The Weather THE PONTIAC PRESS Horn# Edition PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1963 —40 PAGES inJtionH VOL. 121* tfo. 175 7 Ok, 18 Dea More Utah Miners Saved MOAB, Utah ilh — Five more in surprisingly good condition in;treatment. And one of'them, that * fcept 'out deadly gasses rescue operations were suspended trapped miners were rescued ,the same deep tunnel from which Grant Eslick, said, “Sure, I’m while they awaited resendT."Thy trouble with air lines needed alive and in good condition last the other two escaped Wednes-'ready to go back to mining." f When Paol MpKinnev and rwby the Workers. a “ -*• — —purst > * * * wags- The final toll was'18 lulled. down b, in explosion. w Wl Ita uS^i10"81''1 “Wy Wf* **d heard of nothing Un- emotionally: ‘‘Five survivors investigation starting Monday. , I have been found inthe east state official said: “We’U sub-i^*,L,ofJhe t««inel and away fromjProP**- rmgfeatures ga Drain testimony By DICK SAUNDERS Financing of .the Clinton River drain held the spotlight in testimony last night as the second session of a hearing into charges against suspended City Manager Robert A. Stierer. Most ei the questions from the City Commission table came from Commissioner ChaMes H. Moon, a bonding attorney, and Stierer and Metcalf asserted Colburn Metcalf, a consulting that the Michigan State Highway engineer, providing the an- Department still hasn’t deter-swers. mihed the nature or cost Of re- The second and thhxl of six P®*8 of ^ CUnton . __ . . . .. River for the future MM free- charges were covered by testi-*y Harmon with Stierer, Charles were: mony with the .third slated to .start at' 7 tonight at City Hall. Major developments Jast night Stierer said the second charge was not only false but inaccurately stated. Metcalf supported his claim of fame- ! shaft. The men are walking out poena and question everyonewho;tU*Mast. ' 1 ‘ j •*thatdrift!” might havg anything to say.'*_] Hanna said the trio refused Move Follows Reports! Then up they cirae by' the lift,t The last five survivop owed W* W® crew heading to-‘ !grimy hut smiling, in dueh- good their lives to ike first two and w®rd‘ **** rear **** of'Exile Incursions^*’ condition there was little need of their own makeshift barricades Criticism arose yesterday when] HAVANA m -» Prime Minister Fidel Castro’s government put its armed forces here on a state of ilert today and posted bigger concentrations of soldier* and militiamen at. strategic points ji^li^Havana. Armed forces had been put into “state of preparation” Thurs- day, but the military measures were reported then only outside .the capital and not In Havana. , The new moves fallowed intelligence reports of possib(e incursions by anti-Castro;exiles against installations on tfie north Coast. According to military iatelligence, these- raid* would be somewhat larger than the hit-and-raa attacks made by exiles recently. j I Moon testified that a $750,000 „ 'loan to' get the stalled Clinton SourcrosaidThimsdaynightthe 1 River drain under construction;1®* ^ [wouldn’t tihve to be paid back day^The mimary was-understood [next year, and the city was to be watehtag particularly for; jaware—of this -before fflingai?y attack fom Nicarague qr 'charges against §tierer. other Central-American nations . Chnrge N,. i b.wi « “ claim such a loan would, havo; w . , r% #._m taken almost all funds for public UNUSUAL ACTIVITY Wantf 30-Day S t a 11 improvararoU ta m | ^ ^ Rica, r* Hi STierer Hearings ! ■*.+' * iports circulated of unusual activ- The second charge stated thatfe M»ng Cuban exiles in Costa . Stierer demonstrated irresponii- ^ca ^ Njcw:ag|a. Manuel Ar^ Pontiac’s reputation, already^^ •}„ recommending in t h e *“*1®. mfugee leader who partici- a casualty m the controversy (SDrin-lfl62 tiiatT?.,citv ob^pated in the abortive Bay of Pigs over the suspension of City Man- ff",/ ^jf to clean out Md inva3ion AprU 1961, arrived in ager Robert A. Stierer, will’onlylst®aiahten the Clinton River for'Ma"agu*’ ^Niceregua, to confer be wrecked further if the hearing ^^ Z ara^ «i U>i‘h anti'Ca8tr0 ^ founu continues, in the opinion of CecU ooo wtaen such work ul the usuali8*^ 1 Mullinix.. obliaation of the - hiahwav The Cuban command apparent- w * * A: ly braped for a repetition of a re- * * * commissioner, who later agreed J . IT . 7.7. . ., - ’>■" a-? - B r«*nt series of hit-and-run raids.! State records skew II inspections had been made since May M, INI. Three were investigations of fatal accidents. Here also was a fourth aceideut. The U.S. Bureau of Mines said it also probed the four fatal accidents, and said three were preventable. The bureau' said me fourth, involved an outburst of rock, which “is hot entirely con-trolable.'’ In Washington, the Bureau of Mines ordered a federal probe and sent a team herd. Gov. George P. Clyde promtoed a state investigation. 'Foul Play' Considered inBovaHunt IN GOOD SHAPE-Three of the miners who were rescued from the bottom of a 2,700-foot Moab, Utah, mine shaft can be seen in this picture. Apparently in good condition, they were wrapped in blankets and'taken to the hoepital, where they greeted their loved ones, -who had. stood the- long vigil >t the mine entrance. CECIL MULLINIX Most Offices to Be Closed s The chairman of the city’s police trial board said so publicly last night , at the second install* ment of the city’s hearing on 1 charges of incompetency, insubordination and irresponsibilty [against Stierer. “Let*s nor blacken the name of Pontiac any more with hearings,” said Mullinix, former I president of UAW Local 153.. -He spoke'out suddenly from the to perform this work.” The third charge was that Stierer,' in July 1913, recommended the city borrow I7MN9 with interest to get conktrup-tion of the Clinton River drain under way. Also, that the “elaimed. dire necessity” for the loan didn’t Police Seek Sadist Jaycee Who Butchered Girlsi Ends Sept. 7 SHEPPTON, Pa. tOPB — A television camera today recorded “what appears to be a hay hi the same underground chamber [occupied for 15 days by two res-icurf miners. District A tty .Harry Lighthouse rrived at tilt scene to "Ms If itoM to any fowl play fa he to-vestigated.” Lighthouse’s appearance came as rescuers prepared to lower a volunteer more than 300 feet in an effort1 to find Louis Bova, ] trapped' since Aug. 13. by a cave- The last occurred Aug. 19 at aj ISi £ S NEW Y0RK ,iW_A Mdist was sou*ht todayas the| charter Am*ndment eries and faefories. [slayer who’butchered two career girls in. fheir ^part- Petition Deadline Set - ------ ment. . L . Road'Toll-Hits 1,099* Police apparently had no soUd clues, but they leaned The Pontiac Junior Chamber of to the theory that the killer was the man who had made Commerce Charter Amendment . With few exceptions, stores and businesses in the Pontiac [midst'of another capacity crowd area will be closed Monday, j at City HaU hs the hearing re-Labor Day. sumed following a 15-minute re- Government offices also will cess, be closed. i *’ * * Pontiac State Bank, Comma- [ Asked afterwards if .he thought nity National Bank and First the hearing, jf.continued might’ Federal of Oakland announced i bring out issues causing more that their offices will not open damage to Pontiac’s reputation and open the perimeter road (Continued on Page 2. Col. 31 r \ gan traffic accidents. onLaboijDay. Seeks Attention Ren. Griffin warns ; than already 'has been done-by publicity on the controversy, Mullinix said, ‘‘Yes.” But he declined to elaborate on what' those things might, be. ‘*1 beg the City Commission to declare a moratorium on this hearing for 39 days Md meet with the city manager and the people 'Involved,” he against labor crisis Im- j posed by Hoffa — PAGE •! 3. ' • - - / j Road Safety “Let's get together and iron this thing.out.” Afterwards, lie said, “I think a solution could be worked nut if | from home, auto club j i says — PAGE 39. everyone involved just sht down and .talked it over/ Cuba Visitors U.S. students- return [ fpom Cuba, mhoy/utter-ing praise t- PAMTNL_ [ Area-News ♦ Astrelagy ^ . - .Bridie . “ • • . Comics ........ Editorials Farm ft Garden I Markets . •; Obituaries I Sports^ .rCS-.. 1^- Theaters' -..■‘V; . I TV & Radio Programs 39 k Wilson, Earl ... 39 I Women’s Pages . * 1147 *1 23-27 I EAST UA^NGfUPri ^^Jobscene and threatening telephone calls to one of the j Committeeannounced today Aat ipolrce said today the 1963 traffic], “ . r . ... . v , Saturday. Sept. 7, is the last day mpnt muiM “imrm-rtinfpiv ^ ^®® ^^xuited' to 1,099.| VM^iins Ja n l C e Wylie,. _ . |to turn in petitions. ----?Lr lln a comparable period last year,[pretty blonile researcher,together with torn slripj of sheets! A Jaycee said the ^ Af,Ch ' for Newsweek magazine. [ Wylie, hrother of author Philipi door-tinioor campaign wonld ; Miss Wylie’s father, writer;wyUe, said Thursday he.knew of : *®“*!cted.,!S *** LMax Wylie, said he thought the[tW) crank phone calls to his H/!?!"nd vkumr jcallCr was “maybe a crazy kid [daughter, the last one about 10' Highlands subdivisions, next j who saw a pretty pair, of legs." days ago, and his wife thought Tuesday M P-“- ' i FOUND WEDNESDAY - 'there were three. ! Completed petitions must b& i ipu* Wiriio* 91 ★ : ★ turned in to charter amendment , The bodies of- Mws Wyhe^l . headquarters, 510 Community Na-i and Emily Hoffert, 22, werrfound! Wyhe said. tional Bank Buildinv bv Srat 7 Jin their $250-a-month apartment, “The caller said to Janice. ’You ^^* ^ be filed witif toe^citv by Wylie Wedhesday night. xail this ««nberfcjck^^ Detectives figure the ^ WM m An estimated 2,700 signatures! Iaftswer Jipve been secured to date with | “I’ll see if there to any foal piny to be Investigated^ Lighthouse said. “I’ve heard about seme puszUag, developments. I’m patting everyone on notice that there could possibly be sometbiag in my jnrbdictiMi.” H. Beecher Charmbury, state mines chief, said the television camera recorded what locked like the “entire body of a man” in the same chamber to which Dav|d Fellin and. Hairy Throng were trapped. They were rescued Tuesday bul Louis Bwuri—the third 'mbter trapped — was left behind, m P Weekend to Be Fair had been separated from tift Me other two by a wall of rubble and was last beard.Rom four days after the xave-inr' The Labor Day weekend will have fair skies tonight and tomorrow and mostly fair weather 'Sunday.- - -v<- • -^V-rV ,, A high of 73 to expected tomorrow, following a low of 56 tonight. Temperatures for the next five days will average five to eight degrees below the normal high of 78 aod low of 59. . day. Winds today are westerly at I- who got into the apartment by j 15-m.pJi., shifting to northerly at means unknown, killed Mto»4^"7”’a tn hej ,Tell the police:nearly.700 petitions still being dr-l Ex-Dean Jailed on Tax Charge the same speed tonight and Sat- Wylie first; tluit MtesBoffert jor^‘^. ^ ;rNe^^k'culat«d w ay‘ ■ arrived home to find the mar- Uj j,e again, try and keep ' The Jaycees requested that |: NFW York iapi iam«V ★ [ derer still there, and was killed ;him on ^ wjre so that the call those who have not signed pe- Undi {ormer(ju ner date with hipt so that he, on tMlr porch light next Taes- ]tod t0 x ^ V „. . Utitattow wiH total about tiac. At 2 p.m the temperaturh! Miss Hoffert’s body be picked uR.’^uUhe neyer, day evening il lhey live in the 5^,^ ^ cha^g. ** fe [one half an inch in scattered {stood at 72. clothed. The bodies were bound did.” 1 two areas to be covered deor- ; .. _* An early morning low of 60 wasi ... — .., .___, ____ [recorded today, in downtown Pon-1 Ml“ ^1 body was nude' •^*i to-door. \ U. S. District Judge Sylvester >J. Ryan ordered that the term He said the talks should include Police Chief Jooeph Koren, City Attorney William A. Ewart and -city officials along with and tftiL city commis- _ At the hearing, MwlHofr said he was speaking “on behalf *f the citizens of Pontiac,” and not for lay particular ffroap. “I’m not talking as chairman of the. trial board or «t>^tabQr representative,” he said later, but just as a citizen.” Mullinix said be had not taken sides in the dispute, but he-' wanted It to be laftetTfor good of Pontiac. i “These two subdivisions.” a ‘j,______.______ Jaycee spokesman explained, ^se^edimmediately. were selected because other areas have been well covered." . The charter amendment committee urged that completed petitions be turned in or the Jaycees contacted so that the petitions could be picked up. Additional volunteers tfe needed to take part in the ffaml door-to-door drive. Jaycees .hoped other service or fraternal groups might help Ont. “The sooner he serves the sentence, the better it will be for the defendant,” the judge aaid. GRIDIRON MA(JlC--Art Beatty (left) and Ed Legg appear ,4o be suspended in mid-air Tiy invisible wires during a Lake Orion High School football practice. Actually they are doing a “belly thumper" exercise. The players, dive forwgrd from a Some 7,500 to 8,000 signatures [are needed to quriify the pett-tims. »hich call fee', election a proposed change In the D*|tect*d a* election of city commissioners. n The p cjiiliikn «di anaendiBent would retain the present nomina- Landis, who had held high gh-sitions in the federal government, pleaded guilty Aug. 2 to a fit*, count information dunging that he failed to file “timely” income tax returns for the years llM through 1900. The taxes since have been peid. The defease, contended that Landis was so engrossed in pnh- ' [Uc,.aditos and the affairs af his persenal matters, including At * income tax retans. . The government contended that. standing position and land on their cheats and Stomachs. Over 1,200 Oakland County prep football players opened practice this week for the coming season. The first games will be Sept. 13. tion of commissioners by district,[Landis, 83, now a,New- York at- but allow voters throughout titojtbmey, had a gross city to vote for seven candidates, [$360,827.93 in the years one from each district. • (by fhe information. (by^toe I lilf m THB PQNT1AC PBB3& ^TmiPAY, AUGUST at, 1M8 K Says Rifts With Tito at ait End^'*y*A *___j. i£n i i. _.;^i „ _ “ *_ vj, ■ :r. i to Diem Palace Yugoslav President Tito stood by ready creating a heavenly king-dom with all its blessings, spirit- From Oar News Wires VELENJE, Yugoslavia—Soviet Premier Nildta S. Khrushchev to- _ , . ■_ ■• *» ?«*<■** JSSST Russian differeRoes at an aid. . * * ★ t In a speadi climaxing his cur-rent bury-the-hatchet visit to Yugoslavia, Khrushchev told a pared tut to announce the agree* ment pounded out jr. talks between Tito and himself. ★ ★ * * Waving his arms and jamming • pointed finger ip the air, the here that “The basic questions between ear parties and ear peo-ple have been solved.” lie Krsada leader said both satioas “are for joining ear efforts to fight against capttel- Kremlin leader also tore into Us Communist Chinese and Albanian The officially estimated crowd ill IMpg persons thundered its approval. They shouted, “Khrush- do chev ... Khrushchev.Khrush- gjj chev” la rhythmic chants while ual and material. Those who to goto heaven, let them go Khrushchev said of tbs Communist Chinese, who accused him of growing soft on capitalism and shying from revolution. BLASTS CHINESE Directing off-the-cuff remarks at Peking, Khrushchev stuck 'out his chin and said, “Some people who call themselves revohiUdn-aries are like priest who says working harder on earth, ha will get to the heavenly king- “We working' people are' Senate Action on lax Cut Is Doubled jorThis Year WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. George A. Sjnathers, D-Fla., said today ht doubts that the Senate will act an President Kennedy's tax cut bill this year. ’ ★ * ' *] Smathers, third-ranked Democrat on the Finance committee, told a reporter the long delay In the House on toe bill and the probability of a Senate tieup on dvfi rights legislation led-him to the conclusion. “Not long ago I thought it was a cinch to go through this year” he said in an interview, “but I’ve changed my mind.” SUPPORTED CUT Unlike the two higher-ranked Democrats on the committee, Chairman Harry F. Byrd, D-Va., and. Sen. Rumell B. Long, D-Ls., Smathers has strohgly supported a tax cut. He said in June, “I believe that the greatest single need in our economy today is for a substantial income, tax reduction at the earliest possible date. The key to the Senate tax situation is the civil rights bill, Smathers said. If debate on that measure starts as expected In Octobsr and is prolonged for many weeks, it will be impossible for the finance committee to make any headway with frorhaarings, he said. Smathers estimated the public hearlags on the tax cut might ran six to eight weeks, with additional time imaged for committee action on the measure. 2N WITNESSES Based oh past experience, the committee expects to hear about 200 witnesses on the bill. Byrd always has followed a policy of scheduling every applicant,. although he has asked some industries affected by a bill to conaoU- Normally, by meeting morning and afternoon, the committee Plane Debris Found in SeO stratotankers and 11 crewmea found a 10-mile-square “floating junkyard” of debris today hi the Atlantic 200 miles southwest of Bermuda, the Air Farce sail. There was no sip of rarviv-, are. \ Aa Air Force spokesman said plane paneling, life jackets, radio Ufa, engine covers, water farts ware bobbing to the water “Uke a floating junkyard." ‘ hears about 10 witnesses a day. But during the Civil rights fight it will be able to sit only in the morning and not even, then If the Senate convenes earlier than the usual noon meeting time. The finance committee now is expected to receive the bill in the Ways and Meant Committee it will call for a net income tax reduction of $10.5 billion in two stages, with the first scheduled to take effect Jan. lf 1004. Smoking Started Early LONDON (DPD. — The Nursing Times said yesterday a survey of 156 English schoolboys showed that 50 had. started smoking before they were 7. Eleven of the boys interviewed started smoking before they were 5. The Weather FettV. 8. Weather Bureau Report r*--'-'-' PONTIAC AND VIONITY-Partly cloudy this afternoon. Fair aad cooler tonight. Saturday lunay and cool. Low tonight 10. High tomororw 73. Winds westerly 8 to 15 miles today, becoming northerly 0 to II miles tonight and Saturday. tu»> la PaatUc Wind Telocity I m.p.h. _____j Vktdny nt 7:11 p.m. Ala tl*M Saturday et 6:57 » m. Moon «tU Jatun&y nt 3:06 • m. Mow rt«e« Prldtr at 4:43 p m. TkarnSar la Peallee ir T— i> rwMu Hlcboot temperature ......... Loweet Umperaturo Blykeet aad Loweet Teaiaeratareo TUe Date In tl Teen 67 In 1083 v , 43 In II Tharede;', Temperetare Chert -J »j Bey City 75 60 El Peso B B Detroit 77 61 Port Worth' ltl 76 Eecenebe 6* 56 HondtUltT *8 75 Flint 73 66 IndtenhpaHt W M Or. Rapldi 76 56 Jacksonville 60 73 fiWMw 67 60 Kehatl City 17 63 Jaekaon 73 68 Las Vegas Lanatng .74 66 Los Ansels Marquette (T 66 Louisville _ _ n s— 71 60 Memphla 03 75 m 68 67 Miami Bob. 88. 03 _ ■ Marie B 54 MKankM It 50 Traverse C. 77 03 Mpls., St P. 11 H - h i New Orleans 81 83 M New York 76 67 n to awhi ii 67 71 65 Phoenix 102 76 03 70 Pltuburxh. 83 (7 07 03 Pwtl d. Me. 67 00 •1 ■ at. UWU H 80 14 65 gTHaacUCO 64 67 BUmarek Brownavlll Buffalo Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dea^Molne iifcj ; NATIONAL WEATHER-Scattered showers and. thunder, showers are expected tonight in the southern Atlantic Coast araa, the east-Gulf Coast, northern And central Plateau, eastern (tec Valley aad the Pacific Northwest It trill he cooler in the toted!? jag north Atlantic Coast area, Ohio and Ten- were any secret-agreements. I'll l valleys, east Gulf Coast, northern Rains and Pacific Northwect It will be warmer hi the central Plains. In Hyannis Port, Mass., President Kennedy has “no plana at mt” to meet this fall with Ttto. White House sources, reporting this, de&bad to peculate whether such a meeting might be ar- ranged should Ttto come to the United States during the General Assembly meeting of the United Nations which begin Sept. 17, These sources said Mr did not knew whether Kennedy would make an appearance before the General Amiably. fo Diem palace! Community House Plans to Offer 27 Fall Courses Precaution Against U.S. Clash SAIGON, Sooth VktNam ‘.If there guarantee they were not1 in writ* ing.” Harmon then turned to a Pontiac Press article which He claimed was published’ the day of the . meeting, July 23, quoting Oakland County Drtin Commissioner Daniel Barry as saying there was $1 million in tlto 12-Town Drain project available for the Clinton River project. “Did you know die county had upwards of $1 million with which they could finance this $710,989 drain?’ ~ led. “No. I was not jure the money was available,” Stierer said, and read the opening sentence of the story- which stated the mohey was available “If the Ctty Commission is willing to issue tax anticipation notes.’’ ★ “Did you feel it was their (the county’s) problem or the cit/% problem, at the time?” Hannon asked. ‘JOINT PROBLEM’ “I felt it was a joint problem . . . I didn’t know at that time, for certtdn, that those funds would be available to the city, and neither did Mr. Barry, and neither did Mr. Moon, ami I think I ban tell you that you i*t know yet whether those funds are going to be available,’ Stierer asserted. “Well that may be trim, and you don’t knar ... how this court esse w going to come out,” Harmow replied. He Jhdbatod..Uii_ contractor was planning to -sue the drain commission- for work already performed. ★ Stierer said there “was a problem” but he didn’t have anything in writing from Barry to indicate a court suit. Moon later told Harmon bluntly that the city or county were in no way legally responsible. Then Harmon asked if Stiver thought the dty was In “a very good position financially to pledge tax anticipation notes against (Its) .capital improvement fund omen it’s committed right up to the hOt?” Stierer was in solid disagreement with the statement. He said the notes wouidn’-i have ‘to be paid with capital improvement funds. ■ ★ , Stierer asserted that the commission had been told the notes would .be paid when the bonds are'sold , or could be refunded annually. Harmon said the city could pay interest on the bonds “continually” if the drain suit dragged in court “five v six years.’* He said from the moment the comity set up a drainage district, the Clinton River drain was their project and the city shouldn’t pledge Its faith and support over a long period for 'it was a county the City Commission had already u Aid Mission ^ VilUinn nrhan 4ho onunrnmont ‘helped the drainage district out in the amount of $90,000.’ * * ★ He asserted h that the commission also had an alternate’ method of financing outlined to it July 23 and 30 “under ActJMLof ‘ state” in the event the CRapd litigation should nOt go in favor. ■> • Truck Driver 1$ Killod in Collision With Car SOUTHFIELD hti-pacar Neal, 35, of Detroit Was kUled yesterday when his truck coffided with « car at J2-Mile and Southfield^ in LathruRVillage. Police qqoted ‘ nesses as saying the truck Ver apparently ran a red light. The; drivv ot-the car, Audrey Millv, 3fr of Soufiifi^d was not seriousty hurt. Stierer reminded Harmon that VATICAN CITY W - Pope seat a special message the people of Viet Nam to- troubling the cherished people of Viet Nam.” Ike Pope said he had hopes for improvement in the situation. Nhu, who is thought to hold most of the real power here, is imminent. They said they believe the United States was only covering up when it denied earlier this week that such would be its ultimate demand. The demand originally was outlined in a Voice of America cast. But a State Department spokesman later officially repudiated them, saying the voice waa to error. However, the statement was discounted by members M the diplomatic corps fa Saigon. The sources said they believe U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge soon will meet with Diem to mike the demands outlined in the voice broadcast. Meanwhile, the Unit^l States stood firm to its refusal to give up two Buddhist monks who to8k building when the government staged last week’s raids against its opponents. SAIGON, Viet Nam ~ President Kennedy appealed today for restoration of foreign aid funds slashed by the House, saying “freedom does not come easily or cheaply" and the full program is needed at a time ft very intense peaceful coexistence. ■ ‘ e Standing with Kennedy at an impromptu press conference, Gen. Lucius D. Clay said that to slicing 8600 million from toe aid authorization bill, the House has “gone too far and seriously endangered the programr’-’ . Clay, chairman ft a committee ' that recommended gradual reduction of1 aid programs earlier this year, said he was particularly disturbed about reductions in funds for military assistance and the Ailiancefor Progress. ‘AFFECTS SECURITY’ Kennedy s&id “it is important that the American people understand that this affects seguity and the balance ft .power afi over the world.” He argued that if Congress does not r e8tore the money, “’Dds means the United States will not fulfill its obligations of the Alliance for Progress—It would limit very mufti our ability to iftnienc? events.” ( REDUCTIONS INEVITABLE Asked if he wanted the fulhf4.5 billion he asked originally, Kenne- -dy said he wants to get aslnuch of that amount as be can but recognizes some reductions are inevitable: Kennedy, Clay, aid director. David E. Bell and presidential assistant Ralph Dungan conferred for more than an hour bn a sun porch at Kennedy’s seaside summer home here. Asked what kind of strategy they had mapped to seek reversal of toe House action, Kennedy said it was not a matter-of strategy but of trying to phint out the significance ft toe program. The President said it was no accident that three successive presidents—Harry Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower and himself—all feel the aft program is “important, effective and essential." ? STINGING CRITICISM The Alliance for Progress involves aft for Latin America. A week ago Kennedy issued a stinging criticism of the House action in cutting aid. Kennedy placed primary, responsibility for toe reduction on House Republicans. The President arrived here in midaftemoon Thursday, smiling and waving to a crowd ft several hundred at nearby Otis Air Force base, despite evident back pain that causey him to negotiate the airplane^amp with caution. ; SIMMS Has The WwhfrM&st Advanced i Camera Now-And Low At Jhe Features | POLAROID Automatic 1001 Land CAMERA | —Simms Price : ★Black a White Heturet - la 11 Seconds frFUai Pack Ltfads la I ★Color Flash Pictures W Automatically > M ★Block I White Ploturet I— Indoor*-No Flash Ooad fj| ★Weight Load Than Many 35mm Camaras £& Come into _ Simmi for !o §« . demonstration of the worlds S:>! most advanced camera. $1 •:<•£ hold* in frooMqybway for 30'S§ji. day*. Jsl E ! ; i . . the PONtlAC PRESS, fRI&AY; ACCiCST 80, 1963 THREE Griffin Warns of Labor Crisis WASHINGTON (DPI) - Rep. Robert P. Griffin, RrMich., is trying to dlreet his colleagues' attention to the handwriting qn the wall which, he tells them, clearly predicts another labor crisis. The penmanship belongs to Teamster boss Janies R. Haifa and the ‘messaie is unequivocal, Griffin said. VHe has Served notice that within a short time he expects to have the whole nation tied up under one collective bargaining contract,” Griffin said dining debate this week on legislation to prevent a national railroad strike. ------------------ • * . ★ ★ “So the truckind Industry, which, is not under the Railway Labor Act, may soon be in a similar situation.’’ In an interview, Griffin said it would be disastrous for the lawmakers to consider that passage <& the railroad legislation disposed of the problem.. ‘NOW’S THE TIME’ “The time for Congress to look into such problems is now, rath* er than to wait fpr a crisis develop,” he said. Griffin urged favorable action on his resolution, introduced last month, to create a joint House-Senate bipartisan committee to 'investigate industrywide bargaining, -strike and lockouts. ‘‘It would be' my hope that. such a committee would-be so constituted ^thaf it could operate in an atmosphere as free as possible from political pressi add that it would come up with sound legislative recommendations meriting the support of Congress and. the’ nation,” he said. . I SSl House committee' have avoided any broad study of the problem, Griffin said, but he added that the scattering ■ of legislative. jurisdiction among a number of committees might be at least part e! the reason.* The merchant marine and fish-’ eries committee has jurisdiction over the maritime industry, terstate and foreign commerce over railroads and airlines, judiciary'over antitrust aspects of labor;- management relations, and education and labor over most other parts -of the field, he noted. Griffin picked up unexpected support! rom a fellow member of .the education and labor committee, Rep. James Roosevelt-, D- Calif., who re-, centiy returned from a trip to ■f Europe. ' “I must report, without any Motorist Says He's Tod Old question,' that many European countries today are far ahead of us hi management - labor relations legislation," he said. ~5,000 Freshmen-to-Be Flood U. of M.- Campus ANN,ARBOR. (UrtJ r Ne 5,000 Univarftty of Mi c hi g freshmen-to-bO and transfers dents, are taking part in orientation activities on campus preparatory to tiie start of classes Sept. ,3 ( , - 4 . B is the first time since World War H that beginning students have arrived on campus before September. The early date came about because the university is changing from the semesters to Do not thi^jc Ifwasted time to'which may bring, upon you ttyj submit younelf to any influence[nobte feeUng.-^-J. Ruskin. mam ft Rooeevelt said helras' leery^^ .^ - . . , . ^ _ zM the trimester schedules, of citing Hoffa as the reason for ' the resolution, but added that ha’ hoped the - proposal would be adopted. FamoMS Brands-ug'H First Quality * BLANKET TALE! The Lowaat Price* are Still at - SIMMS There is more forest than farm| | [acreage in the United States. YOU MV LESS At SIMMS for AMERICAN Made CLOTHING! Main Floor CLOTHING DEPARTMENT Ladies’ Brassieres or Garter Belts b SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT TBxBO-lnoli — American Mada FIELDCREST BLANKETS S3;VS volu* — 100%, cotton In plaids or solids. Guaranteed forever bgainst moth damage. Machine washable With jwtin binding. TAll American mode .bras and f garter belts with the , famous | (abets still on them — sorry, we can't mention the names because pf thelow price. Bra .site 32 A to 40 C and' -belts in sire 22 to 32. Clearance-All 1st Quality Ladies’ Summer Wear 'tot 2 ' —each 'Cfibice of CoprrSloicks, Jacket Tops. Blouses, Pedal Aishers, Jamaica* Shorty in complete size ranges. ‘ Prints, brilliant colon, styles etc. to chaosO from. < m LADIES’ and MISSES 1st Quality "ST Carcoats Worth $8 to $10- Look At Simmi Price jiSmart styles, for faff*" ’wearing. Choice of popular fabrics in.various, colors^ Some water' repellent treated. -Sizes 10 to 18._____ 100 Fully Linad Water Repellent ■ Ladies’ Coats Value* to 012.95-Nosc [Stylet include: tweed coat with velvet collar, brown ond white check or blue ond Wh»e check, Solid colors tool Acetate ond nylon- -being. Size 12-S to'io . , SABIN BLANKE $«r'value-60x )-imch. Stitched edgei. Blue and in combination. 70x80"........ $9.98 vakif — finest 100% Acrylic blanket is easier >6 1 BLftHKETS SOB $1.95 valui 100% cotton. Stitched edge*. In beautiful lilac BUWETS 129 ■ -l tor ■* S2.se PPEH TONITEsATURDAY till SIMMS Has Everything For YOUR LABOR DAY PICTURES... and Naturally It Costs ’Way LESS! —ALL SPECIAL ’Cut PRICES’ for T0NITE and SATUR0AY- CAMERA DEPARTMENT 0ISC0UNTS \ \Kodak K00AC0L0R Films $1.25 Roll, j Choice of 620-120.1 l 1^7 sixnfilri by Kodak j 1 far color pictures. | ■ ■ limit 10 rolit per jj person. TNewHi-SpeeTKMACHROMEVl RIM KODAK Color Movie Films $2.85 Roll 8mm Film Jhak* better moviee tn-_ m __ | doors and outdoors. ASA , XS, v-7VWr 40 Indoor or A3A2S~ " xv'a otddeor. Full SO foot rod. Limit 10. limn MABA2INK mm LOANnLM........ 0 KODAK Kodkilromelf"”601" FLASHBULBS 12*» 19° 1 Peautar $U4 carton ****#?£ r *■£££, AG-1 White eize. ««e | 1 ‘tJTwre shots. Qeara^i. POLAROID KagBtea Enitre’s Specials Thaf Prove YOU CAN NET IT FOR LESS AT SIMMS! 4 -Shop TOWTE snd MtUHDAY For These -l SIMMS 2nd Floor HARDWARE DEPT. LOUISVILLE, Ky. (A?) - John -Gordon decided Thursday to call It quits as a motorist after, -police said, he ran a red light and hit a parked'car, continued on and hit another, then turned Jbe wrong way on a onewaystreet. “I guess I’m getting too old to get around in this kind of traffic,,x -Gordon said. Oh Gordon’s promise he. .was through driving, light fines totaling $25 were imposed in traffic court. Gordon is 93. On Sale for TONITE and SATURDAY. r LABOR DAY FUN SPECIALS FRIDAY ond SATURDAY Only SPORTING GOODS Walnut finish Wood Frame 16x66” Boor Mirror $4.95 Valua—Ifoui Only Full’ length door mirrors' for closet, doors, bedroom doors etc. flo distortion. Ready to hang, Cosy to instoll yourself. eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee For Steam Plotting and/or Diy Ironing elktric Steam ’n Dry Iron *14.91' Value Easy thumb control switches from dry to ite^m Jeroptrotures for ironing of ofl fabrics. Limit I per person. $1 V* holds. Not exactly as pictured. #OOa#aena***oaooa*ooan*e*n*o*nnnooYnosi For Home-Collega-Cabin-Offioa-Motel, etc, Brachs Orange Slices or Big Ben Jellies 29e i [ pound bog f delicious, lehewy Orange [slices or Big Ben jellies. Y __ Pack Mikes 2 qts. KOOL-AIP Drink kssorted Toffee l«c vohm-I^AuiK* to JlIC it l»eyS«iSy a ,98 N. Soginow-AAnln Hear Official Siza Rubber Volley Balls White rubber volley ball for healthful fOnand exercise for . all age groups. Set for 4 Players Badminton!.’"1;:: As shown*-4 rackets, stakes, net end bircjs.plus a regulation volley ball for outdoor fun. In plnztii; 24x72-lnch Size-Folding Army Camp Gets 447 18-Pc. Aluminum Camp Cook Sat $7 M Value-Now - Styles OS pictured—Sturdy convas , top on wdod home. Folds com* shown—cups; plates, pats, pail, •killed, etc. Nest 599 CHARCOAL—5-Lb. BAG J39c value—nothing lostes better fhan food cooked pver a charcoal fire. 54b. bog of hardwood charcoal. 29° tsjsi 1 6 . 11 Bought at Simms 2 Radio* are Returnable for Exchange « ei3 -------------* " to liwpactiep, Of Ceunef M Wteebej FILMS 400 Speed ^OOOSy-ed type 37 SLIDE FILM | huh black & ,l11* I umh Polaroid Land, Color Film is Here! itiuiiwit KODAK ’Starmatic H 121 Snap-CR^ara |40.45 Ftstee I With Cerryini I "setter Case ] 9 Automotic electric-eye I 1 C,k*s slides, color shops.ond btacx |5srs.sttg I away- — *“■ $2.15 Roll 20 Exp,. Take better'color slides with | fast Kodachrome II Mm. limit 10 nolle. KODAK‘Super 27’Camera Set $21.50 \ Value F Camera with built-in flash gun, ■ takes 12 pictures per 127 roN. -Slides, color snaps phis'blade , ond whit*. Complete outfit. $1.00 holds. This Movie Camera Mas AN Tba Features Found Only In Expensive $2N Cameras! ARGUS zT>S Movie Camera liPl^With AUTOMAYIC ELECTRIC-EYE YOU Can Buy It Here At SIMMS For Only- L Check ThCCB Deluxe Features: Ie1*-1MM42 * Ttneegh The-Uee'aeflee Vtowbig * Foet ft .a Focusing Zoom Une a FUtor for Indoor end Outdoor Meides ______ efiee Pistol Osip Handle Included ATT the above features plus this GUARANTEE—] FULL YEAR i WARRANTY, even if you drop it, run over it with a oar, Simms l and- Argus wiH repair it like new FREE. 8mm roll load camera I with slow motion feature too. $1 holds. DISCOUNTS on TRANSISTOR RADIOS 4 REASONS Why YOU Should Buy YOUR RAMOS at SMB 3 All Radio* am Quality Tested Befate Sal* ■ by Simma Makers. 4Bigg*et Selection of Stylet and lypee of Traneistor Radio*. ‘REALTQNE’ 6-Transistor Radios Company to $12.95 Sellers—Realtone i Sportsman #TR164S radio with, battery, case and earphone. Pbwerhji. to pull in all area stations. $1 holds. Made'jEWEL 10-Transistor Radios Company Of<‘$24.95 — powerful 10 transistor radio with case, battery and earphones; American made 'Jewel* ' transistor at discount. Only $1.00 holds in free-layaway.. __________________ ‘REALTONE’ AM-FM 10-Trans. RaMos Regular $39.95 Value—AM/FMi radio with 10-transistors, 1 thermis-l tor,'and 3 diodes. Tone control bass andWreble Hi-Fi power radio A with leather case. $1 holds. PRECISIONEEREQ BINOCULARS Dfepter scale .field Leas Coatad Prism Lam Powl Binoculars LClimped $29*95 I If prisms Value Canter focus coated tons binoculars gives 350 W at 1000 yards. Wen includes Inathnr com, and ftdnrol ton. $1 holds In f fme faraway. * ^ ni.saaiHw.rE-: FOUR THA PONTIAC PRESS. FRHJfAY, AUGUST 80, 1968 - s/ * County 4-H Honors girls and three boys winner in Western pleasure for brought borne honors to Oaldhpd girls over 14. County Ms week lor the State junior BOYS Show at JAcUgan State tt - A state championship foe the Bloomfield +H~Ch* was wsa by II mentors af the group for conducting a model bwsl> Jan Moora of Farmington’s Las Cabelleros Club captured the gasnd champion Western horsemanship title knd was first-place Another member of that did), J* rfy TlnHe, woo flie Junior boys award in tbs'Western pleasure class open to bow 1£ and under. He came in fourth in Western horsemanship. ’ \ * > ,* JU1 Greenwald, a Rochester Trail Bluer, earned Ike champion Eagtisk horsemanship title, a fourth place in the Eag- plaee far her registered Arabian at halter. Trail Bluer Mary Beth Boulton vu in Math place in English pleasure. w * 4 A third place in Western horsemanship for girl\14 and under and a fifth place in Western pleasure for girls 14 end under were wow by Candy Head of the Los CabelleroS dub. Paul Schafer of Royal Oak's Skill and Craft Club gedeved a blue, ribbon for Us electrical Mbit, chosen for display m new and different idea in 4-H projects: < He adapted a trouble light. . Carolyn. Middleton of the East Qriqa Gibb, won the top time honors u a junior vegetable grower, and Afdis Storm ef the same club won a third place in the girls' division of, achievement in recrefetiion. WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — Pint through eighth grade Students in the Dublin School District still register Thursday ud begin regular classes next Friday. The youngsters will remgln at School fram-8:30 to ^1:1 Sept. 5 and return home by bus. The regular 8:36a.to. to 3:M p.m. schedule will begin the next day. MASTER MUSICIANS — Members of the Michigan State Fair Honors Band Sue Smith, 1378 Maple, Rochester, and Lyle Vette, 1828 Maplewood, Bloomfield Township, receive congratulations for their jeprk from fair' man- ager Walter Goodman (right). The band, composed of outstanding high school musicians will present daily concerts at the fair until it ends. Monday.! Sue plays aito clarinet, Lyle, percussion instruments. ■ MSU Tryiri&Mew Pest Control % EAST LANSING - The days of| pesticide ‘‘beette miy soop beover — at least far the Japanese beetle. Science Is making progress.to the biologies^ control of this serious pest [Last fall, the Michigan Department of Agriculture ■ se d airplanes to Ifterntiy “bomb" the pests with s chemical celled dieldrin. Until now, this has been the only effective coa-trel for the beetle. But now Michigan State University scientists have n new approach to the problem. They are trying to grow tiny bacterial spores in large quantities that wiD produce* a disease capable of *con trolling the beetle. GRAND HAVEN (DPD - Four Lansing youths were sentenced to four months in the Ottawa County JaU yesterday for robbing and ! tj&ting two Indiana boys at Holland State Park Aug. 9. Sentenced by Circuit Judge Raymond L. Smith were Sherman! Schaft, 18, and Barry Van DeBos, David Pine and Douglas Wood-all 17. At present, a team of MSU Howard Pigeon, 24, Holland, fair to five years in priAon for breaking and entering; Charles Morris 3r.,^J^Holland, 1V4-2 •theft; a years for car theft; and 18 months N. Costilow fit engaged in a fun- damental study of tiie nutrition CM Of and physiology of two speck___ bacteria capable of producing this milky disease. Just* more, 21, and Norman Klynstra, 20, both of Zeeland, for killing a goai on a West Olive farm last month. they will have*a biological.^coRt trol for . the Japanese beetle is not known. “Y*u can’t pnt a timetable on this kind of research," says Costilow. “We may be ready te spray spores this fall, or it may aot'be possible until ten years from now. "Our main problem is to get a system which will allow these bacteria to readily form spores in vast quantities. This cannot be done now." LESS SUSCEPTIBLE Costilow explains that the MSU research team wants the dormant sporqi because they are lets susceptible to changes in environment. These could be dried, made into powder and The Japanese beetle Jamie "dusted!.’ on Michigan soils. ‘ The Japanese bettle larvae (grtibs) eat the spores. The organism germinates kill* the gntyfarms spires again and remaias ia the sofl as * the Japanese 1 "We have a lot of information "Which ■ appear very promising .for ^producing 4 h e s e spores,” reports Costilow. “However; there is no guarantee that th|aa irirsti will work. More than thrte yean of research have already gone into the MSU sfrldy which, hi continuing its efforts to control the Japanese beetle — obe of Michigan’s most serious crop, garden end lawn pests. Lansing Teens Are Sentenced Robert Hayes, 48, Grand Haven, who admitted the July 28 break-in at Kent Products plant here, was sentenced to 2-18 years ia Southern Michigan Prison. .Other sentences included: County to Got Detroit Water TROY—Preparation is almost complete for construction of a temporary booster station by the Detroit Water "Board at Adams and Square Lake roads. Work is scheduled to begin next week. A Nov. 1 completion date is. scheduled. When finished, the booster station will implement service the SQUtheast Oakland County Area. Presently, the service area- of the Detroit Water Department covers over 400 square miles and contains a population of'more than 3.3 million, according to department figures. 'Cbitte to Lake Orion — Swing Your Pardner!' LAKE ORION - A food market parking'lot will be turned into a dance floor from 9 p. m. until midnight tomorrow by the Merry The public is Mvited to the dance, which will be held in the tot adjoining LS Foodland, 331 S. [Broadway, Douglas NorlandtnhelSS field Chib was,.selected automotive achievement winner. Ha was seesai to the Misme- 1 ration Set in Dublin District sise of a proposed sanitary sewer to link tiie township with the Oakland University treatment facilities will be established within the next several weds. The project m«st be reviewed fry (he Oakland County Depart-meat of PubUc Works and receive board sf supervisors’ ap- Through Grade 8 The Township Board at its last meeting passed a resolution asking the DPW to- undertake the project. Kindergarten students are to be registered Sept. 6. Those who enrolled in the spring should report between 8:30 and 11:30 a.m. Pupils not formerly registered will be admitted between 12:90 and 8:30 j>.m.' Children must -be S years on or before Dec. 1, 1963 to em ter kindergarten. Birth certificate? are'necessary. Den Ringler, DPW deputy director, said the trunk sewer will be about two miles long. It will head southwest from the university to die vicinity of Crooks and Auburn. Ringler said the sewer will-be the first major sanitary line in reach of populated areas in the township. .""i Imlay City Set for 6-Day Fair IMLAY CITY — Harness racing, an auto thrill show and special childrens’ programs wiU be featured at the 65th annual Eastern Michigan Fair here. AVON TOWNSHIP-Two local women have received top honors in hoAe arts competition at tills yearns state fair. Norma J. Juleff, of 1963 E. Avon. Circle, was chosen best candy brittle-maker in the state. Mrs. Howard M. Zanders, 162S W. Hamlin, won blue ribbons for her grape jelly, canned peppers and chow chop. also included second prize for her canned beets and third-prizes (or The-six-day fair, which begins Monday, will include a midway and displays of " preserve^ rhubarb, preserved classrqpms.Construction1 is sched- peaches Md canned peach preserves. produce, animals, and industrial and business* equipment Racing, 4-H judging and fireworks are on tap Monday; chil-dren^ events and Grand Ole Qpry Tuesday; auto Hell drivers and tractor hauling Wednesday; and livestock judging and toe 811,000-purse Wolverine Futurity harness race -Thursday for trot-ten. The race is run again Friday for pacers. Wrestling and other feature races will be held Saturday. Performances by various area high school bands will be given every day. Problem Eyed 1 st-Hond LOS-ANGELES (UPD-Juveniles stole a camera, wallet and checkbook from the car of local tele-pereoi night while he- was addressing Ihgroup in an elementary school on “The Problem of juvenile Delinquency to Our Society.’ Coo/ Thinking; Quick Action Save Three in DETROIT (UPI) - Cool think, ing and quick action toyhe pilot of a light rented plarie were credited with saving his own life and those of two companions when their craft crash-landed in a free in Gethsemane Cemetery here. Shores, described how he landed in a large oak tree to toe cemetery when he heard toe plane’s single engine quit. T yeered and pointed at toe nearest free." , Earl Robinson, 55, St. Clair Federal Fund OK'd, for Sewer in Milford MILFORD-The Federal Community Facilities Administration yesterday approved an 811,471 interest-free plaguing loan for a proposed sewer facilities project here. ' ', ' , /j The project, with an estimated total cost of 8444|M, calls for enlargement of toe existing sewage treatment plant to serve a popolatiou of 9,000. The present population is about half that figure. ' A I Tbs federal loan provide* for the preparation of deSuled plans and specifications for enlarging the {riant. Fine officials skid toe $34,000 plane was a total loss. Foam was poured on the burning fuselage to extinguish the flames. Robinson; Charles Stahl, 38, Toledo, Qhlo; and Lloyd Cummings, 37, Flushing, scrambled down 21 feet to the ground when the plane burst into flames. I’ve seen airplane wrecks which planes crashed into cemetery markers'and I figured I had a better chance stowing myself down in a tree," Robinson explained. RUSHED .TO HOSPITAL ' Police arrived shortly after the Men reached the ground and rushed totem to a n^rby hospital. —Rsbfa—o was placed in trac-tion In Saratoga General Hospital .with back injuries, burns, cuts and b cat s * s. Stahl and Cnmnriagi were [also hospitalised. Stahl had head udback burns and a broken leg, and Cammiags. suffered boras on on toe back. . ■ / Firemen reached the scene and had to free toe burning plane from its 26-foot perch to extinguish the flames. Sheriff's Dog Trees Jail Camp Escapee CADILLAC (UPI) - William Fraser, If,: Saginaw, wap captured a day after his escape from the Camp Pugsley prison area when a German Shepherd dog treed ;him yesterday to ntearby Menton. The dog, “Lassie," is owned by Wexford County Sheriff Pad Lance. He said Fraser escaped Wednesday and eluded bkek-ades before breaking into toe home of an 84-year-old woman. - Mrs. Grace Moore was robbed of |46 and aknife«by the youth, who locked her in a bedroom. Fraser later broke* into another nearby homte and took a gun, utoce said, i He was transferred to Grand Traverse -County authorities to he charged wito breaking and entering. Sewer PTanrif in Avon Twp. Cost,"Six# Estimate Coming for CHI Link Peach Festival parades planned. The hear-and-a-half long parade is expected to draw ap to MAM spectators. “It will be one of toe finest parades we’ve bad,’’ predicted Grand-Marshall Bert Betfani. AVON TOWNSHIP - Cost and Area Women Excel at Fair Monday in Romea^ Peach ParacleIs | hundreds at marchers will bead down Romeo’s Mato Street 2 p.m. I Monday for one of the biggest Peach C ball playoffs, a dog show and j will be crowned to special cere- pony pun will be held at Lions monies at Romeo High School Park Sunday afternoon. J field 8 p.m. Sunday. MWMMMMAWWUW j He said 15 large floats are entered, most of them designed with floral thanes, along with nine bands; dozens of vehicles, horsemen and even a' steam calliope. The parade forms near Cross-well fir the march north on Stain to Gates. Motorists are advised to reach Romeo prior to parade time, when traffic wfll be detoured around 4fae~ business district. A children’s 'parade will also be held at 16 a.m. that morning. The marching youngsters frill loop around the downtown Romeo, area_____ Festival activities Sunday after-j noon shift to Lions -Park. Rides, I games, and free entertainment at] and 8 p.m. is offered. The big fireworks display is at 9:36 p.m.j A three-day arLshow beginning at 6 tonight at Romeo Masonic Temple opens the Labor Day weekend festival.. A' softball tournament at South Grade School is the niato festival Duns Scotus Collage Announces' Addition SOUTHFTELD (A - Officials of Duns Scotus College yesterday announced plans for a 81-2 - million addition.— the first addition to the Franciscan school - since it was founded here in 1936. The Rev. S. R. Becker, presi- iuw vuvfj, Mrs. Sanders’ list of. winners dent of Duns Scotys, said the ad- ditions will be wings housing a gymnasium, a dormitory and uled to begin, next month, he said. 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You'll do well to drop in and pick up a. folder describing the whole operation in detaiL YARD PRICED SPECIALS iuh MASONITk 1/8" Standard Corrugated FIBERGLASS PANELING I HOURS’? -OR 3-1211- 6PEN WEEKDAYS MONDAY thru FRIDAY A I A.M. tfeS;30 P.M. toTDRDAYS frew IAAI. to 4 PAL 4x8 Prefinished i^fARELHiC CHERRY and WALNUT K.1JTU85 to J3 print THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 80, 1903 Third Jet Aircraft Crashes; Pilot Dies WILLOW GROVE, Pa iff-For the. third time, this year a Jet airplane has crashed while trying to land at Willow Grove ROCHESTER, N.V. (AP) - Otr Aug. S, Michael Schlafer parked his company*^ truck and entered theJewish Home andlnfirmaryto Marine Maj. Charles E. Kiser, S3, of Sprbgfield, Ya. was killed yesterday 'when his T33 trainer crashed at neaifcy Spring Houle. ' He was alofi'e. , , In July, a disabled F*J4 Fury crashed into a day camp grounds near the base, killing eight persons. Earlier this'month, another Fury jet crashed , on the base, killingf' its pilot. Same Time, Same Place chine. When he returned, $800 had been stolen from a safe in the truck. The same thing happened Hum-day. The truck was parked in, the same spot and the money, again $800 taken during the same time, of day, police said. Fewer than 5,000 bald eagles survive ^Khe United States. $1000 PBISUML LOANS REBUEE PAYMENTS Available September A, IMS The new Michigan Loan Law will mean you can-t6ve on interest costs and reduce pay* merits by combining two $500 loans Into . one $1000 loan. You may reduce your monthly payments by Combining all your bills into one $1000 loan to be paid in 36 months at $38.24 per month. You may make application by phone right now, then your money may be-ready for you when you come in on September 6, LANSING (AP) - A move to repeal Michigan’s new so-called "Parochial School Bus Act’) has been stalled by the Lansing Board pf Education. A week ago, the b e a r d resolved unanimously Jo urge repeat’-of-: the' taw. Bat the board turned around Wednesday and voted $-1 to reconsider their earlier motion. Board members agreed their earlier action Was "hasty and unnecessary and asked for further- study of how the law win affect Lansing. Thomas Walsh, an attorney and member of the board, dis* sentedin the move to reconsider die earlier motion, which he pro- Today’s vital uses of such pre- UNIVERSAL Balanced I [ Borrowing MICHIGAN UNIVERSAL Cl.T. CREDIT COMPANY 857 W.. Huron Street, Pontiac Phone: Federal 3-*7961. Schools Stall jmgiK Lansing Board Eyas Parochial Bus Rule The. chemical revolution of die mid-l930’s has transformed the ef brought many infections and illnesses under coo-’ trol. To see raging inf ect ions abate within a few hours after', giving sulfa drugs' was a new experi-l ence to -ue -d^-j tore. Since thgff,- we1 have seen the ad- BRAND6TADT antibiotics, hormonal com pqun d s, ^antituberculosis agents, pills for diabetes, tran- n quilizers, drugs for high blood pressure and a boat of other potent and highly effective agents. Walsh opposed the law be-'cause he said if violates traditional dividing Hues between church and state and because he contends the state is infringing upon local school boards’ rights by passing such a law. lotion. 1 'lhe lhw.' WHfch gflftB lHtt — feet next July, requires public schools to provide bus transportation to parochial and private school students if those students live a mile and one-half or more from schoo land if the public school district already provides bus service. •Atty. Gen. Ffank Kelley saying that irextends a public welfare benefit to parents ruled the law constitutional wad children in aiding pliancewith laws- requiring school attendance. Walsh also opposed the law because he said Lansing -will have a serious and considerable increase in bus transporatioo be- - cause ofLhe law. He. s|Jd Jj/t could hot, however, estimate the additional cost that would be incurred. Father Francis Martin, super- schools, said in a statement last week the law would not cost the public school board any addition- Dn Wayne, G. Brandstadt Says: Precautions trug Effects Mississippi Ejc-Govemor Defeated in Runoff Vote JACKSON.' Sttss. (VPIb-Co&j ir scription drugs bespeak the successes of expert medical supervision and research in preventing or lessening the undesirable side effects so that 'a person who needs a certain drug may enjoy its benefits with safety. Physicians’ knowledge of drug ^ how ^ Pc^fen| sa^dTOg Just, before going to passed the hul this spring by thorn is a measure nf nuwtieol wide margins, and Gov. George -Romney supported the legis- them is a measure of medical progress. It b to Be expected tfiaf as newer, more potent drugs with. pea ter effectiveness against certain diseases or symptoms are discovered, the problem of side effects will increase rather than diminish. A drug, that will control cancer or heart disease will" surely require the most careful adminis- fects. Each step toward powerful, effi- cient action in a drug is a step away from hanalassnbss. •ft"b to be expected, too. that mon Market council, ministers dramatic accounts of disorders attributable to the taking ofeer-tain new drugs will appear and wjU cause general alarm. SOBER ANALYSIS sober analysis' of cause and effect relationships is constantly being undertaken by the best minds in medical science and agen- United States has threat-boost duties on some European goods exported to America if the Common Market maintains the present level of tariffs ’ on U. S. poultry. • This problem is made more difficult by the fact that many APPLIANCE BUYERS I OLLIE FRETTER SAYS: "OUR SUMMER CLEARANCE OF ALL PREVIOUS YEAR FLOOR MODELS WILL SAVE YOU MARY, MARY $ $ $” OLLIE FRITTER Out of Michigan’* Original Discounter* RCA Whirlpool GasDryarv........ $110.00 30” Automatic Electric Range....;$ 05.00 21” Admiral Lew-Boy.. .. $149.00 23” Emerson ___Tslavitlen...... ...1111.00 RCA dolor TV- Wood Console.......$430.00 Admiral Lew-Bgy Color TV... $398.00 Emerson 3-Way Combination ......$279.00 Norge Auto. Oafrast 1224b. . Bottom Froozor-,... $229.00 Sylvania Stereo With Nulti-PIlx ......... Emerson Wood - Table Model TV.....$ 99.00 Zenith 4-Speaker Storoo... $ $9.00 Hotpoint 14 Cil. Ft. Bottom Froozor, Auto. IglU. $219.00 a person’who Just happens to be taking a ing other drugs at the same time. ’Very few drugs are so specific in action as to have no effect other than the one desired. ’Aspirin, for example, Feduces feyer, deadens pain, lowers the bfodd sugar Level in diabetics and exerts -some actions similac to thqse of cortisone. ■ * '*♦ -4h Some of these effects depend on the size of the dose and how lopg, the drug is token. Even though this drug has been used for more than 50 years, the mechanisms of its various actions are still poorly understood. The secondary actions qfa drug' are not always undesirable. One of , the antihisiaminics which relieves hay fever also causes drowsiness. This woqld be undesirable for* a truck driver during his working hours.” Yet, if he were to take this Common Market Sets, New Talks on U.$. Poultry BRUSSELS, Belgium (UPI)-A source close to the Common Market Executive Commission said esterday the agency will meet in 8pecial session next Monday to discuss poultry imports from the United States. lasfmeeting of the Com- te agree on a reduction of (feultry tariffs on shipments of chickens from.the United States. The Ui neatob doctor can /now give you relief Avoidance id side effects depends, therefore, on your doctor’s knowledge of the drags be prescribes for yon, on * his knowledge of your personal peculiarities and your needs and or faithful adherence to Ms instructions. beyond such help a few years ago. '• Given these ingredients, ' your Written for Newspaper Enterprise Association Mate but unofficial returns today, showecTLt. Gov Paul ELHMnMia defeated former Gpv. J. p. Cole, man by a margin pf 04,414 votes in Tuesday’s Democratic runott forgovtrnor With an d (he state’s 1,175 precincts reported, Johnson drew 281,005 votes to 190,001 for Cb|g- U) 0M Shop Tonight HU 9 Tomorrow 9t4S tlU 9 This Weak You Can Relax On Year Own Patio 10x10-Ft. Patio $4475 Costs Only....... U"f J , iptotod Patios on Display roger a. authier ►ATM WORE CO. 10570 Highland RtL 5 Nht Wwt d Fssdis Akpart EM 3-4825 Open Daily 8 to 5 211 AMAZINGVi -i. 1964 WESTINGHOUSE SttitlkSttcllM' Spans the Seasons in Tattersal Print Nylon Jersey Here's fashion with every mark of a dassfe. Jimp-less styling. A print that)s equally smart in town or country. A talent for easy'living. Simply wash /bncl. *drip-dry; ironing's rarely .needed. A./seat fly . front, conceals an ’ on-in-seconds all-Nylon zipper. Another hidden treasure . . . two side pockets in the flattering. pleated-front, panel-back skirt. The effect is lovely, the wearing wonderful ... and the care a pleasure. Thanks to Klylon jersey, wrinkles stay out . . . and that fresh look lasts all day. Brown, Blue, Cranberry. Size* 10 to 20t T2% to 24% FERNDALE STORE-201 W. 9 Mile—LI 7-4409 Open Mon. thru Fri. 9:39 to 9s30-iat.9 to t - SYLVAN STEREO 4 TV SALES ♦12.99 Open Man. and Fit *M 9-Vuas., Wad., Thur*. til 9-Sat.*M I 3191 Orchard lakt Rd. (Sylvan Center) j 992-9199 Phene FE 4-2511 er Moil Your Order- -JValtp'* Daytime Drettee ... Third Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS « West Hurt* Street m FRIDAY, AUGUST 39, 1963 Pontiac, Michigan BSS7J&P ■Vic* Pretldent Md Editor Johm A. |CMT bettUrr ud ' AdverUilni Director ! Why Do Driven Ignore j Safety Messages? f Along with the prospect of a long ! pleasure-filled weekend for million* |of Americans, Labor Day holds the . {macabre prospect of a record-high itrtffie toll. I • ★ • ★ ■ { The public will be deluged with ^safety messages that, tragically, jseem to have little effect in stemming mounting casualty totals over ;holiday periods. » “Drive Safely” wilt be dinned ! into the national consciousness {through maay media- But the di-j Srective means many things to j many people, and lacks effective* { ness because of its generality, i The appeal for driver."courtesy" [also echoes across the land, but it too Stop lacked preciseness: • ★ ★ ★ I iPiiAi fha hTaHfti*>al Qalafw Pftnnnil f IIWiHm Wwyy vwigweT •has now translated the word into one •cqncrete act of safety observance that ieyery driver can understand. and |which, if observed, will probably les-wen jgotoring fatalities, ] It is a basic act of courtesy and little of the foreboding materialized. The discipline of tho marchers was excellent. Although tho vast majority of participants were unquestionably respectable and sincere adherents in their cause, a rotative handful of crackpots or firebrands could have ignited explosive violence. Nothing of the sort occurred. Nor was there evidence of attempt to apply legislative coercion on Capitol Hill. We believe, on the whole, the march had salutary effect. Nepocs were enabled to exercise their con' stltutional right-of peaceful demonstration with, it is likely, resulting dissipation of some degree of the racial tension that has been building up across tie Country. .The march wqs a symbol of democracy at its best — for .qU the world’to see. , Voice of the People: Jaycee Petition ExaV of Right of Correction* a rttiTPn’g right jo vote should be his most carefully guarded heritage. Next comes his right to change or correct by initiative petition, by referendum or recall These rights were carefully protected in the newly-adopted state constitution. The initiatory petitions now being circulated by the Pontiac Jaycees are an effort to correct by ■ citizen action. This is the truest expression of ‘^eminent of the people, by the people and for the people.!* _ dr it it Members of a free society can and should be ae-tive participants in the organizations to which they - belong, in their governments, local, state and national. ' Active Participant Treaty Affords No Loss for Khrushchev* I cannot tee what Khrushchev baa to lose In thin treaty. If he gets an agreement, he has a chance to catch' up with the United States by cheating, if be gets no agreement, he can blame the United States and say we art a nation of war mongers. Edgar A- Mower Says Race Dissension Divides Country Don’t adults realize that wa, the white race, are no better than the Negro? David Lawrence Says: Violent Protests Likely Not Criminals Violate Our Freedom /, it dr d ; “United we stand^-divided we fall!’’ Russia wants us “dl-vhted«*Mfwe caet work «r learn together, how caa we fight together? If we fight among ourselves, Russia is going tohave ■otroubic taking us over, wbetber we are red, yellow, black or white! T. P. By JAMES MARLOW > WASHINGTON W If a inarch on Washington is the moat effective way nowadays to attract xia-tional attention, who will organ-“march?” do not dare to venture .out alone the 27-year-old son of a prorhl-at night. L... V nent attorney — a brilliant young ‘trlE5n7Wlth a splendid reconi in eollege—was killed as he walked his dog a short distance from his [ S In support of tho effectiveness . J of this rule, tha council found, in' { W six-state pilot study during last ! Fourth of July weekend, that,fail? j ire to yield right of way rose 60 | per cent above expectations as a j major cause of accidents. That j wax the greatest deviation be-1' tween the normal traffic pattern » and the holiday pattern, j It doesn’t matter if the other fel-gow is in the wrong—yield and play feafe. | 4 ' ★ ■■ ★ I lThe Press trishea all a delightful -nk to the Negroes’ long struggle for filial equality. Others had beerl •alarmed by the implications of a segment of the Ration’s' population {massing^in theeapitalto exert legiS-{latlpii pressure on Congress. ' ' ★ ★ iti- To the craUtef all concerned, WASHINGTON - The discipline and tranquility of Wednesday’s dvfl rights demonstration will not be the permanent condition of the American Negro if he continues to be frustrated. As they, marched and stood ^in the sun for hours, the massive quietude of perhaps 180,-000 Negroes was amazing, when it -is remembered bow much in’ American life has been denied them. But til is performance was for one day otdy. The warning of bri el quietude, if white Americana continue to deprive Negroes of: equal. treatment, came "teem the one Negro who abovei an has preached- nonviolent re-sistancevRev. Marital Luther King Jr. He said: | _ .t v.1, /' «It would be fatal for the natloh to overlook the urgency of the moment and to underestimate die determination of tha Negro.” AD but one of the speakers in this gigantic petition for “redress of ^grievances” talked with restraint about the desire for equal justice and the Negroes’ hope that Congress will help ~tiwm get The exception was John Lewis, the militant head of the Student Non-Violent Coordi-. nating Committee. BITTER .IMPATIENCE ' He revealed the bitter impatience just be-jftT t1** yurt?** in ■ himself and others WMfr these words: % . “Ibis nation is still a place of cheap political leaders who build their careers on immoral compromise and ally, themselves with open forms of political, economic and social exploitation. , •^“What potiticat lender c«n stand up and say ‘my party H the party of principle’? The party of Kennedy is also tte party of Eastland. The party of Javlts is also the party of Gold water. Where is our party?” , R hi now 95 years and one month since adaption of the 14th Amendment made the. Negro citizens beyond question and guaranteed them protection from any violation of their rights as citizens. -Their rights have been violated^ver since. vKing, lest white people assume that because the Negro has endured this Until now he is a permanent patsy and Wednesday's peaceful demonstration proved it, told both the crowd and the nation: “Those who hope the Negro needed to blow off steam and will now be content will hsve Civil rights are supposed to include the right to be safe from robbery, from assault, from rape, from rfiurdcr. These rights are' presumably guaranteed by those provisions in the Constitution which protect the “life, liberty, and property”, of all citizens. * Orlando W. Wilson, superin* tendenL-of police in the ciqr of Chicago, said re-j cently: “Everybody! seems to be organizing today to protect dvQ liberties. I would like to organize the victims of criminal assaults who have been robbed and raped in our streets.” >: This very week the newspapers have reported the mur- „ New York City apartment — one- shortly to start teaching school and the other a1 magazine employe. They were college graduates in their 20s and the daughters, respectively, of e^ prominent surgeon and a successful author. Two days before, tha wife of the Chilean consul-general was ‘Survival of Law; Order Up to Citizens* We see what Mr. Citizen cares about his law and order or |tia just-don’t-care attitude. The only one that can do anything about this situation is Mr. Citizen. It seems to me there are enough or- *** should help push the good side » it can affecr . residential districts. Hoodlums robbed and shot him, then sped away in a car, and thus ended a promising Hfe. them in the long run. To me law and order is a must to survive. •’ f'". ,• j . , / Old Timer Incidents like these are being multiplied .throughout the nation. The protection of human life— the most Important of all civil rinffdered ‘as* she sat before her. rights — which seems to be neg-teievision set tt 7 o'clock in the . lected in many parts of the counevening at her country home in . try, certainly needs emphasis as New. Jersey. well as national, attention. • A few days ago in Washington, T.rk u!fSFr!SLl,&m**m. me.) Says Unmoved Trash Cans Arc Eyesore ^ Dontlac and surrhunding areas would be more attractive If people didn’t put put garbage cans until dark, the night before col-. lection. Then they should be,taken in as soon as possible after the collection. Some people leave them out a day before collection and a day after. They’re an eyesore. Waterford Resident Is France Using to Rebuild Asian Presage? The Country^ Parson Mr. Wilson is a leading an-. thority on police work, having served as >oUce 'chlef in other cities snd as dean of the school of criminology of Die University of California before going to Chicago. He. said te a speech thii month to a committee of the American Bar Aasociatioa: “Crime is overwhelming our society ... in the name of-protecting individual liberties, we are permitting ao many techni-caUties to creep into our system of criminal justice that we are no longer convicting a sufficiently high proportion of guilty criminals.” ^ He said France has a special affinity for viet Nam and offered to “organize a cordial coopera-trying to use the Vietnamese , tion’^xf the Vietnamese undertook crisis to re-establish French pres- tP^sheke off foreign Influence and tige in Southeast Asia at the ox- .totablish internal peace and unity By PATRICK McNULTY PARIS (* — Diplomats believe President Charles de Gaulle is pense of the United States. *DeGaulle told Ms cabinet yesterday Viet. Nam north and south — would be better off .free horn “foreign influence.” The statement was interpreted as a-slap at the U. S. role in South Viet Nam and de. Gaulle’s belief he could do a better job In an area France occupied for a century. in all of Viet Nam. He made no distinction betweei} the Communist north and the U. S.-supported south. The Almanac Py United Press International Today is Friday,'Aug. 3Q, the 242nd day of 1963 with 123 to fol- * low. The moon Is approaching fun phase. The morning star is Jupiter. The evening stars are Mars and Saturn. And he failed to spell out the terms of France’s cooperation. He said only France was ready.to help “within the extent of her own possibilities.” * I think mankind would be better off never to accomplish anything worthwhile than to do it by a means which is wrong.” On this day in htetory: In 30 B.C.i Cleopatra committed suicide by letting an asp bite her.. In 1780, Benedict Arnold promised the British ttu&iie^would surrender the .American fori at West Point. In 1862, the Union Army was defeated by the Confederacy at the second battle of Bull Run. In the nation’s capital,- Police Chief Hebert Murray tells of |he frustration among his men due to restrictions of their efforts to enforce the law and due to court decisions that have liberated triitijnals thrdugh technicalities. Chief MunPajMays: “The crimtaial is bring afforded- more legal protectiontiian4he ordinary citizen. I often wonder Who, besides the police, is con-cerned about the righto of citizens- to be free from attack criminals.”/ . • , v The statement was made at a closed-door meeting but, surprisingly, de Gaulle authorised its release -to newsmen. Washington had no immediate comment. Some observers believed the statement was intended as belated balm to French prestige, shattered, . in ' Southeast Asia by France’s humiliating defeat in-Indo-China. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages “ Lower tosts The New York Herald Tribune Ford’s objections are these:. 1) “I don’t have any faith I was in favor of it being initialed.” a rude awakening if the nation returns to . business as usual. “Thaw will be neither rest nor tran* quility in America until the Negro is .granted his citizenship rights. The whirlwinds of revolt will continue to shake the foundations of our nation until the bright day of justice emerges.” f He could not have given a clearer warning of turmoil unless the Wrongs are righted. * Not all Negroos have accepted King’s philosophy. of nonviolent resistance t8 injustice or JflViL________iv_______ ■' \ OUT OF HAND £' Crime in the United States is getting out of hand generally, but some amazing statistics have been issued lately showing the relationship between strict Jaw. enforcement and this crime rate; Official figures show, for instance, that in 1982 in Washington, D.- C., aggravated as-" saults 'were the highest per capita in America. Yet, in Seattle, Wash., and in Milwaukee, Wis. — where criminals are dealt with as criminals— the percentage was about one-tenth of what these crimes were in the national capital PULLED OUT - r France pulled out of her former tony after the fall of Wen Bien Phu in 1954 and the Communists took overNorthVlet.Nam. U. S. militaippower, then moved into the vacuum to keep the Communists from overtiming the entire peninsula. Many Frendhmen,- presumably de Gaulle included, found that a bitter pUl. Our Messrs. Evans and Netfak report that D e f q n a e Secretary McNamara is making a determined effort to Switch Navy construction from government shipyards to private firms, for the simple reason that; private firms are more efficient and thus the costs of construction are lower. As one outspoken Admiral told a group of upset legislators, workers at the Klttery, Me.-Pbrtsihoutii, N.H. Navy yard “juK dSirt work." that the Kennedy Administration will carry out. the safeguards promised by the President.”/.' ^ . Perhaps Ford really does believe the President can’t be trusted. Bnt his accusation has no rotation to the contents of the test-bon treaty. ThisXeema a pretty good reason for lettihg the contracts to private industry, whtekjUMdly principle that operates on the principle If you don’t perform there 2) The U.S.S.R. has broken many agreements in the past so “how can you believe they will' live up to this or any other agreement?” Ford asks. The Soviet government has a miserable record in diplomatic affairs. But in 1981 when the Soviet government broke the volun-tary moratorium agninat atmoe- Gen. Curtis E. LeMay made it clear that he is “more pessimistic” than the other joint chief* in giving support to the treaty, but added “I would resent very much -any effort to put pressure on ma. -I have an obligation to both tha President and Congress.” Gen. Earle G. Wheeler and Adm. David L. McDonald expressed views parallel to those of Gen. Taylor and Gen. Shoup.. 4) Finally, . Ford says the , tceaty will keep the U.S. from "easily” developing an effective anti-missile missile. No one ever ctahaed ih whi tereesy comet a dajr whew you don’t get, paid. It would, of course, be hard on some of those non-workers in the Navy yards, who wouldn’t have any. job! to not work at. But mayoe they could be retrained as railroad firemin. A On Shaky GrOvn^ " The Am\- Arbor Newe Verbal Orchids to— * A. 11 Greene oQ66 Judson St.; 82nd birthdayT Bert Frank ....4 ' of Rocheoter; 94th birthday. Mrs. Delore Aud^//^--of 1200 N. Telegraph; 00th birthday. Homer D. Lowrie * of Clarks ton f' 90th birthday. De, Gaulle’s rap at. Foreign Influence, tax Viet Nam alsd was sgen as another maneuver for a more important vbice jn international affairs, not only within the Atlantic alliance but in nuclral war councils ^ Washington. De Gaulle’s remarks at the Cabinet meeting stressed the friendship of France for its for-mer colony. However, ho didn’t mention the Viet Minh uprising . in I9M that developed into the .eight-year Indo-thina war.. De Gaulle also did not mention > the massive aid the United States . gave France during that ill-fated Indo-Ghina * jyar, which many Westerix military loaders thought could have bien won by better French strategy. ‘ * + / CONCRETE ACTION Yet ln the dtyW Washington, Absent;^toorte.de Gaulle’s re- relevant that Fdrd is being Soost-for example, people in the.very marks was any hint pi concrete ed by some as a “possible Repub-best residential neighborhoods, French action. The general spake lican candidate for vice-president as Weil as those in other areas, in abstract terms. ' in 1964, testing,' it openly pro- job. Defease Secretary Robert j its intentiona. Obviously S. McNamara and the military the Soviet be detected, plained how the now test without getting The newspapers tell daily, of murdqrs, assaults, robberies, rapes and other crifflaa. But since M people in one section of . a state are far away from the scene'of a ‘vicious crime or -don’t know the VittMii, the easy assumption is ttiM “it can’t happen here.” The limited nuclear test-ban treaty should be rejected by the United States only If a strong case can be built against it. But Re£. Gerald R. Ford Jr., of Grand Rapids has chosen to attack the treaty almost entirely On partisan political grounds. This is not characteristic of Ford, who has- a reputation as a'^toiuitruo tive coti9erv|^re.', It nimr' be mtM lg boost- 31 Ford says he has heard reports that the Joint Chiefs of Staff have been pressured by die White House to speak in favor of the treaty against their better judgment He certainly did not bear any of theoe reports from the Joint chiefs. men and Chilian scientists sakl that development can and will continue an) treaty before it was initialed and 1 J oT all loecl CimmIu ltu sis.M s mm; eUeVteM In IOehi(Ui and sU other (Smm In XhejDWMI 8Ut« *IMS.n US FINE QUA^TY, PERFECT FIT, LOW PRICES IN SHOE FASHIONI Choose from our large assortment of flats, oxfords, slip ons.., choose from a wide variety of colors and textures! Get *U the quality features of fine casuals, at PENNEY’S savyigs to you! M Good looking? Yes! Comfort? YesI Value? Yes! Come in and try them on... see arid save at PENNEY’S! THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1968 SEVEN The wikftacssbrs of the mod-1 the common wild pig of Asia, ern domestic pig ranged ..from The other is the common wild Europe to the Far East, and two boar of Europe and the itear varieties still survive. One islEast Long-horned wild cattle roamed the grasslands of Europe for millions of years. They were known as aurochs, World News open Sunday -HWB-2 Korean General Quits to Campaign CHiPO-RI, South Korea (AP)-iclaims he was treated “like in LONDON (AP)-ScotUnd Yard gone with the hospital's .payroll of more than $100,000. ■' ★ A 1 The bandits killed two hospital employes, gravely wounded a special policeman and left two other employes of the Polyclinico Ban-car io with less sertousjnjtirles. ’ Boys Rob Poor Boxts FORBACH, France m-Polke let six boys aged 6 to 9 go faMti yesterday after they promised Is stop stealing money from church poor boxes to Jjuy.-candy. WEEKEND SPECIALS Gibraltar Cement Faint Choice €495 of Colors * I Cat. ELM & CHERRY PANELING 4x4 M56 Sheets ^46 a Sheet day from the irmy. He wiH run for president in the Oct. IS elections. Only civilians can run for office. AIRPORT LUMBER and Supply Company COMPUTE REMODELING SERVICE FREE ESTIMATES 674-0384 6971 Highland Road (M-59) Park, 46, will be die candidate of the Junta-backed. Democratic Republican party. About 600 foreign and Korean dignitaries, including Gen. Hamll- ^ toit H. Howze, -commander of the ^ U.N. forces, attended the retire- fi ment ceremony at .an airstrip in this front-line area 40 miles north-1 east of Seoul. His American Jailor dolled Perez* Jimenez lawyers, quoted him aa paying Thursday he Hear-ly starved in the Dade County Jail at Miami. Glasgdw-London mail Vain may have stayed at dieap rooming houses and that some of the $7-million haul may still be hidden in the London dwellings. But police investigating the theory encountered, tight - lipped roomers .who refused to discuss any suspicious activities of their neighhore.'------1 ,,T 1: ";.\j The train was robbed Aug. 8. * Any time I talked to him he said te was fine,” Robert Schar-lau, captain of the* jail, said in Miami. “He did lose weight because he {pit nothing but plain food,' the same - as the .other prisoners.” Peres Jimenez, brought nere earlier this month-W-Lrial on embezzlement charges', is in an air-conditioned cell: He has a television pet and is allowed any other comforts he can buy. BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AF)—An ambulance pulled into a downtown hospital With what looked hke-an-emargency-patient and three attendants Thursday.-A few minutes later the four were HOURS: MeyivFri-8 to 5:30—Sot. 8 to 4 Sunday 10 'til 2 CARACAS, Venezuela credit laae.1 AT ROM IT HALL • lev wve because we mvel PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 930 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Air-conditioned for your shopping < "OPEN SUNDAYS 12 M4D01I to I ML" , r» ^ ’ Plenty of Free Parking IN PONTIAC - 200 Norik Saginaw SI. In Clerktton-Woterford on Dixit Hwy. Ji BIGHT str THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 80, 1968 Duality Carpets! i always unusual values DYER’S CARPET t West Huron ' FE 8-9675 I Open ’til 9 P. M.—Saturday ’til 5:30 ‘A In S. Carolina, Alabama Schools Desegregated Today By United Press International Negro students today inaugurate the first public grade school desegregation in history in South Carolina and Alabama. Three Negron register to attend two white* high schools, in Charleston, S.C., and 13 Npfffoei enroll for classes at a white nigh school in Tuskegee, Ala. Authorities anticipafid no trou- school. Negro attorneys, mean-_ [while, said they would appeal the!' Mobile school board’s grader-year integration plan on grounds it fails to comply with a federal desegregation edict. Around 200 Negroes, thwarted by police in an attempted anti-segregation march on the Wil-liamston, N.C., City Hall yesterday, threw brides and rocks through the windows of several business firms. Sheriff Raymortd Rawls called in extra police help to control the “unruly mob” and arrested 11 demonstrators. SWEET'S Radio and Appliance 90 Days Sameai Cash Discount Pricei Always 422 W. Huron '334-5677 bto in either city. Classes begin Tuesday in Charleston and Monday it Tuskegee. City schools at Memphis, Tern., begin their third yean of desegregation today but Shelby (Memphis) County school officials refused to disclose Integration plans for the opening of their schoola Tuesday, At Mobile, Ala., school officials worked on the applications of two for transfer to a white White and Negro children engaged in a rock-throwing melee in a theater at Smithlield, N.C., yesterday. and police said several yon tbs suffered cats. Twenty-fiv# civil rights demon- strators were arrested at Dan- viUe, Va., on charges of parad- ing nfUhout a permit and vie-lating an antidemonstration injunction. Elsewhere in the nation: • BIRMINGHAM, Ala.-Law enforcement officers urged more fluence among their congregations in preserving law and order during next. Wednesday’s classroom desegregation. •CHATTANOOGA, Tenn.—At least 15 Negrges were registered Teacher Association Starts Petition Drive DETROIT (UPI) - A petition drive for 250,000 signatures has been begun by the Michigan Education Association (MBA). A spokesman for the teachers organization said the petition 'drive was an effort to obtain legislation for all Michigan edn- Presently, only> 20,000 of the state’s 84,000 teachers have protection from arbitrary and unjust the spokesman said. The MEA plans to present its pe|ition_td |he W04 legislature if it obtains the necessary amount of signatured to force the body to act. ; “ • ■ > Fire Hits Submarine/ Killing One, Injuring 6 WASHINGTON (UPI) The Navy said yesterday that one seaman was killed and six others injured in a fire aboard the submarine Grayback. The Navy said the fire occurred I while the Grayback was on training cruisp in the Pacific. our “SPECIAL” o|FT FREE TO YOU BUILT-IN ' • OVEN and RANGE FREE WITH EACH COMPLETE KITCHEN REMODELED PRICED FROM $9087 ' No Cash Down FE 3-7833 RIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION-739 N. Perry for Die first toot. g r a d e d st previously all-white schoolsin Hamilton County. SCHOOLS AS USUAL •POWHATAN, Va. — Public schools wll! operate as usual in Powhatan and King and Queen counties this fall despite the erf-ation of private schools to allow whites to escape classroom race mixing. But m a Third' rural county forged to desegregate, Surry, prtly. Negro schools will operate this year. The county’s whites will attend a new private school. • GREENSBORO, N.C. — A federal, district court will hear arguments Sept. 10 on two suits designed to end racial discrimination In vReidsville and Ran-dolph County. • KEY WEST, Fla.—Schools opened on a fully integrated basis for the first time yesterday as 100 Negro students went to their first classes in previously aD-white schools. • MILWAUKEE, Wis.-Three youthful demonstrators were arrested and charged with disorderly conduct during a sit-in peeking the resignation of a member of the Community Social pevelop- schools. ment Commission who allegedly made'disparaging remark* about Negroes. ★ • CHICAGO—Public school of-| ficials and lawyers for 20 Negrol parents agresd to atop a court! battle and set up a team of expats to study jvobtaMBs creatadj by the city’s traditional school | districting ' system. The . Negro! parents had charged that school districting, together with segNM gation of Negroes in housing, resulted in “de facto segregation'' . • WASHINGTON—Negro leader^ predicted a new wave of militancy will sweep the nation as a result of Wednesday’s civil rights march by more than 200,000 persons. They called for more such demonstrations throughout the oouwry. ~~ , • -. • PLAQUEMINE, La.-An integration leader promised a resumption of mass demonstrations last night after the City Council rejected a list of Negro civil rights grievances. Earlier, the U.S, 5th Circuit Court of Appeals set aside an ordel* banning demonstrations. - DISCOUNT FURNITURE COMPARE OCR PRICES ANYWHERE! •sit iniouvs bugs M PATTEBN* TO CHOOI step, end m oocetail tables SHOP ALL THE'SALES AND DISCOUNT STORES THEN ©>ME TO L AND S WHERE YOU ALWAYS BUY FOR LESS 1*4.95 9 5.95 tus’uw boll away nabs *' 2 20.95 ...........I «■» Jff *»•-« P.aU, bc.rk.rn. Met, lU*. Krtl.r SI FURNITURE SALES . 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It’s an electric dryer ■ V exclusive! • . \ ^ - 4 k \ see year dealer dr DETROIT EDISON TT THE PONTIAC PRESS, A pass IDAY, AUGUST 80, 1963 Archbishop Genoa to'Visit 11.$., Canada HGENOA, Italy (irPI)-Gtuicppa \rdinalSiri, archbishop of wh, will travel to the United States and Canada next month. jfto prelate _____ day he will Imvs Italy Sept. 14. After lecturing atTaval Unlver-, ■ity in Quebec, be will speak in New Ye* City Sept. SO ft- the world conference of the International Committee of Scientific Organization. Cowb6y-Geolo(fTft Dies CALGARY, Alta. (AP) - Dr. J.Q.G, Sanderson, SB, a former cowboy who deckled to study geology and rose to top -of that profession, died Wednesday. PoliceSeekOut Killing Clues ; A WORD TO THE WISE FROM MISTER OH, N.' Michigan Youth Found in Shed TRAVERSE CITY (UPI) State police and sheriff’s officers sought today to unravel die threads in the last few days of l^year-old Richard St. Clair’s life. He rural BoontMich..youth was found dead Sunday in,a shed on an abandoned farm 10 miles south of here—a bullet lodged in the spint of his badly decomposed body. Held in- die ■ Grand. TVaverse County Jafl on a charge of probation violation was the/iast person to see St. Clair alive-^Delbert “Bucky” Rittenhouse, 23, of Trav-erseCity. * Rittenhouse, convicted of larceny here a year ago, told authorities yesterday the la?t time he saw St. Clair was Aug. 17 after the pair had a cup of coffee in a local restaurant. Sheriff Richard P. Weller said there was “apparent foul play, although it could have bees an accident.” He said suicide teas “Just about ruled odh” because of the angle at which die bullet entered the body. Hie body was identified yester- s of Traverse City, read newspaper amounts of the incident. The autopsy disclosed a metal plate in St. Clair’s head.'Mrs, Jones said the plate was the result of an auto accident 12 years ago. She said Aug. 17 alao was You keep your freedom of choice with oil heat. Many local fuel oil suppliers compete to provide the service you want. If one fails to satisfy, you can easily call another—a choice you- never have when tied to a monopoly fuel.. Oil refiners compete with each other, 'too, Which has kept oil cost down while monopoly fuel prices have gone up. Most important, of course, is the family security of an independent oil heating system. There’s never A Worry about an accident along a pipe line since your burner and fuel are right at hand to keep you warm and cozy. the last day she had seen hef brother. Clair, worked at the F & M Packing Go. here and stayed at a local hotel. A key found on his body fit the door to his room there. Weiler said the exact time of St. Clair s death still had not been determined because of die condition of the body. “ffie. have questioned dozens .of persons, including his employers, to. find out if anyone saw him affeu. Aug. 17,’* he said. ' a. SAFE—CLEAN—DEPENDABLE OIL HEA State Announces Sale of Tax-Reverted Lands "OAKLAND COUNTY Oil) HUT COUNCIL” LANSING (in— Some $140,009 tetax-re'verted lands in Northern Michigan 'Will be auctioned September by the Conservation Department. Auctions will: be held at Houghton Sept. 17; Iron Mountain Sept. 18; GlSflwin Sept. 24; Charlevoix Sept: 25; Baldtein Sept. 26. Proceeds go to the counties where the l,200 parcels of ■ land are located, and property descriptions are available from B county treasurers. ' BENSONS LUMBER — BUILDING SUPPLIES — PAINT and COAL 549 North Saginaw St* . " 5ATURDAY € IV FE 4-2521 SHEET ROCK -t-4x8-%..$1.45 4x8-%..$1.65 NEW IMPERIAL dishmaster Cuts Dish Washing Tima in.Half. SEE OUR VACATION MODEL ROME onM-24 ' 3% Milas North of Oxford OPEN SUNDAYS Call FE 4-2521 or MY *-1545 for Information SPECIAL GASH and CARRY PRICES! ROCK LATH Per Bundle. You get extra y*«rs of beauty and protection with Sherwin-Williams House Paints. Lest frequent repainting saves you money. Their superior quality end durability hava been proved on homes in all climates. amazing new MOO* Latex House Paint you art getting t very best house.pain It's possible to buy. Ask us which type is best for your bom*. .1. i. .ill Select.........*230 No. 1 ......... *215 No. 2....... •. *144 Par 1000 Foot CAREY BLACKTOP DRIVEWAY Tj&ILSEAL $795 #5 GAL BASKETBALL BACKBOARD COMPLETE $1080 BACKBOARD I* * SEPARATE * v $75° “mANYOTHERCASH AND CARRY SPECIALS ON ALL THE NECESSARY ITEMS OF BUILDING MANYOTIltKv.Aan ANp REMODELING -^gmANBJ||_ySi___^ Pontiac FE 3-7171 BENSON' HEATING & COOLING DIV. V LICENSED CONTRACTORS-ALL /AAKES INSTALLED FURNACES—BOILERS—CONVERSIONS! sales Toridheel SHWI“ Lake Orion NY 3-8218 ■501" NYLON The Fabulous Fiber Thafs OUT OF THIS WORLD!! LONG WEARING - EASY CLEANING -RESILIENT - MODERATELY PRICED 3 ROOMS INSTALLED WALL TO WALL "501” and continuous filament nylon GUARANTEED 10 YEARS IN WRITING! You grt>«-OsS’HoUSI PAIN* TIM FLENSBERQ •fejm Serle* U-H-97 M Z end not down; look) Hie only bird* of pan fcrwtori and Ml bade; look out!find In thrir natural state out* and ndt In; and lend rtatiL-Hride flaw Guteea are on an Edward E. Hale. - loft Tobago hi the Waal Indies. vJunior Editors Quiz on- Know Your Congressman's I.Gt ELECTRICITY PAY little EACH MONTH WITH OUR HOME LOAN CURRENT FRO*\ POWER fcZZ . STATION am -'★ a 1. The capital of the United States, was named for a former president. Study the following home)- I. when a member of Congress is hiring an office staff, wWch ^of the following should get, priori^? (His wife) (His think is corredt. (George Washington) (George Hyannisport) (George Palm Beach). wife) (His c^mpk^n manager’s sister). B. jBa inlial'a mrrmff nrffh Un : A dr dr 2. There are two major po- T. iSO wdatb wrong wim nis brother-fii-law? (Don’t answer that). litical parties in the Uaited • dr . W it States. Whose fault is this? (Democrats) (Republican!). S. Under the two-party ays-torn, how many of the follow-tag groups currently are active? (Liberals) (Conberva-tives) (Liberal Conservatives) (Conservative Liberv 8. Occasionally, attempts are made to influence a member M Congress. What is this called? Thatcher, Patterson and W#Niat als) (Ultra Liberals) (Liberal Ultras) (Arch Conservatives) Conservative Arches). INSURANCE LEARN THE TRUTH ABOUT THIS AMAZING YICTORtAINT BARGAIN! mtmii LOOK AT THESE TWO Rjaragagas^ _________ Baaed on our analysis, It Is onr opinion that no Bimotiosl. sew*«e ****** Ettinger of 'Albany, Calif. His plent- haa.Jmhw identified, bid wife Martha lives at Misawa Air not by tite army of 160 pa Base^whaw^pUot_tost^ooedrwho turned out with dubs and SSimS fa flwhUghts Wednesdayjlght. Gapt. Kenneth E. Moore, 90, the M _ * * * _ son of Kenneth 0. Moore,watchman Roman Oehri^lewnrand Mrs. Helen A. R^fhd wlved tbe myrtary yes-Moore of ML Vernon, Iowa. His *2"“ «P«ted over-wife Kan» lives at Misawa. hearing two teen-age boys plot ■ -f ■ ting to frighten a friend and hfa girl. Reichel said one jof the New Mexico’s overall area of youths thencttmbed on the oth-forest lands fa currently estimat-er’s back and the two donned is led at more than 20 million acresJlong black cloak. Detroit 3rd Lowest in Traffic Deaths CHICAGO (JwDetroit retained its place as the dty with the thtM lowest traffic death rate per 10,000 registered vehicles far the firet seven months of 1963 among dtiesPbf more than one milling population. ★ * # ★ The National Safety said yesterday that Detroit recorded .9 deaths per 10,000 ve-htdee to follow Philadelphia, which had 2.7,* and Los Angeles, which topped the list with 2.6 deaths. The council reported that traf- fic dcafim aqreaa the nation hi the Writ seven months of . the year readied a new Ugh of .22,190 compared With 21409 for the e period ef 10H U.S. Aide Tells Swedes We Hope to Up Trade STOCKHOLM, Sweden fUPD -Eugene M. Bredennan, assistant U, S. secretary' of commerce, told Swedish businessmen yester- boostStrade with their country. : •'* * * ★ He said American businessmen last year'bought Swedish goods worth |162 million. He said Swedish purchases in the United States totaled about 9919^ million Actress Anne Frcmos Loses Ailimpny Request LtMnAftGELES (UPV- Actress Anne Francis' not only lost her requeet for temporary alimony yesterday but was ordered to pay .court costs and her own attorney’s fees because jhe was making more money than her husband. Superior Judge Arnold Praeger I. however, take under aubmfa- WeatherKiffs Bureau Repbrt MOBILE, Ala. (AP)—A forecast of scattered thundershowers by the Mobile Weather .Bureau came true—and knocked the bureau out of commission. » . / Jr * * * * r Flickering lightning around the Bates Municipal Airport Bureau sion until today a petition foe support of her 17-xnonth-old daughter, Jane Elizabeth. Miss FraHfcfaT^L recently began divorce action against her husband, Or. David Abeloff, a Beverly Hills dentist..... struments, radar equipment and teletype circuits out of order. ' * Sr • ’ * “We were blocked' pretty weD out of commission for about 20 to 20 minutes," William Tilson, Itaeterdpbgfat in charge said. Ii It Aihlgyomghanty ___— or O'MahonayogMayf WASHINGTON «JP* - fllf> House Reclamation subcommittee^ has come up with a Solomon-Hke J decision on naming a lake formed ‘ by the Flamiiig Gorge pub in * Utah. ' ' . The lake lies fa both Wyoming* ; and Utah so the wbcMmuktee de- * cided yesterday to dame the Wy-oming half after the atate’e lata j the Utah half after the state’s ; late Rep. William Henry Ashley. About 05 per cent of weotens. end 9S per cent of worsteds in the • Untied Kingdom's wool textile in- ; dustry are made in Yorkshire. * S3* W WEEKEND SENSATIONS AT YANKEE MIRAGtlMIIE STORE Check Yankee’s Low Prices HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS , wMmm RE0UUR in SIZE ST. JOSEPH MULTI-FLAVORED CIEWULE VITAMINS MICHIN il 0HAL Antiseptic Reg. 98c NOXZEAAA SKIN CREAM Reg. $1.95 69* 89* P0UDENT DENTURE CREAM -—Reg. 99o Johnson & Johnson Baby Talc ■ Rag. 79c Cheryl Richards “Just Wonderful” Hair Spray 2.0S Value 69( sjijp s69{ INTRODUCTORY SPECIAL The TUXEDO III MADE BY AMERICA’S LEADING PHONOGRAPH SELLER, DECCA FULL STEREO AUTOMATIC PORTABLE PHONO 4995 1 Fully Automatic »Four Speeds i Tilt-down front IcUol far coll.ge, home 64“ VALUE “tTV! fully guaranlwd. Without doubt Mu. will bo tho mo«t wonted portablo phonograph for year, to como. Lay-a-Way Nowl LADIES'HAND-KNIT IMPORTED ITALIAN MOHAIR SWEATERS COMPARE AT 12" Fantastically budget priced. 100% Imported crew neck cardigans, Shetland Wool clastic and V-neck pallevars—rib—stttchad neckline insert. White, black, red, heather, beige, navy and gold; Siset 34 to 40. .. * YOUR CHOICE • Two Transistor Radio • Ingham Electric Alarm • Three-Piece Dresser Set Zippo Cigarette Lighter »2 TRANSISTOR RADIO With Carrying Cord, Sottory ona iarphdno. ZIPPOLIGHTER Reg. 93.50 e S-PC. DRESSER SET - Reg. 93.99 Made to tell for $.98*14-95 YANKEE MIRACLE MILE STORE OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9:00 PJVl OPEN EVERY SUNDAY UNTIL 6:00 PM LEAN LOOK washable cottons Boys'Long end - Short Sleevi Westerfield /comp, value 2.08 Wide variety of .fabrics and patterns, full-cut for perfect Stand machine-washable.' Choose from* all {he newest Fall shades. 6-18. , THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 80, 1968 THIRTEEN How to Handle a Woman? Become a House Painter ENGINEERS. HUS. SERVICEMEN, EXPERIMENTERS. crus, etc. GRAND OPENING Tuesday; SEPT. 3rd HI-FI COMPONENTS: t—kw«. Bitttoe. Tunora. flan, be. IUCTRONIC SUPPLIES JN*S Ml Receiving Tubea, Trantformara, Lana* dnell By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - If fortune ever favors me with a rebirth, I’ve decided to come back to earth aa a painter—Just as • house painte r: a plate ordinary aa0 lost six. But I never heard af a painter who succumbed to a , housewife’s strategy. He wins •very battle. m a world of chafing conform-Ity, the h o u lY'^aK.'"' painter is about the freest aoul I know. He bows to <3 no man’s bidding and yields to no woman’s whim or will It is probably their ability to defeat a woman To begin with, the painters won’t even come to your apartment until you’ve goft it In-perfect disorder. The ruga have to be "removed, the furniture stacked In piles they approve of. You leave for your own work; and the.battle between wife' ahd painters begins. Tactfully, your wife makes them coffee and sandwiches;-efen runs to the supermarket to get them some luncheon beer. They take these offerings with the sullen, air of gods accepting the unsatisfac- the bedroom first,” the wife thenjbome his wife wails, “I never suggests. . . .. saw such terrible mm in my Ufa. The painters exchange looks. &> uncouth! They won’t do a One silently heads for' the living sln8le thing the way I tell them/’ room, the-other for thg kitchen: she tries hribery, cajolery, Without saying a word they have the usually successful weapons made a silent pectPIbe bedroom will be done last. "That isn’t quite the Aide of}: blue l chose,” the wife tells Bis man in foe kitchen. ’That’s tee color in the bucket," says the painter, slapping another brush of it on tee writ the pokl Stroke of s born sadist. Each night the husband, comes tee feminine atonal. All to po avail. The painters go on brushing, paying no more attention to the bouMwife then if she were a bussing housefly. When the Job Is done a truce is declared. Husband and wife pour drinks, and ill shake hands. ‘T’U say one thing, lady,” sayt one painter, “you sure got good teste. This is the prettiest apartment we painted all year. Eh, ♦Why not?” replies the second painter, pouring himself a second drink. — After they have gone. lhe wjfe loom around the kitchen critically end says: “They did do a nice Job, and I do like this Color blue. I guess' they weren’t such bad fellows after all.” How do painters get away with it? What do they know about handlihg women the rest'of Us male mice don’t? U.$. Decides to Keep Muskegon Installation WASHINGTON * '- An Army I installation at Muskegon, MichJ built by a private concern under contract, will be retained after! all, an 'Armed Services subcommittee was informed Thursday, j Previously, foe. Army had! asked committee permission to dispose of fog installation, but it) withdrew Its request far disposal] authority before, the committee! ct'owfoei leaf Week Te Tabs Advantage ef fw—iar Prices Os Cad and Fuel Oil Will MOBILE MART COMPLETE OPTICAL shviSI ’ PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CDifll Open EVQinn SiSS m-tni was able to act oi te request. Coral needs' some sofclight to, survive. It. flourishes within M, feet of foe ocean surface, but usually does not grow below 150 feet where light is too weak. SANDERS FOR RENT TRAVIS HARDWARE M Orchard Lake Atc. r h HARMONIC ARDON — EICO — SAMS CMtr 0LARO8TAT — GARRARD SBUES — VT AM — OS — ETC. LAFAYETTE RADIO - SUPPLY COR* Phene 549-4752 4231N. Woodward, Reyel Oak tlcfield—her home —that most makes me admire painters. You hqye to take off your hat to a guy who can do that. ' We have had °ur apartment painted a number of times in foe 25 years we have been mitrried— about as many times as my wife has been able to face up to .the chaos it causee. BATTLE OF WITS Each time it has been a battle if wits between illy wife and the painters^ as to who would have their way. EUch time the painters won—hands down. The same thing happens in every household I know. Napoleon fought 12 campaigns and won six “It would be nice if you’d, do Direct Descendant of Rights Author Dies SANTA MONICA, Calif. - *■■ Big and little sisters dress up for slumberland in holly - berry red and, white no-shrink knits by Gibbs. Diamond plant for big sister in the French artistes* smock leotard version with matching Is Return Address in Bad Taste? By The Emily Post Institute Q: We bavp recently moved to a city, far removed iwm (host of our relatives and friends and very few of them knovr our new address. We are expecting a baby soon and intend to send out birth announcements. . It was my plan to include a return address on the&. envetopes tnt ray husband has turned “thumbs down" on this,' He thinks a return addresh indicates we expect presents and the address is EOUETgEN •THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY^ AUGUST 80, 1968 .Reminiscent of the Windsor chair is this one from Denmark imported by Selig Mfg. Co., Inc. Its Simplicity, * of line and Sturdy walnut sculptured base marks it "taldy 20th Century. '■ *■ Bride-Elect Is Surprised With Party - Maria Gosma of Ogemaw Road opened bridal 'gifts at a surprise party Wednesday evening in the bomb of,Mrs. William P. Gregory on West Huron Street .Sharing hostess honors were Mrs. Harry Gavriledes, Mrs. Sam Cosma, Mary Iliades and Elizabeth Gregory. Among the 36 guests were the bride-elect's mother, Mrs. Ernest Cosma, 'and Mrs. Nancy Collins, Mrs. Lambro Lingoir and Mrs. Foting Alexopoulos, all of Dearborn. Mrs. Chris Skoufos and Mrs. Harry Skoufos, aunts of the honoree's finance*, Gus Stavropoulos of Dearborn, came from Okemah, Okla. His sister, Mrs, John Asima-copoulos arrived from %fee, ~Utah. .. The Seat, 15 wedding will be in St. George Greek Orthodox CHttfch. , Far East ts Setting for Church Unit “World Vision Festival" was the theme of the Woman’s Society of Christian Service of the First Methodist Church at its meeting this week. Settings of India, Ceylon, Nepal, and Pakistan served as backdrops for the unique luncheon and previewed fall studies of the group. Participating in the luncheon were the Vivian Otto, Marion Shaw, Marion Sbq^ ons, Agnes Stably and Grace Otto.Circles. Mrs. Dudley Colby was in charge of. the program, and Mrs. Harry Going spoke on the six great religions of the world. GM Girls Go to T rack, Not Picnic —ftembers .of the General Motors Girls’ Chib of Pontiac enjoyed a day at the Hazel Park Race Track re---cently in lieu of their anniial summer picnic. The event began with a buffpt luncheon served in the track dining room. ■ - The 1963-64 season of the Club will open officially Sept/ 10 with iTfamOy - style dinner .at Devon Gables. Mrs. Shirley Bartbolemew of thfl-Fisher Body Division is chairman tot the evening. ^ Included in plans for “the .coming season is a style show and dinner to be held it the Elks Temple in October. The dinner is for members and their guests, but the public, is invited to the show. Carol E. Saul Adapted from 17th Century Spanish credenzas is this oak cabinet from Jamestown Lounge Co. The earth ings, deep into the mod, are not .only typical of the period, but a tribute to modern cabinet making skills. Church Women to Meet dor the* smaller fining -room tit Wfrgroup from the Sequent" collection By Benredon. An outstanding example of fine l cabinet. making and the beautifully f igured American walnut table tops and large areas of the sideboard are enhanced with bands of Carpathian elm burl. The gracefully shaped Size of Dining Room Furniture Das Shrunk in -Without loss of good design, comfort or convenience, dining furniture has “shrunk in size in the lasl decade. Size of areas or rooms labeled “dining"* on floor plans of apartments and houses is shockingly, small by comparison w i t hr prewar standards. ★ ★ * Designers have created furniture scaled for the -newer smaller spaces. As in the “gOod-dd-d a y s,” handsome > hardwoods with their soft rich- is Wed to City— Serviceman Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Saul of Rosebarry Court announce the recent marriage, of their . daughter Carol Elizabeth to ^ Aviation Technician 3. C. Benjamin A. Bayma Jr. ;.? ;# > ; It" • Rev.‘Walter J. TeeuwtsSeir Jr. officiated TrtThd small family ceremony in the Drayton plains Community United Pre^torian'Church. Parents of the bridegroom*' are .Benjamin A. Bayma of Premont Street and Mrs. Clara Bayma of Pontiac. After a southern honeymoon, the" couple will reside in Hawaii where he is' stationed. Also taking part were Mrs. Rena Theorin, Mrs. Fred Manes, Mrs. Arthur Tuffjn \ end Mrs. J. W. Green: nL new study class of “Cliristian Issues in Southern Asia” will be held each Wednesday mdrnipg in September at tiie honw^of Mrs. J. W. Green of Cherokee Road. Mrs. Green and Mrs?'' Colby will lead the classes. Next month’s meeting of the Woman’s Society will be ; held fPppt. b, Members nt the Marlon Simons Circle —will befrostesses, and reservations are to be made to Mrs. J. H. Rawley. 13 Graduate Nurses Center . Thirteen area women were graduated Thursday from the Ann Arbor Practical Nurse Education Center. The graduates from Pontiac are Mrs. Callie Barge, Carol Byers, Dorothy Chance,; Sandra pooper, Mfs. Grace Cunningham, Mrs. Barline . Dowell, Mrs. Beverly Green, Mrs. Ethel McCray, Cora Mil-ton, Native Milton, Sandra' Schmidt and Ed4-th Scott. Mrs. Margaret Hancock, a Clarks ton resident, was also graduated. Mare affiliated with I tiae General Hospital. tones and shimmering surfaces create an inviting atmosphere. For the long-time plus of daily enjoyment choose the * dining furniture made of a hardwood veneer that quietly . . shows the personality and beauty to whit IT you respond. VENEER G1UDE .Certain styles seem best expressed in certain species of wood. But the mark of distinction between one furniture group- and another of the same style,- iq? the grade of veneer selected. The more unusual figures are graded higher. For instance,' there are many ’ classic 18th Century styles from which to choose. ★ -? The veneer of one group may show a very faint grain or figure. Another, in similar .style, may .have carefully matched figured cabinet doors, tops of tables and Case pieces. The natural rippling oval figure of the wood, centered onihe drawer fronts may delight your eye'and sense of balance. ’ ___■ 1 subtleglow.thenatural range of light and dark tones in skillfully selected veneer of the Same species as the plain- j er wood. - EACH different Each tree of each species has a ‘definite resemBlance// Just as one child may be prettier than another, so each log is different from' its rela- . •fives. Climate, soil and growing conditions influence figure, pattern and color of the Wood. But no one is certain what / makes one log more hand-somely figured than another growing nearby. - of many different species of hardwoods. • She's in Hospital Ponfiac United Church Women will have their -Missions Institute Sept. 9 at the ' Covert Methodist Church on Pohtiac Lake Road. Dr. James Laird, miffister of Detroit Central Methodist Church, will speak -onH,The J Changing City Challenges the Church." This is the (theme * for the year in the home mission field- ★ ★ ★ “The Christian Mission jn Southern Asia" will be the 7 foreign mission topic. Registration begins at 9 'a.m. At noon beverage and dessert will be served. : The meeting is open to all interested women. Wash Garments Before Fall Storage send them. I think this would be an excellent opportunity to let them ‘ know our address. May I please have your opin- -ion on this?. A: If your friends and relatives- do not know your new address, I think incEid-ing a return address on tile envelopes of the bfrth announcements would be a logical and practical way of letting them know what it js. ' I don’t agree with your husband that it will mean . you expect presents: laundering summer clothes beforefall storage is especially important. The stains,'soil, and perspiration that are so much a part of •summer activities may become “set" in the fabrte and the garment will not be wearable when you’re ready 4o don the lightweight attire again. .‘I Want Her Husband’ ’Most furniture veneer comes from “longwood,” the tree trunk. Only after the log, is split can the veneer pro-, ducer be sure the figure is just usual or very unusual. The decision is then made as to the best slicing meth- ^ od to make the natural.-pattern the most interesting., sp ★., The finest furniture makers seek’the unusual in veneers Apply Liquid Wax To -apply liquid wax, dip a sponge in water, wring dry' and pat between paper towels to soak up excess water. Wet sponges do s better job than (by ofies. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Why does a woman hang .on to a man when she knows he’s in love_^ .^with another ’ . , woman? I mfet 'this -man and we became interested in each other. His wife was in the |hospital lor a month, sa nobody ‘ could blame him. After hjs wife came home we continued to see each other, but not so much. I know he loves me. because he said .so. * I wanted to help him bring things u to a head, so I called up his wife, pretending to be a third party, and’told her ail about her husband and myself. I gave her my name and address in case she wanted to check. She said'she wasn’t: inter-' ested in anything I had to say.. I hear die is back in the Should I visit her. there and have a woman-to-woman taik with -her? TIRED OF WAITING ★ "**'"* ' DEAR TIRED: You rank high on. my list of predatory women. Someone should put a bounty on your kind. And I’m afraid in this case, the . wrong Woman is in the hospital. , J-a. DEAR ABBY: How old do you think I should be before I can (1) Wear the kind- of make-up I want to wear? (2) Go in cars with-boys? (3)' Pick out my own clothes? My mother and Lfuss.ebout this all the tiirie. I would like your opinion. “SOMEBODY” DEAR “SOMEBODY:’’ Every girl must live by the rules set down for. her. If she is lucky, enough to have a sms and 12 million j -days lost by children six to -19, the U.S. National Health -•Survey reports. Big ’Membership CHICAGO (UPD—Almost 2%-million boys and girls belong ^to more than 94,000 4-H clubs iuNhe United States, the National Service committee -says^ ■ On another set of drawers the figure may be cut off at one end, causing the same annoying feeling as a tilted picture. The picture could be straightened. Bui if the veneer was poorly used it can’t be changed. *•>' * • * . *★ Candlelight falling on .a plain wood mgy. reflect nothing. It will bring to life, in mother, fibe should listen to her motner. : I could tell > you what my •for a daughter, but it wouldn’t help you because I’m not your mother. ,kv DEAR ABBY: I am going to be married in two months^ My mother dug up her grandmother’s wedding gown -and she wants me tp wear it. I tried it on and it (s still in viery good condition, but it looks so oldrfashioned! Some very fashionable peo--'pie ^ITEie attending my wedding aiRTT would rather haveN. a new -wedding gown. Am I wrong? It’s hot a matter of money because my father can well afford to buy me a new one. MIXED EMOTIONS DEAR MIXED: An heirloom wedding gown is considered VERY fashionable — . ’ and the older the better 1- Most girls would givq their ? blue garters for the opportunity to be married in. their g r e a t-grandmother’s gown, but if you can’t* see it, buy a new one. , * C O N F ID E N T IA L TO “BEEN HAD:’’ H ypu don’t mind the publicity, you could. take him to court and prob-ably get some of your money back. '*• And in the future, young lady, I advise you to tell him that from how on all he can count on ts his fingers! It's a small world stretch in a two-piece nylon sleeper ipyB . with a rocking-horse motif. ! Ml'Y No-shrink '■W .; knit by | ■ I Gibbs in [ . ; ■'••a - maize or. aqua.: . Q: Is it really wrong -to send the printed thank, you cards given us by the fu-' . neral director? We would not think of sending a printed thank you ’ on any other occasion, but as these were given to hiep i us through this ordeal we ' wonder if we may properly —send them? --★ ★ ★ A: If you add a hand-writ-ten “thank you” or an ex- __pression such _as, “Your kindness meant so much to us all,” on the cards sent . to personal friends, they woukl he permissible. Q: My fiance died several months ago from injuries be received in an automobile accident. I have been wearing my en--gagement ring qp my left— . hand but several of my -—friends have told me that I ' shouldn’t cio so as I am no longer .engaged,- Wffl—youT-• please tell me if this'is true? - A: You may continue to wear your engagement ring on your left hand if you wish, but it will give strangers the impression that you are still engaged and will ‘discourage . the attentions of other young men., ’ - -• - - Details concesnii^ jhe announcing and christening of a baby are described in the new Emily Post Institute booklet entitled, “The New— Baby.” To obtain a copy, —aend ten cents in coin and . a' self-addressed,” Stamped envelope to the Emily Post Institute, in care of Thq Pontiac Press.. . (’/•aw’-I The Emily Post Institute^, cannot answer personal mail, but all questions of general interest are - answered in this column: Work Worth More Today, an hour's work in a factory will buy nine quarts, of, milk compared with HRS quarts in 1947-49, reports thf Alabama Extension Service. Sandman , ■ sentry prepares ' for the nightwatek in no-sknnk cotton knit by Gibbs, in red or . 1 blue with trim-fitting elastic ankles and plastic • dot soles. flFTBiW THE PONTIAC PRESS,FRIDAY, AUGUST 80, 1968 Lacy Stockings;r Stocking are changing. The rib-knit and lacy-wool or cotton knit Jdnd wiU be coming Air Pressure Facts H it not necessary to keep a barometer outdoors. *hjr pressure is the same inside U. S. t$$u& Mew' Pamphlet on Exercising Enroll NOWf ULTRA MODERN METHODS Wo Tooch ond Do ADVANCED HAIR STYLING Miss Wilson Closed Wednesday »r" POINTIAC Beatty College 16%«AST HURON Remanding • BATHROOMS • BASEMENTS • ATTICS • ADD A ROOM • GARAGES plain knit or ■ run-rasiit micro with reinforced heels and {MH for better wear. 2 pair. 11.35 "Center Passer" Yauthi' Boy*’ - ttmrfe $579 $599 $529 82 N- Saginaw Street ' Gail here is doing one of the more advanced fee-tfrcises from the new government book, “Adult Physical Fitness.” Body is rigidly supported by arm at start, then leg is raised high: Henderson demonstrates stationary jog trot. Table in book relates number of paces tai''distance which would be traveled. illustrations, Gail Tirana demonstrates one of the simpler exercises. Starting position is at top. Bend for• WTp'MHLs* TUESDAY thru SATURDAY The Incomparable Piaito Artistry of ~ "Sandkrt" Polly's Pointers In the cause of physical fib DINING I DANCING Exquisite cuisine 'and elegant atmosphere In one of' Michigan's finest supper dubs. glamorizing a Miss Perfect Figure. She is Gail Tirana and comes to this prominence bqcmiise she is; the model for a new government publication, “A d u 11 Physical Fitness.” Gail is starred in the fihintrationf far the • which presents women’s exer-vlwti Marine I-arwt CpI. Robert Henderson, handsome and husky, poses for the men’s exercise diagrams. The' 64-page -booklet begins with simple exercises and progresses to more difficult ones, requiring not fhore than 20 minutes for each day’s* program. Booklet may be obtained by sending 35 cents to Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, Washington, D.jC< Keep Wrapping Neat Girls’"Whites" 12% to 3 3% to 10 $429 $479 ^ Slim and Mod. Widths V Couple Wed in Pontiac igirls, remember this for future reference. For a straight, even edge, keep your eyes on the point of the scissors. It is- intriguing and ncvcrMx—ear; By POLLY CRAMER i DEAR POLLY—When you tear off a piece of clear plastic wrap from the package roll, it usually Rev. William Brady officiated at the recent marriage ,ewl59 Junior Bfootory wrinkles up and sticks together. LaSalle-Street b Leo Delbert Wet your - jumds with warm water 1060 W. Huron DEAR POUY - My 6-year-old son has necktieS as elegant and handsome as his father’s. Best of all, they cost nothing at all. I took my hatband’s old-fash-, ioned wide ties and any others that were frayed or soiled and tied them on my son, with the narrow end on top- The former .back of a man’s fall size tie is a perfect size for. a little bdy, find li freak anil new lnnlrinn Datey_.flf. Mio in the Central^ [warm li better than cold) and you will be able to straighten it in no time for easier handling* when- wrapping something.—ANN Mr. and Mrs. Albert G. Erickson were the attend-' ants. After the reception in the home of the bride, the couple left for a brief honeymoon in /Minnesota. ^They will reside on LaSalle Street. Shop Duty 9t30 MB 6,,Moo. and M. ffl 9 ■ - DEAR POLLY—When I want to give Die cement porch floor a quick cleaning and.tdo.-not, have time to get oat the hose, I use the sprinkling can and a' broom. It works better than'' trying to dip the broom in st backet, and you do not'break the broom straws.—MRS. R. H. Bride-to-Be Is Honored September bride-elect Lois DEAR POLLY-With six little Hefner was guest of honor ones coming in with wet mittens hope they like mine.—ELAINE this put winter, I’ve had to dry the mittens over the radiators, and this caused a lot of shrinkage. I hit on the idea of using an ordinary shoe rack. It works just fine and can handle nine pairs of mittens, leaving the radiators free and the kitchen much neater. It is a good way to keep count in the home of Mrs. Elmer Dunlap on Lakeward Lane. Stride Plake was cohostess. Miss Hefner is the daughter of the Isaac .Thurmans of North Shirley Street.. Parents of her fiance, Joseph Seddon, are the John Seddons of Mich-Iga Avenue. Finest Quality Carpets ’ McLEOD CARPETS WOODWARD At SQUARE LAKE ED. Share your favorite homemak-ing ideas .,. send them to Polly in care of The Pontiac Press. You’ll receive a bright,* new silver dollar if Polly >ses your ideas in Polly’s Pointers. ' . I ' Campherwood, Moonmlrt, Goldenwood, Indian Bnfo 'Owns d« mtnthe, Antique-Linen, Wafer Green. NYLON of thp mittens, too.—A. B. Mrs. Robert McKinney of Translucent China by Fanwood^ Nj., and others from Walled . Lake, Royal DEAR POLLY—In cutting paper of any kind or articles from Limited Colors •Acrilic Fibre by Chemstrand CUSTOM VINYL FLOORS Superb Facilities for WEDDINGS Engagement Parties* Bachelor Dinner* . ,s •Futuresq .] •Palatial Corlon SEE THE LARGEST —SELECTION OF •Tessa ra •Montina Incomparable Atmoshpere for .. . BIRTHDAY PARTIES Wadding Annfveraar|ea- , Family.Celebrations In This Area CUSTOM MADE, MURAL READY-MADE 5-Piece Setting . , ...,7V . -. .$12 Eight ether Royal Doultoo patterns—Apiece place ..settings * . . from ...-.v...... 39.95 tq H4.95’ BANQUETS Dilutee Meetings— , Business Get-Togethers Only ons of over 300 Open Stock Dinnerware patterns, offering top saltations and priced to give top values.. Michigan’s Largest Dinnerware -Specialty. Store ? - OPEN EVERY DAY J., 10 A:M. to.8 P M. . NORTH END 0^ MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER ON TEUBGRAPH ROAD The Perfect Settin# for .... OFFICE PARTIES W Card Parties, -Cocktail Gatherings ★ CLOSED LABOR DAY ★ FOR RESERVATIONS CALL MI 4*-I400 - JO 4-5916 FURNITURE S.IAGINAW. ST. At ORCHARD lAKt AVI* ^ % FE 5-1174 • PONTlAC ONLY 7 MORE DAYS—STOREWIDE SALII 3511 Elizabeth Lake Road Telephone FE 2-8642 FE 4-7775 ■ ' .9 SIXTEEN m THE TONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 80, . o'' ; FAMILY SIZE WORLD FAMOUS WASHERS The MOST Service-Free WASHERS MADE! Available WITH or WITHOUT SUDS-SAVER ■M MAYTAG WRINGER WASHERSH Specially BIG ' SQUARE Aluminum P|*|Q0(| At Low A* 2 YEARS TO PAY 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH 1-Year Free Sendee Lowe# —-Interest Ratet in Town! 121 N. SAGINAW - FE 5-6189 * Your Appliance Specialists OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY WIGHTS UNTil9 P.M. Pick New Furniture With Care, Economy By. MARY FEELEY Consultant la Msaey Management Today’s column is by way of being a salute to the bride and plfy with their new furniture. It has always seemed to me that beying furniture ism peculiarly “etnotSS&iil^niortlbf shopping. So much besides money fs involved.. Furniture can express a way of life, a meeting of the minds between! twp highly individual people, an! indication of how1 good, classic design it will fit harmonious}y into any future setting. ■ * . to it madd of hard wood feat wilT not have a tendency to split? Where parts are Joined — is the Joining done properly • parts dovetailed? CHECK CONSTRUCTION Well-constructed furniture is not merely glued,- nor Merely held together jdth nails. Look to see if acretmjafld bolts are used in addition,,jfcxamjne the fabric, If any. * If' stripes or pattern are not perfectly matched/ this teNs yen that the manufacturer red their future. FEELEY It can be a stop-gap between today’s necessity mat tomorrow’s hopes and intentions. And as a matter of fad, with mast young couples it is exactly that compromise. For that very reason, it’s wise to do some preliminary shopping before setting foot in the furniture departments. Decide this basic question: are all these first pieces to be considered temperary, governed by bote and where Tyou will live for die first few years —eg are One or two pieces to be chosen for forever after? it will be helpful to it some of the easy pit-falls In buying furniture are, so they Can be recognized' and avoided. For instance: ★ ★ ★ . Choosing pieces-out of scale with the boose' or apartment; KeepJJw proportion of your new home well in mind. Often furniture is displayed in a more spacious setting in the store. It can literally overpower its new home — even if the actual measurements fit in. If you can take a floor pan drawn to scale with yen when yen shop, you’ll dqabetter Job. And ■ »o ’ RfiM'' the; ■ placement and. proportion of windows and doors. That,may seem elementary, But it can prqye crucial! r *, Lack of attention to workmanship, This applies especially if you are buying an " important piece you hope to Jive with from how on - such as^ohest.trdesk; a favorite "chair, that is such a may very well have taken other fshqrt cats in construction. -Ask all the questions you can think of about the fabric’s wear-ability, whether it will hold its shape .without stretching and sagging, whether it is coiorfad, whether it’s easy to dean. If a chair or sofa isn’t comfortable hi tiie store, it wpn’t be any more coii)fortaideMjriMBR.:yj^^'iat' it ‘‘wne. Investing too much of the budget, in an enthusiastic binge. When carrying Charges are too Heavy, the budget gets bogged down and it can take years to get it back on an even keel. . A reasonable allotment for fiBims ii li ia arparcar of the annual income. Think twice before you take on more than that. Trying to furnish the entire house or apartment at one time. Few young couples can do this. It’s usually smarter to concentrate on a few good pieces, then eke out the plan with inexpensive, temporary furniture which will be adequate if not entirely satisfactory — but whid^can usefully be relegated to less prominent pwrtfl ftiront ymni Shopping to impulsively. When a\ young couple marries, their weU be postponed, looking toward later years when such pieces will {day a more significant .part in family life. I recall the woman whose living tastes are not necessarily jelled. They grew pp with somebody elas’s choice offurnishings ualiy their parents’. Their own 4ake-aaoi Unless the two feel their tastes are la complete bar* mony, that they know definitely what type of furniture they wffl live with most happily then they should take their time hi spending money/ Couples who plan to start a family right away Should take that into consideration when they shop. Perhaps it-'will be more realistic to think In terms of "child-proof’-’ furnishings for the next few years! A more selec- Ths first transoceanic cablet Volcanic pedis,'«• VMpg m laid in 1866. ’ Ihlgh, dominate the Azores. room wps; a .rather mixed assortment of entirely washable furnishings. When adfed by. a visitor Whit “period’’ Mr forniture was, this mother replied complacent-“Early childhood.” ; v Of ceurse, fabrics and furniture that can be kept dean the inexpensive way — with Just tense, children or not. Upholstery that is going to be difficult to care for will pose a budget problem. The same holds true for carpeting, floor' obvfer-ings, draperies. Upkeep has to be considered as pail of the cost, remember... • * *. * As a parting piece of -advice: RANDALL’S SHOPPE ■ 4 summer Permanents SHARON- FIDLER has Joined our «tatt wttk the aeweat in hair .style* DARLENE SEYENEY, Manicurist hen every Ttanday, FrHpty ** Satorday , Wayne Street FE 2-1424 AUTUMN HARVEST incidentals." A single lamp can make'or mar a living room. It’s always wisest fo‘ settle for fewer things, and feally enjoy tiiose few. (You can write Mary Feeley in care of the Pontiac Press. She win answer-in her column questions of widest interest.) Couples Announce Births of Boy/ Girl Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Hie-tikko of James K. Boulevard ..(Sharon Hetherington) Announce the birth of A*son, Christopher Roy, on Aug. IS. • A daughter; Sherrie Marie, was born Aug. 24‘ to Mr, and Mrs. Fred Tefend (Agnes Mazza) of Columbus, Ohio, formerly of Pontiac. 1 SHARON MONDY Sharori Mondy, daughter of , Mr. and Mrs. Bradley James of Portland Street, was graduated tpday from tiie Hackney School of Nursing,, Hackney Hospital in Muskegon, I Frn: Dressing Baby After you suds, rinse, and dry baby, put a tiny cotton ball into each of his hands. He will ailtoniatically double them into fists, so they will slide more easily info his shirt or other sleeves. Exciting new beauty you'll cherish for years. Tastefyliy-executed designs blind into an exquisite ivory-white background. /. An exclusive TS&T glazing process locks colors in . .. protects them from harsh dstergants and cleaners. AmLjf you like to serve, hot from the oven, Ever Yours was made for you*.. because it's ovenproof! • 45-PIECE SET Open Stock 50% Off on All Open Stock. T2 ,95 DIXIE POTTERY 5281 Dixie Hwy. Frozen Emit Salad Is Pretty Party Food OPEN TONIGHT until 9 P.M. ----By JANET ODK1J. Pontiac Press Food Editor ““One of the lOc^t thiiir^ to serve at a bridal shower s a frozen fruit salad. It’s I rich enough to double as | dessert if you like. Not * new, perhaps, but many I readers may never have | tried It VJt, , . Mrs. Alfred Fox of Clark-i ston is Our cook. The moth-| er of two girls, she belongs | to a church group find a | bridge dub. FROZEN FRUIT SALAD " By Mrs. Alfred Fox 2 eggs, beaten 4 tablespoons vinegar 4,tablespoons sugar 2 tablespoons better o« margarine 2 cupe Queen Anne eher-ries or No. 2% can fruit cocktail, drained 3 oranges cut info" pieces 2 pups miniature marshmallows 2 caps pineapple chunks 1 cup whipping cream % cup nutmbats i Cook eggs, vinegar aqd -sugar in double boiler. Stir until thick. Remove, add batter or margarine. -DM, . Add rest of ingredients, folding in whipped cream last. Pour into large mold or refrigerator pans. Freeze for 24 hours. Serves 8-10. • 'm- § Denmark claims there it no ll-l Alabama is eighth among coal literaqfJa QreenlwL „... .., I producing atatoa.. -v?klHO - OeCT I On . THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1963 SEYENTEB# Holds Picnic Sixteen, members of Queen Maty Section, tNeedlework Guild of America, gatberedv for an outdoor' picnic, luncheon Thursday at the Crescent Lake home of Mrs. John New- Mrs. Newton and her cohostess. Mrs. Christine Albert, bio wed slides of their trip to Europe this summer, when they visited some 10 countries in two months. The fall season will open Sept. IS with a meeting In Mrs. Albert’s home on Mi* -amA Roatf. - - By MRS. MURIEL LAWRENCE recently tWed into our neigh-. At best, we can ba only Dear Mra. Lawrience: Iftr moth- borhood. tatocs. For odr difference in . fr Uvea dith me, nty husband Yesterday when die wife tele- eration from our; children’s is and our UttJ^boy. Though ^he is oyer SO, die is so.young in heart that all our friends include her la their invitatiqns to us,1 ,-.U My prcMem is one coupfe wbo On a clear night an average arson can sea 7,000 stars. “Western Round-Up Room” Every Monday NTght 5-8 P.M. We've a special Round-Up ranch room pit roped^off for Boys and Girls and delicious/Cowboy Menu lq servp you, just like they eat out on the range Wtf SUPPLY CO. vy' " K FEED AND' PONTIAC STORE DRAYTON STORE 4266 Dixie Hwy. Phone OR 3-2441 CLARKSTON STORE 6676 Dixie Hwy. g^pnc MAS-2745 September Sate ef Fit Stoles-Jackets , Mink Stales Squirrel Stoles Natural Squirrel Belly Jaekets • Mink Trimmed Dyed Broadtail Lamb Jacket • Mink Trimmed Dyed Persian Lamb Paw Jackets^.. Values to $399 RmNKi Nsw Fluffy 34 to 42 MOHAIR SWEATERS $$699 BUDGET SWEATERS mm $399 SLACKS.. Berkshire Nylons , O.M-o-j»or Smlm Rag. t.35, Mow .. . 1.M Rag. 1.50, Now ., « 1.11 Bog. 165, No w .,. 13 % m EIGHTEEN -Tftg-PONTIAO PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST $0, 1968 $tak»$ Cafi Gefr Too High Don't Lef thS Reward BSN CASEY Trap By LESLIE J. NASON, Ed. D. - Dear Or. Nam: • In the past I have used the reward Systoa-te encourage my children to make better grades. It has worked reasonably well except that the ptakes get higher and higher. NowM my son who willB be r high school^ senior this year wants an automobile as his reward' (or maintaining •B” average. * I can not afford] to enter into such] a bargain. fthat« can I substitute? Mis. R.N., Pitman, N.J. Answer: . Succeeding hr school to the best of his ability is the duty of every teen-ager. Parental approval and nominal rewards are good^ motivations—as sort of extra bemuses. Have a good, solid, down to earth understanding as to who owes whom what in your family, and start over! Yea are not alone to being led into this trap Ity teen-age How can I help my cbild before k deter tiyt legitimate. channels- (education she loses the determination to and preparation for adtnt* life), ‘insist that ho set up a plan tor his own progress far the coming year. sons or daughters. Parents of younger ' children should take heed and profit from Tour experience. w y* Dear Dr. Nason: My daughter’s IQ, 121, should be adequate for college which she However, her marks were mostly. C's tost year and she is jfey on Bridge headache. He had to lead a heart 4A WKJ8S -4ASI4. AIKt m EAST (D) AS AUII van 1—?—went ♦ Q108S ♦ J7X AA»T63 —mir^i *Q 1097649 *749 ♦ K9 ♦ J East and Wait vulnerable East South West North Pan Pan pan 1 ¥ Pan .1* Pan 1N.T. Opening lead ■ ♦ I then guess' whether to pjay immy’s king or Jack. A review of the bidding eliminated the headache rather quickly. There really waa no gum at all.. East had shown up with the king and jack of apades, and the king and queen of clubs and probably he ld the Jack of diamonds. ft hf..F-, Clearwater Beach, Fla. Answer: • ,[ An outsider usually has more success, than a parent in helping a student gain good study habits. A good student in -your daughter’s classes might be the one to do this for her. — * ; Dear Dr.; Ni My 16-year-old Son is drifting from bad to worse. First he did smart alec things. Now he is going out with a crowd in spife of our. disapproval of them and their activttiea. He shows no la* rest k Help! . ( -v; Mrs. E' R., Tampa, Fla. Answer: Your son and his crowd are fighting for independence in the wrong way. Fighting for independence is a natural drive for teen-agers but true independence aM liberty are not gained by fighting authority, Point out to him-that liberty and independence at this age can come only through working in (You can write Dr. Nairn in care of Hie Pontiac Press. He will answer in his column questions A widest intereht) Firms S ign Struck J >RANKFORT, Ky. (AP)—-Ttacj irase “ain’t worth shucks” doei not hold true these days at Che-noa, a r emote community in eastern Kentucky. * * Carr’s Cabin. Grafts of Chehoa and Klarer Co. of Louisvillb have drawn up a contract for volume production of-12 different types of corn shucks dolls, r ._.■ ‘ w • ★ The brightly colored eigh-inch dolls have brought employment to almost 40 families in the depressed mountain area. iwr*a I^RIBRBWHINS >/ QMIPOR, DR- DUAL. *1 ^soMAHTVBnwe ) >pottrMmnrty J AS READILY- j x vine xawwwtoMmMiwQy TOTHBaitoCMWBUUWW. WHAT soac OMMMOff OUR ‘ Hospruus WAttMtoNTu (AATTCRl THE BERRYS | H fl-L bo IT yyfHEN_l>4.1 W <3000 j *JPTME FRONT WALK /j By Carl Grubert Jid rt DRIFT >iARLO OUR ANCESTORS By Qufnc If he also held the ace of hearts he would Jiave had 14 high card points' and surely would have opened the bidding. South led his heart and after West played low South went up With dummy’s king and made £k two spade contract JACOBY By OSWALD JACOBY When yeiU review (toe bidding In effort to locate your opponents’ cards, It’s just as important to remember what you, have not, beard as what you have. In other words, a pate may be just as informatory as a bid. ___South won toe 1 first trick in duit»-| my. He wanted to ave toe ting of diamonds as an .. „ toby to his own batf. Than fie cashed dtmuny’s ace of trumps, came to his own hand with that king of diamonds and played hls queen of trumps. He hoped to smother the jack, but West dropped toe seven of clubs. East promptly led the king of chibs and- continued with the queen. South ruffed and led the ten of trumps. East took his jack and led another club. South ruffed that- also and proceeded to draw East’s last trump. This left South with three hearts, one trump and a slighj r* - * v Astrologica , Forecas# mwrfi.-m , • . . Unha mWi ttc way.” ARIES i(Mar. 21 to Apr. 1»): You receive deflntt* news "solidifying” wbat previously waa bated onspooutotum. Be ready. Bat don't tie yourself down tajuiphtoc until YOB *et ALL THE TAURUS (Apr SI to May 1(): Lett dap of month finds you to "cottar mood" taaa previous d*y«. Pride to aeootopUab-ment from recent efforts adds to weU-belnr. ^ Avoid extreme,. Maintain tense r gw ■ ' P*p*» > 22 to July 21): li to fade. i — — _________proapeets. Mid, ttowa aMtoaTsSltta ds t, —- & mLr-oointiSScm. ami ehar-Unget, atres, creative sctlvlto, H UDO (July 22 la Au*. .21): L_ _ „ ol meath finds you putting "finishing touches" on Important pnjld. Control VW to scatter lorcaa. Be datortetoed to OOliPUn* task at liand. Associate tmoo lAu«. S| to Sept. 22): Plana, hopes, withes . can. be fulfilled. Results depend on willingness to tske tnltlstlve. 4)0W others you have touch at originality. Ba unique. Follow coursee of convictions. 1 LIBRA (Sent. » to Oct. S2): Jump, tato (ray' with bundle of Ideas, challenges. Kay la DEFIJUTE approach. Leave “wishy-washy” adWi to others. — uuboin. HShOto motives. .(PA. .f»T° Bov. 21 k High. V+CHRD Sense** Bass. 34 ’Bus TTt Pass f You, South, hold: 4AQS7 Hill 49 419999 What do you do now?_______ A Bid *Nd hearts. Tow TODAYS QUESTION Your partitor eootinuaa with a Jump to tour apadaa. What do you do aowt , wajC ‘Yesterday’s storm blew a lot of salt water in our Taffy I • it spoiled the whole batch!” BOARDING HOUSE I*p BELIEVE YOUM VEH, HE'£ W'' wtaa YRAftJiMfi ra npcpkinlF SAID THEY VtOS-OP-WAR i(/eretkyihsto/ champwo MYTU6-0F-Y1AR CMAfAP-at THE OWLS , aL>6 PlChliC f4EKT M i YiEEK/OMCE, AT WAIABAU6MLYK, WALES, I POLLED IHE HA«?ME6S Bellowed Likfe 1 u \ MOOSB ABOUT /afyj OUT OUR WAY ctooo I M0RWIW6.CHII \ ISWT ITA 7 BEAUTIFUL, GORGEOUS 0 charge” Impressed. _______ IQ (Oct. alto Nov. 21,. light versatility, humor and willingness to he persuaded. Means keep to‘-AmHm ■ One who Is unorthodox co_._____________ wr»M talmMa umiilwi mirit at adventure cam. llSnuBB (Bar. 22 to Dae. 21): Iwtojul stoa amaiiil jaa to recant -Bat. write, eocansunleate, is “to touch” mil current market. Flash at Inspire-—Men should be kindled Into rich flame. - CAFRICORM (Dec. » to Jan. SO): Protect year interests. Be there "In W/fimr a*i. apaaK ror yourself. Trust-tot Intorasodlaiies pot Wise. Travel may b« necessary. • Cheek various methods. r th' Bull NEVER LOOKS LIKE HE J FEELS- f GOOD MORNIN’S-HE MUSTA HAD SOME >EEPAN'n LASTIN’ SORROW Jl IN HIS Y LIFE/ HAS/LON6\ aaornin’sK wASth’ IDEAL TIMEnO BANO , HIM ROR A RAISEr-NOU HAD'THE NERVE ff AN* HE FELT aoQp^-H NEVER GOT ] OVER IT.V AQUARLUg (Jan. 21 Ip M enftoaiuy, dyniric FSb, ________________I w& plant LODf- dlstaace -communication '(pays alt." ■ I ' MflCSB (Feb M to Mar 20): Tie up laaaa . Stole. Make, sure your "bate" is taUd. Then Mtoh .Wtlw-td accomplish BBC- Bast at proposals appear sursc-- ^ be Selective IF BATUwIy 11 roi^R BIRTHDAY . 1 . you are practical, toim|Tto veer t stay Mto bact oourte if you fee! ethers f I'paatwes Cerp.J By Dr. I. M. Levitt, Tom Cooke i|| PM Evbm By V. T Haifllin Y*MeAN MXTRE NOT WELL,VVHAT ABOUT/ OH, HE SONG THROUGH WITH/ NOPE.1 \THAT YAKKAHIK / JUST WASN’T THE BLACK UGHT / TOO MANY ) GUY YOU GOT. TO \ ADAPTABLE, MISSILE BARREL BUGS/ / REPLACE ME? A. OOP... CAPTAIN EASY A VITAL V IT HAP LITTLE COAMMCML USB ELEMENT IV) TUX RW, AMP J CONTRACTED FOR ------V AUO/ THE 9NTini4b9 OUTPUT PROM . a-TTi.. § r TNSOM.V RBriMERyi -T"— awesL By Leslie Turned ai. VETCH OUR JBIRMS UFTOPF FROM Tie SLOW HOUSE, WITH W TECHNICIANS. VOU CAN NATCH; --WITH THE PRESS MORTY MEEKLE BRUTUS, INBHD 20 DOLLARS RX ItiBPOOBFEOPLe AT B6AU CHAPEAU, WAIT A MINUTB... 06AUCHAFEAU? WHSaS^sTHAT? By Dick CavaUi THE B6AU CHARS4U HATOHORRg ON qUINCVAVBNUe. • NANCY By Ernie Bushmiller I ACCIDENT AND I HOSPITAL insurance grandma By Charles Kuhn /VEQ 60ME PEOPLE I HAVE A NATURAL TAUENT FOR FINDING V FOUR-LEAF CLOVERS... DONALD DUCK -.BUT ME, I HAVE THE UNCANNY KNACK OP LOCATING POISON IVY/, "N I By Walt Disney J. ~ OKASi' BREAK n vpir Above ALOIS®. T-* NO LjOlTOeiNOV MILKIN' TIME ... J.P.WILLIAM^ \tesm NINETEEN honesty later produces beautiful silvery seed membranes which are highly effective in dried arrangements. You may possibly find seeds for these in' the seed racks at they may be polled up as they wffl aot.Moem agafc_>jMr^ Among the,,best cir these *re sweet willlaja, Canterbury belli, foxgloves, sweet rocket, honesty If not, order seeds from your favorite garden seed catalog. those that may be gathered when fully open and driM for Use in pot pourri, that fascinating combination of scents that old-time gardeners made every year. Gather also some of the flowers of colorful nunuds like marigolds and dry these so you can mix flowers to add a touch of color. Having a convenient place to SHETLAND ment of gardening activities. Ingthelrk THE PONTIAC PMSS FRIDAY, AUGUST A 1963 IS1I4 HARDWAI SPECIAt Green Thumb Tipis BIG HARDWARE STORES KEEGO ^—DRAYTON PONTIAC Keego Hardware No.11 Fillmore Hardware Tom’s Hardware 3041 Orchard Lake Rd. 4180 W. Walton Blvd. 905 Orchard Loka Ava. 682-2660 OR 3-1880 FE 5-2424 WATER SKIS ALUMINUM EXTENSION LADDERS m BUY NOW WHILE THEY LAST! OFF Reg MOST SIZES AFOOT Price EARLY FALL SPECIAL! Reg. 59.95 BLOOMS APLENTY - Folks driving by : p«» an apartment on Murphy stop to admire the for the last five years beautifying his grounds, many flowers and shrubs that are artistically and his efforts have more than paid Off. The landscaped at the entrance. Edward Allison, area is alive with color and fragrant scent of manager of the building, Has been working......his gorgeous petunias and other blooms. FURNACE^ HUMIDIFIER Rv.tlS.6o $097 HUMIDIFIER PLATES & *r Now l» the timo to start thinking a boot your furnace. this humidifier has Nooprano diaphragm Monad to fit oH hwuldiflan. Hats* mad# of .genuine looprono aiapnrogm hrOme-niated valve, and ncloted valva soot. En- Handyman Needs Good Work Area Often lumber or garden supply dealers can mlp by providing plana for work benches, compost bins, and storage facilities that the gardener can build easily and economically of framing lumber and hardboard panels. Probably the handiest place to keep tools is on a peg-board - panel installed on a garage wall. *-r^j Wasted space thus can he put use as a storage area for hanging hose, shovels, forks, rakes and o t h e r equipment.. Shelves supported by metal fixtures hold insect spfoys, plant food, and other Rems. - ft it ★ Annuals in window boxes will profit from a nipping back cf long, overgrown stems, a sprinkle of fertilizer and a thorough watering. This treatment, which takes little time, will make them look trim and pretty again. Both propers and eggplants will n producing young fruits as keep on long as the mature ones are kept picked. A sturdy work bench is essential. Tempered presdwood is ideal fbr a- top, providing a smooth, splinter-free work surface, which is easily cleaned. Dirt and’water wiiT w cfiiser tlii pend to de-teriorate. Even soap pieces of hardboard can be put • to use as garden stakes, plant supports, or trellises. .. When cauliflower “curds” are the size of a 50-cent piece it’s time to blanch them. Do this by drawing the leaves np over the top and fastening them in this position. This is ■at always as easy to do nZ it String, rubber bands, andevae paper dips are sometimes nec-ry — separately or all together. , , - Hurry. Another Truckload Just Arrived! truckload Getting Rid of Stumps Slow We are asked frequently how to get rid of tree stumps without expending a lot of money or physical energy. There is no fast ..method without money and labor. Burning ¥tuini>s is one alow, comparatively easy process but often the stump is in a place where use of fire is impractical ' or illegal. .* soil or compost on and around the stomp. The moisture teUl help produce fungi which will disintegrate the wood. College of forestry experts at Syracuse University say that If you take decaying wood from the same kind of tree as the stump and push it Into cuts or borings, decay-causing *fungi will grow ahd stump should be kept moist.(not soaked). - This may be done by piling speed the breakdown.' How long will it take to eradicate a large stump by this method? About five .to 10 years. EARN MORE ON SAVINGS ' SAVINGS IN BY THE 10TH OF THE MONTH EARN FROM THE 1ST AT 8 CURRENT RATE ____ AND PAUYQUARI ... OR YOU C/tN PURCHASE. Advanced Papent Shares Certificates % -—t——»--—Current Rate-'—Tff § Me—0 wi IF HELD TO MATURITY 1 -AVAILABLE IN UNITS OF TOO PER SHARE Established in 1890 — ffacar mimed paring a dividend. Over 72 vents, ol sound management — four adeurantu of (acuity. Assets now ov*r 80 million dollars. CAPITOL SAVINGS S LOAN ASSOCIATION 75 West HutdA DownteviVoelWW Qffieht Woshington Blvd. Bldg. > Comar Stale Street ....^**. * ' • WO 2-1078 Homa Office: l Member Federal Home Loan Bank System Wall faint tnt 95 The All-Naw LUCITE OUTSIDE HOUSE PAINT and All 1963 Decorator Approved Colors in Stock ISaI I house llali I paint • I e* advertised I ed TV now at TOMS emyi jew TOM’S HARDWARE 905 Orchard Lake Ave* FE 4-0561 ‘ Southfield Office: 27215 Southfield otfl Mile Road ' KE 7-6125 FE 5-2424 r/ m \ friendly tameE at oacoiMf fricesi GARDEN HOSE Rubber-Plastic 25% Off LAWN SPRINKLERS Oecillatlnq-Ravolvtng BAR-B-Q GRILL aOSEOUTI Note Only' COMPLETEWITH •Hood e Crank Grid • Motorized Brazier MASKING TAPE %”x1W-Ft. N/t GLASS CUT TcfYour Size • STORM DOORS • STORM WINDOWS REPAIRED Hahdy to i Haml Natural CAULKING CARTRIDGES Speeiel Caulking Dun... 98c Vacuum Cleaner BAGS 77' FITS MOST ANY SWEEPER ALSO OOMPLETE STOCK OF ^VACUUM CLEANER BELTS Plastic FullCa.oof 36...4.58 FULL (pr. SIZE doz. Food Contaiaers $]58 Just in Timo fbr Fall Seeding GRASS SEED p°pular 19e PERENNIAL ib! RYEGRASS or Creeping . RED FESCUE 10bo390 Kentucky ~. BLUE GRASS' 10t5 50 Colombian 7-JAR HOMli CANNERk OUTFIT HOT or COLD* PACK HOME CANNING Reg. 2.19 RENT IT! > Floor Senders o Hind Sanders • Fleer Polieliert i Tim PONTIAC PtfKSS FRIDAY, AUGUSt 30, 19&8 J, RCHARD’S FOR LUXURY .Btautiful famous name suites and accent pieces, correlated to save mcitey and 'inatoHjng1 worries... and you .buy it all with one leer payment! We Witt Be Closed tabor Day! and nfere on regular,original and comparable value prices We hat* to blow our own born, but these are without a doubt the bast valuas at thqjrear... outstanding quality it spectacular low prices! ALL BEDROOM SETS INCLUDE! DRESSER, CHEST, AND DEO. ■WeBMI Not Exactly as Pictured GOOD NYLOft COVERS - FOAM CUSHIONS Colonial outfit in a choice of tweed MANY BEDROOM SETS THAT ARE MARKED DOWN DURING THIS SPECIAL CLEARANCE. SPECIAL BEDDING CLEARANCE 80-in, sofa and the matching lounge chair with solid mapto wings and arms. Thick, foam soat and back. Cocktail table, otep table and lamp Joble authentically crafted in a glowing, goldfn finish. Fair of correlated china., base lamps included. BOTH PIECES Foam Revorsiblo Cushions Coil Spring Construction . SPECIAL FLOOR SAMPLE CLEARANCE Every thin arm contemporary sofa and chair will be sold at a special clearance price. All floor samples and one of a kind* First served choose from such famous names as Broy-Hill, Carsons, Howard, Parlor and Sawyers. Many of these items are priced at cost or .below. Smart sofa and chair, 3 walnut finish tables, pair of lamjM. tftMT Beautiful 30x40" chrome *n' plastic 5-pieca dinette set.... $41.81 7-pc. Provincial outfit Only $15.00 . $OQQ95 Par Month Z9SI * Double dresser, bookcase bed, 10-pc. drawer chest, targe mirror, mattress and box spring $158,88 OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY TIL 9 P.M. • ISeAL DIRECT- NO FINANCE COMPANY Gracefully fashioned 79-in. sofa and .chair In rich figured fabrics with fruitwood finish exposed wood. 3 fruitwood tablet and 2 lamps. • NO MONEY DOWN • 90 DAYS- CASH - . • 24 MONTHS TO PAY • DEAL DIRECT-NO FINANCE CO. •FREE DELIVERY • FREE PARKING OPEN MON. & FRI. UNTij.9 PJA 164 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE • PONTIAC t . 3 Blocks West of South Saginaw % - FnSUISUs RIRNiTURf BaRGAliiS WHILE THEY LAST Phone FE 58114-5 FURNITURE COMPANY l THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY, AUGUST 80, 1968 FONTIACk MICHIGAN. T“ TWENTY-ONE Barry Works orvBrain Aid Plan Can Help City an Clinton River Project County Drain Commissioner Daniel W. Barry is working out « program to help Pontiac on -tie Clinton River drain project Barry add yesterday he was ■sled by the Pontiac Clinton River Drainage Board to prepare a proposal to be presented to 14 soati* Oakland County communities \asking them to lend Poatlae w54,S09 to complete j rrhifaTWerlisa el the project Completion of Pontiac’s perimeter road and continuation of the city's urban renewal - projects could be delayed indefinite-—ly if a group of Maeomb Count residents- appeal a federal coui decision affecting the legality i the Clinton River bonds. * * * , The drainage board w o u 1 meet Sept. 9 to consider goto - ahead with the requests to tt 14 communities, Barry indicate! if an appeal is filed by tiu time. The date is the deadline for sn' appeal, which would halt tt bond sale pending the outcome. SURPLUS FUNDS Bkrry said. Experts Disagree How Much Is City By DICK SAUNDERS Ik $4.4 million tax levy which the - Has the city borrowed million Just to keep operating this year? the answer is no. ■J1 • Is Pontiac BSSfMXMt or 1745,000 or nearly Bio million In debt? The answer to all three fig-ares could be yes, depending on who gives tty answers and on the type of'Jfebt. In recent City Commission meetings and during the hearing Into charges against suspended city manager Robert A. Stierer, jail these figures have come up for discussion. Several times, it has been stated that the city Has “borrowed'’ $2.25 million so far this city will get anyway this year. EXPERTS DISAGREE As for the |KO,OOBMff $745,000~ debt, or deficit figures, even the finance experts disagree; An aadit of the 1M2 city budget shows that the city spent tU4.NI more than it received la revenues. Some experts, depending on what bookkeeping principle they adhere to, say the city’s deficit whs $350,000 because that is the amount which must be.made.up to balance last year’s budget. SURPLUS FUND However, one of the items budget was. adopted earlv in 1982 was a $395,000 appropriation front' a dwindling surplus fund. When audit was months later, it was found there was no surplus. Tims, some finance 'experts figure the dty spent J3S9.909 of $395,Mt that acver existed. Under their theory, you add the figures and end np with a $745,-90$ deficit. The nearly $18-miiUon debt mentioned at Monday's hearing by Commissioner Charles R. Hannon refers to 'money the city produce to retire bonds Ipver the -next 30 years. timated as income when the j It is- Pontiac’s bonded debt, which stood at $9.96 million as of Jan. 1. ...... The city charter provides a I-----1----hereby PMOK’t— he explained. vestigate sources of fun pedite the river project. on the city’s big projects, challenges ports of the Drain Code. the outcome of to city financial troubles." • meter road to be f -■-JU—n .1. . 11, . i.’"""" 1 i ." i.' m — ft .. - : 1 ' • ci >f SAFETY DRIVE — The 1963 school safety bureau; John N. - Johnston, a' crossing poster is previewed by, Safety officials. Police guard; and Thomas Bowman, manager of the W) Chief Joaeph Koren holds the poster, while Pontiac division of the Automobile Club of an 4 (from left) Lewia^'Crew, of Pontiac schools; Michigan, look it over. ' s Lt.’ Ctoyton^ Randolph of the police traffic^ * < A « ' • ' . - be lt • t • . * - ■' * esl ‘t Safety Workers Remind mmmm In — ----- - -- * '■ : •"- ^° ' t ai School's Open—Drive n ^ To a small army of police of-^ fleers, school officials, and safe-■» ty patrollers, next week will signal the start oT*a major cam-i paign to prevent school-child : traffic accidents. Pontiac school doors reopen said there were traffic Ihjaries to 72 children to the M44ge group tost year. Of these, B were pedestrians and 16 to-' voived bicycles. Koren added that parked can Some 2,149 will be children .at-an tending school for the first fitne. 62. KEY CORNERS ^ Key in terse c t ions will be manned by 700 safety patrol-lers and 32 adult crossing guards. Wednesday. _ The Automobile Qub of Mich- were e factor in a majority of the accidents. nt ■ aw* [ Robert E. Lews, co-ordtoe- | tor of AAA’s safely program, " igan issues its- annual reminder “School’s Open 4- Drive Carefully’’ — aimed at all motorists. . Police Chief Joseph Koren School officials4 said that 15,-497 public and parochial elementary pupils will, return to school in the next couple of weeks. said posters and Samper strips , are being distributed to warn mi drivers of the bad: - to -school Mi trek. He noted that this is the 14th year that local officials and the r auto club have worked together in the safety'program. ™j SUGGESTIONS su] Lewis urged pare..nts to be Mi aware of the safest route to let school for their children. He sug- lui gested that children: fie • 1 pQ|ffr~ Iqf . Chicago Paper Defends ! ! Editorial on D.C. March CHICAGO (UPI)—The Chicago from the Grand Cqptral Station, |Sun-Times, object yesterday of a [where they arrived by train fol-e demonstration by nearly 300 re-1 lowing participation in Wednes-i*| turning Washington f r e e d o to day’s freedom inarch in Wash- d [marchers who disagreed with one jington. aieUfainimtoapiftoadftoriaii, —id] ,■. — [routes # Co-operate with safety pa-trols and adult guards | f Use the same route daily, | .as patents can pick up children Ion rout* when necessary . 1 If someone owes you $100 Planned at Junior High X bonded debt, limit now stands if about $22 mtilion. However, ttifUntil applies only to'bonds to be paid from property taxes; not to bonds paid from other reveane, like water bills. These general obligation (tax) bonds outstanding now make up about $6. million of the $8.9 million total. „ • . p-tp* .★ A * Therefore, Pontiac currently retains a legal debt margin of $17 million-generally accepted to • very wide margin under present standards. 1st Test Model \of Expected t>y AF Early WAswRcrorjunr-try Air Force expect^ to have the first test model -of-the controversial TFX fighter plane ready to fly by the beginning of 1965. Air Force Secretary Eugene M. Zuckert said yesterday the first 799 production models of the plane probably would cost $7 billion. In a “status report” orT the multibillion dollar TFX contract, Zuckert said fabrication of the models might begin this year with-the actual flight tests tojbe-' gin around January or February 1965. v , ’* * * The 1,650 mile-an-hour fighter plane has been the subject of a six-month investigation in Congress. The probe was sparked when the General Dynamics Corp. was awarded the plane contract despite the preference of military chiefs for the Bbeing Co. model.- Earlier this month, Zuckert spent nine days testifying,be- the speed of sound. It is sched- fore 'the. Senate Investigations subcommittee. However, he said be did not feel the. long hearings had delayed getting the TFX Into production. Terming'the TFX a. fighter plane that was “critically needed,” Zuckert said a conference of top-level Air Force, tfavy and Greulaal Dynamics Corp. officials opened this week at- Fort Worth, Tex. ★ ♦ The officials will examine and test the physical layout of thfe TFX to make sure the plane will live up to the design specifications, he said. Zuckert said the conference will end Sept. 6 and once its report is completed, the engineering drawings will be released for fabrication. DELIVERY PLANNED uled to be delivered to the Navy and the Air Force in late 1900’s and early 1970’s. •* * Or The most radical feature of the plane is its wing. The wing can be swept forward for slow flight and will be swept back toward the fuselage for supersonic flight. gackert said the escape cap-sale will be an “advance over anything yet used” He said the McDonnell Aircraft Corp. of St. Louis had a $10-million contract Ur develop the capsule. Asked whether he thought the Senate hearings on the plane showied the Defense Department’s decision on the contract-letting to be a correct one, Zuckert' said he was convinced it westhe. “right decision.’!^, . j * * * As for the hearings, Zuckert said it “never does harm” to A radically advanced plane, the j look at the process of selecting TFX is designed to fly at twice I weapons.. Teachers to Gather for Speech * ’ A “state of the schools" ad-. dress will be delivered .next Tuesday to Pontiac teadhers by School Supt. Dana P. Whitmer. W hi finer will talk ,to the school district’s 950-member instructional staff at a morning meeting at Pontiac Northern High School. Teachers will report to their individual buildings in the afternoon._ ______L »- In addition to a review of old and "new obligations' of public schools, the schooLhead will give teachers a rupdown on issues that might arise over next June’s mil-lage election. MILLAGE PLANS School officials have b mapping plans for a millage ques-j intended as’ a medium . curry fator.” - "W * ★ In an -editorial- titled .“Pickets at Our ^poors,” the Sun-Times said its editorial page “is a medium through which jthe Times expresses its opinions and evaluations of people and events and advocates those principles to which it is dedicated...” The editorial said, “There are usually objections to any expression of opinion and to advocacy of principles. We expect them. We respect the right of others to disagree with ns.” # Go- straight »ho In e from . to rial Baltimore and Ohio Railroad‘school before vtsltingfriends trains in ladiank, Tree copies of # Never accepts ride froml the Sun-Times were b r o u g h 18trangere. .... He also advised parents of kindergarten children to accompany their children to and from school for the first few days. aboard and distributed. - The marchers said they objected to a final paragraph of an editorial to yesterday’s edition, which said: The substantial citizens of the Negro community ought now take over and utilize in a ’practical manner the sentiment and mqrai support that the summer of Negro discontent has brought to the surface.” SEEING IS BELIEVING (OCCUPY Thii FAIL). U.S. Defector Brings Wife, I Sons to West Timuel D. Black Jr., organizer! the demonstrators marched -to!of the Chicago delegation in the! - • . ' j the newspaper’s plant, along the^Mdom march, said he felt the HONG KONG (UPI) — Albert north bank of the Chicago River,{Pvagrapb insinuated that IhfeC. 'Belhomme, Belgian-born for-i leaders of the march were not,mer U. S. Army sergeant wfco responsible persons. defected to Communist China 10 In itii editorial today, the Sun-[years ago, arrived here today Times said, “No such implication with his Chinese wife and the kH* H vac MiiJa lihrA# SAI 3 Children Die in Home Fire was intended, K was quite oto three sons who he hopes wi}l vious that the rally was composed have “a better future in the out-| largely of responsible and sub-f«de world.” stantial people who were in control.” : , He was the second of tt U.S. Korean War turncoats to leave China tills month, Me said another, former Sgt. Scott Rush of Marietta, Ohio, planned to return home soon. , Following a two-hour meeting | DETROIT (AP) — T h r e e with 11 leaders of the marchers, ichiMren perished in theiru p -;\pbur C. Munnecke, vice presi-egun:stalrs bedroom when fire struck:dent and gcneral manager of the ___________|-------mo quia-!*' I'^story home in Northwest;sun-Tlme» and Daily News, said.! bn the 1964 school ballot, A Detroit last night •* think now they think; we’re !0hlo- ,eft CWna Au«- I and re-1 citizens coipmittee to study school; __J * * *• . inice people and we think they’re temed tb the United States. needs currently is being formed^f^^J^ro ^^^"J^J^jnlce people. The discussion must have been successful* Lowell D. Skinner of Akron, by James L. Howlett, of 104 E- W 3 ”y.Mr * Iroquois James Jr. and 6-montb-old broth- , Howlett, a 33-year-old Pontiac attorney, was appointed chairman of the citizens study committee tost spring by die school board. He is expected to present a list of 20 committee members for the er. Martin-They were the only children of James Wills; 26, a gas station attendant, and his w i fc, Shirley, 26. Both escaped the flames. The 'parents were sleeping in wouldn’t have lasted for two' hours. I think all of us benefited from thiS." ZZZTZfir- . jljthe basempnt when the blaze .-sctol board s approval at its authorities said. Sept. 12 meeting./ r ' • - ADVISE TEACHERS Whitmer said he will advise classroom teachers as to some of the issues that mlght be debated during the coming school year.' The 'snpefintendent said his address also vfiBoiUline efforts by tfieachools to comfelit-thpdroiSout problem, He *61 ^^iDeqroom nut was oeaien oai teacher to contact oae dropourjjy,..g waU of heat and smoke.’ and encourage, him to return toi other'tteighbocs also fried to “tool, rescue the children. ' School Board President William The yoiugsters v eUqd -. from H. Anderson also will address the burns and suffocation, said Pr. Wills, told detective William Chubb that he had been smek-tog to a staffed armchair to the living room a few hours before the fire. A neighbor, Phillip Paquln, 29, awakened the parent!. Pa-quin said he tried to get to a Stairway - leading to tfte upstaire [bedroom but was beaten back trnai .also wanrte~*oontribute to international good witt” -. Hie emperor made the'statement during a news .conference ..__________IMP PPP MWIIPPW,. , Thursday at his summer r«i- teachers. He will deliver a “wel- A. J. Elmos of* Mount Carmel de^ce at Nasu, 90 miles norm of come back”’ talk. [Mercy Hospital Emperor Hirohito Pledges Support to His Country Belhomme, 34, planned to re-' turn to Belgium with hit wife; Hsiu Ytog, 28, and their sons | aged 6, 4 and 1. He and his wife; both hive Belgian passports. . “We should alf consider the best things for our children,” Belhomme said soon after being met at the Chinese border by a British. Red Cross officer and a Belgian Consulate official. . . .i “I decided to leave China maln-. ^ ryet ! ly because I think the children tave livedo years without befog lwiU ^ Mam to the able to actangish even owffoeUgide workLafterthe condition thing said emperor Hirohito of, have seen in China in tho-^mst + ■ ' Wyears.” ‘From npw I want to do evary-l „ t. " ... . . v „ thing withiri my'poWer for fitol. ^ ba^.bad b?co 0 0 R aline rt > O 0 Colirlto |( • o Triandos i By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Detroit Lions’ coach George Wilson has a Job tonight similar to that of a college physiespro-fessor — Jullof experiments. • The Lions are battered with njuries and Wilson’s task against the rittsourgh Steelers in Tiger Stadium will be the shuffling of personnel to fill the gaps caused by fiijuries. Terry Barr will be the biggest test With Pat Studstill recuperating in an Ann Arbor -hospital following Jftee surgery which may keep nlm out for toe rest of the season, Barr will have to move back into toe flanker back spot which he vacated a year ago because of a knee injury. Barr hasn’t seen any actioib this year after re-injuring the knee in Cr an brook training camp. the third annual Junior Boys golf i iiTSuim* tournament, Balliet had one bogie andLj&ree birdies in his round of 88 to take all honors. Nearest competitor was 18-year-old Tour Mitzelfeld of Rochester fowl who fired a 74. At 75 wqire'Jdhh Kakuk of Auburn Heights, Gary_ Brandt of Rochester and John Meier of Huntington Woods. Low net honors went to Dave Bouwens of RochesterNvith a 70, i Kama day atthebanquetfor Bobby Layne, “Ml be back in sports.” I Rochester wlfott’s. — lewman p 0 0 D 0 J. Lte p lit* Foytack p 0 0 0 9 inm less Oalnakt p 0 0 0 0 BIG HANDSHAKE - Lefthander S a ndy Koufax (right) of the Los Angeles Dodgers usertis right hand to receive a congratulation handshake from teammate Tommy Davis after AT Photofai beating San Francisco 11-1 last night to become the major leagues’ first 20-gahie winner of foe season. . Wilson’s experiments .will include Gail Cogdill’s trial at flanker back, along with Tom Hyll, and rookie AI Greer. With veteran linebacker Carl Brettscfoieider nursing a bruised back as a result of last week’s win against the Cardinals, rookies Dennis Gaubitz of LSU and Ernie Clark of Michigan State will see their share of du- ir Foytack to 0 ft Sta; c-Struc W. S—SlM .nmy,...M0 000 MS-1 •Jmu •• •.A’:"”, mm'SE* E—Torres. Rodgera, Cash PO-A—Lot Angeles 24-9, Detroit 27-7. DP—Fregoal, rsun, 3&—Kostro. HR—Kaline. Triandos. SB- Koufax Sends Dodgers' Exec to Barber With I*LUM STTLL OUT ' Milt Plum will miss his third straight game because of his injured' leg, leaving the complete quarterbacking assignment to Earl MorralL Newman ! D. Lee Foytack Osinski S2. Bottomlands Hassle A 180,000 claim against toe Conservation Department alleging unlawful sale of state-owned bottomlands in Lake St. Clair was dismissed last week by Presiding Circuit Judge Edward Soviets May Build Course ’Bourgeois’ Golf Infiltrating USSR? By The Associated Press [for the final run of the outburst Sandy Koufax, who took San that put It away. Francisco tp the cleaners for hisL™™. 20th victory, has sent Red Patter-1WINNINGEST p1® son to the barber. Ellsworth) now 19-7, became toe T. Kane of toe Michigan $tate Court of Claims. today of what could be a revolutionary change in Soviet attitudes YOU SHOULD KNOW W_^AL PIETZ SALESMAN OF QUALITY Al Plot* U a pood mm to know. He’, qulified a. a Chevrolet QUALITY SALESMAN ... «a expert aatomo. tire consultant. Maybe you’re already met. Al mi(fat even be a neighbor. We're plad M have Al kritli aa ban1 at MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES CHEVROLET. Like all QUALITY SALESMEN, Al earned hi. title by eoeeeaafuUy coatplrting an la* atratiag on-the-job ability- He lEaat the car. be sails. He fM to lb* kind of Grans. Ha’s A Quelify Salesman, A flood Man to See for-TourNext Car! to the West. They said Soviet officials have-been sounding than out on how to build a golf course. MOSOQW (AP)-Wmtert diplo-jtreat by Westerners earlier toisjthelr diplomatic skill, put him at Bv taking mats breathlessly reported signs week that on. «/ .ho L_____g ’ H V W laKinB Koufax’ three-hit pitching and a winningest - Cub left-hander since 15-hit Los Angeles attack that pro- Jim Vaughn won 19 in 1920 when vided the most runs lavished on a singles by Ellis Burton and Billy Dodger pitcher in 45 games, com- Williams and a double by Ken bined to give th^ National League [Hubbs snapped a 14 tie In. toe leaders a 11-1* victory over second-leighth. Msworth- -checked the place San '’Francisco Thursday Phillies on six hits—one Earl night. {Averin’s homer in' toe sixth .that ~~ had tied toe score. The Mets got off winging with three runs to the fourth, inning, two on a homer by Frpnk Thomas, and put it out of reach with a three-run eighth. Jim Hickman scored the decisive run to the eighth when he singled and'scored on stogies by Duke fodder and Jesse Gonder. Roger Craig, tagged for homers by Willie Star-gell and Jim Pagltoroni, brought his -record to 4-20r with’ Larry Bedmarth’s relief help. Joe Gib-ton, 5-9,-lost it: It seemed final proof that toe long East-West cold war was really on the thaw. Golf always, has been reviled and ridiculed to the'Soviet Union as the acme of bourgeois decadence. Former Soviet Foreign: Minister V. M. Molotov once said: “Golf is not a proletarian game. It is only for the rich.’’ Golf never is played In the Soviet Union, for a good reason: There are no golf courses. ' Yet, today came the first indication that toe old guanKview of the old gaiqe could to in for a change. A West European envoy reported that Soviet recreation organization officials, week that one of the Soviet offi- the opener “of”lhe cials who helps run the place first broached foe question. course to the' West grazed sheep “He bad in mind a nine-hole I especially to keep down the grass. ” OflM iVlA AMfyAW ‘•Put La IMLl’ _______j a *____-.* . . ° said foe oivoy. “But he was troubled by the knowledge that there’d be no chance of getting a golf course built on arable or grating land,’! The Western envoys, using all ) make him very TUs seemed toppy.”> One thing’s certain — theru’s. plenty of room for a golf course to foe Soviet Union. It occupies one 'sixfo of the earfo’s land surface. Timberlake F in U. of M. Scrimmage ANN ARBDR un — Hard driY-tog 'by jimior fullback Mel Anthony and some accurate passing by quarterback Bob Timberlake sparked Michigan’! football scrimmage Ttmrsday. Anthony drove through IwF some sizeable gains while Tint beriake completed a number of ble retreat north of the Moscow have been asking Westerners how you go About building a golf course. “Of course we were delighted to help,” the envoy said. “So we advised that- the best thing to do would be tp find a qualified golf course -designer.” FAVORITE SPORT The retreat lies about SO miles SilTSS Sm&si «N***K* looks like a.lake. It’s a favorite Michigan 9 Takes Lead in Tourney •WICHITA, Kan. (AP)-Second- jfour-game series, foe Dodgers 'We told him that many golf dropped, the -defending champion Giants 6^ games btoind, and into an almost impossible situation. If foe Dodgers win half of.foeir remaining 30 games, the Giants must .win 21 of 29 to finish to a tie for the pennant. The Dodger explosion, coming after a seven-game drought to which only 15 runs crossed the plate, also assured Patterson of a tong overdue TialTcut. The club’s assistant, general manager had vowed not to clip hia locks until foe Dodgers scored four runs to one inning. -LARGEST CROWD In foe third toning before a crowd of 54,978—largest to .foe majors’ this season—the -Dodgers trimmed the'Giants for five runs. Now, about the only thing they have to worry' about, is whether Patterson gets a crew -cut 'or a more fitting Apache cut. While Koufax was posting his lobbing passes to right end Bob Laskey. - ■ Another feature of foe U-M varsity’s offensive drive wgs the running of sophomore John Rowser, 175-pound former Detroit East- era High School star. Some standout blocking was turned to by sophomore tackle BUI Ye*rby to foe Wolverine's* second scrimmage of foe se*- With second string, quarterback Bob . Chandler on crutches because _ of a sprained ankle received’ to- Wednesday’s scrimmage, Tom Pritchard, senior sig- for the interlocking, foe gri]} employed by the majority of golfers is tite overlapping. I endorse the overlapping ijpr most playiers, teach it to most of my pupjls. I recommend this fa*, most beginners because it is easier to learn and generally feels more natural to the near player. It is very important that foe grip feels natural. | You can never develop a good swing if it feels cramped or nfoaryfo* uncomfortable. OVERLAPPING victory, Dick Ellsworth gained No. 19 as the. Chicago Cubs edged Philadelphia 24. The New York Mets whipped Pittsburgh 7-4 in foe only other NL game scheduled. Koufax, bringing his record to 29-5, allowed only a stogie by Jim Davenporyn the first, a homer by Orlando Cepeda in the second and a stogie by Jose Pagan in the fifth. Pagan, who readied second haunt for Western diplomats off f foe season for the Women’s Silver Lake Golf League; Mr?. Elmer,Partridge took low net honors with Irltn Gfand .Rapids’ .triumph. The inikir fiPHt'flitfki .% /- 4 ‘ ' “ *' - - - 39 to foe firstTlight. Second flight bonOhf went to MrA.Edifo.frfel With a 38 and to foe third flight Mrs. Paul Spavin had a net 38. Ifrs. Jake Marts was tow pUtt dinner with 13. Teat equaled a throe-homer -mark shared By- three Other players— Tom Angfoy, Houston, Tex., 1940; Paul Ftigffi, Albuquerque, NJd., “ ' Felix; Port .Wayne, 1981, and Cal I Ind., 1951. nal caller, was advanced to the [base on an error, was the cnUy )rtedly [Giant besides Cepeda to get that No. 2 spot. Chandler reportedly will be sidelined fora week. far. Koufax, lowering his earned run average to 1.93, struck out hand, seven for a leaguedeadtog total of 246, and-altowcd only one walk. Illinois Hurler Win* ROCK ISLAND, OL (AP)-Dick Brubaker pitched Rpck bland to 2-0 victory over PMenix, Ariz., Thursday night to foe International Softball Congress World T< nament. The Gianto started Beb . Bolin. He tested into the second toning when Pjerce, 340,‘ took over. Ron Fairly accounted for the first of his four runs batted to with a tin- { gle to foe first .befQre foe Dodgers batted around -in this five-run third. Wally Moon’s one-out,,stogie got foe DBdgers started,TommyDi ‘ , jers started..Tommy Davis then doubled and bofo’scared on a stogie by Fairly. Frank Howard “ iwed with his 23rd hopier, 430 away into foe left field bleachers. A double by Willie Davis and Jy JUUUS BPROS%<&/ ^UI'OPEN CHAMPION X Ds^ite my personal‘preference is assurance of proper placing of foe hand? Those are the elementary steps to follow to fornrifig a i pru Tn! grjp. Uncomplicated, they are worthy of complete concentration for at least one or two lessons, arid many hours on the practice tee. As your game progresses and improves,. you will learn ‘ to check jfoiir grip-automatically before every foot, the same Os you will your aim and stance, NEXT;. The stance. 7*tine out of 10 golfers use the overlapping technique. The forming of the overlapping grip is quite similar to foe iitierlocktog. The club should be pteced. diagonally across foe left hand to foe same combination linger .and palm grip. Close foe left hand, over the shaft with foe left arm extended so as to form a straight line with the dub. You will know your left hand is properly placed when you look down on foe shaft and see the two or even three, knuclkes of foe Yotfr second check point cai^ be used :to this instance Ido.— the pointing of foe V of your left thumb and forefinger over your’ right shoulder.. /The night hand should be pieced Slightly under the shah,v with foe right arm relaxed. Then your overtopping technique !! applied by overtopping foe little finger of the right hand over foe forefinger of foe left. INTERLOCKING As in the case of this inter- NATURAL — The overlapping H____________ .. H__________ oeklng, your right hand V pip generally feels moire Da- ft stogie by Msrny Wills accounted pointing over your right shoulder tural to foe new 'golfer. Injured Squad Meets Steelers in Exhibition florr at Flanker Back as Wilson Plans Tests for Rookies For Morrell, foe game offers special incentive. The former Spartan was with the Steelers-until he caifie to,Detroit in the trade which seat Bobby Layne to Pittsburgh. Ex-Lions coach Buddy Parker, since foen with fob Steelers, Mice noted that Morrall “‘would never , make a quarterback in this league.” .Mprfall has proven himself as foe '“best relief” quarterback to foe NFL, but as a starter,, as to the past two weeks, he has been plagued with early troubles.' Morrail himself has analyzed his “relief” prowess, “I analyze the game and foe plays, and’foe defenses, vary closely while I’m on the sidelines,” he said, “may-, be foi$ is why I'seem to do bet-ter.”. '■ ■ ^ ■' The Steelers are 1-2. for the exhibition season, having beaten foe Eagles arid having lost decisions to the Packers and Colts. The last meeting between foe -teams,was in the Miami Runner- v up Bowl when foe Lions: won 17-10 to a bruising contest in-Jan-oary. ICIckofMs ct 8:00 p.m. teriigjrt-. Aguirre's Santa Hard to Find 'No-Hif Hank Earn* Check With Hot Bat .DETROIT (AP) - Yes, Hank there really la a Santa Claus. Have fun trytogto find him..* .... Hank Aguirre, no longer baseball’s — nor even the Tigers’ — poorest hitter, has . a 810,000 check to be cashed after his 10th hit of foe season. “I*v« been saving" foe check ever since spring training,” said’ Aguirre, who has more'hits than any other Tiger pitcher. “It »Sys ‘$10,000 for 10 hits’ and it’s signed -Santa Claus^ “A man down to l^hetend gave it to me one day tost spring. Then he just Walked away without telling me who he was. I’m going to send It down to Florida to foe Bank of Lakeland and try to get my 110,090.” - / Aguirre collected his 10th hit . of the season — two more than his total in eight preyious big -league seasons —kwhile pitching his two-hit 0-1, victory over ^.os Angeles. The stogie lifted hi i batting average to .181, ' an im-provemeat of -134 percentage points from last year. ^ . 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1063 TWENTY-THREE Presents .EVERY SUNDAY BRUNCH 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. SMORGASBORD DINNER T:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m. ’ ★ ★ v'’ |k\JA2Z IHOOTENANNY Every Wed. and Fri. ENTERTAINMENT. THE IMPROMPTUS JOE GRANDE TRIO PINE KNOB RESORT __Clark sfon Phone 625.2641 Rift Report Is Oerii^l by Miets George Weiss * NEW YORK (AP) - George Welas, president and general man* ager of the New York Mets. akys die reported rift between Mm and Manager Casey Sterigel is ridiculous. 'This has come so much like a bolt out of the blue” said Weiss Thursday, in denying a* published report in the New York Daily News that said the split between the Meta’ leaders was so wide Stengel mlgit pot return as manager next season. FOOTBALL EQUftPMIHT. Low Mad DImmbI Friaaa SHOES - PANTS - HELMETS Back fa Schaal Specials Sweat Sex v,. ......45c Oym shorts i)al T-shirts 96c r 1 hiMl IwaitHriil ~ Lemthrr liana' Jacket. Bob Miseweaser’s Mortk Side Sporting Good* and Hardware —" FI 4-5393 AT Fhotof.x FROM OKLAHOMA—Cheryl Ann Semrad, Miss Oklahoma, i an Assist from fdiow Oklahoman Mickey Mantle as she tries on a Yankee hat before the-New Yorfc-booion gameyes-* terday. Miss Semrad will represent her state in the Miss America paggpntin Atlantic City. > .A Johnston, Venturi Tied for Lead in- Denver Open PltMinirfb. «topped Joey Clemente, 124. |joee. 10 DENVER (AP)—Bill Johnston and Ken Venturi led the field into the second round today of the $40,M0 Denver Open Golf Tournament. Both stroked four-under-par in the opening round Thursday. The bulky field of 145 pros will be cut after today’s second round to the low 65 and ties for the final rounds Saturday and Sqhday. Rex Baxter Jr., leader for the flrattwo rounds last year, was one stroke behind at 67 along with Bill Eggers, Pat Rea and Lionel Hebert. * V At 68 were Duff Lawrence, Tommy Morrow, ..Bob Duden, Mike Souchak, Ron Funseth, Bob Goetz and Dave Hill, the, 1981 champion. ' Miss Bardahl Flips in Trial Pontiac’s Gene Bone 34-39—73. Venturi, who’s on the way back after a two-year bout witij back trouble, dropped a 45-foot putt on the first hole, to ignite his fiv-under-pas round. ' * The Crystal.River, Fla., resident, a top money winner until a pinched back nerve crippled him tyro years ago, bogied the last two] holes to finish 30^6—66. Venturi missed only two greens in his best round In two years. His last victory was in the 1960 Milwaukee Open. v f Johnston, who seldom ventures from his Phoenix, Ariz., home course, never strayed ffotti the fairway and hit all but ehe green carding 31-35—66 over the 6,774-yard, par 3535—70 Denver Country Club course. / Johnston, who tied for runner-up honors last yeafr, drilled two 20- Governor's Cup Hydro Event MADISON, Ind. (UPI) - The usualy placid waters of the Ohio River will be churned up by the nation’s top hydroplane power boats tiiis weekend in a competition for"’$12,500 in prize money and trophies in the Governor’s Clip race. ; -★ ★ , • This city of 12,000 will play -host~to an estinflted 00,000 fans who will line the grassy banks i of the river to watch the water monsters create huge rooster throw away your can opener! ...Bud’s in TWB- -f Pick up ! 6-pak X today t Where there’s life ...there’s Bud, , - , KINS OF OURS . ANHl UStR-BUSCH, INC. • ST.UMlis .NEWARK • LOS ANSELES .TAMPA . Waterford Township Lists Rec Schedule A men’s touch football league under the lights will get the Waterford Township Recreation Department's fall sports agenda started to mid- September, announced Director Robert J. Lawyer. • ♦ ( ♦ h ’ In addition to the, men’s grid loop, four football leagues for Waterford T o w p s h i p boys in grades 5-12, and separate nun’s and women’s volleyball leagues will be offered. ★ ★ An organizational meeting for managers and players In the men’s .football league Vill be held Monday, Sept. 9, at 7:30 p.m. at the Recreation Office located in the Community Aetivi-ties Building. 5640 Williams Lake Road. tails at speed? up to 80 miles per' hour. .Eddie Sachs ef Indianapolis 506-mile auto race'fame will make his debut as a hydro pilot. Sach.was scheduled to drive Jack Snider’s “Such Crust” from Detroit. First, however, he had to pass a driver’s test consisting of three laps at speeds in excess of 90 miles per hour. witii a critical jury of veteran pilots as judges — much the same asJ the rookie tests given at the Indianapolis BOO. The field of 30-footers will be without its top favorite when the trials begin Saturday. MUSSON OUT Gold Cup winner and circuit point leader Miss Sardahl'of Seattle, Wash., flipped over ybs terday during a practice run o the Ohio River. Driver Ron Mus-son suffered three broken ribs and a leg injuiy. when the boat overturned, on the west turn. A doctor at King’s Daughters’ hospital said last night that Mus-son was “resting .comfortably” but would be out of action for about two . weeks. An underdog with a Targe amount of crowd support will be Miss Madison, driven by George Byers, Jr., Columbus, Ohio. Miss Madison is the second unlimited hyroplafie carrying the name and the support of the community which.owns it. She,is' the o n ly community-owned hydroplane on 4he circuit. It will be the boat’s first baptism . under 'fire. She replaces the original'Miss Madison which crashed after qualifying for the Gold Cup raoe at Detroit earlier this summer. The boats will run in elemiqa-tion heats, each craft in two such heats with the five high point boats competing in, the final heat. Alice Sipley Ups Lead in Ladies Golf League Alice Sipley* added to her safe margin in the Thursday morning Silver Lake Ladies’ Golf League yesterday. ; She picked up trio points*for a total of 30. Her nearest rivals are eight points behind with one week remaining. Choice of professional painters! MASTER ni MWTEIS 4 HOUSE INKY H00SE HURT X. 'An excelleiit-quality white house paint at an exceptionally low price. Brushes smoothly —: covers well'— giyesiyears of * * protection. Controlled chalking keeps it * sno^y white. OAKLAND FUEL & PAINT CO. PARKING IN REAR went to Geri Daniels with 47; low net was Miss Daniels with land lpw putt honors went Marge Coopes with 15. ' . i\ foot putts on the way to five birdies on the front nine. He had one bogey on the front nine, three-putting frttM'TS'feet on the 163-yird seventh hole. ''Baxter, 27-year-old from Amarillo, Tex., who led. last year’s first ,round here with a 64, needed only 29 putts in recording his 32-35—67. Summer Clearance SALE Angels Recall^ Bo Belinsky; Joins Piersall LOS ANG-ELES (UPD-The American League hasn’t seen the last of Bo Belinsky yet. • ★ ★ • The Los Angeles Arigels announced today that the colorful playboy-pitcher wtil rejoin the club (the. same one that unpredictable Jimmy - Piersall is. now on) Sept 9" after the Pacific Coast League season ends. Belinsky, who hurled a no-hitter, in his freshfoan year with the Low gross Honors yestefdfiy 'AfTgels in 1962 but fell to a 1-7 record and a 6.39 earned nul average early this season, returns after an impressive bit of pitching for’t^e Hawaii Islanders. aiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiAiiiiiiiii 1963 Model MONO CHAIN Catcher's Hits D< BATTLE CHEEK (*)—Catcher Fritz Messner knocked in all four runs with a homer and a single last night as Battle Creek defeated Wyandootte 4-2 in opening play of the Michigan Amateur baseball tournament. Today’s schedule In the double elimination tournament pits Jack-son against Flint and Saginaw j Y ‘against Miiskegon in afternoon; games and Kalamazoo opposite 14 Detroit in a night contest. 14 4 4 4 4 4 VgMGHAM boatings \ BOAlXtym “°NI POUT OF CALL” LET US TUCK YOUR OUTBOARD MOTOR IN FOR THE WINTER CARELESS STORAGE OF YOUfc OUTBOARD MOTOR con do more harm than REGULAR USE. Putting your outboard motor away right for tho winter is a most important stapforyoy. 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They collected five in their ’doubleheader split at Washington Monday. * *' a'.'', Between the - doubleheaders, Hodges spent the two days off in Brooklyn — and was stuck there whan he got hit by a virus. Thei Harmon Killebrew was Minne- Monbouquette limited the Yanks, Washington manager still wai;B,otj|»g h^g-t betlt^r at WM^ng* to six hits, running his record to IllHHHBPiBR' home Senators got hit by the Twins. ton with three of the 12 homers; while -Vic Poweri Jim Kalian* Coach Eddie Yost was unhappUy| *niie, rowcr> ™u In nhnron Ik. KnmK-rHInn BaWlfe Alknfcadl had two. Bob to^arge whan the bombarding^ ^ zbilo 0CCU,TW,* . . Varsalles added one apiece. The dozen was one shy of the major Rookie left-hander Gary Peters registered his lift strajght victory and smacked a two-run homer for the Chicago White Sox, who clipped Cleveland 7-2 and stayed ahead of the Twins in their battle for second piaoe ln the American YANKS STOPPED Boston and Bill Monbouquette stopped New Yockts front-running Yankees, scoring on Elston ~ ard’s pained ball in the ninth in-ing for a 4-3 decision. That put tfta Yanks 11 games ahead of the White Sox, with the Twins another one-half game* behind in third. Pontiac'* Largest Selection of Football Shoos Highs ond Lesya - & WELDER SPORTINfi GOODS . 698W. Huron FE 4-&11B league high fnr Han ganv^j Lee Stange, coasting behind a 20-hit offense, was the opening game winner; He held Washington scoreless until Ken Retier ham-e^W with one on in the seventh, Dwight Siebler, a recent addition to the Twins staff, gave up only three hits in winning the second game, Don Rudolph and Jbn Duckworth were die well-battered loaers. Killebrew with 33, Allison with 29 and Hall with 27 rank 244 among the league’s homer hitters ID*- Peters also threw a six-hitter for the White Sex and capped their tie-breaking five-run rally la the eighth inning at Cleveland with his homer. Locked^in a 2-2 Her Chicago cut loose against Barry Latman in the eighth With Ron Hanaeo’a two*run single the key hit. Another run crossed pn a wild pitch before Petes hom-ered. (The rookie southpaw nowtx K-5. Ha was tagged for a two-run homer by Vic Davalillo in the first. behlnd Didc Stuarts who rat his 35th against the Yankees. Stuart’s homer, with one'on the fourth, gave the Red Sox a 3-2 lead but the Yankees drew even in the sbfth and it .stayed tied until the ninth. Then Ed Bressoua and Russ Nixon singled, and Howard let one of Stan Williams’ pitches get by him—allowing the winning cun to score. TO Y»* 12-HOUR TIRE SALE SATURDAY OHLY 6 A.M. to 6 P.M. IF YOU NEED TIRES, CHECK THESE GOODYEAR 65th ANNIVERSARY GO WITH THESE GREAT TIRE DEALS WHILE WE STILL HAVE YOUR • SIZE AND TYPE, AT REAL ANNIVERSARY SAVINGS! 'vOtJ tube-type ——""^WHITEWALLS ) TUBE-TYPE ■--"blackwalls 48 4 88 38 4 jL for -*■ ^ 170 x 15 plus *n* oW to* to (or seek to* »** buy 2J25:&^ Tl for vv/ 170 x 15 ptos te_«*d to* to tr»o* fir sadi tire 7" 2.•20 4 ,.’54 7.50 114 w 6.70 * W-Vto* *** ,w* #® tire lor each thw you buy NEW TREADS , applied to sound tire bodies or yeer own tires FULL SET Any 14" Size FULL SET Any Size in stock 24 pies tax aad 4 Old tires Whitewalls $2 more aad NO MONEY DOWN! _ THURSDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 2. Philadelphia l New Tort 7, Pittsburgh 4, night CM Angeles U. San Fradelaco 1. i toto * ........ L Louie -------- Yhrk at Baltimore Winn Was The Last THne You Were Happy About Tin Service Job On Your Gaff; I hope tt waaft’ttoe long ifiDa But I wondar bacausa so many Mkt lle hava coma In, after raadinq our ads^tetf ma lt saams Jika avary sarvica job thay'va hod bTary has ba#n worsa than tha ona bafora. ” tf That’* why 1 talk somuoh about tho Importance of good sarvica. After savan yaart at a sarvica monagof, i know that nothing brings folks bock to buy thoir naxt cars like good service does. And tMfs whet builds a business Nka this* •* having folks corn* back again and again, year after year to buy their cars, now or used. - *k So, If IPs hotter servlet you're after, drive in and give vs a try. Believe the, you won't be disappointed/* HUY SUMMONS-FORD” 941 S. Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion Phone MY 2-2611 Where Better Service Keeps You Sold* Ray Simmons SAVE! d big values for you SIDING Aluminum, without backer, white .... $21.95 par »q. Aluminum, with laminated backet, white.... .$27.35 par sq. WINDOWS, Aluminum Sliders ' - #2020 .......$ 9.60 #3030 ..... $12.96 #4030 . . . . . $14 88 #5040 . . . V . $20.16 #6030.............................$18.24 #1050. Canter Vent................$41.76 I MULE HIDE SHINfiUSL, ----- Storms amtSeraenf for Alomlnum Sliders-—. ■ 235 Ik 3 Tab Regular;.... $6.69 # carried In stock of comporqtive price* 235 lb. Sol Sealei.....$7.80 p< FIR/F.L; (Construction, Max. 25% Std.) ASPHALT PRODUCTS 8 *10, t2 *14 16 1* .. 20; Per M Each 2x4 115.00 .61 1.15.00 .77 115.00 .92 115.00 1.Q7 115-00 1.23 115,00 1.30 115.00 1.53 PerM Each 2x6 113.50 .91 113.50 ■4.14 113.50 1.36 113.50 1.59 *11360 | 1.82 113.50 2.04 11340 2,27 PerM 11 $.00 1.26 118.00 1.57 118.60 118.00 118.00 118.00 118.00 3.15 Each. 1.89 2.20 2.52 2.83 ter M Each 2x10 ' •122.00 1.63 122.00 ■122.00 2.44 12200 2.85 122.00 3.25 122.00 3.66 122.00 ,4.07 ' -P*r M Each 2x12 124.00 r.98 J 24.00 2.48 124.00 2.98 124.00 3.47 124,00- 3.97 124.00 4:46 124.00 4.96 Always Top Quality Best Buys FOR THE MONTH! If you wish to receive "Our Monthly Price List" fill In | coupon and mail to Church'*, 107 Squirrel RcT., Auburn | | Height*. CITY - - STATE IN OUR ROYS' end STUDENTS' SHOP H now it’s Daeros*-si4-cott*R far fall... in trill new slacks. for students Thcrw's easy can in fall wiar—toNn it's blended of crisp, crease-retaining Dacron* polyester (65%) andijaray cotton (35%)-in a smooth, long-wearing, wash'n'wear gabardine. Here is a skin-slinf Trimeter model, with horizontal front pockets, extension wakt-band, and 14" bottoms. Great in block, blue olive, or brown. Woist sizes 26 to 34; inseam lengths 27 to 31. root- blue 6.98 WT r-rf- 1 -;*;. >^£C;:wi? ¥'■ t /- V. ■ ." K '■ , * -f THEPO^TIAC PRjfcSS, FRIDAY AUGUST 80, 1963 ■>[ MEN’S and BOYS’ CASUAL LEVIS Big shipment in styles with < without bolt. Cuffs or no-cuff. All foil colors. Sites 27 to 36. SPECIAL PURCHASE, l.»9 SWEATERS Button front. Zip front in solids,, stripes; patterns. Siam 36 to 46. SPECIAL ’ PURCHASE JACKETS Regular 19.99 values. Ski, lomil* noted. Fully lined styles. Sizes *' to 46. 1288 ROUGE'S 74 N. SAGINAW Richard Compton Turns npo. LocMBoxer Makes Debut Richard Compton, 22, ■ former Pontiac CentraKHigh School student, will make his professional boxing debut in Escanaoa Saturday night. . ★ —A—-—■. . Compton, Michigan A. A. U. champion and Golden Gloves run-ner-up in 1961, will face Jodie James jof Milwaukee in a four- Escanaba High School gymnasium. • Compton’s boot Is one of four listed on ihe Saturday night fight card. Compton played football ahPon-tiac Eastern Junior High and now lives on Granada Street with his wife, FlOFiai-ancLfour children. Rifle, Pistol Marks Set in Ohio Match Greaves, Henry Hank and-Billy Collins. Compton began his.boxing career at 'the Pontiac Roys’ 1!! Club and later represented the *9 club during his amateur career. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Ohio Sale’s traditional scarlet afid gray-clad football team will have a distinct tinge of green tills season, but the Buckeyi won’t be handicapped by^the label of potential national champions. That was the case a year ago when Coach Woody Hayes greeted a veteran club that looked like a “can't miss’’ outfit on paper. Ohio three out of six before winning the final three games for, a 63 rated. “Our team this year will be somewhat green,” Hayes admitH ted and went down a list of positions left open for .newcomers on the eve of fall football prte tice. Only three offensive regulars from v last year returned and six from the defensive unit. The team will be completely -Tne? perienced “up the middle” where all centers, quarterbacks and-full, hades departed by graduation. “The material on the line Is deeper than la the backfield,” Hayes said, “but potentially, we CAMP PERRY, Ohio (API-Two records were set on the rifle range Thursday in the National Pistol and Rifle Matcher. Two 18-year-old youths from tteonjia — James *M. Reiber of Decatur and Frederick Grim of Avondale Estates—won the junior team match with a score of 387-18, which broke their 1962 record of 384-19. ★ 4 * The Washington State- team composed of Andre X. Perron of Bellevue and. .Mika. S. “Dull of Wenatchee -wqj second with a score of 385-18. Ariliy M. Sgt. Maxie W. Fields of Jackson, Mas., wbn the national trophy individual rifle' match with a score of 250-30v, breaking the record of 25f23v' set in 1958 by Marine Tech. Sgt. Michael Pietro-forte. , •. ★ ★ , .♦ Staff. Sgt. Carl J. Pritchett of Ft. Carson, Colo., was second, also bettering the old record with: a score of 250-24v. Pistons Sign l Three Rookies DETROIT WI — .Three rookies, including former Northern Michigan basketball ’’star Gary Stic, signed Detroit Piston contracts for the 1963-64 season yesterday. 4?tl}ers sighing were Dave Ericksoit of Marquette and Ernie Dunston of Seittie^ » ’. ★ Silc led Northern Michigan to likesV.S. Chances for Pfcfvis Cup FOREST HILLS,. N/Y. TAP>-This should be-UaeleSam’s year to. win back the Davie Cup, Bill Talbert predicted today, but he warned that we’d better, watch out for that old Australian fox, Harry Hopman. “The way Chuck McKinley and Dennis Ralston are 'playing, we really Shotid bring back the cuj the former captain added. “1 we’ll have to play it very smart and heat Hopman at his owii game. ★ w “Harry has a remarkable facilty for getting his. boys up to a peak at just the right moment. We must see to It that the same is done with Chuck and EenniS. America’s chances of recapturing the famous silver bowl, which has resided down under tor'll of the last 13 years, should be determined in the National Tennis Championships, opening formally today at the West Side Club. McKinley, the. Wimbledon winner, is seeded No. 1,-followed by Roy Emerson of Australia, No.’ 2, and .Ralston, No. 3. Australia’s No. |2 player, Ken Fletcher, is seeded fifth. -.. Emerson, a wiry Queenslander who already has won the Australian and pYench titles and who was champion here in 1961, makes the NAIA tournament last season, hisdebut today against Chauncey A total of 1£ Pistons now nave Steele III, B l9-year-oy Harvard signed-contracts. fe - Utudent frojn Cambridge, Man, '■ Buckeyes Showing j Tinge of Green as; TWJKN'ii tJbiyisi some ^pretty promising sophomores. The most highly regarded sopE-omore, Tom Barrington of Lima, Ohio, suffered an ipduktrial accident this summer and was believed out for the season. Bat Hayes reported Barring-* ton “hns henied fibnhpsly” and may be Yendy for limited duty nt either quarterback or ' "back by the second game of campaign. Back from the offensive unit of 1962 will be Drmonde Ricketts, guard Tom Jenkins and Warfield. The latter will be, a tWo-way player because of his ftJ. S. Seniors in Semifinals of Golf Match While the Buckeyes looked likp “Shoo-ins” a year ago with fairly soft schedule. they Face a back-breaker this year. it . it ‘it. j It start# out quietly enotu with Texas A&M, Indiana at Illinois, buiJthen Ohio State bumps into defending national champion Southern California at Los Angeles Oct. 19 and then-do* fending Big^Ten dump Wiscon-' ladison the following week. After tkat it’s Iowa, Penn State, Northwestern and Michigan. TOP BACK ~ Hayes will have perhaps one of the top backs in college football in Paul Warfield along with COLORADO* SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — Dorsey Nevergall and George Haggarty meet In the the*fforjdSenlQrs Golf Touroa-ment. Nevergall, of Pompano Beach, Fla., bps emerged as the-favorite in this ^pumament for golfers 55 years of age or over. He has been under regulation figures in each of his four In the other match, Fred Siegel. Scottsdale, Arix., and Forrest Andrews, Colorado Springs, match strokes. In Thursday’s action, Nevergall [defeated Leon Sikes, Palm Beach, Fla., 4 and 3; Haggarty, Detroit, heat Henry Robeson, Albuquerqtie, N.M., 4 and .6; Siegel downed Richard T-olitt, Sycamore, Til t 6 and 5; mid Andres ousted David Mindel, Bermuda Dunes, Calif. -up. ^ MICHIGAN'S *1 TRACK Saturday Mick. Derby Trial Mon. $25,000 Lahoi Day Handicap Tits. Annivenary Day Tim Admission Fmo Fold Falcon and 2 Mink Stoloi Wed. Fim Dodge ,,. ksMi;., .Mtn< vlaBM) nut. Fim CodiUoc SaI.-425.000 Added MfeUgu Derby 10 MILE et DEQUINDRE Res. JO 4-5715 1 THRIFT CENTER BUILDER’S SUPPLIES BUILD A GARAGE-do-lt-yourself! Phone 682*1600 2495 Orchard Lake Rd. Keego Harbor Ail the Materiel for Building Low Price on All Size Garages BIG 20’x20’ SOQQOO 2-GAR GARAGE Mi! MATERIALS INCLUDE; All Studs lA^OlC. Mjfaitwo - Noils o Asphalt Shingtok • Gang* 50sh • No. l Oagriat Hr Studs o Foil 2"*12" Headers • No. 106 Fir Siding or D. V. Siding o 2"*6" Raftsrs o All Exterior Trim • Gobi# Studs * Roof Boards O Garago Door From*. - Above Pries* Do Not Include Cement or Doors Get Our Pri& Refore You Buy ! lumber Btnrsi TiM AM. to I F.M.*> Saturday TiM AM. to I F.H. speed, but others will join himjLJ due to the newxnbstitution rule.Mf^ The new nile, which prevenbj platooning when the ball change? hands, was expected to hurt Ohio! State more (tan most'clubs. I Hayes is a'leading exponent of! |platoon football and has many specialists trained totgo one way [only. ITS BAVARIAN ITS BETTER An Q||d World *■ Bavarian-Style FRANKENMUTH BAVARIAN SPECIAL Yonr Choice-Light or Dark REFER BRBS. BREWIHti OR. FRANKENMUTH, MICHIGAN ... R. K. GRANKE DISTRIBUTING CO.-PHONE 731-3974 [MIDAS MUFFLER guarantees even against normal “wear-out”! Amazing, but Hue. Your Midas Muffler is guaranteed against rust, corrosion, blow-out,-even normal wear*, out!* This guarantee is good in over 400 Midas Shops front COAST-TO-COAST for as long as you own your car. Get a Midas Muffler*... expert installation is fast ... and free. No money down, no extra cost to use the Midas Budget Plan. *' „ ♦Itfplaci—wthrwfB—d*&oByi>p«yi*« $3,50 Mrvka charge • * 435 South Saginaw Ope* U—dey thri Thursday 1:30 AJHLle5:M FJL FE 2-1010 Friday Ri30 AJB. to 7 PJN. I Saturday 8 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. ’63 Car Season , 'almost over! t ; (f^ery,Tired!) \ Give ’em HEAP BIG UAL! 50,000 Mile Guarantee! Give ’em— Loaner Car Bering SeniM Onr Seleelion b Rerih Bat Better Hurry-They’re Retag Fasti . WeSdfd Your Ne-Why N You? Atitad the BY LATHE NI6HT Tiger Stadium ~' Tonight—Aug. 30th Detroit Liene ve. Pittsburg Steefers SHEUON 223 MAIN ST. mmAC BUICK, INC. ROCHESTER OL1-8133 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 80, 1968 Hie Pontiac Press' 7th annual BowimnW, October 19 to December 1, 1163, wifi be the big feature for Oakland County bowlers and establishments for the forthcoming bowling season. The .tournament, with largo* guaranteed prises, extended qualifying dates, 12 participating houses will carry many new features with the inclusion of women to the field. bonders have indicated their in-, tenet in competing on the same level and thra it. was decided by tournament officials to permit their entry this year on a trial basis. The tournament Js sanctioned by fee ABC and the WIBC. presented or the highest 18 games of fee current eeeaon. Women Will be permitted to aubpefy under the same , rules and for die same prisap as ;ihe man. The separate women’s tournament was discontinued tides years ago, but since then women Each qualifying house will send 12% par cent of its total to ths finals which will be held Doc. 1st at the MO Bowl The nig change will be in qualifying this year. Qualifying will take place Saturdays and Bring the entire family oat to* Howe’s Lanes for your bowling fun. You’ll enjoy the ultimate in modern bowling equipment... while relaxing in cool air conditioned comfort We’re expanding more and more every day to bring more pleasure to your bowling enjoyment. Now Open for Your Pleasure VKTANES e COCKTAIL LOUNGE • OPEN for TEAMS-Men>; Women’s and Mixed. . _ ■' This year they may re-enter immedlataly^and bowl on successive squads or in differsot bouses the sited day. BIG FEATURES Among the features wifi be the Actual’s Invitational to be held November 30th; die House Team Trophy award; the Mixed Doubles Actual pinfall and the Beat the Champion’s jackpot. . Bowlerama entry* blanks wifi appear fat Thp Press and wQl be made available within the Opening Soon • 8 ADDITIONAL LANES • NEW SNACK BAR • BILLIARD ROOM* 6607 DIXIE HWY., CLARKSTON ments in Oakland County. Ihcee are the houses which will <26>80U City Women Bowlers May Have Busy Year Open Every Day 10 A.M. to 2:30 A.M. be part of the six-week qualifying period: Airway Lanes, Huron BMtikAHowe’s Lanes, Cooley Lanes, Collier’s Lanes, North Hill Lanes; Lakewood Lines, Maple Lanes, Montcalm Recreation, West Side Lanes, 300 Bowl and Wonderland Lanes. The bowling season is just beginning but already the Pontiac Women’s Bowling Association is looking ahead to the tournament period. ' ", -., the association has information and — or entry blanks m at leaat five tournaments that will interest local female bowlers. MEN’S >3 Better Quality^ WORK SHOES The tournament Is based ,on 70 per cent at 200 scratch and the highest 1902-03 average itnus^ be piss Fret Team Uniforms In Yankee Bigger than Ever 163-64 BOWLIM SWEEPSTAKES Entries wfll be accepted be- Bowl A Frame TIMBERUNES Pontiac Recreation . IBN. Pony St. Bowling 25° During tha Month of August. FE 3-9701 Open 12 to .11 League Openings OPEN BOWLING AT ALL TIMES Bring This Coupon _ terns tional Bowling Congress tournament slated for an April 2 start in Minneapolis. Plans are under way, al%, for the PWBA city tournament at Rochester’s North Hill Lanes next March, and die Elks Ladies’ state and national tourneys. The state affair is listed for Niles while the national meet wifi be la Pontiac. Information on all the competi- jSMT»dil0P* SUNDAYS Til J MIRACLE MILE SHOPPlRO OERTER tion is available St 335-534$, Pontiac’s. Smart, Newest FAMILY FUN CENTER Horn are a fow of the winners who received checks amounting tn excess of $2400.00 in cash in last years Bawling Sweepstakes. ★ AND LOUNGE ★ Open to all teams bowling in sanotionad longues. Regular and mixed doublas and a spaeial individual swaapstakas! ACTIVITIES for all groups ADULTS and CHILDREN Free Team Uniforms If Your Team Finishes lit hi Yoiir League VISIT YOUR YANKEE STORES FOR DETAILS FEATURING.. Pin Findere Tel-e-Scoree Billiard Room Air Conditioned ‘ Subway Bull Return* 24 Automatic Lanes Cocktail Lounge - Free Parfcfitg . Restaurant—Nursery Men’s House Leagues - 6 P.M. Mondays e e e Women’s House Leagues Men’s House Leagues . 6:45 P.M. Wednesday ■ e e • Saturday Youth Day -Discount Prices Famous Ebonite k TORNADO M BOWLING ■ BALL Cordially invites you to Visit, Orchard Lanes and Lounge— one of America's newest de- FORMING WINTER LEAGUES Moddm, Colorful, Exciting. Ebonite “Satellite” On M-24-Between SOUTH BLVD. and M-59 ORDER Bowling Shirts MAT HAST rwi SWINGSTER KING LOUIE Finest Lettering — Fastest Service TEAM PRICES $3.95 M* tANDOIPM v Harwood Custom Tailors — Uniforms 908W. Huron' FE2-2300 THE PONTIAC PRESS,' FRIDAY, AUGUST 80, 1968 tWENTY-S&VEN COLLIER JLANESh-879 S. Lapeer Rd. 1 Oxford OA 8-2851 BPAA Doubles Go West The ltd Bowling Proprietors1 Association of America National Meii’s Doubles tournament “g( West” thip ,faU. Westgate Lit in Boise, Ida., will be the site. in a ' BOtfW League ... Where Bowling Is Fun! * Enter Your Team or Join A League Now! Men's - Woman's * Mixed Doubles and Senior House Leagues 7 / CALL ART AT... SYLVAN LANES 2355 Orchard Lake Rd. 6824)700 WONDERLAND LANES Richardson and Union Lake Road EM 3-71 fl Home of the Wonderland Matter League MEMBER OF B.P.D.C. Entertainment 6 Nights A Week! DELIS Join In The Fun With The Crowd At The Huron Newt Lounge! j APPEARING-TUESDAYS A THURSOAYS KENNY DAVIS LOUNGE FE 5-2502 j 2525 ELIZABETH LK. RD. NORTH HILL LANES * Invite* you to visit the Area’s neatest establishment WE HAVE 32 LAMES WITH EVERYTHING Sole Distributors of BRUNNERS LADIES’ APPAREL 1 Block West of National TWisf Drill on TIENKEN ROAD in ROCHESTER'S NORTH END - 'Open Bowling at all timet RESERVATIONS - 651-0544 Keg Direc u A'*in “««“•; » ‘'EL-AIRE bkklby'.____ U 1-6343. Webster, Blrralngtum; 3# t w . ... —-- Saulrrc. __ 1 Who. mUssesti ul j-iTio ..■null BOWLING—24661 Orchard L »*«.,; Er, WM^L . I birmwoha^mrkcreati lUmO&DUHlS!________ „ J4» Ptului, RHuir; uf I4ia **r ' Rojr“ Ita,«r. *** »0»d, Oxford; It Lone.;*Red Collier, C00”J RL.te^ti.{?!0lK* f*. rvr? Jmni'TitJ3 J2S* riotae; U t*M»;iHj.T484. E**Art itarao^-S^»»u!*k ****' »nw«i7 r ^uu; *■ Bunim Miltord; 16 Ltae.; Mel Moore, IA^KL^^fes»555^^•5S8J^hwr, "•",#n IU»e»i u Ltnee; Ed Alexander, 3T^5^??r:8dLRfil*S?*r “ ****"• " LMW,: EPaESvE CUrkrt“> a *■-« m tm L*ke **A- *•*«*: « Uen; JO* ’ “AJ2,Lwi5S,,i«^ ns?' * u~i <**cMtor LAK^^^st*r^Sric3^na ** um; Bill KukUn- tvxvkf LANEO (flOO C. Nine Mile Road, Ferndale; It Lanes': AI mmjusm it w ,oww',u,: 41 l—**. MONTCALW ROWKlNO-36 E. Montcalm, Pontiac; M Lane.; Tom •.. "Ww' manager; ft MMX. ~ NOBTH HILLS—iso W. Tlenken Road. Rocbefter; 32 Lanes; Lou Koprlnce, manager; 8514544- ■ ' • NORWOOD Lanes—234 a. Hunter, Birmingham; 12 Lanes; Jim Milford. manager; la M1H. ' oe-wbit——*— - taagad Jr. OAK PARK L, : ■ . Rose, manage.. _ ____ ORCHARD LANES—646 Opdyke Road. PoaUse; *5 for. its fighting prowess, does not take a bade seat when‘it comes to bowling, either. QrounA has been broken and a November completion date aet for the largest Military bowling center in theworld. It will be a 32-lane establishment at Camp LejeuAe, N.C., site By JERE CRAIG ~ The fastest growing indoor family sport in the world —bowling—is beginning another reason. . - After another very productive season last fall, win-ter and spring, die sound of pins will grow into a steady nightly rattle at establishments around Oakland County next ufeek and in the weeks to come, . The summer season was slow, as expected, for most area bouses. It was a liiadt."——\',r ..; ..^~ LANES—:aiM^Coolldge Hwy., Oak Pxrk; Lan.a; Dob Spalta, ; 335-6263. . roNTUerRUU—iH'orchard Lxke, pontlxc; 13 Lanes; Howard Field., manager; PE 4-2501. . , , RED ROW BOWLING—ISO* Rochester,*Roy«t Oak; M Lanas; Prad Haaar. manager; U 1-1710. ROOTtgTER EXhEA—Ml l' “ .. (Jerry Hlntx,'. managers; _____I____ RO^L RECREATION-ao E. Frout St , Lake Orion; • Lanes; Ren > *at.. Rochester; I Lanes; Sal s i w I . David F, Emlg, manager: U 1-7060 DOTAL OAK ELKS ROWLING—203 B. Troy. Royal Oak; » Lanes;. Charles Murphy, manager: HMW. •-SOCTHFIELD BOWL—23050 W. Eight Milk Road. Southfield; 34 LaAts; Oerald Kroil, manager; EL 6-0700 i ■ » STAR LANES—2S436 Northwestern Hwy,: Routhnald; 31 Lanoa; Prank _____________ ursm. SYLVAN LAKE! ■ 6641 JogLard Lake . 1 - Rosner. manager: 411-0700. THCNDERBIRD LANE8—400 Charles A. Walby, manage TIMBERfrANES-e-18 H. Parry. _ manager: FE, 3-0701. — wayside RRCRRATION—15013 JohnTt, Madison Heights; if Lanoii Mike Ferguson, manager; U 1-0305. RT SIDE. LANES—207. Orchard Lake Sam. Feme and Don Stone, managers; FE W. Maple R (r; JU 0-3400. y. Pontiac: 30 Pontiac; If Lanes; Art Troy; 46 lAines; Lanes; Bob- Warman. , Pontiac: WONDERLAND LANES—>355 Richardson Road, Commerce; Paul Hcria, maaMdrrEM >7111. YORBA LINDA LANES—3533 _N._ Woodward, Royal Paul Hor .........DA _______ _ manager: • manager;’ 338-7133. for review, repair, reorgan-ization ai)d relaxation for the proprietors and, bowlers alike. Hie face of bowling . Ig : the j county, has changed some. The ■building boom generally has stopped. In fact, at least five -establishments .no longer appear on thet Press’ County Keg Directory. Included are bowling houses in Clawson, Ferndale, Hazel ' Park and Holly. The long anticipated door opening .for one new house appears jdst around the comer, however. Don Spalla, despite snags, is. steadily advancing ‘toward the grand, opening of his -Orchard Lanes on Opdyke Road. ADDITIONS Other houses did not stand still. Auburn Lanes has undergone extensive remodeling. Barb and Les property., They also are enlarging their lounge facilities. The latter came in for improvements also'at the 300 Bowl and Ben Bundo’s Maple Lanes in Walled Lake. West Side Laaes can boast of increased paved parking space while Jee Bonfiglio at Huron Bowl developed an attractive showcase for his pro shop. Managerial faces have changed some, also. Hal and Gerry Hints have taken over at Rochester Lanes this season. Bob Warman ^t,Pontiac’s Timberings. and E^eahpr' Gorman at 'Strike ’N’ Spare will begin their first full seasons hr charge v A change in command at Dixie Rea reatien is all but completed with Joe Puertas set to assume the manager’s rple there. This, also, is the year the agers hope to stimulate the junior darks ton are Hearing uanmmi an aearipg bowling program and the senior | the completion of an eight-lane I addition to their present 16-lane citizens’ keg activity. These two steps are in conjunction with a national drive in this direction. The competition for the fowling dollar should be keener than in recent- years. Most of the “unreached areas” have been exposed to the joys'of bowling. Now it ia the proprietors who will have to make that little extra effort to attract the keglers’ dollars. More will have to be offered to draw the participant out of the house where he or she is bowling and into the place “down the street” or “across town.” SPONSOR & CHAMP-The Professional Bowlers’ Association has enjoyed two previous visits to Pontiac as reflected by— BUI Allen (right) proudly showing 300 Bowl sponsor Joe Puertas the trophy Allen won in his victory here last spring. Puertas will, again, play host fo the touring pro’s next March and the southpaw Allen probably will be very happy to return to the sitn ef his first big FBA bowling triumph. Visit 300 Bowl in March Pro Bowlers to Vie Here,-Again BOWL OFTEN AMF'S Revolutionary ... NEW SPARENAKEBl Pontiac and 300 Bowl are on the itinerary again for the Profess sional Bowlers’ Association winter tour. * The biggest nameis in men’s bowling will be; in town March 24-28 competing for prize money expected to equal or surpass last spring’s 123,400 purse. Ia addition, some $S»0M may (be offered in the Pro-Am eyent 'that wiH precede' the regular PBA tournament. _The March appearance will mark the third straight year the professionals have brought their weekly competition to Joe Puertas’ 300 Bowl. Shows You How to Make Any of 1,023. Possible Spares td Improve Your Score-, 'Bowl Where You See the MagfcTriengle’ 300 BOWL 100 S. CASS LAKE RD. PONTIAC 33S-7133 ^ The visif this time will introduce the local foils to foe four’s scoring change that has prayed popular in its trial on the summer circuit.. The top If qualifying scores are carried over into the 16 head-to-head matches, thus ^retarding the leader’s earlier efforts. In addition, however, each victory i* the head-to-head chmpetltion earns , the pinner 50 bonus pins, thus rewarding a hot .streak under pressure. VN TELEVISION -The Pontiac stop will be one,of 13 events' in which the finals will be viewed on national television, an honor bestowed upon the city last year, also. The tour .will come here'from Akron, Ohio, home of the PBA headquarters. Presently the professional bowlers are swinging along the West Coast on die summer tour which will conclude Oct. 16-11 alt Las Vegas. This weekend they are in San DJego, Calif. Pontiac’s Monroe Moore is with the tour, presently recoverina- -from a , slump- He grabbed an eighSrplace finish several weeks .ago at Meridian, Miss., .his biggest payoff on the circuit. Last week be wax 14th. BOWL IN A LEAGUE THIS FALL! ; A Few Individual Openings Still Available Order your blouses and shirts, NOW!'. For Further Information Call 674-6424 ' '..............11 fJ Ainwuj Lutu 4825 W. HURON ST. ROCHESTER LANES 430 MAIN St. ‘NOW, OPEN UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT! Marine* Dowling Big at Stateside; Base T&i U.S. Marine raps, famed of the Marinas’ amphibious training base. Some 35,000 nrides plus 46,000 dependents at the camp wifl be Mile to use the ia- v-cUity when it is completed. One ef t04>’i Finest BOWLING LANES ' e 46 Lanes, e Cocktail Bar e Lunches a Dinners Have Leagues Open ... Why Not Join One t LADIES’ LEAGUES . Morning, afternoon * MEN’S LEAGUES Monday or Thursday ★ MIXED LEAGUES Tuesday at 9. P.M. Sunday £5 or 9 P.M. Call JU 8-3400 Thunderbird LANES 4MWvMapl« Rd., TH0Y BOWLING SHIRTS --1Ar ■ 6 KING LOUIK 6 SERVICE 6 MUNSINGWEAR TOVl TEAM 08DE1 WILL GET OVI COMPLETE and PAST ATTENTION. LETTENING AS YOU WANT IT ORDER NOW! MEN'S and WOMEN'S BOWUNS SHOES at $6.99 MITZELFELDS Welcome to FAIRGROUNDS OPENINGS ON sat MIXID LEAGUES featuring Men'l Thursday . Senior House League PETEISOR SCORING POSITION PAYOFF Dick Peele, President 684-1505 or FAIRRR0UHDS BOWLING " LAKEWOOD LANES ' 3121W. Huron Sft ' \ FE 4-7943 Team and Individual Openings MEN’S Thursday 9:15 P.M. Class A League >3500.00 Prize Money Friday ‘ . 9 P.M. Handicap League LADIES Tuesday 9 P. M: Ladies’ Daytime League Tuesday 10 A.M. Wednesday 10 A.M. and lPfM. Thursday 10A. Mr CHILDREN Saturday 10 A.M. Completely New-Modern Brunswick LANES AND EQUIPMENT HUPBBM I, AXES GRAND OPENING Sunday, Septem FEATURING EXHIBITION BOWLING and ' ■v INSTRUCTION TO GOLEMBIEWSKI BOWLERS BILLY T Sunday: 2 to S P.M. and 7 to 9 P.M. ■' Everybody, Is Welcome!, 'll S. SQUIRREL ROAD Auburn Heights UL 2-1710 % Midnight Ml 4-3135 OPEN 7:00 PJ. SHOW STARTS 7:30 madness... boyond reason*, beyond belief! JOSEPH E. LEVINE GUALTERO JACOPETTI -t»nnamm »PA0L0CAVARA ^ > ustjno^ TWENTV-B1GHT : ■ v: TUB l‘«iXJlTAC PBKSS teXDAY, AUGUST- 80, HT-. -n*~ Police Arraign Actor's Maid ; VAW NUYB. CaMf. aw ~H>0 *flovMkkn former maid of dteorgfe Montgomery was Migned yesterday on a charge of lying la shoot the actor when he returned home from an extend jjilve trip. Gerama-iMlka Roth Weasel, 37, mast retnra to eoirt next Tuesday far a preliminary hearing on charges of assault With " “ commit < Miss Weaml, who worked for Montgomery When he was mar-tied to singer DinflTSbore, was held in lieu of IStflOO bail. : [ - * * W * . , ••■■■ i She is accused of entering Montgomery's house Sunday, then watting until Tuesday night When she confronted him with a gun as he returned home. Montgomery wrested the revolve^ from her hand but not before it wed once — inches from the fetor’s ear. Suburb Blocks Negro FOLCROFT, Pa. (APj — Some] Baker is a laboratory SO State Troopers, augmented by and hit wife is a nurse, area policemen patrolled this suburban Philadelphia community today following demonstrations by up to 1,000 persons protesting an attempt by a Negro couple to move into an all-white neighbor- I X-Ray Physicist Dies v£ CHARLOTTE AMALIE, Virgin tshuids (AP)—Julius Edgar 1> Jienfekl, 81, a physicist whose, ex-per iments helped perfect the modem X-ray tube, died Wednesday. /Z52KEEGO ; YOU'LL HAVE TO SEEtTTO 3ELJ VE IT Starring % such presi Henry &2S iFonda There also Tracy ated third BODYGUARD TO, ABEAUTYt, MCM„ CROWD DEMONSTRATES - From 300 to 500 persons in the Philadelphia subqrb of Pol-croft, gathered yesterday to protest the aU tempt ofa Negro family to move into the all*, white bousing development. The crowd dem- Captain Allen Henry , said the special force of troopers would be increased to escort Mr. and Mrs. gijllp Horace Baker into the home. They were driven away three times by demonstrators Thursday. The new attempt to enter tha home was expected to be made later today. The home the Bakers are seeking to occupy is in a development known as Deimar Village, some 1,500 row houses in about a 310,000 to $12,000 price range. "• HOME. DAMAGED «“**** -"J S’ ^ Wind9W8 thrown Sd jSt "Sd the and the front door glass and acreens were d The broken before police diapersed the crowd. Ifo Bakere, on urgtagi g,ve up injuries were reported, and no arrests were „„ ^ attempt to enter the .made. , house. Twice later theyreturned ' in... .y - , ..^afld twice continued on their way been living In I their-two-year-old daughter. • W ‘ * .. ★ , The home they bought recently had been reefehned by the Veterans Administration and turned over to the Federal Housing Ad-•minbtrttioajsr sale. Lansing Man Headl State Medical Unit DETROIT (UPI) -* Hugh W. Brenneman of Lansing was appointed director of the Michigan State Medical Sodetyjssterday. * ? ★ dr* . . * Brenneman, 41, win iiieceed William 3? Buna, who retires Dec. 31 after being with the am-dejy almost 30 years. Named to the poet of aaaodate executive director was Warren F. Tryloff, 41, Lansing. ,The hardest chrome steel is ueed fer antUrkdionbeU mid roll: er bearings which must withstand load capacities up to as much as 200 tons. SQUARE and ROUND DANCING :.tcs Qardpn Center Ballroom SIS7Ww*w—Teachers in ds Grand 'Rapids, suburb now hgve a Yardstick on how to Apply it to the rears of rebellious pu-pils. Use the hand or an "appropr* ate instrument on the fleshy part of the buttocks. ’ . That’s an instruction laid dew i for Wyoming teachers this year in a written gnideline on how to deal wife recalcitrant School Superintendent Albert Li Deal said the spanking guidebook puts into writing policies that have long existed. “ Here are other rales for, teachers to follow in adfelnistering cor-' for the subject. But thetollabora- custody Thursday night by State poral pmtishment: . _ TVn’i irpank in anger. Avoid ad-ministering the punishment in the classroom. Have an adult witness. Avoid slapping about the head or hair pulling. “I think the hand sjuxild be sufficient,” Dealsaid. Police, but none were held. There were reports of incidents with racjal overtones in adjoining Darby jfWhship, which has a heavy Negro population. Several white-persons driving through that community said stones had been hurled ajjhefr .cags. Funeral Service! Set for Great Lakes Skippei Spanking should H* the teach-W$ “court of last -reswt,”„ he said, to ba used only after pirent-teacher conferences have failed to achieve results. However, if a student attacks olic^president,” he said, “but most of the other matters are just as applicable today. The part about whether a-divorced mao could be elected president couldn't be more timely.” • The Best Man” concerns chicanery within a party at convention time and was written, by a political insider. Vidal '"is fee grandson of a senator andhlipeelf ran unsuccessfully for Congress. He admitted to having some help with the play. si erah Great Lakes skipper, will held here Saturday at 8:30--a.m. and later ai Port Huron. Brown, 89, died Wednesday in a Detroit' hospital. A native of Southampton, Ont.,l Brown obtained^ bis American citizenship and became it Great Lakes master in 1910. I 4 N. Saginaw - K 5-5591 0|pM 6 A.W.-9 P.M.-CloMd Sun. " y Om S*Tvic* YQU GET MORE FOR YOUR . INTIRTAINMINT "DOLLAR" AT THE ALL- COLOR SHOW „f)OHT HANG URt tkkg ground THE MOST TITANIC MONSTERS OF ALL TIME CUSH HEAD-ON! *LAST TWO DAYS * Friday the amalgamated Texas pothound Doors Open: 6:45 p,m. — Regular Prices ★ NEW* AH-eONPIflONED HILLS THEATRE ROCHESTER - OL 1 -8311 “President Kennedy read the first draft and gave me a couple of lines,” said Vidal. “One.-thing be told me' was there was one way to be sure when a politician was going to knife you, .That was when be said in parting, ‘just let me know if there’s anything I can do foryou.’ ” f /iJ, Executive: Supervises 2f Earns $100 Per Week Her will •also inform swine producers about the new approaches being made in treating this costly disease. , Special sessions dealing with swine; dairy cattle, beef, poultry and sheep will start at 10 a.hl. in the MSU Union building. j The director of the Michigan D e p a r t m e n t of Agriculture,J WASHINGTON (DPD—According George S. McIntyre, will speak to the Labor Department, a man at the noon session. - jjnust earn at least. 3100 a. week , ___________ , ____ to be an executive. The Annual Newspaper Nation-; By government standards, the at-Snapshot Awards, sponsored department said yesterday that to by the Eastman Kodak Co., is the qualify for the title of executive world’s largest amateur photo- a man must also supervise at graphic competition. I least two employes. FIRST __________________________ RUN ... in blind love and blistering hate, women carnal and capricious, women at their most primitive and their most sophisticated, women as they are in every part of the world! • 29 YOU HAW come blow your horn Little Boy Blue there’s chicks m the Hell you, chum, laughs itisL T0NITE at 7:05 and 9:05 SAT.-SUN.4MM ■t 1:00-3:00 SiM-liOMsM MULTI ^ Nitas-SUNDAY I Holidays Mia tat. Matinaa 65c till morn ! Children25c TECHMICOLpBitisI LEE J LEE J. MPLLY BARBARA JILL . ««>•>«• \ ' NORMAN' BUD' " am) YORKIN m m THE PONTIAC DRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 80, 1968 TWENTY-NtlfK Evansville Takes Pony Thursday night by besting V • j Canoga Piuft, Calif., S-l behind League Crown Thursday the pitching of Steve Lambert WASHINGTON, Pa. (AP) Evansville, Ind., iron, the Pony It was Evansville's third victory without a Mn in the double League baseball championship elimination tournament. _ (HOWARD jjoHmon'J WONDERFUL BONELESS FILLETS- /fried to a crisp golden. brown $1.00 French Fried Potatoes • Cole Sla' Tartars Sauce * Rolls and Butter ALL YM CAN EAT Every Wednesday and Friday 3650 JoHnion’5 DIXIE HIGHWAY ^ at Drayton Plains ■■Mpramrani Pontiac’. Popular Tkaatar |s»ral H aBIweiuii»■ aAiwiiiuiiilr^ in^ysl N "H HwiWmniMrliH—- FBI. ( SIT. Only Marilyn Monroe US. Studies Increase Talk Continues on East Trade By PHIL NEWSOM Upi Foreign News- Analyst Partly as result of the new partial nucliar test-nan treaty, partly as )peiuit of long-standing pressures, there lsf ‘ today increasing talk of a vast new buildup in East-WesMrade. ‘ The United! States has admitted it is review-1 ing its policies to-! Want Communist-] bloe, nations. Fop years wider Khrushchev the Soviet Unipa has pressed for increased trade with Western nations and has protected especially the Western ban on strategic materials which covers far more than the question inf guns or rockets. For the West, the more cautious advise that the nuclear test-ban treaty by itself constitutes no re^ breakthrough in East-West relations and that in Germany, jfor example, Soviet demands [have not been reduced in the slightest. There also is the question of doing business wittr and. helping to build a system frankly dedicated to destruction of the Western democracies and their economies. * ★ Within both blocs there are important pressures beyo'nd the political. In the Soviet Union and its satellites there is a growing demand for an increase in the standard of living and the supply of consumer goods after years of hardship. And as the Soviet bloc has increased its own output of both manufactured and raw materials there is an increasing nea ter outlets. Among the satellites, enjoying a period bf respite from iron Moscow control, there also is a spirit of independence demanding. . freedom to develop their qwn economies, including increased Western contact. Among the latter,. Romania pf-fers an excellent example. The Romanians not only have , in- creased their trade faster with the--Wttt~than their Communist-bloe partners but also have shown marked reluctance to Join the integrated economic program advocated by Moscow. TEMPTATION GROWS Among tiie Western - nations, Bar Foundar Dies at 76 CHtPPEWA FALLS, Wis. (AP) -Miss Mary Rehan, 76, a New York City attorney and a founder and patroness of the International Bar Association, died Wednesday. with production capacity in some cases outdistancing markets, there is a growing temptation to dip into the “oceans" of trade promised by Khrushchev. German and British merchants have been particularly restive under, y. 8. demands for'strict en- forcement-of the ban on shipment of strategic materials. Under pressure of the West German government, German merchants finally canceled a deal to supply, pipelines to the Veronica Lake Back on Stage NEW YORK (AP) — Veronica Lake, who became a movie Sensation in the 194Qs with her peekaboo hairdo then faded into obscurity, returned .to acting Thursday night. T was scared silly," said Miss Lake after the performance, her debut on the New York stage. 'But it was great. Damn, it’s great to be bade.” When she Came on stage midway fat the first act of “Brat Foot Forward” at the off-Broadway Stage 7S Theater, applause stopped the action momentarily. In the musical comedy, a revival of the 1940 Broadway hit, she days Gale Joy, a tarnished movie queen whose star has begun to set. Veronica, who once earned $4,-500 a week, also la trying (b start -a comeback. T think that in this show, people will be able to see what I can do/’ die said. “I’m really playing ^burlesque of myself, of Veronica Lake. But I don't mind because I like to clown, and how else can you explain clowning?” FIRST BIG ONE Sbe appeared in 28 movies. In her first one, “I Wanted Wings " her long blonde tresses fell over her right eye obscuring it. Almost immediately she became known as -the peekaboo blonde. “It was an* accident,’’..she said. T couldn’t contrpl the blasted hairdo.’’ She. long ago changed hairstyles. After the curtain fell Thursday night, a few well-wishers went backstage. One was actress Helen Seamon, an MGM contract player with Veronica more than 20 years ago. ★ ★ * ★ “She was great, wasn’t she?” said Helen. •••-/' ;. .. A handful of old friends, who remembered her as Gonstance Ockleman of Brooklyn, -also up. The British g'ovsrnmen showed no such inclination. The British also are in teres tatin exchange of ships for oil, -The West Germans do some $500 million a ypar in trade with the Soviets, the British more than $300 million. U. S. trade with Russia is only about $35 million. -/' < * ★ . ‘ While admitting the risks, advocates of a revision of Allied trade poll c i e s argue that increased contacts with Communist regimes mean greater opportunities to wield influence. Increased trade -with the satellites, they say, not Oqly would weaken the bloc as a whole but also decrease dependence of the satellites on the whims of the Kremlin. Veronica gave thfejp* report on her newest grandchild, an infant who hasn’t been named yet. ‘My other granddaughter, Jennifer, will be 2 in October,” she said. ^ Veronica, who will be 41 Jq November, said the vigorous’action required by the musical is causing her to lose weight! But she stur-worrles about her figure. •k ' it Veronica has been married three times, but she’s single now. Eighteen months ago she was found working in a second-rate hotel as a cocktaiNoimge waitress. ft w I’m sick and tired of having people .ask me about that*” she it’s as though people making' me out to be down and out, 1 wasn’t. I was paying $1$0 a month rent than, and that’s long way from being broke." As the curtain dropped, she was exhausted but exuberant. “There were some minutes there when I knew it was going like crazy, and there were times when I knew we had to fish Jt out,” she. said. \ FOUR SEASONS INN featuring'—Thursday, Friday and Saturday MAC FERGUSON At The Plane if-Modern, Progressive, and Waal Coast Jazz. * *W« serve the finest of Foods and Dinners” • On Dixie Highway' • Vi Mila S..of Holly a Phone 625-1021 [Chuck Chandler. Res. Mgr. DANCE EVERY FjHMY and SATURDAY NIGHT to^ ERNIE CRAIG and The CUT-A-WAYS POOD from 8 KM. ft I AM. LIQUOR Now imhgjmr 10-HI BAR , Come in and Have An Evening ot Fun and Frolic 0761 Pfado Hey, at M-1S MA 5-75J ENROLL TODAY! Day or Evening Gasses Register while there are i FE 4-2353 or write for Flee Pamphlet. lV/i 8. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bldg., Pontiac, Michigan. PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL : You Are Invited To The GRAND OPENING MoutfPWatarina PIZZAr- Delicious . Oelmonico 9-oz. Steaks a a%ma lltclU^DR* $186 Open I PJI. till Midnight... Sun, thru Thurs. i/(. mami Friday and Saturday... 3 P.M. till 3 A.M. 5741 ELIZABETH IK. RD. (Just West of Crescent Lake) * FE 3-9391 Free Quart of Ceka or Vernors with Large Pizza thru Sept. CHILDREN* Under* 11* THE INTERNATIONALLY I ACCLAIMED HIT I TUBS., SEPT. 3rd 13:43 A.M. to 1:00 PJt LUCKY T3 sh°o« KIDS With This COUPON UNDER 12 THIRTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAV, 'AUGUST 80, 1088 Duplin In Soiling Uod RYE, H.Y, the North American Star Class TNe United States produces 169 ■ kinds of hooey from IS stales. MKT to EAT HIKER FOUNTAIN h the lobby of Itw MwrMdha 35 W. Huron St. 'Here Come the Kennedy Kids' Lots of Cousins Grow Up ■ By BRUCE HOSSAT HYANNIS PORT, Mass. (NEA) - The afternoon was cool and gray, with*a light rain falling. Timothy Shriver, age 3, led the way along a narrow pier to the small speedboat bobbing in Lewis Bay. WWW Timmy, brown-eyed and dark haired, sat in the middle as his mother, Mrs. Eunice Shriver, the President’s sister, took die wheel. We headed wot folr toe bay to follow a saOlag race in which two ef the ewtrtes were Bobty Shriver, 9, and Joe Kennedy, “ “ ef the atteney gen- ii,eldMt of 1 end’s eight. A short distance from shore, Timmy stood up, planted his fart wide, and. comhpandeerad the WUROAY NIGHTS 9 P.M. to f:30 A.M. Music by Westnm ARIZONA WESTON*\Modem OXBOW UUCE PAVILION 9451 Elizabeth Lake Read at Union Laka Road GOOD FOOD and LIQUOR The SKEE Brothers' Featuring TJ—JIM and 3 OTHERS Plan an Evening of Fan for Everyone!. % PIZZA CARRY-OUT SERVICE WHITE LAKE INN ORMANO MAO, W milts N. ef M-59, Phi 1*7-5077 On BeautUul White lafto '"Give Mother a Treat9 SUPPER CLUB DINING 'EVENINGS SERVING SUNDAY DINNERS SlagAleng While the Organ Plays! Liquor BUSINESSMEN’S ^ ★ LUNCH ★ Vi* no today Ph. MY 2-6193 Open 11 A.M.-Closed Monday* Make Reservations Note! With supreme confidence he turned the boat in easy circles, avoided obstacles, put it an course for die racing craft. Now and then his mother cautioned: “Watdnwt for. that buoy . . . Follow the committee boat . . . Don’t get too dose to the sailboats.” FASTER, MOMMY’ Timray^Waa-tfc action: “Let’s go a little footer, Mommy.’’ We powered up add moved off behind the racers. But our pace was alow. At one spot Timmy readied for the throttle and gave it a healthy yank. We spurted. He turned to me and smiled: “See what I mean about going faster?” ~ Walking ba* up the pier a little later, Timmy spied some bikes. Feinting to enc, he asked: “Moauoy,. can. I ride this?” “Whose is tt?” queried his mother. ' He replied: "It’s Caroline’s but It’s all right. She’s generous.!” One day when Mrs. Shriver had work to do at a Washington home for die mentally retarded, she took Timmy along and deposited him hi the care of a Catholic sister. The nun seemed to flutter uncertainly, so be said: “Don’t worry about me. I shift for tpyseif.” w * • His brother Bobby and his sister, Maria,. 7, have-the same assurance. Riding at the farm in the morning, Maria traveled the boy: ° “Canyon beat tqi on any i kids in die dash?” When the answer was 1 • Stevie came hack: Ways tomorrow.” fawuh^r at his age. His 'fother* summor bis knee and asked: ‘ and said: “I think so.” .Stevie likes torqad, listens to others, asks perceptive < MM. - / ■ : Llleall those b Atheism Speeds Up Religion HURT WILL PASS—Timmy complains loudly to his mother, Mrs. Eunice Shriver, sister of die President, after a .knee-knocking incident. The 3-year-old has a sister, Maria, and a bother, Bobby. • ' the small fenced-in trade a. while and then asked : “May I put up a two-bar, please?” The instructor agreed, and soon die was making low Jumps. It was Maria who led a carload of yeug singers faultlessly vlhrongh “Puff jbe Magic Dragon,” as we drove to the beach C • m p o u n d from the farm. ■ A bit late for lunch, Bobby and a friend came bounding in, Bobby with a fresh-caught fish which was rather coolly received in the kitchen. Next to the Robert F. Ken-nedys, the Shrivers have the largest ’.‘animal farm.” Wandering around the* premises is Sugar Plum, a small Brazilian horse. Kim and Lassie comprise the dog contingent. Rabbits putnum-ber all. LIKE DAD If the throe young .Shrivers are a dear cut from their energetic parents, so are die two Smith lads,' Stephen, 6, and William, nearing 3, sons of Stephen Smith You pound. Sample,' Stevie to Mike Kennedy, 5V . “Pm not your friend, wanna know why Pm art yonr friend? IH ted yon why I’m not your friend. Because • I was play-fighting and you started rough-fighting.” Moments later the two were off on a Joint fihhtaig adventure. aedy family, Be _____ unaffected bytoe attention that focuses on the group, the visiting celebrities, the goings and comings. To these youngesters, .it’s all part ofj&enatural landscape. Hie four Lawford children, boy and throe girls, tend to reach the Cape each summer a little later in die season than tbq others. This year, as always, they were impatient at the delay. Their attachment.to the Cape is all the.more remarkable When it is remembered they have an ocean at their doorstep in Santa Monica, Calif., where the Peter Lawfords have their home. rrs magic What they miss is die magic ingredient that captivates all who live in and around the bustling Compound -at Cape Cod. It’s understandable. Even the adult visitors find the place pretty hard to resist. For the ingredient is aidless excitement. % 11 s s t* m I • . M Of J L 1 : 1 1 THRU S ■I : re'l (v ■ ' * ' to] ^ d| , U \ f|iff ■ NEW DRAYTON INN Restaurant and Cocktail Lounge | 4195 Dhic H-y. OR 3-7161 Drayton Plain. SEAFOODS^ " " Char-Broiled or Inira-Bay Broiled Steaki and Chops ▲ UNION LAKE ROAD NOW OPDI T NO DETOURS MOREY’S S, CLUB 2200 Union Loins RcLf oiff Commerce Rd. 2014)414 , •' PHILLIPSBURG, Kan. AP)-California physician who almost gave a major portion of the tiny Kansas town of Speed to an athe-- . . . _ ... ... 1st movement now wants to give1?* ^ ,|fan *{enne^y Smith, the {part of it for a diurch. Prwidait^ youngest sister. WWW The Smith bpys have had ample 1 Dr. Harold Chapman, Okaland,-ttale toU* competitive Calif., inherited the property from 4*9 which pervades the Com-his father who waaone-of Speed’s founders. The town in ndrthwest Kansas has- dwindled during the years until its population now numbers about 80. Madalyn Murray, Baltimore, Md., atheist who plans to open a colony at nearby Stockton, said Dr. Oiapman had offered her a big chunk of Speed real estate. The announcement stirred up a furore in Speed and the doctor, asserting his offer had been-mii-represented, withdrew it. He made his new offer in a let ter to the Phillips County Review, S Weekly newspaper. He proposed to give a now unused bank budding in Speed to the town’s people tot use as a church and community meeting place. He said he would alter and refurbish die building for that purpose if city officials accept it '‘Actually, I have no interest in atheism or in furthering its cause,” he wrote the newspaper, ‘but strange as it may seem, I do have an interest in helping Speed.”' Speed has no church now. Curtis Publishing Seeks New Trial in Butts Suit ATLANTA (AP)—Attorneys for Curds Publishing Co. have asked a new trial of the $10 million libel suit* by former University of Georgia athletic director Wallace ~uttr.- -w-.. The motion S/gJuBm trial was filed Thursday with US. District Court Judge Lewis R. Morgan. The 31-page document Wasjnot immediately available. The motion was filed shortly after Morgan stayed execution of a $3 06 million verdict awarded Butts. Attorneys for Curtis cited numerous grounds, claiming errors ip the trial over which Morgan presided. In its Aug. 20 verdict, a 21-man Jury awarded Butts general damages of $60,000 and punitive damages of |3. million. SUNDAY SPECIAL! wr Visit Our Completely Equipped Pro Shopt Everything for the Bowler BALLS.. .*19” Saa tha Magntficant Gold Crown Jawal BAGS...........*3” * AH Styles and Cetera SHOES... .*4"^ All Sim for Ladies and Mu Open Bowling Hours: Daily 9 AM. till 1AM. Sunt 11 AM. till 1 AM. 2515 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. Phene 335-2525 ■■■■■■■ mum Tv*fc,Wuf, Frf., Sot. and DANNY ZELLA and Hi, ZEL-TONES For Your Dancing and . Listening Pleasure Science Quiz By BOB BROWN * PROBLEM—The heated wire. NEEDED — A piece" Of baf| copper or iron wire. A wire coat hanger is perfect. ■ ♦ DO THIS — Pull the straitfit wire tfarougi the hind, and heat wdl be felt Bend the wire bade and forth, and heat will be generated in it *• WHY? - Two kinds of friction are demonstrated here. In the first experiment, die friction is between the hand and the wire, tlh die' second, the friction is between the molecules of the wit In both instances, mechanical energy is converted to( beat by means of friction. A collection of these scientific puzzles is in book form under the name “Science Circus.” It is hi bookstores and libraries. i Oferal PiiIuii Car*.) Cewpletely Reaodeled aid Redecorate! Open Daily 9 A. M. ta 2 A. M. , Wa»»y ol Fraa Parking 1450 N. Perry a* Feotiec Rd. imMiu FE 5-9941 • BEAUTIFUL COCKTAIL LOUNGE! * • Bi-LEVEL BARI • SERVING A QUICK EXECUTIVE LUNCH! • COMPLETE DINNERSI • BANQUET ROOM SEATING UP TO 2001 Tommy Timlin j Jilarieai Comedy M.C. j Penny Williams i Rock ’n Roll | Recording Songstress |1 YOU’LL ENJOY OUR LARGE NEW DANCE FLOOR Comar of Elimbath 5 I* and Cats Laka 5 Rood. J Call For Reserviations FE 2-2961 ■ Dell’s Inn Uncle John’s NOW SERVING STEAKS 1* \eSti [sreJTwttwi ATTENTION CHILDREN RegMer for FREE Birthday *** Party Pancqko Dinner Woodward Are. and 14'/i Mile BIRMINGHAM ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 80, 1963 THIRTY-ONE MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally groym produce by growers and sold by then in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the -Detroit Bureau of Markets as of noon Thursday. Pfoduei V vwvm Apple! Chenango, bu.............. $4.50 Apples, Crab. bu. ...... Apple!, Oreydng, bu. .. Apple*. MllWnih bu. Applee, Wealthy, bu... Applee, WoKmer. bu.. .. Blueberrle*. crate .. --------- Cantaloupe, bu. ................ 8.50 Piaehei. Siberia, bu. 4.00 -Peach**. Pair Haven, bu. .........3.75 Peaches. HaleHavea. bu. ....'.....8.75 Paachee. Kal Havea. bu............4.75 Peanbee, Had Haven, bu. Peacbe. Rich Haven, bu. . Kara. Bartlett, bu. w.... Pearl, Clappi^ParOTlte. by. NEW YORK (AP) - Airlines were irbrlgbt spot In' a mixed stock market early this afternoon as Wall Street dkplayed typical caution prior to the long Labor Day wedtohd. Trading was moderately active. - ■ „ • Stock markets will be closed on Monday for the holiday and mad? Wall Streeters had already started off for their last bit df summer fun.^. X Afrltoes seemed tp be attracting additional buying on the basis of their recent reports of increasing VSSSiaSS^M. The financial' community had n . 3.50 h green. round .. Bhu, on. bob. .-.is Broccoli, dm. bcb. .............. 2.50 Ctbbage. curly, bob. ............. 1.50 Cabbage, red. bu.,,«... . ■. . , lift Cibbace. sprout!, bu. Ml ■ Cabbage, alandard. bu. ......... 1.50 CarroU, doa.. bdu ........... "itt**! **"* irbi S doa. .... Carrot*, topped, bu. .....r.~ y Cauliflower, doit ‘Celery. Paical. ittl. ......... Celery, Pascal, 2-3 doa. era tea ..2.23 Calory, white ...................... *“ . Coca, eweet, dm. bag ........ Cuoumbera, pickle ... Cucumbers, sllcers .. DtU’ * ........... Hggplant. bu. ........ Bgjijtfant, taw type. I Lacks. |lh.‘ !!!»»!. Okra. pk. basket .... Onions, dip, )l d. ... Onions, green, ’beta. . Onion, pickling, lb. . Parsley, curly, bob. . Parsley, root, ban. : Parsnlpe, cello pak, I id& 5. ’. 50-V ba Radishes, black . BSE i________ Squash, Butternut, 1 Squash. Hubbard Squash, Italian. V Squash, Summer, Tomatoes bskt, . Swiss Chard, bu. ............. 1. Turnips, bu...................■-...1, LETTUCE AND SALAD GBEBNS Celery cabbage .............. .11, Lettuce, leal, bu. . Poultry and Eggs Baavy type hent 18-10; light type_______ 9; roasters over 5 lbs. 23-24; broilers and fryers 3-4 lbs. whites 10-20; barred rock 21-22. * Comment: Market steady. Supplies mode rite and limited’ close to nee “ trade contlnues iair. J , .. DETROIT BOOS DETROIT, Aug. 30 (B-Egg prices puld per pound at Detroit by lust receivers (Including U. 8.) > > ■ - “**■“-------- \ extra lam 41%-47%; edlum 21-333; small IS- _____________i grads hugs 30-40; medium 20-30; small 20-21; checks 93+M%. Comment: Market about steady. Prices ranged unchanged to 2 cents- lower, generally and the undertone improved i at the lower prices. Whites grads large 40-44Vi; : 2214; browns g CHICAGO BTJTTEB CHICAOO,'Aug. 30 ID—Chicago .mercantile exchange—butter steady: ... ------- prices u—I------- ___ _____ .3 A 5744; „ _ 65*4; cars 00 B 7%; 86 C 87. Bggs about steady; wholsale buying prices unchanged- to 1 higher; TO per cent or better grade A whites' 30Vi; mixed 39%; mediums 32; standards 32; dirties 27; chttks 10-3614. Livestock CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, Aug. 20 (AP)—Hog! 5.500; 1 airly •toady;______ shippers took marty 70psr cent MJNHO » 17.50 and a lew loads 17JS-17ASl iMsad 3-3 180-250 lb* 17.09-17.M: 1S0-20* — . 10.75-17.00; -a few load* 2-2 200-21 18.70-17.00; mixed 1-4 200-380 lb ------------ 15.88-10.00; 350-400 Ibe 14.75-15.50; 400-450 lbs 14.25-14.75; 3-3 480-000 lbs 12.78-14.81; (00-800 lbs 1325-11.75. Cattle 8,100: mires non* trading on slaughter steers under 1.310 lb* (airily active, steady; heavier steers slow and Steady; heifers slew, steady to weak; cows and bulla weakifcut hardly enough .of either class an oner for an sdeotf-*--test- of . trend; lead prim* 1,871 . slaughter steers 2848; high choice and prune 1,108-1,400 A* 84.75-2840 including about 10 Mada 1480-1,350 lbs at 140; load prime 1,350 lb* 8545; load prtnM 1,400 lb* 85.00; choice 060-1,800 lb* 1446-05.00; caaspsrabls grads 1,200-1,4 23.00-Mj50; load high -choice and 1.43* lb 84.00; 1M4 808-1,880 lbs 28.30; few standard and low wood *245; choice 500-1,100 lb heifers 2441; load high choice with *n Sou oi prim* 071 lbs 2441; good 22.25-22.00; -lav utility and commercial sows 1440-1*40; cannei* and ebttm 1S.I0-14.I0; few utility and commercfiit ljuUs 17.50-10.10; load cboloe M0 lb' feealbg steers 8446. fx Sheep 408; spring slaughter lamb* alow. M to 1.0* lower; fsw sno ter twee steady; few lots c------------------ prints *0-108 lb spring tlaughtsa lambs 3048; fsw head mostly prime 8140; bulk good and choice 1B.00-19.00: utility and good 16.00-18.00; mostly culls 1048-14.00; — good shorn slaughter ewes 4.00- 8.00. Praholiday Caution Airline Gains Mar Bright rose in July after two months of decline. Tills was countered some- American, United and American good news that new factor orders Eastern, TWA and National. Pan what by Dtdpxhed comment to the effect thfMbx-^ut legislation may now be delayed until 1964. Gains and losses of most key stocks were from fractions to about a point. Losses of several points were taken by some of the volatile, high-priced issfcs which liavejieen strong recently. AVERAGE'HOLDS 'The Associated Press average 4r’\‘Kf stoe^ at noon was unchai^ irmft with industrials of 4, rails unchanged and utilities up .1. Among the airlines, gains of close to a point were posted for added fractions. Continental Air rone Vt to 13% on 8,300 ttares. Sperry Rand, yesterday’s market leader ,Jieid firm while Chrysler dipped fractionally. *5malU gains were made by General Motors, American Tele-phdnew -General Electric and Standard Oil of Indiana. ----■ r'rW - -w •it - Prices' were mixed In moderate tradjpg-on the American Stock ExcHange. Corporate bonds were mixed with rails edging higher. U.S. Government bonds declined. The New York Stock Exchange NSW YORK (AP)—Following D g lilt of seiectedjtock transactions on the ’ Yprk Btq^k Exchange With 1:30 p. P —A— ■alee __ (Ma)Slfh Low Last (81. JO 37 118% 115 lllVk + % A 1* 13 V, 12% 13 •0 2 102% 102% 102% AtBatuTT &S2& Altered .40 AllegCp .11* Ajjeg_Lud2 : ' Vi 93%-% 11 82% * 18% .... .... 7 41% 41% 41%...... 13 M 66 57% +3% 43 10% 40% 41% ~ 0 62% 53% 52% 52 17% 17% 17% 17 84% |i% 24% * (1% 03% 83% M 78% 77% 1* 41 46% 4* 48 *4 39% I* 29% .. . 4 15% 15% 11% —.% ___________ 1 63% *3% 13% ft; AmBdPat M----13-93% 33% 31% — % Am Cab 3 35 46% 48% 464 AUegPw AUlsCCb .... Allied Mr 3 AlHsChal .50 Ahunud m Alcoa 140 Anwar t Am Ax Cb 1, Am ALUs ) ABosch ,50e F 1.44a mHosp .30 —h MFd .80 AM «t Cl L.40 . AmMot .50* ' I NO 1.40 lOptle 3b ■Knot*.'Si, ASmrlt 8.80 AmStd 41 AssTarwi Am Tob 1.50 AmZlne - lb am »»>«'/ Ampex Cp AmpBorg 48 anaceKiASr Ankengk .41 Armour 1.4* ArmCk 140 AssdMl tl Atchls 1.20a AtlRef 8.40 LU«?amP.10g -iVco Cp 40 AVCOorp* • 11% 117* 11%-.. 76 04 83 84 . XT 20% 10% 20% “ v mC r .24 27% 37% J7% — V« 47 It 17% 17% .... * 13 42% 41% 41% -3 77 |i% 78% — *7 10% S% .8% -*7 81% M (4% — 3* 17% 17% 17%.. . 144 123V« 122% 12]', + 119 25% '■%- 28% — 2 21% P%~-U%.^ 2 32 " 33 33 . 910 S% U% 10 4- 14 25V. 35 25 — 10 50% *0 - 60% + I 17% 17% 17% 4 I 25 11% 61% 41% — % 31 44% 44% I 07% 00% _____ 11 90%J30% 30% 7 40 47% « wTcti 141 Dynam Gen Elec 2 fiw Foods 2 I .Mills 140 Oen Mot 2a OPraen 140 OPubSv 48g OPubU 120b Gaa -Hg 1.30 OTSMnr- .80 Qenllr* .40 O*. Psc 1* OettyOlI ,10g Gillette . 1.10* GlenAld .50 Ooodrch^ 2.20 Orandtl Mb "--nCS 1.4* AP 1.88* loRy 2 Fin m. Oreyhd I SO* 41 3% Beckman BeeChAlr 40 Ben -Hew .40 lestViU '.III Beth Stl 1.50 Bigelow 1.80 Borden 1.50 Borg War. 4 BTu&yToO Bruhswk ,30p BueyEr .30g Budd Co .50 Bullagd Bulova .60 Burtlhd 90s Burroughs 1 Cal Fnl .43t ~ JtL 40a S* 3 40 C»n Dry 1 CdnPae 1.50' Carrier 1.00 . Carter ft 1 14 14% 14% 14%. . 02 m.JS% 26% - % 44 75% 74% 74% — % 25 17% IT “ " —B—* 23 M 61% 11% —1% It 19% 12 12 — % 11 36% 35 38% .... i 37% 37% am + .% 5 34% 24% ' 34% + % .-*-ij%jr7*% 7»%— Halltbur 240 HamP 120b Hanna Co la H&veg .45* “ :Pdr 48 - __js ■ 140 Hewlett pk ; HeydenN , .80 M'isel Homest 1.00 Book Ch lb House F 1.40 .1 1% 1% 1% + ! 4 38 3* 35 ft 03 31% 31% 31% - *, IS 35% 25% 28% + 1 59 35V. 34% 34% — 5 * .64% 84% 64% — » 31 47% 47 47% + I 4' 5% 5% 1% .... 0 108% 108% 108% +1 Am i2% ii% .... 4 15 V, 18% 15 V, .. 814 15% 11% M% + 0 37% 37% 37% .. 30 17% 37% 37% - In* Rand 3a InlandSt ISO toleriak l so IntBusU |7 IntlHarv 2.40 tntMtaer 1.00 2a __Pack 1 BFmrfr ITE CktBrkr Johns Many 2-JonLogan .70 JonasAL 240 Joy Mfg 1 Kennecott 3g Kern CL 8.4* KerrMcQ i I 1 26%- 25 25% .. OUtlTr 1.1* 17 «% I 10 38% 38% 38% . .. A 8 ft 74% 74%-rwJV y 34 10% 1017 HH Cencolnst .50 CenHud 1.08 CenSW. 1.14« Cerro 1.11 . Cer-teed OS -CteanaAtre 1 Champs 1.80 Cmplln 14* _ ____Oh 4 Chi MStP P ChlPneu 1.40" ChrisCft Alt Chrysler 1 Cttles8y 2.60 CtevEUll 1.20 OoeaCol 2.70 CBS 1.4tb 38 73J Col Oss 1J5 14 30< COlPlct tin 6.26s ComlCre 140 4 43‘ Com ISO) ' 73 54% 82%< S3% y 5 35% 35% 36%-13 44V, 43% 44 34 33 % 31% 31% .. 11 14% .15% 15%-. 16 31% 31% 81%'4-5 40% 40% M% + 37 34% 34 34 .. 2 24%. 24 V«. 24% 4 t* (4% |4 04 T.... M 18% M M — % i MS 70% 71% 42%' 42% + 07% 00% 34% 34% _____102% 102% 23 45%. 41% 45V, — % » 37% 28% 37 M SV. S% 8% IM 30 43%. 33 MV, 1* 34% Wwtxb 1 Wt | ContAtr .10* ■raft Copper B ComPd 1.1* Crompt 1.20 I 52% 52% 15 10% M M U «% 40% 24 28% 88% .... 238 11% 13% 13% 4 -MwJ 46% 48% . 23 Mb 56% MK,„ 7 n% 12% 12% .. 14 tWt 04 84% 3*6 86% *3% 00% +3% 7 33% 33 Mb > 36 50% 50% 58% -t 1 14 84 84 .. Ill Mb 18% 30% 4 M 40% 40% + W.— - — .. 14% 34% Stw-l Cruc SU_ .50 14 34% SMh 2Mb 4 30 8* Mb 5% - % X27 25% 88% 18% — % —D—i_ I 30 11% 41% U% ..... U M 20%. 30% - % 35 07% 07% 07% ..... 1 21 23 B „______ 4 38% 38% 28% — V« JjEngEl 10 12% 22 22% + % NTCent 88 80% 20% H% 4 % | disbursements based on the last quarterly “ seml-anniiol rtoolsratlm Special or 5 dividend, or payments not deals-recultr are identified In the _ footnotes. j—Also extra or extras, b—Annual M plus SOoek ddvManirt—Llquldstlng dividend. d—Deelarad or pa*-" — stock dividend, Pj'STdSJl aid* ta st* Creole Pat ... 44.4 Mead John . -.AM. Fly Tiger ..... IM IBmCMI’! - » Ford Can .Iff Musk P Ring 16 Oen Deval .. 5.3 Novo Indus . v 11-3. Imp OU 10.4 Paso .M*r .... U-3, Imp Th Ob .. 04.4 Teehpleu ...... M.Tj ;• jSlPoSd «onr i Ids. Hlxh L 1 41% 4 i 41% n ForemD .40 23 25% 35 35V, v. 21 44% 44% 44% .. . 5 22% 22% 22% 4 811 M% ' 42% 44% 4 || ft- 70%. 77 4 3 22% 23 13% + 31 47% 47% 47% -l 12% 12% 12% _ m *2% 53% S%......... 21 10% »% 3%........ 4 87% <7% WI% — % 45 35 .a(%M%4-iz 35 31% 35% Btr» •Wiser .50* Phelps D 3 Phlla El, l-.St PhllaRd* lb PhllMor 1.10 PhUllpsPst I PltnBow.SO PttPIOt 2.20b SS? jo ProctfcO 1.80 Mils or- Pullman 140 PuraOU 1.60 1 21% 24% 24%...... 2 20 20 2» - % * 12% 13 23% 4 % 558 W% 25% 27 4 % W *1% n% 81% 4% 14 HK 56V, 86V, —% 28 38V, 18 38% +% H.- W% 74%'4 288 23% 23% 22 - 8 5% 5% 5% 4 t 33% 22% 33%.. §S ! 29% S 27% i ) 29V, - 11 Mb 24% 32 52% 52% urn ** 34% Mb *3 38% 31% 31 .... 221 8% 15% U% ... 44 54 53% 53%-— % dT 31 17% 37%. *■ 27 M 47% 47%. If tm 17% 17% ... . 9 9m 39% »%-% 8 44% 48% 41% 20 «3% 12V, 53% 88 21V* -88% 88% . .. 42 ,44% 44% 47 (M 47% 47tr 4 % U 44% 44% — K - Mb 28V, ... 11 IPj 42 43% 4 % 2* M% 38% 28% .. 44 44% 44% 44% ,, 5 • 30%* 26% 25% .. 28 Jl% 21% . 21% 4 8- 8%. 8 8% 4 4 51% (1% 51% 4 15% - -[adding Go RelehCn .40f R*{chChV in Repub Stl 2 Revlon 1.10b RSSaU .50b BsynMst .50 ReyTob 1.00 Rhsem Mi* RlcbiOtl 1.80 RobertOeW 1 Rohr Corp l RoyDut l.oig Royal WT Rdee 8yst — H ■*JpF H 82% 51% 83 . .. • ■ I 38.36% 38% - % 1) 38% Mb 38% 4 % 14 77 78% 75% 4 % 81 81% 51 > 51%^4 % 1 45% .«% tt% — % 18 (5, 17% % 30 14% 13V, 13% — % 57 U7 104% 105% 4. % 29 70V, 78% 75% 4 % I 77% 77 77 — % 14 Mb 55%' 55% 45 45% 45% 45% —R— M 71% .71% . 71% . .. 35 22% 32 32% <«~% 34 18% 30% 10% 5 11% 11% 11% U 13% SC 12V, ... II tt 15% 11% — % 14 11% 18% 15% .- M 40 Mb'.a 45 46% 45% 40% — % 10 40% 41% 40% 4 % 40 31% 11% 33 — 102 41 45% 41 ,4 27 16% 16% 16%.— 48 -45% 45% 4#H%* 1 14% 34% 34% — 3 15% 1|% 1|%.—. 17 47% 47V, 47% — % 111 f*‘r “ ' OTTAWA- (AP). m A deal with Peking under which Canada will admit up to |7 million worth of internationally competitive goods from Red China annually Was Mitchell Sharp today. Textiles are to make up the bulk of the imports. X' • .★ *' ★ This is part of the arrangement ‘junder which Canada recently signed a wheat agreement with China. Sharp said the agreement will provide for sales of between |215 million and $300 million worth of Canadian wheat to China in the nexffthree years. CANADA^ INTEREST When tin minister announced the wheat agreement Aug*2, he told.the House of Commons it was in Canada’s interest to give-the Chinese corporations 'an opportunity to expand markets in Canada “subject to appropriate safeguards to avoid market disruption, and damage to Canadian producers.’* Hij^ statement today gave details of the safeguards. They amount to -Chinese agreement to limit exports to Canada of some 30 sensitive products—mostly textiles—to a maximum $7 million a year. 11% 4 RegP 140 inDInj .881 I___im 8esrsR 1.40a IhellOll 1.10 ShallTr* .51* Blnelair 2 Singer 1.70 Smith ao 1 amithK 1.20* SOcony 2.40 SoPRS 2.85d 5—12% 18 7 26V, 26 V, MV, II 22% WHIR M 13% 11% 13% — % ' I 21% 81% 11% 35 17% 17% 17V,.... 11 8% 8% 8% — % 11 « M U% — -101 38% 17%. 3|% 4 4 35% 30. M. • — m 83%. MM ' 5 «% 50 47 #"■ ^’ W «0% 60 £. 45%' 44% 45% *r\12V. 12% 12% i * r .r% t% 31 57 88% 81% — % 1 77% 77% n% —% 33 44% 44% 44% ' " ■*m 26V, «%„M%'- -|----------H ■ 7* *44 , wjb M% —S% SKH1BJ *J 18 57% 56% 57% 4- %:8toOSb 2.U 58 81% 61 • «% 4 % SuSd Pkg 7 64% 36% *4% . SfT??-- -*. 10 15% 15% 15%,. 6* 31% 91% 81% -f . 32 Mb 52V, 52% . AouNatO 3.20 SouPac 1.80 ’ Sou Ry 8.M Sperry Road Spiegel 1.50 8<|Uiur*p 1.20 StdKolls 60t StdOlICat 2b 8 84% 54% 84% 1 44 48% 48V, 48% — % 44 81% 80%. 81% 37 34 22% &% — 11 88% M% 55% . 1 |1% *1 81% — *6% MV, «% — Mb Sb i»% 40 M% 28% MV, V 47% 47V, 47% 3 71% 72 78 , ... 7 14% 14% 14% — % 42 08% 15% *5 57 05% « I I M 71% 71% 71% — % StanWsr 1.20 StauflCh 1.80 k Sta^Drus .05 111 14% ] 66V, 4 84 41% 47% 48% 41 16 m 19% 18% .... SI «% *8% il 4 . * M% M% 28%—% 33 M% 34% 8 22% 22% 37 74% 74 i 7i n Leh^Port*11 Leh V tod -Lehmn 1.46g LOFOls 2.00 LibMsN .431 Ltgggdd I Lionfl Uttonto 1.67t -LockhA 1.40 Loews Tbea LoneSCem 1 ■ LooeSOss 1____ LonglslLt .18 M«1 Beetr LorUlsrd 2.50 MaekTr l.ao MsdFd 1.56* Mad Sq. Oar Magma ’MM‘ Magnav .78 Marath tllk MsrMld 1.10 Marqua ,25p Martin M 1 355 33% 33% S% 4- 6 22% 22V, 22% 4 33 21% 31% 91% 4 IS 31 30% 31 ... —L— 40 17% 11% IT 4 8 18% 16% 16% 4 *• lW-^T7 j 12 30% 30% 30% t 14 86% 55% 66% 4 T^14 14 14 * 74 73% 74. ... *10 5% 5% 5%.. 170 77%--75% 70% -71 37% 37V, 437% 4 7 »%- 17' 17V, 4 84 31% 30%'31 4 II 14% 14V, 14% .. . 84 48 47% 47% ... —1-46% 44% 48% t.. —M—, - S3 8 40% 40% 40V, v*. 15 20% 80% 11%^.. Tenn Oas 1" Texaco la TexOPd .80* TexOSul .48 Texfast .80 TexPCO 1.20 TexPLd .35* Textron 140 Thlokel l.llt Tldewat OU TlmkRB 2.40 Trane W Air i 13% K4% 4 4 43 29% 28% M 4- .. J 36% MV, 36% - V, 813 7% r7% - 7% 4 60 36% Mb 34% -* 40V, 38% 40 -—1— ' M m n% 73%— % 81* 88% 89V, 5(% +1% -.128.15% 15 18%. 30 55% 83% 54% .„ I 81% 88% 59% — % 22 M% 29% 39% 4 % p Mb 39% M% * % » 22% 21% 22V, 7 26V, M% 26% „ 10 69% 99% (Mb 4 % 154 23% 22 9% 4IV, >16 I 4% 54V, 14% —% 4% 4% .. DAirLIn .501 Unit Aire i Unit Cp .35* '"-■nilf JO— —jlCp 1.6 OMtM*M 1 USBorx .80 USFrtlt ijfl CB Lines 2 USPlywood M Bub BJ US smelt 2 Mart ,2.20 M 05% Kl% 15% ... 4' 34% 34% 34% 3 11% 11% 11% — ' -Ml 18% 19% 10% 4 1 16. 05% 94%. II ... MOM 1J9 Metromd .« Mid BU l.h Mobasco .60 Monsan 1.30b MontD Cl.40 MontWsrd t 7 19% IP 13 ... 9 29% 20% 99% .. 137 25% 34% 35% 4 ( I 36% 30% M% ... 23 SMI 21% 21% 4 J MlM 119% lit* 41 43 61% 61% 11%. 4 ! 9 1% J% • 3% — ! 1 67 «7 67 — > IS 9% 9% 9% 4 1 M 64% 63% 64% 4 1 5 11% M% 38V. — ' 95 -95% 39% J5% — \ 4 75 74% 74V, — 1 —N— 159 40% 40 40% 4l t 15% 51% fi% — ( M 16% 10% 16% ... 94 71 70 70% — 1 19 65% 65% 95% 4 1 90 95% 35% 26% ... 7- 16V, 30 M% — % 17 H 9% 9% IS 68% 46V, 46% 14 77% 76% 76% 13 50% 50% 50% .19 M% M . 28% 49' 23V, 33 23% 7 43% 43% 43% .1 lib U% U% •M .04% 94% 5*% „ _ 79 119% 119% 119% — % 33 54% '54V, 54% — % 12 IT 55% M 4 % 11 49% 49 1% — % -1 M% lev, Mr.... J. 13 V, 22 22 93 M% 55 TeadsOo .41 Ya- Care a VaEPw 1.04 WarnPie .« War Lam .7: Wn Bsncp ; Wn Md 1 ' TfUnTel 1*. WstgAB 1.40 Whirl. WblteL- . Wllsn Co I 4Mb 47% 4 31 39% «% » .: U 99% 39 30% 4 30 10% 18% 19% 4 1 30% M% 90% .. ___5. 45% ..45% .45% + 4 M 17% 57% - IH Mb M. H 154 61% 61% 51% .. 4 7% 7 7 — % 12 17% IT IL — % 97 37% 20% 37% 4j% 9 44% 44% 44% —V— 5 11% 13% 13% 10 14 17% M , M 10V, 16V, 19V, is 79 Mb 75 RM ’ 11 44% 43% 44 — % -«w— 8 13% 11% 11% M 37 M% 37 , I 41% 41% 41% — % 3 33% »% M% itgAB 1.40 | sI*El 1.30 300 Unci 1.80 6 litelf 1.10 34 - iur Mb -I I M% 30% 35% . “ 37% 36% Hr 4 40% 40% 40% . .. 33% 33 M% H 7 MV, 17% M% - 13 20% 20V, 20% h -1 72% |j% 72% - ._ I 34% 34 34 — % —X— 51 M7 Ml% 2*4% —Y— 8 31% 33 39 — % M 120% 111% 119% ' —z— 39 65 64% 66% — % Canada, China in Trade Deal '• 'S.5‘ ' Peking Can Sail .More Under WHeOf Accord By SAM DAWSON AP'Business News Analyst NEW YORK (AP)^mpuIsory arbitration of the rail labor dispute adds still another challenge to a year of change in labor-management issues and solutions. Sabbaticals for long-time employes, bonuses as compensation for automation, continuous negotiations tomink mlza 'strike threats, stress on r i n g e benefits rather than, pay boosts, charges of racial bias ini some unions and lack of equal job o p p o r tunities, and an increased1 emphasis oil-the public interest in labor disputes— ail seem to be chiseling out a new look in labor-management relations. Congress has ordered sory arbitration for the first time in a peace year. It has put off— at least for six montiis—the threat of a strike that would idle, the nation’s railroads. The chief issue was over what management calls featherbedding —union-protected jobs that the companies say are no longer needed. This issue is debated in number of other industries. BIGGER ROLE The basic problem may or may Last yearyjGpmqmnist Chinese sales to Canada reached $4,520,-000, including about 0*1-3 million in the sensitive goods cowered by the new agreement. Canadian exports to Red China hit $147,13^000, almost entirely grain. • Something more than $3 millic in Chinese sales to Canada* are not covered by quotas. Among the main items In this field last year were walnuts, peanuts and furs. ' . . The new quotas worked out with Red China-are expected to. bring prompt requests from Japan.for increases in the quotas agreed to by~Japftn on its sales to Canada. Mixed Mart Shows Little Price Change CHICAGO (ft — Transactions in the grain futures market were somewhat mixed with prices generally little changed today during the first several minutes of activity on the board of trade. Soybeans came under some pressure and lost about a cent at the extreme before attracting rallying support. Brokers said the weakness may have been related in part to' a private crop summary which forecast a yield far in excess of any previous estimates. Grain Prices .4.76% Gat* . 1.92% Mai. Rails Typify Struggle Labor Issues^ Chatige DAW^QJf Business Notes Ted McCullough Jr.. of 5227 Cmpnton, Waterford Township, has been elected president *of the Multiple Listings Service, Inc., 322 National Bldg* I McCullough affiliated with Arro Realty, 5143 |C£Ss Elizabeth Waterford Town- ... __ McCullough Also elected were Herbert Straley and Merla irgess of toe Bateman Realty 377 S. Telegraph, vice president and secretary, respectively, and Fred Rosevear of the Kamp-sen Realty Co., 1071 W. Huron, treasurer. The service acts as a central clearing house for members’ real estate listings. not be aettled by the board set up by Congress. But changing work rules to fit new-, operation techniques is increasingly involved in labor negotiations. • * The issue is a variant jof the chief concern in this year’s labor talks. The unions primarily, are worried over job security^-the loss of jobs to machines or new work techniques, or to the changing consumer demand for -different products or services. Management . la equally concerned over cutting coets or getting Into new lines fancy. This pften means more mechanization; greater output per man Hour; and fewer employes turning out mare sellable goods. ELECTRICAL INDUSTRY The. steel industry furnished clues to the- new trend in three ways this year. First, Kaiser Steel is paying bonuses to work: ers, their share of savings made through automation. Second, tie industry adopted a long-vacation that gives workers with seniority extended, time off every few years. And thi^Lthe industry licked the strike threat pressure on contract negotiations — this year at least-by setting up a continuously negotiating committee to- tackle labor problems as they |ixls£. and hammer out a contract ahead df a fixed deadline. * • ★ .* Ibe electrical industry also has had study {committees, at work well ahead of contract terminations. Now the talks are coming out into the open. General Elec-tric’s contract expires at the end of next month and Westinghouse Electric’s two weeks later. Long-vacations, more retirement pay .are among the proposals. Overtime and moonlighting also are coming to the frpnt as issues because of this year’s special conditions, chiefly thejhard core of unemployment and the fear of many .with jobs that they may lose them. Many industries prefer to pay overtime when orders call for more output rather than hire new workers and become involved in all the fringe benefits and additional paper work that are an in-creasing part of the job scene. And many employes, especially those - subject week shortening look for other jobs after work, or moonlighting. Often such work is merely in agriculture by farm owners with jobs Frlgaj’s lit Dividend! D*tl!r!4 . ,95 G 9-20 : .376 Q 648 Mil DOW-JONES NOON AVERAGES 18 Hither grade rail* . 19 Second grad* rail* . M Public utilltle* ..... .. 89.81-4.15 .-vjMtfil .. 93.85 + 0.03 BOND AVERAGES In town pir Jactory tmployet halp-ing out hi family qtores or" other business ventures. PART OF PICTURE But It’s all part of. today’s labor picture, and the seeming paradox which sees^more persons employed than ever while toq jnany persons can’t find work. To tola la now added the ee-ample of government embarking. on compulsory arbitration In the public interest; and periiaps a trend toward a revamping of labor and management relations on many fronts. News% Brief Dr. Donald Fraser, 53 Niagara, told police yesterday that his handbag containing medical instruments andjsupplies valued at from $150 to?200 was stolen from . 1.10% pre». Day Year Ago 1963 High ■-H*.- ’ IMS High Stocks of Local Interest Figure* after decimal point! art eighths OVtR TEE COUNTER BTOCEB The following quotation! do not at. . eerily represent aetual transaction! bd^ art intended as * guide to th* appro-mate trading rang* ot th* etcuntte*. BID ASKID AMT Corp............ ... Bln-Dlcator ................ Boaun BBtln**rtn9-T--.-rT--—( Charlei of the Mt* .........i Detroiter Mobile Homes .... •Diamond Crystal .......J Prlto-Lay, toe. ......... Mich. Seamless Tub* C Pioneer Plaahee ....... Bafran Printing ....... San te Be Drilling Venter'! Otnger Ale . ...17.4 1C4 Wyandotte Chemical > fill4 a? mutual funds Maas. Investors Trust . Putnam Ojrowth .......... Television Electronics . .Wellington Fund ........ Treasury Position WASHINGTON (API — The eglh p sRlen -ol JM .Treasury compared wl letrealt* fleeal year JaS l ... .withdrawals Total debt A*f, 87, 194 7.343.354,55 Wi Dqperita fl withdrawal Ao*. *7. 1882 8 8.737.M0.41M8 18.113,704.300.81 11.9 M.0 9.91 94.0 111 9*4 909 949 An automobile engine valued at $1,000 was reported taken yesterday from a car owned by Denis. Marinack, 5502 Garden Terrace, aCommeroe Township, according to sheriff’s deputies. J Wish to Hunk Each and everyone, new and old far- his loyal patronage during the past 30 years. “JIM” LerfokL Service, Auburn at Crooks Rd. _. —Adv. SI ... Temple Beth Jacob Tots-Thru-■■5:1 Teens rummage sale, Sept. 4 and —Adv. ’*iHi * Successful i * Investing * IIIiIIIIBIIIIfIw By R6GER E. SPEAR Q) “I’m 'a young man with two children and hold vdewn a $9,NS a year job. We have inherited $12,ON and irotild like to invest it Tritely and safety. At present we are rent* ing a home for $12S a month. We will appreciate yonr advice.” J.D. A) You seem to be doing very well for yourself and your family and I’m glad to bear , * .■'rr>i In addition, salaried employes also Trill be granted -improvements in fringe benefits, including hospitalization, life insurance, pttorifity.r sickness spd accident. The full hospitalization plan will be Increased from M to 365 day*; Regular vacations for salaried workers will stay foe same — ttro weeks after one year, three weeks after three years and. four weeks after 29years. *•» THIRTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 80. ww-g or blooutbld Ts Hm mm or aUmr imm mur-mM to We following Ossertbed lota •nd por«*>« of leu* jT^jah * nmbII Sl.^_^ .. „ ' thro M kdinln oi Dnoo Bb M> (tlrtrtsn. tacUoo 10, also too following dMcrtbed psrc.1* at wl|l, ltaetsd --j^/itranaari follow!: nut of NW *4 bsg. at • potnl 00 ■ and W t. line ttatapl Wl, 474 * ft. fna center of Station 10. tl ,JL,4* IT B. 285JU ft.. Vbeoce a or or* w. ihts-- W. 215.45 ft., tbenee 8. 07" 01' 26 B. lion ft. to -be*. Map Sersol —L_ mately 4 41 «ra Hi aeocrlbod « follows: Port of * 14 of SW V. beginning ot o point distent N. 00 *7 I SO" w. 000.00 ft, from center of Bec-tlon 10, thence a. ,1* lYS*'' W. 010 • ft., thence K. 00* W 30" W. 50150 ft, okoaM n. i* or a. m ft, thence a. at* IT 30" E. 201.3* ft, thence tl. I* IT M" B. M0 ft., thence a. M* 27’ 30" S. 300 " Sylvan Lake Honon Retired Boss of DPW Newly 900 Sylvan Lake n|i-dents attended i community picnic yesterday evening at file fdty park in honor of Earle Knapp, retired superintendent of public works. Knapp, 01, resigned this aging after a heart attack last fail, He was appointed DPW superintendent in 1917. A 1800 savings bond lemii pi ItalyToo lows: POrt of BW % beg. nt » point distant N. »• 2T SO" W 1100.0* ft. . from CSBter #f SecUon ML thence N. ii• ITIT' W.86 ft, thsnce 1. 1* 41 W. Ilff ft, theoee N. 8S* 27'S6" W. ISO ft, thinta S. 1* 41' W. 266 ft, thenm. S. 00* IT JO" E. Ml 30 ft, I thence K. 1* Sr SO" E. 0*0. ft- to heg. ----*3# portal ooositting ofapproxl- U&mMtfi described si tel-t of SW w beg. at point d!s- ____„. _r jra#" w. umm ft. from center of Station IS. thence S 1'01' W, 310 ft, Utsnot N. or S7' 30" W. ISO ft, thence N. 1*01' E. 310 ft, . thence 8. M* IT 30" 1. ISO ft, to-be*. Acreage parcel consisting of approxl-■ mately 6.86 aorta and described at fol* • i: Part of B. tt of -•** | |M at ............t N. 88° 27 _ . I _ i*irar^r-wr*#* ft. i» »l* IT 10". W. 137.81 ft. from emir of Section If; thence 8. 5* 17' ST* f. 00187 ft -------- his 16 years of service. rwia ir c I MjliniH Township. Oakladd County. Michigan: to right n“i«° K°*2M.95 'ft..“distant' 262.83' ft. Telegraph Hoad along e , ________bnwj land County Bo __ ________________ caused to be. filed In this Court . .... tlon praying for the establishment by this Court of the normal height and level of Case take, said lake beUt| located in Sections 3 3, «. 8. 10 and Jl ot West Bloomfield Township and Sections 33, 34 and JO of Waterford Township, Oakland County,. Michigan.-------- You are further notified that a btsr-lng on the matter will be held In the Circuit Court for the County of Oakland at the Oakland County Court Bouse TOwer, 1200 North Telegraph Road, Pontiac, Michigan, on Monday the 7th dag -* October, 1800, -- ---- --------■— -■ m ‘.hat day________.MMPW a thereafter as Counsel can I_______further.notlfled that dahr Ohe petitioner hjtal"*- “ * - Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas MRS. GORNIQL!fj81. DONTJE Service for former Pontiac rasi-dent Mrs. .Cornelius L (Crystal F.) Dontje, 88, of Bradenton, Flu., will be fo foe Griffith Clini^ Funeral Home, Bradenton tomorrow. , Mrs. Dontje, a member of was presented in recognition of First Methodist Church, died in Bradenton yesterday. She was past commander of .Disabled American Veterans. Auxiliary No. 18, pfcst president rtf VFW Auxiliary Nd. 2488 and a member of Red Bugs No. 605, all of Bradenton. An organizer of . Fairlane Acres Grandmoters’ Club, she also belonged td the Rebekah Lodge, in Bradenton. four daughters, - Mrs. Russell Hetzer and Mrs. Edgw Dewey, both of Pontiac, Mrs. Rusapll Hill and hfr&^Harfoan Sparks, both of Femdaie; eight grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. CLARK EISENHARDT AUBURN HEIGHTS -Service for Clark EisenKardt, 55, of 351 N. Squirrel will be 2:30 p.fo. Saturday at MUliken Funeral Home, Utich. Burial will follow in ($in- Haley Funeral Home.-^ Mrs. Horist was a member of Plum Hollow, Golf Club. Surviving betides her hudbasgl | m sons, Ronald, Timothy im, all at home; two . Dawn and S a n dr a, at home; and her. mother, Mrs. Matilda Wozniak of Pontiac. . , ' ___. Also surviving are four sisters, Mrs. Lillian Cull of Pontiac, Mrs. Clara Haddrill of Lake Orion, too~Grove Cemetery, Mt. dwif Surviving are her husband; two daughters, Mrs. Amelia Sebaski of Troy and Mrs. Frances Scott I'^^pti.! of Travers City; a son Forrest Porter- of Pontiac; 10 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren. . 00 IT' tendld” therefrom and 56 to a point ________________d raid" Into ayerage parcel d . lows; part of NW V« beg. .at a point on K. and W. 14 Una distant Wly 474.1 feet from eenter of Station Id, thence N. 0* 15' M. 306.43 ft! thenm A 81* IT 00" Wly 1M.10 ft., thence 8. 4* M’ Wly 315.43 ft., thence 8. 07*41'30" Ely 10g.fl ft. to beg-. Section 13. Bloomfield Township, for a distance of ' approximately 4M feet. An eight (0) inch lateral Military sewer extending from the rear lot line' and at a point separating Lou U.and l4'Ot Devon Hills Subdivision. Sly along and In the rear lot lines ot * ‘a 13 wru 10 lnclualve, of said aub- BL06MF7ELD TOWNSHIP NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice Is Hereby Oiveu, that a Public Hearing ' arm be held by the Planning CMiiilMHii of the TVwuahlp of B1----- field. Oakland county, Michigan, *—tember 3. 1*33, at I:g0 o'clock L._ the Townehjp Hall, 4800 Telegraph Howl, in said Township for the purpose * nsldeiing the following chanr—i *-anoe No. 07, being "— 1 Lake BmilTa a 83y direction the Wly line ot-aeroage parcel here* lnafter described,, for a distance of approximately _3Mf ft.: Part of B. H •at SW W bag. nt a point dlftaat*H. 88* 27' 30" W. IM M ft. *roni center of Seetloo 13, thence 8. 1* 33'30" W. 610 ft? thence N 88* 27’SO" W 601.30 It., thenoO N. 1* 41' B. .00 ft., thence a. 80* tv SO" E. 201 j| ft., thence N. 1* 32' 20" B. Mt ft., thence a. 00* 37' 30" B. 3N ft., to bag-; and continuing in a Sly direction tor approximately 10 ft. In the following described acreage parcel: Part of B. 14 of gsw Vt nlng at a point distant N. M* W. OHM ft. and 8. 1* 33' 30" 1 from eenter of Motion; thcnoo 8. O' IT 30" W- 332.97 ft.; th. N. 17* OT 10' W. 381.44 ft., thence along B. lint of Telegraph Bead along a curve .to right radius 5454.63 ft., chor Masonic memorial tforVice will be held at 8 p.m, tomorrow in the funeral home. A retired Oakland County Road Commission employe, he served oh the Seotch Distict school board from'1927 to 1937^and was township clerk in 1912. He belonged to Commerce Lodge 121, F&AM. Surviving are his wife, Lena; Finn Cabinet uits in Rift' HELSINKI, Finland (UPI) -The Finnish coalition government resigned today in a dispute, over food price*. “ ——-: - w t. • 4r ^ Prime Minister Ahfi Karja-lainen presented his 16-month old government’s resignation-fo President Urho Kekkonen in n formal midafternoon ceremony. W. . Kekkonen accepted foe resig-hation and asked Karjaiaine to carry bb la a caretaker ca-parity untfl a new government is formed. Talks, on forming a new cabinet' are expected to begin next week, The prime minisiar’s tfecision followed a 30-minute c meeting called - to disc price levels on farm goods. ...j Township reserves _ be reject My or |lf bids. -DOROTHY M. CHAMBERLAIN Clerk Th'-ree-cabinet ministers, all representing trade unipps, decided to quit. Their decision led to ___Karjalainen’s announcement' of K^TeS^t^TmiithefaH of his government. Mrs. Merell Allen of Pontiac, Mrs. Gladys Kammer, Mrs. /dice Kammer and Mrs. Beatrice Mat-thews, all of New Baltimore, and seven grafukfiildren. MRS. CHARLES A. HORIST SOUTHFIELD — Requiem Mass for Mrs. Charles A. (Frances A.)Horist, 43, of 22410 Brook-side, will be 0:30 a.m. Saturday itSt. Michael Cafoolic Church. Burial will follow in'Holy Sepul-Cemetery. Mrs. Horist died Wednesday after a long illness. Rosary wifi be recited at 3 p.m. today at the (tod Mrs. Helen Budnik of Menlo Park) Calif. . ASA L. KELLEY CLARKSTON—Sefvice for Asa Tftfiey, 54,. of 6656 Oakhill, will be 2 p.m. Sunday at the Methodist Church.' Burial will follow, in Seymour Lake Cemetery. Mr. Kelley died yesterday after a lengthy IT " r for the Oakland County Road Commission, Kelley was a member of foe Pentecostal. Revival Church of Seymour Lake. Surviving are Jiis wife, Joyce; three- daujfotenv Mrs. Donald Weils of Drayton^ Plains, Mrs. Malveme Hillman of Clarkston and/tyrs. Gerald Lane of Gingel-vifie; wree sisters, Mrs. Glenn Jdhes Sr. of Drayton Plains, Mrs. Joe Perry Sr. of Clarkston and Mrs. Carl toman of £*ke City. Also surviving are four brothers, BUI, Lde, Gordon and Arthur Jr., all of Clarkston; and eight grandchildren. ' ^So Is the Steer Auditor's . g . li a Champ { You'fould hear State Auditor General Billie S. Faraum all the ! 'way down Woodward Ave. yes- servanee of Governor’s Day and 1 International Day at the fair by 1 joining many ethnic group rep- ■ . terday.- . Faraum * normally a soft-spok-| en administrator, tested his lar-’ ynx with a hog-calling contest, ‘ then auctioned off a 1,110-pound ’ Hereford prize steer named Mr. Governor at the State Fair. Farnnm’s voice most have carried well became the steer went for $1.95 a pound and it brought smiles to the faces of resentatives. for ir picnlc lundi at noon at the picnic grove. ' it Man Is Injured;," Condition Fair l the owners, Mr. jmd Mrs. Gary Minish of East Lansing. Food Fair hfarket of Detroit purchased foe Minisip’ grand champion steejiv . Next year Minish will be shooting for three straight. His 1962 ILuii'Moran, 30, of 215 Prospect, is in fair condition at St. Joseph Hospital with mtiltipla fractures suffered when he was struck by a car last night in front-of 543 S. Saginaw. * w " "ri. a mar .8 ai a w* /! entry, a 930-pound Hereford, also won foe grand championship. Fair officials hoped for/good weekend weather and braced themselves for anticipated large c r o w d s. Yesterdty’s turnout brought this year’s attendance -itarry tsoout, to, ot zn e. Wilson, told police he was driv- P1 . tog wwifo »" s*g4i*» *f ti p.m, 5 when Moran walked, into foe side of his car. Moran was un- . able to make a statement at P1 foe scene due to his injuries. ® after six days to 597,809 compared with 548,797 at this print a year ago. The fair winds up Labor Day ' and officials a r e shotting to top the one-million mark for the second Straight year. ' ..v*w' ^ ’ The 114th annual fair honored foe state’s teachers today and all of them were admitted Two men were admitted to fl, Pontiac' General Hospital after -their cai? collided at Walton and Joslyn at 1:10 a.m. / Harold Grice, 52, of 3051 Garden, who suffered head and possible chest Injuries and William Ware, 3442 Loon Lake Shores, Waterford Township, whose left free until 3 p.m. Outstanding JKichigan educators will receive achievement leg wm injured, both are reported in satisfactory condition. Grice told police nis brakes awards at foe music shell. • Gov. George Romney will appear at the fair for four hours tomorrow afternoon, according to the executive office. Romney, who will return this evening from a 10-day European vacation, will begin his ob- “grabbed” and he fitet rohirol as biz. cat* traveling east- on -Walton, approached the inter- , section of Joslyn. %are, who was shout to turn left onto Walton from Joslyn, said Grice disregarded the red traffic signal. There may be -a number of rea-sons why Johnny can’t read, but lack of brains or’ intelligence might noi be one of them. This Is what Oakland County rlmqry teachers learned this ihtelll- TOR TOUR “9 to 5” HOME! Be Bure your “9 to 5" home reflect; the stature of ybur business with a well-designed attractively furnished office. Let our office planning department desigh an efficient and «fi*tingnie)i»d office for yon. Phone FE 5-8174 for a designer to call! , A»k about the Lewis Letue Plan 2 Demands by Rancher Stall Project TRUCKEE, Calif. (AP) - All rancher Bernard Dobbas wants a water system that wont freeze solid jn winter and a ranch just like fog one be has now. And untu hi* demands are met, he’ll continue holding up work on part of a 291.73-million river project being constructed by American, French and-Britlsh firms. ★ ★ ★ • Dobbas, a * 6-foot, 5-inch, 230-pound, cattleman^ has worked cattle in the French Meadows area southeast of Thidcse I Northern California since 1939. But now foe area is needed as irt nf "foe French Meadows reservoir, important in foe huge Middle Fork American River project designed to be pari of a system carrying water to Southern California sometime in the 19706. Johnny Can't Read? Don't Blame His 10. i Murph^director ational ClTnic The teachers also teamed that is easier f» a child to lea word like '‘Astronaut’’ than tore cofomonly used “what” ‘were.” “First graders have attached lot of meaning to the space vo-ibulary,”, said Dr. Murphy. 'They know more about space Waterford Twp. Approves New Junior High Plans Preliminary jfouu for the $2.5-millian junior high school pro* posed in, the northeast'area of Waterford Township were ap proved last night by the school board; Wakeiy-Kushner Associates, architects, bow will proceed with workiiv drawing! for foe building slated for occupancy in Sept 1965. The school will be located on aid - acre site In Section 11, bound by Loon Lake on foe south and Walton Boulevard on the north.} J, ~ J ★ ★ PWns, call, for a student capacity of 1480 with 58 teaching stations. The building could later be expsnded'to accommodate 2,090 students and a faculty of 62. Ultimately this site.wlfi include air secondary , school ’ facilities. for. foe eaStfejm part of foe school district. Space for « nearly autonomous classroom . sections. A third such area could be addpd on hi the future, w ★ .+ Construction cost of the 800 - square foot*«building is estimated at $1,940,000 or about $12.30 per square foot. V •’> Additional costs far. site development, . contingency, special education facilities, and furniture and equipment amount to an estimated total expenditure of $2,515,000. More than' 600 acres have been cleared in foe area. But right in capacity fen* 1,500 students is earmarked adjacent to the planned junior high scftpol. SPECIFICATIONS Specified in' foe basic design of the junior high school is a central resource area plus two Pontjac Woman Robbed of $50, Ring Geraldine . Sgrrent, 42, of 86 Cottage told police she ' was robbed of $50 in cash and a $60 ring at 3 a.m. todhy outside the Aubum Bar, 378’Auburn. . v .. 'it.: — "JtW A barmaid at the bar, Mrs. Mrs Surret, said foe was getting Into her car when a man with a pistol appeared .-and ordered her to hand over, her purse contain-. lng foe nypiey and ring. I Armed Bandit Rolos Pontiac Taxi Driver Cab driver Wallace Canfield as robbed of $36.09 todajL.pt a.m. by an armed bandit he up at 212 Rockwel s money. The man “f^S^I-AUTOMATIC WATER SOFTENER Avoid Hard-Rusty Water! ★ 10-YEAR WARRANTY ★ Now -Specially Pricedl _ .You edn have the convenience of Soft Water. ONLY A FEW CENTS PEADAY—— Have a whiter wash, Softer clothes, lovelier complexion and even save up to 50% 4 on seqp.r - ■ - WHY RENT A WATER SOFTENER? I as little J 125 per ★ NO MONEY DOWN * Come In Today , op Phone FE 4-3573 ^Area Distributer for Reynolds Water CondMontng Equipment . CRUMP ^ 3465 Auburn Rd. Electric Incorfsorcited UL 2-3000 FE 44573 | D FURNITURE '* tlMww itnoKuw un m. . ‘ PONTIAC Jjg "They’re never home since they got e FORD DIALERUSED CtflV' Who stayB home when there’s a Ford Dealer A-l Used Gar handy? A-l Used Cart are the pick of tho trades. Your choice of makes and model*. TTiey’re inspected, reconditioned when necessary, and road-teated by expert Ford Dealer mechanics. Nothing ordinary about them, except the way they’re priced. See your Fo^[ JJealer. - , f 1962 FORfli / ' GALAXIB HARDTOP 3-Dqpr with- a Besstiful black ’ finish, sttek shift find a 464 , iwttas.- '■ . ■ i • . . . ^229 I960 FALCON * 4-DOOft WAQOlT With rad!*,_ h**Ut7 eutomst and whitewall*. Yours lor > $995.. $995 JOHN McAULlFFE FORD, INC.-—630 Oakland Avenue, Pontiac, Mich. thIoty-kqur • $ Sd* Hwmi 41 Sdn Nwmi 4-hednxxn brick ranch. * baths. I HHgjillli neW carpet, large family IMh. kitchen bullt-lns, gas heal. iMtW Hv carafe, fully land-eesgad UO-by-lto lot. auk CL «, Mich. LO 1-5816. . - ELIZABETH LAKE - > bedroom home, lm-B-to-wall ORESCENT LAKE ESTATES T un privileges. vert at-traettoei--*— — ■ if near Northern High, stoaaratad. vacant, cash model oar aa down payment. PE BY .OWNER. 2-BEDROOM /- urban ranch home on ft . lot. Carnet paneled tUriMMi large Bane and 1-car attached garage. A-I yondftton, lake privileges. BY OWNER. 3-BEDROOM RANCH borne, on Urge comer let. carpeted, patio, fenced yard, •emi-ftnished. office and basement, a{tellable January 1. Highland Estates. OR ACfl&.‘ BEAU- , River. Commi -CLARK ' BLOOMFIELD AREA AND SCHOOLS . r-; Yery aBonattra 3 bedhoatn brick home, brick fireplace. M Hivsts THE PQNTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 80, 1903 ' down: - $8,950. Three white frame bungalAW. I 2^ garage. S MMi_______________ treat. Waterford School District: Needs some improvements. . BY OWNER, 2 BEDROOM 6UB-urban. on ’.V acre lot. Newly decorated. and new carpeting. School • baa at door. raannabtc. MT new. BY OWNER. 2-BEDROOM 0 large lot; in Clarkston School an raas. down ok trade egutty < larger home or discount for eas MA S-UIS. \ . , , CASS AND ELIZABETH LAKE PRIVILEGES With this 1 bedroom borne, breeze-way. gsraga. 3 lets CM dcwn.W ~ monthly. ™-----1 682-2410. I Realty, CLARK REAL JBSTATE -™ W. HURON ~ PE 3-7S8S Evenings'fall PE 5-9619 or PE S-J9II . atoltipte Llatlng Service . CUSTOM-BUILT 1 TOMES . YOUR LOT OR OURS Ross Homes, Inc. PE 40591 * CUSTOM HOMES' duality built - Priced. right Deal direct with Builder.. ^ Carriacm Cpns't Holly SSddSgf ■' Roch. Of,- GAYLORD § SUN ROOM on this 6-room MP you will enjoy. .Carpeting, outside barbecue In idee yard. Three bedrooms. Hit-car garage., /” _________ 919.909 and terms. Call k*-‘‘Tg|‘ ______QI MY 2TB21.,. . . :__ sne shade ............... _____:.___:_____ --------'FOt>R ACRES with T-ra ' trythlng Has been put hi lion. l&Bp--1-------------*-----“■ DORRIS LUXURIOUS 'RETREAT: Rambling brick and frame ranch home situated on beautiful 1-acre knoll Wttlp 3 targe thermopane picture window of .wooded hills and dales. A gracious living room 13'x3t‘ ““ 2 large tbermopany picture CASS LAKE FRONT. 2 BEDRQOMB. carpeted living room, oil heat — Phone «g£3iif or 338-2949.' After COMMUNITY NATIONAL For Home Ownership U__ It’s Easy FE 2-9171 "Crescent Lake Estates CHEAPER THAN RENT *nt NORTH PONTIAC- $69 Down NEW 1-BEDROOM HOME $55 Month “Excluding taxes and Insurance. Everyone Qualifies: Widows, di- vorcees. even par ana a with a credit problem.’’ (20-9575 reaL’value pitifully Dinette ME______________|____I w outside through large, ST modem kitchen 13‘itl3’''char bedrooms, lovely ceramic i. located northwest LAKE FRONT ROME AND BU8I-- NESS FRONTAGE. $17,100. 90 ft. oh Dixie Hwy. 00’ on Loan Lake. 530' deep. A nice modem White frame, bungalow with screened pdrch, Italian marble firef' good condition. 16x8 enclosed porch, work ship 22x16. /few 24x26 garage. All for. 913.500. terms. Call PE 8-9693 or MY 2-2821, Lawrence W. Gaylord MY 24821 or PS S-9693 v Broadway and Flint Lake Orton GILES wmt _ Towering panoramic view, DRAYTON PLAINS AREA 47.100. A neat clean attractive 2-bedroom bungalow with numerous appoint-ments you will admire. .Vacant. ALUMINUM AIDED RANCH HOME. swimming or^fUhing pond. Perfect condition' inside-tend out. 'Se-leot oak' floors, -prastered- walls, madeot kitchen with bullt-tos, 10' *14’ breezeway. 24 x24 garage. 10 x14' workshop, All aluminum sided. . _ BEAUTIFUL BUNGALOW. $9,990. 3rs! tash 1 shades. ____.____„„ „,.J drive, . rage, excellent location: ’ modem kitchen-—w4tn formica counters - and birch cupboards, 'ovely tile- bath; '3-car garage. Terms on contract or consider trade. WKJ4EED ^LISTINGS BUYERS WAITING GROSSE.. pointe ” HOME Lovely spacious home locate __ a beautifully landscaped quarter acre of ground la exefustv* neighborhood. Two floor to* fitting1 fireplaces, -stove, refrigerator, new G.E. disposal, targe screened la porch 14x26 feet. — double garage.' Thu si Jtaet's home is filled _ tonality la the wallpaper, carpeting, and draperies. Only 29 — utet from General Motors I lag. Double coach lights.ol rage, pjua two other lamp posts outside. Extra large bathro— with square tub, coach .light’s' each side of huge mirror. Double sinks, Two- extra large bedrooms, with room—Tor another. Fully completed recreation room r“*-fireplace. Original price was i 500 but owner will -sacrifice $29,009, Cal] MI 7-1475 aftc t, Mixed Neighborhood 3-BEDROOM—PULL basement He dewa payment t No/nortgage coat MODELS OPEN AFTERNOONS t-| AND SUNDAY WESTOWN REALTY - 40S Irwin aft East Blvd. PE 8-2763 afternoons. U 2-4677. Eves, MODEL , thermo windows, m MOVE IN NOW law J- and 4-bedrooms. Wo<_ A* Prtv, lots, basements.' Cape ods or Ranch. $12,000 to SIMM ■ oor MU. Will duplicate. Take on lias Lake Rd„ to Rlgbgato St.. 1 Sunnyvale Chapel. Lira right is bleak to model. 44BLAOH BuUd- i **4y NO MONEY DOWN TONavgl or iaaoh starter homes an your tot. Model open 10-4. G. FLATTLEY, BLDR. ’ 0200 COMMERCE ROAD 303-0001 M. EM * BARGAIN THU Hi A BEAL OOOD BUY — CLOSE .TO NEW BALDWIN JR. HIGHSCHOOL - LOVELY 3. BEDROOM HOME — CARPETED — NEWLY DECORATED — PULL B ASM MUt — AOTOStATlC Wat i wwokb yard ism MOVES YOU IN. WRIGHT 1*2 Oakland Ave. FE 2-9141-2 Open Eves. Eves, after 7:00 PE 44*91 NOTHING DOWN Te OI. This 2-bedroem ranch with basement CtoflRMt 'JMB| r and liB hnwTtofgni. S years Seller will pay-all costs. MA t- Lake prtvUegsa. C rancher. I large carpeted living rot fireplace, modern SSS*. .omi, torap lining room, t-in kHoben, tee. window,wan overuwxmz patio with large swtmmliu; 1 lot. ACdtt. SmK r. Priced vary attrac- lively, ierms!* Dorothy Snyder Lavender . 7001 Highland! Road Eves. 007-5417 or F RENT pr BUY - WHITTEMORE ST St. Fred's alea. clean 'Broom in ‘Couldn’t we go'to the movies next time? tired of these kitchen dates!” getting WATERFORD TOWNSHIP RANCH . in excellent shape. G room* and bath. 15x20 paneled family room with fireplace and grill. MK40’ tot Sob Houses * ■ 49 with -fenced back yard, garage, mubh more. Priced to go at 611,-606. NORTH SIDE 4 BEDROOMS In'fX-cellent condition. Pull basement, DRAYTON PLAINS 3-BEDROOM ranch, fully Insulated, ‘ awnings, carpeting, HM£0iruge, screened ten? te* rfWm, tii.ooo. 2L100 down. 3333 Oeorgeland. OR wall do-well carpet. 4-room ’ apartment oyer 2-car garage. Only 614.-900 with term*. . GILES REALTY CO PE 34176 . 231 Baldwto Ave. MULfllpLE LISTING &ERVICE HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri Level $9,995 ’ $):,00CTD©WN . i - Car garage sp Iot FAMILY ROOM -GAS HEAT OPEN Daily t to. (p.m. SUN. 2 TO 6P.M. WILL DUPLICATE ON YOUR LOT f. C. YlAYDEN, Realtor ---- 10751 Highland Rd. (M-30) HIITER OAEL/tND LAKE PRIVILEGES -Pries . reduced on thie 2-bedroom, gas heat, 112x300-foot lot. low ---------------L'ball today! S basement. 2 HEM____________A bath, kiteben. basement, oil -fur, nicer SO' lot. close to schools. 99.-300. Terms. Call B. C. Hiller. Realty. 3860 Elia. Lake. Rd. PE 2-0170 or PE 4-3000 or PE 5-7559_____ HOLLY-THREE BEDROOM HOUSE on 3 11 acre*. Large living room with fireplace bath and haU.-Tftec. lish washer, gas furnace, ^sfotenert $aia Hmmi EAST BOULEVARD BEAUTIFUL BRICK HOME WITH EXTRA. LANDSCAPED LOT — NEWLY CARPETED — 4 BEDROOMS — FIREPLACE — CERAMIC TILED BATH-- FULL BASEMENT — AUTOMATIC HEAT —3 - CART GARAGE — PAVED DRIVE MANY EXTRA FEATURES. ' WRIGHT. 302 Oakland Ave., PE 2-9141-3 ' - Open Eves. - Eve,, after 7:00 1*W44044- Manson Street Lrt»f<>Sxtrar*ll^e YdU 8!SS..«!iSS?; ... LUTWOS NEEDED Rplfe H. Smith, Realtor 244’ S. Telegraph NEW. 4 LARGE ROOMS AND BATH, practically ftnislied, IVb acres of nice level land. Baldwin -and Orion Ed^ar... IS.M. - 9300 doWm OR KENT Established in IMS ' TWO FOR ONE - You car, two bouses co Pontiac's West Bide for the price of ode house. Total Brice 00.7to with 94.250 down for details. HOME AND BUSINESS — owner leaving state. Good location .for future business potential. Now being used for TV repair shop with attractive llvhig quarters. Basement. |y^heat., lygc deep lot. All for LAKE FRONT -^“TftirnUhad Uge with 50-foot lake short. L ed 30 minutes drive north of DWELLINGS BY MSU DESIGNER —Mich. Licensed Bldr. 8am War-Wtafc. Jr. 335-fflil. -ref. WMSO, NEW HOUSE AND REMODELING ASPHALT PA VINO OR 4-1721 PE 5-5197 DRIVEWAY- -PAVIVO SPECIALISTS —Free estimate. FE 5-4980. KAR-LIFE BATTERY CO. - Oiaeratori—Regulators—Starters Batteries $5.95 Exchange 2277 W. Huron 301 Auburn PE 5-0155 ■________, FE 5-1914 ' 3CAR GARAOE. 9099 Mat. OH Doors. Concrete Floors . Additions. House Raising PAUL ORAVES CONTRACTING Free Estimates ~ /OR 4-1511 GUINN CONSTRUCTION Home Improvements, porches carports. additions.. All type* of cement work, patios, drlvewayi. and HA—alto Ybitma — HOME IMPROVEMENTS AND MOD erolling Free Est. 673-0806 BILL I MANN, BULLDOZING, hour service. MA 5-0121 or 3-6652. Floor Sanding R. a. SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING, sandlni and finishing. Phone PE Fornniti Repair Rental Equipment Wallpaper Steamer BEST WORKMANSHIP, NEW _________ .rerooflng -guar. Free Estimates. MAS-2128. • ^ QUALITY ROOFS. NEW ANI Television, Radio and -Hi-Fi Service Call Trader A1— * the, Home Buyer’s Fal I DRAYTON RANCHER— LOW TAXES— . . Put. extra money In your pocket. Two landscaped lots, five room bungalow, enclosed, porch, base, ment, gas beat. 1H ear garage. $9,950 With 91.000 down, plus costs. NEW 3 AND 4-BEDROOM~ HOMES 297 W. Yale a; Stanley 0 Down—-$59.69 a mo, Excluding toms .Basement. 1arg« >■ Quick trade Uie "ol Model Opin d_, ______ MICHEAL’S REALTY ■ WE 3-4IIE ,. UN OAK PARK S FINEST stallQh home, with 140 fL troov age on west nine milt rd., 2 large bedrooms, 37 ft. Uvtnf room, witb fireplace, haalad garage. Owners mot Inc to Florida. Close (o North-lend.Must see to amreetr*- ____J. JOLL. Resit] PgH-8857 ------- „ Realty ir 6824)282 OLDER ROME. WEST SIDE. 24-foot living room, dining room. Mfeton, It bath down. 2-bedroom, enclosed sleeping porch, full balh up, .fun ' basement: 2-car garage, paved drive. 140x10' let. New roof, flower* and ahrubt. Completely carpeted. Have purchased another heme. PE 8-8524.______________ O'NEIL MODEL t Open Daily 5’ to 8 2002 SHAWNEE - Beauty wBrt iSwoot >Td*d lease of—-Oakland County" Is', decorator -----things you've Corns spect from "Beauty Rite” here, the sunken living' - 333-7553 ■2252 NEW HOMES Full Basements -:$00 ; DOWN. per. mo. Excluding taxes and insu 3-bedroom ' OPJpI. 10-8 DAILY 'SPOTLIGHT BLDp. CO. PE >0985 Ask.,about our trade-lh plan Hamorous. bath and family room, plus -tbe laundry room all on a single level. The ex-posed basement provides a lot cf^Mtra^ltvIng; wiiffllo* wall Whsther you intend to build certain to get inept- PRICE REDUCED mAceday lake 2 bedrooms — 1 lip. 1 down, i 13x28. lower Mxl2. Rot water-l board heat. Carpeted living r.— j ’*-** 'vet with fireplace, gmartto o upper bfdroom with 1x19 $1500 DOWN .will take this 5-room bungalow with Elisabeth Lake privileges. Kies wooded area, aluminum 'sided, gas heat. PULL PRICE.99.100. • • Smith . Wideman 412 W. HURON ST. OPEN EVES.. FE 4-4526 RENT WITH OPTION. 3 BeBrOiOM. ---- * ^ *L-lvllegea. EM 3-6703. Templeton BEAUTIFUL RANCH TYPE Mi ^ Must sea inside to rsally appreciate. 3 extra lafge bedroome. Large Eial living room. aMurai |M|. . alee family room, carpeted ghaut, fas heat. 2-car garage HACKETT REALTY. RE8CUE THIS HOME from the birds, they’ve base —— tog tbely nest to -unfinished’ family' behind 2 ear garage, 3 cherry bedrooms, I’/i batts, large IM. iSOXOT. Out Clarkston way. 0373 move to. OOOJO mo. plus taxes anil insu- HAGSTROM REALTOR 900 W. Huron OR 4-0181 for adaption . Rogers school. Let's re* tt totjay. Ask for A1 Orajism. RAY O’NEIL. Real LAKE OIltOH. 4-BEDROOM, FULL basement. 6 lots, A. Sanders, OA 0-3013. Repr, H. - Wilson, Broker. LITTLE SILVER Luxurious 3-bedroom brick ranch full basement, breezeway, attaches 2'Vcar garage, ^aa heak nice gar* across road. -HAGSTROM REALTOR Huron , -sS- OR 4-0330 ---- "-UtalUSL0435 NEW'FHA APPROVED 3 Bedrooms Farp-Rrjrlr tTnm«»a $150 ... .DOWN~_... GAB HEAT — PAVED, STREETS LARGE ROLLING LOTS E BEAUTIFUL— ’ 2480 Elisabeth Lake Golf View Estates, .‘four bedroom colonial, two and half baths, punched .family room, fireplace, pro: thtiahed kitchen with bullt-to appliances.,. basement, gae hot water heatr attached .two car - garage, paved drive, lake privileges. 927.950. 93.000 down plus costs. 0500 DOWN— 3 bedrooms, basement with new gas furnace.,...tltotng i Garage Builders Tree Trimming Sendee gM.iQy.ALj GENERAL < REPAIRS. REASON- Landscaping MERION •’ OR KENTUCKY.. SOD Lain or delivered. Free Estl-1 , -«-»»> xiiyea seat " M*1rorBrn*o-3M3,u“p'n‘ ” I General Tree Service SEEDING, SODDING. BACK HOE- —_____________________ W HMS tog^bulMostog. IVee estimates. EM ^ :;KAMPSEN CUT THROAT TREE REMOVAL j INDIAN WOOD COUNTRY CLUB 152-4070 Loweut nrie» numl area, rambling brick - ranch. Full basement,. 2 fireplaces', 3. baths, AM-PM intercom, ton' acres, with private fishing lake. House alone worth asking price. jShowtr by ap-pointment. '692-1882: (W Carpet Service Cement Supplies Trucking IRWIN STEFS READY MADE. SPLAI 1 "Stt lK?nS.rA0NRD3^ACTOR Lloih—^n-HVA^-I^INO-. j —- 7 -.. • —- : | rujtolsh^ flhdirt, grading ^ and gr*; Lownmewers blocks, ________ ________ __________ Mocks; Pontiac Pre-cast step -7_.------------------ . w , Ce., 03 W, Walton. PE 2-3900. pick ur sad dellrerx. OR 3-0920. bumper LAWN MOWER REPAIR. 13 YEARS I 26603. ,_________ LIGHT TrI'CRING AND HAULING. "73-8043 «f,;"3wHrj— service,. TOP SOIL. PEAT. BLACK DIRT. —" —----------- i ——,x and All dirt. EM 3-2115 —CEMH4T -CWN TB ACTG R, . censed and bonded, call PE CEMENT CONTRACT censed city sidewalk 1 ■ terms; FE 3-0122. licensed Builders U- | NElDRtCK BUILDING SERVICE - A*^£iuds*lpent two* Lumber • ,.TALBOtT*TUMBER 1025 Oakland , HOME- FOR CHRONIC- ' wor on call. Graduate 1 ** all times. * Pointing aUy .11I. dividual BttonUon'*Reas. anteed. FE 5-4823 t PAUtTINa DONE, Piano Tuning Truck Rental Trucks to‘Rent ^"t^uSK -Jmjt^TORA8t*ktl AND EQUIPMENT^ -s Dump Trucks tt SeqU-TraUero Pontiac Farm ari4 Industrial -Tractor Co, 82 S. WOODWARD . FE 4-0461 . FE 4-1442 , Open. Pally Indtrftot *— Uphostering Wanted’ Household Goods 2-8181 NORTH SIDE Large 2-bearoom bungalow, floors. Sutomatlc heat and hot ter. Aluminum sforma and acr fully insulated. Near school bus. Terms to suit. WEST SUBURBAN Nice 2-be'droom ranch home i large , tot with Ipke privileges i .Crescent Lake. Has oak flooi.. plastered walla, gas heat, Storms with low down .peymdhL WEST SUBURBAN , Large ThMlmm horn*, situated oh as. MILLER ELIZABETH LAKE FRONT. Spa- edrooms. n. tocludlr to . flreplai Perm* Stone exterior. Excellent beach. 4 bedrooms and den — ~i ft, carpeted — . _____i drapes. Also eut .replace. , Huge enclosed porch overlooking lake. Shr-*-landscaped yard, garage. Call complete detaO*. HERRINGTON HILLS 2 bedroom brick rauebette. Nearly new and, in perfect condition. Sparkling hard wood floors, filed barawipi shower. . Pull basement, fenced lot; A red carpet special — only 012.930 — terms. VETERANS RESALES no down pay-—- ment; Cloalny nnatar-nplv- 2 ^nd 1 bedroom homes all to A-l condition. City oi* suburMn:locations; - several to cboosd''from. CaH fQr details. v William' Miller * Realtor = FE 2-0263 670 w. Huron - . Open NICE "FIVE ROOM BRICK HOME, gee heat, beautiful kitchen, with plenty of built-ins. ^ Large lot. black top street. 612.500 — 61,750 down. - ' - FIVE ROOM HOME, needs repairs. 1 oar garage, large corner lot t x 177' — 06.700 — 01.700 wn. bal„ on lend contract. LARGE NINE ROOM HOME.' 2 storys. ideal for the large family <-nice shady lawn, 2 car ga-rage. $12,500, WE grades CRAWFORD AGENCY 258 W. Walton - TE 8*2306 609 B. Pitot M1f 3-1143 you _ ration ________ to tbe Home ln Yu,. . Mr, Proksch wlu be your host. OL 1-0675. TRADING IS TERRIFIC NEW.BEAUTY RITE HOMES . Just through Clarkston _ to tbs sdts of thu lovely, village- All the features you ex. pect site get to a Beauty Rite. Plastered walls.— ceramic bath*, dream'kitchens, clear oak floors. Basements, attached garages. Yes, one home left* ready to move Into. Many lots to choose from. "WE TRADE" - Call "today for appointment to see these lovely homes. WEST SUBURBAN ... ‘ Duality Built . . . 2-bedroom ranch, attached 2Vb-car garage. Farm-style Mtehea, formica cabinets, ceramic tlUd bath, large vanity. Family room or third bedroom. Divided basement. Lot 100x325. excellent location. Priced at 917.160.^91.800 down plus elos- . Largs 11 b« extra large Varsger Extra"^ bath to garage, paved drive. ’ 150x150 lot -all eacloeed with DRAYTON WOODS — Pres-►to** grron00 ■ w8l gi^ryou*??*!. lVLJusrto , walk into. Beamed ceiling. ‘ ROCHESTER, BY OWNER luxe 3-btdroom Contemporary in-choice villsge location. 026.500, 240 Charles Rd^ Rochoster, OL 1-3700. Sam wunnv has Ic-m4° SCHRAM - $9,950 , no money Down and dinette, fiiff' busement i " ‘ ' ttMi ri THE BIG ' T ■ v 3-bedroom - tri-level recreation-- wall, and ___: front, sliding patio door-eat. WIU duplicate etlng, a nat possession. •' OAKLAND LAKE FRONT — - 75 feet of good beach on half-acre plot. . Red brick, year-around 3-bedroom borne. Oak floors, plastered walls, 2 full baths; one has a stall shower tqr the swimmers! Ymill love the wood-burning, field-stone fireplace, 2-car garage. Detroit owner says ’’Sell-It--- quick!." .So,, We've priced, it * will more you in with immediate possession. WE CAN’T" BEGIN TO TELL — YOU bow pretty this home is. you^l Have Jo see it tor your self. Pour .really lovely bedrooms, l '/f' colorful ceramic baths and a very-deluxe family room, all tastefully dec- . orated and perfectly maln- talned. Big lfi-car attached--- parage. It’s a brick rgnenand distance to Our Lady el - Lakes and Waterford village School. It's a steal at $17,900 with approximately 02,000 total Initial investment. Hurry on this one, folks!, RAY O’NEIL REALTOR ' 262 S TELEGRAPH OPEN 9 TO 9 3-7103 PE 5-4684 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE OPEN TRADE In the OLB and LIVE id 4-bedroom house with full basement and 2-car garage. See this for country living, close to town. Priced at' only $9,950. Terms can be arranged. ’ ____ ng room 11x17, separate dining i 9xll. full basement witb oil —*■* >-*•-*". privileges *" "00. $500 on Syjiran Lake. Only I IVAN W; SCHRAM-REALTOR * FE 5-9471 TRADE . 1.IM DOWN on land pew tract with no mortgage, no qualifying, this I room ranch. h locatoa just ojf Hatchery Rd. with big lot. and 1V9 car garage. Pull prioe-MJOO. Let's Trade. $49 MONTHLY ►' will seme £ OI Into this 5 room bungalow, near Cau Lake. Already appraised at SS.3N. Mortgage 0*«t JUDSON STREET --’■’tog 2 »* gffl.t ill carpeting, lovely yard. car garage. 93M down. Frushour > Struble 3930 Elisabeth Lake Road FE 9-4025 PR.a-aawi UNION LAKE AREA ^ 2-bedroom, bath. lVbtoar garage, big ktteben, etudio eelltog to Uraur room, clean, lake privileges. Only 0*4 a month, including taxes and HiHtop Reelty^^^ '- 073-5234 VACANT 3 ROOMS AND kAVH, I ' ’“••■joms.i full basemer"— ' ■ North of city. Val-U-Way $500 DOWN For this Zbedroom bungalow In Perry Park. Located on 2 Urge -W». 1 ear garage, low monthly ..payments of $60 per month. •INTEGRATED upzlalrz pay your oontraet nc $250 DOWN R. T. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 343 OAKLAND AVE. OPEN 9.7 FRONT — 1-YEAR-OLD -as 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, 2 fireplaces. 2-car garage. - Walkout basement, aluminum storms and screens, carpeted, excellent condl- Walled Lake Area 2 bedroom bungalow, large living Urge kitchen, oil furnace, 2. car .garage, nice lot to good neighborhood. 99.900. Good terms. Looted at 1189 N. Eddie St. call HAROLD R. FRANKS REALTY A-l BUYS' SMALL FARM - SEMINOLE HIIXS.- 4-bedroom, 2-story, all aluminum exterior, full basement, built-in 2-car garage, fireplace, carpeting and drapes, by owner. PE ” B STOUT& —Best Buys ^ - Today MOST HOUSE — For the money, , story Colonial, every inch utilised . to its best advantage. Luxuriously carpeted Hving and dining room, kitchen with breakfast bar, . dishwasher, _renl.4*u, to hath, “ * floor. 3 .large bed- rooms with wt ramie hath up beautifully * landsci walk of,t5i,«i Incinerator, ed fenced ireu garage. Conven-zter, iocatton.- O nl y easy terms. NORTHERN HIGH — 2 bedroom rancher ner lot, p«— Writ, lt{_ garage. Reel*1 vain* • HOME - INCOME - Ideal c NIGHOLIE MODEL "pm OPEN $A e. Home has csrpetei Ifvh mh mat dftpe*. water softener. Attitehod lvi-car garage and mimy otlwr deluxe feature*. PH A or OI tertxte. MULTIPLE LlSTINO SERVICE OEOR/l* IRWIN teffitTno* JOHNSON CHOSE TO OAKLAND UNIVERSITY Mr. working man if you want a' nice, hdme bere to one.- PHA approved. owner-Jiving to Calif on' must - -be. gold. All modem, basement, 3 bedrooms, Urge Located of Pontiac Read. LAKE PRIVILEGES ' - rent? We can move you ta ce 2 or 3 bedroom home' w small down, fraytfieni: Nei rated. -In-most instances pi Looney FTS-4-3976 •— A. JQHNSaN- & SONS . REAL ESTATE—INSURANCE •• - rf»S4 8 TBLEORAPE * V FE 4-2S33 ONLY $16,909 OPEN SAT. and SUN-to -----------------------J COLONIAL OR 2-BED- ___11 CJt and alumtoum . — slate entrance.' Thermo-windows. sunken llvinf basement, COMMERC . TO MANDALE. attached garage. ARRO ^ WE BUILD—'WK TRADE good land contract a LOADS OF CUPBOARDS to i_______ Uy sised kitchen. Large living it — 3 bedrooms. -Plenty of eh space. Water sot toner. AJumto__ ’ storms Mid screens. Large partly fenced. yard. Ctoee ' te “*“* 1 •tearit-98.900. storms and screens. > school gad bus. 17.080. Close Quiek -GOOD NORTH END LOCATION. Clean 3-bedroom. Well to waD c - paling, gaa hegt, Jit or ms screens, fenced ykrd; shade trees and outside fireplace. Only; 60.710. ^ternu. LIKE gECLUsIoN AND PRIVACY? You win have tt H you purchase this 7to acres, of wooded lKqd. l.ooo tl. on lake; with good flabtog. Only IQ minutes' from PoaR*e. BETTER MURRY. . ' *t4jf CAM-EUZABETH ROAD ----RH ■..........- -TOME. custom built, 4 bedrooms. 3 baths, mans extras. Owner will finance at sacrifice pries. PE 4-7341 or TX iSmT' INCOME Six-family brick income. , email apartments and rented 1 per cent with a watting 11 Close to. Low malntOndhce; Mi appointment only; *° sstatr. NEAR HIOH SCHOOL .• One-etory bungalow. Large'llvl room, carpeted. Two nice b< rooms, toll basement with aui matte beat. Easy to matots slum, siding. It's vacant and ei he purchased under PHA. West suburban Cute 4*®,bedroom one-story hoc to top condition. Carpeted livii room, gas beat, nice yard. Just the borne for a -couple or retiree Only $9,000. Cal} us. CLARKSTON-WATERFORD AREA orated. Aiitomettc beat, large for spacious living: About Si moves you in and payments U . rapt. Vacant. Eve*. caU Mr. Csstell FE 2-7273 NICHOUE HARDER CO -Hi4 W, Huron st. Me' 5-8183 NO DOWN PAYMENT NO- MORTGAGE COST NO PAYMENT 1st MO. FULL BASEMENT MONEY DOWN 3 MORTGAGE COSTS, tbrand new, Just a Job moves you to; Large 3 bedrooms with walk-to clouts, oak floSrs, family steed kitchen, ' 082.79 month. . MODEL AVAILABLE > RUSSELL YOUNG Real- Estate North' End chased oa FHA terms. Low down, ■ Need More Room ? I bedrooms are-lncl, to this 2-■tory fraihe oo the yreet tldo. Corner M Snd close to General Holt Mai. 818.000 and this can be on PHA Mtg. with low. down.- •WARDEN j Sunday 2 " Buitoafi" modeT."'J-bedfoom 1 :aS "-SaLtoto.' m. Presenting workmanship I quality, Pontiac'Lake Rd., i Bielhv £°unniht*rket' rl*ht NORTH SUBURBAN — OPEN Sat. <& Sun. 2-6 . 3851 Meinrad (Off WaUon 'l block east of Dixie! ' 3-bedroom. Ufcebaths. 2-car gars" full basement. Wul - dupll,cAte wills, oak floors, oil beat, large 75 x 300 lit: Only $750 down." small monthly payments. Warren Stout, Realtor PE 5-0105 Partridge SWIMMING POOL Uke to go swimming to privacy .. .to your, own back yard? You can with this one. This 2 bed room home fhehides a 10' x 40' - pool, with '.filtering system ahe drain. gtoUt onto tie rear of Um arrange* terms *1*'2W' >We 11 QUALITY BUILT Before you took any further, co ‘"is 3 bedroom brick .’w. I roti bav* i tarnation — g -1 ESTATE SALE ,100 la aU that'# needed to pur-Chase this comfortable home to Pontiac, ft contains 3 large bed- H^EALTQR PARTRIDGE Is the jBira Ao See . SUBURBAN HOMES , ri ACRE — 8, of Grand Blano — 6 room nonmodern' farm home — HoUy School — 14.500. M ACRE NEAR CLARKSTON — 4 room home with attached breeze-way and garage — work shop' at; ' -.‘aundry room — -neat and cfoi dry rolling land with neat 24>ed-. room ranch home. fuU basement, -garage — An excellent buy at JUiOfe. See It today! - ’ "DNLY 965 PER MONTH — 4'^ • room bungalow In Drayton Plains^ Very nice, dean home/ Shaded lot — Full price 97.950 with 1600 down. SALE OR LEASE OPTION — New 3-bedroom ranch, full basement, tf9,.ltoat. lvk baths, oak flow} *» Walking distance of city haJl. Easy terms. OWNER TRANSFERRED—Forced to eel] this lovely lake-front home, 3 bedrooms, basement, natural fireplace — loo-foot frontage on Oak-land^Lake. Reduced for quick sals. WATERFORD REALTY 2101 Dixie Hwy, . OR 3-1373 WATKINS - PONTIAC ESTATES 3-bedroom, aluminum aiding, full baument, beautifully shaded fenced Hot. 313,900, OR 3 ~----- WILL BUILD - On your lot or ouro, . Your plan or ouro . don McDonald v Mc«o»«d Braider OR' g-pgat YOUR CONTEMPORARY HOME IN Bloqmtleld Twp. It has 2 or maybe J bedrooms, and 1 bath to 1400 zq. ft. Your children krill love school 1 block away- and swimming prtv-tlegu at Square Lake Beach. Their pete will be happy on 1 acre ■“2, 2nd »°S? term* in thir tajOO home. _Drtve by ITSP' W Income ProperT) •FAMILY HOME. VERY " CHAMBERLAIN ST. come 13.418. *1,600 down' Insurance ‘i ■ income 6- UNITS. SEE: AT' 7H DorrU and Feathers ton* Rd., bf ATTRACTIVE 3 BEDROOM RANCH — Full basement — Insulated — Ito car garage — .Sir *“ LAKE PRIVILEGES on Dixie Lake with this inviting 4 room home basement — 3 enclosed N Discount i ROOM HOME with aluminum aiding — insulated — 2 car -garage . “ lake privileges — $6,500 — 9500 down. /* ACRE LOT — Near Ciariuton. condition 7-°toU "pz^OnM'biS! meet — gas heat — garage with blacktop drive— 414.500. » UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 5-2015 0665 Dixie, Clarkston -0 an*. MA 5-1241 Dlzcount for'caah. 624-3031*’ “CRESCENT LAKE tfANAL FRONT r“®?' terga rooms, flreplact. uduur —-coded lot, 111.. lots. 325 Hick- * , ****■ ,40 ACRES, — Lake prlviligA, «►. - ^r.rsrSiwM' :, TONQ-6330. TAYLOR iOTHING DOWN - I-b*droom ranch TWp. Large lot. handy to ' r^reSrafci ptIcTm.OOO. INDEPENDENCE. moves you to; 3________________ handy to schools. Large tot. Payments lees than rant. N.7W total WATRitFtHlD TOWNSHIP . *250 Naw 2 'bedroom, basement, 2/car garagi PE 8-1198 Ideal —- liumiicu. 3-bed room ' rancher. Brick and frame, l'.i baths. 2' utility rooms street *HaKd to*** <>CWl *"* bus. Payments ton than rent. WE'HAVE. AN excellent selection of nearly new homes in *“ ■«— -m-small. down Mtyraei Luks Praperty . FINISHED ■- **• J9»0 frontage, finals large Florida room and c*r^ living room, FE 3-7968 or HAMMOND lj\KF. LAKE FRONTAGE. 97.500 Attractive lot with many tree*' •toptn* to lake. Kxdllent sitefij- ' .tewevel overlooking beautiful bay ■and dose to fine homes. 1 Evettlngs MA 6-7221 HUNTING AND * FISHING Agler^and Rkldway Lake area "* “P Small down me^Also, one and toro ’bedroom State Wide—Lake OriotT OA S-MW AFTER 5 raTym LABOR DAY SPECIAE Li' SEASON Beautiful building sites ! 100. Privileges on two eandp Djaktog. .good TlsMh'g. w Beach Country Club Sub- S two. SIM. 95 00 (town - 95 00 U MY 2-0940 established community 1 Consideration. ., Co™* **~tB£«tel af! Jtltfolebeli a Rguaro.LakSHtaaCor phone r m _ EveMngs «r phone tU N-SPITZLEY •RATION , -. THE PONTIAC PKKS3, Uti- Atniga Lakefront Lot FRONT LOT Hammond Lake , . . Ideal lot for walkout but-, mant. Good beach, 10 (oat wlda, blacktop »rd^ |PU||i Tha beat bny or tha laka. Call Mr. Ltwfe FI 6-3343 Ok F K3-710I. LOT ltrflW’. NEAR OAKLAND RAY O'NEIL, Realtor OFFipa OPEN 8 TO • DLTIFA LIBTfHO J4j»i B FRONT, 4 BEDROOM BRICK ____„ many extra*. 523.75*. OR •wi - , • • WALTERS LAK* privileges, lot IMS up. Also starter hill*.—Cl arks ton Orton Rd. U Rd., to Mbs 0«ot. MM II Walters Laka treat tad, oattai It. by MO or will dlrlda. SYLVAN ---- MUMS iSada beach. WHITE LAKE modem, ^larga lot. targe C. PANGUS, Realtor • ORTONVILLE AM Mill St.___ NA 7-MU •1AM down c PAUL JONES REALTY FE 4-6850 -with large to depoaRW C _ . Northern Property CABIN. 4 ROOMS, PARTLY FUR-Dlahed. garage. fuU price MAM. .« ml. W. of -Mlo, *-------- INDIAN LAKE —MAN18TIQUE Beautiful completely furnished log home. Ready ter year arauttl living. Wooded tat arlth IN' of candy beach. 113.500. . . AL PAULY. REALTOR NEAR WEST BRANCH—10 WOOD-ed aeree on pavement, bunting and ikllng area, 41.060, **“ ■ MAple 6-1456. NORTHERN MICHIGAN ACREAGE 10 - 40 - 40 Acre Tract — 435 per am up, OEOROE WELLINGTON SMITH OPEN Sat., Sun. and Mon. 12 to3-PAff. 4635 Port Austin Road Caeevule. Michigan n Ideal setup for summer vacationing, plus On Income with — 5 J-bedroom modern eott only 200' from the beautiful _ beach of Saginaw Bay. Located ) settle i 12 JQ6LYN COR MANSFIELD ROSE CITY AREA: Ideal (or chureb.eamp nr building lodge. 2 hours from Pontiac SO acres - 15-acre lake, latte year round cobblestone house, ____I_j quarters, oomptately furnished with > good Italian Maple furniture. Owner will take trade. Clarence C. Ridgeway MtwtPfpNfty MOBILE SITES, DON'T BENT, BUY fit acre, HO downr HO a month. OR 3-129S Bloch Broa. Core. ' MfW WftAOE - WOODED LOT. North raaort, by itaU fomt. Bunt. ftah. Ewlrn. $1395, $100 Sm--------- r y Morrow, G 1 a ( (Mtoela). Mich. COTTAGE AND WOODED - Come to our office at the Karri-•on-Oald w in Exit off US-27 Free-" e big orange --------------------| I ____r_____ Harrison, cipao . days a week. (Member Chamber of .Commerce). ST. HELEN — BY OWNER beautifully fuxatsBefl. well Insult— cottage, on paved - and lighted street, one of Ibe beat locations In town, with seven adjacent ]r‘~ 222x300 — •' ---------- ---------£' peasant, St. Lots- AcrsofT BLOOMFIELD hte. all utilltlea. FE 4-2S2S. i ACRES — NEAR NEW 1-7 to -v. Good spot for horn —1 commercially. Small Estates f to M aerea. marts restricted is IMteT 7^ end tri-level bdtpes. Some parcels wooded.- As taira 750, 4300 down. Wanted!! City e( Pas E BLDO, C 0. ACRES. 4 ROOM HOUSE.. CLOSE In, take privileges. A Senders. OA iAtuTrepr. H. Wilson.’ 75-Acre Farm With 1 large bedrooms, basement. C. PANGUS, Realtor Artonyillx 22 Mill m NA 7-M15 to ACRES WITH FBONTAOE roads. 3-bedroom home, good bam. Only 517.600 on terms. 4% A fruit farm, attractive 5-. ne. 1-car attached s (Tom fyult Siftt HwIesw OppsrtwIHei TIRED OF RENTDtOr TIRED OP ‘high overheadr Tired iiIMfM to and tram work? Stulneee building approx. i.soo so. home attached. Mutt » ™ be appreciated. By owner. t<4 M. Saginaw. FE MtW. * TO BUY OR SELL A BUSINESS REAGAN THIRTY-FIVE Sand-Gravel-Dirt CUHOM COMBINING - we' WILLI dombbrt your wheat, tr -MMMW 555 wSSJtS * yards iU.daMvered. FE 4-6588, PA 812681. OPEN. DODD ORCHARD AND M -------------- LOADING Beach 'aand, cushion sand. GHT run gravel and fill. Crescent Luo -wad... Hatchery' Rd, 073-2000. MEL’STRUdKlilD ■ totTaoU. Mack. dirt, tm dirt. sand and grovel. PE 2-7774, NOTICE TO BUILDERS Trucks available. Fill d -kind. -Free eat * M PONTIAC lie. aand, gravel, (111 dirt. < Vood Wgad Cad Cakt-fwaj^ ~ K' wWs LANPBCAPPINO, WOOD OP Pott-Hunting Dogs POODLE. M0 UP. HO MONEY ARC REGISTERED DACHSHUNDS. AKC MINIATURE POODLES. 4«0 REAL ESTATE 225 N. Opdyke Rd. FE HIE PE HUT ABSOLUTELY THE FASTEST AC-tlan on your land coatrant. buyers waiting. Call Realtor trldge FE 4 3541, 1050 W. Huro 20 ACRES e bam —sc. 5300 acr center with large 10 building site IMP Please read s le entitled euburban hi WMmm Property 57 I. Oood , ______ ring bulU ... so. ft. end 3.400 eq. -"orete block with brick fro heetlng plants. Both to state highway in northen------- near Toll Road -In an attractive town. Oood labor market. ED-WARD A.1 WOLFE, Shlpehewans, Indiana. k^NOFACTUMNO PLANT, 65x164. e apace. Mao' aq. ft. -i >. shown by appt„ FE i ESTER MICHIGAN, 264 ROCHESTER___________ tone Industry No. g, wi sewer available, Phone O PRANK -SHEPABP. ISIS l Business Opportunities± ... 59 RYAN, 265-4524. Cleaning Village______ and coin operated laundry Royal Oak area, crossing 425,000 per year, and getting -better. Run by hired help, Will accept trade. ~~ 6-4857 .ANTIQUES—SHIFTS And the finest lines of Esrly Am., lean and Colonial furniture and accessories." ...______nor dm perlenced Mftafil-. th valuable main e and attractive 1243 AUTOMATIC TWIN NEEDLE tig sag In wood eeoeeta, decorator, sewing, blind aUtehtaf, bemmlni , Michigan Necchl-Elna. § freeaer.149. Electric dryer and washer eat, 471. Oood working TV’s, tll te SM. PE tint. V. Harris. REFRIGERATOR GX. 4 FOOT gtt. I. FE 5-9807. •_______' SINOER CONSOLE ZIO-ZAG 429.50. GAS OR OIL HEATING 8Y8TEM8 ......... r,1(. priced, free • Heating. OR 3-4544. GOLF CLUBS, CART AND 25 H P. COLEMAN OAS- FURNACE. LIKE i. OR 40101. ,Curf i CONSOLE SEWING MA- Monsy to Loan 61 j3f!S5!^4fi5SLJ^3S!&-— $25 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE *• FAST, CONVENIENT - . Auto or Other Security 24 Months to Repay. Home & Auto Loan Co. " N. PERRY ^ m *■*“, appuance repair, micrioan : Apptlaaee Co. OR 244M.____ ABOUT ANYTHINO YOU WANT BUCKNER FOR THE HOME CAN BE POUND ATLkt SALEOT A lime out of the way____I____ less to pky- Furniture end appll-. ances of ell kinds NEW AND USED; Visit bur trade dept- ‘ real bargains. . We toy. sell or trade. Come ow and look around. 2 acres of *'•*' - parking. Phono PEW-M41. Open Mon. to Sat. M; Frl. — MONTHS TO PAY 75 per X . Unlveri SPECIAL 424. A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OP FPEi|ttVRJi —. Cmwlats of: ■piece U table.. 1 cocktail table ai FINANCE COMPANY ----WHERE YOU CAN BORROW, UP TO $500 OFFICES IN Ponllee—Drayton-Plata*—Utlea Waflad Lake—Birmingham ■ E. of I a Auburn, 1 448 95 413.85 up Mt.84 .. WYMAN FURNITURE COr 17 t. HURON FE 4-__ U W. PIKE____ FE 2-2150 Tend "Signature. SOFA BED. ' CHAIR. AUTO ur FURNITURE Up to 24 months to repay I ^HONE FE^2420|_ OAKLAND LOAN COMPANY 202 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. WHEN YOU NEED •”^5 to;$500 Wb will be glad to hrtpyoU. STATE FINANCE CO. 508 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FET 4-1574 LOANS TO 4604-425 TO $100 TEAGUE FINANCE CO 202 N. MAIN- , AUTOS Livestock HOUSEHOLD GOODS MU . OL 1-9741 3514 PL 2-3510 • "Friendly Service" LOAN8 i25 TO 4500 7yi Acres Close ta parcel, .near new X-way. only minutes from-downtown Pon-Use. Gently rolling, suitable ft *—" "---!, partially w—*‘A \ REALTOR PARTRIDGE | Is. th^ Bird to See . „ ______ fe 4-ssti. Mortgage Loans jb MEM: PARTRIDGE & ASSOC,. INC. [ - CUt YOUR PAYMENTS ONSFHALF bj^qulek ‘ ----''— “■ i. Oood condition. W CLEARANCE SALE 5 4-3572 Clearance Sale On 1962 Motorola TVs and Stereos. Special prices.on all floor models. 14" portable, 4118.88. 23" LowBoy, 4187.77. Console Stereo. 4129.95. Easy credit Mims. B. F/ooodrieh Store, 111 N. Perry. FE 2-0121. CLOSINGS) UT frigirataf. 2 549.95 __b.al savisua alov_a RENTALS WITH OPTION TO BXIYr GRINNELL’S ^ PONTIAC DOWNTOWN STORE » 8. Saginaw ** BRITTANY MALE, . ,$75. OAkland 8-1320. COLLIE PUPS — MALES 920, FE BUNDY FLUTE. 485. FE 5-1950. _________ PIANO IN YOUR HOME ___■ 415. PE S-3S17. 2021 Old- dlngiRd. DACHSHUND ' WITH FREE LESSONS FOR loOP^S!*! with all accessories. COMPLETE STOCK OF PIPE AND fltttats. Custom threading. Imnwdl-ate aervlce. Montcalm Supply. 1M W. Montcalm. FE 5- Rental Per Week. - GRINNELL’S PONTIAC DOWNTOWN STORE - Saelnew PE »714S GERMAN SHORT-HAIRED POINT-j tr pufs, 4 months old, AKC Re^- _____ hunting sti I, Troy. 879-0673. j ALL Mt ■ D. & J.' Cabinet Shop* Discontinued fannies 25c sq. I Hoods 432 and up.. Porcelain at stainless steel stake, faucets met moldings and cabinet hardware. ENRICO ROB8ELI4 ACCORDION, Williams. FE 4-6433. IBM sor amine ana cuoi plee tod (tor*. Oakland O 2204 E. Commerce Rd.. East of MatHSTTlEji dahy during peach season. Bob St bill's Produce Specials Best Grade Peathei $2.99 a Bushel.. NONE PRICED HIGHER Apples - eating or sensing 53.40 to. Canning peers....... ... 44.29 bu, ~weet corn, fresh each dsy, canning or freeatng,^4tos, tog >1AP o. l laaeyjpotatoes, 44 lb tog 41.4* Horn* grown tomatoes, peck . .5 to “ome grown Honey Rooks, large alas. . . .. t lor » J8- or bu, S2A4 Grade A Milk, thro* M gal. ear- tone .................... 41.00 no bqttto deposlt to bother with r Other produce at good pneei Bob & Bill’s Produce Co. 7605 Highland Rd. (MM) Ponttae. Mich. 674-4121 .. -i.------ - Alrport Rd.) 17 ON CAT. 4l.l A grader 40.1 ir 51.500. I yi dump truck, vibr flHMIV 41.500. American Stone Products. 6335 Saahabaw ltd. »6A MB, ^ ALLI8-CRALMERS NO „ bine, ready to go, reduced 4700. Davie Machinery, Ortonvllle, NA FARM-ALL TRACTOR AND IMPLE-' 1A 4 -3540. RIDING TRACTOR 7UTK PLOW USED TRACTORS KING BROS. HAMMOND OROAN Beautiful 'spinet Hammond organ rich wunut cabinet. Can be h for assuming bslsne*-- of p a_ menu pretent owner leaving' I college, Save1 atout 4400 on to MALE, BOX-TRAINED KITTENS 'Iree to good home. MA 5-1018. \i furniture •- GRINNELL'S DOWNTOWN PONTIAC STORE! 27/4, Saginaw at. ^ , —FE - 2-7140 ELNA "SUPERMAJIC." FULLY AU- ___________________ tomatic Zlg Zag sewing machine. » 2 vanity lamps. . Makei all designs, button holes, wt, 4 chroiri* thSlMT "blind hems, etc. Take over pay-Hi “ i of M per month ' tl Company, FE 4-0905. FRIOIDAIRE DRYER. WRINGER washer, baby scale, grill, and m Like new. InTfcauUfui tame, can be lurchased for 4450. Free Dfttvery— lave 4SM. Call Mr. Dusenbarry at GRINNELL'S PONTIAC DOWNTOWN STORE - Saginaw FE »71S» WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE Rebuilt elect, refrig Odd tspeetry sofa v. * .piece sectional sola ..-piece living":r*"" »' 5-plece dinette 'ALL FLOOR SAMPLES 120” elecorlc range............... ■ ■ •459 »5 Open 9 'Ml 5:30 Mon. '01 4:20 36" gas.range ............... • I3S.M Bedroom sets, box springs and mat-:Apt. awe gas range ......... 5X9.9* —— ----- - - -'lairs,118 W. Pike. E-Z TOftHS FB 4-106* rfbT WATER BEATER, I o sylte .439,95 , livtng-'i seta, el tables, EVERYTHING MUST GOI Easy Terms ' BEDROOM OUTFlTTTN(TC( CROSLEY CONSOLE TELEVISION, like new. OR 4-I9IS. CHAlk. EASY davenport a_____________ washer, quantity of carpet — C OR 2-9106, __________ YELLOW 01 BUILT-IN OVEN . OR 4-07i6 OLD LICENSE PLATES STARTING with 1914. Come and get 'em. :Y-Knot AnteqOH. 10345 Oakhlll, Holly ME 7.51 as ” 14 INCH PORT ABLEGE TV, 435. with grey-Stripes, 020; Lazy bar RCA RADIO - STEREO • PHONO, 2 chair; mulberry, 420; Chippendale! were old. Reg. 4270. 4188. chair, blue, 410: gas stove. El Call SYLVAN STEREO - TV 0824)190 PA.2-5189.__________________________!STEREO - TELEVISION --RADIO combination, like new, 624-9736. 62 ELECTRIC STOVE. l, 673-4837. BLOOMFIELD " . Woodward ,- Square Lake ----- i Over 100 large rolling wooded (0)4, to ohoose from. Most- have_all Improvements schools, churches. Tom Bateman ' - PE 8-7161 -OaltorExchangor DEALER > WANTED. TO MARKET - x telephowe! answering equlp- * ~ “-oduct, pro- RORABAUGH FRANCHISE AVAILABLE — MOT" crate Investment ta BViWerlal tod equipment, unlimited POtemll Write Pontiac Press. Box 25. Brook fiekl Highlands K BLOOMFIELD HILLS SCHOOLS , . Lots. 135x160. $5,900 and up. Terms. Paved, water system, stream, hltl-Blde,. and some lota with traea. 70 new custom homes here now — ------------HFUsU for Bloom-. field 432.50(1 model . HOUSEMAN-SPITZLEY LARGE BRICK I. Gin N umh he;, wmaw- 45x60. Also, beauty shop tat- quarters close to down-ontlac. FE 4-201131U 5 pm CANAL FRONT, LOT -t- SYLVAN OXBOW LAKE PRIV. 2 lots ea « 50x150. Total price 5600. , OXBOW LAKE PRIV. Single tot M WEST HURON ST. Near Webster Bohool. 55x120 ft. 52 800. WALTERS LAKE PRIV., 2 tote. Ill - ' ontage. 51.100. aaay tOUf ***“ “ | SEMINOLE HILLS. E. Iroquois St. . WilHam Miflcr Realtor FE 2-0263 4 W. Huron _____Open 9 PHWPMiiBr hilltop V uons. Excellent mtge rating i 5V« per cent Interest on hoi - LADD’S, INC. 5825 Lapeer Rd. - (Perry 104) PS M»1 or OB 2-1231 after 7:30 ■ -■ Open Sun- lxto 6 FoNTIAC LAKE FRONT *5x115. e 1001033' ELIZABETH LAKE. 50x125'. beach tod boat right*. 81.795. MACSDAY LAKE. 75x150'. 1 • SEE—COMPARE. ' Qierokee Hills , trou'U like this controlad < nninltoreMetter hoinese ant close-in. cpnvement location Only 1 mile west. v ', Main Drive * ■ scott Ut: J Carl W. Bird, Realtor ME Community Bah Business—Income' ?Aag*^0t*^,,j^mi*f for good: operator. 30x40, bldg., plenty of storage area: price Includes all equipment. plus 9-room Income home, Only 120.000 for ell plus Inventory, win sell separate. Warren -Stout. Realtor, 77 N. Saginaw St. FE 5-8165.__________ ment. A proven product, tecus territory. 43.500 - ! _____ ___ Franklin, ddm l cent to Mlraele Mile. Owner Ul. wants quick eels. Call RUDY. VE 5-5500. Detroit. Rymal Symea Co. COMMERCIAL Local Est. Heating tod sheet metal oemtractlng business, Including warehouse, sales office, to fixtures, trucks end equipment. Also Inventory. $103)00 down. UNIVERSAL REALTORS ■_______ 334-3551 468-2367 MODERN 2 BAY PURE FIREBIRD | itlon In the heart of the ; Now. ,lor lease to ag-isalv* man. Call Jack Anderson. — ^nw l EHEi. - gresslve i 682-3344 o: CHEMICAL-------- LABORATORY Uidifootu'rln'g "toif"1 whole-saling shampoo. Sacrifice. MICHIGAN Business Sales, Inc., John Landmester, Broker ' 1573 Telegraph . FE 4-1519 WANTED THE UNCOMMON MAN-' CAPABLE OF RUNNINO If you’re dependable, sir willing to work hud. Oil Company offers you uyxasav • cations, avallab! field Hilte; #re», u ™* teres ted please call FE 5-9486 further Information. ■ • • wiLl exchange 436,000 Free and. clear resort;"Os-ctoa. Mich, od Lake Hurtn. • % bedroom heote. t bath*. 7-cottagesj. L^^SE'EMAN; S.E.C. Real t^Excharteor ‘ 19U W. JnJBON. M flfTJ - ROME owner! CASH UNLIMITED Exclusive plan. Remodel you home. Pay past or current MU Consolidate into one low month payment. — — —- -■ Phllco IS Motorola _ ________ Frifldalre Freeser. 362 ..GE Automatic Washers _____ ____ THE OOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP •**— ** "" FE T-1855 Cmstruetlor Co. J ____________frontage. No appraisal fee. B: D. Charles. Equitable Farm Loan Bervlee. 1717 S. Telegraph, CASH Loans to $3,000 Consolidate your debts with up to 48 months to jreftsy No fees ot- any kind tod Wt 'provtda credit life Family Acceptance1 Corp. 217 National Bldg. 10 W. Huron Telephone FE B-4023_________ Swaps 20-INCk OAS £TOVE. 5 DRAWER ir studio oouch 01 1936 FORD. 3-WINDOW COUPE; DIS- 1855 STEWART, 8' WIDE. 2-BED-room, /will accept furniture as down payment- 233-9219. Or DODOE A -1 CONDITION, swap for pickup truck, PL 2-1777. ________ M 52.346, Pood- son for trading;- FE- 2-4259. 42.504 EQUITY IN 2-BEDROOM I YEAR OLD QUAR-4 Arabian mare. Wen ~r wlil jwap i, Ji^mson. PAItT OP A CABIN IN IOSCO County for Ournsey or Holeteta cows -.-aeil or trade. UL 2-5444. WILL EXCHANOTi COMPLETE Salt ClUitBf WEDDINO GOWN. SIZE 12 .. 14. 1 seRtslre dtamnrtd engegement — |g 5 SIZE 14 8 Ujk is 1 '.able. MI 4- ;*T8. COATS. SHIRTS LADIES HUDSON SEAL’ BLACK Sals Household Goods 65 METALMASTERS TABLE ehtow. Gray. TE 4-1956, - MURPHY iFOLD-AWAY BEDS IN Water Softs^eri t' refrigerator 5179,95 TV. 1154 model ilit 95 Sal* Miscellaneous "FIRST TIME IN MICHIGAN' —FREE HOME DELIVERY— WHOLESALE r MEATS AND GROCERIES AH nationally advertised brands. Savings up to 46 per cent. Soap, sugar, toffee, flour, butter, cake mix, cereal, soup, vegetables, fruit Juices, -Kleenex, pet milk. '.YES! UP TO 46 PER CENT Tot tree catalog and Information ,tgp,rtc»%4gil677C*n.-5>>Ur ^IZ-WHEEL.-TRAILED: STORM WINDOWS. VINYL 'rtdtag. TnstatteB'-.or; materials only. For n J<* C.FE 5-9545, FHA Tor At -ho money LlcenseiT.-lntured, ORNAMENTAL IRON PORCH AND Step Ratling eoroera,_tod toga —tons CABINETS, 1870 G| FE 4-4380. ____ PEARSON'S FURNITURE -Ml ■ to 214 1. Pike, ' • • Aiftr PIUOIDAIRX 4 -'WiMira1 **6lec-I pumpe. ^0*'wmpp'pumpil Cone' portable^ dish washer, | Renta). FE 0-0442 045 each. Also Ollder 45. MI 4> rnrwAtos 67 Call FE 5-9M5. 13-INCH MAONE8IUM wheels. Cheap. MT 3-2802. -to BTU, LUX AIR OIL FURNACE. Exc. condition. Reasonabla, MA 5-1801 - MA 5-2537. * ~ OE AUTOMATIC WASHER EXCEL-condition, FE 5-5251 GIBSON REFRIOERATOR, <35 Ward's rafrigerator. 520. Motorola . 315. MUford- 685- OOOD CONDITION, ll-FOOT PRIG ldalrej refrlgsrator. OL 1- HOTPOINT ELECTRIC STOVE. BOTPOINT AIR-CONDITIONER, ton. -220 ‘volt. R. B. Munro Ele trie (toff 3-8421. ------ HIDE-ABED. — CALL FE 2-25 NTIQUE household IN ______ AUTOMATIC TAPPAN AND MAOiC Chef gas ranges, closing out 4 models at these unbelievable only regul LIKE NEW ELECTRIC YELLOW stove rotlsserle. coat approximate-ly 5298. MI 4-0091. AUTOMATIC OAS HEAT I LIVING. ROOM SET; 2 If L O O R 230 Whtaemore 1 MOVED TO 210 E. PIKE - PEAR -eon'e Furniture. ■ ________ MAPLE DINETTE WITH BUTCH Michigan Applianc* Co. 3252 Hwy. 673-0688, . 'AiroflUHl WaBI ___ _jw furniture, cloth- Auburil Height* MobUe ■ off Opdyke Rd. 220 Red Drive. Friday and. Satunlay new and Used 9x12 rugs Passed Jotrn.R 052.-2444. . DIN I FURNITURE MOVMD PEARSON' to 210 E.___________ CEILINO TILE .........Be ft. UP Plastic wto til* . le Each TtaH JloartntWs sq. yd BfcO TUe FE- 4-0957. 1075 W. Huron REFRIOERATOR. 525: ELECTRIC I. 425; j I, FE 5-2704 V, Mtofta. HHHHBI ^ HUNTERS A HD service workers. 1165 Chevrolet %-ton vanette body truck. 6-ft. high Inside by 16% ft. long.' Camp In Tt or use as traveling —-* OR 3 REFRIOERATOR. at these unbeUevat .v.... f only reguter 4WT--w 4206.50. 3 only tegular S374.M w $174.65. 3 only regular 4206.»5 r 4150. 1 only r ___________________for Phllga* or natural. Fmanolng Arranged. Phillips PetroleunTTo" 2625 Or- vented heaters. Priced front $54 complete with thermostat. Thomp-M-M "West. AUTOMATIC S lN.Q'E'j., ctolnct. srws buttoni. French Know designs, ete. Without ettWfiWrtnte. Only 9 payment* of HE remaining. Ouaranteed. MtOblfto Neeehi- ALL STATE 1 WHEED' 'TRAILER -id tarpaulin. $45. VW -i—“ ige rack and taimaulli .silent condition. OL l-ll BATHROOM FIXTURES. Oil AND ... __________ water and steam holler. Autoiaetta water heater. Beidwece. elnti a—Me* crock and pipe and fittingx- Lowi Brothers Paint. Super Kemto and Rustoleum. Bottle Gas Installation 2460 lb. ejrltadiite .^nd-^riiul^gent ^72. ° FE 4- JIO S PHONE 662-1580 LAVATORIES COMPLETE. Si value. 41495. Aleo bathtubs, lets, shower stalls. Irregulars, 1 rifle values. Michigan Fluoresci 393 Orchard I • POODLE PUPS, OROOMINO AND HAMMOND CIJORD ORGAN ♦ walnut With bench and lota "-el music. $475.00, term*. • - - MORRIS MUSIC I s: Tologranh Rd. ^ ^Ft 2-6547. is from- Tel Huron WITH TREE LESSONS FOR w Rental Per Week GRINNELL’S PONTIAC DOWNTOWN STORE 3-4216. POODLES. AKC, DARWIN DAZ-'illng Dandy apricot English Toy at stud, also white toy and blaek miniature. Puppies. Parakeets, Canaria*,- sages and supplies. Tropical fish. Cranes, 2468 Auburn.. UL 2-2208. REGISTERED POMERKNUN PUP- y. 448, OL I- Auction WftbMr Lake Rd. 30 74469. B AUCTION SALES -EVERT WEDNESDAY 7:38' P.M. EVERY. FRIDAY 7:38‘P.M. EVERT SATURDAY EVERY SUNDAY " Sporting Goods —_—_ Hinit ;• Door Prises Every Auction Wt buy-ssll—trade, retaU 7 day; -peeling paint It oreaines. ys.ee per gal. Pi line of Olldden Paints. Warwl.-Supply Co.. 247S .Orchard .Lake Rd. 682-2828. LAUNDRY TUB. — BUILT , copper and galvanised igt. plumbing tools, heat- Sand—Gravgl-Dirt FilT terche*'; CAST IRON GAS FIRED -HEATING bettors, - including controls, slees from &.000 ta 240.0M BTU, priced <130. Thompson, 7005 M59 ' t*T lathe, seaflolds. aluminum ea-tension . ladders,' builder's level. > Come took around. If there ii anything 1 haven't pnenttoned. phone end ask. 1606 MWdlebelt Rd. Saturday and Sunday I Ie 6. Phone 6836480. J . "FORD TRACTOR. HILLTOP TRAIL- > welder. teots. Tl processed road gravel <141 . yd. *0 a 40 <1.46, cushion sand and fill dirt 160 a yd. washed tend. American Stone Product*. 4335 6h**ha-■ Rd. MA 5-1161. iC-1 BLAtK DIRT — TOP BOIL, sand, gravel, tUL Roes. Judd Ferguson. OR 3-(~ icaNpino top soil, _______INDSCJ black dirt fill, aravi_ „ ' nurse. FE 4-4228 icott Lake Rd. broken up bide walk for re- delivered. FB 5-9M1. . SELF PRO- PEACHES $2.99a^BUSHEL $2.997rB«SHEL 3913 Auburn Rd. Near 'Adeqn Rd appLes. peaches. pia4y BARTLETT PEARS 161 COOKER ROA PHONE 682-0601 fo., . hogs 25c lb., many . aides ima SPECIAL FALL PRICES ' Wa-Wa Travel Trailen TRAVEL TRAILERS light weight. eeU Fleet Wing end contained trail- IXlQaBTD] i. aia?. imraMMi___ condition. 335-6903 or FE 44W cellent condition, ______________I_________*ni aervloe. fi ei eellnrtlee.JUae pertP'. cessories. Bob Buttommu.' Home Sales, Ino. 4301 Dixie Hwy.. Drayton Plains, OR 34202. Mobile home I Van Dyke. UxM. 2-badroam. d condition. Couple going over--. 1946 LakevlUe lBL Utoi OXFORD TRAILER " SALES wide Marleftae, Stewart*. «i M24. MY 2-0731. Parkhurtt Trailer Sale* FINEST IN MOBILE UVJBO 13 tt “ 'let. Featuring New Meon-Buddy SALES SIZZLER TIME NOW ATBOB HUTCHIN80N Savings galore oq new loti's and used mobile taM^t— “ DETROITER, ALMA and Ml* hi 8tep 4 ur presen onln of A Bolt Hutchinson Mobile homes . 4301 DtXte Highway OR 51k) Drayton Plata* ... Opto • I* • 'Dally 8*1. M Sun. 144 --------AT hURON Jfptot^toj FE 4-9743_______ Aquartaa. — Rd. %'ml.N. ofAqhurq Rd P*ARS T° acvu CALL 335-I*40. 6070 Elisabeth Lake Rd. w» Aott Accmirt— 1946 CBBVYi MOTOR » OOOD k FECK, 13EtOI& ; THIRTY-SIX THE PONTIAC VRKSS FR»A¥t .AUGUST .8», 1968 3ff ft t««ti Mi AcmmHn ' W ■ Oi lMr mV» ut .. mk x nS1**.*.* * *— 54 Hour larvtca on gteenajHM - lam usmzamaP- warn** Mwe Sure You Can Stop BRAKES • RELINED FORD—CHEVROLET— .. PLYMOUTH •SPECIAL!' : $19.391 I | Regular $26.95^ \,: ' | . r Included ’ i Lining anqulp. jauat sen. Call OR 3-4411. 5? FOOT MIDLAND BOAT. IS Mo WWff-JpMlrt} stnall embln. $250. Walt's Boat Ltrery. Pontiac . £& condition. sacrifice MM. FE 1T-POOT CHRIS CRAFT. 185 HOR8E-pover. four wheel trailer and cover. »1 jae Phene PR MT71,______ id FOOT CHRI8CRAFT CRUISER. ALL ALUMINUM : ODAY SAIL BOATS , CANOES—PONTOON BOATS . BfMSTS-nncirn MERCURY - scorr INBOARD-OUT DRIVES WE SERVICE ALL MAKES VACATION SPECIALS Several /Iberglas runabouts ebm-aieto with electric Evtarwdee or MwdBfct* Men! for skltnt, from mss *iin ■ •it' ', alighUr scratched, _ rag. tut, • slightly weathered 8100. PAUL A.YOUNG, Tnr. 4030, mate Hwy. OR 4-041 One I days i tiful Martha. -—P ter. Tfsliiljrt heads. Fenten? 1 VACATION IS OVER AT TONY’S MARINE Terrific discounts os all heat) supplies. Try OUT lfl repair -service backed1 by 37 years experience. 3805 Orchard Lab&Jtd.. Keego. CorsTrucks 101 • —- Y25 MOftte r Mat high grade used ALWAYS 9KJYING AMD PAYING MORE FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS ASK PCMt BERIOS AT - BIRMINGHAM CHRY$LETt•'PLYMOUTH INC. >13 » Woodward____MI T-32M Forsign Cars . PM CARS —FREE TOW I --TOP 35 SC ALL FE 5-8142 SAM ALLEN ft SON BBC. FOR THAT -TOP DOLLAR" I SHARP LATE MODEL CARS. Averill's Mar Dima Hwy. LLOYDS BUYING Good Clean Cars 2023 Dixie Hwy, MOT sio-tdR sales v ‘ More Money 1 FOR SHARP LATE MODELS mjT-STATE MARKETS \ 3527 DIXIE HWY. QB4-3300 \ MANSFIELD . \ Auto Sales 1076 Baldwin Ave. 3-15.5000 a* Sr prices paid: Sullivan at BiHek Pon-tiftc Sfrles in f ‘ GLENN'S WANTED: 1M9-1W3 CARS Ells^jTorth IHtd Auto-Truck farts 1M 1 HOW ABD\C~RACB CAM FOR- —» cubic In. Chevy. MA 5-g«M. cheap. MY 3-23IH. New and Used Trucks 193 1555 -2 TON CHEVROLET TRUCK, good condition. 5460 Orchard Lake Road. Homestead Orchards of MA Mill before IS — — , ALLOY STERLING TRAILERS CAMP TRAILERS—MARINE PAINT SPORTING GOODS-ACCESSORIES AljUMA-CRAFT o and W OLASTRON | ]$S8 OMC 1 TON. EXCELLENT . _____ ■- t Condition, .. TON CHEVROLET PICK Up. Good condition. 3475. M W. RUtgera; after ***“ -w 1 X CRUIBE-OUT BOAT SALES O E. Walton 3 40 t FE 4-440 XLEAR-T-HE DECKS! Barrington Boat Works iota S. Telegraph t&. 338-8833 Odea Fri. ftp CLOSE ! OUTS ; All Boats Reduced { ■ Big Discount -—• . FlMrglas—Renken Clipper-Craft [. i Alumtoum—Mlrro-CraSTMeyers t Trailers—Alloy. Dllly. Meyers ! i Motors— Scolt. Bundy, Neptune 1 ; Warden’s Cycle Sales 4755 Dll dr”8 HYDRO . i SAILBOATS - CA IP PEfi CENT OFF—I J , , ACCESSCffilE Winter s boatlandI --lUS M. Osdrke (M24) FE 4-0924 DAWSON'S CLEARANCE—USED 10' X»erocrafl atum "hinabour. StS Mermaid alum boat. 5125. 14* Aqua Kaa alum, boat: $135. 141 flberglas runabout. 5250. 18* Cleveland cruis- ---pr and trader. A4M ^Prices Slashed aU’hew and used merchandise, discounts on 1983 Evinrude r l»5l DODGE pickup, good condition ‘ *,. 513 1951 FORD Pickup . ..... 561 1951 CHEVY $251 11UTCHIXSOX SALES MM P^idwtn Rd —Oingriville TEPlfifi? 1M FORD FI00 PICKUP. OOOD condition. $650 or best oiler. 682- inTtr ...__________________ I960 FORD PICKUP. EXCELLENT jhape. 20900 actual tniies. $1001. . Phone - 092-1600,. between 9 a m. FORD TRUCK. F 750. dcr. standard transmission, radio and heater? whitewalls. JEROME FERGUSON. Rochester Ford) Deal-ffTOtMni. Better Us^dr Trucks GMC' SAVE On Auto Insurance-*-. Now Aetna- Auto-RUe Policy eayea careful drivers REAL MONEY. 92LIM liability. 91.150 medical. U.9M death beneftt. 589,9m uninsured motorist coverage. . $1100-QU ARTFRLY' ■s 917 M Next M WHAT* AUTO INSURANCE WN07 ANYJQRIVER HOW? - . SRF US -i E INSURANcfc For COMPLS S MOTOR C______ . JOIN NOW! FRANK_A; ANDERSON AGENCY New and Used Cyra 106 Nsw ww^llstd Cara' 106 105 1997 METROPOLITAN HARDTOP, redlo. heeler, whllewalli. esc. con-dHlaa, 9*75. FE 44311. Ml VW - OOOD CONDITION. 3275 __________OR 3-1787 138 VW—*735 — DAVES BARBER i, 745 N. Fen !9M 8IMCA 4-DOOR SEDAN, miles lo tbs (allon. 3297. LIQUIDATION lot, - ' 150 S, Saginaw ' .’ ■ ■ FES4071 .... , IMS CHEVY. V-3 STICK. body, meter >ood. SIM. FE 343M, S3 CHEVROLET. vT. ST&K. full liquidation price 337. Assume *l” LIQUIDATION11 LOT 185 Oakland Across from Pontiac Aid Building. :?«cSS!Ka:lK' Use. INI Joslyn. Gordon s Pufs Oil Service. FE 34398. ■ ■ ^ i*»“'CHEVY Y n1w RINGS. Ills. Phone 625-8865. m. Pontiac sports car 7 Auburn. CaU gS.UH/ T if w mmTT. jondltlon. ,CaU S44-831S after 8. dloNand1 heater, white- CHEVY — 18ft CONVERTIBLE -pricAprily 5495. ' ■'>■- ■^ Excycondlllon. $550 338-4629. * TSXMOTORS *, BmEMBHC 1M1 StMCA 4 N owner, radio \ walls. Full prlos __ SURPLUSES in 8. Saginaw street 1988 AUSTIN EEALET 53M DR Luxe, wire wheels. mkSKelln X tires. AM-FM radio.* jxtrai. MA 1957yr&HEVY CONVERTIBLE. odneMftw top, SMS. 626-1137. . jam CHEVROLET STATION WAGON VI, automatic, radio and heater, 1161 VW SEDAN I960 Ford Ranch Wason t 7M AUTOBAHN • Motor Sales, Inc. 4456 Huron M-~5»> 1 OR 44468 1383 AND VQLK8WAGENS. SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 OAKLANP AVE. i hand. Name your i excellent financing. Immediate «<-livery. AutbOTtaed dealer for Jaguar. Triumph. MO. Auston Healey. Sunbeam. Morgan and Flat. SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 OAKLAND AVE. Birmingham Trade IMF W Moor sedan, radio, on owner, sharp 1 Full price W95. Oi YearWarranty. Lincoln - Mercury . BOBBORST ™T)LIVER -RENAULT- .... looking for » ionsull Is &e answer. RENAULT DAUPHINS •RENAULT R-g . ...... Renault “Authorized Dealer1' OLIVER -BUICK and JEEP Comer HWusnd Ceaa Volkswagen MARMADUKE By Anderson dTXeeming • v;/ HUTCHINSON SALES 38M BsMwIn Rd.. OtagehrlUe FE 5-2741___________FE 84357 1956 FORD 8-DOOR. VERY CLEAN. EM 5-4081. Conway, dealer. /ft®-} - ■ 1957 FORD STATION WAOON, eXc,' Condition. FE 5-4333. • 1957 FORD FAIRLANE 300, 'BLACK 2-door, haidtop, FE 3-0687. . 1131 CHEVY POWER STEERING. 1960 CHEVY IMF ALA, OOOD_CON-auto,, boot offer, 962-7241> l“‘ 1999 CHIVY WAOON. AUTOMATIC 2s-*l»3w Hi m I 50. -J-speed, l _/ 19OTV CHEV1 ilR cylinder, r 185* CHEVROLET “IMPALA11 CON-steerlng. stitomatlc transmission, radio, heater and other extras. Sporty silver blue finish with a brand new white top end ■ exc. whitewall tires. A fine iwrform- writing for one year. Our. low full price Is only *3*5 and easy terms can bo-arrawed - Ut your budget BIRMINGHAM ' CHRYSLER-i - PLYMOUTH 13 B. Woodward Are. MI 7-8814 1958 Chevrolet Impala Sports coupe. V-S engine, with, a standard shift, beautiful Erm'--turouolse. radio, f~ Ills. This II a bt ...roughout. 8395. Crissman Oievroiet Go.. 1*5* CHEVROLET *'STICK SHIFT ' ' 8-cylinder 2:door with radio, heater and new whitewall tires. Sharp tu-tone white and turquoise finish With neat matching Interior trim. A good economical family cer that Is guaranteed In writing for one year. Our low full price Is only 1353. Easy terms can be arranged to • fit y0tlfBIR^INr,HAM . CHRYSLER * PLYMOUTH, INC. 912 8. Wobdward MI 7-3214 1997 CHEVROLET* 2-DOOR WITH Vt l engine, automatic transmit*1" .per m 2023 Oakland A 1*30 CHEVY 335 HORSEPQH^jR,.. ■ speed, 13,500 ml. 4040 Baldwin. , IEVROLET BISCAYNE. 6-** "J‘- -*-' beater; .white-Rd., ORION. 196) CHEVROLET BEL'AIR 4-DOOR eedan. V-3 engine. PowerglldCt radio, heater, whitewalls. Llgh | blue fidtsh. Only I1M5, Easy terme. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., . MM* 8. (WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM- MI 4-2735, .31 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4-DOOR sedan. 3-eyllader. Powergllde, radio. heater, fawn beige finish. Only 11.495. Eagy terms. PATTERSON CHEVftOLET CO. 1000 S WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. MI AIM do 'msr pi ir further Informs turn cau sir. O’Hara. Credl manager. k^j, BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Ave. Ml 3-3900 1961 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2-boOR . hardtop. 3-cyllnder.. standard shift, radio. Mater, whitewalls. Low mile? age. spare still new. Light, b)ue,fln-ish. Only UM. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 100* 8. WOODWARD AVE BIRMINGHAM ;i98i CORVETTE, 4 SPEED. 270 . 2 11.754. EM 3-4202 116 1053 FORD 2-DOOR. REBUILT XN- S£/irssggi».-■y t*3t FORD CONVRRTiELX. llfl. 1057 CHEW 3-door 1*57 PONTUC-MM ., 1057 BUICK MMHte1' . ••** HILLMAN. 4-door ■ Nsw and Itasd Cars IMk CONTINENTAL. EXCELLENT UlM miles. $005. 1050 UmcoLN Premier. User hardtop, lull powtr, sharp! Full price. I1.2M, One ywpr warranty. ^ BOB BORST mileage. 334-5348. 1930 MERCUET TWO, DOOR HARP-top 8250. FE 4-0003, Mo4pl Clearance Sales f styles and colar* Tap trade value an peasant oar. Slop la ay and see Why pra foot that are Pentlae'i tap trader. PERIOR RAMBLER ^SOiOAkLAND AVE. NtwaRdllMdiCm J06 I90T MERCURY 2-DOOR IUS619F. red and black .... MM 1057 Dodge Moor auUunalte- 33M 1899 Fora Moor. V*. Stick .... *7*5 UM OldsmobUe .... *43* JEROME "Bright Spot" 24-HOUR SPECIAL Matthews-Hargreaves FE 4-4547 Nsw and llsod Cin BUY'. Thle 198! Tempest station wagon. Straight Mift, aharp as a task- $139Down’ WILSON pontiac-cadjllaC „ 1350 K Wob3ward I_____ halor an White. A sharp, ear la goad condition. Prl-vete. 9375. MA 6-1734. 1*57 FORD CONVERTIBLE, POWER STEERING, RADIO. HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. WHITE SIDEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. PAYMENTS OF 519.75 PER MO Sen Mr. Parka it Harold Turner F 1357 FORD 6 SEDAN. STANDARD sklfi, very 1 nice; FE 3-7542. H. Riggins, Dealer. 1958 FORD '.FAIRLANE. 2 DOOR, looks like kardtap. VS lntercepler motor, auto., power steering. 5375. MY 3-1182. ____________ . derblrd special _____ 5195. UL 2-5175 after .. >58 FORD, <4 DOOR HARDTOP, VI. Crulse-o-mstlc. radio and hehter. Full power, whitewall*, solid black, extra nice. *990. JEROME FER-OUSON. Rochester Feed Dealer. 1968 FORD 1 - DOOR. VS. NICE --, complete. UmMIUNLOT *• 150 S. S 1 — __ FORD HlTON WAOON. RA- DtO. HEAtBR. ECONOMY ENGINE, WHITE SIDEWALL TIRES. STICK SHIFT. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. PAYMENTS OF 519 75 PER MO. See Mr. Perks at Harold Turner Ford. Ml 4-7500, 1050 T-BIRD BLACK-HARDTOP, exc. condition, no rust, California ear 01.450. Ill SSSS. 50 FORD OALAXIK 2-DOOR. V-l stick, real nice ear. 9788. LLOYD** 2023 Oakland. / FORD OALAXIE. 2 DOOR hardtop, power steering, brakes, radio. auUmiatle ^trarvunUsion. tur- 1961* CHEVY ■*, Ion fleeteldl 1908 CHEVY P CONVRRTTBLE -wins m. bicH-t~ HOMER HIGHT MOTORS INCr- v-- I Chevrolet - Pontiac - Bulck OXFORD ~ -- -- -»«3 CHEVROLET ~BISCAYNE, 'oor. automatic, radio and hei— ihltewaliruDON'S^USED_CAR_S^_677 lS CORVAIR 700 SERIES..4 teat belts, radio, heater, by owner, 5)395, Phone Rgcherterjl31-SS41. - Chevrolet-i mpala - Convertible. 387 VS automatic posl-traction axel. Sharp. 88.105. _. Van Camp Chevrolet Milford - 1 mu 4-1085 1962 CHEVROLET IMPALA CON-vertible. .VS engine. Powergllde, power steering and brakes. Autumn gold fiSGS: Only 82.215. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE , BIRMINGHAM mTBw- JJ66R* CHEVY H 2 DOOR, 4 CYLIH, tier, standard trahsmTsslon. radio and heater, whltewallsk 1 owner 51295. JEROME FEROUSDWv.Ro. Ford Dealer. OL (1-9711._| _ _ _ UPEH "Sports 283 engtn Call MY 3-1550. 1982 CHEVY II . NOVA 2-DOpR. BOBBORST Llncoln-Mercury ----550 8 Woodward Aw. *- Birmingham- ’ 1958 CHEVROLE1 MISSION. WHITE SIDEWALL TIRES ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. PAYMENTS OF S84.75 PER MO. See Mr. Parka al Harold Turner Ford. MI 4-7800. JL958. CHEVY. 4-DOOR ____________ 8 ^Dealer. 48» Dixie. OR 3-1733. 9 CHEVY SHARP. 1 9. IMPALA DELUXE. 1959 CHEVROLET BROOKWO0D station wa(on. 0-cylinder, standard transmission, power steering, a real sharp watqn. 8817.* Suburban Olds 565 3. Woodwi 1959 CHEVRl BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH. INC 912 8. Woodward .MI 2-331* CORVAIR MONZA 900 - factory. A real buy. • • J1295, • WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward^ 1 ‘ ' ' ' ‘ 4-19301 106 walls. Extra eleah. 01.1*5. Easy terms PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 S. WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735,__ . 1989 CHEVROLET t-DOOk .ATATION wagon. Just Ilka new. On* owner. No money down. * LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" HO g, isiinow ----FE 4-8214 1050 CHEVROLET RfAOON.. 6-CYL- Ford Dealer.'OL 1-9711, 1002 FALCON RANCHERO PICKUP. . radio and heater, automatic, whlto-. walla. DON'S USED CARS. 677 “ Lapeer Rd- MY 2-3841. 1962 CHgyy PICK V P, LONG Masurek Motor and Ml 845 3 Blvd. E. * - | l*is FORDur F-239, H TON PICKUP. VB, standard transmission, radio and heater, factory official truck. JEROME FEROUBON. Rochester Feed Dealer. OL 1-9711. • Forris . . “FORDS ____Clean-Up ' .SALE — AIT Models — Cars and Trucks and onla e It huFb t tire. *“whleh 1 the sharpest 1 kind*-around, iw duel ninety aoo. You mr-‘ 1 beauty —> ile price of only'31107, Suburban-Olds 565 g; Woodward * -. . ^ Ml 4-4485 Birmingham Trade 4961 BUICK Le8sbre Moor hen ■ top. automatic Tiidts. belter, Powi - dtthm. IMl frill WiXd, One yw TOB BORST BUICK—1962 CONVERTIBLE. FUU Marvel Motors • _________________ 0 CHEVY CONVERTlHLE‘_Rl tick. 348 engine, clean. 31395. heater. wWtewe V-*. FowergUde, pow •r steering *nd.hrake6, radl er, 'wbllepaUs, sSUd whit* Extra clean. PATTERSON CBEV ROUST CO. 1033 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4j735. 1 M* CHEVY 4-DOOR HARDTOP VS automatic.—sharp, reasonable -* tor. 5754835. rtte CHEVROLET BISCAYNE. hew tires, tend condition — mileage. M75. MY 5-tnoe Hard too. ’58 CHEVROLET Station Wason. $197 $197 $97 $97 $197 •$i97 $297 MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM FE 5-9231 Opcii Slon.-Fri. 9 to 9 Sat. 9 to 6 FE 5-9232 ' ___;__________________l.___ PAYMENTS. OF 028 75 PER IJO.j Ml 4-7500. t Harold Turner' WHITE SIDEWALL TIHl Mr. Parks at Harold Turner Ford. MI 4-7500. _____ • ' 1(60 FALCON 2-DOOR DELUXE. 6-cylinder, outomatlq.^^n*'jj»tltes. Suburban Olds 865 S. Woodward ; BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 6 g. Woodward Ave. Ml 0-3000 60 FALCON. NEW PAINT. NEW LUCKYTOrO~5ATES "Pontiac's Diseount I^t*’ '• " Sagliytu 1001 FORD 8-DOOR. V-8, STICK. L radio, white walls. Excellent cond OL 1-0170. - -_____«g-* 1962 ford galaxie son 2 door hardtop. V*. swlan^ymkllc.* radio and heater, .power steering, lown-*er, extra sharp S1996. JEROME I- FEROUS«Nt Rochester Ford Dealt-1 or.Otl-mi. • ; [■ 1962 FORD GAJL.AX1E CONVERT-in re,. p0Wer."exc. condition, Sl-5A54f „ 1962 FORD GALAXIE SO "1. -cruise-G-niftlic.—radl •leering. « DOOR. atid' It la aliirah-’ ____ ________________________ iecd i“ writing for a full year.j- Jn'eatnul"Ttalth/'exira sharp. Jfc-Exterior la a beauttful aolt rote- ROME FERGUSON. Rochester wood capped with light beige, Dealer. OL PfTll. urloualy^"trPmmed ‘Snd'u U ^ »g8 VALODN, nJT^A~CONyERT-mSe. Our price X, only 031M *—• and final -- . INGHAM CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH, ^ 673-2607.________________________ 1060 DODGE "PHOENIX V-0" 4- door hardtop,''"has.....automatic transmission, power steerfelT'and. brakes, radio, heater, whitewall ---- and c^hr- “*——1 1(63 1 with red i J BIO LOW sporty red ' black Interior BARGAIN at PRIOR jpf 0&L BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER • PLYMOUTH ** - "foogward MI 7-3314 1*57. DeSOTO ADVENTURER _ door htedlop. full power. MA 6-5809 I960 DeSOTO HARDTOP. AUTO-matic. power steering and brakes. Sharp rust free California car - 8805. *2012 Kohler, Drsytorn Plain*, - > - TJ61 DODGE LANCER STATION wagon, automatic, radio, heater whitewall Urea. Light green finish Only $12*5 Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 6. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM.! MI <-2735. • < You Can $149 Down WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward Birmingham. • TRADES Eveiy used car offered public GUARANTEED > - PLUS MANY OTHER FUTURES ARE STANDARD EQUIPMENT ON 'THE ^—Just To.Remind You That'We E)o Not Have A ' LIQUIDATION SALE ' ^STORAGE SALE AUCTION SALg _ - GIVEAWAY SALE BUT - FANTASTIC DEALS ' a • wr arb -BUT- A FEW 1963 RAMBLERS VE. ARE NOT OVERLOADED-BfiCAUSE WE - ; HAD A |IG, BIG YEAR-ttBIG DEALS ALWAYS ■- ,-L Say Compare-- The 1963 RAMBLER IT HAS WON BOTH MOTOR TREND’S “CAR OF THE YEAR” -AWARD AND WINNER IN ALL CLASSES OF THE MOBIL "ECONOMY RUN (FROM, LQS ANGELES TO DETROIT): ‘"“T* ’ , It Has Such-Outstanding ', u Features as: •Twin Master Cylinder^ i WHICH MEANS YOUR BRAKES WILL NEVER FAIL) Self Adjusting Brakes (WHICH ELIMINATES BRAKE ADJUSTMENT) 'j| , Generators, Starfef’*L0istributof and Steering Lubricated for Life Muffler and Tail Pipe*® 1 CERAMIC COATED AND GUARANTEED!. FOR LIFE OF ORIOINAL OWNER -Galvanized Rocker Panels' PLUS SPECIAL PRIMER DIFPINO * ’ Lubricate Chassis „ ONLY EVERY 33.000 MILES Change Oil U MONTHS OR Guaranteed ■ ,ES (NO FRORATINO CHAROE*) Radiator. Coolant. THE, PONTIAC PRKSgi FRIDAY, AUQgSX.y), 1963 :0 THIRTY-SEVEN- Mew and Utsd Cart 106 New and Iliad Cm down. HI M nor dto; „ . . • . LLOYD’* , HM Oakland Ave. „• HI 14044 nil MERCURY STATION WAGON. • with * fin* parformlni v-l engine . aid equipped with auto-0*Ue transmission, ndlo, heater »nd new" whitewall Ur**. Very clean interior ud nice • un %nuh mom exterior flnlih. Her* if OMoUoni trar-------- — .ran.porti r low discount price If only • and easy tome nan b* ar-iged to fit your budget. BIRMINGHAMH „ 1YSLER . PLYMOUTH «W $11 Woodward. 19U MERCURY MONTEREY HARD-MR- new mode*, tire* and ■■wdann toed paint, mm. EmhHS- SIMMONS 50RD Clearance of AH 1 1963 CARS and . • TRUCKS Rfit SIMMONS FORD' ____ Ml 8. Lapeer Road 1 Orion My Mill m i$0 Mercury "V-*" i-door sedan, fit* sUndard shift I transmission, radio, healer and excellent whltswtn tires. This is f a food died* ear that performs and -handles very jslefly. And it ’ IT flkrantsed in vrifirt. for it full year. We- will arrange terms • to suit you and the full price is only «j». - * BIRMINGHAM :. CHRY«L*R . PLYMOUTH 8U fl WnodnarA___Ml T-308 ■ HflO MERCURY' Now and Uted Car* iWOnbland / DOOR DELUX. _____ hit* Want. esc. ffoffiJon. Must sell. fuiirprioiAto. IW COMET 4-DOOR STICK. KAMO and ’ heater, whitewalls. DON'S U*OD CAM. 877 g. Lapeer Ed. ORION, MYtf-2041. 1M7 OLDS, 0. POWER BTCiRINO * —■* brakes, good Ur*s. I extras, wner exe. condition. MOO. MA clean. $725. OR 3-1888, 1963 Mercury. Colony........ Park Wagon. Black, power brakes. \#Z buy, my e^uItL^Call after | SELLING OUT) ^ALL 1963's CbStorJELGW CREDIT APPROVED OVER PHONE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY DEALERS INVITED FCf» INFORMATION CALL-., fj; MR. O'HARA ^™*»u n MR. O HARA ' BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER «* SOUTH WOODWARD AVE, BIRMINGHAM MI 8-3900 : DODGE, INC.'-.; 211 S, SAGINAW ' ■' . FE S-45*! -- .USED CAR #: @(RI?(tlTR(i!@ !$Ca ALL CARRY 2 YpAR GW WARRANTY ’ll BUICK 8-DOOR Sedan. -Oltamlng broniamlrtHt; matching Interior. Pull factory REDUCED REDUCED i '83 DODGE, BUCKET SEATS i»rd top with largt 3S3 CC en->. Gorgeous one-owner trade- >81 MONZA. BUCKET SEATS Birmingham trade. Marine blue, sporty floor shift model. Priced REDUCED •p\T—li-NT T/">ITTr\ '5$ CHEVY HARDTOP tinDy vhU igd.^^.^n,,ns,d‘ . V8: VACANT WAGON REDUCED HUGE PRICE REDUCTION NOW T-JT-1Y-\T T/^'P'TN ’ '#1 0LDS HARDTOP nLUUOLD . ~’80 fOBD FAIRLANfL^Wr T-\ TTI-^ T T/^TTTN ^ubtertot.w's nhUUL/hiU milPi . REDUCED ____'80 FALCON-CUSTOM Automatic, radio, heater, brand now rubber. Not a scratch or mark. Priced to ami this week. REDUCED YOU WILL. SAVE AT SPARTAN REDUCED- ctstories including power. Uko •«0 QLDB HARDTOP. Super "IS". Loaded i including p trade-in REDUCED 'll FORD HARDTOP 3-Door, clean car. This Is ready to go. Any redsonable offer end you Will drive it awey. 1 PLYMOUTH. HARDTOP (torn rad and white Helve-• Automatic and full fee- REDUCED; •60 CHEVY WAGON Waa priced to cell at $1,08, now reduced HOP. REDUCED MANY OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM RFnTTPFn ruLJJu^n,u wbss*“- REDUCEDw mu? -la. prnT Trrn 41UJ UUniJ fsT*lfST T/*Vr»TS ' Hr 11 - I ( r- I I . This beautiful ear was priced dt 1 U—lLS VJ VVJLjX^' -gees, now reduced to dnly'STM. Many more in 'stock to choose fro|tn. Cottie in now and make your selection ! Credit no problem t Mm mt 211 S. SAGINAW -v . FE M0 actual miles.. Now ear guar-PATTER8(In *LDt CUTLESS CONVERT. 1962 F45 DELUXE STATION WAO-on. Fully equipped Including luggage reek. 1-owner Birmingham trade. Beautiful maroon with,white ' top. Bile priced at 0.395. * Suburban Olds 585 g. Woodwhrd Ml GIRL Catcher $375 Down "TPM Cadillac oonvertihl/ AU pewter. nearly now tires. A gleaming Mack beauty. White Interior. . WILSON PONTIAGCADJLLAC 1350, R Woodward llrmui«!i»m^-C_r mi A im ¥ Haw Iliad Cm 116 Birmingham Trade 1962 OLDS nju.mil 0 2-door herd- “bqbborst Llncoln-Maroury • IN ■. Woodward Av*. ____ CONVEBT- Ible. A ^eal honey for the money, ap white with red tnterlpr. lull gewer with 9Aoe actual miles, 0,- Suburban Olds IB 8. Woodward ~ Ml 4-880 wlip posl-tractlon. vinyl sport tap, huckst seats, radio, heater, whitewalls and much mor8. Only 8,000 mllw. Immaculate 0.1N. JEROME* . "Bright Spot" 1954 PLYMOUTH. EXCELLENT ME-chanleal condition, good, tires. cheap. OR 4-0080.___________ 1M5 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR. ENGINE IfOtCTH 1956 PLYMOI A-l rubber, 8125. 873-3131. H V-S AUTOMATIC, very Reliable, first __VALIANT 8-DQOR. radio. HEATER. ECONOMY ENGINE. WHITE SIDEWALL tIEE >. STANDARD TRANSMISSION- ABSOLUTELY MO MONEY OCWW PAYMENTS OP 128.0 PER MO. |es Mr. Parka 0 Harold Turner Pert. Ml 8-708. _______■ • 982 PLYMOUTH ’Y-l PURT”, 3* door hardtop hat special oriental red vinyl interior and black ear* ‘pot in vlvd contrast to the snow white finish. Fully equipped in* cludlns automatic transjplsslon. power eteerMs, and brakes, Itewall t ■ that • \ other ■extras. ' Buying getting * hew one. win \o'or. Automatlc. A very d< ear. See H and drive. Priced only 't $1895 Cheapies $75 and Up RUSS JOHNSON : PONTIAC-RAMBLER DEALER- ; Lake 'Orpin M-24 at the'^light .... * MY 3-6(266 -ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN JUST MAKE PAYMENTS u Car . • Full l Price Pay *. Wkly, ptr Full Price Pay Wkly. *0 Pontlec Hordton $497 $5.17 ■5$ Olds mobile 2-Door Hardtop $297 $2.73 * ... * If Chevrolet 2-Door $297 $2.73 ’0 Comet $697 $6.52 2-Door Hardtop ‘ $197 $2.12 $997 $10.24 $ .97 . $lsQ8 $197 $2!12 ^ $497 $5:17 $297 $2.73 - ;$397 $3.65 .$ 97 ■y PLUS MANY OTHERS TRADE-INS ACCEPTED; NO CREDIT PROBLEMS ; CREDJT MAN ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES TO OK . APPLICATIONS, EITHER IN PERSON OR BY PHONE LIQUIDATION-LOT 338-9661 : l 60' S. TELEGRAPH •; 338-9662 ACROSS FRolkl TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER A DETROIT BAI5K SALE ; •old by Am*. 38 — All eon recon-, dltlonea qaa warreatod for one year In writing. All that ii re-delivery U * CREDIT CHECKED BY PHONE FE 5-8150 1158 PONTIAC 4-door hardtop, sharp ear ......... .......$977.20 W POED.Wagon ........ I lisa UNCOLN Moor hardtop I 110 FORD Oalaxle 2-ddoT 107 MERCURY 2-door hardtop, runs good ...................... $49 FORD 8 cyl. stick overdrive M OLDS 2-door hardtop. lm trlrUDEBAKER Lark no ru»t ...... $l»5.( 1956 DeSOTO 2-door h'top ... 172.1 RUMMEL CAR -CO. • PONTIAC DIVISION 3152 KING-AUTO SALES " i^QUIDATlON LOT , . " ~ 7 DELIVERS WHEN OTHERS £ANNOT EVEN IF: *; 4 — YOU AR^ NEW IN MiCHIGAN-^AD A REPOSSESSION * HAVE NO CREDIT—HAVE BEEN BANKRUPT •NO: ■ RED TAP^-SIDE NOTES—SALARY NOTES—CREDIT NEEDED $5 DOWN' ‘ WE HANDLE 0UR OWN FINANCING ; . . YOU PAY DIRECTLY TO US *'57 FQHD- "ordO-Mstk $97 -O-Matlo. radio and heater. WEEKLY PAYMENTS 11.16 '58 CHEVY pdoof Sedan. 8, Powerglide, radio and h*t*r. $397 . WEEKLY- PAYMENTS M.88 '58 FORD 3-Door Sedan. S. Ford-O-Matlc. radio $197, WEEKLY PAYMENTS *2.21 2 Door Hardtop. 58 DODGE op. 8, automatic, ( $297- !. radio and heater. WEEKLY PAYMENTS 33.33 '58EDSEL*. - 8-Door Hsrdtpp. Radio and heater, S, eutometlc. $197; WEEKLY PAYMENTS 82.M '57 DeSOTO 8-Ddor Sedan; I, automatic, radio and $97 WEEKLY PAYMENTS $1.10 '57 MERCURY Commuter Wagon. I. automatic, radio and heater. $197 * WEEKLY PAYMENTS 0.31 - '59 PLYMOUTH $497 .yE2BKLY4AYMENTS 0.0 '58 PLYMOUTH r Sedan. stick shift, $97 t shift, radio end heetor. Weekly payments tus '57 FORD 1-O-MetU tran*.. i $197 Wason. I, Ford-O-Matle trane.. radio wild beater. WEEKLY PAYMENTS 12.11 '59 MERCURY *8-Door Sedan, t. automatic, radio and heater. $597 v. "• . . '59SIMCA ^ 8-Door Sodon. Clean. Whltewalla. $297 - - WEEKLY Pf^nfEMTS 0.11 OVER 200 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM CALL OR SEE OUR CREDIT MANAGER MR. COOK KING AUTO SALES CORNER W, HURON (M-59) ANO ELIZABETH LAKE RD. FE 8-4088—IF TOLL bALL; CALL COLLECT 1 MILE NORTHWEST OP PONTIAC— - PHONE APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED OPEN 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. DAILY — 9 A.M. TO 7 TM. SATURDAY $-5,000 REWARD Or Car of Yotir Choice, IfV/e CANNOT Put You ii .*\ Our Many Estate Storage Used. Cars. EVEN IF: YOU HAVE BEEN BANKRUPT - YOU HAVE BEEN IN RECEIVERSHIP YOU HAVE BEEN GARNISHEED YOU HAVE HAD A REPOSSESSION YOU HAVE BEEN TURNED DOWN BY OTHERS ^ ALL WE REQUIRE IS A STEADY JOB ’ . : Anyone can buy * car from us. Our finance company has had r good year, so they have a surplus of money, money, money. For a litnited .time only they lowered, their loan requirements, so—you eatv ouy a car from Es tate Storage Co. . y . '57 MERCURY, V 4-Door Sedan, V8, Automatic $197 ’ WEEKLY PAYMENTS $U1 '59 CHEVROLET 4-Door Station Wagon, Stick $697 WEEKLY PAYMENTS $6.« ^1358 PONTIAC Chieftain 2-Door Hardtop $397 WEEKLY PAYMENTS $4.41 ;58 CHEVROLET _ B^TAir 4-D6or Hardtop '~~Z ~ " $397 / WEEKLY payments $4.88 ; - ' '59EDSEL - Citation 4-Door Hardtop $397 . WEEKLY PAYMENTS $4.45 ■58 PONTIAC ' le Ccinvertibk :s, V8, Autoir $597- . WEEKLY PAYMENTS 00 Bonneville Convertible, Bucket Seats, V8, Automatic SPOT DELIVERY MINUTES CREDIT NO .PROBLEM PAYMENTS TO SUIT YOUR BUDGET! CREDIT MAN 4 ON DUTY' FROM 9 A.M. to ’* 9 P.M. '57 DODGE 4-Door Custom Wagon, V8, Automatic $197 , meekly payments 0U '57 CHEVROLET Convertible, V8, Automatic ''** -- $397 / WEEKLY PAYMlHfTS 0.0 1 ’59 FORD 4-Door, V8, Automatic ^ • ‘ $497 WEEKLY PAYMENTS $5.0 '57 CHRYSLER Grown Imperial, 4-Door Hardtop $497 WSpCLY PAYMENTS IMS . '58 OLDSMOBILE Fiesta 4-Door Station Wagon, Full Power $597 weekly payments 0.0 • .'57 CADILLAC Coupe DeViQe, Full Power $897 WEEKLY. PAYMENTS 0.0 ' - • ESTATE STORAGE GO. -.109 s. east Boulevard at auburn ; <■■■% PE3-7161T. ■ ' FE3-7162 THtET Y-BIQHT - K 4mt PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. AWOTEH 1063 % DOUBLE CHECKED. // USED CARS -WEEKEND SPECIALS-: 1959 BUICK 2-Door Hardtop, White*...$1295 1962 CHEVY, Auto., Blue, Whitewalls ..$1895 1961 BUICK Special, rBlack‘, 155 H.P. .. .$1695 196TSTAR. CHIEF, Low Mileage...., .$2J895. 1962 RENAULT 4-Door. ,1961 RENAULT Frel^c-cluch ......TT... WflHlENAUDT 4-Door, Black Finish 1959(RENAULT, 2000 Actual* Miles, Green 1959 BUICITElectra, Power, White .7. ^961 BUICK’Electra, Power, Blue ...... 1960 T-BIRQ, Automatic, Green Finish ,. pfiSMBUICK Skylafk,-Powder ... . jjl960 TRIUMPH, with 4.-.Sp»dr'Black §1960 COMET, Automatic, Black I , • T’t*.' ■ _; J1961 BUICK LeSabre with Power ...... 1960 MERCURY, Jower. Wliite Finish [I960 OPEL, Luggage Rack, Rose Finish } 095& CHEVY 6-Cyl., Stick, Rose Tihish 1962 BUIOC Special, Auto., Blue'Finish . •1962 CHEVY V8 with Automatic ....... 1962 RAMBLER Custom 400, Real Clean [1963 MONZA with 4-Speed Transmission .>595 $ 795 . .$1333 $2195 $1877 ..$2495 ..$495 ..$1095 ..$2175 ..$995 ..$ 895 ..$ 795 ..$2385 . .$1795' ..$168fc, $2295 -QLlVES BUICK 196-210 Orchard Lake - FE-28165 A BEAUTIFUL IMS PONTIAC 4-door Star Chit! Vista, fully equipped. 3,300 mtlf'i. O K. War-rmoty, S3.1T8. 682-2654. 106 N«w end UsmI Cars 'TUSS?_____________ 155 TKKPnf, 1 DOOR, (.000 .................... IMS POWTIAC GRAND PUX. AUTO With full pewV.M! SMI • isa poimAC. « door hardtop im_ wwhif,. "K«M ' lULIK. In. condition. OR I-SS1I. ms nrv» f siri'AMAir«'vi, ‘—-— «hlft. radlp, heater and WARD ATS.. " BIRMINGHAM. UO Wf______1_____ ble, power steering. 7,700 ■■ „■ |, „ ---PONTIAC CATALINA SPORTS joKrtor-HSIS ^ _. . I . moot, plus a full Dm of factory Installed accaaaortei. Like new. no opr waa our service mah-. ager'* demonstrator. In g effect shape. Boa Ken Krrtekeon, Credit manofor. WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC. If I. Woodward, Birmingham^ £ I jjfrjr 1»S» RAMBLER 4-DOOR SEpAN, radio, hnater. standard tranamls-alon. Birmingham one-owner. Metallic bloc matching Ulterior. SM down, fgawb u low he 4*1-33 per Tho. For further. Information. OaU Mr. O'Hara, ere- BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER ' SM f Woodward Are,- 1963 PONTIAC SPORT COUPS. RA-1 did and healer, whitewalls. double pewec.. whlte. DON’S USED CARS, *77 S. Lapeer Rd . ORION. MY IMS CATALINA 4-DOOR SEDAN, full per— HAUPT | SPECIALS r 1M0 RAMBLER 4-DOOR SEDAN. MflSKhS brakes, Custom IM1 *>Rk> Paiirtaoa SOO. 4 ISM PONTIAC Ootallno 4-door tedan. ~ radio. haaierr bydraro>H»i white-walls, little gem! 1 CATALINA sports coupe, hydrs-■ k. radio, boater, power steering MB iwsils, Mj |---------- 1 brakes, whitewall ISM CATALINA 4-door hardtop, hfl 1 dramatic, radio, heater, .pawn steering and brakes, whitewalls' law down payment. WE HAVB A FEW 1963 DEMOS THAT MUST GSH! TE MOFIC DEALS!- r STOP IN I DEAL TODAY I HASKINS OK- USED CARS SPECIALS Kg CHEVY Bel Air 4-door. 4-cylin-der engine.. FowerglMe transmission. radio, above ateriga condt- 960 CHEVY Blseayne I-door, gas-saving 4-cyllnder engine, StaMWrd transmlsalon. radio. baaUWill light IMS OLDS Starflra Hardtop. DEMO. HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds "Your Crossroads to Ssvtngi" U.s, 10 and MU MA 5-5071 MA S-lj IMS BONM'Kirhal’TittIWiATIRLE; I power, orsM Prts isr" -1-0751, ■__________' , vertlble. stick. After 4. MA HI A {beautiful' s«d end red lealW For further btesrmattem,MM O'Kam, credit manager. . BIRMINOHAM JO S. Woodward Aw. ■ SC o-SQM |il»OS RAMBLER 4-DOOR SEDAN, radio, bed ter, overdrive. Imma- none/, down. Peymggta motion, cktfnErIi,tl'Hl Information, edit manager. BIRMINOHAM -RAMBLER — S. Woodward Ave. mi »-3goo 10M RAMBLER 4 DOOR fcLACK $495. EM 3-6697. antomsUe ' price 01.095. -No money d< [■iwMfBiSaM B Woodward Ave-- MI 0.3000 I960 RAMBLER 0-PASSENOER 4-• station wagon, radio, hooter. 'white sidewalls. JH OM down, payment, _____________ 0S3.01 per mo. For further Infoi -matlon. call Mr. O'Hara, credit manager. manager BIRMINOHAM RAMBLER OM ,8. Woodward Ave. MI 0-3000 llHI jUERRSSADOR CUSTOM Take That Labor Day 4«unt in a “Pat7 Used —V' Payments aa low as S52.47 nor month. For turfpir 'Information call Mr.,O’Hara.'eredit manager. Birmingham rambler ' DO YOU LIKE A PONTlACf We are offering a 1960 Catalina 2-door In gleaming white w LI h power eteertng.' brakes, radio and hsater. Spotless, l'-owner car. wdd. Thurs., Frl. only. WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. • Woodward MONEY BACK Guarantee After .4 Full tuvi. 1943 BONNEWAMvComrertlble S3S95 JOHN MeAULIFFE 'FORD ; : , END OF MONTH SALE OF ■ A-l USED GARS- 1962 Ford 1961 Corvair ' ■ Galaxie ”500” :■4-Door Mon^a With a 4M angina, 4 .speed on MM flow and vinyl trim Ihreugb-outl See this beauty 1 With automatle transmission, radio, heater and whitewalla. Only— !. 12195 $1295 1961 Falcon 1962 Falcon i 2-Door Sedan . An out-of-state ear^’aad only— Wagon,' 4*Door With radio, boater, ~wBKeWalU and (tick shift. $995 ©695 • T957T-Bird. I960 Ford Soft Top Beautify ret^wtUi a white tw^ Fairiane 50b 4-Door with V-g, pvurdrive, ra-dlo heater and whltawalls Solid - “"$1595 blue. $1095/ 1962 Ford 4960 Ford "] * . Galaxie Hardtop 2-Door y , Jfi0? • beautiful Msok J 8 finish, stick shut wad a 4M 1 F engine. With, radio,' hsater, automatic-transmission and wnttewalW^.i 4. $2195 $995 1. 1962 Ford^ ^ „ 1962'Ford [. ■ ; Galaxie Convertible 1 4-Doir1 With radio, heater . and | automatte tranemlssloo. — Radio, heater, V-S engine, white-walls and power steering. I f ©795 — $2195 | 1960 Chevy 1959 Ford i 4-Door Wagon Galaxie 4-poor ■ With MtefMlte transmission, i radio, heater sad WhttswaUe.. With automatic . transmission, ’ radio, heater and whitewalls. ; ©295 $895 K59 Ford, 4-DoorSedan With, radio. Tiester. autopiatic ( $795 1962 Ford • Country Sedan h radio, heater. 1 1 whitewalls. Yours f $2095 •1963 Foid Fairiane 500 looe—with V-g engine, aut ,tlc transmission and whit Us. (MV • • J2195 /1960 Falcon 4-Door Wagon W|th radio, heater/ automatic I whitewalls. Yours for $995 V- 1962 Falcon Futitra 2-Dpdr - th radio, heator, whitewalls d beautiful finish. ' $1795 1966 T-Bird Hardtop .$2095 • JOHN'MeAULIFFE 6J0 OAKLAND AVE 1959 lELBCTRA 225 1962 LeMANS -Hardtop 196! IMP ALA 2-door B«rdtop 1962 CATALINA 24oor Hardtop 1961 BONNKVILLB Hardtop ... m2 CADILLAC 4-door __ 1960 KARMANN GRIA ... 1960 T-BIRD 1-dobr .. 1961 PONTIAC sedan . 1963 TEMPEST 4-door .. 1969 IMPALA 2-door ..... I960 CATALINA 2-door . 1962 MONZA 2-door . 1962 BONNEVILLE Moor ‘ 8TARCH1EP VISTA .. SHELTON PONTIAOBUICK 223 N; Mam OL L-8133 ROCHESTER, MICH. 104! vertlble, 137-h.p. engine, power IMSSm. the tat MM. 31.000 . certified miles. A. Blrmlnghdh rTLSofe KTE further . Information, call 0'h£W^Air^BRE. SM Si Woodward Avs. Ml OOOOO im.RAMBLfcR.tfUB'rOM 4-DOOh station wagoa, radio, haator, kw tomatlc transmlsalon. A beautiful 7M with matchtpg bucket east*. ■KS tpeclal l' Mgr' door,' JmSc AIM dowi astoir-ae. ii».03 I par n throughout •ale price g! ,__Mi ST ■...New.. i 11,505, 0M down, further Information, call '|| OM s. Woodward a I O-JOOO BUY YOUR NEW - rambler HOUGHTEN & SON U M. Mato > RoohMtor OL I-S74I RAMBLERS Is the last roundup. Oet 1 big deal on a 43 Rambler from ROSE, RAMBLER PATTERSON Motbri, Inc. LABOR DAY .SPECIALS 1961 Pontiac Catalina ikloor sedan- Wlth automatic tram mlaalon. bargwt i $1595 1962 Falcotf €ustpm (hie owner, low mlleate. tike ne' (2 to choose from! one Is blue t! $1495 s - 1962 Monza Sport- • Coupe, with 4-speed transmission, real sharp, while with a red interior, Only—. $1895 Ford Galaxie 900 Moor hardtop, attention Fo fans — check this one. Dark hi flhlsh, and It has Cruagmattc a $2495 ; 1959 Plymouth Fury ^-door hardtop, with Vg engine, automatic transmission. complete overhaul and new brakes, —" tires. One year warranty. A :$895 1958~Dodge 4-Door Vt engine, automatic transmissli depenulMe transportation, only—" $395 1959 Ford Wagon VS engine, with automatic tri mission. . this one. needs a 11 $595 .PATTERSON Motor'Sales, Inc. 1001 N. Main Street . • heater OL 1-8559 LABOR DAY SPECIALS ANY NEW 1963 .Chrysler.- Imperial Plymouth or Valiant DEALER'S COST . Plus Delivery Cost and You'll be the. Proud Owner of a New *63 Chrysler Product^ LIMITED TIME -ONLY -I - . ALL MODELS AVAILABLE SfANY-COLOUS AVAILABLE; ' ■ . ^ MOTORS, INC r Rochester, 1001 Mam Street OL, 1-8559 When You See The <3>/r»/e\ n YT SIGN AT You Know The Car Has Been Inspected— Labeled—Warranteed T TQWn P ARC YOU PAY NOTHING UDJGm WiiTlO For Parts and LdDOf 4862 S-22 COMET Automatic/radio, heater. 1962 PONTIAC Bonneville Ha rdtop-;-power; black. 1962 FORD Galaxie 500 VidOfia, power, Auta 1962 Bulck Special Converjible, Automatic. . / • ,, •1962 PLYMOUTH V8 engine, Waaon. oowen/W. Walls. T962”5iEVY Bel-Air 2 Door, w ith Automatic. / d963 ENGLEH FORD —Prices Reduced— -Factory Sticker Price . ^ Factory Reduces Price'.. 7.-. Lloyd, Motors Reduces Price $1974 '.$ 100 $ 220' Total Discount $320 $154 DOWN “ or Old Car JPayQnly $1.60 Per Day YOUR PRICE —Btiy the Wty-a Dealer Buys—«t Auction “PVicear— 1958 Qievy Convertible « - Impale with automatic transmission, engine, power steering. 1955 Buick Hardtop - 4-Door wfth automatic brakea and steering, n I960 Ford 2-Door With power steering, s Transportation for payr 1957. For„d Hardtop Vic Red with white top. ! ‘ transmission. Only— 1957 Buick Estate brakes and radio. r power steering, powi $595 $295 Save $395 $595 1961. English Ford ____ r with radio, heater. Economy at its best. Pgymente of <32.42 per month..- No money down. 1958 I^oritiac 4-Boor i , ■ tt With automatic transmission, power. Only— $795 $495 19S8 Olds 98 roll,. Wltly power-1’ 1957 Btpck Super . s-Dobr Hardtop; Ready 1 WSLFord, Stick 'With a red >nd whit* finish.' radio ai 1954 Ford, Automatic Runt real good. Yours for 1957 Lincoln Hardtop 2-Door with a turquoise, and white finish. 1958 Chevy 4-Door With 6-cylindcr englhs and nutomatle trsns- 1956 Olds Hardtop : With powar steering and brakes. Qnty— Save $395 $159 $125 $295'" $595 $145 THESETCARS ONLY.AT LOT NO. 2-2023 OAKLAND -14 DEMOS Most Models Available ^ .Tremendous Deals Giant Trade-In Allowances "LINCOLN MERCURY, 232 S. SAGINAW FE2-9131 ' ; COMET ENGLISH FORD lii ■-V-, w THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 80, 1968/ THiBTferiirr /^Today's Television^ ProgramsiL^i-- Program* fumithed by stations Ditad in title column am subject to change without notice —CKLW-TV Channel Sd-WTUS ’ (In iitf d) News, Editorial, Sporta, Weather ( (4) Deputy * f (7) Movie: “Okinawa. Progress) . •■■■'» f (I) Captain Jolty and Pop-eyt !■ (56) What’s New? f:25 (4) (7) Weather, News, Sports . '.‘•r—-— -"**■ •“ 6:30 (I) Highway Patrol (9) William Tell (56) On Healing Music ' 7:60 (2) Baseball:. Detroit vs. Cleveland .{ "(4)~At the Zoo (7) Tightrope (9) Sir Fraiicis Drake (56) Big Picture 7:30 (4) International Showtime . (£) Cheyenne (9) Movies “T h e Mighty McGurk.” (1946) Wallace .Beery, Edward Arnold, Dean Stockwell. — (56) (S p e ei a 1) Jerome HSR 1:00 (56) Turn of the Century . 8:30 (4) (Color) Sing Along With Mitch (7) (Color) Flintstones 9:00 (7) Dickens-Fenster (9) Music Stand 9:30 (2) Alfred Hitchcock (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) 77 Sunset Strip (9) It Is Written ' 9:50 (2)' Baseball Scoreboard 10:00(2) Alfred Hitchcock ' (Joined .In Progress) t (4) (Color) Jack*Paar -(9) News, Weedier, UAW Telescope 10:30 (3) Portrait (7) Shannon (9) Canada at War 11:09 42) (4) (7) News, Weather, Sports . (9) Pioneers . 11:25.(7) MoVies; 1. Hell.” (1939) Douglas Fair; banks Jr., Joan Bennett. fT “Sop of Frankenstein (19M1 Borin Karloff Itrlnl (<) Mak* Ro0m f0r SK££&.”el,i ■"*-*-“* 11:36 (2) Steve'Allen (4) (Crier) Tonlght-John-ny Carson (9) Movies: 1. “Night Must Fall.” (1937) Robert Montgomery, Rosalind Russell. 2. “6,000 Enemies.” (1939) ( Walter, Pidgeon. 1:00 (2) Movie: “College Scandal.” (1935) Wendy Barite, Kent Taylor?-- SATURDAY MORNING 7:00 (2) Meditations TV features GOP Governor Seen - BASEBALL' 7:39 p.m. (2) Detroit Tigers'vs.-Cleveland L Indues. JACK PAAR, 10! 00 p.m. (4) Guests include Jayne Maps* | field, Zsa Zsa Gabor, and, Senor Wences. § v — :• I ) PORTRAIT, 10:30 p.m. JUJJov. Mark Hatfield of I /Oregon, mentioned as possible GOP Presidential candidate, § is interviewed at home in Salem. WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS, 5:00 p in. (7) Jeep race,- 1 AAU swimming and diving championships are shown. 7:05 (2) On the Farm Front 7:10 (2) Let’s Find Out 7:39 (3) Felix the Cat 7:56 (4) News SUM (2) Fun Parade (4) Country Living , : (7) Crusade for Christ jY* (4) (Color) B WCAR, Wows, Sheridan WPON, News. Weston WHP1. Rota. Mutts C:SS—WJR, Music Hall 11! Jews Roberta nwi.wr' ism. -* — i—mm rsu l:SS—WJR. New*. Harris MA'MMi Monitor . WCAR, News, Conrad. WRFI. News. Burdick ' WXYZ. Mews. Winter »:**—WJR. Los Murrar cklw. MttatnrDwM SATURDAY AFTERNOON ISsSS—WJR. News, Pam WWJ, News, Hultman WXYZ. Harvey. BebnatUiB WCAR. Hews. Purse HtfS-WJI, Moods Mr MeSom lilt—WJR. Newt. Music-—" I :St—WJR. Dateline. Murray WWJ. Tlfar Baseball S:C#—WJR, Pan Para 1 WJBK. News. Lee WPON. Newe. Johnson S:Ct—WXYRrJUws^rilnee , StIS-WJR. MueTc HAM <:SS—CKLW, NeweTDaetes WWJ, NeWa. Melody . WCAR. Sheridan WJR, Newt. Mutla Hall Supervisor Replies to City Official Waterford Township Supervisor James Seeterlto Wednesday night took issue with a statement by Pontiac City Commissioner Charles H. Hprmon that the township was Ignoring a dilution problem. Harmon stated- at Tuesday’s City Commission meeting that the township had neglected to take measures to curb pollution of Sylvan Lake and the Clinton River. ' Seeterlto told Waterford Township Board members, prior to a' special meeting on toe township budget that the township has been , trying for years fa> get sewer service from the city. 'Stepped up "efforts for sewer service began last May, Seeter- the students were subpoenaed to appear Sept. .12 before the House Committee on Un-American Activities.. When the group left their plane, most of them walked into the Customs Building quietly. But one student, not identified, fell to his knees and kissed too ground. SOME DISLIKED A spokesman for the group said five students deckled not to take part'to the Idlewild ’ demonstration. The spokesman added that five “disliked what they saw in Cuba.” » Larry Phelps, one of served with a subpoena, said he fa from North Carolina and is a graduate of the University “of' North Carolina: “I caft’t understand why I wasjlto said. He pointed out that he Said John Wayne Thomas n Oakland, Calif.: “Cuba is a danted fine country. It works predy well.” a ★ * - Martin Nicolaus of Fontaijai Wis., said he had allowed fad passport to ha invalidated tie* cause it expired at midnight Thursday night anyWay. Nicolaus’, a graduate of Westeyan Uni verity Middletown, Conn.,~>said he wij~ pursue graduate studies this faa at Brandeis University, Waltham; Mass. • The students who originally numbered 59, went first to Czech©-' Slovakia, then Havana. They went to Madrid from Havana tost SSrjP day. .// had several informal meetings with Pontiac City Manager Robert Stierer, since suspended, from May to July on the sewer situa- Seetdrtto added that a sewer treatment service proposal between the city and township, prepared by the township’s consulting engineers, was accepted fast spring by city officials, for study. • ★ No response, on the proposal has been received to date, Seeterlto said.- * r Auto Club Says Drivers Safer Farther From Home By TbeAiiociated Press The Automobile Chib of Michigan predicts some 5,750,000 Michigan motorists will take to the highways during the three-day Labor Day weekend starting tonight and indicates that the farther the motorist gets from home, toe safer he will'lie. Auto” club touring manager Jerry E. Fisher says too many driver* believe toe most accidents happen away from home at high speeds. ’’This just isn’t true,” said Fisher. ‘Studies show that three of four deaths occur within 25 miles of home' and more than % of injurious or fatal accidents happen at speeds less than 40 miles an hour.” The National Safety Council has estimated that between 430 and 520 Americans may die to traffic. accidents over the weekend. Michigan State Police figures The auto club offered these six tips for safe holiday driving: Allow plenty of time; on long trips make frequent stops. , • Be sure your car is to good mechanical condition, with properly adjusted brakes, good tires, lights and torn signals operational and windshield wipers functioning properly. • Use seat betts, if you have them. Drive to keeping with road, weather and traffic conditions. • Mike* allowances .for unpredictable driver and pedestrian ae-tions, giving yourself.and others an extra margin of safety; o Make courtesy your watch-word. First... Try, Try Again . MIAMI, Fla. (APHA Coral Ga- show 20 persons died to 21 acd- bles loan firm several days ago dents to the state over the last Labor Day perlbd. The auto club says that tills year motorists who want to, can travel .farther, safer and to leu time than ever before. Fisher pointed out that while the majority of motorists probably will confine their travel to nearby parks or areas, “at least 10 .per cent more motorists-than ever before will be taking longer trips, thanks to the new freeway*.” CITIES BYPASSED He said Michigan now has 1,080 miles Of partial and limited ac-cess freeways, with 225 miles completed since fast Labor Day. Mueh of this 225 utiles bypasses such major cities as Lansing, Grand Rapids, Muskegon and Pontiac or forms a connector between different interstate systems. The auto dub sdd motorists should remember that, ‘wealjifer and traffic volume permitting, it takes about lHi hours to drive 100 miles on all freewdys and - tyro hours to drive the same dis-tance on two-lane highways; turned down a young man’s request for money because he was under 21. 'Come back with a cosigner,” said Charles Jones, the manager. The young man returned Thursday with another youth and a revolver. They fled with.$512. California student, remarked} “The people have an UBpreeetetf *! ed enthusiasm for Fidei Castro; They have not lost their zeal fat the revolution.” r_:J-Lurta Castell, a student at SaV Francisco State Teachers College; said: “Culm has fiiade some er» rors. It had to pull itself out of the 17th or 19th century fin they’re tryii£ to build somethin NUUK! How Opts and LOUNGE W*ke Ktnnrotion NOWI PRIME TIME AVAILABLE for WINTER LEAGUES 645 Omfyke Road' ' ’ rfi 8-0393 USED s49 50 ELECTRIC 125 W. Huron COMPANY !-WE 4-2525 UNLIMITED SOFT WATEH RUST-FREE , *3 PER MONTH tW»S*nU»AUMdkm LINDSAY SOFT WATER CO. Divliion of Mich. HMting, Inc. 66 Hewhtny St. FK 04621 COLOR TV SERVICE ANTENNAS INSTALLED AND REPAIRED S Brand New for 1964^ The PtAYMATE PORTABLE HI-FI JT* by ADMIRAL | ri.ty of' 3 colon; Cera), Ton or Blue, Modem slimline lug. (OM d.sign and easily portable. 4-speed and fully aula-and see|i at lew, law price... FRET OFFER tlnft»JT11«i« Omjy • e ll RECORDS • fPWIAi.-e RECORD CASK Included In PvrchoM Price Rtg.tl0.9SVmim i lAUIICAy We Service What We Sell 2 ■ uunnouiu radio a television 1 ■ m Rad Wotton, 4* Meek lad d BoMwta m q aw WJR < ■ OPEN EVENINGS 711 7:30 K MON I ■■■■nailMBOUaBaSMOBMUOPABBrjl IY •. - i fOETT THE PONTIAC PR^SS, PEIPAY, AUGUST 90, i063 4- t pi Short Course in Printing N to Counterfeiting laXANAPOUS, Ind. (UPI) -Ralph James Brunet, 45, Frank-fo|t, Ind., put to use the lessons he feapfed i printing. yesterday for a week’s visit as gueat of the Finnish Foreign Min-HELSINKI, Finland. (Ull) -iatry. ' a short course ini Nik Kin Visits Finns I Alexei Adzhubei, editor of the Brunet pleaded guilr governmentnewspaper hr day to printing 51,712,700 worth oljvestia and son-in-law of Premier counterfeits hll$: INiklta S. Khrushchev,, arrived King-size cigarettes now ac- annua) cigarette sates. . lightning itrikes Thrice *|)e Jgg M , Weather Bureau station. —at Weather Bureau MOBILE, Ala. ir Light- count for about 90 per cent of the ista* not tmly struck three times in the seme plow yesterday hut It kind of ahook everyone up," said a veteran weatherman, who reported no injuries and minor damage. Jilted Newsboy, RV * Says He's Got Another BRIDGEWATER, England r Bureau Ftretul. ' , TPertiy Cloudy . ,? (DeUiU Befe *)" VOL. 121. NO. IM &; THE PONTIAC ★ J^ - PONTiAC. >HCHIGAN, FRIDAVi ^l^GUST but allow. voters-Jiiroughout city to vote {or teverTriodid one fcom -each district, r) than voting only for their district candidates. resalt of seeing the Revision ' this morning it was decided, though there was not unnai-moos agreement, that we think we have enough evtSewctfor someone (ago dawn the hokT “The plans are in nation and someone has been chosen,” he. said, adding the identity of the man — “a pretty husky hoy'* — would, be kept secret for the .fcharmbflry [said be h#ed thq descent down the 17%-inch wide shaft would be made this after- Measures Were Lax; CHARTS COURSE - City Manager Robert A. Stierer, suspended, is shown 'pointing out tiw s<5ope cl various proposed Clinton Rjver drain project? at last jnight’s hearing into charges calling for his dismissal. Stierer used several maps to illustrate' points .during the 3Vi-hcwr session; Hearing Features Drain Testimony By PICK SAUNDERS Financing of the Clinton River drain beld the spotlight in testimony last night as the .second session of a hearing into cha against suspended City Manager Robert A. Stierer. Most of tiie questions from the City Comnpdssion table came from Commissioner Charles H. Harmon with Stierer, Charles Moon, a bonding attorney, and Colburn Metcalf, a consulting engineer, providing the Answers. .The second and third jtf sis charges were covered by testimony with the third session d to start at 7 toniight at City Hall. ' Major'developments last night were:. . • Stierer and Metcalf asserted that the Michigan State Highway Department still hasn’t , determined the nature or cost of relocating parts of the Clinton River, for. the future M59 free- Investigation .Ordered way. ' Stierer Said the second charge was not .only false but inaccurately stated. Metcalf j supported' his claim of inac- i 4 HAVANA (AP) — I Minister Fidel Castro’i government put its armed forces.here on-a state of alert today and posted big-|ger concentrations of soldiers and militiamen at strategic points throughout Havana. Armed forces had been put.into a “state iclatan such^n torn would have had reported these, details: 1 ,., 11 taken almost all funds for public . ■ - _ ... . „ _L Wants 30 - Day af&f I improvements in 1064. ; &*<**.Th^sday nightthr 1 alert had been in effect-since Mon-1 in .Sfierer Hearings 3-* - ^day. The military was understood! The second charge stated thati(0 be watching particularly fori • I Stierer demonstrated lrreiponsi-;tny attack from'Nicaragua or Pontiac’s reputation, alreadyibility in recommending.In theother Central-American nations] a casualty in the . controversy!spring of 1902 that th^^utjf ob-1whMM|*ve offered refuge tp anti-over the suspension of City Man-J ligate itself to clean out , an*casjtro exiles, agar Robert A. Stierer, will only {straighten , the Clinton River for be wrecked further ti the hearing (the future MS9 at a cost of (400,-• continues, in the opinion of Cecil .000 when such work is the usual Mullinix. {obligation of the ... highway commissioner, who later fCan Be Tragic Saturday, Sept. 7, is tiie last dayjready to go back to.mining.” ;. * *' j hours after tiie rescue, Crawford had to tell the .tearful wives and parents still waiting by the mine what moat of them bad to turn ta petitions. -' A Jaycee spokesman said the UNUSUAL ACTIVITY j • In San Jose, Costa Rica, reports circulated of unusual activ-j By GAY PAULEY UPI Woman’s Editor Tbe chairman of the city’s to perform this work." police-trial board said sp publicly last night at the ‘second install-' mpnt of' the city's hearing fln “♦charges of in competency, insub- tty among Cuban exiles in Costal _ ^ ^ bv Rim and Niraraffua Manuel Ar- AKW YORK InfF come py Most Offices to Be Closed The third charge was that Stierer, in July 1903, recommended the city borrow (750,000 with interest to get construc-ordinatioti and irresponsibiltyj. ttoa at the Clinton River drain against Stierer. - - i under way. * &*!KI pated in the abortive Bay of Pigsl^ork. TTtey arrive just out of invasion in April INI, arrived in!high schm^cctiegeywng, Managua, Nicaragua.. to donfer W hopefuLof what the with anti-Castro exiles, sourcesjN® city proimses Glartlour, ca-said reer, excitement, challenge. The Cuban ,command ap- -j^y ^ Up tp two6 and threes traced focr« repetition j to afford a neat' apartment ' t seriesrof hit-and-run neighborhood io those ! president of UAW Local IM, He spoke out suddenly from the'4n^ “P**4 *h* P«1frtetor road and businesses in the Pontiac ] midst of another capacity crowd (Continued on' Page 2, C6T 31 area will be closed Monday, at Qty Hall as .the hearing re- ‘ Lobar Day. j sumed following a 15-minute re- (jpvpretneut offices also wili '.cess, bntoied. r *.*.,*■ Asked afterwards If-he thought; the hearing, if continued might] bring opt' issues causing ‘more damdge to Pontiaprs reputation _ ____________________________ __________ than already has been done hy . .u, afternoon or eve-!on® half an inch in 'scattered) .. .. l...« tlrih publicity on tbe controversy, WCTS Urn afternoon or eve^, and ltton-1 Then theseL blaze (orth ^ a ..............- ’ jnmg, the Labor Day weekend will™. s Mie 5unaay ano. Mon few years as business executives las designers, as names in lights door-to-door. campaign would be conducted in two areas, the Herrington Hills and Pioneer ,' victijns — Janice Wylie, pretty blonde researcher I ter Newsweek magazine. j Miss WyHg’s fattier, ' writer | Max Wylie, said he thought the j caller Was “maybe a crazy kid jwho saw a pretty pair’of legs.” FOUND WEDNESDAY -The bodies of Miss Vfylle, 21, and Emily Hbffert, 22, were foundljheadquarters, 510 Community Na-jat. the mine„>l a n a , were in their (250-a-montli apartment tional Bank Building; by Sept, y.jnotnfced for a joint state-federal r — I s. linvuoflfltadAn cioehnrr A feared: The last 10 men in the Highlands oubdiviskms, n efgt , ■■ Tuesday M p.m. . ofter turtner where tbe blast oc- .... • curred were dead. Completed petitions . must be] Amid s o^pi ’e miner’s charges turned in to cha^o' amendment j that safety precautions were lax - by Wylie-Wednesday night. * [They will be filed with the 'cHy Detectives figure the slayer, clerk on the following Monday who got into the apartment by - * * * means unknown, killed Miss [ An estimated 2,700 signatures Wylie first; that Miss Hoffert |have been secured fo date with arrived home to find the -mor- |near)y 7QQ petitions still being cir- derer still there, and was killed to eliminate her as a witness. Mips Wylie’s body was nude. culated. WRk' few exceptions, stores ‘‘Lett uot.btacken toe name ; Also to! toe dtre p^ay braced ito afford a neat aoirtment in a of Ponttec any more with bear- jnecessity” f uth«! 'loan^didntLJ-recentWksXhitflad-run Scf lighbortwdE firrt mgs,” said Mullinix. former ,exist since the tojiway depart-j raids ^ u,st occurred Aug. imStfe to^ frlghtehtoTco^- m«}t V°u|d immediately pave - ^ # ^^1 plant, on the nortii E N«w YSf^S* toj£to*etfter wito forq.stripSdf sheets.] coast where there are manyyiil iohs.ife.secWStarie^, receptionists,! .. * r»rinM>i»« ».m fapinrip^ !’ Wylie,- brother of author Philip _ _ _______ „,irM. „ m**™,Wylie, said Thursday he knew of models, researchers >- marking j, time as thex,„pursue a special dream. ‘ The Jaycees requested that we--..- A. ... • . „ I those who hove not signed p* Itofferts body was fuMy tocaurs 84010 or tor* clothed. The bodies were bound1 0D their porch light next Tuesday Gening if they live in the two areas to be covered door- ,investigation starting Monday. A state offidai said: “We’ll subpoena and question everyone who might have anything to aay.” The last five survivors owed their lives to the first two and their own makeshift barricades that kept out deadly gasses while they awaited rescue. When Paul McKinney and Don-lContinued on Page 2, Col. 81 Pontiac State Bank, Comma-nito Nstional Bank «nd First, Fe^frai of Oakland . announced, that their offices will not open ohjUlhor Day. .i£V i j In Today's. I ' Press. Mullinix said, “Yes.” ^ "“*|day ..But he declined to elaborate on—Searchers looking fpr two missing air force stratotankers and 11 crewmen found a 10-mile-square “floating junkyard” of debris today in the Atlantic ttI miles southwest of Bermuda, the Air Force said. There was no sign of surviv- economy today is for a substantial Income tax reduction at the earliest possible date.” The key to the Senate tax situation is the civil rights hill, Smathers said. If debate on that measure starts as expected in October and is prolonged for many weeks, it will be impossible, for the finance committee to make any headway with tax hearings, he said. Smathers estimated the public h«ii ring* on the tax cut might run six to eight weeks? with additional time needed for qpmmittee action on die measure. Ml WITNESSES Based on past experience, the committee expects to hear about 200 witnesses on the bill. Byrd always has followed a policy of scheduling every applicant, at though be has asked some industries affected by a Mil to consolidate their testimony. •Normally, by meeting morning and afternoon, 'the committee hears about 10 witnesses a day. But during the civil rights fight it will be able to sit only in the toy! not even then if the Senate convenes earl usual noon meeting time. The finance CQaaMrittee now is expected to recefoe the bill in the latter part of September. As tentatively approved by the House Ways and Means Committee it will call for a net income tax reduction of fl0.5 billion in two stages, with the first scheduled to take effect Jm. 1, 1964. Aa Air Force spokesman said plaae paneling, life jackets,, radio kits, engine covers, water coolers, hebneto and ether debris were bobbiag m the water “like a floating junkyard.” Pelting has played, on race and color to win hading from noa-white nations against European communism. In Washington, the Washington Post said today President Kennedy has tentatively decided to confer this fail with Tito. Next month, Tito is planning ' to visit Brazil, Bolivia and Mexico and the Post said tt is al-most certain he will end his trip with a stop at the Unltqd Na-conference with Kennedy. ★ ★ - Their meeting will probably be at Newport, $d £ Road Toll Hits' 1,099 EAST LANSING* (UW) —State police said today the 1963 traffic death toll has mounted to 1,099. In a comparable period last year, 993 persons Were killed in Michigan traffic accidents. ‘As far as I’m concerned, I did not hear it th(at,-way We didn’t need to go to the taxpayers for $750,000 or pledge ourj taxes for |7SOjOOO." ‘CONFLICT OF* INTERESTS’ Harmon claimed that Charles Moon, consulting bonding attorney for - the county’s - Pontiac-Clinton River Drainage Board was working for the county on one hand and advising the city on the other, and there “definitely was a, conflict of. interests here.” The Wea ■ Fall U. S. Weather Bareau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Parity cloudy and a little ceoler today and tonight with chance of a few showers this afternoon or evening. High today 74; low tonight M. Saturday partly cloudy and cool, high 73. Winds westerly 141 mil's today, becoming northerly 6-15 miles tonight and Saturday. At > i.m.: Wind velocity 6 i Direction: Southweit Son Ml* Friday it*! Sun Heee Saturday ft Moon >ets Saturday i < Moon rises Friday al Win TtvUiy’i Teayei .— Alpena 71 55 Duluth _ - '**“ 75 60 Bt Paso M W 71 81 FOrt ’Worth 101 Downtown Temprraturee Bay City Detroit • tcyabf » Thareday in PiaUae Dowest temperature ..................JO Mean temperature v........i ........ el. Weather: Cloudy, iniftty.ln morning One Tear Aga in Pontiac . 0 Temperatun * > **"« M lo?« • Chart Town Drain project available for the-Clinton River project. ^ . “Did yoq know the county had upwards of $1 million with which' they could finance'this $756,906 drain?” Harmon queried. was available," Stftrer said, and read the opening sentence of the Story which, stated the money was available “if the; City Commission is willing to issue tyx anticipation notes.” Moon "asserted tikm wasn’t any conflict of interest on Us part because the project is financed 97 per cent by the city, Stierer said “I did not feel funds are going ------ .---------—-7---------Stierer asserted. Tragedy May Bring New York's Fame (Continued From Page One) .the slaying tit Janice Wylie, 21, .★ *★ in dburt “five or six years.” . He said from the moment the county set np a drainage district, the Clinton River drain was their project and the city shouldn’t pledge its faith and 'Xbmething that was a county problem. . Stierer reminded Harmon that the City Commission had already “helped the drainage district out In the airiqunf of (30,000. U.£ Rejects Viet Demands Won't Return Monks; Stiffening Policy Seen BIRMINGHAM—The Commun-SUOON, **6 V* Nft» AItltl craft and bobby courses during the fad session, which begins Sept. 16. Teaching the courses will be 21 instnfctors with diverse backgrounds. VATICAN, CITY (I) - Pope Paul VI seat a special message to the people of Viet Nam today expressing Ms “painful concern for foe sad events troubling the cherished people dT Viet Nam.’’ The Pope said he had hopes for improvement in the situation. Registration will ha conducted next week from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. and r-V pm- Tuesday through Friday and frdttt 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday. Karl IJmmanuel, director of Community House educational activities, expects enrollment to top last year’* figure of 1,696. Offered this year for the first time is % course in crewel embroidery, an old English type of embroidery that Is done with yarns instead of thread/ Dinh Diem and could precipitate a diplomatic clash. The South Vietnamese demand was made by the acting foreign minister, Truong Cogg3$iu. — The two monks escaped1 from government troops who raided the Xa Loi Pagoda, which is near the American building, Aug. 20. Last Wednesday, the Diem regime sharply rejected U.S; criticism of the crackdown on Buddhists, saying Washington acted on eironeoudpnformatipn- As if to underscore the U.S., rebuke of Diem’s regime for raiding pagodas and making mass arrests of monks and nuns, Lodge conferred with the two monks even before he presented his credentials as the new U.S. envoy to South Viet Nam last week. . Diplomats believe the issue of the two monks is/a relatively minor one, tinderscoring an actual U.S. demand for the!ouster of Diem’s powerful brotheiy^go Dinh Nhu, from the palace as a condition for continued American support of the Diem regime. —He i sion alsh had. an alternate jneth-od of financing outlined ftSCjuly 23 and 30" ‘-’under Act 342 of.the state” in the evenfr the Chapter 20 litigation should not go to our Ifavor. SAIGON, Viet Nam ] Aiken said fieDid riot believe foere were, any “side deals” with Khrushchev and added: “If there . were any'secret agreements, I’ll guarantee they were not to writing.". More Utah Miners Discovered Alive (Continued From Paige One) “I’m sorry, ma’am,” he said contritely, “but I didn’t see no On Jan. 2, 1933, he joined the AP in his native Baltimore, and soon showed foe. stuff required for the rough life of a spot news . photographer. THE WAR A year° later, be came to Washington. Then, the war: North Africa^ Italy, France, Germany, Poland. In. December, 1945, he was back home. Legends become impossible' to unravel. Did be really save Gea. Eisenhower’s life by warning Mm that a road wairintoed? Did the next fellow down It really get blown to sddfoer- ' sjm It certainly was true that he -M once almost knocked Eisenhower out. This came on Nov. 4,1952, at the tod of Ike’s presidential camplign. The general was posing for pictures in Boston, and Griff was trying to mgve a clock that messed up the shot. ttbt it slipped and down it went on Elsenhower’s , bald always in a hurry, fell 12 feet to the concrete below. He fractured six ribs, one of which pierced a lung. Truman, sent his own physician, Gen. Wallace Graham, along -to make sure Griff got foe best of care. Well, It seems strange to find noisy, brash Griff silenced forced to teHnr to speak again and now reduced to tappings out replies over the phone, two taps for yes, one for no.' But hisCfriends, great and lowly, will be pleased to knof the tap-tap.sounded jaunty, like a man who soon will be ready for anything. aid Hanna started out the tunnel toward safety Wednesday, they came across a ruptured air line leading back to foe other five. They paused to fix it, weren't able to get foe ends completely together, but came 'dose. It was enough. Ironically, three of the victims, might still be alive if they had joineftythe original seven in .build- * ing the barricades far to foe rearof the tunnel and away from the blast. - Hanna said the trio refused to join his crew to heading toward the rear ofjjhc tunnel. CriticiMn arose yesterday when rescue operations were suspended by trouble‘ with air lines rieqded by the workers. Most of foe day was spent repairing the lines and Hanna fed MCKifflSty‘;v^PBr2lmrpty™criticai' of some phases-of the operation, blaming the state.fo?.a “lack of inspection.” In Washington, foe Bureau of Mines ordered a federal probe and sent a team here. Gov. George D. Clyde profllaed a state investigation. ~~r HENRY GRIFFIN for. once Griff was morticed. He fled and returned only after Eisenhower, his wound swelling but not serious, insisted be come back. It’s abo tine he fell tet Tn> man. Griffin was on a frets ptone accompanying: Truman to Kansas City. The, ramp - was .pushed up to the door, and then unaccountably removed. Griljf». 1 SIMMS Has The Worlds Most Advanced i * Camera Now-tad Look At The Features f POLAROID Automatic 1001 Land CAMERA -3irrtms Price ★Black t White Mefores W In II Seconds ^ ★PNm flaek Leads la T ★OetoVnash Pictures || Automatically W ★•ladktft White Pfetwes M Indoors-Ho Flash Used m ★Weigtis Less Thaa Naayii 11m Camaras Come into Simms for . demonstration of the worlds J: most advanced camera; $1 f holds in free layaway for 30 | days. •• -X THE PONTIAC PRESS.^FRIDAY. AUGUST Freserfe' EVERY SUNDAY i , BRUNCH 10:30 a.m. - h30 p.m. SMORGASBORD DINNER §f 1 iOO p.m.-8:00 pitn* ★ ★ ★ ■ JAZZ hootenanny .fvory We' 8 A.M.'til Dark SPECIAL FAMILY RATES TRIANGLE FLIGHT SERVICE-{674-0391 Poetno.Munieipal Airport Hebert, At 68 were Duff Lawrence, Tommy - Morrow, Bob Duden, Jacky Cupit, Juan Rodrigues, Mike.Sobchak? Ron Funseth, Bob His last victory was in .the, Milwaukee Open. • —| Johnston, whoseldom ventures firom. his Phoenix, Aria., home course;. never strayed from the fairway Rnd hit all but one green Gottzand Etove Hill, the’ 1961in «“din« 31-3&-66 over the 6,77V *: ■ IT. " .' varH nor __7A linm/Pf Pram. champion. Miss Bardahi Flips in Trial Governor's Cup This city of 12,000 will play tails'at speeds up to 80 miles per hour. Eddie Sachs of Indianapolis 500-mile auto race fame wiU make his debut‘as a -hydro pilot. •< ♦* § ___. Sadi was scheduled to drive Jack Shafer’s ‘‘Such Crust” from Detroit. First/howeyer, he * d to pass adriyer’s test con-iting of three lai who Will line the grassy banks of the' river to watch the water/ monsters create huge rooster Waterford Township Lists Rec Schedule- A men’s touch, football league Se wa- I under the Hghta will, act thi terford Township ‘ Recreation Department’s fall sports agenda started in mid- September, announced Director Robert J. Lawyer. In addition to the mot’s grid loop, four football leagues for Waterford T e wtL8 h i p boys in grades -5-12, and separate men’ and women’s volleyball leagues will be offered. Miss Madison is the sftcond unlimited, hyroplane carrying: the' 3W5-47. name and < the support of the gomjqumifat which owns it. She is the ’ community-owned hydroplane on die circuit. It will lie the boat’s flrst bap- s per hour, with a critical juryof .veteran pilots judges — much the 'same as the ^ rookie tests given at the Indianapolis 500. ’ / . The field of 30-footers'.will be without its top favorite i the. trials begin Saturday. MUSSON OUT j yard, par 35-35—70 Denver Country Clpb course. , • ^ Johnston, who tied for runner-up honors last year, drilled tW 20-foot putts on ttie 'Way to five birdies on the front.nine. He had one bogey on the front nine, three-putting from 25 feet on the 163-yard seventh hole. Baxter, 27-year-old from Amarillo, Tex., who led last year’s first round here with a 64, healed only 29"putts in recording hip Catcher's Hits Decisive BATTLE CHEEK (#1- Catcher Fritz Messner krtoeked ip ail four . . , runs with a homer and a single Usm under fire. She replacem as £ttle Creek J* the ongina Miss Madison whtph feated Wyandootte 4-2 if. opening i o-ashed after quahfying for «ie pIay of the Michigan Amateur ^ Gold Cup race at Detroit earlier|i)aseball tournament. 4 this summer. today’s schedule in the'double A The boats will run jn_elemina-1 ellmjnatifni tournament pita '.lark-1 . tion heats, each craft in two I son against Flint, and Saginaw] v such heats with the five high against Muskegon in afternoon 4 point boats competing in the (games and Kalamazoo opposite A final heat. . ' . (Detroit in a night contest. 1 Gold Cup winner and circuit point leader Miss Bardahi of Seattle, Wash., flippea over yesterdayduring a pqjptice run on the Ohio River. Driver Ron Mus-son suffered three broken ribs and a leg injury when the boat overturned on the west turn. ’ I A doctor at King’s Daughters’ ispital said last night that Mus-1 ih was “resting comfortably”! but would be out of action for fhmiF tain manlre An underdog with a large amount of crowd support win be Miss Madison, driven by Geonge Byers, Jr., Columbus, Ohio. ~ An organizational meeting for managers and players in 4 be men’s football league will be held Monday, Sepf. 9, at 7:30 p.m. at the Recreation Office located in the Community Activities Building, 5640 Williams .Lake Road. Alice Sipley Ups Lead in Ladies Golf League LOS ANGELES (UPO-The American League hasn’t seen the last of Bo Belinsky yet. . Alice Sipley added to her safe margin in the Thursday morning Silver Lake Ladies’ Golf League yesterday. .1 She picked up two points for a total of 30. Her nearest rivals are eight points behind with one week remaining.* ; ** .'• . MASTER PAINTERS NOUSE PAINT An excelteiit-quality white house paint at .an exceptionally low price. Brushes. smoothly — covers well ,—^ves years of protection. Controlled Chalking keeps it snowy white. OAKLAND FUEL & PAINT CO. PARKING IN REAR. Low. gross honors 'yesterday went toiGeri Daniels with 47; lpjy net wSs Miss Daniels with 33; [and “iotv putt honors went to iMarge Coopes with 15. Angels Recall $o Belinsky; JoinsPiersa II The Los Angeles Angels an-1 nounced today that the colorful! playboy-pitcher will rejoin the Club- (the same one that unpre-dictabje Jimmy Pieraall is now! on) Sept, 9 after the Pacific] Coast League season ends. 1 Belinsky, .who hurled a rio-hit-ter in his freshmgn year witti the Angela in 1962 but fpll to a 1-7 record arid a 6.39 earned run average early ,t^s season, returns after an ijrnpressive bit of pitching for the Hawaii Islanders. ^BIRMING TWcii Bghmboatings INTtR - ‘‘0NE P0RT OF CALL” LET 113 TUCK TOUR OUTBOARD MOTOR IN FOR THE WINTER LAWN MOWERS SAVE FROM Tremendout savings for you. Wo art clearing out our entire stock of lawn mowers. Not all sixes, models or ' price rangos loft, but enough to give you big bar* -oain. Come early! CARELESS STORAGE OF YOUR OUTBOARD MOTOR ton do more harm than REGULAR USE. Putting your outboard motor away right for the winter Is a most important step for you. GIVE YOUR MOTOR THE CARE IT NEEDS . .f it will repay you magy timos ovor with countless.hours of trouble free pleasure. When you're ready to put your motor up for the season . ,. Just bring your boat in... we will take your motor off, inspect it, dean it, tune it and have It raring to go noxt spring. Storage untH May 1 st if desired. .Wo specialize in, expert service on all' Johnson, Mercury, EVinrude and Gale outboards. Limited space availabJe for storage . . . call now for reservations. ' ‘ ■' . 24 Inch . Outdoor firilf «-99 50 foot length cf 9/14* dismstsr Easy fo hendls—logs aufemsKcaHy seep opsn or dostd. Hrgh-fpw sd- 1265 S. WOODWARD at Adams Rd.f BI5MINGHAM JOW727 Ml 7*0133 —=# Opon Daily 9-4: Mon., Thiirs., Fri. 9-9 | 4 vinyl host wlth.qushfy brats coup. 4 li"9«. iB.yssr guarantee. 14 “lEVEMAKi 1963 Model MONO CHAIN I fa# I, becoming [ America's JVo. J CHAINSAW [ Heovy-duty, yot. light in woight with powor to do even the biggest jobs. Models rang# from 4Jo 9 [ H.P. enginws and we have a com-l plate lino to select from. ON NEW TIRE PRICES Coupon Special Free wikiting BRAND NEW & 7.50x14 ;«.n fuGeless Whitewalls THIS WEEK ONLY 4 for *37” FACTORY REMOLDS No Rscapable Tire Needed " ■“ — "* TignTssssTu tTrt« ~.i.r " SNSTV IMNRTS ee< G0MMCT N«» IsMim tSS level •14" MSslS ISSilSS SJtilS • IJSilS w.w. . Most Sizes *16“ COUPON SPECIAL-NO TM0tN|tOiO “^JmLs 9.00x14 WHITEWALLS $15M ! 50*w k7«t ... wTg El ePtM NOB. THXU ritii 9 ts'l-SZT. I Is I—CLOliP SUN. 4 4 }# 4 e-a 4 20* ELECTRIC A WINDOW FAN i 5?, « $15-99 4 Portable far ut» in window o^toom Cm . Hand SPRAYER. School tU^CRJCIT 'a pd of the season raductions on Handy suitcase style metal lit with -^ Sur itsrek ef inflatable plastic. M. n. vacuum ' tminj accattorias. • cold liquids. Hurry . . ! Note's the Time to Buy! LEE’S LAWN t GARDEN CENTER ■ 921 Mt. Clemens St.^Pontiae . FE 2-1412 ■! UNITED TIRE SERVICE "WHERE PRICES ARE DISCOUNTED—NOT QUALITY' 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC i bottlbjor hot or HARDWARE STORES WALLS 'HARDWARE 6545 Commerce BULMAN HARDWARE ^MCDizabeHi I LikrAoad-i FE OPEN NIGHTS ’* OPEN sunoms BOWLING SHIRTS, By Dunhill|t THE PONTIAC PRESS: FRIDAY, AUGUST B0,196g president of the Profes-1 Steve Nagy, a’ member of bowl-Bowlers’ Association Isjiug's Ball of Fame. Houae o| Fun and Rtmaftoti Bring the. entire family Howe’s Lanes for your bowling fui*. You’ll enjoy.the ultimate in modernJjowling equipment. ..while relaxing in cool air conditioned comfort. We’re expanding more and moge every-day to bring more pleasure to your bowling enjoyment Now Open for Your, Pleasure • 16 LANES i • COCKTAIL LOUNGE • OPEN for TEAMS-Men’s, Women’s and Mixed. 6607 DIXIE HWY., CLARKSON Opening Soon • 8 ADDITIONAL LANES • NEW SNACKBAR • BILLIARD ROOM Open Every Day IQ A'M. to 2:30 A.M. 626-50)11 The Pontiac Press' 7th annual Bowterama, October 19 to December 1, 19(3, will be the big feature for Oakland County howlers and establishments for, the forthcoming bowling season. The tournament, with larger guaranteed priMMT&tended qualifying dates, 12 participating houses will carry many new features with the indusion of "women to the field. | .. * * * The entry fee remains the same at |7.00, but the top prize has been raised to $700, plus any percentage gain from the number of entries. * The second prize of 1500 is larger than the top prize when the Bowlerama started -7 years *1350 in CASH piss FreeTeon Uniforms In Yankee Bigger than Ever I9S3-S4 BOWLINS SWEEPSTAKES 7 th Bowlerama Biggest Yet Here are a few of the winners who received check* amounting in excess of $2400.00 in cash in-last years Bowling Sweepstakes. Open to all teams bowling in sanctioned leagues. Regular and mixed doubles and a special individual sweepstakes! IDENTICAL PRIZES FOR BOTH MEN’S A 1 LADIES’ LEAGUES IN YANKEES SWEEPSTAKES ., FIRST PLACE... $250 SECOND KAGE. H50 THIRD PLACE .. MOO TOTAL TO WINNERS . 11000 SPECIAL PRIZES FOft ' Mixed Doubles AND J(f ^ INDIVIDUALS Free Team Uniforms If Your Team Finishes 1st in Your League VISIT YOUR YANKEE STORES FOR DETAILS Fa Famous Ebonite TORNADO BOWLING BALL mw ■FITTED ■■■■ Ebonite “Satellite” efrlr toe Sene Wick and -hit*, /red. Ebonite “Princes*” mmm TREMENDOUS DEPTH W SELECTION Of Men’s-Ladiefii ago. Fallowing in guaraateod prizes are $IOt,$S*6 and $111. Each qualifybtg house will send i21lftr cent of its total to the finalswhkh will be held Dec. 1st at the 309 Bowl. \ The big change will be In quailing' this year. Qualifying win toe {dace Saturdays and Sunday at the respective sites listed and bowlers win be able to pre-register or register Immediately at squad times "if openings are available. This year they may re-enter immediately and bowl on successive squads or in different houses the same day. BIG FEATURES Among, the features Will be the Actual's Invitational to be held November 30th ; the House .Team Trophy award; the- Mixed Doubles Actual pinfall and the Beat the Champion’s Jackpot. • Bowlerama entry blanks win appear in The Press and wHl be made available within the next few days at'all establishments in Oakland County. r... b i_ j These are the houses which will City Women • Bowlers part, of the six-week qualifying period: Airway Lanes, Huron Bowl, Howe’s Lanes, Cooley Lanes, Collier’s Lanes, North Hill Lanes; Lakewood Lanes, Maple Lanes, Montcalm Recreation, West Side Lanes, $00 Bowl and Wonderland Lanes. PWBA Readies for Tourneys City Women - Bov May Have Busy Year The bowling season is just.beginning but already the Pontiac Women’s Bowling Association is looking ahead to the tournament period. The association has information and — or entry blanks on at least five Jtournaftients that will interest local female bowlers. Entries will be accepted beginning Sunday In Grand Rap* ids for the women’s state bowling tournament which will start Jan. 18,1RG4 in Cadillac. Reservations are already being accepted for the 1964 Women’rla-ternational Bowling Congress tournament slated for an April 2 1 ; start in Minneapolis. A Plans .are under way, also, for S the PWBA city tournament at Rochester’s North Hill Lanes next March, and the Elks Ladies' state and national tourneys.' The state /affair , is Hsted*-for Niles while the^national meet, will be in Pontiac. Information on all the competition ib available at 335-5343. . The tournament is based on 70 per cent at 200 scratch and the highest 1962-63 average must-be : [r.-T'rr. ■li Bowl A Frame TIMBERLAMES Pon|iae Recreation TiN. Parry St. Bowling 25°' £ During tho Month / of August. / FE 3-Q701 Open T2 to 11 League Openings OPEN BOWLING AT ALL TIMES Bring Thi* Coupon bowlers have Indicated their in-terestriR^sompeting on the same level and thus it was decided by tournament'. officials ' to permit their entry this year on a trial basis. The tournament la sanctioned by the ABC and the WTBC. [Yankee Stashes Work Shoe Prices Men’s Insulated Leather'Boots MEN’S MEN’S 8” BOOTS Reg. 11.95 - MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER fpEBBY at MONTCALM . ■ ■ MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER ORCHARD LANES AND LOUNGE * ®!iove m lyeRYTHl FOR JOUR co»m%E Don Spalla . PROPRIETOR and MANAGER Cordially invites you to visit Orchard Lanas and Lounge— • orflt of America's no wort do-. signs in Bowling ‘Centers. Colorful, Exciting. ACTIVITIES FOR: ALL GROUPS ADULTS and CHILDREN featuring... Pin Finders Tai-a-Scores ' Billiard Room Air Conditionad Subway Ball Ratums * 24 Automatic la«*^ Cocktail Loungo Fra# Parking . RestauranJ—Nursery Industrial-Leagues • f • Women's House Leagues ' • Men's Housa tbagues * 6 P.M. Mondays • . • • . Women's House Leagues Men's House League* 6:45 P.M. Wednesday a\ • • J-Saturday Youth Day Discount Unices forming Winter leag Teams and Individual* Naadad for Mixed Bowjing ORCHARD LANES AND LOUNGE-Phone FE 5-8293 645 OPDYKE ROAD On M-24^Between SOUTH BLVD. and M-5$ Evansville Take* Pony -Leag ue Crown Thuraday WASHINGTON, /Pa. (AP) Z Evansville, Ind., won the Pony League , baseball—championship Thursday night by beating Ganoga Park, Calif., $-1 behind the pitching of Steve Lambtot It was Evansville’s third victory without a loss in the double elimination tournament. THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 196,3 U.S. Studies Increase Talk Continues on _ (HOWARD jjoHnsonJ WONDERFUL BbNEtlSS? FlLt^S^#** >i,d . cri.p French Fried Potatoes }. .Coie^Slaw.' Tartare Sauce * Rolls and Butter ALL YOI (AN EAT -~€refy Wednesday and 3650 joHnion'j DIXIE . HIGHWAY at Drayton Plains By PHIL NEWSOM . UPI Foreign News Analyst \ Partly as result of the new partial nuclear test-ban treaty, partly as result Of long-standing pressures, there isj today increasing talk of a vast ew buildup in j East-West trade. The United! States has admitted It is review-j ing its policies toward Communist-] bloc nations. For years under Khrushchev the Soviet Union has pressed for increased trade With Western nations and has protected especially the Western ban eh strategic materials which cov-' ers far more than the question of guns or rockets. --For. the West, the more cautious advise that the nuclear test-ban treaty by itself constitutes no real breakthrough in East-West relations and that in Germany, for example, Soviet demands have not been reduced in the slightest There also, is the question of doing business with and helping to build a system frankly dedicated to destructjpn of the Western democracies and their econo- creased their trade taster with the West than their jCommunist-bloc partners but atop have shown marked reluctance to join (ho to* tegrated economic program advocated by Moscow. TEMPTATION GROWS Among die Western .Within both blocs there yfcre important pressures beyothe political." In the Soviet Union and its satellites there is a growing demand for an increase to the standard of living, and the supply of consumer goods after years of hardship. And as the Soviet bloc has increased its own output of both manufactured and raw materials there is an increasing need for [outlets. Among the satellites, enjoying a period of respite from iron Moscow control, there also is a spirit of independence demanding freedom to develop their' own economies, including increased Western contact. AfWSBg the latter, Romania offers an excellent example. The Romanians not only have in- Bar Founder Digs of 76 CHIPPEWA FALLS'Wis.(AP) —Miss Mary Rehan, 76, a NewJ York City attorney And a founder! and patroness of the International Bar Association, died Wednesday. notions funder with production capacity to some Cases outdistancing markets, there to a growing temptation , to into the “oceans’* of trade promised by Khrushchev. German and British merchants have been particularly restive U. S. demands fqr; strict en- Veronica Lake Back on Stage NEW YORK (AP) - Veronica Lake, who became a movie sensation in the 194gs with her peekaboo hairdo then faded into obscurity, returned to acting Thursday night. “I’was scared silly,’’ said Miss Lake after the performance, her debut oh the New York stage. “But it was great. Damn, it's great to be back.” When she came on stage midway in the first act of ‘'Best Foot Forward” at the off-Broadway Stage ‘ 73 Theater, . applause stopped toe action momentarily. In the musical comedy, a revival of toe 1940 Broadway hit, she plays Gale Joy, a tarnished movie queen whose star has begun to set. Veronica, who once earned $4,-500 a week, alscris trying to start comeback. “I think that in this show, people will be Able to see What I can do,”. sh^ shid. “I’m really playing a burlesque of myself, of Veronica Lake. But I don’t mind because I like' to clown, and how else can you explain clowning?” FIRST BIG ONE She appeared to- 26 movies. In her first one, “I Wanted Wings,” her tong blonde tresses fell over her right eye obscuring it. Almost immediately she became, known as toe peekaboo blonde. : “It was an accident,” she said. I couldn’t control the blasted hairdo.” / She long ego changed hairstyles. • ? > After the curtain fell Thursday night, a few wcH“wishera. Went backstage. One. was actress Helen Seamon, an MGM contract player with Veronica more than 20 years ago. ■ ★ ★ ★ ‘‘She was great, wasn’t toe?’ said Hejen. ~ A handful of old friends, who remembered her as Constance Oekleman of Brooklyn,.- also showed up. Veronica gave them a report on her newest grandchild, an tafaiff who hasn’t been named yet. “My .other granddaughter, Jennifer, will be 2 to October,” she said. Veronica, who will be 4f to November, said toe vigorous action required by the musical is causing her to lose weight.-But she still worries about her figure. • ' it ■’* ★' Veronica has been married three times, but she’s stogie now. Eighteen months ago she was! found working to a second-rate hotel as a cocktail louiige waitress. Trqde for cement of toe ban on shipment of strategic materials. Under pressure of the West German government,' German merchants finally canceled a' deal to supply pipelines to .toe' Russians.x The British government showed .no such inclination. The' British also are interested in exchange of ships'lor oil. The West Germans do some $500 million a year in trade the Soviets, the British more than $300 ^million. U S. trade with ussta is only about $35 million. !V *' * * While admitting the risks, advocates of a revision of Allied trade policies argue that increased contacts-with Communist regimes mean greater opportunities to wield influence. Increased trade with .too satellites, they say, not only would weaken toe bloc as a whole but also decrease dependence of the satellited oh the whims of Kremlin. • “I’m sick and ; tired of having '■’Tfeople ask me about that?’ she said. “It’s as though people were making me out to be down and out. I wasn’t. I was paying $190 a month rent then, and that’s a long‘way from-being broke,” As toeeurtain dropped, she1 exhausted but exuberant. “There were some minutes there when I knew it was going like Crazy, and tl|ere were times when I knew we had to fish it out,” she said. mm TODAY! —^—Day or Evening Qaaaea Register while there ue still openings. Phone FE .4-2352 or write for Free Pamphlet. llVj S. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bldg., Pontiac, Michigan. . ' PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL Featairtjng-lhuntqt, Friday and Saturday > AAAC FERGUSON At The Piano V. ... .. . - ■ * - • . Playing-Modern, Progressive, and Wait Coast Jazz. “We serve the. finest of Foods and Dinners" ^ w On Dixie Highway Vt Mile S. of Holly to Phone 625-1021 (Chuck Chandler. Res. Mgr. DANCE EVERY FRIDAY ad SATURDAY NIGHT to ERNIE CRAIG and The CUT-A-WAYS WHti Ray and Ronnie Scalf on the Guitar and Sax .., and Al Leo on Bass POOD LIQUOR finu food Mrvad daily ' Now tsrving your from B A.M. till I A M. favorite drinks. 10-Hl BAR a longwfeekend, especially one which includes the frequently significant labor Day ' * * ;> Magnavox and General Precision each fell more than g point following their flurry of yesterday on report! a merger was being considered. General Dynamics .was up dose to a point in bnek dealings in a follow-through to news that the program for the TFC fighter plane, for which it1 is a prime contractor, is getting high priority. < Gains of around a point were made by U.S. Smelting, Control Data, IBM, Merck andDu Pont. Sperry Rand, yesterday’smaf- ket leader, was firm. Chrysler dropped a fraction while Food, General Motors aqd Studebaker woe firm. r\ Thursday the Associated. Press average of M stocks rose.Ni to 278.9, another historic high. Prices on the American Stock Exchange were mostly higher. ' Corporate bonds were mostly steady to higher. OTTAWA (AP) — A deal with Peking under which Canada will admit up to |7 million worth of internationally. competitive goods from Red China annually was Mitchell Sharp today. Textiles are to make up the bulk of imports. American Stock Exch. ntUTM ilHr decimal potato are algbtba mew YORK (AP) >1 El Pw .... *0.4 _ohu Das ... Creole Pet ,*82: . 10.9 Mohawk Air! 3. jC mua it. . 5.3 Mara Mu ... il. • ».4 Pace Her .... IL . K( Tattoo ... if. The New York Stock Exchange Am iWriki. «7—Ik (Me.) High Law Laet Cfcf. Balea Mel (Ms. flirt Law Lee, CM- ______D .40 4 1«% 10% Wfc ... . . poetwn jfp I fi% wn «% — % Preepta UO 40 25 34* 24% 4 % Fnithf 1.30a U MW 3040 3044 — % * lom uut. u If M. __ 100 23 V, 22 8% 13 5444 54* 60 V, 13%. 3(4 3% M J3V, 33(4 33(4 4 10(4 M% 10(4 4 41(4 41(4 41(4 5 57 II « 31 50(4 40(4 40(4 3 53(4 53(4 53(4 — (4 41 3% 17(4 17(4 — “ 15 34(4 .34(4 34(4 .... 4 43(4 63(4. Mb + 33 78(4 n(4 Tl(4 * ff 40(4 40(4 43% Oen Cl* 1.20 ) M O Dynsm 411 37(4 Oea Elea I "" Oen Foods 1 lu 39(4 4 4 15(4 13% 15(4 3 13(4 53(4 53(4 IX 4114 44(4 4414 77 Rib Mb Mb 41 S 37(4 m 9 Mb 34(4 39V, a L n. 03*4 z5 Mb Mb Mb II 13% 19(4 10% . 13 37% 31% 37% — V, 34 U 11% 1714 ... A 43(4 43 43 — GeltyOU .10* OUlette 1.14a . OlenAld .50 ' Ooodreh 134 Ooodytar 1 Orsei Co lb . OrsndU ,*0b oraoct 1.40 OtAbP 1.30s OtNoRy 3 * V 45 10% H ... s Bn 4t ft —! , f.% s 35(4 . 1 mi 11% 11(4 14 f}% MB 01(4 14 Mb 44(4.44(4 . ■ 1 30% 00(4 90(4 - % 10 3014 30(4 Mb - " 1 « 47(4 « . I 10 39% 39% 39 V, —lb 13 93% 3(4 Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY per pouni Hefty type hens 19-13; light type hens; S2JVT2 ab«inment ■‘“Slsritet steady. JaPPUM ample loads and part loads chaws 339-1 steers 34:».M. around si* load. . choice and prime 35.50; good to taw choice 33.50-34.03; sUndard snd tow *aod 39.35-33.35; mast choice 70*069 lb. hall- 13-13: Conner and eatter 1343; utility gad commercial bulls 1IJ4-33J9; banner and aattor 15 50-13.33. . Z Vectors compsrad last wesk: Vaalers mostly steady; choice apd prime 3343; Otasdard and good 33-33; cull 3 II ft •Map compared last weak: Spring slaughter h, ‘ g|MR -and prime spRB| tombs 11.73-33.30, to* • tola 33J4-33.13 thriUghaM ““ goad 30-100 lb. sham spring 1 lay 1 to 1 pelts 31-33.00; at ■laughter owes 4.50-7.75. (tattle 330. Mot enough anj — .—_ for'market test, few utility caws 13-11: camser and cut toe 13-13. Vaalers 33. Hoi enough 1 market. , . •beep 35. Hat fDOOgh- b market' Bogs 35. Hot enough for ti_.. Compared last woak. Barrows aad gilts Re to mostly its towor; at— CHICAOO LIVESTOCK *toSk°M:p ________________0 par cent of the .sup- mwim. l-i ltd-330 lb butchers HM-1143: .over 133 Mad at 11.M; M bead at fldl; mixed 1-1 130-300 lbs n.00-17.35; flp&3 lbs 1175-17.00; mixed 1-1 300-350 it saws 11.15-13.00: 334-430 lbs M.54-MR 433-4(4 lbs 14J3-14.il; 3-S 454-MO W 13 75-14J5; 300-333 lbs 1L33-U.V. Cattle 733; cal res zysizrstJ lots of pood sad bow - _____________ _______ 33J3-K50; standard and tow taad 33.ao-33.38 _ eluding Holstataa. from M.30-I1.7I: tow mad and tow gMrn gtHn 3*.3MI.“ __13J3-14.M; utility ___ __JTSh JMWMS; tow warty tat HiiuMK warty ui waits gmiam p., » ... 37 5% 31% 31(4 — (4 M Mb 33% 33% +” M 33(4 34% 34% — 4 64(4 *4(4 64V, — » 64% 61 41% + * 103(4 103 + 13(4 13% ... 1103 II 1 1 11% 13 . PureOU 1.00 > 33(4 4 Rsythn .371 Reading Co 14 RelchCh .434 m RepubAt | ., 11..33% MVs Mm. -15 33(4 A S 67 f«b 74(4 Mb . „ 163 13 V« 33(4 »% — % •' 3 1% 1% J% ■ a 4 MV, 33(4 33(4 1 33(4 ,3614 A% 130 33 37% 33 33 34% 36% 34(4 4a.) High A 46(4 —R— 33 11% n% 11% 31 33% 33 33V« 15 30% 33(4 33% I u% li% ii% . .. 6 13% 13% 11%..... 9 it • 15% 15% — % 33 43 33% 33% 33 43% 46% 43 9 40% 43% Mb This is part of the arrangement under which Canada-- recently signed a wheat agreement with China. Sharp Raid the agreement will provide for sales of between $215 tions. million and |380 million worth of Canadian wheat to China in the next three years. CANADA’S INTEREST When the minister announced the wheat agreement Aug. 2, he told the House of Commons it Was in Canada’i interest to gNe the Chinese corporations an opportunity fcf expand markets in Canada '‘subject to appropriate safeguards to avoid market disruption and damage producers.” / •*“ ■ iment RlcMOIl 1.83 —‘ Oorp i RoyDut l.Olg 41 33% 33% 33 - — % 113 « Mb 4L. 30 13% 13% 13% 31 49% 43%. 49(4 1 1S% U% U% I 13% I i 34% 4 B 11% iff% — 19 36(4 33% Mb'4 I 41(4 46% 41(4 4 U 13% MV, 33% - 2 StRciP 1.4( 2 SsoDlm M 2 Bchenley f Jf Schsrg 1.41 ortssa, i so . 73 49% 49 1 . ..Jip .A 2 iaabAL 1.00 ? BesrsR 1.40a 3 43% 43(4 33(4 A 39% A(4 39% 4 33% 3M4 .31% U Mb 31% i , A 13% 13% Mb'rt- % 3 31% 31% 11% — (4 31 37(4 37% 17% — % 9, (% 9% 3% — % A 11 13% 13% — % A 33% 31% 33% ' ‘ 39% A 93%. 93% 91% - fiwr 1.30b —R— 4 34% 34% 64(4 i 3*% % . A > 36% 36% Mb 4- % I 34% 34% 1 ib- % 0 31% «V4 1^ - % 16 73 - 72%-73 4- IS 33% -A S, ♦ 19 34 33% 33%— .1 BS% 56% 88% 4-4 51% 11% .41% T-33 33% A(b 30V. ... 3/-Mb 06% Mb # % 300 15% 15% 15% ... • 3 38% 33%. »% ... 3 41% 47(4 41% — 3 *13% '!» 13. 3 14% 14% 141 33 36Vs (3% 33 43 *n% n% ni » TcxOSUl ,C * Texlnst .80 TexPCO l.A 4 TsxPLd ,33| *i 13% Sm 9% '+' A 33(4 31% A% 4. 11 tV — «b* I 36% I 3 13% 14(4 14%_____ 2 15V, 13% IMA ..... ste mb 18% mC + % 8 11% 37% 37% IS 37% 31% 31% KlmbCtark 3 Koppers 3 Korvette Kre.ge ,.60g Kresa8H .40c Krotcr 1.19 33% 4 3 35% 16% 35% 51 .30% A% 94% PH 10 39V. 39% 34% +.% 7 75 74% 74% — (4 34 19% 13% 10% 16 48(4 A 45 , 13 M% 34% 34% 13 51% 83% 53% ' 5 15% 35% 16% « m 44 «% 14 33% 11% 33 —3 1Mb * 13% 14% - t, mM- wic «u Llttapm 1.(11 Loews Thee LoneSCcm l LoneSOas 1 LonglalLt .56 Lord ncetr Lorlllsrd 1.30 Lttkcns 411 l 6 13(4 13% M% — l V 8% am ujt.—1 tit 71% .13% Mb'—t ■11 43% 43% %3% 4 ( 15 48V, 67% A MackTr l.A MCdPd 1.88* Mad 8q Osr 1 103%'102% 103% + 13 43% 43% 48.% . 13 17V. -34% A . CM Gee 1.11 OolPlct Mtr CtomiCre 1.40 ComlSol 00b OomEd 1.30b QMHUa |J3 It 30(4 30% • A% -4 4 36% Mb. Mb, -4 43V. 43% 43% -3 33% 18% 18% - - 13 49% 4»% 17 36% 38% 303 13% 13(b 41% 4 36% ., i 46% . Central Data 164 Copper R ComPd 1.40 Craw c .sol Crown DM 14 Mi 11% 54% i 13% 11% — A 34% M% .... Z Z ^ a%: s A 33% ' 13% : I 33% - Cruc BU it Cudahy Pk m gro xli 20% 30% Ay, — % —D 19 15% 18% MMto 1A Dlnei .40b DiTSae 1.A DemeMta .A Dow<5k LA b 33 41% Drtaa : 1J4 > duPont 4.30g Duq U IS Dynam Am Sl 8' S' & 10 34% 34% 34% 3 11% In ii% * 48% Mb 44% JL 47% M Mb 11 »% 1K4, - 11% 33% 33% —, 14 HI tl| I, 41% 1,18a- |A *»% 33% 33*4 4-1. *14 114% 109% 114*4 4 % 14 »% 37% 37% +•% i ip io% .Mi % t III 10^ MVs 43% 1% 31 13% 13% 13% % J 85 S' 3 16% 1514 is5 * % —F— Padd Core 1 i Pltatkt J3 IWPw 1.34 >B>L»iJi it . II 13% 13% 3Mb f 8% 3% 3% 8 17% 17% 17% „ 4 13% 13% 13% 4 % 1 41% 41% Mb 4 % 8 33% 33% Alb i‘. n L 33% 33% 2j3n * % 3 13% A. . Mb 4 % Self to ford *1 S jfto 8% fm - % 37 $% 31% 31% 1 23% 13% 33(4 -I It 31% 31% |1% '. 'll U 30% 31 . ' Twent C 9 50% 33% A 3 14 14 14 6 14 , 73% 73( 75% I 37(4 76(4 - 37% 4 20 21% Mb 21% + fi 31% Mb Mb ... n » «%. to% — 1« 14% ij%rl4% . • • 18 48 47% 41% 4 i 46(4 43% «% ... —M— UCarbtd 1.60 ^ UdwAi t * UnPac 1.2?s u UAtrLtn .30b ; Balt Alfa I I Unit -Cp .35* . UnPrult .S0e J UOasCp 1.30 7 UnltMAM 1' 7 USFrht 1.30* * TJBGyp to £ US-'Indust * us Unci 3b a 3) to ll e cud y * US Rnb 3.20 . US Smelt 2 50 33% ■ HH 9 34% 14% 34% — M n i% 4% + 3 ,48% 4T» 48% 4 > 18' 31% to 11% 4 7-U— • 17 lA(b 131% in% 4 A 4* 39% 39% - A 3914 33% 33% 4 A 45% 44% 45% - 21 n% a -U »% 33 19 18(4 U% 3 M 1 13-* 481* 37% 37% — 43*5 V UnWhel .07p Uhlfetch .40 UnOllPd 60s i Upjohn M l 40% 8 30% 30% 39% 4 rim* 12 361s , M% 36% 4 Canada, China in Trade Deal Peking Can Sell More Under Whaat Record By SAM DAWSON AP Butiw Newt Analyst NEW YORK (AP)—Compulsory arbitration of the rail labor dispute adds still another challenge to a year of change in Inbor-management issues and solutions. Sabbaticals for long-time employes, bonuses as compensation for automation, continuous negotiations to mini-ise strike threats, stress on rlnge benefits rather than pay boosts, charges of racial bias ini some unions and lack of equal job o p p o r tunitles, and an Increased1 nA1Iwnttf emphasis on thd DAWSON public interest in labor disputes— all seem to be chiseling out a new look in labor-management rein- His statement today gave de* of the safeguards. They amount to Chinese agreement to limit exports to Canada of some 30 sensitive products—mostly textiles—to a maximum $7 million year. T j»t year, Communist Chinese .{sales to Canada reached |4,320,-000; including about $1.3 milUon in the sensitive goods covered by the new agreement. Canadian exports to Rod China hit $147,430,000, almost entirely grain. Something more than $3 million in Chinese sales to Canada are not covered by quotas. Among the main items in this field last year were walnuts^ peanuts and furs.. - \r The new quotas worked Out with Rails Typify Struggle Labor Issues ; not tie settled by the board set up by Congress. But changing work ruins to fit. new operation techniques is IncreMingiy involved in labor negotiations. The issue is a variant of the chief concern In this year's labor talks. The unions primarily are worried over jpb security—the ton of Jobs to machines or new fmpi> of gc Congress has ordered compulsory arbitration for the first time in a peace year. It has put off— at least for six months—the threat of a strike that would idle the nation's railroads. The *hMef issue was over what management calls featherbedding -union-protected jobs that fne companies say are no longer needed. This issue is debated in a number of other industries. BIGGER ROLE The basic problem may or may Business Notes Ted. McCullough Jr. of 5227 Chipman, Waterford Township, {has been elected president of the [Multiple Listings Service/Inc;, [National Bldg. McCullough is [affiliAtecl with Arro Realty, 5143 Cass Elisabeth Waterford Tdwn-Iship. McCullough Alto elected were Herbert Straley and Merla tod Ota, «, to brtag prompt' requests from Japan for increases in the quotas agreed to by Japan on its sales to Canada. Co., 377 S. Telegraph, vice president and secretary; respectively, and Fred Rosevear of the.Kamp^ Mixed Mart Shows Little Price Change treasurer. ■Msnjjp_________wt, clearing-house for members’ itfal estate.listings. CHICAGO UR — Transactions in the grain futures market were somewhat mixed with prices generally little changed today during the first several minutes of activity on the board of trade. -Soybeans came under -some pressure and lost about a cent at the extreme before attracting rallying support. Brokers said the weakness may havp been relate^ in part to a private crop summary which forecast a yield let in excegp of any previous estimates. i “ ... wumj . Grain Prices 3 11% 11% 11% - V .. A 13% 19% 13% 4 4 10 65 % 64% 64% — V * 83% 53% 53% — 1 WarnPlc .A WsrLsm .70 Wn Bsncp l 4 33% 33% 29% ; 35% 29(4 39(4 .... WstkAH 1 40 Wtototf iff/ WUn CO 1.00 .. h n% — . ‘ A 117 113% 113% 25 (1% 31% 31% 4 • I '01 31 31 -f ™ M 1% 3% 9% -3 % " A 54V, 34 Ml. A Bt% 30% sr-17 39*4 fiitoJI 3 31 > fmwti —N—' 136* 40% 40 —-V— :■ f 13% 13% 13% 1 lf% 31% 11% 16 13% 11% 13% n w ■ii £. . „ 11- 44V, 43% 43% — % —W— i n% »% i3% ,4.% IS ST 3614 37 4 % 3 41% 41% 4i% — % 31 30% »% EK taH f 93% 30% 29% 111 31(4 36% 37V, • 43% 43% 43% 29 33% 33 to% .... 3 38V* 36% 33% — % CHICAOO GRAIN CHICAOO, Allg. 30 (AF)—Opening < Wheat ..........JOB ....... 1* ip........1.13% Oats oc. .......U3% *ep. . ..... •« 1.33% Ora. .0) »U» 1.33% Mat.; '..... .f — 1.56V* BUy ..... .• ^»rn NstCsn .lit HGkahR 1A NDslry U0 i 55% r 3 16% 16% 16% ; ■ ■ Natbiat 1_ NatPual 1.34 HatOen .411 MstOypa 3b 5 65% «% 65 V, 4 R 25(4 25% A ., 2 36V,' 36 V. 36 V, . 1210 J%> 1% . NLMd l.»* N Steel 1.A NEniEl 1.1* 1.11% 1 > 64% I A 113% 113% 119 A 54% 64% 54% — % 9 A 33% . Me 4 % I 46% A%. «% — % 8u^.«r. _ends 'In tpe loregi—. —.. ... disbursements based on the tail quarterly — mt-annual declaration. Special at _____dWIdsods or payments net deelg- nsted as regular >— - **■- following footnotes. - -lira nr e. dividend, eelared c lated cash lletrlbutlon Northrp Nwst Ail t.,, MHP . Noriwch la M3 (4 4 « ?l%~«OhR 40 33% 38 33% + able In steak during 11 relue on e«4imbfld ---. a—Declared or '■ n—Declared or _JPH|WHill dividend nr apltt up. k—Declared or paid Ml, an nraiaawtattTe issue with Oita Iteth I OttsElev 1.A OutMar .433 Owenalll 2 50 OxtdPap 1.20 I; 11% 11% 4 1. 33 33% M ObE 1 tog 34 33% 33% ---------- * 11% 11% U% 4 % M% 33% 33(4 — % 44% 43% A 43% M% 49 PacTfcT i.A PanAAlr .r paramPtct ParkeD t PeebCoaf .A Penney lJOa PaPwLt i“ Pa RR J5e PepCole l.A Pflaer .(9a Phelps D 3 Phi la A lto PhllaRdg lb ng mt d% A 16% A : A — 19 9i% 11% : 93% 4 i jl- ■ __JpaPat l PttnBew J9 PttPUt 3.30b Dt Aral Polaroid .30 PraetAO I M ISK.’fc 9 39% Am / 36(4 il fi f ® 4 % I 9% «% 49% — % 11 lifts 31% 67% 4 % A 114% 13% U. — % A 137 194% 194% —1% A (TOV* 73% 73% fifiw W% W% II 31% 19% A% i 30% 3 13 11% ‘ 71%—% 4 34Vs . 34 34. — % —X— 49 387 333 333% —6% —Y-* • 7 33% '»% 31% 11 1AV* 113% 1A. AMT Corp. ........... Bto-Qlcstor ......... Braun Englnaqiring 5 R la 22 85 M% M% - % Detroiter Mobile Homes , Diamond Crystal ...... Prito-Lay, Inc. ......... MoLouth Steel Co. ....... Mnradel Products ....... qa. last ytay. 1—Pay-I estimated cash 133 plu 1-Paj dividend omitted, deinrrM • 6 rat, io osuuso, aeierreo or w et laet dlvtdond meetta|. . H ______Of paid In 1992 pin# etoek dividend. t — Paid 'In etock during it** sltlmated cash vMfla. on si-dlvlasnd u distribution data. - .. - s—Bales ta fall. dividend.jr—Ex lit 146 4 U9.6 2TO.1 i i tin i9.i nt.j Jul. . 1.39% Rye •ep. Stocks'of Local Interest Figures Altar decimal pointa. are eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS The following quotations do not ni tartly rap resect actual transactions ■Jiproxl- Mohawk RubMr Mich. Psamllsc 1 Pioneer Finance ....... Bafran Printing ....... •ante Pe Drilling Vernor's Ginger Ale .. Wlnkelmen’s ........V. • I 8- ^9. Co. MUTUAL FUNDS Affiliated F Commonwealth Stook .... Keystone Inoome K-l .... Keystone Growth K-3 — Meat. Investors Growth . Maes. Investors-Ernst .... Putnam Growth ............ Television Electronics . . Wellington Fund — — Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AF) — Whe 4 /to WtaU qecal year in town or-factory e tog out in fjunlly stores / business ventures. ^ n h i« PART OF PICTURE Mtwj , * But It’s all pact of picture, Mid the seeml^JiBniBa which sees more pj^P ployed than ever W|y|fy work techniques, or to the changing consumer demand for different products or services. Management is equally concerned over cutting costs or getting Into new liner that consumers now fancy. Thia often means more mechanization, greater outgut per man hour, and fewer employes turning out more sellable goods. ELECTRICAL INDUSTRY The steel industry furnished dues to the new traad in three ways this year. First,J,'**toer Steel is paying bonuses to workers, their share of savings made through automation. Second, the industry adopted n tong-vacation plan: that gives workers with seniority extended time off every few yews. Aqd third, the industry licked the strike threat pressure on contract negotiations — this year at least—by setting up a continuously negotiating committee to tackle labor problems as they arise andhpmmeaout a contract ahead oFa fixed deadline. on compulsory arbitration In the public interest, and peuMpA,'« trend toward a rsyS&ipfiig of labor and managg^gijteKgmis * on many front!. HraVYrStam The electrical industry also has had study committees at work many frith jobs that they may lose them. Many industries prder to pay overtime when orders call for more output rather than hire fieft workers end become involved in all the fringe benefits and additional paper work that are mi increasing part of the job scene. And many employes; especially week shortening look for other jobs after work, or moonlighting.1 Often such work is merely in agriculture by ftvm owners frith jobs ACCUMULATIVE to* BOND AVKRAGI^ f|isrv Ti — - - — r*». uti tl.T.mj AJ 9.A M. 31.6 101.3 ,M.6 30.9 A M BMHf a s m 77.2 96.4 MIC ««•'« «• 82.2 M19- 99.S 91.9 S News in Brief To'ttis is nowsadNf^N&ifx-^ noUo,9 to nlan Q) “I’m f.TWWj# two dilldina»>ialAlfho don’t, I would rono^trjkiittod ’> local insurance agent and set up » a program. umixoJqq* • If you are reasbnahfj(fq$j^$in ; that you will remain '^^*7 well ahead of contract terminations. Now the talks are coining out into the open. General Electric’s contract expires at the end df next month and Westlnghouse Electric’s two weeks later. Long-vacations, more retirement pay are among the proposals. Overtime and moonlighting also are coining to the front as issues because of this,year’s special conditions, >ehiefly the hard core at ^ ^________ ... unemployment and the fear dt^ggent location, I- would make ...... ...Uk irtko Iktof iktoti mow a . .1 * .’■______J.Ato.1*/ a substantial down paynp#fd', jon * a house. When all that to, ac- 1 complished, you can begin safely * to thlnk - of a stock invcst&fent , program! --•--- m ' ★ * fj/t . _Q) “I wish you would sug- * gest a low-priced utility for a * beginner. I have thought of * Central IHinuis Public Service sen Realty Co., VOX % Hufpt^those subiect to periodic WodM you recommend Nith'of tpoGciiror hiaaIt ckApinninff IaaIt fnr / ... . . Dr. Donald Fraser, 55 Niagara, told, police yesterday that his handbag containing medical instruments and supplies valued at from $150 to $200 was stolen from MS'car , An automobile Fftgllie valued at $1,600 was reported taken yesterday from a car owned by Denis Marinack,. 5502 Garden Terrace, Commerce Township, according to sheriff’s deputies! I Wish to Thank Each and everyone, new and old for his loyal patronage during the past 30 years. “JIM” Lerfold Service, Adbum at Crooks Rd. —Adv. Temple Beth Jacob Tots-Thru-Teens rummage sale, Sept. 4 and 15, 9-9, 14 E. Pike. —Adv. A)/I would definitely recom-' mend Central nlinojr Public* Service, but I am notvery keen *. about Potoma? Electric. ;■ Central Ijtinois serves a fast growing industrial area, has in- T creased' earnings to each of the U past six years, and has doubled / dividend rate over a ten-year < period. . n Potomac Electric Power to a \ good stock, hut has problems: m Earlier this year :the company ^ was told by the District of Co- *• lumbja and Maryland Commis- , • sions that it must justify its present rate schedule or face re- inductions. In view af that situa- ! tion, I would avoid the stock for ;* the present. ' H As a substitute for Potomac, I suggest Montana Power, selling : a little higher’ in price, bjit witii =’ a better growth outlook. (Mr, Spear cannot answer ali l mail personally but will answer all questions possible to .his column). ::* (Copyright, 1963) 7 ■ The Business Picture SEC Revokes 2 Brokers' Licenses By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The Securities and Exchange Commission revoked yesterday the brokers licenses of Scientific Investors Corp. of Chicago and Security Service Inc. of Salt Lake City. The SEC safe Scientific Investors failed Jo file reports of Its financial condition and ‘careless disregard of, and cavalier attitude toward to report" rion said that on jasions the company laid I vised of the reporting requirements- quire J. Folger & Co. in an exchange of stock, it was announced here yesterday. The agreement, signed by officers of both companies, requires approval of directors of both firms and of Folger stock- In the Utah case, the SEC said _ registration application filed by Security Service in 1960 falsgly named Ralph E. EQingson and Reed R- Maxfield as owners of 10 -per cent or more of the company stodk. The SEC said Sacurity Service was beneficially owned by Uinta National1 Insurance Co. and that (X) 30*.433.749,990.1 year ~WMr*«»ia nicer year 3 *H»SklWH the registration application did not disclose this fact' 391.330.149.117.4* M,tU.lM.3l*Ji NEW YORE - Proctor Gamble Co* has agreed ^ afr Since midyear, commercial and industrial loans have decreased by $295 million'compared to an . increase of $64 million to the corresponding- portion of last year. - With headquarters of Kansas City and 'flan Francisco, the 13-year-old Folger company markets vacuum-packed and instant cfefee under the Folger name to mid western, .western and southern parts of .the country. Howard Morgens, president of Proctor t Gamble, said it is planned to operate Folger as separate subsidiary with current management. WASHINGTON - The Federal Reserve Board said yesterday commercial and industrial loans increased by $66 million during the week ended Aug. 11 at reporting member banks in lead ing cities. This raised the total W sack loans at these banks to $3$J6 blllloa. This was $U6 billion higher tftaa the total a year earlier. ■ . •• PITTSBURGH - The.Ajtonii-num Co. at America sMd. yesterday it win extend a vacation program to its sotoe 14,000 salaried employes staffing the first of next year. The plan will give employes credit for 1.6 weeks’ pay each year for five years. The individual employe may elect to take it to company stock as part of the present savings plan, or to cash, or as a vacation plus cash or stock. Id addition, salaried employes, also will be granted improvements in fringe benefits, including hospitalisation, life insurance, maternity, sickness and accident. The full hospitalisation plan will be increased from 120 to 365 days.’ Regular vacations for salaried ^ workers wifi stay the same—two | weeks after one year, three %eeks after three years and four : weeks after 2Q yean.. / J" ." THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY AUGUgf^oTl^a t hort Course in Printinci eads to Counterfeiting WIANAPOLIS, Ind. (OP*) -Rl ph Junes Brunet, 45, Frank-fa ; Ind., put to use the lessons He learned in a short course in printing. yesterdny^for a week’s visit as gyest of thp Finnish Foreign Min* trfty target was the 1 Weather Bureau station. ^Lightning Strikes Thrice —at Weather bureau MOBILE, Ala. (UPI) ■- lightning not only struck three times in the seme place yesterday but Nik. Kin \faiH fhins- HELSINKI, Fjnland (UPI) *— AlexeL Adzhubei, editor Of the Soviet government newspaper Iz* vestiaand son-in-law of Premier Nikita 8." Khrushchev, arrived Jilted Newsboy, 81, wedding to retired nubs f Irene^Trend, *7, buthe was phik>-I Says He s Got Another ■ophh^i. p ii kiwi or saooii everyone up,' ; _ , . . ’• .] . ' V . * * • ★ * J 1 said a veteran weatherman, who BRIDGEWATER, England MW *rthL , ^ _ i reiJbrted no injuries and minor ( -Newsboy Frank' Woodward, Bl.jwho wiU itave me, but I’m X damage. ' |was jilted yesterday shortly be-jadjtfng Who she is,’’ he said { Brunet pleaded guilty yesterday to printing $1,712,700 worth of counterfeit $10 bills. King-size. cigarettes now account for aboftt 90 per cent of the annual cigarette sales. Old Salem by Rowe f Early American AT ITS BEttl ■ mr: A . . \ AUTHENTIC .. « COMFORTABLE * . . CHARMING . warmth and cheer of yesteryear. Unequalled comfort of crowned foam rubber cushions . • • smart button-tufted deep foam backs . . permanently box^leated. Alrto. Choose from owthmUk-Carfy Am arte— fabrics. Realistically priced ... buy b«h or dther one at real swings. m Yei, arm shields included at no extra cost. WtoB OWE is decorator-shop stuff... the sort of thing that just looks like money j we have oir only $7 down • 44-rn. dresser base* bookcase bed • chest • poster bed • spindle bed and night stand • student desk • 2 twins • trundle bed Ever visit a decorator shop so l^igh priced they didn't hove the nerve to tag the furniture? Then you've seen the-4ikes of this. This is genuine Winston Chapel solid maple in a wonderful sugar 'rv spice finish-and rubbed and polished within an igch of its life. Come get these beauties and treasure them for years. •• i ~ ' • ' Early American Dining Room It's so easy to be your own decorator .with Keller dining furniture.'Elegantly styled—sturdily built*-here you can expect years of pleasant enjoyment even, with growing children; in the house. The plastic-topped tables almost "dare" youngsters to have as much fun as possible. Mates Chairs *19"- Table *119 China *179 You Will Re at the vast selection of Early trkan Furniture in our Colonial Department. You may choose quality Titmiture from the nations leading manufacturers and ot down to parth Thomas Economy prices. Budget terms, of course, This will ’be the most comfortable chair-in thejjousel Long wearing nylon cover in your choice of colors of ap* prOpriate colb- w -l nidi tapestry. ^ Foam, cushion- ing provides fi3& & deep c’omfort. ^ AMPLE FREE PARKING! EASY CREDIT TERMS Open Tonight and Monday Night ’til 9 P.M.