in the process of removing about 120,000 bees from the rear roof of the Waldo Theater in Kansas City. The beekeeper said the honey and comb half filled a 55-galIon drum. He estimated that the hive had been there for five years. New Defector of Life By Science Service ANAHEIM, Calif. — A new, extremely delicate method reported here could be used to detect simple life forms on the planet Mars. It is the most sensitive way yet developed for spotting the fhemicais essential to life. Invisible amounts of amino acids ran be measured by the technique. Dr. John W. Westley of Stanford University, Stanford, Calif., has found. As little as one-billionth of a gram of living material could give positive evidence of amino acids, he told the American Astronautkal Society meeting here. The technique is based on the fact that all known life forms contain basically similar molecular structures. Dr. Westley devised a method of measuring this sameness by combining procedures for detecting amino acids and for identifying the specific amino acids involved. w * ★ He reported that this combination technique has been used to chart “marked changes" in the chemical compounds remaining within 24 hours after a sample of soil containing simple life forms was inoculated with certain polymerizing materials. The materials are called racemic, meaning that they show no preference to rotate polarized light either to the right or to the left. All life forms, on the other hand, have a definite preference for rotating either to the left or to the right, a characteristic scientists term optical purity. SUSPENDED CEILING Royal Bond Paint 2ui>^«5.90 • LATEX SEMI-GLOSS • ENAMEL. ALL COLORS VINYL ASBESTOS TILE 9x9x1/16 rint Quality . I «a. CERAMIC TILE For floor, Woll-lxt Cryilolln* EQO ^ Was 69c "• CERAMIC WALL TILE 4V4»X4*/4» ORo Wt Loan Tools Ow $q.n.«i4Ua PLASTIC COATED DURABLE PANELING 5 Shod** First Quality $599 PLASTIC WALL TILE STOCK COLORS - formerly 10 24kc NOW I PANELING LUAN MAHOGANY 4'x8» ^3®* TUB ENCLOSURE • EXTRUDED Aluminum From* • Haavywaight • FroitodJStlau $2495 ^ONTIAC'S LARGEST TILE CENTER Cur own installation work done by experts OPEN MON., Fill, ’til liOa P.M. - FREE PAREINO IN REAR NEW DELHI, India (AP) -Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, a woman in a hurry, has embarked on what may be the decisive political gamble of her career. If she wins, some of India’s most forceful public figures will have to dance her political tune or fade into the background. '* she loses, Mrs. Gandhi may be In trouble. ★ ★ ★ Her tactic comes from India’s greatest political wizard, her father, the late Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru: When stymied by the political pros, go to the people. In them lies the real power. In the past month, Mrs. Gandhi has done just that. She has traveled almost 10,000 gruelling miles under a blazing sun to visit widely separated areas of her troubled country. PUSHING SELF She has endured scores of parades, mass rallies, receptions and speeches—bustling from one to the next in an effort Political Life at Stake India s Indira Gandhi Gambling on People project Herself as a popular leader capable of swaying the masses as her father did. Last Sunday, at a meeting in Bombay of her Ckingress party, Mrs. Gandhi used another tactic of her father: the threat of resigning. . A * ★ She said that if the nation is dissatisfied with her leadership she would step down. Critics have accused her of departing from the policies of neutrality and socialism laid down by Nehru and of opening the way Tor foreip meddling ^ through aid agreements. HAS SCOLDING For these she had a scolding: What is this talk about outsiders influencing our policies? If we are determined, nobody can Influence our policies.” The conference at Bombay burst into applause. ★ ★ ★ The drain on this 48-year-old woman is written on her face. Dark circles have appeared un-her eyes and she is showing fatigue. But there still is bounce in her step, and more long trips are scheduled Into the countryside. If Mrs. Gandhi “gets across” to the Indian people, as she hopes, there does not appear ' be any single politician or combination of politicians who could prevent her from stamping the Gandhi mark on her faction-ridden Congress party and breezing through next year’s general election. ARE UNHAPPY Many leading politicians know an end run whw they see one and are openly unhappy with Mrs. Gandhi’s fast moves. They are wont to recall that their political power put Mrs: Gandhi in office after Prime Minister Lai Bahadur Shastri died last January. Her breakaway came when Mrs. Gandhi was attacked bit terly in Parliament and elsewhere over the fiscal and economic policies of her govem-mftit. Broadly, Mrs. Gandhi’s hopes for saving India from economic ruin contained two things her qritic^found distasteful: • She asked the United SUtes and the World Bank for increased aid and in return started economic “reforms” both and investment,''the Indian economy could go under. * ★ ★ ! But of the 14 men in her Cabinet, just three consistently rose to her defense—Food Minister Chidambaram Siibramaniam, The key to victory lies in the dusty villages of the Indian countryside—and that is where Mrs. Gandhi is seeking it. demanded. Leftists took this Planning Minister Asoka Mehta to be a surrender of India’s economic sovereignty that opened the country to foreign meddling. • She took some shackles off >rivate enterprise and, in at east one case, gave foreign investors highly attractive terms. This was attacked as a dilution of India’s ^ociaBsm opening India to big bad foreign capitalists. Mrs. Gandhi fought back, arguing that without foreign aid Dixie College President GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) -Dr. Isaac H. Miller, an associated professor of biochemistry at Meharry Medical (Allege, Nashville, Tenn., has been named president of Bennett College here. Finance Minister Sachin j Chaudhuri. Others, looking to the forthcoming election, stayed on the sidelines during the nationwide debate or actively resisted her. many FACTIONS in her..party, vast divisions! appeared. A leftist faction, led by former Defense Minister V.K. Krishna Menon, openly, declared war on her leadership.! Railway Minister S.K. Patil started a rumble on the right.: Party president Kumaraswami Kamaraj stayed silent. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Gandhi has surprised even dose friends with the determination she has shown in this political battle royal. No one in the capital is i»'edicting the outcome. PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER EbhMjeS! Omk tvcnini* tU liM Mi-in I Wolfififcnil-Hitti MoiUV' Homesites From $3,700 DON WHITE, iBc. 2891 DIXIE mCHWAY OR 4-0494 1075 W. Huron St. 334-9957 4(>4>4>4> If You Don’t Buy From Os, We Both Lose Money TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! COMPARE FASHION AAANOR TOWELS-dll perftcts, to Pennay’s hi^h specifications: generous sizes, weighty, densely looped to give you piore dryobility. Beautifully styled In newest colors. Always^ a big buy, incomparable now. enneil% through Saturday only! ALWAYS RRST QUAUTY • _ Brilliantly designed to wrap you in luxury! AAoretqua. Exotic beauty. Design worthy of a Persian rug. elegantly executed. Jacquard woven, beautiful on both sides. Dense, luxurious low-loop continental pile cotton terry. Superb colors: cosmic blue/moss green; heather/mandarin red. PENNEY'S AAIRACLE AAILE STORE HOURS: 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P M. 1W] H ^ - N V A-—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 80, 1966 ONE COLOR LAST NIGHT WHILE PONTIAC SLEPT... SALE STARTS PROMPTLY TOMORROW AT 9 A.M.! THESE BARGAINS AT PONTIAC STORE ONLY! SOFAS 4 Cushion KrothlorColonial tofa in brilliant orongotwood......... $299^*^ ^233^^ Colonial sofa, bluo/groon print, includoi arm covirt............... 199^^ 98^^ 76" Hoywood-Wakofiold Colonial sottoo in nylon mattolasso......... 199^*^ 148^^ Contompororylooio-pillow back sofa in soft molontwood....'......... 229^^ 178^^ 80" Chippondalo sofa in lovolygroon floral quilt.................. 389°*^ 188^^ Early Amtrican nylon patchwork sofa with mapio knucklo ami......... 249^^ 198““ BEDROOM Droxol'Doclaration,'triple drossor, mirror,chost and bod........... ^492®® ^349°*^ Hoywood-Wakofiold Contomporary,chost, bod, night stand in solid cherry ... . 329®^ 169®® Basset 'Bonus' 3-pc. modem-triple dresser, mirror and bed. ......... 169’^ 119®® Sterlingworth solid cherry twin size hi-pesterbedwithcanopyframe..... 89^^ 49 Basset 'Young Ideas' Modem 4 drawer chest...... 59” 39““ Sterltngworh solid maple 5 drawer chest............................. 99^^ 79®® DININGROOM ' Thomasville French Provincial, buffet, table and 4 chairs............ 1/. '399® Drexel 'Declaration', modem walnut china, table and 4 chairs. .............. 638^® 449®® Craddock Traditional walnut comer china................................... 169^^ 119®® Heywood-Wakefield solid cherry square-round table and 4 chairs. .....265'® 139®® Assorted dining tables - mahogany, maple, walnut, cherry............ 99^' 49®® Keller French Provincial oval table end 4 cfiairs................... 239®® 159®® Colonial, foam T-cushion swivel rockers, blue/green print........... ^79^' ^36 Rural Englisihrecliner chair, bright red, sove $100................ 219'® 119®® Pair of Traditional channel-bdck lounges, dark turquoise........... 119^' 88®® Modem decorator chairs, bright red scotchgarded fabric............ 109'® 68®® La-Z-Boy Traditional rocker-recliner in blue/green motelasse........ 204^' 179®* MISCELLANEOUS Mattress or Box Springs - twin orfull size, odds and ends. Large assortment of table lamps and pictures ..... reg. $19.95 to Bunting folding summer cots with mattress..................... Solid maple occasional tables, many styles..........Reg. $39.95 to 3 Piece barset, 48" barwith 2 stools......................... ■ Ottomans - choice of styles and colors. Odds and ends. Reg. $22.00 to FLOOR COVERINGS 12'x22'9" Continuous filament nylon rug, beige............... 12'xl 1 '5" Pottemed Grecian olive nylon rug................. 4 Pc. Braided rug set; I -6'x9', 2-27"x48" and I -2'x6'........ 12' X 10'6" 8eige Acrilan embossed pattern rug............... $7995 219'® 11995 109'® 204^' $':}Q95 399' 1995 499' 12995 2995 $21052 9]25 69’' 139®® $28®® 14®® 1288 33®® 89®® yoo $]49oo 59®® 48®® 9900 Thomas Furniture buyers were busy marking down prices on nearly every item at both great stores. Included are floor samples, one-of a kind pieces and dis continued groups. Frankly, we need space to moke room for incoming mer chandise. Now is your chance to own the furniture of your dreams at prices you never believed possible! Listed below are just a few of the hundreds of values ... all from America's leoding manufacturers. There are many, many more bargains impossible to list here. First come, first served, so be at either store early for best selections! All items subject to prior sale. THESE BARGAINS AT DRAYTON STORE ONLY! 379““ 129““ 49““ 189““ 22°® BEDROOM R«g. sale Oraxcl'Duclarotion.tripludraMur, mirror, ch«it and b*d.......... '492®® ^349 Thomaivillo French Prov., tripio drotier, mirror, chost and bod. 479 Dixie Modem walnut, triple dreiter, mirror and bed.... ......... 179” Sun Glow 4 drawer maple chest......... ......................... 69” Dixie Contemporary, 72" double dreiter, mirror, chest arid bed. . 239” Twin size beds - yourchoice of 3 styllps....................... 29 s6fas Rowe 80" high back Colonial sofa, marine, basket weave......... ^249®® ^199®® Italian Provincial sofo - fruitwood frame, green/gold cover......... 219'® 148®® 73" Traditional quilted sofa - blue/green or red/green............... 229'® 198®® Modern 84" black vinyl sofa with foam rubber cushions. .............. 169” 148““ Heywood-Wakefield Colonial family room settee, blue nylon tweed_ )995“ 140OO 90" Contemporary sofa, blue with blue/green back pillows............ 249'® 199®® DININGROOM Thomasville French Provincial, buffet, table and 6 chairs. ........ *627*> *449““ Drexel 'Declaration.' modem walnut china, table and 4 chairs. ...... 638*“ 449““ Heywood-Wakefield 54" cherry buffet........ ................... 189'® Bernhardt solid maple Colonial dropleaf table and 4 mate's chairs. ....:.. 149” Authentic Colonial maple captain's chairs...................... 29” Richbilt 67" buffet in natural walnut, modem design... ........ 190““ CHAIRS Contemporary red vinyl lounge chair..... ...................... '89” Pair of Kroehler modem occasional chairs, red/blue print....... ] 09^ Heywood-Wakefield Colonial swivel rocker, bright red........... 119'® Colonial Swivel rocker, olive and black plaid - off. ........... 119'® Italian Provincial decorator pull-up chairs in blue/green...... 129” Ladies' Traditional swivel rockers, green/gold fabric. ......... 109” MISCELLANEOUS Carpet samples, discontinued patterns, large choice of colors... .L '5” Full size floor sample bedspreads, slightly soiled. ........... 39” 4‘x6' Area and accent rugs, slightly soiled........ Reg. $39.95 to 59” Mapledropleaf tea cart with glass shelf................ 59” Solid maple occasional tables....................... Reg. 39.95 to 49” 3 Piece bar set, 48* bar with 2 stools.... ..................... 129” 109““ 119““ 19” 129““ »58““ 88<£ 88““ 59” 98““ 69” AU SALES fINAl - NO RETURNS THOl^jAiS AMPLE FREE PARKING - CONVENIENT CREDIT PONTIAC 357 S SAGINAW*FE 3-7901 DRAYTON 4345 DIXIE HWY‘OR 4-0321 BOTH STORES CLOSED TODAY, MONDAY - SHOP TUESDAY 7IL 9 P. M. THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, MAY 30, 196^ B—1 living Program Pencils in hand, women patients at home economist. The hospital’s exciting Pontiac State Hospital listen intently as a Rehabilitation P^ograrfi in Family Living lesson on selection and preparation of has helped hundreds of such women revegetables is presented in cozy kitchen turn to their families with new self-assur-setting by Mrs. Paul Metzler, graduate ance. ^ WOMEN'S SECTION Safe Boating Is Important Dad Sets Bad Example By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My husband and I own a boat. We both love fishing and sometimes we stay on the river all night. Here’s t h e problem: My husband can’t swim a stroke and he refuses to wear a life preserver. H e says he has to die some-i time and he|_________ doesn’t care ABBY how he goes. ' We have five children, Abby. They range from 13 years old down to three. I get frightened half to death when we are In the boat with him and the waters get rough or a storm comes up. I am becoming a nervous wreck over this. Can you suggest something HIS WIFE it * * * DEAR WIFE: Tell your “hero” that even if HE doesn’t care how he goes. YOU do. And you ^Iso care WHEN! Remind him that you didn’t have those five children without his help, and you don’t intend to'raise them alone either. That ought to buoy the old boy up. * * ★ DEAR ABBY: About three weeks ago all of our relatives and several of our friends received wedding invitations to a mutual relative’s wedding. We received no invitation and felt put out, but said nothing. You don’t just call up people and ask them how come you weren’t invited, do you? Three days bpfore the wedding, I got this tearful phone call from the bride herself, apologizing all over the place because she’d heard we didn’t get an invitation. She said we were on her guest list and the invitation must have gotten “lost” in the mail. She begged us to come, but I hadn’t shopped for a gift, and I had nothing to wear, so I declined. Many of our relatives Sarah A. Wheatley Is Wed An evening ceremony and reception Saturday in the Columbia Avenue Baptist Church marked the vows of Sarah Ann Wheatley and Robert Charles Brown Jr. of South Edith Street. Wayne Wheatley escorted his sister at the rite performed by Rev. Marion Sherrill. Their parents are Mrs. Richard M. Wheatley of South Roselawn Drive and the late Mr. Wheat-ley. TIERS OF LACE Deep tiers of Chantilly lace over white silk taffeta fashioned the bride's floor-length gown worn with veil of English net. She carried pink roses and white carnations. Attending their sister were Sandra Wheatley, maid of honor, with Mrs. Forrest Dennis and Mrs. Donald Nelson, bridesmaids. Their nieces, Brenda and Karen Wheatleiy were junior maid and flower girl, respectively. ★ ★ ★ The bridegroom, son of the Robert C. Browns of Sault Ste. Marie, Mich, had Albert Smo- lek for best man. Ushers were Gary Brown, Frank Wheatley, Richard DeMerse, Thomas Par-adiso and Greg Nelson. Bradley Wheatley was ring-bearer. it it it The couple will honeymoon at Cedar Point, Ohio. MRS. BROWN said they thought we should have gone. I would like your opinion. OVERLOOKED it 'it it DEAR OVERLOOKED: I think you should have attended. If you had not been wanted the bride would not have telephoned you personally. Your gift could have come later, and your attire would have been of little importance. it * * DEAR ABBY: What do you think about a high school that makes rules about how short a girl can wear her skirt? Also, they have rules about how the boys can wear their hair, and they won’t let him raise a beard or mustache. Isn’t that denying a person his individual freedom? * ★ ★ Don’t you think if the kids’ parents don’t care, the teachers and principal should stay out of it? Please don’t duck this question, Abby. We kids at Lincoln High want to know where you stand. THEKIDSATLINC. it it it DEAR KIDS: I think it should be up to the parents, not the school, to determine how students should dress and wear their hair. But more important than fashions and hair styles is RESPECT FOR THE RULES. it it it If those who think the rules are unfair would invest as much time and energy in attempting to change them, as they do in defying them, the rules COULD be changed. ★ w * And that, in my opinion, is the best way to strike a blow for individual freedom. ★ * * CONFIDENTIAL TO STUNNED BUT SILENT IN EUZABETH, N. J.: Tell your hostess. If a very good friend of yours had had money taken from her .purse while a guest in your home, wouldn’t you want to be told about it? it it it Problems? Write to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, inclose a ^tamped, self-addressed envelope. Hate to write letters? Send |1 to Abby, Sare of The Pontiac Press for Abby’s booklet. “How to Write Letters for All Occasions.” Patients Bifiding Selves By MARGARET BROWN Home economics is having a vital rehabilitative impact in mental health at Pontiac State Hospital. habilitation Program in Family Living has been facilitating return to their families of countless women patients suffering breakdowns. it it it Recently Mrs. Clarence Krem-er of Marie Circle, willowy and winsome graduate home economist (University of Kentucky) was hired to coordinate this challenging program. it it it . Her position, newly opened to meet increased demands in rehabilitation for homemakers, was the outgrowth of volunteer work. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Kremer sees that lesson materials are available from the -Oakland County Cooperative Extension Service^^and helps plan classes. BUSY MOTHER Mother of two sons, William, 18, and George, 15, Mrs. Kremer has done extension work in Kentucky and Virginia. Now that her youngsters are older, she also enjoys free lance home economics teaching in this area. Next week she will instruct a class on “Stretching Your Food Dollars” for a group of Project Head Start mothers. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Kremer’s husband, a Michigan State University civil engineering graduate, is resident engineer in charge of new construction at Oakland University. The couple met during the war in Virginia where he was stationed with the U.S. Navy. Originally designed to help women patients return to their former roles with less anxiety, the family living program now has three additional goals. In the six-week session of 12 lessons hospital staffers and volunteers strive: • To help the patient strengthen her feminine image and concept of self - worth through reassurance of existing skills. • To improve her ability to relate successfully to others. • To increase her awareness of community resources, encouraging the use of available educational material. Taught by volunteer home economists and extension workers, classes cover such subjects as managing time and energy, home beautification, clothing care, laundry know - how and stretching food dollars. Sessions on modern meat cookery and specially conducted An English Guest Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Huth-waite. West Iroquois Road, have as a houseguest Mr. Huth-waite’s cousin, Mary Hickling of Nottingham, England. market tours have had particularly favorable response. Classes run from 9 to 11 a m. Mondays and Thur^ays. * ★ ★ “Revolutionary advances in I have any patient coming to us may be able to go home in six weeks or less. For this reason each class is a unit in itself, so the program can continue smoothly.” sjiortened hospitalization periods drastically in recent years,” said Mrs. Berner Hansen, an occupational therapy supervisor who works With Mrs. Kremer^ KEEPINTOWH “In the past some patients hadn’t seen a grocery store for years. We feel this program offers a fersocialization process that keeps these women in touch with their community.” • it it * Classes also permit attendance at the Pontiac Mall Woman’s World Series meetings when patients’ scheduling permits. One homemaking class attended a session of The Pontiac Press Cooking School in January. it it it Lively group discussions with patients and the occupational therapist may focus on religion, sex, in-laws and children. “We experience a 1 m o s 1100 per cent turnover iri classes,” said Mrs. Kremer. “We assume Dr. iRobert Braun, the hospital’s clinical director, instructs volunteer teachers in their approach to patients. The program’s thqlapy of communication was underscored by Mrs. Hansen. ★ ★ ★ “Patients participate on a non-verbal level. We doh’t question them, but we observe their work, responses and attitude and report these to psychiatrists. “Patients seem to feel secure in this kind of situation and usually get their problems out in the open.” Staffers and volunteers feel that the class area’s pleasant-kitchen and ifving room setting . offers patients a link with home. “The kitcheb particularly has great impact as a protected setting,” said Mrs. Hansen. “JUST LIKE HOME ” One patient remarked, “This is just like home, not a hospital.” Another bond of comfort exists in the women’s mutual interests; alt have common domestic problems. Psychiatrists at the.-hospital, pleased with therapeutic results - nf Ibe-elassesr -constantly refer more women to the program, resulting in future expansion plans. Responsive patients, applying newly teamed homenuiking techniques after discharge from the liospital, are responsible for much of the program’s constant revision and updating. “Many women offer helpful suggestions for improvement and teli us which lessons were most beneficial and which, superfluous,” said Mrs. Kremer. PATIENT’S REQUEST Lessons in p^sonal care recently .Were added to the class schedule at a patient’s request. Volunteer teachers include Mrs. Irvine Feig, Mrs. Kremer, Mrs. Paul Metzler, Mrs. , William Potts, Mrs. Harris Olson and Mrs. George Villcan, all home economists. Extension workers teaching are Mks. Robert ^arr, Mrs. Elma Cook, Mrs. Del Jones and Mrs. Lloyd Christian. Mrs. Robert Bloor, an occupational therapist, also instructs the classes. Mrs. Clarence W. Kremer of Marie Circle, home economist (center), recently assumed the job of coordinator for Pontiac State Hnspital’s family living rehabilitation program. In planning homemaking lessons and obtaining materials, she co- operates with hospital staffers (from left) Mrs! Berner Hansen, supervisor of intensive occupational therapy- program for • new admissions; Gabriel Martinez, vocational rehabilitation director; and Dr. Robert Braun, clinical director. B—2 THE rONTlA(' PllESS MONDAY, MAY 30, 1906 DO YOU HAVE A ^fULLHOUSE? Then use our storage service for all your clothes. It includes complete protection for all your garments, including your furs. Everything is thoroughly cleaned and mothproofed before storing. P.S. FREE ... Cuddly Teddy Beor, Pussy Cot, or Puppy Dog. (Life Size) with $50 in M.G.M. cleaning receipts. All Colors. The sooner you oct, the wider your choice. Bring your Spring cleaning in. now. M.G.M. Cleaners, Inc. In Business for 21 Years Auburri Rd., at Adams Crooks Rd.f at Auburn Mound Rd., at 23 Mile Rd. Aim on Campus at Oakland University S Rants and Starts Strvint Oakland and Ma<)omb Counlits Open 7 A.M. to 8 P.M., Mon. thru Sat. In by 10 A.M.-Out by 5 P.M. Couple Is at Mackinac At Mackinac Island for a honeymoon are the Larry Burgess Sonnenbergs (Terry MRS. SONNENBERG Apt to Be an Ailment of Women More than two and a half ■tjmes as tpany women as men have gallstones and gallbladder surgery. For patients hospitalized for gall - bladder conditions, according to the National Health Survey, the over-all rate in the U.S. is 2.5 per thousand population (all ages). Butlfor women the rate is 3.6 to 11.4 for men. Of these 440,0(K» patients each year two-thirds are operated on. So that means about 214,285 women — and 85,714 men — have their gallbladders removed every year. That makes a lot of scars to worry about on the beach. —Tbe^ surgery itself is no cause for concern. Mortali^ from surgery to remove the gallbladder is almost unknown. A truly disturbing fact, however, says Dr. Gerald N. Weiss of Lake Charles, La., in an article in the “Journal of Abdominal Surgery,” is that rate of malignancy in the gallbladder among patients over 50 appears to be rising. Lee Wright) who recently exchanged vows and rings in St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church. ------ ■ A reception in the Pontiac Country Club followed the rite performed by Rev. Frederick J. Klettner. The newlyweds’ parents are the Eugene T. Wrights of Lit-tletell Avenue and the Arnold J. Sonnenbergs of., Kempf Street. A chapel veil of illusion complemented the bride’s gown of white Chantilly lace and silk organza. She carried white roses and lilies of the valley. Honor maid was Kathy Bierlein with bridesmaids Sandra Hall, Susan Zanetti, Mrs. Charles Henderson, Patricia Wright, Cheryl Sonnen-berg rnd Marsha Wright. Marybeth Wright and Jimmy Sonnenberg were flower girl and ring-bearer, respectively. Attending their brother were David Sonnenberg, best man with Gary, Robert and Terry Lee Sonnenberg ushering with Thomas and Joseph Wright, and Richard Ghastin. Kenneth D. Jenkin-son, son of Mr. and Mrs. Delos Jenkinson of Williams Lake Road, White Lake Township, was graduated from Adrian College Suriddy with a B.A. degree. An English major, he is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity and is teaching in the Southfield School System. Old ? tJoS£PH/A/E lokWl4A/^ It seems difficult for many women (and men) to understand the parts which diet and exercise play in reducing. Calorie counting is fairly easy. We know that energy is provided by the food we eat. The food which, we do not need is stored as fat. Therefore, we must hold our food consumption to that required for body maintenance and for our activities if we are not to gain weight. If we hope to lose we must cut our food to less than we need for body maintenance and our activities. How many calories do you need? Follow these directions to learn how many calories you should have a day at your LOOK! A NEW SINGER ZIG-ZAG PORTABLE SEWING MACHINE FOR ONLY PiMiVia$•*Plia...$9paraMtliiltir saun tiwa maul • Saws Big-zag for deoorztlvo work |||^ . • Dams, manda without attaohmanta • Saws forward and rararaa ^g||| • Complata with carrying oaaa Other new SINGER* sewing machines from ’59.50. TOUCH & SEW* Sewing Machines with Push-Button Bobbin start at ’149.95. IkAarf nm Jortmomw b a( SINC E R lodayl* DOWNTOWN PONTIAC, 102 North Saginaw Phone 333-7929 “ “--------— PONTIAC MAU SHOPPING CENTER Phone 682-0350 SINGgR _______♦ A TfBd«iii«fli »l THt SINCta CO age and for your height in order to maintain your ideal weight. Your ideal weight at 50 is the same as your ideal weight at 25. GRADUALLY LESS If you are a woman under the age of 35 multiply your ideal weight (at age 25) by 12.3 and then add 525. If you are between the ages of 35 and 55 multiply your ideal weight at 25 by 11.1 and add 475. Women between the ages of 55 and 75 should multiply their ideal weight at 25 by 9.3 and add 400. * ★ ★ Men, up to the age of 35, should multiply their desirable weight at the age of 25 by 14 and then add 725. If they are between the ages of 35 and 55 the)^should multiply their dwirMe w«|K and add 650. If they are between 55 and 75 they should multiply their ideal weight by 10.7 and add 550. If you exercise enough to burn up several hundred calories you can eat that much more food if you want to maintain your present weight. If you want to lose, it’s a fine idea to exercise and also cut calories. However, you do not have to cut them as drastically as you would you did not exercise. EXERCISE LOSSES Of course this depends also on the type of exercise you take. For instance, dancing burns up 200400 calories an hour depending on how strenuous the dancing is. Golf (with out a motored cart) uses 300 calories an hour; tennis, 400-500 calories; skiing, 600-700 calories; rowing a boat hard, 1200 calories; swimming, ^Breas^^mr backstrokes, 300-650; skating, fast,' 300-700 calories. " Toot His Horn Boys Need Assurance By Dr. GEORGE W. CRANE Case Z-413: Norma L., aged 17, is a high school senior. “Dr. Crane,” she protested, “don’t I look attractive to you? “Then why do boys fall to ask me for dates? “I come from] a good home and my daddy is A promineiU' lawyer. DR. CRANE “But even after I get one date with a boy, he isn’t likely to ask me for a second. “So how can a girl avoid being a one-date flop?” CUPID STRATEGY To win friends (and dates) you must learn to toot the other person’s horn! This means, in brief, that you should become a social detective, searching out the assets in your companions. Then pay them compliments thereon. This is what we call “tooting the other’s horn.” Too many girls make tte> sad mistake of tooting their own horn by boasting about their dad’s new car or the fact they have traveled abroad, etc. These girls do that with the hope that if they can make themselves appear more important, then their male escort will be doubly interested in seeking a second date. But it doesn’t work out that way. For the louder you toot your own horn, the more inferior you are likely to make your escort feel. Since no boy wants to feel below par, then such a girl’s boasting makes him take a sour view of her. , But if she will stop tootinR^ her own horn and start paying him deft compliments, he will happy, delighted and expansive. Soon he will begin to toot her horn. So both then get their horns tooted. And the music ALWAYS sounds sweeter when somebody else toots our horn for us! PAY COMPUMENTS \ Girls, Cupid’s best weapon is a horn! \ So toot the boyfriend’s horn by sincere compliments and he will not only think you are wonderful. But he will also credit you with being a smart girl. And 50 per cent more beautiful than others rate yvxi! Nowadays it^snlU^ Aladdin’*^ -magic lamp that is a girl’s best weapon but a horn! When Norma began our interview, you wili note that she commenteii about her own attractive looks and her daddy’s prominence. ’That meant she was focusing attention on herself. And she was also guilty of this while with a boy friend, which was why she offended her escorts till they didn’t want a second date. So I coached her in turning her attention upon others via the “Compliment Club” strategy. She promised to pay her escort a minimum of 3 compliments on her next date. (ANwyt writ# »• Or.CrtiM In «rn If Tha PnntIM Pnu, nncltilat a Ian* Horlene K. Hill Is a Bride The Peck Methodist Church was the setting for the Saturday vows of Harlene Kay Hill of Franklin Boulevard and George Edward McCanham of Peck. ★ ★ * Parents of the couple are the Harley J. Hills of Peck and the Reginald McCanhams of Mio. PANELS OF LACE Panels of Chantilly lace accented the bride’s Empire gown and detachable train of white satin, worn with bouffant illusion veil. She carried red roses and white carnations. * * it Kathy Sheridan and Mary Irving attended the bride at the evening rite performed by Rev. Silas Foltz. With Duane VanConant, best man, were the ushers, Ronald McCanham, Henry Toler, and Dennis Beers. it * it After a reception in the American Legibn Hall the newlyweds left for a northern honeymoon. GET YOUR FREE $198 PHOTO ALBUM. Sm •Her ia Today'* Nowipwptr She Says Women Are Naturals in Medicine CHICAGO (UPI) - The increasing shortage of doctors Jmthe United Statefr^hould be countered by recruiting more women into medicine. Dr. Bernice Sachs, past president of the American Medical Women’s Association, believes. ★ * * Dr. Sachs, wh(i is married to Dr. Allan Sachs, a Seattle, Wash., surgeon, is the mother of a 20-year-old son and a 17-year-old daughter. She was graduated from the University of Michigan and since 1949 has practiced psychosomatic medicine at Group Health Clinic and Hospital in Seattle. FEW IN U. S. “Only 6 per cent of U. S. doctors are women, compared to 80 per cent in Russia, 24 per cent in Great Britain, and 14 per cent in Canada,” Dr. Sachs said in an interview. “We are way down on the totem pole in recruiting women for careers in medicine,” she said. “The major difficulty has been faulty counseling in schools and dis- b» smart-look smart couragement from parents,” she said. Dr. Sachs said women are a natural for medicine since they are the custodians of the family’s health and welfare, have compassion, and stamina. “In the last 50 years there have been many roadblocks to women entering medicine but every medical school now accepts women applicants,” she ^id. “There is no battle of sex now the criteria is— are you a good doctor?” she said. Dr. Sachs said it is possible to combine medicine, marriage and motherhood. “Ability and will are prime requisites,” she said. “A woman doctor’s two goals are self fulfillment as a wife and mother and a yearning to help humanity.” Dr. Sachs said an estimated 85 to 90 per cent of women medical graduates continue to practice after graduation and three-fourths of them are married. A recent survey showed that women practiced most often in these fields: general practice, pediatrics, psychiatry, internal medicine, anesthesiology, obstetrics - gynecology, pathology, public health, radiology, dermatology, and administrative medicine. WE HAVE MOVED PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE TO 108 PONTIAC MALL OFFICE BUILDING PHONE 682-4600 \^HACK SHOES A TO EEEE Are in stock 2.‘J5 PIERCE ST. BIRMINCH.A.M Putme^ 11 N. Saginaw St. Think of it! The Luxury Of Our $25.00 Salon Custom Wave Sale-Priced — Now for Only •1500 JVo Appointment Needed! Beauty Salon Phone FE 5-9257 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MAY 30. 1966 B—3 Compittt Picturt Story of Your Wodding i39 95 Only [ ALBUM INCLUDED 7 DAY SPECIAL Offer con be uted for any 1966 wedding if appointment made within 7 days. KENDALE’S Tel. FE Mill orFE 5-32SI 45 W. Huron Not Good With Other Plant A Lcu:aL-W^ in our famUy Bible ing the blo^ types of each family member. I noted that my youngest grandchild and I have the same blood type. Ij This may be of help to future |j generations if they know the blood types of parents, grandparents, etc. — A. W, T., a grammar school guidance counselor. DEAR PQLLY—Occasionally I scorch a white shirt belonging to my hjusband, so to be sure he only wears it under a jacket I tuck a note into the shirt pocket letting him know about the scorch. He really appreciates this and I do not have to do the shirt over until after it has been wwn. — BETTY ANN pUR 28th YEAR OF BETTER PHOTOGRAPHY 9i00 AM. to 9:00 P.M. The Family Photographer SWOBODA STUDIO linainghasi 147-4311 By uppoiatmmtonly two pointers in today’s column were submitted by Mrs. George Blahovic of Orchard Lake.) DEAR POLLY — used a paint roller to paint a chest of drawers in a jiffy. I finished in half the usual time and it has a nice finish, with m> brush strokes. , When decorating cookies, 1 use a plastic catsup dispenser. I place uncooked frosting in the dispenser, replaee the cap and turn if upside down and squeeze to decorate the cookies. It is very neat and with it I can write names, make lines and so on. — MRS. G. B. DEAR POLLY - To pro-long the life of my leather wrist watch strap I glaze the inside of H with colorless nail polish. This also makes the band waterproof, which is good for the person who perspires a lot. — MRS. E. G. G. DEAR POLLY-Your column is ‘‘required reading” iri our; household. Recently in a routine j guidance interview we were dis- By ELIZABETH L. POST I cussing reading of the local Dear Mrs. Post: I read your I paper and I asked a "poor” column about swimming pooisf reader to read aloud from your and the problems involved in! I column. He, too, has become a limiting invitations and keeping jfan and has made a scrapbook some time reserved for the of the columns as part of a adults, plan to encourage his reading. I Neighbors of ours have I am happy to report he has;worked out a very effective sys-started to show improvement in tern. his general reading, so thank They installed a small flag- you for helping me to motivate...................... him. Their Flag Tells Them to Swim (/ ¥Al ' FASHION IMPORTS is moving to t ^EARANCE SALE! FINAL DAY! Tuesday, May 3il Reduced Up to 511% AH Sales Final—1591 Woodward at Long Lake Rd. Here to Serve You . JSAu-Scott Creative Stylist has joined our staff of operators HAIR CUTTING and STYLING Open Wed. and Fri. bjr Ajppoinlnient RANDALL’S Beauty Shoppe 88 Wayne St. FE 2-1424 C. R. HASKIIJ. STUDIO Has Photographed Over 2000 Weddings. May W'e Make Y our l*ieliires? Now for my Pointer. In listing marriage records and recent additions to the family ALL PERMANENTS $^9.i NONE HIGHER 1 — New Lustre Shampoo 2 —Flattering Haircut 3 —Lanolin Neutralizing 4 —Smart Style Setting HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY Open Mornings at 8 A.M. 78 N. Saginaw Over Bazley Mkt. 333-9660 FREE Area-Wide DELIVERY HOSPITAL BEDS WHEEL CHAIRS • CAHES _______ CRUTCHES a COMMODES A Complete Line of Sickroom SeetU PHARMACY, INC. 880 Woodward Avtnut MtOlcii Building-Next to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Fil^otiielu FE 2-8383-FE 4-9915 4 pole at the gate to their pool and ail of the neighborhood children have been told that they are invited to swim whenever their special flag is raised. This means that one or both of the parents, or one of the grown children stays at the pool and supervises the youngsters. 1 When the parents have guests or wish to have the pool to themselves, or there is no one to “lifeguard,” the flag is kept locked up and the neighbors -know that the pool is closed. — iMrs. Joe Timkin. j ★ ★ ! Dear Mrs. Timkin; Thank you ;so much for sending me this excellent idea. Readers, here’s a simple, friendly way of keep-jing the neighborhood kids on lyour side! AVOID CONFUSION I Dear Mrs. Post; When John; jSmith Sr., dies, does John I Smith Jr., continue to use the: Jr., or does he become John Smith? Mrs. Smith Sr.^ is still! i living and the family is afraid there will be great confusion between her and her son’s wife if he drops the Jr. — Lucille. Dear Lucille: Correctly, the son drops the Jr. To avoid the c 0 n f u s i 0 n you mention, the mother should add Sr. to her name. If she objects to this, as a purely practical matter, the only alternative is for the to continue to use the Jr. long as his mother lives, so that his wife may use accounts and correspondence. The correct wording and addressing of wedding invitations and announcements are described in the booklet entitled "Wedding Invitations and Announcements.” If you would like a copy, send 10 cents in coin and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Elizabeth L. Post, in care of The Bentiac Press. Queen Christina of Sweden is pictured entering Paris in a 1657 engraving. The Council of Europe has choien Christina and her epoch as theme of its 11th exhibition in Stockholm June 29-Oct, 16. Art treasures from the life and times of the controversial queen mil be on exhibit for the largest cultural display of its kind ever presented in Sweden. Mark the Return of a Rebel Special 8”x10” PORTRAIT OF YOUR CHILD 88; • Choice of several poses • No appointment necessary • Group pictures slightly higher ^ Photographer on duty 10 A.M. till 7 P.M. STARTING TUES., MAY 31 THRU SAT., JUNE 11 -KRESGE'S .. . PONTIAC AAALL- History generally portrays , her as something of an enigma — a bizarre figure who | alternately charmed and shocked the capitals of the Continent. An independent thinker, a rebel against convention, she is often referred to by many 20th century scholars as “Europe’s first modern woman.” Now, after some 300 years, she is returning Stockholm. LEFT HER MARK She is Christina, 17th century Queen of Sweden. Whatever the mystery and controversy which cloaked the strong-willed monarch, she left an indelible imprint as the greatest patron of the arts of her day, and it is through the treasures she left behind that she is making her reappearance. The Council of Europe has chosen Christina and her epoch as the theme of its 11th Exhibition. It will be held this year in the Swedisif capital between June 29th and October 16th. The international event is under the patronage Adolf. Nearly ten years of planning have gone into the effort which will bring together priceless artobjects, documents and effects, once Christina’s, which have been scattered round the world in the centuries since her death. The reassembled collection will be housed in Stockholm’s huge National Gallery and will be the largest cultural display of its kind ever presented in Sweden. * ★ * The exhibit will provide a panorama of European 17th century culture and of the personal life and career of the only daughter of King Gustav Adolphus II. Her father, standard-bearer of protestant-ism in the Thirty Years’ War was killed at Lutzen in 1632. She later assumed the throne and was crowned “king" as he had directed. She punctuated a brief and stormy reign with drastic diplomatic, political and cultural decisions and finally gave up her crown in 1654 to be converted to the Catholic faith. A ★ A Christina was not a woman of striking beauty, but tially a highly educated, witty and QUt-sp^en personality who had the courage to break with contemporary thinking and who sought the company of leading philosophers and artists of her time. These personal qualities, combined with the fact that she represents an entire epoch of European history, has made her an outstanding theme for an exhibition. The entire upper floor of the National Gallery is being emptied in order to accomo- ty in which Christina was the central figure. Museums of many countries are contributing their treasures to the event. With permission of Pope Paul VI, the Vatican Is easing a strick rule to lend several invaluable m i scripts. The Pontiff also made it possible for Christina’s tomb the crypt of St. Peter’s Basilica — she is the only woman buried there — to be opened so that a silver casting could be made of a death mask which was buried with her. The mask will be part of the exhibit in Stockholm. Among the innumerable exhibits to be on display will be some 250 large paintings, fifty sculptures and countless drawings, manuscripts and historic documents, all intimately connected with the life of Christina. TTiere will be masterpieces by Raphael, Rubens, Titian, Tintoretto, Veronese, Bernini and Bourdon from major galleries of the world — from Rome, Venjee, Paris, Madrid. The famous “Codex Argenteus,” the Silver Bible, which for the last 300 years has been kept Uppsala, will also be shown. ★ A * " In attempting to revive the 17th century atmosphere, every effort is being made to see that the exhibit is not "dead.” Music by composers who frequented Christina’s Roman palace will be played. There will be readings of fwetry, philosophy and other literature, including many of Christina’s own writings. In connection with the Stockholm exhibition, a conference on “Women in Europe 1966” capital. Mrs. Jerry IF. Day 1 Mt. Clemens St. with olhum Price Ittclades: • Pirliire for Press • Just Married Si)sn • Weddiit)! (iuest Book • Miniature Marriage Cer-lifieale • Rice to Throw -Kvrrphmg b«l n • II.UM: M4Tti!" MATERNITY FASHIONS MATERNITIES • UNIFORMS MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL NINE ■QrrmTmTnyr»TTryy|rrmTrnmnr^^ May We Serve You . . ■ 1^) DANIELS INSURANCE AGENCY R______FE3-711t, tRJmJUUULJUUt g «.R.».R.R.0.a R 8 «t«.O.tJ.)UUUUUL»JUL>^ SHOP SPARTAN 9:30 A.M. to 10 P.M. D/HLY SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 6 P.M. HAVE YOUR DRAPERIES CLEANED and DECORATED FOLDS We steam in DECORATOR FOLDS with specialized machineryl This process assures you that the folds are steamed in at the desired length assures even hems and no shrinkages! WE TAKE DOWN AND REHANG YOUR DRAPES Pick-up and Delivery Service Anywhere Our Years of Experience Is Your Assurance of Quality AAAIN CLEANERS 4480 Elizabeth Lake Road CALL 682-4880 7*/7'i DISCOUNT DIPT. STORIS IvifrHERS! $i00 1 3 DAYS GET A HUGE 11x14 PHOTOGRAPH or YOUe CHILD Tuesday — Wednesday — Thursday MAY 31 - JUNE 1, JUNE 2 HOURS: 10 A.M. to 1 P.M. - 2 P.M. to S P.M. llAILY THURSDAY AND FRIDAY *TIL I P.M. NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED • SELECTION OF SEVERAI^ POSES FULL POSE PORTRAIT • BABIES AND CHILDREN OF ALL AGES PORTRAIT DELIVERED AT STORE A FEW DAYS AFTER TAKEN • SATISFACTION GUARANTEED • GROUPS $1-00 PER CHILD Corner of Dixie Highway & Telegraph Road - itl PONTIAC B-^ THE rONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 30. 1966 SPLIT PERSONALITY—An illusion by magician Kent Richards of Philadelphia was photographed with a Graflex iXl camera and an Auto/Strobonar electronic ftasir Society/Of American Magicians show in New York. Camera Angles Electronic Flash Controls Light — By IRVING DESFOR AP Newsfeatnres THE HONEYWELL Auto Strobonar is a space-age first among electronic flash units today. It has an electronic brain which calculates flash-photo-rfiguring with the speed of light and permits only the amount of' light needed for proper exposure for subjects up to 23 feet away. After using the unit for several months, it seems like magic to set just one lens opening, then flash away at different distances without changing the lens setting. I have the results in color as well as black-and-white — and it works! tn outward appearance, the Auto — Strobonar resembles the previous Stobonar 65-C model but a revolutionary circuitry has been devised to fit inside the handy shape. A tiny sensor cell is the heart . and brain of the new flash unit. It’s a small black dot on the flashtube lens. ★ ★ ★ Its job is to measure light reflected from the subject until there is enough for proper exposure, then to cut off further light and divert the excess into suit their camera instruction book or test the camera by opening the back and shooting a flash through the lens. The automatic feature of the Auto — Strobonar works only when the flash unit is set on “Battery” operation and the special knob is turned to “On.” Otherwise the unit works as I conventional electronic flash on battery or plugged into AC current. It delivers enough light to provide a guide number of 80 for Kodachrome II. ★ a a The flashgun head has a rear tray compartment holding four rechargeable nichel - cadmium batteries which deliver about 80 flashes. They can be restored to full power with a small accessory recharger in 20-24 hours. EXPERIMENT The ability of the unit to produce high-speed flashes at close distances give photographers an opportunity to experiment with stop-motion pictures. Some camera fans may like to shoot exploding light bulbs, shattering glass, etc. and they can do so with the unit on automatic battery operation. With the objects at from two low resistance tube inside the I to five feet, they’ll be getting flash head. 23 FEET When the subject is at maxi- speeds from 1-50,000 to 1-30,000 of a second. But they must devise tripping devices that are actuate at or man^j ually fire the flash at precise fraction of Ume to capture the action. r allows the full output of the unit to flash at a speed of 1-1,000 of a second. At a closenp distance of two feet, a minimum amount of flash output is needed to give adequate light so the sensor cuts the light off in 1-50,000 vjewfinder and with _ fo a second. I change in focus as needed, no It is assumed, of course, that other adjustment was needed in CHANGE IN FOCUS I preferred to flash “people pictures” from various dis-| tances. With my eye the camera used has X synchronization and is set at a shutter speed assuring full electronic flash synchronization. - camera setting. It’s a very handy feature tor c shooting a hectic assignment such as a news event, a wedding, birthday party, a family it get-together or a magic show. ^As^a new^hotegraphie tool, 'it on others it may be set at 1-100 can make life a bit simpler for or 1-300. the photographer taking flash Photographers should con- pictures. Shutter speed must be set at - 1-50 or 1-60 on some cameraaf Special Purchase SALE! PRICED FOR SUPER SAVINGS! BUY NOW AND SAVE MDST DN THIS FAMDUS Serta Quality Mattress • Firmly laced tufted • Pre-builti non-eay borders • Fully vented • Steel coils assure lasting comfort • Durable covers • Serta quality upholstery • Matching box spring for proper support. You Get Both! Offering YOU Many Exceptional Values in Good Furniture FURNITURE 144 OAKLAND ¥R¥.E P4RKIM; LOT, JVST AROIM) coRypR ALoya curk street: Convenient Terms Country Fresh Blue Ribbon Grade A large Eggs A Deliciously Mild in Flavor With Coupon Rich, Tomotj rlovor, Hunt's Pork and Beans Wrigley Polalodlips S Deliciously Mild in Flavor VeheetahM I5-OZ. $|00 3 Wt. Cans 2 Mb. $|00 Bags I Qreof for Hot Dogs Meadowdale Mustard Weorever Aluminum Foil 2-lb. 2-oz. Jar 29‘ 42$:ft. $|00 Rolls I Fondo Blue Willow CoM (ups Fonda 9 Inch White Paper Plates lOO-ct. Pkg. 99‘ 100-ct. Mrfte Pkg. /y Dean's Frozen Indian Trail ' Orange Cranberry Relish lO-oz. QOc Wt. Jar 07 Sweetheart Lemon or IIIACFACIAISOAP 4-ct. OOe Pkg. OO Woshdoy Detergent Fast Relieving Pillar Rock Solid Pack GENILEFELS AIKA SEIIZER WHITE MEAT TUNA Pt. 6-oz. roc FI, Btl. OO 25-ct. / O' Pkg oo 7-oz. OQc Wt. Can 07 Assorted Sweetheort Red Heort Beef Flovor Red Heort Bacon Flavor BATH SOAP DOG FOOD DOG FOOD KM' 15'/2-oz. O'!' L Wt.Cans OO /’Y >5!/2-0Z. 0Q« Z. Wt. Cans OO For Housecleaning BO-PEEP AMMONIA 35« t=l. Btl. Trend Detergent TREND DETERGENT 2-lb. 1-oz. A“Jo Box Af Great With Horn ROYAL PRINCE YAMS ' 1 -lb. 1 -oz. Ole Wt.Can Ol Frozen Rosy Red HAWAIIAN PUNCH 2wtS™39‘ THE POXTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 80, 1966 tadaj, Wednesday & Thursday SAtE MONTH END Prices Greatly Reduced on 7,961 Automatic Washers, Diners, Refrigerators, Freezers, Etc. Hnrrj in for onr Month-End Clean ont of BRA]^ NEW ITEMS . . . plus window and floor samplea at prices that mean great sav* ings for you. Don^t confuse these with the many *iast year^* models that are now being offered elsewhere at comparable low prices - these are the NEWEST MODELS.. . with sell fast. DonH forget — our low prices are complete, including 24>hour delive^, 1-year expert service, and full portective. warranty at no extra cost. They are selling fast. Sale ends Thursday night . . . hiirry! (Iiialilv Si‘r\i(i‘s al \ii H\lra I'osl: liiinii'(lia(c llcliicn. Iiisla AWAY WE GO—With stabilizing parachutes flWng hind it, an Army twin-engine C45 plane is carried d^ the Delaware River at Philadelphia after it was airlifted Philadelphia’s outport terminal for an air trip to the Ari repair depot at New Cumberland, in central Pennsylvania.' The air trip was used since the C45 could not be trucked over highways because of its size. Survival of Most Fit No Longer the Rule GENERAL ELECTRIC By SCIENCE SERVICE DURHAM, N. C. - "Survival of the fittest’’ no longer holds true and, as a result, man is in danger of breeding himself into a genetic weakling — if he survives at all. In prehistoric times, people^i|^ , bom with genetjc defects died^P_“ " off quickly, said Duke Univer- genics programs suggested today, such as sterilization of the feeble-minded, can do nothing about the problem. Dr. Buettr ner-Janusch said, since those such as the feeble-minded contribute relatively little to what he called the “gene pool’’ of a NORMAL’ PEOPLE DslivsrUI Quirintiidf Strvintdl NO MONEY DOWN $5 MONTHLY Gleaming white Porcelain Enameled ’Tub—plus full-size Safety Wringer—high power motor — easy rolling casters — and more. Oversize deluxe washer with adjustable wringer has the famous Maytag exclusive Gyratator washing actioa Buy now and save! Dilivtrtdl asaranlstdl Ssrviesdl NO MONEY DOWN $6.30 MONTHLY Also has porcelain tub — SUDS SAVER feature — Power Flush Rinse & fast-action drain pump. World’s fastest washer! Big 19” Partable Includes Stand *129 NO |IONEY DOWN $6.70 MONTHLY Here it i»—new 1966 model with all channels inclading channel 30. Up-front controU—lighted atation aelector. Hide-away handle, 2 antenna poles. New in boxen and including the stand. HURRY IN FOR I'HKSK BK; 8AVIN(;S siey anthropologist Dr. John' 'The far more numerous “nor-Buettner-Janusch. Today, however, children born with inherent weaknesses such as susceptibility to infectious disease are being \kept alive by antibiotics and Vhost of other aids. "The weakness genes are being perp^uated.’’ Even m*. most extreme eu- mal” people who carry cessive weakness gene that does not show contribute far more to the pool. In addition, they are much more likely to procreate. Man may never reach the point of characteristic genetic weakness, however, the scientist said, since |he hnmaii species now faces the dangers of the “technological ability to destroy itself and a population explosion that mi^t do it first.” All is not lost, however, he believes. Science can already block the lit effects of some weaknesses and can manipulate surroundings to compensate for others. Great efforts ^buld be made, Mentify recessivc ' cifioni In good condition within ton (10) gene camcrs SO that they Acc^oir*MddSrlr’wm te^'roquirod to; might, know the relative dan- irnijh Mtitfoctory Portortnonco Bond jap., td Labor and AAatarlal Bond, each Inl6*^‘’*- 10 wnount of loooo o( tho contract. The Dr. Buettner-Janusch special-o'acCTpto^bidSir!' **'*" '** Izes in the study of evolutionary Monday, June Propoials must bo on formi turnlohod by tha Architect end bo accompanied proBoMl lubmltted. ■ deposit for each i firm tor a period of thirty (30) otter opening of bids. The Board of Education retervos tha right to rtfact any or alt bids In ' ties tharaln. ^ Board of Education AAay 24 and 30, 1VM trends in body chemicals and blood systems. Besides his pessimistic view of man’s coming evolution, he has found no evidence to support the idea that today’s different races stemmed from different species. 78 NORTH SAGINAW STREET SPECIAL TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY Downtown Pontiac Store Only! ROAST SALE! • ARM • ENGLISH • BLADE Automatic Washer 2 Speed—3 Cycle $168 Dalivered - Installed -Guaranteed NO MONEY DOWN $7.21 MONTHLY Here il in - ralfd No. 1 and the moKt firxiblp auloinalie on the market today — All deluxe featured X, HAMILTON Stainless drum Automatic Cycle *183 Delivered - Serviced -Warranted NO MONEY DOWN $7.41 MONTHLY Big deluxe all fabrie dryer tie-higned for the big family drying Ittatia — Brlect any temii.—aa low aa air — plua low, delirate. mrtlium. waan-n-wear, woola or high - Thry will go faat - ir Big 14 Pound Electric Dryer *131 Delivered - Serviced Warranted NO MONEY DOWN $6.37 MONTHLY All porcelain drum — 2 cycle - 4 temps — GIAOT capacity — easy to clean lint filter - and much more -come see. FRIGID AIRE 2 Cycle-1966 Model Automatic Washer *179 Delivered -- installed -Warranted NO MONEY DOWN $7.00 MONTHLY Includes new jet action agitator plua ali porcelain tub—wash with hot or warm—rinse with warm or cold—thia series has sold lOOO’s at the regular price-~>omesee. I YEAR EXPERT SERVICE & EULL WARRAN I'Y Delivered! Serviced! Warranted I NO MONEY DOWN $6.85 MONTHLY Starts meal cooking at preselected time. Has electric Clock and Timer—Minute Minder — Storage Drawer —Porcelain Enamel Finish. llelme with Automatie Ovea M87 Delivered! Servietd! Warranted! NO MONEY DOWN $8.50 MONTHLY 30” electric with illuminated Work Surface — Fully Automatic Oven — Porcelain Oven Liner — White or coppertone. Special! NO-FROST 2-D«M»r Freezer and Refrlgeratdir *196 Dalivered! SarviaadI Warranted I NO MONEY DOWN $7.10 MONTHLY NO FROST EVER In the Freezer—and NO FROST EVER In the Refrigerator. 12.2 cu. ft capacity. White or Coppertone. GE.\ERAL ELECTRIC 10 Cubic Foot Food Compact Family Size Freezer *157 No Money Down $6.43 Monthly liiiilt (I) fit anywlierr. Onerous freezer across lop, porcelain crisper, stainless slielves, egg and hutler door storage and much mure. 4;mne .See! Mostly one of a kind Display Items AITOMATIC WASHERS *168 *158 *179 .*208 Hamilton 14-lb. . . General Electric. RCA Whirlpool.. Fripdaire..... Maytag.,. v, PIGER WISHERS Maytag Round Tub .. . *97 Philco—Heavy Duty... *99 Easy Spindry.....*137 HOME FREEZERS Whirlpool, 18Cn.Ft.. *198 Genetid Electric, 12-Ft *176 Philco, 16 Cn. Ft...*188 Gibson, 10Cn.Ft.....*163 PORTABLE IT’S Sylvania 19” General Electric 12” ‘87 General Electric 19” *129 Zenith 19” *196 RCA Victor 19” •129 Motorola 19” .*129 GAS RANGES Hardwick... ......*I0S Roper.............*179 Tappan............*209 Sunray............ *H8 Electric RANGES Phiko 30”..............*156 General Electric 30” .. *177 Snnray 24” ... ........*1JS Frigidaire 30”.........*148 General Electric 40” .. *211 REFRIGERATORS ^ General Elec., 10 cu. ft. *1^7 Philco, 13 Cu. Ft..*186 Gibson, 13 Cu. Ft.... *217 RCA Whirlpool, 14 Ft *219 Frigidaire 13 Ft..... .*208 COLOR TELEVISION GE, 12” Portable ... *249 RCA, 19” Conxole . . *428 Sylvania,21”Maple. *412 Zenith, 21” Walnut. *467 Motorola, SIQ.) 23” Mahogany.... AIR CONDITIONERS Admiral, S,000BTU *99 Gibson, SOOOBTU sir iMuunt Kit....... Ill GE2-.Spe«Ml, 10.000 BTU...... 101 Gibfion 2-speed, c n-o 10.000 BTU....... lU RCAW-Pool, Used I Ton....... 04 NO MONEY DOWN-EASY CREDIT-90 DAYS SAME AS CASH The Good Housekeeping IShop of Pontiac Free Parking Downtown Ponliac-We’ll Stamp Your Ticket 51 W. Huron Street Tuesday Night ’tU 9 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MAY 30. 1966 6,000 West Berlin Communists Are Mostly Ignored BERUN (AP) - West Berlin, surrounded by a Communist wall and barbed wire, has 6,000 card-carrying Conununists. Although banned in West Germany, the party operates legally in West Berlin under a 1946 hxir-power agreement. It has the same name as the East German Communist party ^ the Socialist Unity party (SED>— but members deny they are affiliated with the Communist regime in East Berlin. ★ ★ ★ The local party held its first convention this year in an out-of-way hall surrounded by police posted to prevent inci- delegates and observers were a number of stylishly dressed young women. MILITARISTIC One of these, asked why she was a Communist in West Berlin, repeated an East German slogan; “West Germany is a militaristic state and the Communist party would insure that there never again would be a war involving Germany.” The woman, about 30, said she was a master locksmith. * * Her companion, a 22-year-old student at W'est Berlin’s Free University, said: “Q)mmunism is the wave of the future. My Asked how he reconciled being a Marxist while taking advantage of a capitalistic economic system, the student answered: “The economics of it can come later. Right now, we need more people.” CITE ECONQMICS Others gave primarily economic reasons for joining the party. "Things are not as good here as they look,” said a 27-year-old welder and father of two. "For someone in my position, wages will never catch up with skyrocketing prices. The Communists are the only ones who have plans to do something about it.” oenTS. mere were none. The city’s 2.2 million people mostly Ignored the event. -------- Among the some! 500 invited being a West Berliner has nothing to do with it. I am a Marxist, therefore I can belong to no other party.” The welder said he lived in a ,big apartment house and had no difficulties with his neighbors because of his party affiliation. “As a matter of fact,” he said with a grin, “when something is going on with the East, my neighbors ask me questions, figuring t have inside information. But I never do.” DOOR-TO-DOOR A slightly built 19-year-old apprentice mechanic said he p^dled the party pamphlet door-to-door but “outside of having some doors slammed in my face, I have not had much trouble.” Life for a West Berlin Communist was not always so smooth. Another working man said he believed public opinion was easing up because the wall dividing the dty was almost five years old and “people are getting used to it.” VIEWS ON WALL How do the West Berlin Communists dew the wall, put up by the East Germans, and the killing of refugees trying to escape to West Berlin? “When it was first built, I was shocked, too.” a 34-year-old delegate said. “But now I see it was necessary. The West would have bl^ the East white by kidnaping all the best work- logical result. As for the continued diootings, he added, “if the refugees did not try to keep coming, they would not get shot.” 'Yankee' Raid Made on Dixie College Campus COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP)-There’s a Yankee on the campus at the University of South Carolina. The Gen. Robert E. Lee Me- said, “if people found out you were a Communist, they planted one in your kisser and no questions asked.” Another delegate repeated this theme, that those fleeing to the West were being paid or otherwise enticed and the wall was a was cut off about four feet from the ground. A sign left on the stump read: “Sherman rides again.” SAVES LIFE T Ficst Lt. Francisco Ball Jr. of El Paso, " Tex.i‘^(wks'“8t ff buHet that™ was stbpped by the compass he hojds. He was wearing the compass on his belt during a Viet Nam operation. /wiONTOOMERY WARD HURRY! COMI IN TODAY! QUANTITIiS ARI UMITiD! 18% Off Misses stretch jamaicas ^44 REG. 2.99 esiim cwf wesfarn ffeniin jamaicas e Easy to car# for cotton, nylon e Bor focks of poIntM of sfross Nylon, cotton denim jamaicas are great all summerJong^^mes in the colors you want most. In sizes 8 thru 18. Slim cut western styling. Buy, save now! / I' ^SPRAY Save 26% on Knit foot socks 3188* a«g. 3 pri. 1.1V Low - cut, long - wear stretch nylon with no band to cut or bind! Tops have Lycra® spandex for fit! Save! 38% Off Carol Bront hair spray 47* A crystal clear mist to hold a simple or elaborate hair-do in place. Super-hold or regular! Don't Miss the Giant Anniversary Celebration at The Pontiac Mall Starting Wednesday, June 1 —Bigger and Better Values at Montgomery Ward Co. Save 25%! Short sleeve knit shirt r 7©^. REG. 1.29 9 Mocfiino wosfiobfo 100% cotteo fokric 0 Comes in sixes S, M, L, and XL 0 Chose from on assortment of colors Short sleeve polo shirts are cool and comfortable all summer long! Machine wash and dry. in sizes S,M, L, andXL. Stock up today at this new low price. Save! 35% Off 9x12’ vinyl rug ^88 Hard polished surface wears well and cleans easily. In gaily colored designs. Stays flat . . ! 16% Off 3-pc. redwood group 24 88 Save 30% on Men's Scruhdenim cut-offs ■ 4 2” 9 Wesforn tiyUng: few riding, form fitting 9 “Reno” fog tray more H yen want 9 Built-In faded hfoe look—4oft foofi We’ve never seen anything zoom to the “hit style list” so fast. Fray the unfinished bottoms more if you want. Sanforized® 11 ’/4-0Z. cotton. Sizes 28 to 36. Table, 2 benches are made of quality, rustic California redwood. 6’ length, iave now . .! 35% Off Window or door canopy ^88 _ Pressure - coat plastic finished steel. Fluted roof sections, protective sides. White. Save! 15% Off sowing machino w/baso *38 ln® No Money Down SYMPHONIC 11" TV (Solid Sbte-AC, DC or Battery, UHF-VHF).... *129“ Himm TRANSISTOR PHONO PLAYS ON 6 FLASHLIGHT ------------- BAHERIES Mtuiug CORDLESS TAPE RECORDER Ploys everywhere . . . <>)n beach or patio ... in the carl Versatile portable phono to add to your summer fun and enjoyment. Weighs only 4% lbs. yrt ploys dny size, any speed record, monourd or stereo. It is oil transistorized and has 4" speaker, built-in 45 rpm spindle and breok-re-ilstont cose. Diamond needle guaranteed for 10 years. SPECIAL LIMITED TIME BONUSI $25 WORTH OF MERQURY RECORDS AT NO EXTRA CHAR6EI $25 Mercury Records 39.95 Mercury Phono 39” Batteries extra powered by flashlight batteries Dual motors and Capstan drive guarantee excellent sound and big set performance! Operates for months on ordinary flosh-botteries or can be plugged into standard AC outlet with AC converter. Records and ploys bock up to 4 hours on single tope. 2 speed operation. half track "recording, dynamic microphone with remote on-off switch, magnetic earphone. Reg. 89.' ^5 ^58 B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MAY 30, 1966 Jacoby on Bridge 'Extinct' Bird Is Discovered in Aucklands BEN CASEY ♦ AK843 4874 W«ST EAST (Not Shown) (Not Shown) SOUTH (D) 4AKQ87 IT J43 ♦ 72 4AK6 Both vulnerable Weat North East 14 Pass 2 Pass 4 4 Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—♦ Q. By JACOBY & SON Newspaper Enterprise Assn. The columns this week will take up declarer's problems at trick one. The East and West hands won't be shown most of the time b e-cause declarer does not get to sec them. You start with the code' word “ARCH.” \nalyze the' lead and note that West has probably ledi from a queenjack combination. You hope that it wasn’t a five-; or six-card sort. “You Re-' view the bidding and not that your opponents were unable to contest. You Count your winners and losers and see nine potential winners and four potential losers. Then you ask, “How can T make this hand?” Three of your four potentials; losers are in hearts and you; note that you have a chance to ruff your third heart in dummy. You also note that you have time to do this because West; has failed to open a trump but that yotr oannot afford to^ play; the trump suit yourself if you want to ruff the third heart. ponents lead back and to p|,ay a second heart. This will give you time to ruff your third heart in dummy irrespective of how the defense goes since you have been able to get to work on hearts before any, trumps have been Pl^^- By Science Service j WELLINGTON, New Zealand} —A bird previously thought to; be extinct, the Auckland Island rail, has been discovered on desolate Adams Island — a wind swept islet of the Aucklands group. 600 miles south of New, Zealand. Q—The bidding has been: West North East Sooth IV 14 Pass 3 4 Pass ? You, South, hold: 4AQ95S V32 443 4KJ75 What do you do? A—Pass unless your partner plijri ~ this' pirttiralar jump raise as an absolute force. In that ease, yon must go to four The rail is a small ground- living bird about the size of the quail, It is a subspecies of the Austrailian Lewin water arail and has been regarded a extinct. The dis(H|very was made by i a seveh^ah team of New f Zealand scientists. JACOBY You note there is some danger attached to this play. If West has led a five-card i diamond suit his partner will be able to trump a second diamond lead, but you can’t help that. If diamonds are going to break S-1 you just aren’t going to make this hand with any line of play. Therefore you decide to go after that heart ruff and lead a heart at trick two. You plan to win anything that your op- TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of passing, West bids two hearts over your one spade. Your partner jumps to three spades and East goes to four hearts. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow Astronomers use s i d e r e time. Only one specimen of the bird was collected by the party. I Adams Island is less than a I mile from the main Auckland | Island, but the leader of theT expedition, Dr. E. J. Godley, L said that probably the main rea-| son for the bird’s survival there is that there are no introduced animals on Adams Island, there are on the main island. BERRY’S WOaLD By Jim Berry r Astrolomcal Forecast ■y SYDNEY OMARR For Tuoidoy I wlw rnan confrolt liFs' detOny . . . Aitroloay point- ......... ARIES (Mar. 21 ■ ------* '-^$S. Otiter, mar ua t immediate Investment - - Don't ; Highlight psychologic . . SONAL CONTACTS. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 - Dec. 21): What you teel today ... Is transmitted TAURUS ( r. 20 • May 20): dinating efforts memoers. mate or partner rvuvr-r a clal attention. Spotlight partnersh public relations. Analyze news, infori r. concen- ! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 -Friends may offer helpful iskeptical of reports " ' lack substance. GEMINI (I ir afield. analytical, avoid self-deception. CANCER (June 21 - July 22): Element et luck seems to ride with you. Your 0 (July 23 - Aug. 22): Time no: nish, complete, round out project! - “ —Is. Go back «".^arg-hoom and J. William Sch^ the department of biology an^ botanical museum. Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. The oldest cellular microorganisms previously discovered are the 2-billion-year-old fossils found on the GunfUnt Iron formation in northern Ontario. The South African microfossils, are more than 3.1 billion years old, Drs. Barghoom and Schopf reported here in Science, journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. The fossils were identified by andjtions of their business: that it both optical and electron microscopy. Organic analysis showed that the black cherts also contain small concentrations of complex hydrocarbons, which are thought to be definitely biological in origin. AP PiMtaiax arrival from New Caledonia. Zoo officials say they are the only pair of their kind in America and among only 35 to 50 in the world. attracts and holds passengers who have flown before, and that it attracts some of the 60 mil-lion passengers who have never a been up in an airplane before.” FaahirttatTi2l-li2t But airline stewardess schools in which the carriers have invested millions, teach other items besides cabin service — such as makeup, hairdo and even how to walk. ★ ★ And for one reason, runs the airline argument: To present pleasing public image that can be achieved only by an attractive girl. MUST BE FORCED ALPA and TWU say the law’ the law and that’s that. If the Civil Rights Act prohibits sex discrimination, the airlines must be forced to hire men as cabin attendants. ’Hie airlinea point out that even civil ri^ts advocates opposed the inclusion of sex, as did advocates of equal ^-ployment opportunities for women — ^cause they felt that sex discrimination was a different problem that had to be handled separately from civil rights. The airlines base their own legal case on a provision in the Civil Rights Act which holds that an employer may discriminate on the grounds of sex, if sex is a “bona fide occupational requirement.” * They say three and a half decades of female flight attendants proves their job is, indeed, a girl’s job—welcomed and supported by the public, and also adopted over a long period as an accepted, deliberate business practice. EXPENSIVE ’TURNOVER The airlines emphasize that hiring pretty girls involves an expensive turnover, which in itself buttresses the “bona fide occupational requirement” that stewardesses must be female. ★ * ★ 'We have deliberately done ’ said an Air ’Transport Association attorney arguing before the conunission, “because the industry has believed all these years that the practice is related to the normal opera- >,/UUyyUi>AAMFIIEE PUYtROUNBS EXCmMS CIRCUS TMIH RIDKAAAAAAAAAA riiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiffiir Wide Track Drive at W. Haron; FE 2-1170 DINING and COCKTAILS < MONDAY NIGHT *^BRINGA FRIEND** SPECIAL! One Dinner FnlL Price—One Half-Price! Special PHces—Cocktails 4 to 6 Daily COMMERCE p—Now Thru Monday^—■ I All Color Holtday Progronfil | Also . fmratxoik i \UPi^ >M eieis starring — Ann Margrat — Louis Jourdah Richard Crenna — Edie Adams YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART I . NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct answer. 1 Hue and Du Nang were mentioned often in newi r^iorts from South Vlat Nam last week In connectioQ with ..... a-Amerlcan battles with the Viet Cong b>antl-goTemment diaturbanoea c-eplde^cB of influenza 2 In Oregon’s primary eleotiont Robert Duncan won flie Democratlo nomination for the Senate. His victory was seen as a sign of voter support for our Viet policies. True or False? 3 The White House urged passage of a bill to increase the national minimum wage by 36 cents in two steps. The minimum wage now la $..... per hour. S-.75 J^IJDO 0-1.25 4 France is marking the anniversary of the Battle of Verdun, which took place dmrlng the . a-Napoleonlo Wars b-Flrat World War c-Second World War 5 Total debt in the United States has risen to about $1.3 trillion, the CosuuerceD^artment reported. The largest share, some two-thirds, of this debt Is owed by..... a-private citizens and business b-the federal government o-state and local governments PART II - WORDS^IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. 1 pagoda a-a tax 2 Junta b-falr, just 3 levy o-Asian temple 4 dissent d-to differ in opinion 5 equitable e-rullng group PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. 1 Kenneth Kaunda a-Presldent, Zambia 2 Marla Remenyl "b-an “Emmy” winner 3 Dick Van Dyke o-Prime Mlnleter, India 4.... Jndlra Gandhi d-1966 Mil* USA 6.....Ralph Houk e-Mana^r, New Toric Yankees The Pontiac Press Monday, May 30, 1966 Blatch word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. Kauai King seeks “triple crown” election sethere June 1 classic race takes place on Memorial Day 4..... “Rocky” bqwed out as Presidential hopeful moon craft launching expected this week BrlUsh-Spanlsh talks about this area began many. Including Lynda Bird, are graduating SURVEYOR fromcoUege 8..... rowboat began trip acroas Atlantic - Brltl ah leader met with West German Chancellor 10..... Caaalua Clay defeated Henry Ccxqper • VEC, Ine., Madhen, WIkomIr _________________ Save This Practice Examination.' STUDENTS Valuable Reference Material For Exams. FAMILY DISCUSSION QUESTION Should service in the Peace Corps be accepted as a aubatltute lor serving In the Armed Forces? Thit Quiz li part of tha Educational hegram which Thii Nawipapar lumithat to khook in thii araa to Stinwlala Intarait In National and World Affain at an aid to Oovologing Good Clltcomhip. i^'DO Ybu"RAf EV (Score Each Sid. of Quiz Sop.mt.ly) 7, ^ „ point. - Good. 91 to 100 polnH - TOP SCORE! 61 to 70 polnH - Fair. Silo 90 point* - Excollont. 60cr Uhdor???-tfnwii ANSWERS TO TODAV’S NEWS QUIZ •q-Ol iq^6!S-8 0-8 U*-? O-g !p-g ihl :zinD 108NAS a-8 lo-t !q-8 !p-g !«-i :||| lUVd q-8 IP-t O-f <••{ Is-i 111 iyvd ■-9 iq-t l9*t Oiui-g Iq-i i| iHVd B—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 80, 1966 TWO COLORS Ifs a Pleasure to Shop and Save at FOOD TOWN f PEOPLE'S SUPER MARKETS B FOOD MARKETS iliHiiLM S H 8 S S. ~ ‘ ■ I)INW(hland Read 112M Baldwin Ave«| 1275 Cooley Lake Rd. I is»inkrt..a.ia I eWMrCU*.. I IW«,UUV.U^ | J ONNS^n I OKNSUNWY* OKNlUNWkYJ I 253 AUIURN I 45$ L PIKE ST. I 7NAUNMST. I IM ORCMUIUKE AVL oi>«i«i>.,..WMk|or«*AJiLi«»r».l •Ai«.i)>rju »AJ4.W»P.M. I «B.n.WNk I I 4DAYIAWIBC iO SUNDAY! I OKNSUNDAy | OfCN SUNDAY " *.......—“ US. CHOICE CHUCK BONELESS CHUCKTQe ROAST I Ua FmhllBiBr = CORN FRESH FROZEN > CHICKEN • TURKEY • BEEF 114hiiiea Pkg. CHASE and SANBORN INSTANT COFFEE 10 ounco i<*«^ . DOUBLE Gold Bell STAMPS With This Coupon and $5.00 Purchase (Except Bear, Win* or Ggor*tt*s) Coupon Expires Wednesday, June 1,1966 Limit 1 Coupon For Customor lUOi ISt Chef's Delight A BAA CHEESE SPREAD Z-43^ StirnwIitfrY PRESEBtE52'"49^ Happy Value 1-pound 1-ounce can W A CREAM STYLE CORN 1|V Stokle/s 1-pound can CUT BEETS Lucky... 15-ounce can DOG FOOD 1-Pint 6-Ounce LIQUID CHIFFON AQUA NET 13-ounce HAIR SPRAY Meadowdale Fresh Frozen FRENCH FRIES 9-Ounce Package Meadowdale Slice or Crashed PINEAPPLE 1514-ounce can th* Right THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 30, 1966 C—1 Pontiac Northern on Sidelines Kettering, Waterford Nines in Key Tournament Contests By JERE CRAIG Kettering and Waterford are i involved in two key Pontiac Invitational High School Baseball Tournament games today while Pontiac Northern is watching from the sidelines at Jaycee Park. The Huskies were upset in their opening game Saturday, 3-1, by former two-time champion Royal Oak Kimball which now plays Birmingham Brother Rioe in the 7:30 p.m. quarter-final game today. Wateitrod challengcp p r e-tournament favorite Ndrthville at 3:15 p.m. after ousting Basel Park, 6-3, Saturday. The Mustangs beat Romeo, 6-5. Defending champion South-field advanced to today’s 5:30 tilt with strong Kettering by whipping Clarkston, 6-2; and Pontiac Central meets Milford in the 1 p.m. starter following a 21-7 blasting of Walled Lake. Kettering, Brother Rice and Milford all were winners in games prior to Saturday. SOUD BLO W PNH, a finalist in two of the (preceding three tournaments. could only score on Kimball left-bmider John Ritter when Keith Deaton cracked an iWde-the-park homer in the seventh inning: •k It * Ritter allowed only one other hit and whiffed nine. Two runs in the sixth iced the win for the Knights. Tony Cummings led off with a triple. A sacrifice fly, Tom Scott’s single and Tom Sttam’s double brought home the runs. The upset cost the Inter-Lakes League some prestige since the Huskies are cochampions of the I-L while Kimball only won two starts in the Southeast Michigan Association. Park (10-5) was beaten in the opening tourney g a m e for the second straight year when Waterford (12-5) suprised the Vikings. WTHS shares the I-L crown with PNH. The Skippers scored six unearned runs in the first three in-^ nings on four singles, six errors | But SEMA champion Hazel and one hit batsman. Bill Hill Michigan Boy Handcuffs Tigers Detroit Edged by Angels, 2-1 Hank Aguirre Sharp in Taking Setback Expect '500^ Record Speed Builds at Indy M!)IANAPOLlS,4rid. (AP) Andretti, Clark and Foyt were. A\33-car field, straining with|aniong 24 contenders driving' record sp^ buUd-up, streaked powered byi DETROIT (AP)-GeorgeBru-;^f ‘‘^gg;;“,fr^^^^^^ V-8 dual overhead cam net thanked a Heleeation of Ud- .engines, such as Clark used to p^^ “la Snf ,^a.«pohs Motor Speedway^ Lj„ ^ges. Jones and Ward handcufflnu the Ttaers on three' Management predicted a have four-cylinder super-hS »rTeadtog h^^^^ ^^,000. (^umiess oftJeharged Offenhauser plants. Angels to a 2-1 victory. watch^ 9"'y one front-engine Offy. 6f Brunet, who was bom near L Houghton, received a number monopoUzed the 500 for gifts from a group of 48 persons'^®*^®®*® ®®‘®*'iyears, qualified. It was piloted • ” lite. Ihv Bobby Grim of Indianapolis representing the Upper Peninsu-la copper counti^ Saturday Th® chase for slices of an all-| njght time high prize list that may! « ^ 'reach 3750,000 had an 11 a.m.. He was not scheduled to pitch ^ST, starting time. Sunday but California Manager: * * ★ \ Bill Ripey made a change and Record speeds appeared as-^ named Burnet after he learned sured with a weather forecast of| the left-hander’s father had nev- sunny skies, temperatures ini er seen him pitch in the majors.' the low 70s and northwesterly “I told the pepple Saturday breezes of 8 to 12 miles per night I would try my best, but I hour. lyei I by who made We 11th row with a 158.367 amage. In all, power plants ^re fitted into IS differ-nt spmal chassis. tn rookies were making th^r first 500 start compared toj \l last year. These include! Jackie Stewart, Dumbarton,! Scotland; Graham Hill, London,! England; Gary Congdon,! Garden Grove, Calif.; Mel Kenyon, Davenport, Iowa; Cale! Yarborough, Qiarlotte," N.C.;j Carl Williams, Kansas City, andi Larry Dickson, Marietta, Ohio.j Virginid Rider Scores Victory in Horse Show - - ., , j WIESBADEN, Germany (J» — didn’t promise I would win,’; Averaging qualifying speed j^gj^y Kusner of Arlington, Va., Brunet said. “Actually, I want- was 160.251 m.p.h. for the field the day’s main event and ed to win it more for my room- compared to 156.052 last year, i j^g^y a,ap^ of wallpack, N.J., mate — Frank Malzone.’’ ggjg PACE Iscored a victory in the women’s THROWING ERROR Setting the pace to win the event Sunday at the Wiesbaden Maizone’s two-base throwing pole position was It^an-bom horse show, error in the ninth put Wiliiei Mario Andretti, 26, ^ national Horton on second base with the'driving champion /rom Nazar-tying run. jeth. Pa., who finished third in But Brunet, who fashioned the his first Speedway start last fourth best earned run averagelyear. He set/a four-lap quali-in the American Leape last lying mark of 166.899 this year, year — 2.56, bore down and ★ * w made pinch-hitter Don Demeter! Four former winiwrs shared his eipth strikeout victim. He favoriUsm with the ^footS ^ then retired Bill Freehan and rnell junior, who won the of Miami 4 and 3, Cros defeated I.C.4-A. 440 outdoor title Satur-Peter Flaherty of Ireland 1-up, day in the rain and fog at Down-and Cole defeated Alexis GodU- ing Stadium, lot of France 4 and 3. | Maryland’s deep squad took Mourgue d’Algue and Cros the team title for the second will play for the championship straight year with 40 points to 32 over 36 holes Monday. for Villanova’s challengers. Cubs’ manager looked at the ing single In the eighth inning, pictures - the video tape from then won it by singling across the telecast of the contest. jim Hart with the wining run “It was foul,’’ Durocher in-in the iOth. The Phillies had sisted. “It hit the wall along the erased the Giants’ 3-0 lead with right field line, and the wall is five runs in the seventh inning, about a foot away from the foul two on Clay Dalrymple’s homer line.” -and two more on a triple by In other National League Cookie Rojas, games San Francisco nip^ Philadelphia 6-5 in 10 innings, New York trimmed Los Angeles 7-6, Houston edged Pittsburg 3-2 in 11, and St. Louis temped Cincinnati 3-2 in 10. OLSM Track Champ in Parochial Meet Orchard Lake St. Mary outran 14 other teams Saturday in capturing jts second straight ★ ★ ★ V Orchard Lakt St. Mary 40; 2. Utica Catholic League Second Division track championship. The Eaglets picked up first-place points in four events during the day-long meet in which five records were set. _________ . jl. Theresa 4 2-3; 12. Farming-; ton Our Lady of Sorrows 2 2-3; 13.1 St. Gregory 2; 14. Center Line St.; Clemens 1; 1$. Highland Park St. Bene- Shot Put - Tony Weinch, St. Thomas, 4«-10onald Chambers; dear .. _..J two great-grandchll-Recltatkm of the Rosary i Tuesday, May 31, at 8:30 t the Donelson-Johns Funer- ” ly, June I, at 11:30 Michael's Catholic Church. Interment in Mt. Hope Cenftelyy. ^ (^g^sled ^ HASSENZAHL, AAAY^mT'ER"-NEST J., 778 Laird Street, Orion Township; age M; beloved husband ^of^ Emma^R. ^swniaM; and Dale J. Hassenzahl; dear brother of Mrs. John Hbpkins, Mrs Joseph Duggan, Charles, Arthur, Earl and Frederick Has-seniahl. Funeral service wlD be held Tuesday, May 31, at 2 p.m, at the Orion Township Community Bible Church with Rev. David Willett officiating. Interment in Perry Mt. Park Cetnetery. Mr. Hassenzahl will lie in state at the Lewis E. WInt Funeral Home, Clarkston, until 11 a.m. Tuesday, at which time he will be taken to the church for services.________ HORTICK, MAY 28. 1988, NORMAN H., 48 Bennett St., age 58; dear father of Gerald Hortick; dear brother of Mrs. Helen Duncan, Mrs. Margaret Schubert and Arthur W. Hortick; also survived by three grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, May 31, at 1:30 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Interment In Christian Memorial Cemetery. (Suggested visiting hours 3 , to 5 KINGSTON, MAY~28, 1988, HELEN B., 10330 Glenn Rd., White Lake Township; age 83; beloved daughter of Mrs. Laura Hudson; dear mofher of Mrs. Earl Simpson and BEGINNING JUNE 8TH THROUGH Service will start the summer schedule of 2 pick-ups per wtek. Pick up days will be same as last year. For information call 825-8821.______________________ ANNOUNCING ANOTHER DEBT AID INC. office, 718 RIker Building, branch of Detrott's well known Debt Aid, Inc. to servo the Pontiac Community. GET OUT OF faEBT — AVOID GARNISHMENTS, BANKRUPTCY, REPOSSESSIONS. BAD CREDIT AND HARASSMENT. We have helped and saved thou-sands ol people with credit problems. Let us consolidate your debts Mrs. Roy Smith and Melbourne Cash; also survived by 11 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be today. May 30, at 8 p.m. at the Elton Black Funeral Home. Funeral service will ■" day. May 31, at 10 i d Tues- Cem^ry, Clarkston. Mrs. Klni ston will lie In stats at the funeral KLiTNr"MAY 27, 1988, FRED H., 1389 East Lake Drive, Walled Lake; age 74; beloved husband of Emma Klein; dear father of Arnold and Edna Klein; dear brother of George and William Klein; also survived by one granddaughter. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, May 31, at 1 p.m. at the Richardson - Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake, with Mr. Glen Cooper officiating. Interment In White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Klein will LOEW, AAAY 27, 1988, LEAH, Warren Street, Pontiac; age 8 dear aunt of Mrs. Robert Drav Sr., Mrs. John W. Hudspeth J MARSH, MAY 29, 1988, THELMA B„ 44 South Anderson; age 73; beloved wife of RusseH Marsh; dear mother of William R. and T, McCulloch; also survived grandchildren. Funeral ar- Sparks - Griffin where Mrs. Mai state. (Suggested vis Car Hits, Kills Bear; Jail Inmates Eat It | DELAND, Fla. - “Bear-,, burgers” were on the menu at: the Volusia County Jail h6re.| When a motorist struck and killed a 200-pound bear accidentally oh U.S. 892 near De-, Land, Sheriff Rodney Thursby brought the bear to the jail and fed the meat to the prisoners there. Death Notices BROWN, MAY 28, 1988, FRED 111 South Josephine, Waterford Township; age 87; beloved husband neral service will be held Tuesday. May 31, at 10:30 am. at the,, Oonelson - Johns Funeral Home. Interment In Pontiac, Michigan., -- Mr. Brown will He in state sti the funeral home. (Suggested vls-Itlng hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) CONNELL, MAY 28, 1988, OSCAR; 23 Clinton Place, Fair Port, New York; age 71; dear father of Mrs. Harriett Camr"- Streaf, Bofrsm Oxford DINSMOllE, MAY 27, 1 e funeral home. 1. Virginia Nor- father of Mrs. Paulina Lo^z, .....— .... ton, Carl and Earl Kirby; dear brofhar of Mrs. Inez Gleim; also survived by IS grandchildren and 14 araaf-grandr^lldren. Funeral servica win be h8M Tuesday, May 31, at 10 a.m. at the RIthardson- ssrBS-!.5er.r'“ . Orn day. May 31, at 2 p.m. at the D. E Pursley Funeral Home with Rev. Clyde E. Smith^^oflifiMing. tery'^ Mr. Nevenzeel will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.mj__________________________^ PARKINSON. MAY 27, 1988, ALLEN D, 2157 South Greer Boulevard, Sylvan Lake; age 55; beloved husband of Lila D. Parkinson, beloved son of Mrs. Myrtle Parkinson. B.P.O.E. No. 810 will conduct a Lddge ol Sorrow at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home Monday at 8 p.m. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, May, 31, at 1:30 at funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.mJ ROBERTSON, MAY 28, 1988. JEAN-NIE. 4528 Olivia, Royal Oak; age 87; dear mother of Mrs. Kenneth McVitfle; dear sister of Mrs James Campbell, Mrs. Jack Brown, John and William Gllles- son's. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, May 31, at 1:30 p.m. at the SparksGriffIn Funer-' 35; Beloved wife of Eugene Ruth ledge; beloved daughter of Thomas Smidth; dear mother of Duane, Dorin and Darla RuHHedge;^dear and Howard’ Smidth. Funeral jn-Bird Funeral I WILSON, MAY 28, 1968, MARVIN W., 280 Wise Road, Commerce Township; age 51; beloved husband of Mary Wilson; beloved son ol Mr. and Mrs. John ,Barsul; dear lather of Dorothy, Robert, Dennis, David, Marvin and A/2C Ronald; deaf brother of Stephen Wllkla t'-rnSr.i: r Ih^^ Rosary wlll^ be^Tues^ EHon Black Funeral Home, 1233 Union Lake Road, Union Lake. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, June 1, at 10 a.m. at Sf. Patrick's Catholic Church, Wilson " Cemeteij|r, ^Cl Clarkston. SMALL WANT ADS BIG DEAL FOR YOU! —^tr-NO-ciHAiroer—’—— Hours 9-7 AAon. thru FrI., Sat. 9-5 FE 24111 (BONDED AND LICENSED) LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY WITH Dex-A-Dlet Tablets. Only 98 cents at Simms Bros. Drugs. BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there j were replies at The j Press Office in the fol-I lowing boxes: I 4, 5, 10, 31, 34, 35, 41, I 50, 53, 57, 60, 65, 67, 79, j 96,110,117,118 Funeral Directors COATS funeral home DRAYTON PLAINS_______874441 Huntoon' FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac for 58 years 79 Oakland Aye._FE 2-0189 Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME, FE 2-8378 Established Over 48 Years Cemetery Lots 4-A 3 LOTS IN WHITE CHAPEL, LO-cheap. UL 2-4852. __ ANYONE SEEING ACCIDENT ON Nov. 15, 1985 on Auburn Ave. in Auburn Heights where 2 boys were hit by a car please call Boyd Elkins, OR 3-9478.______ ANYONE WITNESSING AUTO accident at Telegraph & Orchard Lake Rds. Friday, May 27 at 8 a.m. please call OR 3-6975. ANYONE CASHING A CHECK ON May 28. or May 21 at Elden'i Hardware please contact Elden Shell OR 3-U20.____________ ANY GIRl or MUMaN NEEOlNG CLOSED MAY 21-JUNE 1ST HOUSE OF WIGS 158 N. Perry DAINTY M.AID SUPPLIES 739 Menomln/e________FE 5-788S GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSEl ORS X'THB 1984 CIVIL RIGHTS -:-i LAW PROHIBITS, WITH X; S; CERTAIN EXCEPTIONS. X; i-:-:oi$CRiMiNATiON BE- ;X: CAUSE of sex. since lySOME OCCUPATIONS ARE ;X CONSIDERED MORE AT- -X <’■ TRACTIVE TO PERSONS '.v OF ONE SEX TH*« the X. 8 THE $600 Wanted Male 4 A-1 MECHANIC Experienced In hydromellc Irene- DOWNEY Oldsmobile, Inc. 550 OAKLAND FE 2-8101 Permanent position. Degree and knowledge of standard end lob cost systems desirable. Selery end other benefits commensurate wife ability. Please submit fuH resume and your salary requiramants In confidence. P.O. Box 128 Lake Orion. Mich. 41835 An equal Opportunity employer k-l OPENING" FOR EXPERI- ALERT YOUNG MAN FOR 6ENER-el warehouse work and tome deliveries. Pert time and full time available. Call 873-1248._____ AUTO MECHANICS AND MECHANICS helpers. Keego Pontiac Sales, Keego Harbor. ON AND AFTER THIS DATE MAY 27, 1988 I will not be responsible for any debts contracted by any other than myself. Stanley Talaga, I8f4 Myrtle, Pontiac, Mich._______ SUNDAYS only, BRING THE FAM-ily for a delightful outing. Many lets each child mllC Atolly tha cow. Sheep shearing at 2:38 p.m. Horse drawn hay rida, pony rides, meal extra. Open Sun. 11 to 8 p.m. Walton E. to Adams N. to end. Follow sign to UPLAND HILLS FARM BELIEVED LOST FROM CAR: GUN ^_____ ______ experience In ell phases of accounting and taxes. Please call 844-3057 for Interview. A PART TIME JOB $200 PER MONTH AUTO BILLER BRICKLAYERS, BY HOUR OR JOB for residential construction com-pany. 873-2421. _________ BUSINESS Management s Consumers FInana Bus Boys Ted's of Pontiac Mall has Im ate openings for full time boys'. No Sunday work. App person only. TED'S ______PONTIAC MALL BIG BOY RESTAURANT ____20 S. TEJ^EG^PH___ CAR WASHERS WANTED $13"" A day. Northland Auto Wash. 521 Eliybe%Lak^ Rd.__________ CARPENTERS, RESIDENTIAL, UN-.......... 882-3098. •V OTHER, ADVERTISE-M E N T S ARE PLACED v under the male or female columns for x ■X convenience of read- :v X; ERS, SUCH LISTIN<3$ ARE X; X' NOT INTENDED TO EX- y;. CLUDE PERSONS OF yy EITHER SEX. Help Wanted Mala 6 20 MEN NEEDED men waiting Induction, attending night school, ate. Raport 7:30 a.m. daily In white shirt and tia to the following address: 2012 PONTIAC DRIVE NEAR ORCHARD LAKE RD. TELEGRAPH PONTIAC or apply at Michigan Employmant Security Commlsilon, 242 Oakland ■ft., Pen" - ----- MONTHLY GUARANTEED SALARY PLUS BONUS AND CO. CAR For Right Man DAYS OR EVENINGS MILL AND ENGINE LATHE OPERATORS Top Wages and Overtime cation, profit sharing a EXPERIENCED I service man, Daioy ly. EXPERIENCE!/ REAL TIME rv FE 44802. ESTATE FULL TIME DISHWASHER, SUN-days and tMlidays off. Town and ---------- 1W S. Telegraph. ARTCO INC. 3020 Indlanwpod Rd., Lk. Orion 89^283t gXI station attendants vylll train It mechanically Inclined. Gbod pay. Sunoco 'Station. Tela- graph at Maple Rds.______________ GROOM HANDYMAN TO WORK on thorobred farm near Union Lake, nice apartment. No children. 383-7084. Eve. 8284717.________________ GUITAR INSTRUCTOR TO TEACH and sell. Part time, in new Country Music SIwp, 873-0307. HOiTsE man with REFERENCES, experience. Top Wages. 828-0747. HAVE OPENING FOR SALES-man who enjoys calling ing on commercial, retail, and service accounts. Must know the Pontiac market orea. Have car and be in good health. The man we need should have been in retail selling or similar lines. Good starting pay and benefits. Please write for interview to Pontiac Press Box 13. CITY DRIVER SUPERVISOR-FOREMAN. EXPERIENCED PREFERRED, BUT WILL CONSIDER INEXPERIENCED APPLI-CANT. 5 DAYS A WEEK AND EVERY 3RD. SATURDAY. GOOD SECURITY, SALARY, VA-XATtONS, FREE INSURANCE, RETIREMENT BENEFITS. CALL BILL KOLOSKY FOR APPOINTMENT. ASSOCIATED TRUCK LINES FE 2-9298 (an equal opportunity amptoyer) Distributor Trainee Man to train to fakei,over whole-sale distributorship for large well known company. Salary phis com-mTssloh while in framing. Must tentlal r--------------------- lerienced supervisory sal-arieo personnel with automotive background in the following areas; Material Buyers Plant Layout Engineers Standards Engineers Manufacturing Engineers Production Supervisors Punch Press Truck Assembly Truck Repair Machine Shop Material Supervisors Maintenance Supervisors These positions are permanent, possess potential for advancement end should appeal to aggressive Individuals. Every qualitled application will K# considered and acknowledged. Write Pontiac Press Box 10 giving complete resume and salary required. An equal opportunity employer. DIE DESIGNER AND DETAILER with lamination and progressiva die experience. Overtime, ttlnoa benefits and axcellent working conditions. Hydro-Cam Enginaring, 1900 E. Maple, W. Of John R. JU DIE REPAIRMAN FOR SMALL PROGRESSIVE PIES. STEADY WORK, DAY SHIFT, ALSO PART TIME HELP DAYS OR NIGHTS. Automatic Press Products 105 ELIZABETH LAKE ORION DIE SETTERS OY WORK, DAY SHIFT, PART TIME CONSIDERED DAYS OR NIGHTS. I Automatic Press Products 185 ELIZABETH 'LAKE ORION DRUG AND STOCK CLERK, OVER II, experience preferred but not necessary. Perry Pharmacy, 809 EXPERIENCED USED CAR PORT/ INSURANITE AGENT UCE^"D INSURANCE AGENT TRAINEE, quality for full time agency 1 four months part time traln-330-9201. LIMOUSINE DRIVERS WANTED hospitalization ant Ufa Insur ____. Paid vacation and yeai around work. Must have valid driv Royal Oak, Hal or Walt, Hickey For alt, l1 1-181 SOD WORK, $2.00 per^ur I?RODUCTION WORKERS EXPERIENCE NOT NECESSARY FISHER BODY DIVISION 900 Baldwin Ave. Pontiac, Michigan (313) 332-8361 >1 Opportunity I PERMANENT POSITION Help Wanted IWrie i PRODUCTION WORKERS also Millwrights Electricians ' Pipefitters Maintenonce Welders Machine Repair Toolmakers Painters & Glaziers INSPECTOR TECHNICIANS Concrete product manufacturer has need for young, ambitious, energetic high school graduate who has mechanical apptituda and interested In inspector technicians work. Any previous engineering or materials testing experience Is helpful. Duties Include laberatory testing, outdoor Inspection, end keeping accurate records. Opportunity to advance. Complete pack- e meats the qualifications; to y call 825-2825. (Clarkston) and ..i that you wish to apply tor e Inspectors technicians position. lie contact experience, we will train you. We are the nations largest with 227 offices coast to coast. Exceptionally high earnings first year. Reply Spelling and Snelling. Call MEN WANTED TO WORK ON —---------- —-*s. Good pay. In- ner frlnga benafits. lay Boats, Inc. 925 carpenters. Holly 834-9335 at- MAN WANTED TO LEARN HEATING AND AIR CONDITIONING SALES. PAID WHILE tN TRAINING. ONE OF PONTIAC'S BEST ESTABLWED MODERN COMPAhilES. HEATING 8. COOLING 580 S. TELEGRAPH RD. CORNER. ORCHARD LK. NO CANVASSING, NO DOOR TO door, strictly appointments demon- NIGHT AND DAY COOKS, SALARY or hourly rate. Apply Maple House Restaurant. 3811 W. Maple, BIrm-Ingham. 848-7839.___________________ 1. Apply In person, „ ...... John McAullffa Ford. 838 r 21, If PART TIME NIGHT MANAGER, PORTER We have an opening tor a go^ reliable man that has a valid drivers llcensa. Very good pay, ' hospitalization. Insurance, paid va- >f Elizabeth Lake Rd. PORTERS PORTER Part or full time, 11 p.m. to 8:30 a.m. Paid vacalipht hospltalizallpn,_ Apply Tn ^rsdh. BIG BOY RESTAURANT ________20 S. TELEGRAPH_______ ROUTE MAN for vandlng machines, Pontlac-BIr-mlngham area, no axperlanca nac-ecessary. Vehicle furnished, salaried position. For appointment call Mr. Molina, 427-9S55, Livonia altar Retired man - steady par't time work — light cleaning In commercial buildings — number of hours and limes can be arranged for your situation. Rtply Press Box 43._______________ REAL ESTATE SALESMEN QUAL-Itying to manage real estate sales department. Please phone lor appointment. K. G. Hempstead. FE 4-8284. ______ ___________ RAILROAD WORKERS nmediate openings available for Also switchmen for those who meat our Physical requirements — vision Grand Trunk Western Railroad An Equal Opportunity Ei APPLICATIONS ARE BilNO At-caplad lor txpariancad comptom-afar and Burroughs Samisimatic ledger operators. Stenographic applicants also being Intarvlawtd- BABY SITTER, FULL TIME, RELI-ablt, to Mv# In or with transp. PE 2-09Q7._________________________ BAR AAAID. STEAD Y. ABLE TO taka ovtr night shift. Good wagts. No Sundays. And bondabh. Call before 8 p.m. FE 4-S780.______________ BANK bookkeeper Full time openlno for bookkeeping with Burroughs Sensimole or Sen- Maple Rd., *■—- BOOKKEEPER you can appraclato an oapaHwiI^ hr 8ISM2M por wook. Phan8 Ft REFRIGERATION BUILDERS AND Vacallons-Pensions PROGRESSIVE WELDER 915 Oakland (uvIO) Pontiac FE 4-9518 ,n Equal Opportunity Employar REAL ESTATE SALESMEN wanted at the Mall. Inquire about our generous commission program. VON REALTY George Vonderharr, RIfr. —MLS In the Mall ., Room 118 882-5802 I Eves. OR 34833 REAL ESTATE SALESMAN Full time, new and used homes. J. C. HAYDEN, REALTOR 3834804 10735 Highland Rd. (M-59) RECENT COLLEGE GRADUATE young man with some college inted for —^------*— Yates Rd., Utica.____________ RUFF CARPENTERS, OR CREW, by hour or |ob. For residential construction company. 873-2421. SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE SINGLE GROOM, 9 live In. Call atti Queen, OA 8-2296. TOOL MAKERS Growing company, d/i M. C. MEG. CO. 118 Indlanwood Rd. Lake Orion An equal opportunity employer Drill PrBss OpBrators WANTED 2 MEN, 1 A8AN FOR lumber yard work. 1 man to work In hardware store. Experlancad pretarred. Reply to Pontiac Prau Box WELDERS-HELPERS Paid vacations and holidays, paid group Insurance. Paragon Bridge and Steal Co. 44088 Grand River, Novi.____________i________ WANTED; EXPERIENCED ME-chanlcs on trucks end Industrial equipment. Pontiac Farm and Tractor Co. 15 S. Woodward FE 4- YOUNG AGGRESSIVE N with young-fast growli ganizetlon. Sales abill necessary, but helpful train. Salary plus bon esntiva, call 33S-9283. 2 EXPERIENCED WAirilKSES for afternoon shift, 1 for‘morning shift. Apply Nicks Fine Foods. 2830 ETTtfghland Rd., Highland, Michigan (MS9).____________ 80 YEARS OF PROUD SERVICE ness to become and Avon Representative. Call FE 4-0439 or write PO Box 91, Drayton Plains. $$$ OVER HALF THE WOMEN IN Amarici want to earn extra mon-ay. Do you? Call 331-3)11. Pat Esslambra. -. Distributor tor Judy Lea Jewels. BEAUTICIANS Exe^lrrt^pportunltyj^ t^iy ^P mu's plan, “ ' " '' il 88383, or Curb Waitresses Ted's restaurant hat openings CLERK TYPIST rk-typist with light experience. Apply Cashier Ted's ol Bloomdeld Hills has an opening tor' a cashier on the morning shltt. Paid vacation, food allowance, AppW^in^p.r«m. WCIODWARD AT SQUARE LK. RD. CoffBB Shop WaitrBSSBS cook, housekeep«_;for^wid.. 6w“ In Wooinfieltf Hm$. 1=rrsr class required, top waaes for --- to Pontiac t Mrion, li Box no. Dining Room Waitresses Iklf W—i>e FtEwh 7 HOUSEKEEPER - COOK, LIVE In, 8 days, no .Iwindry, m^ h^t rets. 2 schooFege children, 855 PUNCH OPERATOR, AT r exp. operating IBM key machines and 858 f vtrmar. Aftamoon/a light COOKING AND HOUSE-kteplng for elderly man. 125 per week. Live In. OR 3-7398._ .... jf 15785 with step Increases I $8788 in three years. Good Inge benefits, 1 ' ‘ MISS Pope. PE 44921.__________ MATURE WOMAN POR BABY SIT ter, 7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m., 5 days. Oliver St., Pontiac. Own transp. F E 2-2784 eft- 8 p.m.______ MOTEL MAID OVER 25. DEPEND MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN TO LIVE mature lady for I N SID El also curb waitress. Froit-Top LIBRARIAN CITY OP PONTIAC Branches librarian, " “ 1 library oth mode.... ----------- staff. Quellllcatlons: B.A. in liberal arte tublec* graduate library degree. benefits. Including fully p Cross-Blue Shield. Apply nel. City Hell, 450 Wl;- ■ ___________________________ /uiuST BE experienced. HOURS 7 a m. to 3 p.m. or 13 noon to I p.m. No Sundays. Sunbeam Col-jee Shop, opposite ot St. Joseph. NEED CURB GtRLS. APPLY: HAR-\av's Colonial House. OR 389^. _ NURSES AIDES NEEDED. APPLY 532 Orchard Lake Ave., Tues., national food service CO^ pany Immediate opaninfl for a wpfr«n to worK at a local campus of the Oakland Community Collepe. Good pay log conditions. Call Ml 7-2050 for apoointment. NURSE, D 0 c'T O R • $" OFFICE, Rochester, 4'4 days, no evenlr^s, dern oHICe, lop selery. Replies ATTENTION RN'$ AND LPN'S Opcnlngt. Call m-71$4 TED'S WOODIMRD AT SQUARE LK. RD. cooks, SUMMER JOB FOR GIRL Scout Established Camp Narrin, ment. Apply 2397 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 54114. ________ EXPERIENCED MEDICAL ASSIST ant, 25-48 years of age, Rochestar EXECUTIVE HOUSEKEEPER FOR 308 BED GENERAL HOSPITAL, EXPERIENCE REQUIRED. EXCELLENT STARTING SALARY, ASSURED INCREASES. GENEROUS FRINGE BENEFITS INCLUDING RETIREMENT PROGRAM. APPLY TO SAGINAW GENERAL HOSPITAL, SAGINAW, MICHI-GAN, PERSONNEL DEPART-MENT._______ tEXPER16N€E0^*« A O T + C IA H Dottle's Beauty Salon, Auburn near John R. UL 24240.________ EXPERIENCED NURSE'S AIDE, for afternoon shltt. 873-5142. FULL TIME EVENING KITCHEN FINAL INSPECTOR fits, steady employment and over- M.C. MFG„ CO. 118 Indlanwood Rd., Lake Orion Equal Op^rtunlty Employer GENERAL OFFICE WO'RK, SHORT-hand and typing and bookeeping. Real Estate experience preferred. Reply In own hand writing to Post Office Box 338, Pontlic, Wchlgan. GENERAL HOUSEWORK live In, own room, color TV, txc. with 2 childron undor 3. Must hevo good recent ref. Name your own salary. 828-4879. GIRLS OVER IB Training school starts Wednosday, ' June 1 at our Pdntlae Office lor loveral young ladles to work In our outside order dopertment. $1.25 accepted. This - - ^----------- sllion. Apply 785 Pontiac Bank Building, 11 ‘ GIRL FRIDAY FOR SMALL 2 girl office. Must Ilka figures. Shorthand not required. Send resume to Box 218. Walled Lake, Mich.___________________ GENERAL - THOROUGH CLEAN-er, must have rets, and own trosp. 4 or 5 days. Ml 84437._________ GENERAL OFFICE A^IO LIGHT bookkeeping experience p r e-tmrrMi. h,i» will train 5 dav.week. GENERAL OFFICE WORK, Accounts recelveblo. Full time. Blr-mlnghem Cleaners, 1253 S. Wood- ward. Ml 4-4828._____________ __ GOOD STEADY JOBS WITH STEA- dry experience helpful, necessary. Custom Ser“‘'-1888 S. Adams. be pleasant, noet HOUSEKEEPER WANTED P C Catholic Rectory. Live In or o 3488 Adomt Rd., A ‘ --- UL 2-4178. Write ef HOUSEKEEPER, evenings Into cash, 118 for each 3 hours, car necessary, no can-vetslng. 331-3111 between 3-8 p.m. HOUSEKEEPER, CHILD CARE, live In, 5 days, 858. wfcly. Soulb-fleM 158-3738. HELP POLIO PATIENT, LIVE IN, part time general office --workr State queWflcatlene Pentteo Press Box No. 41.______________ PART TIME $2.58 per hr., cor necessary. Contact Mr. Bryan for intarvlew. OR 3-8585. ___________________ Part Time Clerk Typist For tha City of — Treasurer's Oftica. ; curaf^' typing requlr^ Public contact and cashier r---------------- helpful. Salary $1.83 per nou, fringe benefits. Proposed i Personnel Office. Municioal Build-Ing. 151 Martin St. Birmingham. PART tImE $2 50 per hr., car ncessary. Must be over 21. Contact Mr. Bryan lor _ interview. OR 3-J585. __ _ RECEPtlONISt FOR MD's OF-llce. Typing and pleasant telephone personality essential. Wrlta quallll-callons, oxperlance. refarenett and salary expected to Pontiac Press RN'STLPN^STAiDES For modern nursing home. Own lilansportatkm. Call 357-5533. SALEWIRL for PRODUCE A8AR- SECRETARY lor a one girl oftict. If you have oxperktnce In tha consumer finance field you may be the one wo art looking for. Top starting salary and advancement opportunities. No ovtning hours, paid vacation, profit sharing, and savings Plan. Phona Mr. Baker at 338-4872 for a confidential Interview. Family Acceptance Corp., Suite 317 National Building, Pontiac, Michigan. SALES MANAGER TRAINEE Long established manufseturer of fashion products with new marketing plan Is seeking s sincere Individual to learn all phasas ol sales and managamanl. Desire to h For local Interview write PROMPTLY full details ot. experience, education and marital status. Most important, tell us your personal goals. PRESIDENT, Box 1718, New FULL OR PAR I nwc. u DRAPERIES. PONTIAC SECRETARY FOR LAW OFFICE. Shorthand and rv,M^ er%. Experienced repair* •n« alterations. Full time. Good opportunity. MA 5-7207. 55W Tele- WAITRESSe INQUIRE CHIEF PON-tlac Bar. 71 Baldwin. WAITRESS PART TIME APPLY Ricky's. 819 Woodward. Pontiac. WAITRESSES. 1 " WAITRESS, FULL TIME SUN6aYS and holidays off. Town and Coun-try Inn—1727 S. Talograph.______ WAITRESS Experlanced, mature dining room waitresses only, apply after 3 p.m. dally. Fox and Hounds Inn, Ml 4-4800 WAITRESSES Dining Room and Curb Full or part-time. Paid vacations. Hosplllllzatlon. Lunch hour and food allowance. Apply In person. BIG BOY RESTAURANT Tolegraph 8. Huron or WOMAN TO WORK I It pay and fringe Id at Hoffman’s, MAN. BABY SITTINQ AND WOMAN TO LIVE IN , WHITE home, I'A days a wk. ol Ago 55 to 85. Light housekaoping, must cook ) PLAIN C06kiNO .. - . - __.jssary. Own trinsp or will stay. Ml 4,5«._____________ WOMAN TO ASSIST IN KITCHEN work - Morey's OeN and Country ckiB-mo union uke Rd„ ofi THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 80, 1966 C—T WORKIKO MOTHIR DlllREI. —rMPOmltM weiMn. Ihw p for baby and^dp ------ ..—‘ty-lirl^, yfPRiStlR WAWTlPj IILK »"• •• ---------- c. t. of Tj Mp Wwttd M. w f. I BLOODS DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED * ^ROIT*t%Oo'$ER'^CE wod. 1 P.W. >n;8 $HORT ORDER COOKS. APPLY Horvey*! ColonHI Homo. OR 3-OOfO students S2.73 Dtr hr. Choaia vour hours. Scholarships offOrad. Call EOY\WRr lo^aMmal I dunbny. WANTED SWIMMINO INSTRUC-tors with WCI. Good hours, good pay. Call today Holly, «3»0«3a. OR 3-SOM attar « Cooks and cooks helpers, full and urt tlma lob open. Cell COUPLE WANTED TO LIVE III chlldran. Writs P< ( 31.__________________ EXPERIENCED COOK Wanted Man or Woman FOR MOTOR ROUTE IN' Southfield Farmington Area at Once Apply to Mr. Stier PONTIAC PRESS CIRCULATION DEPT. GRILL COOK 11.75 AN HOUR, E prrionced. Apply In person, T Crachar, garret-Orlve-N*.- 3«5T L Ion Lake Rd., Union Lake. S HAIR STYLIST, FOR PERSPEC^ i.^lpsTShfaTy. ^ART TIME JANITOR HELP needed. Apply Company, 175 Pontiac. Wanted Man or Woman FOR MOTOR ROUTE.. IN Troy Royal Oak Area At Once Apply to Mr. Stier PONTIAC PRESS CIRCULATION D Work Woirted Malt ALUMINUM HOUSES W_______ GARDEN PLOWING. WEED CUT \tlng. 15<7 Joslyn. PE M<11. .IlGHT HAULING, PAINTING AND Work Wantod Femok 12 Saks kelp,Jli^.Ftiiiok S-A Can You Sell Bonding ServIcof-SyppHw 13 u agalni la, Pomi Mac Prass, Bpx Sf. condlllont. Tele-Huron ~RATE CLERK, EXPERIENCED, HOURS NOON TO » P.M., J DAYS A WEEK, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. WILL CONSIDER PART TIME. GOOD SECURITY, PAY, VACATIONS,! FREE INSURANCE, RETIREMENT BENEFITS. CALL BILL KOLOSKY FOR APPOINTMENT. ASSOCIATED TRUCK LINES FE 2 9m (an equal opporlunlly rapidly expanding Arm. Plenty of leads and floor lima, excel-,lent guarantaa to guallllad. 'Backed by the tremandoua ad-vertlsInB power of 7 offices. For confidential Interview call M Korby at: YORK WE BUY WE TRAD r>R a03«3 OR 4713 Dixie Hwy„ Drayton Plains DRUG RETAILER 6Help Wootod Mok ELECTRICAL MACHINE DESIGNER. MACHINE DESIGNER —... Supervisor of Services (M.E. Degres or Equivalent) Ml Corporation Is looking tor possibit sppllcsnts xva positions. Excellent salary and btnefiti. 10 yourself to check out this opportunity. It BUNDY TUBING CO. 12345 E. 9 MILE RD., WARREN J£ 6-2580 Ext. 332 WofrtodCkildroafoloOTdll HEAR OUR PRICE BEFORE YOU chance to star^ pit ^ gro^ ^•*** ****** " floor_^and^worl5^«p ^ «r a^Hw,^^w^t^^^ B & B Auction OR S-IW7 Wanted Miicolioiioous 30 ith rasT III SALES TRAINEE ^standing apportunitjr e waciT lnMlas."Taff your man! ability and profit tajMO plus bar fits to start. Call Tad Hall collai PONTIAC ENGINE, FAIR CON-lon. H S. Anderson. 33Bd513. COPPER, 40c AND UP) BRASS WoRtad to Root FAMILY OF 4 NEEDS AT ONCE • or apartment. Ow-------- . Within If Bfil. S3S-1I14. _ ORYWALL REPAIR o 10 Eves. Sats A Suhs. - Insurance adjustments. ABSOLUTELY TOP PRICES PAID FOR TYPES OF PROPERTY AND LAND CONTRACTS. BUYERS WAITING, CALL NOW. J. J. Joll, Realty FE 7.3400 OroMmaklBg AJEdloriog 17 Landscepiog LAWN CUTTING AND MAINTE-nance. Free estimates. Tell Tlm-‘—Nurwy. 33S-844t. Coiivaktcoot-tlorslogi 21 2 VACANCIES-NOW AVAILABLE MotHiig ood Trycldiig 22 AA MOVING Careful, enclosed vens. •les, tree ‘ »r as-SfU. BOB'S VAN SERVICE^ MOVING AND STORAGE PREE ESTI/WATES ROBERT TOMPKINS EM 3-7020 LIGHT HAULING kND MOV i ynn. Foiotiog ood Doconrting 23 PAINTER. EXPERIENCED FOR general maintenanca for epert-mants. Year around employmant. Parkdale, Pontiac. 33SgS2». PAINTING, PAPERING Tuppar. OR S-TOOI asi."- TroRsportotioR PASSENGER WANTED TO SOUTH-Illinois, S. E. Mo., Paducah, itucky, or Union City, Tenn. nltlas. Leave May 31, 807-4373. SAVE ON HOMEOWNER POLICY savings In A plus com-r> up « 14 per cant. Oependa-4id prompt claim sr— I FE a«2l4 far a tVERYTHING SEEMS TO GO RIGHT WHeh YOU USE PRESS WANT ADS I 2 OeOROOM HOUSE, , UTILITIES LEASE, 2 BEDROOM, CARPeTEO, ----9, bistmtnt Macttfay privi- _______ijyms._______________ HoRt Uko CottRgos 41 CASS LAKE FRONT RENTAL - —-— ------- -----TU, furnished monthly. Call VACATION ON PRIVATE LAKE, DOUBLE OCCUPANCY, S(_ , ' Maid service, talaphona, car TV. Sagamora AAotal. 7lf 1 1 TO 50 Urgently need for immadlata Salal PLE*LI^tIn perfection. Call for an appointment to sea It now. .......#0-13 YOU CAN'T GO WRONG Nice all brick home with 160 ft. on West Huron Street by Webster School. No crowded feeling here as all rooms are large. Fireplace In living room, sun room, three bedrooms, aluminum storms and screens, 3-car garage, full basement. With a little decorating, this could be a charming home. Low down payment on land contract. 'We will take your house in trade, too. #13-11 al. Large living room . large screened porch, riced to sell at $17,950. #0-16 RAY O'NEIL, REALTOR 3520 PONTIAC LAKE RD. OPEN 9 TO 9 SATURDAY EVENINGS AFTER 6 CALL OR 4-2222 MLS EM 3-7961 49 Sdt Hbvms NICHOLIE $i,m di Decorated and vacant. Eves. Call Mr. Castell FE 3-7373 NICHOLIE-HARGER CO. STOUTS Best Buys Today Sab Haam CLARK WHITE LAKE PRIVILEGES - 3 rooms. Located on 130x130 ft. lot. Owners are anxious to sell. App. ---down. Priced at $11^00. PONTIAC northern AREA - G t. — ".H.A. terms. Clean 5 room home lovely remodeled kitchen and . Loads of cupboards. Full base-I, gas heat and car garage, arge rooms. Asking $10,900. WE NEED LISTINGS — We Also Buy Homes and Equities. Call Us For Quick and EHIcient Action. CLARK REAL ESTATE 1363 W. HURON ST. FE 3-78S8 or FE 5-3690 Multiple Listing Service_ IRWIN LAKE FRONT: Located on beautiful Square Li Brick ranch home. Six rooms and 3'-S ceramic tile battJ Laundry, kitchen with bulll-fn! Eating area overlooking the lake Val-U-Way NORTH SIDE Maintenance free aluminum I 3 bedroom home. This home been completely remodeled. _ paneled recreation room, spark-,llng kitchen, gas heal, fenced yard, •combination storms and sdr“-Full price $13.50a $550 dovm. NEAR FISHER BODY Sapeious 3 bedroom home schools, churches and stores. _ er has recently completely redecorated. Large kitchen with plenty of cupboards, gasheat, living room, ---*— Only $11,750, . Call fi LAKE LIVING 55 ft. lake frontage on Ponitac Lake near Gale Rd. Low pricr" for CASH sale. List With Us-We Sell 0 Home Every 24 Hours R. J. (DICK) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Ave. Open — r hours FE 0-1984 or FE UTICA- Rochester area, sharp 3 room brick rancher with ------ oak floors, plastered walls, 3 way fireplace, informal dining --- custom kitchen with bulll . .. Ill ceramic baths, attached 3'-r car garage. Only $31,500 witr immediate possession. WEST SIDE- Spaclous 3 bedroom 3 story fam ily home, near General Hospital carpeted living room with fire place, separate dining room, den modem kitchen, plenty of closet space, I'/y baths, basement, gas heat, 3 car garage. Only $17,500 s the city. Custom down payment to qualified vi an. Closing cost only, f $10,300, can be seen most WEST BLOOMFIELD: 3 bedrooms ranch. Family room has lovely paneling. Living room, dining room, two car garage. Priced to sell at $14,500 G.T. lohn K. Irwin & SONS REALTORS 313 West Huron—Since 1935 Buying or selling call FE 5-9446 Warren Stout Realtor 1450 N Opdyke Rd. Ph FE 5-6161 Open Eves TIM 8 PM Multiple Listing Service JAMES K BLVD. SYLVAN LAKE PRIVILEGES bedroom brick rancher. 33 ft. Ilv- MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR WEST SUBURBAN TRI-LEVEL In NEW condition. Less than 1 - old and ready for your family garage. Just $18,500 on e NORTH SIDE RANCH 5 rooms and ■ "I plus large unfinished 3rd. ' attic. Large dining area, . with rec. room, 3 car garage lots more. Just $13,900 with SYLVAN MANOR BRICK 4 bedrooms, ivy baths, large family room with beautiful ledgerock fireplace. New plush carpet in the large ------n and hall. Fenced back GILES REALTY CO. 311 Baldwin Ave. FE 56175 MULTILE LISTING SERVICE garage. Corner lo' . ' OF PONTIAC FACILITIES AND SCHOOLS. WEST SUBURBAN 3-BEDROOM RANCH HOME Carpeted living room, large kitchen with ample cupboar--Ceramic tile bath. Large recr SMITH (Sc WIDEMAN REALTORS FE 4-4526 TIMES THREE-BEDROOM BRICK home Is like new and offers a walk-out basement, 33' Michigan. Vicinity of M-59 < US-33,' a real sharp colon! completely renovated with cor supreme. Lovely town t ting with towering trees a many shrubs. Aluminum a i.. brick construction, featuring wall fo wall carpeting, hot water V/i baths, walking distanc church and Khools. First basement finished o tion, two fireplaces carpeting, large i 1 gardener's de- WE HAVE LOADS OF Acres In 10 acre parcels, wllh buildings. If we don't have It, stop out and talk li ' erlne Svetcos, Ernie Vaughn, Gus Bessinger, Ray Hunter, Don Genereux, BUI Oliver, Bill Arm-ilrong, Ray Hayward, George Vernot, and Bert Hungerforc working tor you, how can you miss? WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU "JOIN THE MARCH OF TIMES" Times Realty REALTOR - APPRAISER 5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY (South of Waterford Hill) OR 4-0396 Open 9-9 dally Bateman SAYS: NEW MODEL HOMES AS LOW AS $11,950 on your lot. A type and price for everyone. Beautifully built of brick and aluminum, lots of extra features and many bullt-lns. ULTRA HOMES SUB.—Open SAt. and SUN. 3-6 p.m. and dally by appointment. M-59 to Whittier, opposite City Airport. YOU CAN BRICK LAKEFRONT TRI-LEVEL - Lake view from every room In the house. Custom features throughout Including Intercom, family room, fireplace, marble sills, duo-pane windows and 3 ceramic tile baths. Gas hot-witer heat, 3VS-car garage and a guests. It's a delightful place to live, conveniently close-in location and reasonably priced at $39,500. BETTER LOOK TODAY. #55 IN THE CITY NORTHEAST SIDE — 3-bedroom brick rancher with full basement and lust 9 years old. Yours for $13,950 with approx. $3,000 down and assume present mortgage. Total monthly payment $103 and NO MORTGAGE COSTS. Calf Today. 377 S. TELEGRAPH - FE 8-7161 fireplace. Attached garage and large rolling lot with plenty of garden space and lake privileges on Upper Straits Lake. Reason- hour's drivt from Pontiac. Live at the lake and vacation all summer. Wc^ J^’^cash* CALL llow^" ^ OFFICES CLOSED DECORATION DAY, MAY 30th 730 S. ROCHESTER - OL l-Ssis Frushour Struble NEW MODEL HOME FEATURING 3 BEDROOMS, peted living room, ceramic _ sealed glass windows, marble sills, bullt-lns, 6' doorwall, 1Vi baths, basement and attached garage, aluminum exterior. Selling now for $16,300 plus lot. If you' '- market for a new horn - _______ Our trade-in plan that has been accepted a... proved by many satisfied < JACK FRUSHOUR iMILO STRUBLE REALTCiRS _ WL! FE 8-4lg5 ____PE ARRO CASH FOR EQUITY - LAND CONTRACT located in very gooo remui aico, close to shopping and transportation. $34,500 ---- g room, large kitchen ly, $7,500. LAKE PRIVILEGES bedroom bungalow privileges on Watkii EQOITT TRADE Do you have an equity from $30 to $15,000? Or a free and —— home? If you are eligible tc for a home with 4Vy per c........... 6 per cent current Interest rates. Call and have one of our experienced salesmen explain h~ save you money. McCullough realty 5460 Highland Rd. AiA.Vi'in 6- GILES I MORTGAGE COSTS ONLY. Large *^79 ' "- -- plastered w basement, 3 s wlfif Anchor fence. Brown Realtors 8, Builders Since 1939 toot carpeted living room, a...... foot family room with a natural fieldstone fireplace, 2'/i baths. There is also a large r——— place, formal dining room, 1 baths, attached 2'/i car gara and Is In excellent Condition side and out. $35,500. CUSTOM BUILDERS. We have ov 100 plans to choose from wi prices ranging from $18,000 to Les Brown, Realtor 509 Elizabeth Lake Rd. (Across from the Pontiac Mall) FE 3-4810 or FE 4-3564 PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" to the tall stately columr the white colonial. You wll. — yourself as the Colonel meeting his guests with Mint Ju"-hand. This 4-bedroom nestling midst a 4,acre grove of hardwoods, has every conceivable luxury you have ever desired. Priced at $47,500, Colonel sir, and your family will worship you for It. Less than via 1-75. WOODED VALE WITH LAKE Peace and contentment abounds here Two or three people will fln< this haven close to Heaven. 30 acres of woods, veh/ef ' natural springs that own private fishing lake. Horse barn, dog house, gar— —' small home are as neat Unique fireplace and PHONE 682-2211 Ted McCullough Sr., Realtor 5153 Cass-Ellzabeth Road KINZLER velopment |ust northwest of Clark-ston and In Clarkston School area. Very scenic, 6 to 10 acre parjgels. All slightly rolling and partly— NEW CLASSIC RANCH floor, 3 balhs, basement and 37'x35' attached garage. Fireplace and kitchen bullt-lns and new carpeting. Nice wooded site " privlleges. Eves. 338-3385. Gl VETERANS All White and Immaculately clean 5 room modern bungalow ........ basement and oil heat. I commercial lot that could i— used for business. $9500, nothing down, lust small closing costs. Another new offering. Eves. 338-3385. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 5319 Dixie Hwy. 674-3335 Across .from Packers Store . Itiple Listing Service Open yfO DORRIS completely ai 1 Meal horn a Interested In gard- free home. 3 bedroom brick ___ home with oak floors, 10x16 family style kitchen, first floor utlir room and gas heat. $17,950. CLARKSTON STARTER HOME. terms or will *‘’lth*'X»wfth1''^ will discount for cash " per cent mortgage , payments of — w,ii<.n Included taxes ai surance, 6 good size rooms In ell with kitchen with eating spaoi and 8x10 utility room. DORRIS Si SON, REALTORS 3536 Dixie Hwy. 6744334 AMtLtjPLB LISTING SERVICE 1050 W. HURON IRWIN' LAKEFRONT ce. 3 bedroom year round ilh large enclosed porch. NORTH END 3 bedroom ranch hon large lot. 1 block I GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 16 W, Walton_____FE 3-78 ^LVAN LAKE • ledroom brick, tr family room wll Wit- Lake Property 51 8 ROOM YEAR AROUNO HOME, NA 7-3915 after 6 | 55X134 PONTIAC LAKE LOT Camelot Rd., oft Gale Rd. $3 cash. Val-U-Way, FE 4-3531.__ AT TAN LAKE Deluxe 3 bedroom brick ra with finished basement. Featui beamed callings, I I electric kitchen, S'/i t.. ge. Owners transferred. Phone JI-8588 for appointment. SHEPARD REAL ESTATE CEDAR ISlXnD LAKE, 15 I utes Pontiac, large lots, on wate $55 month. Year around llvini Blech Bros., DR 3-1395._____ DOW RIDGE In Village of Orchard Laki this superb 1VS acre wooded sll with 145 feet on Csss Lake oner of the few remaining proi ertles of Its kind. Priced i $35,000. LESLIE R. TRIPP, REALTOR-APPRAISER 75 West Huron Street __________FE 5-8161 OME. SITES, to- X 100', SUNNY Beach overlooking besutitui Wsl- beaches, dock^, $?m, $Io dom JAYNO HEIGHTS LAKE LOTS In beeMI nMtIed between I paiurti leM City water, paved roads, gee. lake prlvlle^ lets avtilabi Chocee now. %rms If desired. Silvsr Loks Const. Co. KEATINGTON Ihh beautiful new town In Orton vy acre lots end lake privileged lots. 1 mile north of 1-75 Orim Township. Low down paymer*- — low as $15 month. Duck Lake—fun spot—75x330'-$3,500 $400 down. HAGSTROM, Realtor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 100 W. HURON OR 4431 _________EVE. 683-0435______ and aluminum. / r 1 acre, lOiy FRONTAGE, good lach, lots of shade, -------- ' studio living — MEDIATE POSSESSION. SGHUETT EM 3-7188 8800 Commerce Rd. VS ml. west of Union-Lk. Rd. Open Dally til dark. SUMMERTIME FUN! Thais what you'll find In 3 bedroom oMer home on Pie Lake, 18x35' living room with place, large enclosed front _ back porches. Plenty of room for all the family. New gas furnace, 130'x330' lot, car-port. (5nly $16,500. HAGSTROM, Reoltor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 700 W. HURON OR 4-0358 i5 »■»»■>«» W Sale HouMhoM 6oeili_^ 65 HELP-HELP-HELF 111 Business It excepllenalty good. 1 -■ed all types of butinettat .. II. Tall everyone you know lo a WARDEN REaLtY If they UKE FRONT LOTS c Lake—I 10-4500 (hr Lake-^un down) HAGSTROM, Realtor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE mo W. HURON OR 44)358 "FREE" curate estimate of today's te Ing price. "NO OBLIGATION." WARDEN 3434 w. Huron, Pontiac 333-715? HILL VILLAGE... a i of beautiful rolling hills Ing pave d roads. You wll... . 3 miles north of 1-75...only 30 ____quick sale. $5,000. 6834163. WATERFORD HILL - WOODED I30'x180' lot — excellent view of HURON GARDENS - i Bloonnlleld, or Commerce Town-shlp area. 965-3900, Mr, JenklM. various parcels. Parcels rangir from 100'x3fl0' lott up to 380 acre Underwood Real Estote 8665 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston 635-3615 If no ans. 635-43! APARTMENT SIZED FRIGIDARE refrigerator, take over payments r. Frlgidare automatic wash-, rt price from $59 up. CRUMP ELECTRIC FE 44573 ---------- -------- Proksch. OR 43333. Roy O'Neil, Realtor 3530 Pontiac Lk. Rd. • - OL 1-0575 apartment size refrigerI tor, excellent working condltlor,. $39. V. Harris. FE 5-3766.___ g^e cr3«3"^gIxle“HSy'!*6"73-iPl'l"' No Competition! and"''ilquo^*'?icen **°™nd*” making variety d^rtment. Building with modern living quarters IncludMf. A ooAd going buslnr** lern fixtures BLOND DINING ROOM SUITE, dropleaf table, china cabinet, 4 chairs. $50. OL 1-1693. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE sale. BI^AND NEW. Large end small size (round, dr^leaf, rec- ’pEAiRSON'S FURNITURE E. Pike ________________FE 47881 BRAND NEW FIRESTONE 18,000 BTU air conditioner. Never used. Selling at wholesale price $300. 6740151._______________________________ CALL COLLECT NA 7-3815 __ - 1 LOT------4 ROOM use, new, big 3 car garage. Ill price t11,0M — $3,000 down I N. Ceu. FE 5-3370 or FE ShIb laiMl * 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Set us before you deal. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1650 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 54165 , opjn Eves. *------- 7 ROOMS, 4 BEDROOMS - SOLD 810,600 with 81600 down, 87000 to handle. Frushour 8, Strublo Real-ty - FE 84035. ACTION On your lend contract, large or small, cell Mr. Hllter, FE 34179. Broker, 3793 Elizabeth Lake-- WaHtad Coirtracti-Mtg. 60-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See ut tx Northirn^roparty^^ 51-A COTTAGE FOR RENT Lewiston, Michigan Modern 3 bedroom cottago In a vacationers paradise. $55.00 per week. Phone 6744056, expressway to Detroit or Pontiac. Many possibilities. Reasonable. Mll-ford. Call 6046615._______________________ Salt Buiiness Pro|Mrty 57 DRAYTON PLAINS 90" commercial frontage on Dixie, approximately 94' on water at rear of deep lot. Well maintained older home with apartment upstairs. $33,-000 with $3,300 down. AL PAULY Mil. CAPITOL SAVINGS I. LOAN ASSN., 75 W. Humn. FE 8-7137. estate sites. 3 cottages, acre. Terms. Will consid trade or sell part Interest. ELWOOD REALTY Resort Property h Bros., OR 3-1395. down on proper^. K. L. TEMPLETON, REALTOR 3339 Orchard Lake Lots—Acreogt Make offer. Pontiac Press Box OR 10 ACRE PARCELS. 8-3013. A. Senders.______ 14 VACANT LOTS near Longfellow school. Will trade for land contract, house or what MoiMy to Loon " ■'•nsM^Mwiey LOANS TO $1,000 Jsually on first visit. Quick, trial y, helptul. FE 2-9026 Is the number to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO, W^P^tlM start Bank Bld^. l'o'TnI to 81400 N. Perry at Glenwood. COMBINATION GE WASHER-DRY-er, 6 mos. guerantet left to run, sacrifice 8400. Sat., Sun., Eves. only 333-0403. COUCH, KIDNEY desk, Dunx pads, metal office cupboards, bedstead and dresser, chairs, pictures, I------ •== DELUXE KENMORE CAS RANGE, electric rotlsserle, oven timer, 3 yrs. old. Upholstered brown chair; Child's bicycle, 3 wheel; Extra large Presto pressure canner. 634 4645. _____________________ ^ ^ ELECTRIC 36" STOVE, EXCEL-—■ condition. FE 3-4914. TRIC RANGE, 40 " P H I L C 0 ELECTRIC'RANGE tl5, WRTNGER washer $35. FE 40451. __ EXCELLENT CONOITTON. WILLET " lie extension drop leaf dining n table and chairs, 880. Cush-I buHet, 885. 3 Heywood Wake- HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL $30 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consists ol; 0-piece living room outllt with 3-plece dresser, chest, fi 5-ploce dinette set with 4 chrome :halrs and table. All for $399. Your :redlt It good at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. E. HURON FE S-1501 W. PIKE FE 3-3150 KIRBY'S tebullt and new. Repairs all nakes. Used vacuums $10 end up. >hone 3640060, 43940 Dequindre at SoIb or Exchongo Coast Coast to Trades TELEGRAPH Mr Orchard Lake Road, good bu1 Ing 30x70 wllh now home beck. (See furnace, 4lu* 2 i garage, 2 extra commercial k BATEMAN FE 8-9641 LOANS LOANS TO $1,000 -------Ildart bim Into or.. ..- ly payment. Quick service i courteous Credit life _______ _________ Stop In or phone FE 54131. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. N. Perry St. FE 54131 80 ROLLING SCENIC ACRES WITH creek, woods and young ---------- freens, sandy soil, close to xpresswOy. Livingston ( 828,000 with 10 per cent FE 3-2144. L. Smith. ACREAGE BONANZA METAMORA-HADLEY ACRES, completely surveyed v.. 495 feet blacktop frontage, spring, SjOTe woods, $4,950, 20 per C“* BEAUTIFUL 13 ACRES wllh t and woods and possible pond s evergreens planted and la frontage. 87,350, 20 per cent dow ACRE CORNER, hilly end icei 960 foot road frontage, $4,250, per cent down. ORTONVILLE H R E E II ACRE PARCELS, wooded, $617 per acre. TWO I'/i acre parcels, tceni •oiling, $595 per acre. TWO ACRE PARCELS, becufl-■ country side, S495 per aerr 5 ACRE PARCELS, $3,300 C Pangus Inc., Realty OPEN 7 DAYS I M-15 Ortonvilte CALL COLLECT NA 7-3015 ACREAGE HOMESITES Clarkston and Brandon Twp. ' I enytimo 6741740 CITY OF PONTIAC MENOMINEE CURKSTON AREA cro wooded hllTstde lot with li Ivileges on OMr Lake. 100x315 sloping lot on ttreem. I building site. 3 ml. non •ti, private lake, barn a BusinoM OpportwHitiBB 59 CHURCH AND ACTIVITY HALL Price Reduced Church censists of 3500 sq. ft. _ Ing capacity lor approxlmelely 175, complete with pews. Activity Hall consists of 5700 ft. offices, school room, bai... ball court and stage. Also facilities for banquets with kitchen. Price reduced from $47,500 ' --------- Far, f WATERFORD TOWNSHIP 00 sq. ft. building, zoned comm del. Could be used for 3 stores. Ideal lor Retail and Wholesale Airport Road. FOR LEASE, GULF SERVICE S d AA-15, Clerks- I quarters, good f OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS For Sale: Long lease on one ol the best money making restaurants In Pontiac. $10,000 cash. You will have your money back In a lew months. Absolutely no In-address given out r^ me pnone. Call for appoint- DISCOUNT STORE field Hllli. HO B48I5. CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR 18 W. WALTON 33B-4084 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEF" DID YOU KNOWI Pirfrldge end Aisocletat, Inc., have more bars, restaurants, stores, resorts end other business “ portunitles for Mie, then other firm. We sell more So to buy or Mil, cell us tods UPPER MICH. RESORT Owners home end 18 cabins nesHIng In a singing pine grove on e beautiful lake. Vacant, tor 3 yrs. and irteds repair. All units nir-nlshed and with baths. A reel bargain at $19,500 with 88,500 down, or will trade. PARTR'iDGO real ESTATE » W. Huron, FE 41581 lEND FOR FREE CATALOG Swopi 1957 CHEVY TRADE FOR MOTOR-cycle. or Mil ter 8750. OR 34342. WASHING machines conven-tlonel, automatic pump, $139 SO value, $09.95, Scratched, no down payments. Michigan Fluoriscent, 393 Orchard Lake. FE_48462._________ MAPLE CRIB, CHEST AND CHIF-ferobe, very good set, likt new. MOVING. HOUSEHOLD FURNI-ture. Seen at 395$ Cembrook, Waterford.______________________ NORGE 30" GAS RANGE deluxe cookitrt scho ' — Has ^en light, c 1650 S. Telegraph $43.43 cash or $4.43 monthly. 10 __A6AN BROS. SEWING CENTER. REFRIGERATOR, EXCEL lent condition. $35. 673-REGRIGERATOR AND ELECTRIC 49$)l er FE S-4372. SOLID flood cond Call after 4 $45. OR 3-1109. Sole Clothiofl Sols HousahuU Goods 65 $277 THREE ROOM OUTFIT 7-PIECE LIVING ROOM 9-PIECE BEDROOM 4PIECE DINETTE May Be Purchased Separately E-Z TERMS LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 61 Baldwin at Walton FE 2-6843 First Traffic light south of I-7S Acres of FrM Perking sen Eves, 'fll 9 Set, 'ftl STEP-TABLE: ROLL-»-WAY________ Chest of drawers; desk chair; coffee table. FE 2-WS7. 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNITURE 3-ROOM OUTFITS $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better)„ $3.00 Weekly $478 (Best) $4.00 Weekly NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS .,— ...—- —. Hvln^room 'Inch's? ell lor 8109. Only Id Fri. 'll Id City H GROUP A6AYTAO washers. Low as 837. Rangea, frlgeretors, metal cabinets, < beds,.dresMrs, chests, springs, -several living room suliei.. ^ thing at Bargain prices. LITTLE joe’s TRAOE-IN DEPARTMENT, 1440 Baldwin at Walton. FE 14841 Easy terms.___________________ TRAD E-IN REFRIGERATORS. Take your choice, 850. Call Mr. Adorns, FE 44804, World Wide Ing, etc. Mutt collect balance of 853.53 cash or will accept payments of 85.53 monthly. JO year guMnrte pllii lessons Included. CeiT credit meneaer at 363-1623, CERTIFIED SEWING CENTER. 9x12 Linoleum Rugs . $3.89 Celling file ............. TWe f* Vlnyl Asbestos tile ....... 7c at -Tleld tile 9x9" .......... 6c at Ploer Shop - 23SS Bllibbetti Lake "Across From the Moll" SINGER AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG Sewing machine — sews twin needle, designs, overcasts, buttonholes, etc. — modern cabinet --still under guaranlee. Take over payments of $7 PER MO. for 8 mos. or 856 cash. bat. UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 OR 41101._____________________________ singer AUTOAAATIC ZIG-ZAG Sewing machine. Dial control tor fancy designs. Buttonholes, blind SINGER DELUXE MODEL-PORTABLE Zig zagger. In sturdy carrying case. Repossessed. Pay oft $31 cash or payments of $5 PER MO. UNIVERS/'L CO. FE 4-0905 WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At Our 10 w. Pike Store Only Odd tables and lamps .. From $1.95 Occasional chairs . . From S5.9S Walnut dresser with mirror $34.9$ Washer $59.95 .... ----- Is Good At Wyman's EASY TERMS______________FE 3-3150 WASHER $25. GAS STOVE, $35. RE-frigerator with top traezar, $49. Dryer, $35. TV, $35. Electric atov« $35. V. Harris. FE 5-3766._____________ Hi-Fi, TV & Radloi 66 2MNCH USED TV ............12995 Used 3 speed phonographs . .. $4 95 Walton TV FE M257 Open 9-9 . 515 E. Walton, c ■ • 33" ADMIRAL TV ______Cell FE 5-3693_ V^l^:^0«BINATION COLOR TV BARGAINS, LITTLE Joe's Bargain House, FE 34643. RECORD PLAYER NEEDLES HARO TO FIND? SEE US --WE have most all KINDS. r\ukJCAM pg |i456f For Solo Miicollanooos 67 through. The toughest of i THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MAY 80. 1966 c—a fmt Sak Mhwlhfw *7 *■' PtMTIC PIPf, mt PtR 100'. 007.0. A.^r{!ompmi.^ Sw w i - IIIOOO BTU INPUT LUXAIRE Low Boy> bounwnt forctd ilr gu furnoco. « to 0 jorlr-*“ "-* I GAS FURNACES, 10IL00O BTU, hots, 3 rtiunu. ISOS InttolMd. U yeor, guarontoo. Pontiac Haating Co. cairaia-mi or «03-ss74. PIECE BUILT IN BATH SET with taucata. S5104S3.________ S' BLUE BATHTUB, DAMAGED, IIS. G. * --------------— ■■■ 4'/i HORSE POWER MERCURY boat motor, 10SS Ford. FE S-0064. O'aJiT LIN9LEUM RUGS *3.05 EACH paneling, cheap. I. I07S W. Huron plea Encyclepa TV, h.p.-$9* Hl-Lo TMt Ib.-M00 4,000 llx, A-I-S1S00 BOULEVARD SUPPLY 1. Blvd - - BALDWIN SPINET ORGAN, > most Ilka new, with spat tremolo. LEW BETTERLY A PUREBRED BLACK MALE POO- dles. 413-1459._____________ REGISTERED TOY FOX TERRIER puppies. Toy Fox Terrier and Chl- huahua stud service. FE M4?7._ REGISTERED ENGLISH SETTER, ■ N 10 weeks old. S25. 405-103I COMPLETE DRUM SET, I ENRICO ROSELLI ACCORDION, GOOD USED SPINET PIANO MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Tatograph Rd. ac, Mich. FE W»>’ Across from Tel-Huron FENDER BASEAMN AMPLIFIER •"-t 602-S2S0 attar 4 " MONTH END SALE 'lanos, organs New and Used 'rices that everyone can afford, peclal savings — no money dowi payments till August. Gallagher's Music 1710 S. Telegraph South of Orchard Lake Rd. pkm, other sire IS4S top Doberman. Phone Flint, 2 'ury kitten ■RMAN AKC, 175, Shots. AAA 4343S. HOUSE OF POODLES GROOMING AND SUP4>LIES OSTER CLIPPERS AND BLADES mo Dixie Hwy.__________OR BB»20 SIAMESE KITTENS From Internationally know Cattery. "Superior show stocl., tus symbol pets." CFA registered— SIAMESE KITTENS, t SIAMESE KITTENS, $15. OR 4-3304.______________ REGISTERED 34444, AAA 5-2450. COLLIES, Studs. MY________ TOY SILVER AND BLACK, POODLE Stud servlca. 3354702. Auctiw SolBB EVERY FRIDAY - ERY SATURDA1 ERY SUNDAY ........ — gSS^”p"?ls°es’1eS^"Alcr. ---- -^Il-Trada, Retail 7 - gnniento Wel^a OR 32717 Plonts-Trees-Shrwbs 81-A .... (Cotor-Okjl. Guitars $21.30 up. Used organs, L------- -- Thomas J'— rgans, Lowrey Hoi as Symphonatta. v » $1,»5. Floor tr E R G RE E t readers,tOtr miles North ne Evergreen »y. 425-1022. of Pontiac. Cedar Farms. 8070 DIxl JACK HAGAN MUSIC 440 Elltabeth Lk. Rd. 332-0500 7216 Cooley L~ ........ ITOREY-CUARK CONSOLE PIANO, it Pontiac Drive-ln Theater THOMAS ORGAN, 2 MANUAL, LES- ^ ■■ * Vaars j q^D BEAUTIF^L^SHET bridle. MA^3132o!* “ * * ATTENTION PARENTS ACCOHUION C PIANO AND ORGAN INSTRUCTION Ai^llc Shop ________ Office Equipment 1 72 BEAUTIFUL MATCHED PALO-maras. W. Carpenter, 343-r 625-34W. APPALOOSAS, QUARTER HORSES, top registered. 5f " ---- ■ - - 6200-3015. Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. IRON CEMETERY URN, FE S4043.________ If carpets look dull and 1 supplies, s, paint - I — full C “'lilei Stora EqHipinBnt complete set of beauty shop equipment. $100. OA 0-3601. LADIES APPAREL STORE Fixtures, wall racks, carpeting, drap- reglster lii gM cinditlon. Corners Fashions, 1501 1 Bloamlleld Hills at Long Lake LEARN TO RIDE ern or English, professional uctions. Boarding and training. Hhler Rd. GOLDEN H COR- 262-4S5V or 625-2630._____ PONY AND TACK. I____________FE $4733. - 'thoroughbred JUMPER, BESt 73 oHer. 674-0707 ------------ 1N4 10-FT. TDUR-A-HOME PICK- CAMPERS AND TRAVEL TRAIL-ers. Sale pricad, 3334t2l. Family Campers. CANVAS BACK CAMPER BY MALLARD EASY TO TOW AND SET UP Priced Start at $895 $735 TOM STACHLER AUTO AND MOBILE SALES 3091 W. Huron St.__FE 34920 CAMPING SITES 10O acres, private Iska, safe___ modem facilities, McFaaly Resort, ELDARADO PICKUP TOPPER, Ilka new 4 months old. OR 44S60. HOBO PICK-UP CAMPERS THEY ARE QUALITY BUILT SUPPLIES AND ACCESSORIES Dally 10 to 5, 0 to 10 p.m. Sun. 12 noon to 5 p.m. HOBO SALES Streamlines-Kenskills Franklins-Fans-Crees and Monitors Compmate Truck Campers Franklin Truck Campers Good Used Travel Trailers From $075 to $1295 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK NEW 1965 16' PLAYMATE, SLEEPS ‘ nrovliion (or upper- bunk, no t, $1230. UL 2-ISOS after 5 PICK-UP COVERT, $29$ ID'S" cabovars, $1293 and up also chassis mounts and custom built campers We now carry a new line of 1966 LITTLE champs Also good used campers T B R camper MF6. CO. lMrti-AccMMi!iM 97 UiMl A«t*-Tmk Pwts 102 ATTENTION RETIREES Special price. New lO'xSB’ Hear. Hava space In park near (Wall. Raaaanable rant, no car naadad. WATERFORD MOBILE HOMES — • Highland AT COLONIAL r Knowllngly Unde DIATE OCCUPANt. ... V ULTRA MODERN PARK All 1964 Models on Display In Every Price Range At Winter Discount^ RICHARDSON-HILLCREST ACTIVE HAMPTON 25 Opdyke Rd. 332-1657 (Corner of M59 at OpdVka) OR 5430 Dixie Hwy. 674-2010 (W Mile South of Waterf ‘ OPEN 7 DAYS msXiatol moSa ^ s. X yrs. Repair Experience. TONY'S MARINE UH Prehard Lake Rd. AKE THAT VACA 13 toloo ft. See th 1, Milford 605-1120. -TRI-LBVEL, 1, fully car- Farkhurst Trailer Sales FINEST IN A40BILE LIVING IS 40 ft. Faaturlng New «4oon Buddy and Nomads, ocated halt way between Drion and Oxford on MU, r-“* -Country Cousin. MY Y 24411. Open 9 to 9—7 days a week MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie Hwy. 3304772 1 block north of Telegraph Motorcycles 4 HARLEY DAVIS SCOOTER 1965 305 HONDA SCRAMBLER, miles, excellent condition, mu Milford. 685-2007. . FEW St sell. 1965 SUPER 90 HONDA, EXTRAS. Exc. condition. UL 2-3$$2. 1965 HARLEY DAVISON Sprint. AAA 6-1140. 250 1965 HONDA SUPER HAWK miles S525. 6$^3164. . 2500 1965 DREAM HONDA $475. after 4 p.m. 363-5351. CALL Spoftiiig (Beyb , 7' 1966 NIMROD CAMPERS CRUISE OUT, INC. Hoy—Grain—feed . Eggs and chicks. CERTIFIED SEED POTATOES, Jack Cochran, Lake Orion, "" 2-0931._________________ GUNS-BUY-SELL—TRADE BURR-SHELL. 375 5. Telegraph LOADING COMPONENTS, GUNS -we (buy, trade and sell. Opdyke Hardware. FE $4404. sizes. Over 10,000 Items to choose from. V, price or less off on most Items. 236i Dixie Hwy., Mon.-FrI. 9-9, Sat. M, closed Sun. FE 4-0205. LUXAIRE OIL FURNACE, 15,000 ________________________ BTU Ilka new. OR 4-0205._____| C-i.,1 Breeal—Blee Lavatories, complete sja a value, $14.9$; also bathf — lets, sfknver sfalls. Irregi rifle values. Michigan Fli 393 Orchard Lake. FE 4-04____ IaWN mower, TORO, PROFES-sional reel type, 74" r ' * engine. Ml 7-1200.____ MUST COLLECT alanca on Slooir I" lovely i cabinet, with automatic zlg-zag-ger for button holes, hems, tan-cy stitches, etc., pay only $39.20 cash or $4.64 monthly, 5 year guarantee plus lessons Included. Call credit manager at 335-9213, RICHMAN BROS. SEWING CEN- ONE 6 I AMO N sacrttlce. FE 4-3084. ______ Plumbing bargains, free Standina tollot, $14.95. 30«allon heater. $47.95; 3d>lice bath aets $39.95. Laundry fray, frim, $19.95; Mx)wt sink, S2.9S; Lavs., $2.95; FlCNIC TABLES, FIVE SIZES, lawn ornaments and gms. Liberal Bill's Outpost, 3265 Dixie “ OR 34474. PRINT SHOP 22" PAPER CUTTER, OFF-SET PRESSES. Forbes — rCNATURE CABINET SEWING iTMChlne, very good conC'"-Alumlnum boat,- barbecue. R 3-9425. SINGER Console model sewing machine In exc. condition. Zig-Zag for fancy stitches, ovarcasting, etc. Guaranteed. Only $30.25 or can bs paid $1.00 per wk. Call Credit Manager. SINGER In cabinet with ilg-zagger. Ju change fashion plate for butto holes, etc. Must collect ^.75 cai or $3.50 n—— ....... ' SPRBO-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK ^Wly. 247$ Orchaid Lake. 6 FT. PICNIC TABLE, ----------- condition. $25 FE S-3497 alter 5 Everythlira Clothing, Fu.. WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENtS AT WANTED TO BUY A-t CLEAN RICH TOPSOfL LOAD-ED DAILY 7 TO 7. S, OF "K" MART PARKING LOT.___________ BLACK DIRT. 6934409. PEAT BLACK DIRT, TOPSOIL, sand .................. FE > BLACK DIRT AND TOPSOIL'. FE 4-035$. Al's Landscaping. BUD BALLARD, OR 3-5773. gravel, fill dirt a lANURE, (HORSE) OELfVERY, PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-^iji^Sand, gravel, (III dirt. OR SAND, GRAVEL, FILL, BULL DOZ-- driveways and finish grades. SAND, GRAVEL AND DIRT, GRAD-Ing and excavating. Clarkston. MA 5-1229, Kan's Dirt |i Dozing. TOPSOIL, WHOLESALE OR rF- USED AND REBUILT TRACTORS and com planters. I-W Brilllon packer. Davis Machinery, Orton-ville, NA 7-3292.____ NEW AND USED FARM EQUIPMENT. TRACTORS, WHEEL AND CRAWLERS, BLADES, PLOWS, MOWERS, LOADERS, RAKES, DISCS. Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. $25 S. Woodward FE 4-0461 Pats-Hvntiag 0«gs _ 79 1-A POODLE TRIMMING, SHAM-—'ng, reasonable. 625-2075. I-A, AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPS, STUD ----Ice. IMATODDS, 33^7139. BEAUTIFUL POODLE PUPPIES- 6 weeks. Call 625-2875._________ WEEK OLD PUPPIES, PART Springer, mother killed—must sell quickly. $5 each. FE 2-7734. i-l DACHSHUND PUPS, $10 DOWN. AKC-Terms. JAHEIMS. FE 8-2538. ! without chIL AKC REGISTERED ENGLISH BULL lies. Fine blood line. Ak" ' ' Ice. UL 2-3754.______ AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVERS, 2-months, $75. 473382$. PET SHOP, 55 WILLIAMS FE 44433. RabMte, Mrdi.____ AKC APRICOT TOY POODLE AT BRITTANIES, EXCELLENT stock, 334-8093 aft. 5:30.____ BLACK AND tXN BEAGLE, FE-male, 1 year old. $25. FE 2.344$. BEAUTIFUL FARM TYPE COL- •) puppies. 492-1901.________ CANINE COUNTRY CLUB. $5^4740 _ __87 1951 JOHN DEERE WIRE BALER, 1 John Deere No. 5 7' mower, 1 rubber tired wagon, I 4 bar side rake, 1 buih hog, 2 lectlon spring ' tooth harrow, 1 220 gal. oil tank, large quanity of used lumber, " lls^halmers 1951 W.D. tractor A-1 shape. ME 7-...... . ' LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTORS, FROM 7 H.P. TO 9W H.P. WITH ATTACHEMENTS, $95 AND UP, IHC TRACTOR MODEL NO. 2406, 2 YRS. OLD WITH HENRY LOADER AND HENRY BACK HOE, ‘ * PRICE $4400. A6ANY OTHERS KING BROS. separately. 670-2223. MICHIGAN'S LARGEST (REAL) farm service store. John. Deere and New Ideal part galore. Davis AAachInery, Ortonville, NA 7-32" Your New Idea-Homitta and C Riding tractor dealer. NEW HOLLAND 5 BAR SIDE DE------ - "s oat a-^" - WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS Travel Trailm ^ 88 15' GARWOOD, SLEEPS 5,-$)000. TRAVEL TRAILER, ' SAGE, HAS EVERYTHING. I. Call between 6 764 19'/b FOOT TRAVELMASTER trailer, self-contained, condition. 684-214). Mllfor 1966 NIMROD CAMPERS CRUISE OUT, INC. Walton, dally 9-9 FE $44( 1945 APACHE BUFFALO CW Er* This Is . ____ _________ _ $795. New Apache Chief modal with canopy and add-a-room $549. New 1965, 14 foot.Coachman travel trailer $645. New 1944, $ foot cabovar pick-up camper $745. Our May bonus sale Is now on. ChKk — package deals on new 1984 Api camp trailers and new DelRay Wildwood pick-up campert. ! up to $230 on new 1965 Johi outboard motori, Starcratt bi Grumman canoea, new 14 .... tipper boat trailers $109. Largest stock of camp trallara 'and pickup campers In this area. Open rMV!!,'.Vir-'c?’LrEV,’f “ m M-21. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 4507 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston 525-1711 ACE TRAVELER COACHMEN WAGON TRAIN CAMEO PICKUP COVERS Hitches and Accessories JOHNSON'S 517 E. Walton FE 4-S$53 or FE dOllO HOENIX KADEL INNEBAGE WOLVERINE Campers and trailers. Also Ph ' convertible. We sell and 1 Reese and Draw-tite Rentals. HOWLAND SALES AND RENTALS 3245 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1456 Open 9 a.m. 'til 9 p.m^_ SPRING SALE MALLARD-ROBIN HOOD Get the lump on the spring rush. Special deals on these units, they are not subject to BRIDGESTONE MOTORCYCLES Fmm $239.95 up CENTURY-SAGE-TAG-A-LONG TOM STACHLER AUTO AND MOBILE SALES 3091 W. Huron St. - FE 2-492 PIONEER CAMPER SALES PICKUP CAMPERS BY Travel Quaon - Orarland - Ovance-Concord trailers. MERIT FIBERGLASS TRUCK COVERS VACATION RENTALS OF STUTZ CAMPERS AND CAMPING TRAILERS 160 W. HURON________FE 2D909 Rf HTALl -:r U FT. Ann 16 FT. models of travel trailers. Travel Coach, Inc., 152)0 N. Holly Rd., Holly, ME 44771. Oi USED REECE BAR LEVEL EQUAL- C AT ION WITH TAKE YOUR ' youthl.^sumnwrm^.-|NE DRIFTWOOD - SCAMPER or the luxurious BOLES AERO travel trailer or truck camper. "THE RED BARN" Jacobson Trailer Sales 90 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-5901 Vacation Timp Is Here Select your travel trailer now fro our new Corsairs, Holly and J |os. Sizes from 16 to 2$ ft. .-acks. Lowry Camper Sales, S. Hospital Road, Union Lm EM 33681. Spare tire carriers. 1962 DETROITER — EXPA 10x55', Triple "A" condition..... for equity. Eves. 334-3050, days ATTENTION Retirees & Newlyweds Priced to lit all budgets IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY RIVER BANK MOBILE VILLAGE 395 S. Telegraph _ Pontiac, Michigan KeL-Sat.-Sun. 124, Closed oirWeCh-Open Mon.-Tues.-Thurs. 12-8 DETROITER-PONTIAC CHIEF KROPF Top trade allowanca on your present mobile home. Yes, all Detroiter products meet or Ihe rigid B r healing. oy the i 1 ahd r BOB HUTCHINSON SALES 4301 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1202 Drayton Plains 1953 OLDBMOBILR INtAKE MANI-(Old and 2 banwf carburetor, alao radiator. 195# OMamebfla Intake (LUMINUM RUNABOUT MOTOR, $325. 3^2013. AVON SAILBOATS PRESENTS-A fine selection of sailboats Wayfarer, Wineglass, Aquar performance. $2150. 3 LARSON, INBOARD-OUTBOARD Sava on 1965 14 foot boat. HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Your Evinrude Dealer" ■ Telegraph FREE-FREE with every Suzuki, 12 months orj 12.000 mile warranty. Better than I anything you can wear. CUSTOM COLOR 238 w. Montcalm NOW IS THE TIME-SPRING _ Here, at last — Merc-Crusler Dealer, Chrysler Lone Stars to 19') Inboards, |or outboards. H.P., we have Ldne Star Must . Inboard or outboart) In stock, MFG Boats, Glastron, Sail Boats, Si for your boating needs. - GOOD BUYS - one Star Crusliner III — 24' LOOKING . a used Suzuki? Suzuki ov i satisfied, fhiw would ri Ik fhan switch, CUSTOM COLOR 238 W. Montcalm and 77 W. H west Wide Track) UcrCNUADLI: 4 V.T«wUB HONDA!! World's biggest seller No mixer gadget needed Over VcKie fro. Including the tough new 305 Scrambler EASY TERMS-FREE HELMET-HURRY Also authorized dealer for BSA-TR lUMPH-NORTON MOTD-GUZZIE --■ SPUNKY 13' ARISTOCRAFT, WITH trailer and tarp. 33^5S26 after - ~* p.m. Ask for *— RENT-A-CYCLE BY THE HOUR, DAY OR WEEK. New Yamata SO, 80 and twin 100s. Rates cheaper than owning. RIDA-RENTA CYCLE i. Woodward, Bgham 647-7450 Wanted Con-Tracks CHEVY SUZUKI CYCLES, 50CC-2SXC. RUPP Mlnibikas as low as $129.95. Take M59 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory RMge Rd. to Demode Rd. Left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone MAin 9-2179._______________ SUZUKI BETTER GET 'EM NOW 12 MOS. - 12,000 MILE WARRANTY TUKO SALES INC. 572 E. AUBURN - ROCHESTER I BIKES. $109.95, $129.95. 682 USED BIKES SPEED SAVILLE - 258 OSMUN Boats — Accossories 97 9. TRAIL- frallerr $149. 'New' lY flberglas boat, 40 H.P. Johnson elect-'- ““ b. trailer, battery-box $1299. BUCHANAN'S 9 Highland Rd.________363-2301 12' FEATHERCRAFT ALUMINUM boat and trailer. Lights and ' Ing, $195. 7314257. r RUN-ABOUT 61 ’ LARK FIBERGLAS.BOAT; SEA FIBERGLASS BOAT, ( 8' ALUMACRAFT BOAT, WITH 30 horsepower Evinrude mo" ' trailer $450.00. OR 3-5498. . SNIPE SAILBOAT, TRAILER, cover. Dacron Sails. Exc. Condl-tlon. $625. OR 3-3403. V ALUMINUM PONTOON trailer, $600. OR 34039._______ 8' SHELL LAKE BOAT, MOTOR and trailer, $575. MA 6-2175. MOTOR AND RIverla Crusler Raft (Marine Dlvisi( 15210 Holly Rd., Holly Open D..............- • PINTERS Slarcraft-MFG-Thompson Johnson Boats and Motors Weeres Ponfoehs end Water Bikes Double AA Motor Repair Rating" 1370 Opdyke-Open * * ' (1-75 at Id University Exit) PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. Dixie Hwy. at Loon Lake Drayton Plains 101 OR FALCON 6, STICK, needed at once In exc. 1 owner. OR 3-2539 be- EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "Check tfM rest, then get the best" at Averill AUTO SALES ' 2-9878 2020 Dixie FE 6889$ MORE MONEY Paid For Sharp Cars need hundreds of sharp cars to fill out-state orders, and to sloe my lot, that Is a full city bloc ' gTlE McANNALLY'S Auto Sales lU EE $45! m Pontiac State Bank California Buyers FOR "tLfcAN’* UiBU GLENN'S E 67371*” 61797 ^PAYMENTyOO HJGH?^ DON'S'(JSED MrV' 477 J. Lapeer Rd, Lake Orion MY 2-2041.____ FOR CLEAN CARS OR Economy Cars 2335 Pi>'- ' 1965 GMC Suburban Red and white paint Several to choose from GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 , 4“Sy'tl! 1965 Chevy ’/2-Ton Pickup with fleetside body, 6 cyl. engli ■tick shift. Yours—In your drive I Only— $1395 Crissman Chevrolet (On Top Of South Hill) ichester______ OL 2-9721 condition. 6824460. 1961 VOLKSWAGEN 2 door sunroof. Real clean an bargain at this price. No c $1095 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH IN GOOD CONDITI09I. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 1966 GMC i-Ton Pickup Heater, defrosters, backup lights, seat belts, 2-speed wipers, washers, inside rear view mirror $1779 including all taxes PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 Grimaldi IMPORTED CAR CO. Stock No J-123 CJ-S Universal — Gold 4-wheel drive Full fop. NOW $2278 WANTED GOOD USED CLEAN CARS-CASH Opdyke Hardware WILL PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR Saansfield used cars HELP! a naad 300 share .CadlliKt, F«-set. Olds and Buicka for ato market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ava. S-58C0________FE 54825 -2 AND 10 JUNK CARS 101-A -^TRUCKS, - TRUCKS :OPPER 40 CENTS AND UP; Brass radiators, battarles, startarv (lanerators. C. Dixon, OR 3-5B48. Heavy Duty One-Ton Pickups 4 speed, V5 and V$, heavy du springs, tires, 1960-1964 GMCs and FORDS $695 up all makes and models Easy Terms. ASK FOR TRUCK DEPT. FE 5-4101 John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm Ave. __(I blocJ^E. of Oakland Ava.) _ STAKES and DUMPS 1963- 1964- 1965 FORD F400 - 3x5 Dumps Fron $1995 to $2995 1963 FORD N-750 111" wheel base, will tike U body. 332 Cu. In. angina, 5 spaed 2 spaed, 920-10 ply. $2495 $795 1957 FORD :-600 V$, 2 speed, 825 tires, fo 12' comb, grain and cattle bod] $695 Big Stock of other makes and models to select from ASK FOR Truck Dept. FE 5-4101 John McAuliffe Ford IMF John McAuliffe Ford 1963 VW 2-Door Sedan Ebony black with sporty rs terlor, whltawahs, awf that fi yw aconomyl $59 down, fl balanca of only $767 Get a BETTER DEAL" i 1942 TRIUMPH TR4, A-f SHAPE, contMer older used car as dowi payment. 150 Clayburn 6824519. 1963 SPRITE, CLEAN, SHARP. FE 1943 VW CONVERTIBLE WITH RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, A REAL GAS SAVER, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN Assume weekly payments of $7.7$, CALL (TREOIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 'W, WHITEWALLS, SUN ROOF 0, low mileage. Exc. Cbndl-Take over payments. 330-9779 y CONVERTIBLE, 7, ' Was $2695 Now $2288 Grimalidi IMPORTED CAR CO. ntm Mi fMCm m 1960 BUICK'*LSABil'^HAEOTOA MUST SELL TODAY TO lETTLI ACCOUNT. NO MONEY DOWII. U$7 WEEKLY. CALL MR. CASH, FISCHER BUICK 554 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 1964 BUICK Skytorir fwrdtoy with vinyt rpof; 1 “line, automatic f-------- HAROLD , TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_Ml »755> 662-5336 after 6 BOB BORST I CADILLAC HARDTOP, FULL ower, good shape. $450. MA 4-1502 (ter 7 p.m.______________ IMF Jonn MCAulIfft Ford 1959 Cadillac Coupe OeVille Dust rose finish, with matchbig brocade Interior, and Is In showroom condition throughout. Power steering, brakes, wTndowa, and seat. Many Exfratl $79 Dawn, Finance Balance of Only — $891 Get a BETTER DEAL" i LATE MODEL CADILLACS ON HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME . Cadillac 1963 Coupe OeVilla with tp; $295 DOWN ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Pontiac Caciillac GM (Owner's Initials) Gala AAcAnnally's Auto Sales la sura and watch for our big June Grand Opening, a cityblock up to 100 cars of popular makai and models to select from I SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Baldvyin FE 8-4525 Across frorn Pontlec State Bank Cadillac '63 Convertible with beautiful gil finish, nice blega top, full power this one Is really a nice car Class toMess. ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Pontiac Cadillac ONLY ONE LEFT 1966 Morgan Super Sport Modified with big engine, dual rubber 4 barrel! carbs, headers. Alum. Hand built body, GT model, wire wheels 4-speed-Syncro. Racing liras. Was $4280 Now $3988 Used Morgan Plus 4^ In Brltlsh^^raclng gree Grimaldi 1963 CADILLAC oupe DeVilla with full power, vinyl roof, radio and healer, whitewall tires, in excellent condition, only 8129 down and weekly payments HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 5. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-75(X New aNd Used Can 106 stark 338-4088. Cadillac 964 Convertible, eye appealing beig tinish and beige top and trirr equipped with full power an air-conditioning. Just right to *~345 DOWN ASK ROR NORM DANIELSON . WILSON Pontiac Cadillac Ing Interior, power equipment. For "SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE nance CHEVROLET CREDIT '59 Chevy Impale '40 JlamWer^ 9 pass, wagor NO money'DOWN^WE CADILLAC 1965, 4-OOOR HARDTOP Coupe DaVllla, axacutiva car, factory air and all accessorial. 676- C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 80. 1966 N«w mi lh«d Cm 1M fE RoTSooTwrrHEVY ^0 01 hArtftOD fr Cllif. ^iWSO hp 4 WILL ACCEPT IN TRADE SUNS, BOATS, MOTORS Sumhine from « <*•"«[» Echo from i steamboat whistli Exhaust fumes from an outboard i almost anything movable STOP IN AND OFFER KING AUTO. SALES M59 ot Elizabeth Loke Rd. FE 8-4088 1960 CHEVROLET irtlble with V-( ai ' transmission, d New and Used CoH _1M I CHEVROLET CONVER- tk m un KkiAPikie ^LB'wiTM'vi ENGINE, AUTOA4ATIC TRANSMISSION. FULL POWER, radio AND HEATER, WHITE-WALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY Nm^«M_lhed Cm 106|Mew and Used Cm ALWAYS SO OK USED CAR^J Haskins Cheyy-Olds it HAROLD TURNER Nmt iNd IlMd Cm DON'T MISS GRAND OPENING ------ OMsmoblle. Terrific used _________„ galore. SSO Oamandj. | MUST DISPOSE OF T H I S IfM . “ .....................min- HMT iiid Used Cm lOi WOULD YOU BELIEVE 11 No Cash Needed — Bank Rales )M1 Pontiac Catalina ...... $ 41 door ; DODGE, r»<3 hardtop. Ermine wnite with tur-i air condltkme quoise trim, VO, Powergllde, eow-| er jfwrlng. Chevy Impale with power. B __*11 WT------------r STATE WIDE AUTO OUTLET 3400 ElUabeth Lake Road FE 8-7137 GM ■SOMETHING NEW" ^MIKE SAVOIE^ CHEVROLET tins .. ____ . _____ drive M t ' truck to ROCHESTER DODGE Drive Awey — Save More Pay S51-01M____________ROCHESTER 1961 CHEVROLET (Owner's Initials) Gale McAnr----- * *" 1»42 CHEVY Bi Sales Birmingham _______MJ 4-373S - Ml 4-7t0e____ 1945 CHEVY (Convertible, vt, powergllde, double power. tOT-Ssn. mi Corvair Nionia............. IMS Falcon, 2-dr., aulo. S a** ^ambler, auto., full power GET SAAART - SEE US OPDYKE MOTORS 2230 PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYKE FE 0-9237 TO CHOOSE FROM BILL SPENCE ! 6673 Dixie Hwy. chrysler plymouth-valianT \ rambler-jeep ^ Clarkston ______^M^ 5-243S TchEVY 4 CYLINDER STICK. irifty a cylinder engine ,ck Shift, STAR AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph latching li aulomatic,' VoL wa^l tires-^Lols of new car v 2 year warra^nw. burke i '""SOMETHING NEW" SAVOIE. 1943 CORVAIR MONZA HARDTOP, CHEVROLET i 4 DOOR, 4, MECHANICS! . auto. First 0100 takes must| is week-end. 444-9939._i NEW CAR WARRANTYS AS LOW AS $49 DOWN Payments as low as $11.95 OLIVER BUICK 1965 Opel Wagon White finish, 4 miles. Only — $1250 1964 Buick LeSgbre Sedan, beige, power steer brakes, whitewalls, a real r $1795 Bargain Minded Used , Car Buyers Attention! Our 12th ANNIVERSARY SALE "OK" USED CARS. Shop the Big "OK" Used Car Lot at MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES “Chevyland" 431 Oakland Avenue at Cass FE 4-4547 1W2 CHEVROLET BEL < o^r V-«, auto, power ste< chrome luggage rack Very c $795. Birmingham KING GM e Grand Opening, a city b use6 SMALL AD-BIG LOT 70 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 1945 TEMPEST Wagon, 4 dr., stick 0, silver bl radio, heater, wMlmatls. Catalln ! M59 at Elizobeth Lake Rd. FE 8-4088 _ 1944 PONTIAC tv and niwdels to select from! SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525 12 BONNEVILLE HAROLD TURNER 1945 FORD CUSTOM "500" 4 brakes, 5,000 actual mites. Factory official's Car. Priced to sef at JEROME FORD Rochester' Ford Dealer. OL 1-9711.____________________ 1942 CORVAIR C 0 . 1962 Buick Convertible blue finish, while top, power stee Ing, brakes. Only — $1095 WITH AUTOMATIC TRANS-MISSION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL Hanoute Inc. Chevrolet-Buick MY'‘2-24n , radio, heater, whi 1964 IMPALA heater, whitewalls. KING KING Mow mi Ihod Cart 1M FE 0-923* Autorama Houghten Olds 528 N. Main Rochester 01 1-9761 MOTOR SALES 2435 Orcherd Lakt Rd. 402-4410 ......... West of ~ • 1M3 OLDS SUPER M ^ rdtop, full power, ri S. Royel Master IMS MUSTANG 2 0R HARDTOP, ■'* with straight stick, radio, heal-Extra sharp tl*9S. JEROME ID Rochester Ford Dealer. Pretty Ponies 19^5 MUSTANGS 7 USED JSED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM ~rONVEimBL"ES—~ HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $49 Down ond $49 Per Month HAROLD TURNER TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO money down, *------- * weekly -----*■ 677 S. LAPEER RD. Lake Orion ______MY2-M41_________ 1944 CHEVROLET I AUTO SALES I M59 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 8-4088 AUTO SALES M59 at Elizabeth Lake FE 8-4088 FORD, INC. M S. WOODI^ARO AVE. BRAND NEW '66 Oldsmobile F85 Nm ao4 Cm_106 RUSS With full factory equipment. Will be delivered for only $1995 DOWNEY OLDS Fine Used Cars 1250 OAKLAND 1M3 OLDS STARFIRE HARDTCJP, alrxonditloning, lull power, Immaculate. 424-5*09. 1^43 OLDS M CONVERTIBLE. POW-er, sh*rp, ocean mist, whlia In-terjer,.*149jL,F£.j:«B^ I JOHNSON Pontiac-Rambler On M24 In Lake Orion MY 3-6266 GM Gale ^ 1944 PONTIAC Grand I with beige Interior, eut-er steering, brakes, : SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525 matie. 1IM4 ftlNTIAC CATALINA, VINYL I top and Ventura trim. (1700. 1007 1 Lakevlew. FE ^7944. TEMPEST CUSTOM SPORTS coupe, V*, eulo., radio, whitewalls, ZIebert rust proofing, clean, - - OR 3-9550. ECONOMY CARS 2335 DIXIE H 1940 VALIANT 2 KING GTO, SECRETARY'S CAR must sell, 4 speed, many extras. 335-12*0. OLIVER BUICK S!S'.SSLo”i!i,NK SAVOIE "SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE j CHEVROLET i-__A104 .South .Woodward^ __U f964 CHEVELLE CHEVROLET ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP . EM 34155 OAKLAND HARD TO FIND 1960 Corvette Convertible 327 V8 enoine. ey.^radip, healf 2 CHEVROLET IMPALA, 409, peed transmission, full p o w e Odd condition, MA 4-3233 or A GM Impala $1395 BEATTIE 1962 CHEVROLET door hardtop, radio, . cylinder automatic. Ex-flt condition throughout. This $895*' BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Woodward_______Ml_ a white fop, automatic, p< ___________________ ranty. SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin FE 84525 CHRYLSER, 39,000 ACTUALI with VS, automatic ai A Florida car, *295 FORD, Rochester's McComb CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH IMPERIAL 1962-63-64-65 CHEVROLETS: Chevy r FORD DEALER Since On Dixie In Waterford at the double stoplight OR 3-1291 1940 CORVAIR 2 DOOR WITH AUTO-mallc transmission. Radio, heater and a lot of good miles Yours tor only *5 down an full price Is lust S29S at KING Station Wagons Both 6 cylinders and 8, some with power steering ond brakes. All have radio and heaters. Look over our selection, prices nev- .MTA rxirr better. AUTO SALES t r’ J M59 ot Elizabeth Lake Rd. j©rOm© I OrO. _______JE 8-4088 ________ Rochester OL 1-9711 19'40 CHEVY * STATION WAGON,; BIRMINGHAM TRADES 1965 OLDS FSS 4-door Deluxe V-8 with automatic and power. Only......... $2095 1965 OLDS 98 LuxuTy sedan with full power. A sharp Birmingham trade ..............$2795 1963 OLDS 88 2-door hardtop, power steering, power brakes. A sharp Birmingham trade. Only ................................. .$1595 1965 OLDS Dynamic "88" 4-door hardtop. Loaded, all the extras, air conditioning....$2595 1965 OLDS 442 hardtop, 4-speed, radio, heater, red line tires. 5 to choose from.......$2195 1964 OLDS Dynamic "88" 4-door hardtop. Power steering, brakes, and power windows $1895 2 YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 K FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Pontiac Cadillac GLISTENING BURKE, 338-4528, SPARTAN. Spocials BUY HERE-PAY HERE No Application Refused 1940 FORD V* si 11961 PLYMOUTH 2 1960 CORVAIR Auto 1959 BUICK Hardtop “11 COMET Wagon steering and brakes, radio, t car. Only $1895.' 'SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE PONTIAC L-r kJ.ri.VWiJ--. NO money DOWN SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS *797 $2,99 "1945 "Cfievi'oiet" automatic transmission, 8 cylinder. rust-proofed with only 4»700 miles. Asking *1820. Call Jim. FE 2-r " E xt. 235 days o^y please^____ 1945“VaALIBU SS HARDTOP, Horsepower, 4-speed on the f 1965 Ch©vy IMMEDIATE DELIVERY MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM . WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING CALL R. DAN AT -------FE 84071 1941 FORD 4, 2-OOOR, VERY NICE. 333-7542. Riggins, dealer. IMF ' John McAulitle Ford 1941 FORD STARLINER, 390. HIGH performance, 404 heads, and camshaft, pay balance. 152-1513. 1942 T-BIRD, WHITE, AIR, NEW tires, wire wheels, *1295. FE 2-2329. 1942 FORD 2 DOOR SEDAN WITH AUTOMATIC TRANS-MISSION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of *4.**. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Patks.at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1965 T-Bird 2-Door Hardtop Landfu, Sautarne Gold finish, with! black vinyl top, this executive ' owned unit has factory Air conditioning, power steering, brakes.] and tour like new ^whitewalls. Be GM Flnmc^Batance of Olity — $2966 (Owner's Initials) Gala McAnnally's Auto Sale* 1942 FORD^GajaxIa m 1 Get "'^e'tTER* I3EAL'* at John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 shift, V*, 2 year warranty. SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Boldwin FE 84525 1942 FALCON SQUIRE WAGON. Like new tires, battery, end muffler. 19,500 ml. exc. condition. 444-; 8145. T-BIRDS 14 To Choose From IMF John McAuliHe Ford MUSTANGS-MUSTANGS Mustangs Over 4 Mustangs In our corral and the prices start at only— $1499 1963, 1964 and 1965 ' All Colors Some have air conditioning. All hove: Power equipment, outomatic transmission, radio, heater, whites AS LOW 'AS $129 DOWN and $14.88"'per week HAROLD TURNER Lasso one today 1 FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRVUNGHAM Ml 4-7500- "rt only takes a mThiite to 1 Get a BETTER DEAL" at jlOM MUSTANG,^ T^i^E OVER PAY-! i' John McAuliffe Ford jl945^FdRD~3ALAX'lE~50^HARD-: i TOP, REa^BLACK^^NYL TOP,] 1 430 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 1 19« FORD «ALAXtE SOOCONVERT-1 ible, power steering and brakes. ' ”100150" 'motor" SALE*r’ ‘ 190 W. Walton FE 4-4854 i automatic, FULL PRICE *1195 at 1 Autorama 1945 MUSTANG HARDTOP, COUPE,! metallic burgandy. V* automatic, new premium Good Year tires, ^alr- » MOTOR SALES 1 Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER 2635 Orchard Lake Rd. 682-44U 1 Mile West of Telegraph BIRMINGHAM 1966 Ford' i auto sales I Tn it n u i ^59 Ot Elizabeth Loke Rd. LTD 4-Door Hardtop ! FE 8-4088 '.L2!?„y' * GO!! HAUPT PONTIAC larkston 3-5566 $2295 BEATTIE 1962 PLYMOUTH automatic, | ______:ar at Bank Rates. i $895 ! I BIRMINGHAM ;*40 S. WOODWARD _ Ml 7-3214 BEFORE YOU buy! STOP AND I94S CATALINA SPORT COUPE, — power steering, brakes, hydromal-Jc^2250. Call 451-3*32. V*, 1945 vWfURA 4 DOOR HARDTOP, No; 7000 ml., double power, more #x-■ tras, like new, *2400. MA ^2*20. 1945 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, Power steering, brakes. , excellent condition. 42«-l744. ! choose from. > . 100 1 w purchased r FORD DEALER Since 1 On Dixie In Waterford at the double Stoplight OR 3-1291 GM GM LUCKY AUTO Gala McAnnally's Aul tuna Grand Opening, a Sales our big city block lar makes • '. WIda Track _____or _ FE 3-7*34 1963 VALIANT Convertible. Beautifut red finish 1945 PONTIAC Bonnevllla convtrtl-ble, red finish, while fop, red bucket seats, automatic console. top. Radio, heater, 4 cylinder w . 1 c SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin FE 84525 - Across from Pontiac Stale Bank SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin FE 84525!» from Pontiac Slate Bank ; H 1966 Ford Galaxie 500 Hardtop $1095 BIRMINGHAM CHRVSLER-.Plymouth 5. Woodward _ __MI^^-32Ui PLYMOUTH CONVERTIBLE,! ke over payments. 4*2-3440 alter Pontiac rl K FOR NORM DANIELSON $2395 BEATTIE 1945 PLYMOUTH S#>ORTS FURY, ai^. 52,000. 4^-M22. _ _ _ 1959 PONtiAC 4 OOOTt WAGON, 1940 STAR CHIEF, 4 *3^ FE 2-0953, 9 V940 CATALINA, A DOOR SEDAN. _yoor^s Rd. CONDITION, ■'■SHELTON WILSON Pontiac Cadillac 1945 GRAND PRIX WITH VINYL top, 12,000 miles, f -- consl^M 1957 MERCURY CONVERTIBLE - g and braktv 1959 MERCURY, REASONABLE.' PONTIAC CATALINA 2 DOOR -- - - - ..„.'dtop. A quality --- '”* 1959 MERCURY WAGON, NEEDS engine - --------------------- •_ *50. 45I-3047. _ _ i Radio, 1940 CdMET,“2 'obOR. NO'rust, makes *250. FE 5-2510 between 4 and 7 * 1945 PONTIAC LtMANNS CONVERT-Ible, ligt blue, console, radio, v"“-walls, Dowtr steering and " LOW ml., *2250. 424-4445._______ l'944* GRAND PRl'X, AIR CONDI- ll^d. 2,000 mj., 451-^7.________ I'sslon' 1944 PONTIAC WAGON. OVERHEAD *597 *5.95 JyA'' KING KEEGO Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just east ot Oakland ^1964 CHRYSLER New Yorker 4 door Hardtop, $ave HOMER HIGHT rates. And a real Bargin at on $1895 BIRMINGHAM CRYSLER - PLYMOUTH q S WOODWARD 1745 5. Telegraph 's Ford Dealer, OL 1-9711. TRANSMISSION, ______________AO 10 AND HEATER AND WHITE-WALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments ot *7.72. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. I MUST DISPOSE ; Fastback. No weekly. Call I F THIS 1943 FORD '"'scott, 333-7*43. ~--|l943'/x FORD, 2 DOOR, HARDTOP, KESSLER S I ‘ Motor, Inc. On M24 In Oxford. Michigan OA 8-2528 -SPORT CARS at GRIMWALDI IMPORTED BMC Pre Vacation Fun Time Sale 1966i The Fabulous New Austin MG Sports Sedan H©al©y Two K). Choose From One Red and One Black Sprint Roadster Seat bells, whitewalls, healer. Red Finish — and Ready Full Price truly fine car. $1799 $1699 POE (Only at Grimaldi) Parts and Service Bank Rat©s Is now under our new Service Director Tom Kennedy. HI* 20 yeirs experience Is ■ guarantee of aatlstectlon to our customers. Easy T©rms N©w MGB Roadster $2444 (Only at Grimaldi) Our New Service Facility It now near completion —Pontiac's Authoriz©d D©al©r— GRIMALDI IMPORTED 900 OAKLAND AVE. DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Sales and Service I _______ OA *1400 JOIN THE DODGE REBELLION Prices slashed •'all 44's now i Hunter Dodge, 499 S. Hunter nea 15 Ml., Birmingham. 447-0955. ;E 2 DOOR HARDTOP. !, automatic transmission, ater, tutona finish. A real r that Is ready to roll ’KING AUTO SALES M59 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 8-4088 REPOSSESSION 1944 FORD "XL" CONVERTIBLE. $11.83 WEEKLY. — ----- ____ _______ MONEY DOWN. ALL CREDIT APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED. CALL MR. SCOTT, 333-7*43. LLOYD'S._ GM ___SEEJOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525 Across fr^ Pontiac State Bank_ rM4 ‘FORD“CUSTOM V-S; STICK, Interior, AM-FM walls, $1250. FE 8-6471. 1962 MERCURY 4 DOOR I 1 AUTO SALES MS9 at Elizabeth Lake F :i FE 8-4088 BOB BORST REPOSSESSION 1940 PONTIAC CATALINA, I RATES ON BA' ------- Pontioc-GMC-Tempest "Same location 50 Years" KEEGO HARBOR_______ 3^52*, SPARTAN._____________ 1940 PONTIAC, 2 DOOR HARDTOP. -----K 3-HM- REPOSSESSION 1945 MUSTANG, FOUR SPEEDS, *13.13 WEEKLY. NO MONEY DOWN. ALL CREDIT APPLICA- 1966 Ford LTD 2-Door Hardtop With 352 V* engine, radio, heal Crusamalic, i-------- $2995 BEATTIE 'Your FORD DeWlER Since 193( On Dixie lA Waterford >- 1941 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, ■ ir hardtop, come* with full po -;Fstat© Storag© '109 S. East Blvd. FF 3-7161 nrtenis ot aio.vi. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_________Ml _<:7500 1945 MERCURY 2-OOOR HARDTCIP 1943 PONTIAC C 945 MUSTANG HIGH PERFORM-ance. Hurst 4 tpeed. Posltractlon. Other goodies. Burgandy with black vinyl top. After 4, 343-0513. 1965 Ford Country Sedan OSCAR'S MOTOR SALES "DISCOUNT LOT" -15% Discount on All Qars-—We Handle Financing— No $ Down - Low Weekly Payments ! MUSTANG Basa $2187 Disc. Price $1843 ■ CHEVY $497 $'423 1 PONTIAC $697 $ 593 1 OLDS $727 $ 633 ' PONTIAC Wagon $596 $ 493 1 COMET $497 $ 428 : CORVAIR Monza OSCAR'S MOTOR DISCOUNT HOUSE 448 S. Saginaw FE 2-2541 $2995 BEATTIE IMF 1965 Ford Fairlane 500 Hardtop with twMIght turquoise finl matching Interior, inappy V* wl itriUght stick shift, radio, heati whitewalls. A nict car for on *79 down, financing Balance Only - $1677 "It only takes a minute i Get a BItTER DEAL" i John .McAuliffe Ford KEEGO Pontioc-GMC-Tempest "Same location 50 Years" ______KEEGO HARBOR GM ! Grand Opening, to 100 cars ot r models to select SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525 2 PdNTIAC CATALINA 2 GM COME TO THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 100 Top Quality, one-owner new car trades to choose from power iteering, brake*, 2 sk'’b6b burke 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525 trom Pontiac State WHERE YOU EXPECT MORE ... AND GET IT 65 Mt. Clemens At Wide Track FE 3-7954 1943 CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, auto., power steerino and brake*, rebuilt engine, 421 •Is, *1400. 4733772._ 1943 PONTIAC STARCHIEF 4 DOOR Bitap. Power brake* and t‘— __ I. Exc. condition. OR 3-9134. iW3 324'TEMPEST "4 DOOR. WITH ■r steering and alr-conditloning. very good condition. S*75. Bloomfield Car — FE 4-4 < 1944, HYDROMATIC, Ing and brakes. Power (hitewalls, radio, tinted glass. Weal Pontiac popular makes 1944 Catalina convertibla wItt BOB BORST )S 4 DOOR WITH V* EN-nd automatic transmission. near you can own awn. Full prica |uat KING AUTO SALES M59 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 8-4088 1942 OLDS STARFIRE CONVERT- KEEGO Pontioc-GMC-Tempest "Sama kicallon 50 Years" KEEGO HARBOR K FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Pontiac Cadillac 1964 GRAND PRIX Ing, Dateggtng group, trI-poiMr. California goM color. 1-ownar, ex-cellent condition. 335-5414. GM Junt Grand Opening, a city bi^i; SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525 Across trom Pontiac State Bank 1966 Pontiac Catalina 4-Door Sedon with radio, heater, automatic, power steering, brakes, whitewalls, $2995 BEATTIE 'Your FORD DEALER Sines 1930" On Dixie In Waterford at the double stoplight OR 3-1291 1942 RAMBLER STATION WAGON WITH STANDARD SHIFT TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments ot *14.8*. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. '1965 RAMBLER (|kmericah 330 4-door sedan. Automatic transmission, radio, heater, white-wall tires, seat belts. Like new. A 1-owner Birmingham New Car Trade. Full Price $1395, Low Bonk Rates. Many more to choose from at Village Rambler 666 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 I THE POyTlAC PljESS. MONDAY, MAY 30, 1966 e—11 —Television Programs- PragNHmfwnlMIvilaHomlMvdlntiiteeoliifflnarawblMlfodKingewlHiMilneH^ ' a-WJIK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, T-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 36-WTvi AFTERNOON IP- 12:N (2) News, WdOher, Sports (4) Jeopardy (7) Donna Reed (9) Razzle Dazzle (50) Dlekory Doc 12:30 (2) Search for T(«norrow (4) Post Office (7) Father Knows Best (9) Take 30 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Love of Life (4) Match Game (7) Ben Casey NATIONAL GOLF DAY, 4:00 p.m. (4) Round of Cham-, pions pits U.S. Open champ Gary Player against PGA I titlist Dave Marr from Akron, Ohio. Winning pro will be setting “target score” for amateur golfers across the country. ... (9) Movie: er” (1963) Rory Calhoun, Corinne Calvet. (50) TV Hour of Stars 1:25 (2) News (4) Doctor’s House Call 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Let’s Make a Deal 1:55 (4) News 2:00 (2) Password , (4) Daiys of Our Lives (7) Confidential for Women (50) People Are Funny 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7J A Time for Us (50) Holiday 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (M) Captain Detroit 8:25 (2) (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say (7) Nurses (9) Swingin’ Time 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) (Special) National Golf Day (7) Never Too Young (50) Lloyd Thaxton 4:25 (7) Arlene Dahl 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action Is (9) Fun House 5:00 (4) George Pierrot (7) News, Sports (50) (Special) Horse Race I (56) French Chef | 5:30 ( 50) Club Mello (56) What's New m:*t 4) Here's carol Duvall 5:45 (7) Network News I BASEBALL, 6:00 p.m. ‘Powder Riv- f at Atlanta in cbI(orcast. TV Features Sfory of the '500' Dodgers clash with Braves ^ SPECTACLE IN RACING, 7:30 p.m. (50) History of Indianapolis Speedway is examined. INDIANAPOUS ’60, 8:30 p.m. (50) Role of behind-the-scenes men at Indianapolis is explored. 500 MILES TO (K), 9:30 p.m. (50) Film highlights of today’s Indianapolis 500 are shown. 6:55 (2) Editorial, News 7:00 (4) Today (7) Three Stooges 7:05 (2) Network News 7:30 (2) Happyland 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo Big Theater 8:30 (7) Movie: “His Brother’s Wife” (1936) Robert Taylor, Barbara Stanwyck 8:45 (56) English VI 8:00 (9) Morgan’s Merry - Go Round 9:00 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Living (9) Romper Ro«n 9:10 (56) Let’s Read 9:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (56) American History 9:55 (4) News i (56) Spanish Lesson 10:00 (2) I Love Lucy I (4) (Color) Eye Guess I - (9) Hercules 10:10 (56) Scientific World 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk I (9) Window on the World 110:SO (56) Spanish Lesson 11:00 (2) Divorce Court (4) (Color) Morning Star (7) Supermarket Sweep (9) Luncheon Date 11:20 ( 56) What’s New 6:00 (2) News, Weather, Sports u.30 (4) (Color) Paradise Bai (4) Color Special) Base- (7) Dating Game ball: Los Angeles vs. At-,. (9) Hawkeye lanta (7) (Color) Movie: “Hon-' AFTERNOON do” (1954) John Wayne. Ward Bond, James Amess l2:«* (2^) News, Weather, Sports (9) Dennis the Menace ! (4) (Color) Jeopardy (50) (Special) Horse Race (7) Donna Reed (56) Friendly Giant 1 (9) Razzle Dazzle 6:15 (56) Chadren^s Hour I (50) Dickoiy Doc 6:30 (2) (Color) Network Newsl2:3« (2) Search for Knowledge (9) Marshal Dillon ' (Color) Post Ofice (50) Little Rascals (7) Father Knows Best (56) Museum Open House* (91 Take 30 7:00 (2) Dobie GilUs ||?:35 (M) Spanish Lesson TONIGHT (9) Movie; "In Old Sacramento” (1946) William Elliot (56) International zine 7:30 (2) To Tell the Truth (7) 12 O’clock High (50) (Special) Spectacle in Racing 8:00 (2) I’ve Got a Secret (56) Great Books 8:30 (2) (Color) Lucille Ball (7) Jesse James (50) (Special) Indianapolis ’66 (56) Challenge of (Change 8:55 (9) News 9:00 (21 (Color) Andy Griffith (4) (Color) Network News (Time is approximate) (7) Shenandoah (9) Show of the Week (56) U.S.A. 9:30 (2) (Color) Hazel (4) (Color) News, Weather, Sports (Time is approximate) (7) Peyton Place (50 ) 500 Miles to Go (56) Japan: Enchanted Isles 10:00 (2) Mike Douglas (4) (Color) Run for YofOT Life (7) Avengers (9) Don Messer’s Jubilee (50) (Color) Talent Scouts 10:30 (9) (Special) World of His Own IhOO (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports (50) Horse Racing 11:30 (2) M 0 V i e: “Sorrowful Jones” (1949) Bob Hope, Lucille Ball. (4) (Color) Johnny Car- 12:4512) Cririding Light 12:50 ( 56) Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Love of Life ^) (Color) Match Game (7) Ben Casey (9) Movie; “Lightning Strikes Twice” (1951) Richard Todd, Ruth Roman (7) Movie: “Concert of Intrigue” (1945) Brigitte Bardot ) (9) Sentimental Agent 11:45 ( 50) Jockey Standings 11:50 (50) Sports Desk 12:30 (9) Window on the World 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ 1:15 (7) News 1:30 (2) (4) News, Weather (7) After Hours 2:15 (7) Dragnet (50) Hovr of Stars 1:10 (56) Children’s Hour 1:25 (2) News (4) Doctor’s House Call (56) Young Artist 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) (Color) Let’s Make a Deal (56) American History 1:55 (4) News 2:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) Days of Ou^ Lives (7)* Confidential for Women (50) People Are Funny 2:20 ( 56) Safety Circle 2:25 (56> Book Parade 2:30 (2) (Color) House Party (4) Doctors (7) Time for Us (50) (Color) Wanderlust 2:50 ( 56) Spanish Lesson 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Captain Detroit 3:25 (2) (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Nurses (9) Swingin’ Time 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) (Color) Bozo (7) Never Too Young (50) Movie: “An Annapolis Story” (1955) John Derek, Diana Lynn, Kevin McCarthy 4:25 (7) (Color) Arlene Dahl 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action Is (9) Fun House 4:55 (4) EUot’s Almanac 5:00 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) News, Weather, Sports (56) J a p a n; Enchanted Isles 5:30 (50) Club Mello (56) What’s New 5:45 (7) Network News 5:55 (4) Here’s Carol Duvall Land Aiwwr to >rr»lou» Punla ACKOaO 39 Novel aPlot of ground 12 Sandanc tree J* rSS“J «ArtU"oUce ISUkaaatreak 16 UounUinoua aODewrt gardeha 21 Secret agent cuckoo fami mily lant nreATt «0 Moistened (comb, form) “Joo^U 32 Feminine name 1 Valley (poet.) 33 Prevaricator 2 “Emerald ble” 34 Negative reply 3 Expanse of (slang) natural scenery S Dull pain 37 Outside (eomb. 6 Sudden attack form)______________7 Unit of work 6 Creek holy . mountain 9 Meadows 10 Stream in France 11 Spreads for 17 fur 19 Old EnglisB gold piece 22 Main blood artery 23 Ancient Persia] 24 Eager 26 Open country 27 .Speed contest 29 Large land 30 Unclosed 31 Salamander 34 Trap 38 European river 44 Greek letter 46 European capital 47 Melt, as snow 48 Whetstone 49 Send fortb Newer Drug Typesi Harmful in Excess 4 By Science Service CHICAGO - Seven of the newer nonbarbiturate sedative-hypnotic drugs have been reported to cause states of intoxication or physical dependence ' both, if abuseid. Like barbiturates or alcohol, excessive use of one or more of these drugs can cause car accidents, inpury by falling, interference with occupational skills and violent behavior. Gems of Ed's 'Shew' Career Spdffighfed by Columnist By EARL WmSON NEW YORK—Broadwayites like to tell the story about Ed Sullivan and the Uon tamer. Ed told the lion tamer, one minute before he was going on camera: "We’ve got to cut you down to threes minutes. Do you understand?” “I understand,” replied the lion tamer, “but ^ how am I going to explain it to the lion?” 41 The drugs are meprobamate, glutethimide, ethchlorvynol, eth-inamate, methy[Miylon, chlordi-azepoxide and diazepem. Dr. Carl F. Essig of the National TnstlfuTe Iff Menfff diction Research Center, Lexington, Ky., reports. Ed Snllivan gags are the rage becaase he was recently named Man of the Year by the March of Dimes and was the fall 119 for the Circus Saints & Sinners. Comedians are notoriously fond of their own material. Not one can be found who would admit he should do less than 20 minutes. WILSON It is conmioa for jMmcdiana and ielLhow Sullivan , - 'Greetings' * I From 1959 [ ruined” their act by shortening it. But Julia Meade, who did commercials on Ed’s show for nine years, says, “Ed’s a brilliant editor of comedy material. “I can tell you,” Julia said, “as one who witnessed many rehearsals, that some pf those comedy acts didn’t deserve to be on as long as Ed allowed them to be on. A bit battered for the trip and seven years late, a postcard, nevertheless, arrived Saturday ; with a message for the Scrib-| ner family of 95 Douglas. | Mailed by Harold Scribner, now of 337 Newport the card was postmarked Jan. 29, 1959 at 7 p.m. in Santa Rosa, New! Mexip. Scribner sent the card j on his way to Mexico. j He got back four years ago. The card arrived Saturday. j — Radio Programs- WJR(760) WXYZd 270) CKLW(800) WWJ(950) WCARd 130) WPONQ 460) WJBKQ 500) WHFI-FM(94.7) TONIOHT News. Sports WWJ, News WXYZ, News, Sports WCAR, News. Joe Bacerella WPON, News, Sports WHFI. Uncle Jey Show «:1S-WWI. Sports i:30-WXYZ, Business WWJ, Review l:04-WWJ, News, Phonp WXYZ, Ed Morgan WCAR,- W(fWI, R6H irtsT WJBK, Musk WJR, TIgers/Kansas City A *:00-WWJ. News, Sports WHFI, Jack Fuller I0:»4-WXYZ, Denny Taylor i:W-WJR, Music Hall WWJ, Farm News CKLW, News, Bud Davies YSTPON, News, Arfidna «:3«—WWJ, Roberts 7:S4-WHFI, Almanac WJR, News. Musk Hall WPON, News. Bob Lawrence l:(B-WJR, News, Sunnyside l:»-WJR, Musk Hall f:0B-WJR. News WCAR, News, Sanders WWJ News, Riley WHFI, Uncle Jay CKLW, Joe Van V:1S-WJR, Open House f:34-WJR, Lee Murray )0:4»-WJR, News, Good WWJ, News, Ask Neighbor WXYZ, Breakfast Club WJBK, Ner- —--------- WPON, Ne 1:at-WJR, TUESDAY AFTERNOON CKLW, News, Dave Shafer WXYZ, Steve Lundy, Musk WCAR, News. Delzell WCAR, News, Dave Lock- “I remember one act that was so bad Oiat Ed told them they had to cut down to practically nothing, or he would just pay them off without letting them do anything. “He was justified. The act was so bad that had it gone on as it wanted to go on it would not be where it is today!” Jack Carter’s one of Ed’s favorites who can say anything ; about Ed, and does. “I wanted to get a nice Christmas present for Ed,” Jack h^s been known to say. “But what can you give a man who has nothing?” “Talent and ability go down the drain, but Ed Sullivan goes ortiforever,” Jack says. “Next week we are going to have right here on this stage,” Carter mimics, “World War II“. . . with the original cast. Only right here on this stage, we’re going to have a new ending... WE LOSE!” ^ A small library could be put together of the gags that Carter, Jack p. Leonard, Alan King, Henry Youngman, Joey Adams, Milton Berle aiKl others have used over the years. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Oh what is So bare as a dame In June?” (We thought of this years ago and it still goes.) EARL’S PEARLS: Richard Burton in Rome co-{H*odudng 'The Taming of the Shrew” said the photographers don’t chase him and Liz Taylor so much now: “I guess I’ll have to start some scandal to keep those rascals happy. One of these days I’ll have to take out Sophia Loren.” Maybe they call those peek-a-boo dresses on those long, skinny models “Peek-a-boo” because after you take one peek, you boo . . . That’s earl, brother. (TM Hill Syndkaft, Inc.) 1:04-WWJ, I I, Call k WJR, News, Elliot FItId CKLW, Nawf, Dava Shatar I:I4-WJR. Naws, LInklattar WPON, Naws, Pata Ladd WXYZ, Oava Prince WWJ, Naws, Call Kandall :!aa-WCAR. Naws, Bacaralla Ontario Crash Kills 3 CHATHAM, Ont. (AP) - A two-car collision near Chatham Saturday night killed William Genevich, 55, and his wife, Margaret, 51, of Detroit, and Robert Bruce Wellman, 20, of London, Ont. TV SERVICE COLOII-BLACK t WHITE , Lu^i IIJI RADIO«td SWEETS mivisioN WKC AIR CONDITIONERS and FANS at SPECIAL LOW PRICES! HOME OF FINEST BRAND NAMES 108 N.SAGINAW-FE 3-7114 Into a modem city of one BuHiott people must come daily, to maintain its metabolism, 3.000 tons of coal, 2,800 tons of oil, 2,700 tons of natural gas, 1.000 tons of motor fuel and 625.000 tons of water. TUESDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:26 (2) News 6:25 (2) Sumnfer Semester 6:30 (4) Classroom (7) Funews ANOTHER PRODUCT ESKimO 10" ONE-SPEED Oscillating Fan • ON-OFF SWITCH • DESIGNED FOR MORE AIR MOVEMENT • CAN BE MOUNTED ON WALL • NO RADIO OR TV INTERFE^JENCE • GUARANTEED____________ No Money 4986 ESKimO TWO-SPEED BREEZE BOX > TWO-SPEED PUSH BUTTON SWITCH • COOLS UP TO FIVE ROOMS. • CAN BE USED AS WINDOW FAN • GUARANTEED IMOW beautiful furniture that cools IN BEDROOMS • DENS • NURSERIES • APARTMENTS Furniture-Fashio'ned Coolerator. 8600 B.T.U. ROOM AIR CONDITIONER • Automatic Thermostat • 115-Volt Operation • 2-Speed Fan • 4-Way Air Direction Control • Fresh Air Intake • Permanent Washable Filter • Tilt-Out Magnetic Front BUILT-IN EZY-MOUNTfor easy installation! NOW ONLY PAY ONLY NO MONEY DOWN l|788 PARK FREE IN WKCS LOT AT REAR OF STORE-FREE SERVICE-FREE WARRANTY C—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 80, 1966 You Can Count on Us — Quality Costs INo More at Sears liliiif Ilnurs: 9 until 9 Open Q ^ p. m. TOMORROW Open 9 Until 9 Tomorrow Dusters in ccrtttm 299 B« Smart, Be Thrifty ... Tmnmrow and Every Dayl Yon Can Be Snre of Extra Sarin«i at Sean! Reg. 96 Cotton printed dnsten with slit on sides or plain colon with hand smocked yoke and self-fabric tie at neck. Assorted colon in small, medium or large sizes. Shop early for W selection. Tuesday only! lAmgnie Dept., Main Floor hoys* boxer longies Boxer cotton deckt. p._ py mt. FnU elirtic waul. “**• Atmrted colon. In boys* knit shirts Reg.Sl.39 elierl^leeved nhiiti. Jr _ AeMtted colors and fj 'T C patlrriM. 3 to 6x. j/ S infaat$’ Dept,, Main FUtor TUESDAY ONLY!, no phone orders COoDo’s or deliveries* ^except large items Open 9 'III I TOMORROW ONLyTI \ limited quantities-tuesday only Men’s Regular $2.47 and $2.98 Dress Shirt Sale 177 •L eacli each ■ay, "CHARGE TT* at Sen* Mved ihlr onW) in V ____________ pocket. Sc colon availriile. limit 8. Shop Tae*> day 9 to 9. Men’s FmmUhingt, Mtdn Floor Lightweight “Pound-a-Pair” men’s casuals 5?I Regular $8.99 ler nppcrt. Sprinn Sea I, and heela. Siaes Tn to Sale! Boys’ All-Cotton Saddle-Backs » 3-^6 Charge It or 2.22 ea. Sanforixed-PIus. Machine wathablo and jnst tnmble dry for best reanita. Tapered for that long lean look. Heavy wei^t IIV^ ounce twilL f 6 to 12. Also in larger sisea, i 26-29. Bojt’Wenr.Maim Floor .................'i^.. Shop Until 9 P.M. TOMORROW save on children’s sandals Regular $2.99 IV Charge It Childs* sandals with composition soles. Choice of red, white or brown in sizes 7 to 3. Buy them in different colors, stock up now at this low ^thrifty Tuesday Price. Shoe Dept., Main Floor TOMORROW ONLY! TOMORROW ONLY! ___ MM Automatic 20-Inch RoUabout Fan Reg. $56.95 44“ Changes air in average room, in just 2 minutes! 3 electrically reversible speeds. Sleet. Dept.," Reg. S7.99 Stainleaa Steel 24-Pc. Tableware SeU 4“ Cham. It Service for 6 in choice of 3 aimilar patteriM, Shelby, Elaiim or Dorian. 24 pieces. Hoiu«ivopr«».tfaiii B bomb-scarred embassy in Saigon to the k. was bagged 1st Cavalry command post at A UkI he the U.S. flag wiU be flown at half-staff until' ed to» From the battalion level up, brief, noon^ Ices will be held in tents, huts and open df such places as Cu Chi, Nha Trang and B * * * / i police, “They will have as many of the tro<^»s j g possible under combat conditions,” said J. G. Gessell of Rochester, N.Y., actin(L chaplains in Viet Nam., . q BRIEF CEREMONY 2^ At Tan Son Nhut Airport where im quarters is located, the top U.S. coitrj Gen. William C. Westmoreland, will spt teremony to be closed by a bugler soi"^ A year ago there were c ^ Nhut each time a new flag-draped'v off to “Let’s make a deal, Dad.. You eat my spinach and ru eat^oqr ice cream.” Green is for remembrance.’Yt is also for the imm^iacy of Viet Nam where men still move out o0patrol in furtherance of the dream^hat Now the steady shipment ( hardly noticed. grow Memorial Day may somO^y b. just that - a • ^ day for memories m a time when the world is at ^ indicati*®^ peace. rodijher di^s ahead. '3 '