U.S. Rebuffs Soviets, Offers Mid east Peace^^rmula UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. - The United States today rejected Soviet demands for punishment of Israel for the Middle East war and proposed a five-point program for peace based on Arab-Israeli negotiations with “appropriate third-party assistance.” In a measured response to Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin’s attack on all U.S. foreign policies, Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg adopted an over-all moderate tone in laying down a proposal based on President Johnson’s policy speech in Washington yesterday. Kosygin arrived at the assembly hall late for the resumption of the special-session debate on the Middie East crisis. He took his seat after Goldberg had finished speaking. Goldberg rejected the Soviet proposal that Israel be condemned as an aggressor and forced to give up territo^ and captured material immediately. He told the 122-member assembly that “the bomb of hostility” must be defused and that the explosive itself would have to be removed if a durable peace was to be achieved. * SNEAK .^TTACK’ Syrian President Noureddin Atassi followed Goldberg to the rostrum, accused Israel of having made a “sndak attack” and of a long history of “aggression” against the Arabs. As be spoke, Israeli FPreign Minister Abba Eban listened intently and made notes. Eban yesterday had dissected piece by piece the Soviet attack on his country te an honr-lmig reply. The day’s session began with a brief address by U.N. Secretary General U Thant, angrily rejecting Eban’s version of his decision to with^aw U.N. peaccT keeping forces from Egypt in advance of the fighting. • de«r,«oa|t^nl«ht fpoNTiie Home ] Edition PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. TUESDAY. JUNE, 20. 1907 ‘-*pRaM^weaHATioNAu —80 PAGES 10c Romney Ponders Newsman's Question Romney Sees Vietnam War as No. 1 Presidential Issue PITTSBURGH, Pa. (* - Gov. George Romney of Michigan believes that if the Vietnam War is not settled, it will be the No. 1 issue in the 1968 presidential election. Romney said it remains to be seen if the Middle East crisis will be an issue. The governcr, considered one of the leading contenders for the Republican presidential nomination next year, made his remarks in a news conference before speaking at a $100-a-plate fund-raising dinner in Pittsburgh yesterday. The address climaxed a busy day for Romney, who visited former President Dwight Eisenhower for Vk hours at his Gettysburg College office and met New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller in his Fifth Avenue apartment in New York. ★ ★ * Ip his Pittsburgh speech, Romney propel a plan for peace in the Middle East which would include Israel retaining In Today's Press Wixom New sewer system serves as catalyst for growth—PAGE A-5. D. C. Schools Federal judge orders massive revisions of “discriminatory” poUcies - PAGE A-7. Greece City man says junta was stabilizing — PAGE Art. Area News ..........A4, A-S Astrology .............B-6 Bridge .................B4 Crossword Puzzle .....C-11 Comics .................B-6 Editorials ............A-6 Mystery Story .........B-7 Markets ................C4 Obituaries ............C-S Sports ........ ....C-1—C-3 Theaters ..............B-7 TV and Radio Programs . C-H Wilson, Earl ........ C-11 I’s Pages .. B-l-B-3 some territory seized from its Arab neighbors two weeks ago. MEETS NEED The governor said his solution for peace included consideration of possible border realignment “consistent with the need of the various states to live together with mutual respect and security.” Romney also called for agreement on the status of Jerusalem, the treatment of the Palestinian refugees and the use of waters of the River Jordan. He said other steps necessary for peace in the Middle East are Arab recognition of Israel’s right to exist, free passage through the Suez Canal and the Gulf of Aqaba and the existence of an effective international authority to police the peace. * ★ * At his news conference, Romney declined to say how extensive the border realignments should be. Summer's Arrival Sunny and Mild The Good 01’ Summertime will breeze into Pontiac tomorrow at 9:23 p.m. * ★ ★ The weatherman gave* residents a preview of high temperatures in store for us last week, but tomorrow, will be SUNNY AND WARM sunny and mild with the high in the 70s. The low tonight will be g cool 50 to 57. Fair and slightly warmer is the outlook fpt’ Thursday. Morning southerly winds at five to 10 miles per hour will increase to 10 to 20 miles late today then shift to westerly. Percentage chance of rain today is 30, tonight 20, tomorrow 10. Fifty-eight was the low temperature in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. ^e 2 p.m,, recording was 73. LI’L ONES The usually mild-mannered Thant appeared infuriated as he accused llrael of creating “provocations” over the past 10 years along the border. ‘SAFE FOR BELUGEHENCY’ Eban had said Thant’s decision to withdraw U.N. forces had been disastrously swift and made the Sinai Peninsula “safe for belligerency.” Goldberg did not spell out in detail what was meant by “appropriate third-party assistance,” but the phase suggested a possibility of international mediation in the Arab-Israeli dispute. The U.S. resolution introduced by Goldberg called for negotiati(His based on mutual recognition of the politicar independence and territorial integrity of all countries in the area. Police Crisis Brings Detroit Mayor Back Fund Bills Clear Senate Panel LANSING UP) T- Bills which would spend $465.5 million in fiscal 1967-68 were reported out by the Senate Appropriations Committee last night — 11 days before the start of the new fiscal year. The bills cover seven major areas and represent slightly less than half of Michigan’s general fund budget for the new year. They fall $12.5 million bebw current spending and $61.6 million below Gov. Romney’s recommendations, but call for increases over present ievels in the controversial areas of education, mental health and corrections. “They meet the actual needs of the state,” said appropriations committee Chairman Frank Beadle, R-St. Clair, and represent “the minimum level for these various agencies to do a respectable job.” The House, which prepares about half of the yearly spending bills, reported out budget proposals Friday totaling $338.8 million, generally following Romney’s recommendations. IMPOSSIBLE TO DETERMINE With House and Senate action still to come on the bills and action pending on school aid — expected to total about $300 million -- it was impossible to determine the final budget total. However, estimates range from $1.04 billion to $1,104 billion. Romney recommended a budget of $1,153 in a February message to the legislature. Even so, the figures indicate the budget will top by almost $100 million the so-called “austerity budget” proposed by Romney as an alternative to tax reform. Romney had recommended $257.6 million for education, $137.4 million for mental health and $23.3 million for corrections. DETROIT (AP)—Mayor Jerome Cava-nagh flew home from Honolulu today to deal with Detroit’s police emergency still adamant in his stand against an officers’ pay raise demand. ......W" ★ ★ The mayor, cutting short his attendance at the U.S. Conference of Mayors, arrived to find the force of more than. 4,000 men depleted by sick call-ins and disciplinary suspensions. “What they want is the impossible,” Cavanagh said on his arrival. Cavanagh, repeating his earlier position, referred to a demand by the Detroit Police Officers Association that patrolmen’s top pay be increased from the present $8,335 a year to $10,000. Cavanagh and other city officials say there is no money available for such a raise. 84 CALL IN Police officials said 84 officers called in sick on the first two shifts today, bringing to 676 the number of officers absent because of reported illness or Carl. Parsell, president of the DPOA, recorded a message which was read at all police precincts at roU-call time today. He urged all officers “to report for assigned shifts.” Parsell told a news conference a short time after Cavanagh’s return that the city “has made absolutely no counterproposals in negotiations to date.” * -★ ★ As Cavanagh returned, city officials were preparing to go into court tomorrow to demand a permanent injunction against a strike. A temporary restraining order was issued last week. In an airport interview Cavanagh expressed displeasure with the policemen’s union. “We don’t propose to abdicate control to the DPOA,” he said. ★ * * Cavanagh indicated he was not prepared to say whether the Michigan National Guard would be called on to fill the gap in police ranks. READY TO AID Both the Guard and State Police had been represented as ready to aid. 'The ranks of patrolmen were depleted by about 200 suspended for neglect of duty and several hundred others who called in sick, as well as nearly 100 on the disabled list or on emergency leave with departmental approval. The “sick call” epidemic began last Thursday after several traffic bureau officers who allegedly had participated in a ticket writing slowdown were assigned to pounding a beat. ★ ★ A It appeared to have taper^ off Sunday after the restraining order was issued, but flared anew yesterday. DETERIORATING BADLY Corporation Counsel Robert Reese warned that the situation was nearly out of hand, and was deteriorating badly. MAYOR CAVANAGH If Budget Cut Holds Up Hike in Tuition Possible at OU A tuition increase is possible at Oakland University if a State Senate committee’s recommendation to increase the university’s operational funds only one per cent for the coming fiscal year holds up. “I can’t wait ’til something comes up, but I hope it doesn’t. I planted spinach.” That is OU Chancellor Durward B. Varner’s reaction to the $4.3-million budget recommendation made yesterday by the Senate Appropriations Committee. The committee’s recommendations of $200.8 million in operational spending for Michigan’s stole colleges and universities in fiscal 1967-68 were included in a $240-million education bill, which could come up for a Senate vote today or Among other committee recommendations were: University of Michigan, $58.6 million; Michigan State University, $44.2 million; and Wayne State, $32.9 m^on. DURWOOD B. VARNER If passed, the bill would then have to go to the House for consideration. ■k it it “The most logical alternative, if we were given only a $50,000 increase in operation funds over last year, would to be to increase tuition,” Varner commented. “We are already in the top tuition bracket. CUTBACKS POSSIBLE “We can also cut back a little here and there — clean floors half as often and mow the grass occasionally.” Varner said the university had requested a $1.6-million increase because of an expected 30 per cent increase in enrollments. Most of the budget request includes salaries. Kosygin Won't Visit President UNITED NATIONS OF) — Prospects for a U.S.-Soviet summit meeting were fading fast today after Premier Alexei N. Kosygin reportedly turned down an invitation from President Johnson to come to Washington. 4- ★ ★ Administration officials in Washington said Kosygin sent word to Johnson that he had come to the United States for the U.N.’s emergency session on the Middle East and not for the purpose of visiting American authorities. Kosygin’s message, sent through diplomatic channels, said the Soviet chief therefore was unable at this time to accept Johnson’s offer to meet at the U.S. capital or a nearby place like Camp David, Md., White Sulphur Springs or Hot Springs, Va., the U.S. officials said. This still left the way open for a summit site elsewhere and J o h n s o n’s invitation presumably still stood. But with Johnson preferring not to journey to the United Nations area to call on Kosygin, and Kosygin preferring not to leave it, the outlmk for their meeting dinunished as time grew short. TWIN TIGERS — A first taste of fiublicity leaves the 2-month-old tiger at left a little be^ldered, while the other Basel 25oo in Switzerland to a tigress named Gunda. They have manages a half-hearted meow. Hie tyirins were bom in the just been put on display with other animals. U. P. Gets Its Way * on the Time Issue LANSING (AP) — Gov. Romn^ and Atty Gen. Frank Kelley today bowed to the Will of those Upper Peninsula communities that want ^eir time to he an hour behind the rest of Michigan. They said they would withdraw a petition in which they had asked the Interstate Commerce Commission to put the Upper Peninsula in the Eastern Time Zone. Lower Michigan is in the eastern zone, bnt the U. P. is located geogra^aUy as well as officially — in the Central Time Zone. For the sake of convenience and to avoid confusion, Romney and Kelley urged that U. P. points observing eastern time switch to Central time. They suggested the changeover be made at 1:01 a.m. EDT Thursday. A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1967 Study Recommends a Johnson Overpass City comtnissiwiers will b6 presented tonight with a traffic engineering feasibility st u djJ( whidi reclHniftends a |3-mi]lion overpass to carry east- and west-bound Johnson traffic over Cass and the Grand Trunk Western Railway tracks. ■nje Etetroit firm of Ellington, C o w i n and Stirtoi, Inc., in detailing recommendations, said “an overpass from State to Oakland is structurally and economically feasible.” ‘‘The present crossing is hazardous and subject to con- siderable traffic congestion and delays, as a result of railroad switch^ and throng train operations,” the engineers said. Installation trfanoverpass would provide a means for getting westbound traffic out of the downtown area, they said. ★ ★ Joseim E. Neipling, director of public works and service, said there is at present no good east-west route north of Huron before Walton. The overpass as recommended U.S. Speeds Report on Israel Ship Attack WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Defense Departinent is making every effort to make public this week a full report on the Israeli air and torpedo boat attack that killed 34 crewmen aboard the U. S. communications ship Liberty June 8. ★ ★ ★ Pentagcm officials feel that, with various rumors circulating on the reason for toe ship’s presence in the war zone and on the circumstances of the attack, an official statement of the facts should be made as soon as possible. 169 y/efcong Killed by U.S. Task Force SAIGON — An American Army-Navy task force pushing into the guerrilla-infested Mekong Delta was reported today to have killed 169 Vietcong In fierce night battle only 19 miles south of Saigon. ★ ★ ★ Twenty-eight American infantrymen were killed in the battle, 126 soldiers were wounded and four American helicopters were shot down, the U.S. Command said. The battle erupted as the soldiers and Navy river assault forces pushed up a near-flooded pad^ area along the Rach Hul River a few hours before dusk yesterday. ★ ★ ★ Heavy fighting raged until midnight, th«i fell off, but new skirmishes were reported today as the men of the U.S. 9th In-fantry Division continued th sweep. Arab newspaper added urgency to the matter yesterday with charges the Liberty aided Israel by jamming Egyptian radar at the start of the Middle East war. They said this was the reason Israel’s aircraft caught the Arab force on tbe ground. ★ ★ ★ Other allegations originating in the Arab world accused the United States of using the Liberty as a “spy” ship intercepting and translating messages transmitted by both sides during the fighting. OPINIONS ON ATTACK The scanty factual content of first accounts of the Israeli attack on tbe Liberty also gave rise to diverse opinions on what mused it. Israel apologized for the attack and explained that it was a mistake. The Defense Department replied that “The U. S. govern: ment has accepted the Israeli explanations and apologies. ★ * * Pentagon officials subsequently said privately they were incident was indeed a tragic mistake of warfare. Retrial for Man Jailed 37 Years DETROIT (UPI) - A man who served 37 years in prison for the slaying of a Detroit policeman yesterday was granted new trial. ★ ★ ★ Recorder’s C!ourt Judge George Crockett Jr. ordered t new trail for John Podolski 65, on the grounds Podolski had been denied his constitutional right to counsel and his rights to be confronted by witnesses during his 1925 trial. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly cloudy today with a few scattered showers and thundershowers ending this afternoon. High today 74 to 80. Clearing tonight and cooler, low 50 to 57. Sunny and mild Wednesday. Southerly winds five to 10 miles per hour this morning, increasing to 10 to 20 miles this afternoon and shifting to westerly by late afternoon. Thursday’s outlook: fair and slightly warmer. Percentage chance of rain today 30, tonight 20, Wednesday 10. At t a.m.: Wind Valocity S tn Diractlon: South Sun tatt Tuaiday at f;13 p.m. Sun rlta* Wadnaiday at S:S7 a.m. Moon Mil Wadnaiday at 4:56 a.m. Moon rim Tuaiday at S:07 p.m. Ona Yaar Ago la Pontiac Albu^uarqu AP WirapliaM NATHH4AL WEATHER — Rain is expected tonight from the eastern Lakes to Georgia and Texas. Rain is also forecast for the Rockies. It adll be warmer in tbe Northeast and Southwest and cooler in tbe Midwest. by the engineers would be 22 feet ov&r tote railway and would, span Pinegrove, Cass, the railway, and Pontiac Creek. Southbound traffic could turn onto the overpass from Cass. Commissioners will officially receive the presentation tonight and discuss the possibility of implementing the recommendations. The commission also will formally approve ordinances which will authorize the city’s 58,290, “ general fund budget for 1967 and establish the tax rate fw property owners. ★ w ★ Total budget for the fiscal year which began Jan. 1, is $12.3 million. It will require a tax levy of $18.02 per $1,000 assessed valuation as equalized. LEASE EXTENSION The commissioners will also consider extending a lease for She months for office space at 7 W. Lawrence for the Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity (OCCEO). The dty pays $800 per month, rent for the space. Commissioners also will consider petitioning the county drain commissioner to authorize storm sewer work in the south of Pontiac State Hospital north of Voorheis, at the city’s western edge. * ★ ★ Also to be considered changing the name of University Avenue to Price Street. The switch is being considered a result of the city’s plans change the name of Mount Clemens Street to University Drive. PARKING LOT A report wiU be made from the p 1 a n n i n g commi parking lot requirements in the city’s zoning ordinances. Pontiac Youth Shot by City Police Officer CALIFORNIA SLAYING SCENE - The bodies of two Iwrder pqtrplmen were found yesterday in this shack in southern California’s Riverside County. George Azrak and AP Wiraphoto Theodore Newton' Jr., missing since Saturday, were found shot in the head. A massive manhunt has begun. Kidnap-Killing of 2 Lawmen Stirs Manhunt in California SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) —Inorthem San Diego County and The kidnap killing of two young j southern Riverside County. U.S. border ^trolmen sparked! The Federal Bureau of Inves-a manhunt today. Itigation, other federal agencies Marine helicopters flew over and sheriff’s offices of both the ravines and foothills of | counties put every available A Pontiac youth was shot by city policeman early today while resisting arrest after b^ chased from another arrest scene, according to police. ★ ★ ★ In satisfactory condition at Pontiac General Hospital is La-mont Tucker, 19, of 55 Clovese He was shot once in the left side, officers said. Police said the shooting occurred in a home at 377 Prospect where Tucker fled after allegedly threatening to get a gun and return to a scene on South Sanford where officers had stopped his brother, Theodore, 23, of 19 Baxter in a reportedly stolen car. The vehicle had been staked out while parked about 1 a.m. on Franklin Road at Nevada, police said. ★ ★ ★ About 1:10, according to police, a second private vehicle drove up and discharged a passenger who entered the reported stolen car and drove it away. PATH BLOCKED’ The patrol car attempted to follow, but the second vehicle made a U-tum, blocking its path, either intentionally or unintentionally, police said. Another scout car foDowed and stopped the stolen vehicle on Prospect near Sanford and the second private car arrived moments later, its occupant allegedly threatening to get a gun and return, according to officers. Police said Patrolmen Merton Kesselring and Norman Kilmer were then instructed to follow that vehicle, which drove to Baxter Court where the occupant got out and ran. ■k -k -k The occupant. Identified by police as Lamont Tucker, was caught, but broke free and ran to the house at 377 Prospect where he was again caught Inside the door, but again broke free, officers said. ★ ★ * They said Tucker ran into a bedroom where Kiimer grabbed him while Kesselring became engaged in a struggie to fend off five persons from interfering in the arrest. ★ ★ .★ When Tucker allegedly threw punches at Kilmer and again broke free, Kilmer fired the diot, police said. Chinese Nuclear Arsenal! Said Seized by General HONG KONG (UPI) - A nist China’s first hydrogen Hong Kong newspaper today re-lbomb was exploded Saturday, ported a rebel Chmese Commu- intelligence nist general seized a major nuj s„„rce8 here said were du-clear arsenal m a battle that ^ous, the newspaper said its information from Communist China said Wang captured the Kaimusze arsenal complex before the test. The arsenal was Communist Party Chairman Mao Tse-tung’ man on the tracking job. A vast area surrounding the cabin in wWch Theodore Newton, 26, and George F. Azrak, 21, were slain was sealed off. Their government sedan was found covered with brush. Officers said there was no evidence that another car had left the scene 70 miles north of San Die- Birmlngham Area News Sergeant, 33, Promoted to Fill Police Chief Post BIRMINGHAM - A 19-year I veteran of the Birmingham Po- '' ‘ lice Department became its chief today. ★ ★ ★ The post was filled by 33-year-old Darryl Bruestle, a sergeant the last two years. Bruestie’s appointment by dty Manager Robert S. Kenning wag oonffrmed by city commissioners at their meeting last night and became effective this morning. Kenning said that Bruestle was selected for the $ll,200-a-year Job after “an extensive evaluation of a number of well-, qualified police professionals who applied for the position.” With the department since 1957, Bniestle succeeds Ralph W. Moxley, who retired earlier this year after 19 years as police chief. MOXLEY AIDE From 1963 to 1965, when he was promoted to the rank of sergeant, Bruestle served as an administrative aide to Moxley. A native of Waterfmd Town- De Gaulle Still Firm on British Market Entry DARRYL BRUESTLE ship and a 1951 graduate of Waterford Township High School, he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Emil Bruestle of 56 Dover, Waterford Township. Following his graduation from Michigan State University with a bachelor degree in police administration, Bruestle served in the U.S. Army for six months and then joined the Waterford Township Police department where he was a patrolman'for one year. k k k Bruestle, his wife, Kaye, and their two children, Bradley, 3, and Lee Ann, 1, live at 571 Bird. killed or wounded 15,000 persons and threatened to destroy another of Peking’s “secret atomic centers.” The English-language Star, a right-wing newspaper, said Gen. Wang En-mao, commander of the remote Sinkiang region, was I in control of the arsenal and testing grounds where Commu-; Car Sinks in River; Flint Man Is Killed A Flint man was killed yesterday when the car he was driving went out of control 1-75 in Pontij Oakland Highway Toll in ’67 53 Utt Y«ar to Data 63 Township, left the road and submerged in the Clinton River. Michael C. Yalch Jr., 48, was trapp^ in the car when it came to a stop in the water after jumping the median strip about 6:45 p.m., according to Oakland County sheriff’s deputies. Deputies said Yalch was traveling north just south of Auburn Road when the mishap occurred. last stronghold in the province, it said. The Star said the 15,000 fell during the storming of the arsenal. It said Wang now tT to level the arsenal unless Mao makes policy changes favorable to the rebel general. For months there have been reports of fighting in the area between Mao and anti-Mao forces. Wang earlier was reported to have rebelled against Mao’s pro^am of purging most old established officials and installing fanatic supporters in their place. Backlog Is Cut WASHINGTON (UPI) - The backlog of civilian Reservists awaiting a c t i v e-duty training has been reduced from 133,(XX) to 5,300 during the first six months of this year, according to the Army. Draft calls have been kept low since Jan. 1 to allow space in Army training camps for men entering the Reserves and National Guard through the so-called sbt-month program. Stokely Ignored Violence in Atlanta By tbe Associated Press Crowds of rock-throwing Negroes swarmed into the streets of a shopping center in a Negro neighborhood of Atlanta, Ga. Monday night despite advice from black power advocate Stokely Carmichael to “play it cool.” He spoke to the crowd at a nearby church and said police have “got us surrounded tonight, so we’U just walk around and play it cool.” ★ ★ ★ However, tbe group of about 350, mostly teen-agers, rushed into the shopping center area and began to throw rocks and bottles at store fronts and police cars. It was tbe third strai^t night of violence in the area. Police finally restored order by firing shotgims and pistols into the air. Some climbed to the roofs of the stta'ev to keep better watch on the denoonstrators. At least two persons were injured, including John Casserly, American Broadcasting Co. newsman, and eight were arrested. Carmichael was not spotted in the demonstration after his speech at the church. He had been arrested Sunday night in a similar outbreak and is free on $50 bond pending a court hearing Thursday. A group of 250 to 300 Negroes in Montgomery, Ala., also participated in rock and bottle throwing when a march on the "■ *e Apltol was ha' ' ' police. City Attorney Ira DeMent estimated 12 were arrested before order was restored. One of those arrested was the Rev. Richard Bpone, a Southern Christian Leadership Conference staff worker who had led several marches in the past week. He was charged with interfering with an arrest. PARIS (AP) - French sources say President Charles dS Gaulle’s basic opposition to British entry into the European Common Market was not al-^ tered by his talks Monday and tion as intensive as we know J how,” an FBI spokesman said. The killer or killers may have a 48-hour jump on their pur- Judges: Probe Is Up to Kelley Oakland County Circuit Court judges, following a 3l)-minute meeting this morning, said any announcement concerning the future of a grand jury in the county would have to come from State Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley. It was Kelley who had initiated the now-defunct grand jury probe into alleged criminal activities surrounding the Hazel Park Race Track. ★ ★ ★ After operating 10 months, however, tiie Michigan Court of Appeals recently ruled that the ^and juror. Circuit Judge Philip Pratt could not legally hold the position, and the investigation was halted. Kelley met with the members of the circuit bench last week to the setback, but details of the meeting were leased. old Wilson. * De Gaulle was reported holding to the view that the British request must be thoroughly discussed by the six present. Common Market members. British sources expressed optimism that negotiations on the British application for membership would begin soon. ★ ★ ’Hie two leaders also discussed the Arab-Israell Issues before the U.N. General Assembly, Red China’s H-bomb test and U.S. policy in Vietnam. k k k Both Wilson and de Gaulle were believed to have decided against flying to New York in an attempt to meet with Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and President Johnson for Big Four talks on the Middle East. The French reported de Gaulle disinclined to lend his prestige to what appears to him to be a propaganda circus at the United Nations. LEFT FOR LONDON Wilfon left for London today after an informal half-hour talk with de Gaulle. Monday the two spent nearly two hours under a chestnut tree in the garden of the Grand Trianon Palace in deep but apparently inconclusive talks. The training of 10 members of the Neighborhood Youth Corp from the Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity was approved by the city ' commission last night. ★ * ★ ’The purpose of the program, financed by federal funds, is to give boys work experience. The boys, 16 through 18 years of age, will be assigned to the Department of Parks and Recreation, to do main- Only one commissioner, Robert Page, objected to the program. k k k “I don’t see why we in this citadel of the middle class have to ask assistance for our parks program,” said Page. COUNTY HEAD The program was defended by commisioner Carl F. Ingraham who is also chairman of the county office of Economic Opportunity. “We’re not asking assistance,” explained Ingraham “They are asking us for assistance by cooperating in the Page said that the city should have its own training program. k k k It was noted by other commissioners, however, that the city had hired as many young men for summer jobs as the budget will allow. Parties in Press Release Battle State Tax Deadlock Continues LANSING (AP) - The House tax stalemate—and the battle of the press release—both continued Monday without aj^arent result. Republican and Democratic negotiators met nwst of tiie afternoon but reported no progress toward working out a state income tax package that can attract the needed 56 house votes. ★ ★ ★ . Each side, meanwhile, kept up the drumfire of press statements which started Friday and which each party hopes wili convince constituents that the other is to blame for the fiscal stalemate. With the new fiscal year to start at the end of next week, the pressure was increasing on both sides to find the votes for revenue-raising package of some kind. WON’T SIGN BILLS Gov. Gewge Ronmey has vowed he will not sign appropriations bills for the coming 12 months unless he is assured revenue intake will be adequate to balance state spending. “Tbe Democratic party must shoulder most of me respoa-sibility for our curroit fiscal ' ‘ House Speaker Robert Waldron said in his press release following the afternoon’s tax talks. “The Democratic party is responsible, in the main, for two years of overspending beyond revenue,” Waldron charged, “and it is guilty during that time of completely ignoring the need for new revenue,' even though they had the majority to pass a fiscal reform program.” ★ ★ ★ Democratic leader William Ryan said his party, in last fall’s election campaign, asked the voters for legislative majorities and for the responsibility of meeting Michigan’s fiscal needs. ‘UP TO GOP’ “But everyplace in the state we went,” he said, “there was a white-haired gentleman (Romney) with his arm aiound the Republican candidate saying, ‘if you vote for this man, you’ll get action out of the legislature.’ ” Now, Ryan said, it’s up to the GOP to act. . k k k Ryan still insisted Monday that to attract enough Democrat votes, a tax package would have to put about 27 per cent of the new-revenue burden on business. Waldron still insisted that was too high a figure and would hurt Michigan’s economy. Ryan has promised the Republicans 15 Democratic votes either for the program already passed by the Senate, which he estimates would charge business about 29 per cent of the $273 million it would raise, or a similar program Ryan suggested last week, of which he said the business share would be 27.7 per cent. DEM CHARGE Democrats charge the current Republican proposal would make business shoulder only about 10 per cent of the new-tax load. They add business pays about 30 per cent of state taxes under the existing structure. “Ibe Senate plan is truly a Republican plan,” Ryan said. “It passed with 16 Republican votes in the Senate, and we are willing to give it 15 Democrat votes in the House.” Uut Waldron said most House' Republicans feel “this plan put Michigan in a poor competitive position for employment opportunities. “If business moves from Michigan, the worker suffers because it takes away jobs,” Waldron said. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JUNE 20. 1967 VACUUM CLEANER HOSE Braided Cloth, All Rubber Exchangeable with A M Youc Old Re-Use- V ^ H able Hose Ends W ^ 91# ReeularT.50 U Cinne In itr Free IttHwry PARTS and SERVICE ON ALL CLEANERS Diiipotial I)aR»« lloKCs, Bnislirti, lirliN, Allachm«‘nii«; Klc> “Rebuilt by ('.urt’s ApplianceM I'oipu Our Oh-u’ I’nrlw’' • Free Home Demonstration-OR 4>1101 V Within 2S Mile Radius CURT’S APPLIANCES ' hacu»yrAuth0ifiiztHi§fntitipth*ttit*r 6484 WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD WASHINGTON (AP) - A Senate investigator says'broken-down construction equipment is rusting and rotting in VieUiam because repairs paid for by tiie United States were left undone. The Senate subcommittee on fioreign aid eiqiendltares pfans R#plcM« Old SwMty SfMl cmd AhNniMNii WMows In Your INSULATED WNYl WINDOWS FROM TO U.S. Bilked on Equipment Repair—Prober STEEL Vinyl Windows CASEMENT €300^:/ • SWEAT •NEED PAINTING , • STICK WOOD me HEB laaiani mode to your opening. Beth tides ef gloit clean frem inside. Mode to any style. All labor included In lew, low price. This is one impcovement 4hat will completely chonge and beautify the looks of your house or eemeiercfel building. llAeeCon ffonstnidionfla 1032 W«st Huron Street FE 4-2597 NICNTS a SUNDAYS PHONE: M2-W4I MA 4-1091 0T3-2S42 EM 3-2305 MY 3-1310 Shift Corrects Path to Venus for Mariner 5 PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -Mariner 5 pitched, rolled and burned its on-board rocket for 17.66 seconds. With this delicate maneuver Monday it corrected its path toward Venus and streaked at 6, 690 miles-an-hour toward a target centered 1,250'n^es off the planet’s surface. i to open hearings July 27 on that and other allegedly unfulfilled repair contracts involved in a |S4^million Agency for Interna-tiiaial Development prc^am in Asia and Europe. ★ ★ ★ ‘'ey’re paying milliois of dollars for repair of equipment that has not been properly repaired,” said JosejA Lippman, the subcommittee’s staff director. The maneuver was commanded by mission control at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory — on earth 980,000 miles away. Officials said all signals from the 540-pound voyager to Venus indicated it had functioned precisely as ordered. PREVENT CONTAMINA-nON Launched from Cape Kennedy a week ago today, the probe was aimed initially at point 43,200 miles from the cloud-shrouded planet. This was partly to prevent the craft from crashing onto Venus and contaminating it with earthly micro-organisms. The new target area is 2,50C miles long, 800 miles wide. ★ * ★ Officials said a second midcourse maneuver can be commanded if necessary in the 216-million mile curving flight to intercept Venus half way around the sun. The Soviet Union was silent on the status of its own Venus I probe, launched two days before [ Mariner 5. I Drydock-Bound I PORT HURON (AP) - The 1552-foot Freighter Sylvania left Port Huron Monday, under tow |for a drydock in Loraine, Ohio. I The Sylvania was sunk June 1 ! when rammed by the Renvayle. I The vessel was raised and tem-iporarily patched for her trip i to drydock- The inquiry stems from an inspection trip in Europe by Lippman and the subcommittee chairman, Ernest Gruening, E>-Alaska, and a separate trip by Lippman to Asia. ‘NOT DONE AT ALL’ Lippman told an interviewer there is evidence that repair work financed by the Agency for International Development in both areas is being done unsatisfactorily—or not .at all. The program involves reclaiming and repairing for foreign use construction equipment, cranes, trucks and Jeeps declared surplus by the armed services. ★ ★ ★ Lippman said this equipment is sent to AID depots or contractors in Yokohama, Japan; Inchon, Korea; Okinawa; Amster-The Netherlands; and Rota, Spain. Much of more than $2.5 million in work on equipment destined for civilian programs in • ICE CREAM • SOUR CREAM • BUHER • BUTTERMILK • CHEESE • MILK . • COTTAGE CHEESE dairy foods belong all lAupstir summer too! V\ jQJJg Enjoy Them Everyday! ramerican dairy association of MICHIGAN Vietnam has been unsatisfactory, said Lippman. At one area in Saigon, Lippman said he saw some ^ pieces of construction equip- Marriage Licenses Waltur C. Laport*, 764 Melrose and tory A. L. Slater, West Branch, Michigan .-•ofin P Leaner, Detroit and, Patricia A. Hann, 2431 Empire Norman W. T. Brink, Lancaster. Pa. nd Shirley L. Bishop, Birmingham David L. Dress, 47 West Cornell and Barbara J. Hughes, 86 East Columbia Robert L. Noland, Walled Lake and Arllna P. Karaschin, Walled Lake Ronald L. Phillips, Lake Orion and Dolores S. Jimenez, 422 Howland Thomas L. Saragent, 26V, Stout and Nancy E. Yarbrough, 26 Stout George W. Jackson, 35 Sentinel ano Linda L. Theobald, 812 Kettering ^ George _Geddla M L Far ............ GardaJ4. Bargen, Oxford A..Graham, ^McBain Michigan ind Sherry Larry L.'RIpaldl, Farmington and Diana merit vehicles, all of them unusable. “It had been repaired, supposedly put into good operating equipment,” he said. “It’s all inoperative. None of the stuff works.” * ★ .★ Lippman said the cranes are need^ to unload supplies for AID programs in Vietnam, and the construction equipment is used on civil works projects, some linked with the pacifica- tion program. * ★ * Other equipment was shipped out into the countryside before it was found to be unusable, Lippman said. “The information I get is that the countryside and some of the villages are virtually Jittered with broken:down pieces of equipment.” L. Sherrill, Southfield RIcherd J. Walsh, 1000 Lakevlew aren L. Weimar, Kaego Harbor Andrew A. KIves, Ann Arbor and a M- Waonar. Drayton Plains .. .. Bell, Bridgeport, Al Norma J. Barker, Farmin Rose, Drayton Plains ls*B*! Town, Royal'l Birmingham and Heads Lottery ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - Ernest T. Bird, who retired recent-! ly after 25 years as an FBI agent, has been named director of the New York State lottery. | Firemen Robbed SAN LOUIS OBISPO, Calif. (AP) — While Capt. Patrick Demsey and his two firentfen fought an apartment house fire recently, back at the station house somebody stripped their wallets of $16. NU-SASH REPLACEMENT WINDOWS r - -- PEHRY COUPON--------1 't fmrlt§ Sntaa Oil DEEPTAN 8-OZ. SIZE Regular $2.00 Charge account service—Pay all utility bills at any Perry Pharmacy PONTIAC-689 East DM. at Perry FE 3-7152 PONTIAC-1251 Baldwin Near Celumbia FE 3-1057 BIRMINGHAM-597 S. Adams Next to A&P Mi 7-4410 WATERFORO-341T Elix. Lk. Rd. at MS9 FE 8-9248 THOY-2870 W. Maple-Somerset Plaxa Ml 7-7910 CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON, BICYCLE? SELL IT WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 332-8181. \ Up To *100 Or More.. .On Your New Car At Pontiac State You Pay Only This Is The LOWEST RATE Of Any Financial Institution In This Area Take Up To 36 Months To Repay-We Also Finance Used Cars And Trucks TheBankOnThe“GROW” Pontiac State Bank Main Office Saginaw at Lawrence — open 9 a.m. Daily Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation u>Uh Deposits Now In$uredto$lSfiOOhyF,D.I,C. 12 CONVENIENT OFFICES / THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1967 CHARLES L. JOHNSON School Official Quits Avondale Board Votes to Seek Supplementary Funds AVON TOWNSHIP - The Avondale School Board last night accepted the resignation of Asst. Supt. of Instruction Charles L. Johnson. Johnswi has been with Avondale Schools since September 1962. He served as principal of Elmwood Elementary School for a year and a half before becoming assistant to the superintendent. He served as interim superintendent early last year prior to the appointment of John Dickey to that position. In other business, the board voted to make preliminary application to the State l^ool Bond Loan Program for a loan to be due in September 1968. The loan would go to supplement revenue from the current 7-mill tax to retire a $3,100,000 bond issue, which was to finance the new high school, additions to existing elementary school facilities and for acquisition of sites for future construction. The board gave the superintendent authority to approve installation of showers in the new R. Grant Graham Elementary School. Supt. Dickey said the showers would be needed if the school is to serve as a community center. School Tax Vote Slated ; HOLLY - 'fhe school ^ district set July 25 for a second attempt to pass a 10-mill operating levy vote. The June 3 vote lost by 49 votes. The requested millage is a three-mill increase ($3 per $1,000 as assessed) and renewal of a seven-mill levy due to expire. School officials pointed out all registered voters may cast ballots as the ? request is for operating millage and not indebtedness. Last day to register at township offices is Monday. Flier Is Sale in White Lake Plane Crash WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -An Adrian man received minor cuts and bruises when his small plane crashed yesterday near Round Lake. The pilot, Alton Gardner, said he .was flying the Piper Cherokee to Pontiac to pick up some parts for the Prentice Aircraft Co., owners of the plane. He said the engine lost power and the plane glided into a field, bounced over a fence *and came to rest behind the Round Lake Grocery Store. Gardner, who works part-time for the Prentice Aircraft Co. said he has been flying for about a year and a half. An investigation is being made to determine the cause of the accident. Pilot Walks Away From Disabled Airplane . Troy School Chief Demands Proof of Staff Irregularities By ED BLUNDEN TROY — The school millage battle is over and lost, but skirmishing continues. The latest potshots are being taken at the school’s modular system and the administration in general. Some of the “blasting” is being done by the teachers. In reply, Schools Supt. Rex B. Smith has issued a statement -demanding in effect, that teachers and parents put np or shut up as far as proving “rumors and gossip.” Sharp differences of opinion developed during the recent school millage election. The district asked a tax hike of $7 per $1,000 assessed value (7 mills) from property owners for a one-year period. ★ ★ ★ This was to pay off some $400,000 in debts accruing from last year and the coming school year. The miUage question lost by a 2%-l margin. Also defeated was school board vice president Gordon Sparks. He lost to Harold Janes, an accountant and severe critic of the district’s spending policies and educational system. Since the electiem, the board attempted to fire the high school principal, Joseph E. Be-chard. The effort,failed on a 4-3 vote. ★ ★ ★ He was reportedly charged with allowing laxity in the school where the “modular system” is in effect. The system allows great latitude as far as attending class, subjects studied, manner of dress, etc. •HIPPIE’ APPEARED One student group caused consternation by inviting such speakers as an American Nazi who didn’t appear, and a “hippie” from Detroit who did, according to school officials. The high school principal, though retaining his post, was placed on probation by the board. He must submit weekly reports for a year on how he is handling disciplinary problems at the school. He has been asked to enforce class attendance and rules of dress as well as tighten up on A group of 23 teachers entered the fray by charging the admiiustrati(Hi with being at fault. SMITH REPUES Superintendent Smith’s reply to all this is as follows: “I believe it’s about time everyone concerned with the Troy High School faculty squabble ought to make a concerted effort to sort out the rumors and gossip from the opinion and instances of poor judgment of inexperienced teachers. Clarkston Fights Disorder; Noise CLARKSTON - Disorderly behavior, noise and gangs will NOT be tolerated, village Police Chief Robert Phillips warns. * ★ ★ The chief has asked for citizens’ cooperation in enforcing a new ordinance on disorderly conduct. Chief Phillips said the main enforcement problem in the village is loitering and rowdyism, particularly in the summer months. 42 Beauties Seek Honor of Being Miss Michigan MUSKEGON OPV-For one of the 42 beauties in Muskegon this week, today is the start of a glittering path which leads to the giant stage in Atlantic City and the Miss America Pageant. With $11,000 in prizes being given winners in the Miss Michigan Pageant, the grand prize YEARROUND SPORTS ENTHUSIAST-Miss Michigan Winter Sports, 20-year-old Mary Louise Paxton, is on a river boat on the Au Sable Wver before competing in the Miss Michigan pageant this week at Muskegon. A student at Northwestern Michigan College, Traverse City, she is in the pageant under the sponsorship of the Grayling Rexona! Chamber of Commerce. is a chance to compete for the crown of Miss America. ★ ★ ★ The girls arrived in Muskegon today for orientation and rehearsal before facing the judges in competition Thursday. The field will be narrowed to 10 finalists and one will be crowned Miss Michigan of 1967 Saturday night. The 42 Miss Michigan contestants will be in convertibles in the Miss Michigan Pageant . parade Wednesday. The girls take the spotlight in the parade which includes 20 floats, 10 bands and a number of marching units. MISS MICHIGAN On one of the floats will be Miss Michigan of 1966, Nancy Ackert of Battle Creek, her reign coming to a close when she crowns the new queen Saturday. I The Miss America Pageant, considered by many to be the grandmother of the beauty and talent pageants, was started in the early, 1930s. ♦ ★ ★ Lenor S. Slaughter, executive director of Miss America Pag-; eants, Inc., who has been associated with the pageant 35 years, wiil make her first visit to the Michigan pageant this year as grand marshal of the> Wednesday parade. Besides winning a trip to Atlantic City and the Miss America Pageant, the Michigan winner will take home a complete wardrobe for fall, winter and spring; accessories; sports outfits and shoes; a jewel chest; a watch; portable television set; bowling ball; a camera, a scholarship and use of a car. The pageant finals Saturday will be televised at 9:30 p.m. The Village Council has stiffened its law on disturbances and the police department has vowed to step up enforcement. * ★ “There’s no reason why people in the village have to put up with noise and gangs,” Phillips said. RESIDENTS CAN HELP “However, residents can help a lot if they’re willing to sign complaints. In too many cases, it’s a matter of not wanting to get involved.” The new ordinance calls for punishment of $100 fine and-or 90 days in jail on conviction. It was prompted after incidents in the mill pond areas where loud parties were held over a recent weekend. The mill pond is completely surrounded by homes and residents complained of loud parties being held after 2 a.m. The problem of groups of youths loitering and causing trouble in the area is a continuous one, however, Phillips said. “With the new ordinance we should be able to take care of it,” he added. Autopsy Performed on Body of Woman An autopsy performed yesterday on t h e .body of a young woman found near Stoney Creek Metropolitan Park revealed that she died of an apparent skull fracture, police said. ' Romeo State Police said the decomposed condition of the body had prevented exact determination of the date of death. It was estimated, however, that she had been dead about two weeks. “If any Troy pdrent or teacher has a valid, serious complaint about a high school teacher, let him present it to the superintendent or the board of education. A * ★ “I guarantee appropriate action will be taken after proper investigation and study. FAIR HEARING “If any teacher has acted illegally or immorally in the performance of his duties and we are able to obtain adequate proof, he will be suspended and given a fair hearing. “If any teacher has acted incompetently or with poor judgment, he will be given a fair chance to correct his methods and procedures. “If any teacher has acted unethically, his case will be referred to the ethics committee of Troy Education Association in accordance with the master agreement. ★ * ★ “In attempting to straighten out our problems at the high school, we do not intend to act hastily or fire whole groups of teachers without sufficient evidence or to get involved in lawsuits over breach of contracts or to violate any sections of the State Tenure Law. INTERWOVEN PROBLEMS “Our problems at the high school appear to be very complicated and interwoven with each other in the minds of students, teachers and parents. “Please have patience while we try to unravel and investigate any information provided to The woman was described as blonde, about 5 feet 3, 140 pounds, and in her late teens to early 30s. The body was clad in a red sleeveless blouse and undergarments. The woman was wearing a ring depicting a setting moon reflecting through pine trees off a lake. FOUNDSUNDAY Police said the body was discovered about 7 p.m. Sunday by a pair of horseback riders near the park entrance. ★ ★ * Stony Creek Park is located on Main Park Road, north of 26 Mile Road in Washington Township. Meeting Slated for Niom Group The Niam Conference of the Macomb County Area will meet at 8 p.m. tomorrow at St. Barnabas Church, 24800 Phlox at 10 Mile in East Detroit. ★ * ★ The organization is for widows and widowers, aged 59 and under. A speaker will address the group. Adult and family activities are planned. 10 Arrested Near MSU in Dope Case LANSING (UPI) - Nine persons, most of them allegedly students, were freed on $2,500 bond each today after being arraigned yesterday on charges of possessing marijuana. Another perspn, William E. Kahl, 27, no address, was freed on $7,500 bond on charges of possessing marijuana and forging a prescription. All 10 persons were arrested Sunday in a raid on a hippie newspaper, called simply “The Paper,” near the Michigan State University campus. Preliminary examination for the group was set for June 29. ★ ★ * Donald L. Reisig, Ingham County prosecutor, said the youths were smoking marijuana in waterpiepes and other makeshift smoking devices. He said some of the youths were in various stages of undress. PERSONS IDENTinED They were identified as Kahl; Blake H. Bowen, 22, Troy; Dan Young, 23, East Lansing; Eileen Wrebbel, 19, East Lansing; Stewart Urist, 22, South Haven; John C. Wooley, 21, Lansing; Katherine A. Schoenherr, 20, Sturgis; Michael Harris, 30, Lansing; Suzanne C: Rice, 19, Haslett; and Margaret C. McNutt, 19, Haslett. * ★ * Authorities said they believed all but Harris and Kahl were students at Michigan State. School Work Pact Awarded Remodeling Planned at Rochester High ROCHESTER — The school board last night voted to award the Leslie Construction Co. the contract for remodeling work to be done at Rochester Senior High School. The agreement calls for the Leslie Co. to be paid $19,584 to install partitions in two large rooms in the school, increasing the number of classrooms in the school by three. The board also voted to spend $38,130 for the purchase of a multi-lith duplicating machine from Addressograph-Multigraph Co. Schools Supt. Douglas B. Lund said the board hopes to use the machine to put out a monthly newsletter. He said it will enable the school system office to function more efficiently and professionally. W * Construction work'pn the new Long Meadow E^Iementary School was reported to be pror ceedlng on schedule. Target date for completion of work on the school is Nov. 1, 1967, School District Aide Gets Post in State FARMING'TON TOWNSHIP-Harold W. Keivit, administrative assistant for the Clarence-ville School District, has been named superintendent o f schools in Athens. The new position is effective July 1. ★ ★ ★ Keivit, who has been administrative assistant for the past three years, formerly taught in the Taylor School District. He holds a bachelor’s and master’s degree from the University of Michigan and is presently taking additional graduate studies. Grant for Dust Study The Southeast Oakland County Incinerator Authority, located in Berkley, was awarded $26,667 from the U.S. Public Health Service for a one-year program entitled “The Control of Dust in Handling of Solid Wastes,” it was announced by U.S. Sen. Philip A. Hart. Escape Disaster, Just Like Movie SUGARLAND, Tex. - The front wheels of a truck being driven by James Edwin Allen picked a bad time to fali off. The mishap occurred as the vehicle . was crossing the Santa Fe railroad tracks here and a speeding train was bearing down on the crossing. Luckily, Allen and a passenger, John Myers, were able to leap to safety just before the train crashed into and demolished the truck. Dances Again in Lake Orion LAKE ORION - The second season of teen-age sununer dances sponsored by the Lake Orion Area Jaycees will start Friday, at the Lake Orion Youth Center, 102 S. Broadway. The Way Men will play for dancing from 8 p.m. till midnight, according to John Kish, 962 Miller, Orion Township, who s e r V e s as Jaycee committee chairman. ♦ * * A canteen will be in operation, and pool and table tennis tables will be available. Door prices will be awarded. The dances last summer were very popular, according to Kish and a second active season is viewed. The dances will be held every other Friday ni^t during the summer. I Takes (Air) Conditioning Weather Blows Hot 'n Cold By JEAN SAILE So far, good old 1967 has been the kind of year tiiat has had utility companies wringing their hands with glee. The cold, cold weather of last winter which kept gas- and oil-fired furnaces running at top blast has been supplanted by the hot, hot stickiness of summer which has had air-cmiditioning units of those fortunate enough to own them running at capacity. It seems to be a contest of endurance and anyone living throngh both extremes should come out well-tempered. That's what they call the hot and cold process of hardening steel, isn’t it? Swinuning pools are doing a land-office business, private owners frequently finding neighborhood strays soaking up the luxury. est” swimsuits of all time — not to mention their brevity — and boat owners are eating out and, in many cases, sleeping out on the water-cooled craft. GOLDEN YEAR About the only thing to be said for the torrid conditions is by the bugs. It’s been a golden year for the inchworms and the june bugs. They have been only too happy to share the extra hour o^ sunshine from Dayll^t Savings Time with picnickers and lovers of the great outdoors. In between the torrential rains we've had, firemen have been getting plenty of workouts dousing grass fires. ★ * ★ fr Quite frankly, it’s all been I little bit too spectacular. How about some climate c Beaches are the scenes of some of the “cool- the weatherman? Let’s not go to extremes. f } THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 20. 1967 A—6 » WESLEY McATEE Mayor J. J. TIGUE ■ Ford Motor Co. D’ARCY YOUNG Police Chief MRS. ELIZABETH A. WAARA Clerk-Treasurer MRS. DONNA THORSBERG Deputy Clerk JOHN FINLAYSON Assessor Progress Is on Horizon, Says Mayor Seiyers Seen as Catalyst for Wixom Growth PICTORIAL STORY BY JANICE KLOUSER WIXOM — This western Oakland County city, which has not developed as fast as some of its neighbors, is now teetering on the brink of progress. The impetus, which officials believe will start the municipality on its way to becoming a modern, developing city, is the $4.6-million sewer system now under construction. Because of the sewers, which should be available to the 10-square-mile city by the end of the year, Mayor Wesley E. McAtee predicts the present population of 1,800 will nearly triple in the next decade. “Growth is on the horikon,” he said. “It should begin next spring after sewers are connected.” Another boon to the city and one which gives it a character different from many of its neighbors is the Ford Motor Co., the second largest assembly plant in Ford’s worldwide operations. The 10-year-old plant occupies a 320-acre site at Wixom Road and 1-96 and employs an hourly force of 5,-Miss Klouser gQO. NEAR RAILROAD Ford officials chose the site because of its loca- tion near a railroad and a proposed freeway and today have nothing but high praise for the city and its administration. “It is and will be an excellent place to live because of good planning,” said J. J. Tigue, manager of the Industrial Relations Department. “We are impressed with the thproughness of the city officials and have always had a harmonious relationship with them. -‘They are excellent to do business with.” 82 PER CENT With Ford, which pays about 82 per cent of the city’s taxes, and about eight other industries in- BELONGS TO THE PAST - Wixom’s “downtown” may be slated for extinction if a hoped-for urban renewal project becomes a reality. Under the proposed plan, Pontiac Trail and Wixom Road, where the central business district is now located would become light industrial. A shc^ping center further east on Pontiac Trail would replace this scene. New Subdivisions Like This Are Seen For Wixom Community Got Its Name From Pioneer ofJSOOs . WIXOM — The first known settler in what is now Wixom came to the area in 1830. Lewis Norton stayed only two or three years then moved to WiUiamston where he was killed by lightning one day while taking shelter under a tree from an electrical storm. 'About a year after he left, the second settler by the name of Alonzo Sibley, built his home on tlie comer of Maple and Wixom roads. His arrival was followed by that of Alijah Wixom who settled the northern portion and who was a prominent pioneer of the community for 45 years. The town was first named Sibley’s Comers after Alonzo Sibley who purchased 80 acres of land from the government for $1.25 per acre. As more settlers moved in, Sibley donated some land for a one-room brick schoolhouse and a church. Homes began to spring up after the Flint and Pcre Marquette Railroad was built. It was after the railroads came in that the pioneers met to decide whether the town should be left at Sibley’s Corners or moved near the railroad. It was decided to build the town near the railroad and call it Wixom after Alijah Wixom. Shortly thereafter a general store and post office were built followed by a jewelry store, a large wheat and plaster warehouse, lumberyard, foundry and machine shop. First Building In Proposed New Business Section eluding the new Micropoise Engineering Co. scheduled to be built soon, Wixom is destined to become primarily an industrial city. About 40 per cent of the land area is zoned industrial. Industries also help to keep taxes the second lowest in Oakland County. This year the levy totals 9.628 mills—4.128 for the general fund and 5.5 for the sewers. ★.....★ ★ The city’s valuation is up $9 million over last year. It amounts to $35,703,500 this year as compared to $26,631,633 this year. WITHOUT HIGH TAXES “If we can keep our tax base at a high level, people can livd here without high personal taxes,” said McAtee. To keep up with and possibly facilitate the city’s expected boom, plans are in the making for an urban renewal project. At this stage, an application has been submitted for a survey and planning grant to study renova-tion of the central business district, bounded roughly by Wixom Road, the Grand Trunk Railroad, the proposed ring road and slightly south of Pontiac Trail. ★ ★ ★ In its present state, commercial growth is hampered by the two railroads which bisect the heart of town at the point where Pontiac Trail and Wixom Road come together. LIMIT ON DEVELOPMENT Officials agree that the railroads are necessary but admit that they limit development of a downtown business area. Currently, the central business district consists of a restaurant, a grocery store, a couple of general stores and a beauty shop. Other businesses, 31 in all, are scattered throughout the city. ★ ★ ★ This could all be changed, though, if urban renewal becomes a reality and a shopping center is erected on Pontiac Trail across from the civic center. OLDER BUH.DINGS Some of the older buildings in the present business district would then be torn down and replaced with light industry which could make better use of the railroads. Another indication that extensive growth is about to take place is the number of new schools planned for the area by the Walled Lake School District. A new high school, a new elementary school and a new junior high school are planned in and near Wixom in the near future. ★ ★ ★ “The school district feels that this will be the big growth area in the next few years,” said McAtee. Ford Motor Co. And Its Sprayviing Industrial Complex Play A Big Part In The Wixom Story THE PONTIAC PRESS 18 West Huron Street M«a««>ng zdttoT TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1%7 Pontiac, Michigan 4805S HOWAU H. riTMKIUU, n Gritty Group Gains Graduation Many of life’s most courageous accomplishments occur in pursuits not generally touched by the aura of bravery. Yet the quality can be as truly reflected by unremitting devotion to a relatively prosaic objective as by instinctive acts of fearlessness. ★ ★ ★ For openers, consider 26-year-old Jerky Bond who, after becoming a school dropout eight years ago, turned back the academic clock to qualify for graduation from Lake Orion’s Community High School. Paired with him is a 38-year-old mother of eight, Mrs. Robert Dodt. Last fall she enrolled at Pontiac Northern High School, and combining an employment and study schedule rigorous enough to fell a Spartan, triumphantly reached for her diploma with the rest of the school’s graduating class. ★ ★ ★ Another imsung heroine is Mrs. Gerald Miller who, along with caring for seven children attended Waterford Kettering High School, for several years to graduate with her second eldest. And how about Mrs. Elsie Robertson, another mother of eight; and Mrs. Carolin Martin, returned to class after a lapse of 20 years; who were graduated along with their sons from Pontiac Central High School? ★ ★ ★ Also joining the “you’re never too old to learn’’ select society were Mrs, Edward Webster and Mrs. Roger Kidwell who likewise marched with their sons in the graduating class of Waterford Township High School. We render an admiring salute to this group of steadfast students. May their high purpose and determination serve as an example and inspiration to a host of teen-agers tempted to cut short their scholastic careers in answer ^ to the siren call of immediate “gain.” U.S., USSR Hold Responsibility for World Peace What has aptly been termed a two-power duopoly is developing between the United States and Russia. These are in fact the only two powers that have the means to prevent the trend of world affairs from racing uncontrollably to disaster. Along with it, they have parallel interests and an overriding responsibility to spare the world the holocaust of a third world war. Despite both, however, the Russians will undoubtedly continue to make life uncomfortable for this country wherever and whenever they can, short of a direct and irrevocable confrontation. Where they detect uncertainty, there they will meddle. We must be prepared to expect it and effectively to deal with it. The meetings of the U.N. Security Council have demonstrated that no firm action to end war can be taken without the consent both of the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. That being the case, why should there not be a Pax Americana-Sovietica, an understanding by the two most viable powers in the world to play earnestly the role of peacemaker? Steadily and inexorably, this has become a “big two” world in which the choice is between peace and cataclysm. It falls upon the Russians and Americans to make the choice. The war in the Middle East, however tragic the consequences for the peoples involved, serves as evidence that we must be approaching the only logical conclusion — an end to war. Sky the Limit on Astronomical U.S. Finances The trouble with astronomical figures like those our Government deals in is that they’re so big most people can’t comprehend them. Consider the Administration’s proposed 1968 budget of $135 billion. Whittle that down to a per-day cost and the sum still is a staggering $370 million, or better than a third of a billion dollars. Only the cost per second is really meaningful for most of us. That comes to $4,281. When you stop to think that the fruits of a full year of laboring at your job would serve to keep Uncle Sam in beans only a second or two, you begin to realize Just how big— and how expensive—this Government of ours really is. Midepst Debate in V.N. Filled With Its MARLOW By JAMES MARLOW AP News Analyst WASHINGTON - Before the end of the Israeli-Egyptian war debate, which opened yesterday In the U.N. General Assembly, the United States and the Soviet j Union may get' along better or worse. It’s that unpredictable. The Soviets, who promised! the Arabs their | support if they got into war with Israel, did nothing except piously protest violence when the war came and the Israelis demolished the Egyptians. This cost the Soviets dearly in Arab confidence. So what dwy did when the quick war ended was obvl-Mt: They set out to recapture Arab good will by asking the UJ4. Securty conn-cO to condemn Israel as an aggressor and demand it withdraw from the Arab land K seized. The Soviets lost on this maneuver in the council when a majority of the 15 members, includii^ thb United States, refused to go along. So then IfoBCOw hsked the full assem- bly to do what the council refused to do. This time, in the General Assembly, the Soviets may try to fry a lot of fish. WORTHWHILE PROJECT Posing as friend of the Arabs, it can seek to make the United States look pro-Israel and anti-Arab, which the Arabs think it is anyway. For the Soviets this would be a worthwhile project if the result froze the United States out of the Middle East, whlqh doesn’t seem likely, and made itself' the dominant force. But the unpredictables in all this are endless. A ★ ★ Soviet - American relations have been improving, and thej Soviets showhd reason and restraint when the Mideast war broke out. rrs POSSIBLE It’s possible that, while trying to endear themselves to the Arabs all over again by castigating Israel, they will try to avoid ansrthing that would anger the United States. It seems likely that no matter what the General Assembly says about the Is-raeli-Arab war it will hpve little effect on a Mideast For instance, suppose the And the Israeli Foreign Minister, Abba Eban, who is also in New York, said Sunday there would be no return to prewar boundaries “even if the General Assembly votes 121 to 1 in favor of it.” He said the Arabs would have to negotiate with Israel about getting their real estate back. The Flip Side David Lawrence Says; Kosygin ‘Act’ Typically Soviet WASHING'EON-What premier Kosygin did and said on his visit to New York City and in his speech at the United Nations shows con clusively how a monolithic government functions. Not only] were the words con-' demning the LAWRENCE policies of the United States agreed upon in the Kremlin and the premier directed to parrot them, but the Soviet people were denied an opportunity on the same day to hear on radio President Johnson's speech or the rebuttals to the premier’s address by the other speakers at the United Nations General Assembly. It was considered important to keep from the Russian people any knowledge of Premier Kosygin’s walk around New York City and the obviously friendly reception given him, and equally imporatnt not to broadcast or reprint the significant speech made by President Johnson yesterday morning, just before the General Assembly met. These tactics are not un-unusual. The Communist oligarchy in Moscow is afraid to let the people of Russia know of the friendly spirit prevailing in this country toward all other nations and of the sincere desire of the representatives of most governments in the United Nations to find a way to achieve an enduring peace in the Middle East. peat the accusations and demands which have become ingrained in Soviet policy, irrespective of consequences to the peace of the world. Nor was it unexpected that Premier Kosyghi assailed American policy and demanded that the United States withdraw from Viet- Certainly any conference between President Johnson and Premier Kosygin would be meaningless, too. All .these maneuvers are part of the Communist concept that there must never be any modification or change in a policy once adopted. It means that the Soviet government is not interested in planning a peace by conciliation, and wants to keep the Middle East in constant turmoil. Bob Considine Says: New Grad at Berkeley Takes Political Plunge BERKELEY, Calif. — The It was a good, gutty talk, I most, remarkable remarks of told him, and introduced my-the annual kudos season may self, have fallen from the lips of Arthur Joel Shartsis, president of his class and candidate A. B. College Letters and Science on graduation day at the Univer- “What would have happened if the governor had been here today?” I asked. “Would you have gone through with it, with him sitting on the platform in front of all those people?” “Sure,” the young man said. “I’m kind of sorry he didn’t show up.” He said it as wistfully as a CONSIDINE Cali- kid who didn’t get a cherry Voice of the People: Reader Calls Attention to Area Traffic Problem Oqr State Highway Department did a fine job of connecting Telegraph Road to 1-75 in widening Square Lake Road. However, in spending welt over a million dollars for the project, they neglected to install an extra traffic signal on Telegraph. ★ ★ ★ ^ For northbound traffic on Telegraph, the traffic signal is far out in. front of the proposed line of stop. At almost every change of signal the northbound traffic on Telegraph stops in the eastbound lane of Square Lake Road. Since this happens almost every light change, all drivers 'can’t be careless where they stop. ★ ★ ★ A traffic signal should be installed further south, giving northbound drivers a more definite view of the intersection as to where to stop. This would enhance the flow of traffic as well as making it a safer intersection. ROBERT J. RANZILLA BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP ‘Enjoyed fteports of Trip Around the World’ Thank you, Mr. Harold A. Fitzgerald, for the enjoyable, informative accounts and opinions of your recent journeys. Please continue to share your travels with us. MRS. CLARENCE W. KREMER 1957 MARIE QRCLE More Readers’ Views on Change in Time The most peaceful time of day for me is when I kiss my two small children goodnight and tuck them in bed, but it is almost impossible to get them to sleep while the sun is still up. Daylight Savings Time may be wonderful for some people but what’s going to help the tired housewife who loves that peace and quiet after she gets her kids to bed? TOO LIGHT TOO LONG The Daylight Saving Time is for the birds, literally and figuratively. If the majority of the people want Daylight Saving Time, they should wait until 1968 to put it on the ballot and vote on it. GEORGE DeQUIS Here we go again, trying to stretch the day into more than 24 hours. I have to get up at 4:30 and to get enough rest I need to be in bed by 9:30. Can you imagine children crying, playing and screaming, motorcycles racing down the street, and me slowly having a nervous breakdown? I hope I get A' chance to vote on it. ALINE YORK 232 SEWARD Comments on Recent Middle East Conflict I urge that America not give an inch of the territory that Israel took in this last war against the Arab states. Israel attacked towns inside Lebanon. When they could not goad the Arabs into attacking first, they attacked. AH evidence is that they planned this war for years. After a cease-fire was accepted by Syria, the Israeli attacked again. Again a cease-fire, but Israel attacked a day and a half later. Shades of Hitler! MARTIN PAPP ROCHESTER fornia. The good-looking fellow, who majored in political science, opened his political career with a blast against Gov. Ronald “ on the top of his sundae. Question and Answer How old are ballet stars Rudolph Nureyev and Margot Fonteyn? FAN REPLY Dame Margot Fonteyn was horn in England May 18, 1919, and Nureyev was born in Russia March 17,1938. In Washington: Communist policy seeks to keep up the ill-feeling and even to exacerbate it further Assembly says Israel and the Arabs ought to get together and work out a settlement. A ★ ★ Or suppose it condemns Israel and tells it to wlthi draw and return to the Arabs the land seized in the war. RULED OUT Before the, Assembly could even meet to discuss such problems the Egyptian ambassador to the United Nations, Mohamed El Kony, ruled out Sunday any Israeli-Arab negotiations. He said, “By aU means we are going to get our terri-itory back, whatever the cost.” Further, he said, even if President Johnson and Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin, who is in New York for the debate, had a summit meeting they “couldn’t arrange anything! mthout our He will probe deeper into that career this week by going to Washington to join the staff of his friend. Rep. John Tunney, Democratic son of arch-Republican Gene Tunney. He was chosen as one of the two graduating students who spoke to the army-sized grad- ________________ by denunciation of the United .nation classes and a congrega- T h e reputa-States and Great Britain. Uon of perhaps 20,000 which. tations of men It is not surprising that the filled a section of Memorial and groups Soviet government decided to. Stadium, let its mechanical spokesmen * ★ * His subject was ‘"The University — A Crisis in Confidence.” “We were once known as the Harvard of the West,” he said in his strong way. “Now I Ruin Fans Out From Mideast By BRUCE BIOSSAT WASHINGTON (NEA) -Much of the wreckage of the war in the Middle East will not be found on the Sinai desert and other battlefields. at the General Assembly re- Verbal Orchids J. R. Stetler of Atlanta, Ga., formerly of Birmingham; 83rd birthday. Mrs. Dena Naugle of Auburn Heights; 86th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Hemstead of Oxford; 53rd wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Vem Johnson of Walled Lake; 61st wedding anniversary. Mrs. Anna E. Miller of Avon Township; 81st birthday. E. E. Kilbreath of hnlay City; 87th birthday. Mrs. Bertha Hnntwork of 93 Murphy; 96th birthday. understand there is a school where in New England known as the Britain, Berkeley of the East. But our future is in doubt . . .” Carol Steinbaugh of Highland; 80th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Wright of 4150 Elmhurst; 51st wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Bert McKeachie of White Lake Township; 52nd ing on the stadium grass irf wedding anniversary. families of the graduates. ’The “doubt” was the gist of his talk. The citizens of California have lost confidence in the proudest jewel in the state’s crown, the university which has more Nobel Prize winners on ifs faculty than any other school in the world, whose alumni are everywhere — including the Supreme Court, the Cabinet and every great corporation. He owed this lost confidence to “some of our public citizens — those politicians, whether professional or otherwise, who have directed their attention to us.” He said the politicians, obviously Reagan, were t^ing to bring Cal dovm to the level of the fist and game board. I apmoacbed him later, during the affectionate meet- BIOSSAT West Germany, France and Italy, the fabled lands of a great continent? ’They were being largely ignored — penalty both for their varying degrees of post- their own already half-dug economic graves, plan their next hate campaign against Israel even smolders. Then there is poor India, never so overburdened by famine and chaos that it cannot find time to lecture the world on its moral duties. India’s leader, Mrs. Indira Gandhi, often a most admirable woman, professes to see in the anti-Semitic hatreds and vaulting ambitions of Egypt’s Nasser a kind of wave of the future. In truth, of course, he is the tide going out — an economic wastrel, Sukamo-style, a pos-turer whose charismatic talents are frittered away before the mirrpr. Add to the wreckage the leaders in some black African Tiny Israel must, then, be, a sort of Pentagon-made “McNamara cocktail.” One can hardly blame the World War II political impo- evidently believe tence and for the self-comfort- t,,at nothing is to be deemed ing isolationism they devel- ............................ ■ ■ ■ oped to match their impotence. When you are grossly indifferent . to the world’s problems, they get l^andled without you. German leaders, oddly enough, were the oiUy ones candid enough to make open conunent over being left in the wings. Consider next the tragic Arabs. They strive desperately to cast away a fair measure of genuine official good will in the West, at the same time dissipating sympathy for even their strongest causes, like the million or more refugees left homeless for 20 years. They were recklessly wiUlng to drag the great powers into the war, talk now of digging Israelis for resenting assignment to this diminutive role in a war they plainly won by this one still themselves. On the other hand, the wreckage includes many Americans and Europeans who make “military victory” a dirty phrase in Vietnam but exult in it when the h'iumph is Israel’s, who in this war uttered hardly a sound against bombing, napalm, the death of civilians — all matters which lift them to emotional heights over Vietnam. This town has heard a lot of good-natured humor over Vietnam doves becoming Middle East hawks. But when the fun is put aside, their doiible-standard shows. “Escalation,” a word they misuse almost daUy ov«r Vietnam, was apparently never fear^ around Suez. This new ..w..—. .» -w _________ whose enlargement was a crime which by any stretch them an unalaraung pros- can be labeled' “revolution- vect brought Soviet Premier ary.” In their myopic world, Kosygin and President Jcdm-Nasser is the Arab crusader ^ line.? tilting against colonial giants. ^h®. war these f^tics say Oakland, Oanesaa. Llv-Hisnan, Macomb Lapaer and WaaManaw Coimtiat It h SlUS a yaart ahawhara in Michigan and all other placai In the Unhed stataa S2(.00 a year. Alt mall nib- pompt twn Btw pt Mtmbtr or ABC may fan out from Vietn^ .to China and the world has never produced one twitch on the hot line teletype. The ironies and the twists need not be multiplied further. Their arguments about Vietnam will never sound the sAme again. Nor ^1 Europe ever seem quite the same ^ or the Arab world, the pro-Nasser black Africans and pathetic India. Their battered hulks, stripped of much weight and iidluence, lie stremi across the world landscape in the wRke of a m^e week-long war. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JUNE 20, 1967 A—f Revise 'Biased' School Policies, D.C. Ordered WASHINGTON (AP) - The District of Columbia’s Board of Education, its policies termed discriminatory, is under federal court order to make massive changes in the capital’s public school system. Judge James Skelley Wright of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals issued the order—which could have national implications — in a decision Monday that demanded revision of board policies on student placement, faculty hiringSi basing and attendance regulations. Every word clearly heard mikthe p"’P"'V»* KPVING* RPSTFJJM a complete hiffh volume sound system in a single case • Provides professional quality sound to audiences as large as 1000 BB « Works on Rashlight batteries s Weighs only for easy • Easy to use ||||||||H|||H • Adaptable for Budienlse partid- • ■ ■ ■ . , pation Tile AmpiixVex Roving Rostnim includes: e 25 watt transistor amplifier (40 watt peak) e 2 full fidelity loudspeakers • Microphone and aecMsories e RetracUble legs for reading height adjustment • Auxiliary input • All in one case which becomes the lectern • Manufactured in U.SJI. e All for $149.95 (less batteries) AVAILABLE FROM: / AUDIO-VISUAL CENTER 55 Oakland Ave. FE 4-1523 The verdict was a victory for Julius W. Hobson, a federal employe and civil rights leader, who hailed it as assuring “a bright future for the pow black boys and girls in the school sys-an." The board of educatim withheld immediate comment regarding a review by board attorneys. 18 MONTHS AGO Hobson, 45, who 18 months ago filed the suit against the board charging discriminatiim, said he hoped school officials would appeal Monday’s ruling to the Supreme Court. He said if the high court upholds Wright’s ruling it would ^ strike a death blow to so-called de facto segregation, or racial imbalance in the schools, with sweeping ramifications for ur-areas of the North. WEDDING INVITATIONS For The Diecriminating BRIDE-TO-BE ^ m for • Announcements • Infermolt • Accessories pMe cwifidmtce et te quolHy and cormct-Munf fonn. Wedding Announcements of... • Traditional Beauty e Classic DIstinctien e Social Cerrectneis /r ,,#/* 38 Years Serving Pontiac' j ' | nnHianEiiiiiiM' aSNsrihSqtaTsi^FE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. JUST PHONE 33M181. TRADING BOATS IS EASY WITH A 3,500 at Confab EAST LANSING (AP) -Some ,50b persons are on the Michigan State University Campus today for the largest conference ever held on the campus. It’s the 75th annual meeting of the American Society for Engineering Education. The conference ends Thursday. Wright ordered the board to abolish immediately its system of placing students in “tracks’* of varying academic difficulty depending on the students’ scores on aptitude tests. The judge called-the aptitude tests “standardized primarily on white, middle-class children' and said they forced most Negro children into tracks which offer reduced curricula and from which “chance of escape is remote.’’ FACULTY INTEGRA'nON The decision also ordered the faculties of capital schools “substantially integrated’’ and said the board must provide busing to take Negro students from overcrowded schools to primarily white schools, which he said have enrollments under capacity. * * ★ Wr^ht further ordered the board to file a plan by next Oct. 2 to increase racial integration of students. , „„.★ .it Nine of eveiy 10 students in the capital’s public schools are Negro. Appointaients this spring have given Negroes a 5-4 majority, their first ever, on the education board. The judge said the faculties of District schools “are assigned so that generally the race of the faculty is the same as the race of the children.’’ He noted the ‘heaviest concentration of Ne-^0 faculty, usually 1C per cent, is in the Negro ghetto schools.’’ LARGER SHARE White students get a proportionately larger share of the capital’s tax dollar, said Wright —nearly $100 more annually per student. Wright said the track system, because of improper aptitude testing, denies Negroes “equal opportunity to obtain the vdiite-collar education available to the white or more affluent children.” Hobson, a Negro native of Workers Pick Teamsters at Farmington Twp. Firm Employes of a Farmington Township auto parts manidac-turing firm yesterday elected Teamsters Local 614 as their bargaining agent effective Ai%. 19 when their agreement with Communications Workers of America Local 4000 expires. * ★ ★ In the election at Diamond Automation, Inc., 23400 Haggerty, the Teamsters received 91 votes to 55 for the present labor representative. Two other votes were east for “no union representationV as 148 of the company’s 164 employes went to the polls. The election was scheduled by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) i^en more than 30 per cent of the employes signed cards petitioning representation by the Teamsters. An NLRB spokesman said that all three parties in the election, the company and the two unions, will have five days to file objections concerning the election which was conducted by the NLRB. Certification of the employe bargaining agent, effective Aug. 19, will be made by the NLRB Monday. Reluming Tonight For A Very Limited Engagement THE DALTON BOYS Join The 300 Bowl Tonight In Welcoming Back The Area's Favorite Action Band 'Qfiy Wke/t& tke/ -AdSm Ja Wighto -A Week; 300 BOWL 100 S. CASS LAKE ROAD Birmingham, Ala., is an economist for the Social Security Ad-ministratjon. He is a former official of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Congress of Racial Equality, but he split with them and now heads a city civil rights group called ACT. It was the second major school desegregation ruling handed down by Judge Wright. ★ ★ * In 1962, as a U.S. District Court jurist, he ordered admission of two Negro girls to Tu-lane University, breaking the color bar at the New Orleans school. FREE COLOR TV To Be Given Away At Hijnu Sluit finvite 510 WEST HURON-PONTIAC No Purchase Necessary ' Drawing August 1st, 1967 , Licenced Drivers Only For Drawing CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON, BICYCLE? SELL IT WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. EASY TO USE, JUST PHONE 3.32-8181. HELLO my name is Planned For Pontiac APRIL 21-24 Your Cooporation Would Bo Sponsored By Church of Approciotod When A Volun- Christ, 1180 N. ftwry. Con- teer Wearing This Tog ducted By Young People Knocks At Your Door. From Mici|igan. Squaw need new work tools? See the Indian Givers at Community National Bank. They’ll give you money for new appliances if you promise to give it back. Money for a new refrigerator, a new range, an air conditioner, washer or dryer. Or, to help mom and the the rest of the family relax, a new TV, stereo, camera or other hobby equipment. You’ll save money with Community National’s low “thrifti-loan” bank rates. As Chief Pontiac says, “New appliances make life happier on old reservation.’’ NATIONAL I BANK Now 21 officas in Oaldand and Macomb Countio* MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPOUATION 'A—8 THE PONTIAC PBESS. TUESDAY. JUNE 20, 1967 City Man, Back From Greece, Says Junta Had Stabilizing Effect The troubled and tempestuous Middle East has been noted for at least two decades for strife, discord and upheaval. Yet, at its edge, linking Europe to Asia and Africa, Greece stands "peaceful and tranquil.’’ Despite a fierce but relatively quiet struggle for power, a takeover of the reins of government by a military junta and dark Greece is now better off than at any time in the postwar era, in tile opinion of Socrates Sek-les of 185 Ottawa, a Pontiac resident since 1911. American organization, recently returned from his 40th visit to Greece, one he took in order to evaluate the political, economic and social climate of his birthplace. “I went expecting to find machine guns on top of hoteis. I found only order and wellbeing,” he said. Seldes, an officer of the- Ibk fluential American Hellenic Progressive Education Association, a national Greek- He said his stay in Greece as in marked contrast to a visit made in August 1965, when Athens — the principal Greek city — was hit by riots an dissension. PEIUOD OF TROUBLE ‘Then we found ourselves in an atmosphere of trouble and anxiety,” he said, remember- ing that Greece had to provide soldiers to stand in front of the American Embassy to ward off troublemakers. Admitting some apprehend Sion over the tide of affairs in Greece before his trip this month, SeUes said be began forming the impression that something had changed shortly after arriving. “It seemed that all in Greece were working with greater zeal and less anxiety.” The now-retired former restaurateur said he traveled throughout Greece questioning people, ‘‘I4alked to nbt only the government leaders, but the ordinary people, the cabdriver, the farmer, the waiter. Not once did I hear anyone say he was dissatisfied with the government.” government canceled the elections pending revisicm of the constitution. A 20-member council has been selected to revise the constitution for a vote of the people. Sekles, who in 1965 was chairman of an AHEPA conventional congress in Athens which drew some 15,000 members, said that the United States, while it may be belabored in other countries because of its bigness, prestige and role of \vorld policeman, is loved in Greece. when a Communist-inspired insurrection threatened to turn the country over to Red hands. “The Greeks realize that it was the U n i te4 States which saved the country,” he said. The Trunian doctrine, advanced under Harry S. Truman, un-lassive aid to Greece in the years after World War II The Cireeks remember this and are thankful, said Sekles, who has advis^ presidents since Woodrow Wilson on Greek-American problems. STATUE OF TRUhLtN To show their appreciation, the Greeks have built a statue of Truman in Athens, he said. Communism is no threat and party membership is less than 1 per cent of the population, be said. with Israel, but as a nation it could not get involved,” he said. EVACUATION STOPOVER Sekles said he noticed immediately on arriving in Athens that large numbers of Americans and Europeans were Irving the Middle East by way of jets routed through Athens. “Usually there are five or six in the airport. When I landed there were about 30. The hotels were full and private residences were rented to accommodate those who had to wait fw flights,” he said. Sekles said the Mideast war, which saw Israel humble the Arabic nations, had little effect on the Greeks. “The Greek sympathy was Israel and term the Israelis as “hard working, tremendously proud and devoted.” VAST DIFFERENCE Mrs. Sekles said she was amazed standing on the border overlooking neighboring Jordan. “On one side are trees, orchards, green lands. The other is desolate and poor,” she said. VklC>- IldS visited Isidll Sl\ time’s and was accompanied on two of these trips by his wife, a Pontiac club leader. Both Sekleses have been impressed with the progress made that his adopted land, the^U.S., will ccNitinue to be the greatest nation on earth. She said the Israelis have regular planned programs to start forests in desolate areas. One which is thriving outside of Tel Aviv is named after the late John F. Kennedy. Sekles, gWen^ to-refleclion.. on the'past and future, believes that order will come to the Middle East, believes that his birthplace, Greece, will grow stronger and more steady, believes “Time heals everything,” he said, a philosophy that he has followed and prospered with ever since he first came from Detroit to Pontiac on a tip that he could get a job here. He spent what must have looked like the biggest quarter in the world — his last — to take the trolley ride to Pontiac, but time has been on his side. BAhA LLAH cloudad iplaiidor ot hi> nwlaKon I34-4MS (IN: Olaminit) (Mer liSI a.ll.) Sekles said the cost of living has gone down and wages have gone up with the increasing amount of controls assumed by the government. This was a necessary step, he said, in ensuring that Greece would remain stable and would not dissolve into a land of nearanarchy, disrupted by adverse economic conditions. POWER STRUGGLE Greece was put under army control in April by King Constantine after nearly two years of a power struggle between him and former Premier George Papandreou and Papandreou’s America n-educated son, Andreas. VISITING THE ARCHBISHOP - Socrates Sekles (left) talks with the Greek Orthodox Archbishop of Greece, leronymos, in one of his many talks during the past few weeks with Greek leaders. Sekles of 185 Ottawa also had visits with Premier Constantine Kolias, the chief of the general staff of the army and ministers during his recent visit. The 26-year-old monarch, convinced that a period of dictatorship was necessary to avoid grave internal disorder and to save the monarchy, suspended normal constitutional procedure in putting the Army in control. The Papandreous and their leftist followers had fought to make the king a largely ceremonial figure with no real pow- Romney Gets Authority Over Guard Commander LANSING (UPI) - The Michigan Senate gavl final approval yesterday to a military reorganization bill that gives the governor clear authority as com-mander-in-chief of toe National Guard to hire and fire the adjutant general. The bill, certain to be signed by Gov. George Romney who has sought it for two years, reorganizes toe state’s military establishment under an adjutant general directly responsible to the governor. It eliminates toe hodgepodge line of command of the existing system. The bill passed 26 to 5 and will take immediate effect with the governor’s signature. The bill ends, for all practical purposes, the squabble that re-;uited when Romney dismissed VBhicles which have 1953 Ford — B3FG 259 571 1958 Mercury — 57LA 39584 V 1959 Dodge - LD 2 27'““ Adjutant General Ronald McDonald in 1965 for allegedly being involved in questionable land dealings near the ‘ ' Guard camp at Grayling. 4 BuicK — 16«994Sa • ot th* above vehicles will i on Saturday, July 22. 19«7 i ~ LEGAL NOTICE The following is a list ot vehicles which have b— at Public Auction, pursuant to Sec-252 ot Acts 300 ot Public Acts ot (C.L. 1940, Sec. 257,252) >7 Pontiac — PI57H 30 10 Chevrolet — P50F 100 150 19 Ford - C9FT It — 407M C9FC 32 507 P - 1JPA 5047 ,,1959 Ford -1953 Buick — 17 203 7U 1957 Ford — D7FT 167 544 1952 Kaiser — KS211 207 770 1955 Ford - A5DG 174537 1950 Ford — S73BK50144142 >7 Mercury — 575L70000M Sale of the al 10 Colliar Rd., Pontiac, Mich. t Sam Allen's, a 20, 1947 LEGAL NOTICE Tha following Is a list ot vehicles which have been deciareo a doned and era theretore scheduled sale at Public Auction, pursuant to _ tion 252 ot Acts 300 ot Public Acts ot 1949 (C.L. 1940, Sec. 257,252) 1956 Buick — 6C20 17 053 1959 Ford — C9DG 162 153 1960 Ford - 092V 136 449 Sale of the above vehicles will be held Saturday, July 22nd, 1967, at 1:30 p.m. at the City of Pontiac DPW Yards, 117 Lake St., Pontiac, Mich. Juna 20, Constantine, fearing a left-wing plot among pro-Papan-dreou army officers to oust the monarchy and take Greece out of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, fired toe elder Papandreou from the premiership in July 1965. ELECTIONS CANCELED The Papandreous had intended to campaign in the May 28 national election, but the new Romney’s authority to dismiss McDonald, who has appealed toe case to toe Supreme Court, was questioned because of the crossing jurisdiction of toe governor, the chief of staff and the State Military Board. The bill eliminates the latter two offiiies and merges the office of adjutant general with the directorship of the Department of Military Affairs. In January Romney appointed Maj. Gen. Clarence C. Schnipke director of the department, post he held in an acting capacity for two years. Governor Cited FT. CHAFFEE, Ark. (AP) -Louisiana Gov. John J. Me-Keithen was honored for “exemplary service” during the third annual Governor’s Day review of the 39th Infantry Division, Louisiana-Arkansas National Guard. The Unusual In Gifts The June g Bride Shower Gift* - Cards Wedding Gift* Wrapping and Ribbon Party Garhe Prize* Midwe$t Typewriter Mart 88 N. Saginaw St. FE 4-5788 (N«xt to Simmi) Post Is Won at Boys' State Michael Giroux, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Giroux, 2776 , Dbcie Highway, irie Boys’ State, 'held at Michi- I gan State Unt I versity. Mi ch a el ii GIROUX staying at ‘Garfield City’ sponsored by Fisher Body Local 596. The representatives made up names of counties and named their cities after U.S. presidents to imitate city, county and state government. Wolverine Boys’ State is sponsored by the American Legion. The one-week event concludes tomorrow. I STOP s You ^ SHOP| ^ in the Relaxing jm I Atmosphere of * the I Cocktail Lounge Right in the Heart of Downtown Pontiac 85 N. Saginaw THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1067 A—0 Board Takes Steps to Assess Future Township Needs The Waterford Township Board last night took steps to hire financial consultants to launch a study and make rec> ommendations for funding sew* ers, fire stations and other future conununity needs. China Staff Confin&j in New Delhi NEW DELHI, India (AP) Indian police ringed the Chinese Embassy in New Delhi today as the government confined Peking’s diplomatic staff to the embassy grounds. ★ ★ The confinement was in response to the Chinese siege of the Indian Embassy in Peking where Defense Minister Swaran Singh told Parliament the members of the staff and their families were “virtual prisoners.’ ★ Singh said China had responded to Indian demands that Clerk Arthur J. Salley was directed to contact financial consultant firms, requesting them to submit written proposals for review by the Township Board. Interviews will follow. The action followed a dis* cussion among board members and a representative from Johnson and Anderson, Inc., township engineering consultants, regarding a proposed sewer project on parts of Marion, Eiizabeth Lake, Voorheis, Chadwick and Col-rain. Ihe. project recently was delayed when bids ran too high and, consequently, were rejected by the board. The merits of financing the project through county revenue bonds instead of by special assessment were discussed by the board last night. The board also weighed the feasibility of creating three sewer districts in the area, based on the flow of sewers to existing outlets, rather than only one district as hitherto proposed. In other business, the board introduced a rezoning request for a proposed $l-milUon topping center with frontage on Dixie Highway, Walton Boulevard and Foradale. Final action will be taken after information is received from the Coun^ Drain Commission, County Road Commission and State Highway Department. the siege be lifted only by admitting some food parcels for the 66 peraons inside the embassy. No effort is planned to stop food supplies for the Chinese staff of 22 in New Delhi, said Jagat Mehta, a joint secretary in the Foreign Mfaiistry. ★ ★ ★ “We are not trying to starve the Chinese,’’ Mehta said. 'The Indian government said it ordered tte confinement of the Chinese to protect them from “the just indignation of the Indian people.’’ Nine Chinese were beaten last Friday when a mob stormed the embassy and broke its windows. CHINESE DEMONSTRATE Demonshutions continued outside the Ii^an Embassy in Peking, the official New diina News Agency reported. It said the demonstrators demanded Indian authorities “guarantee the security of the membm of the Chinese Embassy staff in New Delhi and ensure the safe return to China of those who have been injured. ★ ★ India has said it will not consider the problem of the beaten Chinese until the Red Chinese siege on the Indian Embassy in Peking is ended. ★ ★ Harassment of the diplomats in the two capitals began last week when China accused two Indian diplomats of spying and deported them. As the Indians departed, they were roughed up by Chinese mobs. Inferfaifh Parley TRAVERSE CTTY (AP) -r An Interfaith Seminar will be held here Aug. 7-11. The seminar is sponsored the Michigan State University Continuing Educa-tim Center, the Catholic Diocese of Grand Rapids and the Grand Traverse Area Council of Churches. RENT ANEW PIANd Per Month ^8 • NO CHARGE FOR CARTAGE • CHOICE OF STYLE and FINISH • LESSONS INCLUDED • FULL CREDIT IF YOU DECIDE TO PURCHASE Drainage and traffic problems ' exist at the location, according to township officials. RECOMMENDATIONS Nonetheless, the request to rezone the property from local business to general business has Dem Gain Cited WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP) - Registrations in Westchester County in the past 15 years grew 20 per cent for Republicans and 117 per cent for Democrats. During that time popula-tioh.*f-the suburban county increased 36 per cent. CONSUMERS POWER 00. 20 West Lawrence 333-7812 been given favorable recommendations by. the Township Planning Commission and County Coordinating Zoning and Plannihg Committee. Wilkinson Insurance Agency of Waterfiwd Township submitted the apparent low bid last night on workmen’s com-pensatiop. and general liability insurance for township employes with a combined an-nuai premium of |13,032. Three othw firms turned in bids. All bids were referred to the township insurance committee for review and recommendations. ............... * ★ ★ A public hearing was set for July 10 for a proposed street lighting project on Richmond Street. Three lights would be installed. Based on 18 assessments, total annual charge would be $126 with benefiting residents paying $113.40 and the township Would you rather buckle this... or this? The Pontiac Press d to save lives in cooperation with The Advertising Council. The National Safety Council and The international Newspaper Advertising Executives. paying the $12.60 balance. Cost per assessment would be $6.30 per year. Also last night, the board approved a request to add space to the Airport Tavern, 6115 M59. The board voted to lease an IBM dictaphone over a three- year period at a cost of $13.50 a month. Granted, s u b j e c t to school board approval, was a July 4 fireworks permit for Ralph Averil at Sandburg School. Also, the board canceled its July 3 meeting. {AdvtrtIunMnn —BACKACHE— Aching Muscles You long to MS* thos* pains, oven temporarily until the causa IS cleared up. For palliative, or temporary, pain relief try OeWitt's Pills. Famous for over 60 years DeWitt'sPillscontainananalgasic to reduce pain and a very mild diuretic to help eliminate retained fluids thus flushing out irritating pain causing bladder wastos. -DeWitt'a Pills often succeed wharo others fall. If pain parsists always ass your doctor. Insist on ‘“DeWitt’s Pills-* SHIIEgllE LUXURY LOWBOY iWSSire MOORISH LOWBOY LUXURY LOWBOY SHOP NOW-SAVE NOW COLONIAL CHARM 29$ aq. In. picture ’ Ilia GENNINGTOH Series OH-ins SSMuin (wefaM diag) 29$ sq. in, picture RCA VICTOR COLOR TV IS STILL NO. 1 EARLY AMERICAN CHARM DECORATOR LOWBOY TABLE COLOR TV Pontiac’s Largest RCA Victor Color 589 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-0526 1108 West Huron FE 2-1275 com EARLY tFOR BIGGEST SELECTIONS! Gireinto your driving dwuhition Our purpose in lift is to better yows. With any of IS different Chrysler models. Every one luxury-sized. Ydt every one reeson-abiy priced. Engines range right up to the biggest standard power plant in the classi The 440 cubic inch engine. With the biggest brakes to match. Choose from over SO different Options. 3 different seating arrangements. Including a unique 3-in-l front seat Converta from 5-foot sofa to individually adjustable seats for two. And the passenger side reclines. Now that you’ve got the story, go ahead. Better your life. And better ours. Move upto a ’67 Chrysler at our place today. OAKLAND CHI 724 Oalli Pontiof I YSLER-PLYMOUTH, NC. land Avenue Michigan KESSLER-HAHN CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, INC. 6673 Dikia Highway Clarkston, Michigan A -10 ONE-CW THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1967 Programs af Hollywood Museum Shows Prove Film Shorts Can Again Be Entertaining By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Televisicm Writer LOS ANGELES (AP) - The power aral the glory of the short film has been demonstrated during the past; two weekends at the Lllar stays, camphqr balls and roach powder, lighters, spices and multicolored pens, wafch bands ahd costume jewelry, perfumes and even wading bands. Most are men, but there are some women and even children. Like all modem businessmen, they believe in advertising, but instead of newspapers or radio and television they prefer to use their lungs. EVERYBODY’S ANGRY Shopkeepers are furious at the camelos for taking up space in front of their window displays, and pedestrians resent being shoved into the streets. Newspapers are clamoring for action, and the police are trying, but Mritbout success. Now that the municipal police have been thwarted, there is growing demand for action by the semimilitary state militia, which has avoided the battle thus far. But the camelos aren’t worried. In fact they are offended. “It’s an affront to free enterprise,” said one as he picked up his battered briefcase filled with contraband lighters and ducked into a side street at the approach of a squad car. length which have won film festivals around the world. They come from Poland, England, Japan, France Italy, Belgium, Canada, and even the U. S. A. The “names of some of the creators are significant: Rich-iard Lester, Jean-Luc Godard, j Francois Truffaut, Clive Don-■ner, Roman Polanski. ★ it * These are directors who first tried tiie briefer film, then went on to attempt some of the major advances in recent feature films — Truffaut’s “The 400 Lester’s “A Hard Day’s Night,” etc. AUDIENCE ENTHUSIASTIC A capacity audience greeted the first of the programs with enthusiasm, and there were ordinary citizens along with the expectable quota of hippies. All seemed most amused by the classic “Running, Jumping, and Standing Still Film” ol Lester. Peter Sellers and his fellow members of Britain’s “Goon Show” romp through a procession of outrageous gags that presage the Beatles movies, “The Knack,” etc. AUTEN’S DONALD C. AUTEN TuAMSituAtf omJL GiUlb^' Titttl ^TDjtajfe/UiU. AIJTEIV FURNITURE 6605 Dixie Hwy, Glarkston 625-2022 NEW MANAGER SPECIAL 8x10 Photograph 99 • OnV *"• MKh 9 menthi 12 VMti SIlfhHy AadWonol KENDALE'S ... Photographers 45W. Hunm 335-0322 - 335-3260 | Htmi Mm., Twm« TInm 12-t:30 - Wad., Fri., Sot. 9-S || aJ TH(S OFFia INOS IN 7 DAYS-Miom lor AppoMmant Another favorite was “Enter Hamlet” by the American cartoonist Mogubgub. As the “To Be or Not to Be” soliloquy is There may be political significance here, but it is elusive. (XMMIC TECHNIQUES Several of the films use animation and stop-action in ways that commercial film makers would not dare. And there In lies much of the value of these short films. With little investment risked, the shorts makers can explore new avenues of cinematic expression. Many of their discoveries have already found their way into feature movies. PROGRESS for HEALTH jt of )0, the prescription ley ceils for a dreg that then, you couldn't have bought that drug — and “- --------- •- —*— Yet today, . ready for your c 1 our shelves -ic.wr 'or your oooior lO prescribe — a less than the cost of a good dinner. That' TODAY'S PRESCRIPTION IS THl BIGGEST BARGAIN IN HISTORY Pharmacy PLAZA PHARMACY Jerry A Joanne Dunsmore, RPH 3554 Pontiac Lk. Rd., Pontiac, Mich. Phono 6T3-126T 24 Hottr* A Day Service FREEDELiVSRY \ Money Orders Istved Here IT. t eatureSanderM Candy Teu Mey Pay All UHHIy Bllle el Heze Pheriaeey / OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE Presents a mini-FILM Festival The eecond discnssion-syith-film in the eeries. ALONE WITHIN: The Approach-Avoidance Conflict Film: The Marlene Dietrich Classic “Blue Angel” Rev. Robert Marshall will lead diacueaion after Him. Wednesday, June 21 — 8:00 P.M. BLOOMFIELD HILLS HIGH SCHOOL Look Lake Road Jnat West of Telearaph SINGLE ADMISSION, $1.50 For Ticket Reservations Call Commnnity Serv. Division 642-6210 - 042-6211 - 647-6200 Facility Will Be “Air CooletP' Ionia Escapee Caught Quickly IONIA (AP) - Frank PoweU, 63, of Detroit walked away from Ionia State Hospital for the Criminally Insane Sunday. He was captured about four hours later on a nearby farm. Powell has been an intimate at the hospital since 1939. j Frigidaire Appliances KEASEY ELECTRIC 2620 Dixis Hwy. OR 8-2801 GAS HEAT TIUANUARY, 1968 Oil and coal users; don't lay out hard cash‘to repair your old furnace. Gas users with ready-to-fail heating plants: get a new furnace now! With every Budman gas furnace or boiler installation ordered now we'll issue a free fuel allowance to cover all your hooting needs until Jonuory 1,1968. Houses as large as 8 rooms included. Phono JE 9-0200 and heat your heme free oil yeai;! FURNACE SALE *129" CONVERSION BURNER $59«a 'W ^ 49 ALUMINUM WINDOWS ALUMINUM AWNINGS ASPHALT ROOFING AND DOORS SALE! AND PATIDS SALE! INSTALLED NOW! Comb, door, ai l.iW o. Polio, (ram $S8.81. $gt8 orr,y^£*" si-iss Averog* 34*«30* houoe with pitch *188 ALUMINUM SiniNU SALE! Wa ds It all # OUTTERI G KITCHENS m BATHS INSTALLED G OARAGES G FENCES [UDMAN'S You don’t have to head North any more to get “renef from the heat" A gas central air conditioner gives you comfort at the turn of a dial! When temperatures dimb, you have fingertip convenience to as much cool air as you need to beat the heat But more important gas central air conditioning does something about the hu« midify too. It drculates filtered, dehumidified air that's so fresh and clean.it's a pleasure to breathe It What a break for hay fever sufferers—and with dust shut out what a breeze for dirt-chasing homemakers! See us today for a free air-conditioning survey. When you learn how easy it is to install gas central air conditioning, and what a difference it makes in summer living, you'll wonder why eveiyone doesn't havp it! FOR INFORMATION ON GAS AIR CONDITIONING TELEPHONE 333-7812 THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1967 Expert Agrees With a Mother on Situation ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post; My daughter has been told by the dean of her boarding school that what I had asked her to do w'Hs “totally improper and that he had never heard of this before.” Three days before my » prom, a very otose friend came to her rescue, at piy request, and was\^ending two of her sons and an extra boy to be escorts for my daughter and two friends at the prom. Sihce they lived in an adjoining state and it would involve great expense<^for her in lodgings and transportation for the three boys, her husband and herself, I felt the very least I could do was pay for their rooms. I asked my daughter to find accommodations for them and to pre-pay them. She made reservations at a nearby motel and when she signed out com-menting on what she was going to do, she was taken to the dean and very severely criticized. She was told this was totally improper. I know it could have been handled better if time had not been an element, but as the situation existed, was I that wrong? — Mrs. S. * * * Dear Mrs. S.; I have never heard of the exact situation, you describe before, either, but my reaction is directly opposed to that of the boarding school. Ip view of the circumstances -- the haste, the inconvenience to your hriend, and so on—I can see no impropriety in your daughter reserving and paying for their accommodations. In fact, I commend you highly for showing your appreciation in this way and I’m sure your daughter and her friends are most grateful to you, and to the boy’s mother, for arranging dates at die last minute. What is your most puzzling etiquette problem? To the sender of the most interesting question that we receive each week, we’ll send a free copy of Emily Post’s Etiquette, revised by Elizabeth L. Post Send your question to Elizabeth L. Post, in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600 P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. LWV's Annual Picnic The annual picnic of the Pontiac League of Women Voters will be held at 6 p.m. this evening in the Camley Street home of Lillian Davidson. A board of direqtors meeting will follow the dinner. W0fiieri%Se€tmmi Mrs. Clarence Pudney, Elsinore Drive, president of Junior Pontiac Women's Club, welcomes officers and board members to a “play and plan" party Monday evening. Making certain that the dub will get “a-head" is Mrs. George Morrow, Sylvan Lake, center. Marguerite Buttolph, Vine-wood Street, is chairman of the newsletter. Some Folks Are Just Thoughtless Actions Not Usually Deliberate By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Several months ago we learned that our baby was retarded. We were stunned and heartbroken, and all we could do was pray for the strength to do everything we could for him. According to our doctor, a retarded child I has a better start in life if he lives at home, so we decided to keep him home. Abby, you wouldn’t believe the remarks made to us by friends: “Why don’t you put him in an institu^ tion? He’il be better off with his own ABBY MRS. ROBERT JAMES KING Jill Sue Bearing became the bride of Robert James King, Saturday " afternoon in All Saints Episcopal Church. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Clyde N. Bearing of Fox Hills Drive and Mrs. Clarence King of Detroit and the date Mr. King. kind.” And, “Aren’t your other children embarrassed by him?” Abby, our other children are not embarrased. If anything. it has given them a better understanding of life and problems and how to accept the inevitable. ★ ★ ★ 'There are dark moments, of course, but what I really want to convey is that a retarded child' needs love and affection as much — if not more — than a normal child. And more people should realize that it means mwe to parents of a retarded child to have their friends inquire about him. It is so much kinder than all the hypocritical evasions and pretenses that the child is normal. Just putting this down on paper has made me feel so much better. Thank you. A MOTHER DEAR MOTHER: Thank you for your wonderful letter. Millions of people will see it, and you will never know how much kindness you and your retarded child have inspired in otherwise well-meaning, but thoughtless people. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: I am buying a house from a friend of mine for $55,000. He asked me if I would do him a favor and state the price of the house as $35,000 in the agreement of the sale, and give him the balance in cash. He said he didn’t want his wife to know how much he was actually getting for the house because she’s the kind who spends a thousand if she thinks they have a hundred. Would there be Anything wrong with my doing this for him as a favor? HIS FRIEND DEAR FRIEND: Yes. Plenty. Do not falsify the price of the house on the agreement unless you want to be a party to a fraud. Tell your friend he’ll have to work out the problem of an extravagant wife some other way. more enlightenment and understanding on the subject of homosexuality is Sexual Inversion by Dr. Judd Marmor (psychoanalyst); published by Basic Books. ★ ★ ★ Troubled? Write to Abby, The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P. 0. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1 to Abby, The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P. 0. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. Union Lake Club to Sponsor Show of Arts, Flowers The Union Lake Business and Professional Women’s Club will' sponsor its third annual arts and flowers exhibit July 15-20. Entries may be taken on July 10 and 11 to St. Patrick’s Catholic Church for registration. Hours are Monday from 6 to 9 p.m. and Tuesday from noon to 5 p.m. MEDIA Oils, drawings,'graphics, pastels, water colors; mixed m^ia and sculpture will be accepted. Works of artists under 18 will 1^ judged separately. Entry blanks may be secured at A-1 Tile Company on Cooley Lake Road and the Community National Bank, Union Lake branch. Cash first prizes will be awarded in each category by the club. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Elton Black, chairman of the event, is working with Hazel Nauman and Mrs. John Vis. PonNae Prtsi PhetM Reelected to a second term by the Junior Pontiac Women’s Club are Mrs. A. L. McAdams, Neome Drive, treasurer (left); and Mrs. E. Milton Evans, Cottage Street, financial secretary. Club meetings will resume in October. Mrs. Marderosian Treats Group to Armenian Church Tour, Foods By SIGNE KARLSTROM Mrs. Charles Marderosian of Lahser Road entertained 40 friends at luncheon in her home following a recent tour of the new St. John’s Armenian Church in Southfield. For some time, Mrs. Marderosian has been telling her American friends about St. John’s which was inspired by a sixth century church in Armenia. Invitations were sent out with a picture of the church. The Rev. H. Papazian explained the religious service to the guests and Suren Pilafian, the architect, conducted the tour. vMrs. Edward Dildilian assisted her mother with the luncheon. We hear it was a “feast” of Armenian food. Four great grandparents and three grandparents were present at Krystyn Marie Heggen’s christening in the chapel of Kirk In The Hills on June 11. Krystyn Take Vows in Niles Miss E. Grace Clark of Monroe Street and Bartlet Wager of Chadwick Drive were married Saturday in the First Presbyterian Church, Niles. After a wedding trip through northern Michigan the couple will make their home on Monroe Street. Pair Honeymoon in North Carolina Following Vows A golfing honeymoon in North Carolina followed the wedding Saturday of Jill Sue Bearing, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde N. Bearing of Fox Hills Drive, and Robert James King. He is the son of Mrs. Clarence King Of Detroit, and the late Mr. King. SILK ORGANZA For the rite in All Saints Episcopal Church, the bride wore a gown of silk organza on Empire lines with a Chantilly lace panel in front with matching lace chapel train and short sleeves. She carried a cascade of miniature carnations and Stephanotis centered with a white orchid. . ^ Matron of honor was the bride’s sister, Mrs. Michael J. Currie, with attendants Mrs. Michael Pierce and Sandra Smalley. l^mory King, the b r i d e g r o o m’s brother, was best man with ushers Jerry Biddleman and Michael Soikl. A reckon in the Elks Temple followed the nupitals. Past Is Recreated for Wisner Tourists Live models in the rooms of the Wisner Home on Oakland Avenue will be a special feature at a lamplight open house June 28 from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Sponsored by the Oakland County Pioneer and Historical Society, tours will be guided through the home, the restored root cellar and the one-room school from Drayton Plains. ★ ★ ★ Among those who will recreate the life of the old house are Susan and Sally Anderson, Mesdames C. R. Blank, James Keene and David Scott; and the Barbour Williamses. Mrs. W. Scott Purvis of Birmingham is chairman of the event. They'll Wed Tonight - Mrs. Harry G. Stowell, Elizabeth Lake Road, and David, L. Brown, Thorpe Street, will be married this evening in the chapel of Central Methodist Church. After a short trip to Northern Michigan, the coqple will return to the Brown home. DEAR ABBY: Although it’s been nearly a year since I wrote to you about a problem that kept me up nights and since I got your answer. I still ask God to bless you in my prayers. I had a baby out of wedlock, and my maiden name was on his birth certificate. Less than a year later I married a fine man who knew all about it, (I kept the baby) but that birth certificate was worrying me. I didn’t want our boy to go through life with something on his record that was no fault of his. I wrote to you, and you told me to get in touch with the Board of Health, which I did immediately. They referred me to the city clerk, and in a matter of minutes I was on my way to having my son’s name changed. And for only 50 cents! I kept putting it off because I thought I would have to go to court and maybe there would be a lot of red tape, publicity, and expense involved. I can’t find words to tell you how much I appreciate your heiiung me with this worrisome situation. I wonder if other piothers with the same problem know how easy it is to solve? FOREVER GRATEFUL DEAR GRATEFUL: If they didn’t and they , read this, they do flow. ★ ★ ★ CONFIDENTIAL TO “PREFERS TO REMAIN ANONYMOUS”; ’The name of the book which, in my judgment, offers is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Donald Heggen. Grandparents are Dr. and Mrs. Harold Longyear and Mrs-. Abner Heggen and the late Mr. Heggen. ★ ★ ★ Great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Carl Richtman of Birmingham and Florida and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Longyear of Detroit. Mr. and Mrs. Scott Skinner are Krys-tyn’s godparents. Following the ceremony Dr. and Mrs. Longyear gave a reception in their home on West Long Lake Road. ‘ GOING WEST Dr. Heggen who recently graduated from the Medical School in Ann Arbor is now on his way to the Kaiser Foundation Hospital in San Francisco for his internship. His family will join him later in the week. * ★ ★ Another christening took place last Sunday at St. Coleman Church. Scott Michael, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Anderson, had as his godparents his aunt, Kathleen Doyle and his uncle, Michael Doyle. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Glen Doyle of Cottontail Lane. The Andersons entertained 22 relatives and friends for brunch following the christening. No need to put away your antique acces- is upholstered in hot pink; carpet by James Lees sories if you have modern furniture. This room is olive green. ■ Living plants and fresh flowers and setting shown at the Summer International Home a icatercolor over the fireplace soften severe lines. Furnishings Market in Chicago this week illustrates Designed by Elroy Edson. how all periods can live together. Selig furniture B—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. JUNE 20, 1967 New • Materials • ideas Really Not Love By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE C-561: Lana S., aged 28, is worried. “Dr. Crane,” she began, “I have been marriei^ for seven years. “My husband and I were not wildly in love at the start. In fact, we were just good friends. “But during our marriage there has de- veloped a deep understanding | and comradeship between us. “Then I happened to meet a business executive recently who suddenly set my heart pounding. “It just seemed a if magnetic sparks flew back and forth between us, for he was instantly attracted to me, too. “Alas, we are both married, so we don’t want to hurt our mates. “But we can’t seem to stay apart. We tremble and feel ecstatic just at the mere todch of our hands. “What should we do?” “Look not on the wine,” says the Bible, “while it is red.” That means avoid getting near the dangerous thing that tempts you. Even if Lana had been wildly in love when she married, she might still have met another man who would zoom her pulse rate and give her a tingling, ecstatic sensation. For human beings are so constructed that once in a blue moon we may encounter a person of the opposite sex who sets us aflame. Fortunately, that doesn’t happen very often in a lifetime, but it does occur. So be forewarned! Don’t go overboard when you meet that other personality who seems to vibrate on your own erotic wave length. Actually, there may be 1,000 such persons right here in the U.S.A. who' would have the same electrifying effect on Lana. But in the course of a usual lifetime, she isn’t likely meet more than one or two of that 1,000. Sometimes, your original love affair is so quiet and peaceful that you take, each other for granted and hardly realize it is true love. Then, if you kick over the traces to run off with the magnetic stranger, you soon find that it wasn’t really love at all but merely a unique combination of sexual magnetism, coupled with a few “trigger” characteristics. And by “triggers,” we psychologists refer to those traits of a child’s beloved uncle or father or cousin- or brother ai'ound which a little girl may have subconsciously crystal-ized the high points of family affection. In lafer adulthood, some strange fellow may have a similar nose or gesture or tone pf voice, which triggers a suffusion of emotions. Suddenly the adult woman is now filled with ecstacy, thrills and chills, butterflies in her tummy, and the other symptoms of infatuation. This is exactly what happens when you fall in love at first sight. An explosive surge of emotions overwhelms you, yet you may never previously have laid eyes on the stranger who upsets you so thrillingly. But something about him triggers an emotional ava-lanch that derives its power from your childhood emotional attachments to beloved kinfolk. It doesn’t pay to indulge in an illicit affair to shatter the i emotional hypnosis in which i you find yourself. The newlywed Williarfi Raymond Johnsons hatfe left for -a Northern Michigan honeymoon follorbing their vows Saturday noon in St. Joseph Catholic Church, Lake Orion. The former Cindy Ann Jacobs is the daughter of Mrs. Eleanor Jacobs of Shick Drive and Ralph Jacobs of Goodrich. The bride wore white eyelet organdy over taffeta and carried roses and carnations for the rite. Jeanne Peterson was maid of honor and Elizabeth Chapa was bridesmaid. Vem Hun-kele was best man and Frank Jiiggeman- was the bridegroom’s attendant. ‘•Leanord Jacobs and Richard Ross were ushers. Parents of the bridegroom are the Ivan Johnsons of Lanco Court. A reception in the First Federal Savings of Oakland Lake Orion followed the rite. Judy Ann White become the bride of Stanley Paul Hus-tosky Saturday in a noon ceremony in St. Benedict’s Catholic Church. Parents of the bride who wore a gown of tiered Alencon lace with natural waistline are the Paul E. Whites of Scotch Lake Road, West Bloomfield Township. Mrs. William Taylor um matron of honor for her sister. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Dana Hustosky, Sandy Hustosky, Debra Liitzkin, Kathy Ryden and Linda Canterbury. Best man for his brother was Dana Hustosky. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Hustosky of hakemew Street. Ushers were William Taylor, Edward Ritter, Richard Shot-well, Gerald Matthews and Richard LaBarge. All Mini From Top to Toe Have yours in high-belted coat-dress, crisp A-line with sleeves cut high, or modified tent with reaching side slits. Just don’t forget those peeking pants underneath. The minimoods of summer are combining the minidress thrown over matching minipants. The always-in-fashion shirt takes on ruffled edges just touching the pants underneath. Importad Nymph Chair, hand-mod* of h*avy^ rugged willow, 24 inches long, 28 inches overall height. Cor- Only SOA95 $26” The Wicker World of Birmingham 10S Townsend St., Birmingham 642-9748 (Acrett from Hughoi & Hotchor't Parking Lot) Polly's Pointers Makes a Soft Pad DEAR POLLY - When someone has a sore foot and cannot wear a shoe or slipper but must remain active, place a sanitary napkin inaide a sock make a sole, then put another sock on top of this first one. Tliis is inexpensive, keeps the foot warm and cushioned. My neighbor with five children had a wart removed from her foot. When I saw her hobbling around, I fixed her up in this manner and she was able to do her entire ironing.i-JUDY; Just be sure your doctor approves of standing on the foot. -POLLY J DEAR POLLY — My conservative daughter never discards anything that she can possibly use. She put up a new . pole-type towel rack in her bathroom Since the wall-type one it replaced was nice, i^e put it on the foot of-the baby’s bed. The screws are fastened into the solid parts of the bed, and she hangs blankets on the rod. When she takes baby out of bed it is easy to put the blankets neatly in order on this rod. If baby needs more cover while sleeping they are at hand, and there is no noise from opening drawers. — JO ANN You will receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite homemaking idea, Polly’s Problem or solution to a problem. Write Polly in care of this newspaper. The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P. 0, Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. Summer Special! SCISSOR HAiRciirriNi; OUR SPECIALTY With mr ritSaal Ajiputnlmml Beauty Shop Biker Bldg., FE 3-7186 Discover the Colourful Life with Hair Colour by l'OR6ai: World-famous Excellence and new Rege Superbe for glamour only UOreal could create! Only L’Oreal, masters of hair colouring fashion, could bring to life such exquisite colours os those of Excellence ... colours automatically controlled to stop at the shade you want. And only the magic of L'Oreal could bring you Rege Superbe, a wonderful new way to rinse away gray without changing your natural hair colour. Shaffla**4a Ceiaur 140 N. SAGINAW Near Saari HURON STREET Comar Talagroph 4895 DIXIE HIGHWAY Oroylon Ploint Mr. and Mrs. Alan Howard, nee Lois Zimmer, graduated together recently from Central Michigan University. Alan received a B.A. degree, magna cum laude. He will continue graduate studies at the University of Michigan. Mrs. Howard earned a B. S. degree and will begin teaching in New Hudson in the fall. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Zimmer of South Marshall Street and the, Edmund Howards of Traverse City. Degrees from Central Michigan University were conferred recently upon Mr. and Mrs. John E. Ryan (nee Nancy Redmond). She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Redmond of Fortress Drive. His parents are the W. K. Ryans of Andersonville Road. Mrs. Ryan earned a B.S. degree in education; her husband was awarded a B. S. degree in applied arts and science. They will begin graduate studies this summer. SALE DRAPERY-SLIPCOVER FABRICS BOLTS and BOLTS of Fabrics in Solids, Prints, Sheers-20 Numbers in White Alone (AJI 48" Wide) OVER 5,000 YARDS Priced from 2.75 to $5.50 yd. all at 20% off 800 Yds. “r.,: $150 yd. 300 Yds. 50*= yd. 200 Yds. 39= yd. All Tier Curtains & Valances . 'A OFF........ : No Workroom Orders at Sale Prices Quality Draperies and Carpets Since 1941 Ato/U OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY EVENINGS 1666 South Telegraph FE 4-0516 Dishwasher Safe for Finest China Even “heirloom” china is safe in a dishwasher — unless gold, platinum, or other metal is used in the design. This assurance comes frcMTi none other than Frederick Haviland, authority whose family has been making fine china in Limoges, France, for more than a century. A ★ A “It isn’t hot water or detergents that affect metal decorations,” Mr. Haviland miplains. “It is the motion of the water. This takes particles of the metal off the china and deposits it on metal parts of the machine through the process known as electrolysis.” Trivets* for your table, for decorative trim in your kitchen! .Some round, tsomethe hhapeofan iron, some oblong-many delightful patterns to choose from! W ipsss Bridal Regisliy . . . Bridc»-'l o-Bc register their crystal and china piilU-rns anil otiior gift preferences there . . . cheek it with'a Wiggs Bridal Consultant—avoid duplications. Colorful Carbone Crinkle Glass Ideal For Your Table—For The Bride! A wonderful crackled barpque look in glassware with many accessory pieces. (Choice of topaz, ainetliysl, moss gold, green, iieacock and light blue. (Ruby red slightly higher in price than listed here.) I bOs. water tunihlers, each...............1-10 Goblets, each............................. Mierliets, eacli..........................• Large Shupeil Water Pilcher.................6.00 Juice Pilcher..............................f-®** Desert Dishes, each........................I.L5 Liner «»r Salad Plates, earli..............2.25 WIQQS ptivriAt: 21WKST III'RON .STRKK-r In Pimfiiir. t'K I ihtily nil sao China. i:rnlal. IliJI. anil Klhnn AUrn furnllurn m.OOMFIKLU HILI.S tOgOTKLKGRAPHRD. ,11 PONTIAC MAIL Invites You and Your Family To Be Wednesday Highters Enjoy Tender, Golden, Deep-Fried COMPLETE CHICKEN DINNERS 120 ChiUren 95' TMOICE OF POTATOES OR VEGETABLE DINNER SAUD OR DESSERT ROLLS AND BUTTER COFFEE, TEA OR MILK SERVED EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT POHTIAC MALL CAFETERIA ONLY 4:30 to 8 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1967 B—8 Festivity Set for Retiree byPTAUnit The Webster PTA is sponsoring a reception in honor of Dr. Edith Roach Snyder, retiring principal Friends of the honoree may greet her from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday in the school. * * * Working on arrangements are Mesdames Donald Kline, Ross Elliott, Betty Chetwood, Elsie Welch, Lyle Lampert, Marvin Jaffee, Eugene Carey Jr., J. E. Graybiel find Rob- It takes a lot of ingredients to make tea sandwiches for over 200 guests. Webster School PTA members are busy making and freezing goodies for Sunday’s reception honoring Dr. Edith Road Snyder. The event from 3 to 5 p. m. in the school is under the general supervision of Mrs. Donald Kline, Lincoln Avenue (left). With her is refreshment chairman, Mrs. Eugene Carey Jr., Mark Street. im Old ? Here is a recording instrument that works with the greatest of ease ... the Sony Solid-State Easy-Matic "CassetteCorder" AAodel 100. Snap in the Sony tape Cassette, press a button, and you're ready for business — or pleasure. What could be easier? □ The Sony Model 100 is a quiet worker that comes through loud and clear. Yet, it won't disturb your budget, because Sony's mode it easy for you to own. □ ELECTRONICS INC. I. Sonymotic recording control, oulomaVcally gives perfect recording volume vrithoot ever touching a knob. • Operates on batteries or household current. • Push buttonTfentrols. • Built-in speoker ond tone control. • Radio, TV, phonograph recording input and earphone output. • BaHery recharging circuit for use with optionol lifetime bat-teries. • Bottery strength Indieolor. • Excluslv* "pop-out" Cossette ejector bultos. Complete wHh remote Stop/Stort dynamic microphone, leather corrying cose, and one 60-tninute Sony tope Cossette only $99.50. • AddlMonol 60-fninute (C-dO) Sony Tope Cassettes wtth . mailing box, less than $2.25 ooch. . AT SQUARE LAKE ID. ' PLENTY OF FREE, EASY PARXINC - OPEN NIGHTS TILL 9 P.M BO SHOP “EASY-TO-GET-TO” Miracle Mile Countr|> Squire 3 DAY SPECIAL TUES., WED., THUR. ONLY! Complete Stock of AAADRAS SPORT- COATS Sizes 36 to 44 long I7« MICHIGAN BANKARD WELCOME HERE r MIRACLE MILE STORE ONLY WINDOW SHADES BOYS’ DRAGSTER RIKE High Rise Hondle Bara Banana Type Seat WHILE THEY LAST! LIKE IT! CHARGE IT! AT KRESGE’S! Penultimate in Outdoor Gooking Fast as you fire it up, a CHAR-BROIL Portable Pit will spread your name around the neighborhood as the finest cook since grandpa gave up the smoke house. And we're proud to add; Char-Broils, sturdily constructed of cast iron and heavy-gauge steel, can last a lifetime. »99» AdjustabI* fir* l*v*is 10", 8%", 6%", 4%" GB-160A Cooking height 30". Cookitig orao 14" x 23" Adjusiabl* fii* i*vd« 8Vh", 6%", 5" Wt.96lb*. *74“ For a real first class cooker, you pay more than *19” But only once! SPECIAL SELUNG LADIES’SUMMER SHIFTS $799 WICKEs: ESTABLISHED 1854_ LAUAN ^OGANyTaNELING 4x8 - YOUR CHOICEI MIRACLE MILE SHOPPIRG CERTER 2216 SpUTH TELEGRAPH ROAD PHONE 332-9173 HEDGE TRIMMER OPEN: Monday thraSatniday Til 9 P.M. cr.s LET’S GO MUNI! ////. PANTSKIMMERS - CULOTTE MUNI DRESSES - SHIFTS IMP! MBNIES plus SHORTS SIZES 5 to 13 and 6 to 16 8. 19. B-r-6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1967 Jacoby on Bridge north AJ92 \ ¥Q8 \ ♦ A Q 10 \ AAKQ8 6 west east 4 7 6 3 A A i\0 V 10 6 5 3 7-6 4 2 ♦ J3 A A b V J9\ ♦ J 8 5' A 109 7 54 South (d> AKQ854 V AK7 2 A KO 3 A 2 Neither vulnerable West North East South Pass Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—♦ 2 Pass Pass Pass By OSWALD & JAMES JACOBY There is an old rule that you should cover ah honor with an honor. One of the commonest of defensive mistakes is to follow this rule blindly. Sometimes this is a really tough problem. On other oc-J casions you should know the correct play. Thus, when you hold just two cards-in the suit your normal play is to cover. If you don’t you may have to play your honor op a low card and gain ho benefit from it at all. Sometimes it even pays to play your honor when a low card is led. We remember a defensive play made some years ago by Charles Loch-of New York. Charley is one of our fast players. When he is on defense he sizes up the whole situation at a glance and is ready to play each card as if it were the only one in his hand. South took a moment to look pver dummy before winning the diamond lead. Then South j played dummy’s deuce ■spades. Charley had analyzed the hand completely by this time and had seen that there could be no real defense provided South had his bids. If South held six spades to the king the ten spot play would be hopeless. South would have to rise with the king. If South held five spades to the king South was doomed to defeat anyway. Charley discarded the possibility that South held seven spades to the queen. That left one Soudi ndght have started with five spades to thp Ung-queea. In that case the ace play might cause South to take a wrong view of the trump situation. Charley clattered up with the :e of trumps and led a second diamond. Soudi won in bis hand, looked at the ceiling, both opponents and the walls, and finally led a low trump and finessed dummy’s nine. Charley’s ace play had produced a trick for his ten spot. EOBIN MALONE By Bob Lubbers JAOOBT Q—^The bidding has been West North East South 1 A 1A Pass 2 A You, South, hold: A2 VAKJ7 AK32 AAQ1054 What do you do A—Pass. This is not your hand. TODAY’S QUESTION You pass. West bids three spades and East lour spades. What do you do now? Astrological Forecast ay SYDNEY OMARR For WtOMUlay Win man controls his dostiny "ARIESTMar.^21-Apr. 19); Stick to homo base. If possible. Not wiso to veer too tor from tested course. Ten—*-tion may bo to throw caution to w Common sansa dictates voice of perience. TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): Di move could result In profit. Applies to personal life. Means you hit tha nr Day when your special talants ara warded. Go to It. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Contract connected with your holdings ma finalized. Gal authorities to apt (:ancer (J your efforts n > 2)-July 22): Some of f appear to slide from .......... Is to have faith ultimate ability to strike pay dirt. A\ one who sings song of gloom. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Your chanci succeed Is enhanced It creative. Me break through to goal ol sell-express Don't depend upon patterns set others. Create your own style. Imag VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): What feel may be turmoil of confusion, cent' on change, travel, dealings contrary rtlatives. Maintain poise. ( wind will blow Itself out. Stand by. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Emphasis i opportunity for putting Is versatility. Sense o ally. Use it to your advantage, appears, aids cause. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2)); ------------ certain restrictions. Realize some delay for your own good. Be aware of cost . assets, credits, deficit. Fiscal responsibility Is a must. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Find the why of thing. Be anaivtical. Personal judgment today sh Births The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office by (name of father): Denton L. Adams, MIKord Kenneth W. See, Drayton Plair Robert C. Krug, Rochester Larry E. Stapleton, 43) ------- Kenny D. GIbsOn, Drayton Plain! Lawerence E. Parker, 350 Cherrylanc Ivan M. Lucas, IfO East Glass St Garcia, 44 ■ loss, 12L _______ ... Roblnspn Saginaw Raymond T. Wilmot, 233 Baldwin Douglass W. Lintz, Keego “..i— Charles R. Runyon, Roche Roosevelt Simmons, ______E. Knight, 1061 B______ Timothy A. Means, 4f West Columbi Roger J. Reynolds, Drayton Plair David H. Toft, 248 West Lor.. . Gary M. Berry, 8 East Boulevard North Ronnie J Hall, 32 South ' Roger O. Hester, Drayton Pli Winiam D. Klempp, Holly Robert L. Noggle, 86 Ruth Herbert R. Strickland, 87 Eltr Stephen R. Suttpn, 2737 SIVi Alvirt N. Townsend, Ke Donald J. Hatpin, Rochester Harold E. Bowker, 311 Perry William R. Harrala, Walled Lak Carson E. Cascaddan, 72 East Stanity T. Domallk, '— William C. Hardinji. ------------ Stanley C. Harding, Drayton Raymond F. Meyer, Blrmlnghart ____... ________jr., Kocnester Johnnie R. Jewell, Keego Harbor Dale A. Williams, Rochester Fred Rockwall, Troy Melvin F. Helm, 136 Blaine Henry H. Smith Jr., 6160 Greer Gary L. Kunse, 2MS Penn LeRoy L. Mauslln^ 1201 L.... WItllam C. Messenger, Orion David S. RIehman, Milford Robert L. Travis, 640 East B 3 Jefferson stem. Union Leke Craig, 88 N. Roseles me, 1169 Stanley ■ erry u. anercr. Walled Lake Saves Alvarez, 46 West Hookins jWl' Hobart W. Conityr 270 Sfata Robart A. Rollings, 23 Hartung ‘'arry U Tallant, 1509 North fata- el. nomm* wai« tarry Hubbard, 350 _ ^rw G. Anfuraty 451 Branch (fwint) Tirryi. ChaM, 6M Fourth Laonard M. Gavottey 02 Nawbarry mrnm L. Htckayy 167 Chamberlain Horace Thompson, 542 Luther Donald J. VeltetKWubar, 216 . nul R. Bytord, 52 last Newport KTHl’tt.Warr S Amador Jr., 36 West pstesr7(,«u.riK, fevSSr Bruce A. Spancar, SJ North Roselown Lawronco V. Traynor, Iff Woodland Oannia W. CanMMIf, 254 ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1967 B—7 Intrigue-suspense at its best rehouse of cards by STANLEY ELLIN atwlar JBUia. Siatruwt«d Iqr Kiag ^ 't' INSTAIJUaBNT No. 8 CSwyrifht Q IMT 6r If JnawFMSyiidlaat*. . -t HA%lKArPEX«l> R«no Dftvis, an -Bx-pugmaf trytoB W ba a writer in ParU. naeded the money ottered aa t>i«xr Ku^d to the young Villemont, the Arne a French arlatocra gard^ the advic, . *,0 trlen^ L^ula la Buc. not to get vplve^ At the de Villemont m_.. And Matllde Vosiere, the sla*^**** ---•- law at the late hlslite to be'ithpeiiiM! When Oavia let da Oonde know about the gun. hS iSTtold^ to*'ar'^ **? Gnnde promlaed reer< Meanwhile, havlna mnvad his .mk* ,de VilfeiSnt man- CHAPTKR 8 *TTffi FIRST flowering of Paul * de VUlemonf g revolt against maternal restrictions came as a startleij to Madame de Vllle-mont at the dinner table one evening. "Wine is more important than miUt” he pointed out to his mother. ••Milk only makes bonea Wine makes blood." Madame de Villemont blinked at this. “And where did you get that piece of information ?•' “From Louis," "Who is Louis ?" “He comes to the park. He’s Reno’s friend, and now he’s my friend, too." ••Someone whb came up you hi the park?" she said me in a Ught voice. "No, madame. He used to be say fight manager. Tve known him for a long U^e." The fear enumatlng from her had enveloped Paul. •'He’s very alee. Mama." His voice rose shrilly. ••Don’t say we can’t see him any more. He’s really very preciatlon for that. It was all so pleasant and meaningless on the surface that I never dreamed anything would come of it, but the next day Paul and 1 were, in effect, given the keys to the City. So he rode in the Metro at last, proudly buying the tickets for both of us, and squandered money on a collection of rusty treasures in the Flea Market, and played football in the Parc des Buttes - Chaumont with a gang of small roughnecks from Boidevard de 'Belleville, coming home with both shins covered by black and Mue marks which he proudly displayed to his quivering mother like battle wounds. Madame de VlUemont said, Tt seems to me that our little Louis certainly makes hii felt around here. I really ought to Bseet him." So I arranged for them to asset — Madame walldng with Paul and me to the Parc Mon-eeaa tor the first tlme—and It turned out that Louis was the one to release us from our short He kissed Madame’s h with the air of a courtier; __ dusted the bench for her with his handkerchief; he lectured her on child raising. “I'm afraid I must be the one to determine what he needs for his own good, Monsieur le Buc.’ “True, madama But only tf you don’t let concern about your ---- peace of mind spot! your She didn’t like this Impertln-snce, I saw, but she took It weU. When she rose to leave, Louis again kissed her hand and said cheerfully, ’ Madame, If I were only a ^w years younger and a few nullion francs richer—’’ and Madame de Villemont made a charming little curtsy of ap- Late one afternoon, I * was waiting for the elevator on the ground floor, and when it descended into view I saw de Gon-de aboard, his thoughts evidently far away. 'Bonjour, MonMeur de Oonde/' I said aa I opened the door for him. Then, aa I was about to take his place in the elevator, he said, "One moment." •‘Yes, monsieur?" “How is the writing going?" I decided I had everything to gain and nothing to lose by reminding him of his promise. "I’ve been hoping to get Charles Leschenhaut’s opinion on thaf monsieur. If you remember—" “I remember very well," d Gonde said stiffly. ’Tve spoken to him about you. He’ll meet with you here as soon as his schedule permits, and should be very soon. He trusts you’ll have something to show him worth his time and trouble. Will you?" "Good.” De Gonde slowly sized me up and down, his face expressionless. Than he abruptly, “He knows the s tlca bare. He knows you’re doing well with PauL That’s in your tovor, too.” And with that, be turned on his heel and walked off. One Friday morning, pleased with the prospect of the whole day free before me, I was suddenly brought to a halt by the sight of Madame Matilde Vo-siers, her eyes fastened husband aa he walked heavily down the stairs and strode across the rotunda on his way out. It was easy to see he was in a savage tssnper. He wore riding elothea, and with every step be swung '' “Is that aU you have to do with yourself, stand and stare at people?” ••I’m sorry, madame." ’Then, icauae I was sure that no'mat-t« how painful Voslers’ riding crop across the face had been, the blow to her pride was even more painful. I said, ••! was only eoncemeO because you have suffered a bad falL The worn spots In this carpeting can be dangerous.” "You know, Reno, you’re not at all one of the typical, smirking fools one finds infesting Jie house, are you?" "I try not to be, madame," “No. In fact, you seem quite the chevaiiefl Very much chevalier. , Someone who might deserve a tittle good advice ,n return for his chivalry. Would you be interested In it?" I nodded, wondering udiat she was getting at. "Very well then." Madame Matilde glanced over her shoulder aa If to assure herself that the fimereal length of corridor behind her was deserted, then In voice said to me, •‘The ad vice is to clear out of here. You don’t belong in this place. For your own good, get away from It aq soon as you can.” •‘But why—?" “No questibna. Ask no questions of anyone here. That sad man vriw. was once Paul’s Instructor wasted time doing that, and what did It get him? Just leave here and don’t look back.' "Not without some reason," ] protested. "And what would be your reason for remaining here? The money ? A man like you can do as well elsewhere if he wants to. The charms of Madame de Villemont ? Believe me, if that’s what you’ro mooning after, you’re living in false hopes.” “The princess and the peaa-~ said with open NEW YORK (AP) - The National Broadcasting Co. said Monday night that New Orleans DiM. Atty. Jim Garrison built his case against Clay L. Shaw' on testimony that did not pass a lie detector test and that Gafri-son knew diis. NBC Probes 'JFK Plof Garrison Witnesses Disputed Pontiac Draft Will Induct 66 Shaw, a retired New (h’leans businessman, is under ihdict-nafint there on charges of con-gplracy to murder President John F. Kennedy, who was assassinated in Dallas in 1963. Garrison disputes the Warren Commission finding that lMMtie of NorthMn Franc* and Flomton (1400-1474) Tu«e„ July 4, 8:30 P.AA.Music for King Honry VIII TICKETS: Pavilion $3.50, Lawn $2.00, Frotival Office^Oaidand Univ*r«»y, Roehrator, Mich. 48063, T*l*phon^38-7211. •xt. 2301, 9 A.M.-5 P.M., Mon. thro Fri. * OnN 7s30 SHOW STARTS AT bUSK _______ MA 4-3135 COLUMBIA PlCTURhS COLUMBIA PlCTURtS^^ii^ ^. ',i3MeSMaS0N8l3NB®MNIi)GM c -PLUS- r SUCGESTtO fpR MATUBI AUOIEWCtS { COlUMBIA PICTURES and SAM SPIEGEL present "THE HAPPENING” The Swinging Hit Song mi HAPPENING” Tender, Fresh^ Young, Plump CHICKENS Deep fried in fresh pure vegetable oil for the most de- ' lightful CHWKEy DINXER feast, ever... Buy it by the! BOX... the BUCKET... the BARREL! ORDERS for parties, picnics, meetings, social groups or dinner at home. DAWN DONUTS Made Fresh Around the Clock On the Way to Work Or Home From A Parly YouMI En|ey Dawn Famotts Fresh FUVOR BREWED COFFEE Open 7 Days-5 t.M. to 12 Midnight A DIVISION OP ^DAWN * DONUTS ___ ^JUUUUUUUUUUL 93 NORTH TELEGRAPH BETWEEN TEL-HURON AND PONTIAO MALI CHICKEN-PHONE 335-2444 5 7,668 men will be ord- U he eleehtns ew»y »t weeds with a sickle. Am thm door rlnond WraHeaiwsra MatUde turned and caucht aiglit of me. Her hand flew to her cheek, covering it, but not before I had aeen that the cheek was red and swollen and bore a distinct slash mark across it, a long ugly welt •’■What are you staring at his profession, be wasn’t likely to riak his standing in it by having a groOaly unethical affair with a patient "ufaunei" I aaid. but Ma-MatUde’s eyaa, srhieh had examinations in August, Selective Service officiate said. ror at her own aUp, sroro now veiled to me. “Tve said enough," she toM nm dully, 'rroo much. You make it impossible to do you a favor." My predeceaaor, Georgea, the chauffeur, told me was a passionate young man who had suicided because o( a hopeless love for Anne de Villemont. fTo Be Continued TomorrowJ • Ruidotn Houb« novel. Copyrlsht O 1967 by Stanley Bllm. Distributed by Kins Featuree Syndlcata '•OIKSITOACttASCMmilDOSSItU.irUliai!’’ C CHmusiimiiiHirs JAMES BOND 007'^ J7 intematlanal Star* Incledliir PETER URSULA DAVID WOODY SELLERS • ANDRESS * NIVEN * ALLEN ^ Trooper Is Cited COMMERCE DRIVE-IN THEATRE (HUM LAM n M EMl-MII - tkawSlartt at Dmk ASiilta SUMkMraa UaSsr li Fret -LAST NIQHT- Sonny & Che'r in "GOOD TIMES" ALSO 'KISS THE GIRLS & AAAKE THEM DIE' Starts WEDNESOilY ____Kirk WASNE DOUGLAS 'thkWar EAST LANSING (AP) officer who risked his life to stop an apparent suicide has been cited for bravery by the Michigan State Police Board Awards. State Police Trooper George E. Corwin of the East Lansing Poet earned his bravery award in November when he disarmed a subject who had placed a pistol to his own head. The subject previously had .................in the arm af- ter his gun misfired when first pointed at investigating officers. RHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYE DAIRY Fmalurtng Our Famous Ko*h*r CemMi B**f SFfCIAL LUNCHEON EVERYDAY ■raokfait - DInm 5I& Oakland Fraa Perking FI 3- Pontiac's POPULAR THEATER lundani Cenlinuaua 12 •.*. to EAGLE I NOW SHOWING l^MARnN^DiuSi P- imBlSHOP Uu^Aciioss IMThe River ^i^WaND "CHNicoum* mm Breathless? Working Man’s Buffet Every Tuesday - Friday 11:30 A.M. to 2 P.M. Choice of Two Meats d Salads with Dassarts Broalcfast Manu Daily Till 11 A.M. AIRPORT SKYROOM Opan Daily 7-6 P.M. $<125 6500 Highland Rd. in Airport Tarminal Building If you’re always a gasp away from saying hello, it’s time to get away from your breath-taking routine. Order an extension phone. It's that easy and it costs so little. For as little as 95-cents a month you can have an extension phone where you need it. Different type phones and decorator colors are available. So, take your choice and choose not to run again. Call Michigan Bell and place your order now. Michigan Bell Part af tbs llstioiiwids BsH Systsm WaU • 95^—monthly dmie for each exten^on. • 84.00—one-time charge. Covera any number of plumes in color installed on the same order. No charge forhiack. A nominal stniet- charts may bo api Charges quoted for residence extensions do not include tax. Your choice of deemator ebloTS. each phone. A Nominal smtet-eomuetionorehoHM charts may bo appliedhU. Charges quoted for residmu* extOHsionsdonatincluds lax. Your choice af docoraior colors. A nominal smieo- 'connection or eheOUi htappuediU. charge may btai Charges quoUdfor rtsidtnes extensions da rut inebsdtta. Your choicoaf docoraior colors. B 8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 196T TO TRY CHANNEL SWIM -- These are six of seven Wichita boys who will attempt the first team swim of the English Channel today, weather permitting. The team members are Michael Uhrich, 16; Marshall Seely, 17; Mike Janssens, 13; Tom (14) and Randall Reed, 17; and Charles (13) and Roger Gephart, 14. FOSTER PARENT — Robert McAllister, an employe of C & C Construction Co., casts a watchful eye over Suzy, a mallard duck, and her brood of nine at a construction site in Hennepin, 111. Ihe duck hatched her eggs in the midst of construction work at a river pumping station. JAMMED BEACH — Thousands of alewives litter a beach north of downtown Chicago where park district crews have fought a losing battle against fhe odorous meSs. Fish were washed ashore by easterly winds along most of the city’s beaches. The migrants from salt water, now infesting Lake Michigan, also clog intake screens at the city’s water cribs. In the background is the lifeguard’s tower, but there is no swimming today. WET AND WILD — Three of America’s Apollo astronauts — (from left) Bruce Me- River during jungle survival training in the Candiess, Fred Haise and John Bull — are Panama Canal Zone, and later they relax shown riding the rapids of the Changres after the ordeal. News in Piefures NO WISE-QUACKS, PLEASE - Thtre is Uttle time for this busy mother to catch a catnap. When the duckling* hatched this week on the Calvin Wood farm near Oshkosh, mother-protfictor. I ii AP Winphete Wis., Andrea, the Woods’ 2-year-old cat, took over duties as BATTLE-SCARRED - Wounded GIs gather in a muddy clearing for first aid and evacuatkm. A half-hour fight with Vietcong anipen cost the company six dead and 12 ‘ Hi. The 1st Mantiy Division seddiers were in war zone D, about 50 miles north-northeast of Saigon, last week. Monsoon rains left ankle-deep mud and water in the YOUNG REPUBUCAN RIVALS - Candidates for chair- ventfon earlier this week. The three are (from left) Jack man of the Young Republican National Federation get to- ‘ McDonald of Naihvllle, Tenn.; Ray Cooper of Little Rock, gether at an opoiing-day session of the organization’s con- Ark.; and Jim ^etts of Cleveland. The election ^ Friday. THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1967 C—1 Playoff Birdie Putts Give Bone, Souchak Berths in PGA Field Tigers Split Twinbill; Podres Goes Tonight DETROIT UB — Johnny Podres, a 35-year-old southpaw with a histcH7 of winning clutch games, gets his first shot of the seasiHi as a starter tonight when the Detroit Tigers face the California Angels. Podres, 1-0 in 19% innings of relief, relies mostly on his curve and slick change up nowadays, but says, “I’ve still got the smc^e sometimes. I’m ready.’’ Manage Mayo Smith decided to go with Podres because of a raft of double-headers and in hopes of snapping his sagging starting staff out of a slump which lasted 12 games. ★ * ★ “I’ll probably use Podres again in the first game at New York this weekend,” said Smith, after watching the Tigers split a twinight twinbill with the California Angels Monday night. Mickey Lolich, on pass from the National Guard, lost a heartbfeaker in the opener, 2-0. Denny McLain, his fastball singing by the Angels for 12 strikeouts, won the nightcap, 5-1. Lolich, who gave up five hits in eight innings before being lifted for a pinch-hitter, lost it when Rick Reichardt slammed a two-run homer in the eighth. “Both McLain and Lolich pitched great games,” said &nith. “It’s very encouraging. But I haven’t decided whether I’ll bring Mickey in to pitch again.” Smith has been considering adjusting his starting rotation because aU four starters have had their troubles since beginning a slump in California two weeks ago. In that time, Detroit has dropped 10 of 13 games and dropped 3% games l^hind the first-place Chicago White Sox. SOLO HOME RUN McLain, working with one day’s rest after being knocked out against Kansas City Saturday, gave up four hits, including a solo homer by Bobby Knoop in the third. "You can give up one run a game with this club behind you and it won’t hurt much,” he said. “You can give up three runs and still win most of the time.” Lolich, now 5-9, wasn’t as fortunate in the opener, dropping his seventh game in a row. Detroit didn’t get him any runs in three of the losses and only 10 runs in all seven games. “It all evens out,” said McLain. “’This club isn’t going to give up. The hitters can’t start blaming the pitchers and pitchers can’t blame the hitters. We’ve just been trying too hard to win.” Clyde Wright became the ninth straight southpaw to beat the Tigers in 0 0 0 Wert 3b MIncher 1b 0 0 0 0 Cash 1b --------- 4 0 0 0 Oyler ss J 0 1 0 Price ph ’*00 TrcewskI ti Rodgers e Knoop 3b Wright p Roles p Lolich p WlcSshm'''p ilTil Total Detroit 1. LOB—Ca^r^a 7T”'Detroit J Northrup. HR—Reichardt (0). ' Wright (3), Wright (W.3-0) 73-3 5 0 0 3 wil!kl!rrt.'m’ * i S o o i HBP—Lolich (Relcherdt), Lolich (Schael). T-3;33. SBCOND OAMU CALIPORNIA OITROIT Schael 3b 4 0 10 Wert 3b *4 0 3 3 Johnstone ef 4 0 0 0 MAullffa 3b 4 111 Held u 4 0 3 0 Freehon 1b 4 n i a 4 0 0 0 WHorten If 3 0 0 0 Kallne rf 0 0 0 0 Northrup r1 ml 1 0 0 0 Stanley Reichardt If 3 0 0 0 Price c Morton r Total 1 0 0 0 McLain p 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 Total 39 5 4 5 tot 0 10 0 0 0—1 unren ............001 001 3I(—9 E-Knoop, Wert. DP-DetroIt 1. LOB-Callfornle 4, Detroit 5. 3B-Wert. HR-Knoop (4). SB-McAulItte. S—Price. IP H R ER BB SO Turnfcr (L,1-l) .... t 4 3. 3 3 l Kelso 3 3 P 3 3 - I McLain (W.I-7) 9 4 I 1 1 13 T—3:14. A-1M38. the opener, getting relief help from Minnie Rojas. “We couldn’t have beaten anyone the way we’ve been playing the last couple of weeks,” said Smith. “But I guess they keep throwing left-handers at us because Willie Horton and A1 Kaline didn’t hit them as well as right-handers last year.” ★ ★ ★ Detroit had several opportunities to score in the first game, but two doubleplays ended early threats and Wright got out of a tough jam in the seventh. ALEX REDMOND MIKE SOUCHAK 4 Play Over Injuries Baseball Iron Man Not Extinct By the Associated Press There were almost as many medical conununiques as baseball reports coming out of American League ballparks Monday night, and the immediate conclusion might be that the age of the iron man isn’t over yet. Ecuador Netters Stun U.S. Team GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador (if» - “When you lose, you keep your mouth shut,” said U.S. Davis Cup Captain George Mac-Call, and his team had little to say after their humiliating defeat at the hands of tennis midget Ecuador. .‘Ecuador beat us fair and square,” was ail Cliff Richey could say after the South Americans took an insurmountable 3-1 lead Monday. Arthur Ashe, of Richmond, Va., on leave from the Army, lost to unheralded Francisco Guzman, 0-6, 6-4, 6-2, 0-3, 6-3, Monday, eliminating the United States in the American Zone final. Ecuador the heavy underdog which has never before reached the quarter-finals in this struggle for world amateur tennis supremacy, thus moved into the inter-zone semifinals. Hick Monday, Earl Battey and Bill Skowron all seemed out to prove that it takes more than a cut or a knock to get a fellow out of the ball game. ★ ★ * Monday injured his left foot in the first game of Kansas City’s twi-night double-header with Cleveland but didn’t leave for X rays until the second game. The Indians won both contests, 4-2 and 2-1. Battey wa^ bounced around in a collision at the plate with big Boog Powell of the Orioles as the Twins split a twi-nighter, winning the first game 4-0 and losing the second 9-5. But the Minnesota catcher didn’t leave the game until the next inning. And Skowron, playing only a week after being spiked in the hand while sliding home, reopened the cut while batting in the eighth inning of the first game of the Angels’ doubleheader with Detroit. California won the opener 2-0 and the Tigers took the nightcap 5-1. New York and Boston were rained out. Washington and Chicago were not scheduled. Touring Quint Winner BRISBANE (® — The touring Oregon State University basketball team defeated Toowoomba 82-31 Monday night. Monday bounced a foul tip off his foot in the fourth inning of the first game, but not until the fourth inning of the ' finale did he leave the line-up for, a quick trip to the hospital for a check-up. Apparently, there were no great problems because the Athletics’ outfielder left soon after X rays were taken. RECEIVING END Battey was on the receiving end of PoweU’s 240 pounds when the Orioles first baseman got caught in a rundown on a missed squeeze bunt attempt. Boog was finally tagged out, but he jammed Battey’s arm in the process. Earl left for a pinch hitter the next inning. The Indians won the first game on pitcher Steve Hargan’s two-run homer— his first extra-base hit in the majors— with two out in the ninth. Don Demeter’s pinch homer and Fred Whitfield’s run-scoring single gave the Tribe the night-cap. Dave Boswell set the Orioles down on just three hits in the opener as the Twins t scored twice on Tony Oliva’s homer and I twice on Zoilo Versalles single. The ^ Birds mounted a 15-hit attack in the second game, led by Paul Blair’s two singles, double and triple. GLENN STUART DON KUBIAK Taking Long Time to Decide Winner Walled Lake an Southfield will have to meet a third time to decide an American Legion game which began June 11. The first game ended in a 44 tie after 10 innings. The make-up game which was played last night also ended in a tie, 5-5. A third game will be scheduled wittun 10 days. Southfield tied the game in the seventh inning. Bill Davidson had a single and a homer for Southfield. Jim Dickey and Joe Mattack each had two hits for Walled Lake. Ontario Rider Continues Top Performance at BOH Five State Pros Earn Spots for Trip to Denver A pair of local pros who failed to make the grade in the recent U. S. Open qualifying rammed home short putts on the first hole of a playoff yesterday at Birmingham Country Club to earn a trip to Denver for the National PGA Championship. Knocking in six-foot birdie putts on the 507-yard, par-5 hole were Pontiac’s GCne Bone, head pro at Bay Pointe Golf Club, and Mike Souchak of Oakland Hills. The other three spots in the field of 54 were medalist Alex Redmond of Loch-moor, along with Glenn Stuart of Grand Rapids and Donald Kubiak of Niles. Redmond, 28, assistant pro at Loch-moor;, set the pace in the 36-hole qualifying over the 6,660-yard, par-71 layout with a 73-70—143. It will be his first try at the National PGA crown. On two other occasions, he was an alternate but his turn never came. The PGA is set for July 20-23. ★ ★ * Bone and Souchak came in with 144s to share the runner-up spot with McEl-murry, Stuart and Kubiak. ’That fivp-way deadlock forced the playoff for the other four spots. BOOMING SHOTS Souchak and Bone hit booming tee shots on the first hole of the playoff. Both hit second shots close to the green and chipped within six feet of the pin. After McElmurry and Kubiak putted out for pars, Bone tapped his in and Souchak followed suit. ★ ★ * Stuart, McElmurry and Kubiak continued the playoff with Stuart getting a birdie at the third hole and Kubiak winning the fourttj hole. Bone, after an opening 72, had a good round going in the afternoon but he picked up bogies on 15, 16 and 17 to break the spell. Souchak and Bone both missed a shot at the U. S. Open title recently when they failed to make the grade in the qualifying round. Souchak came close, losing out in a four-way playoff for two spots. ALERT BASE-RUNNER — Detroit Tigers’ outfielder Jim Northrup slides between the ball (TIant 5-1), night ' ila (Hamilton 0-0) at C I-O), night (Bell 3-4) at New York (Stottle- (Podres ^BosIot Only games s Washington al ChTcagoT'z,' twi-night Minnesota al Detroit, night Calllorhla at Cleveland, night St. Louis . Cincinnati Pittsburgh San Francisi Chicago . “■infa . ...ladelphia Los Angeles Houston New York I Cincinnati Results 100 101 000—3 < 024 000 OOx—d- t Igo (3), Abernathy (7) i ------ McCormick ...„ Cormlck, 4-3. L-Nolan, 5-2. Home runs —Cincinnati, Pinson (5), Pavletich 2, (5). '■* Francisco, Mays (9), Hart (10). ago ............ 100 )0) oon—3 in i tburgh ........ 300 000 )0 .-nkins, Hartenstein (8) and Veale, McBean (8) and May. ' Hundley; /-Veale. louslon ...... 001 002 00) 00—4 Gibson, Hoemer (8L"Sri|es (9) anc .... Carver; Cuellar, Sembera (I), Schneider ), Ellers (9), Lalman (1), end Brand. ...... 000 002 000-2 7 ...... 001 100 001-3 7 , Kelley (9) and Uacker; Kelley, 1-7. “—B run—Los Angeles, games scheduled. phia (L. Jackson 4-7), night Chicago (NIakro 1-2 or Slmmoni “'“-■•■irgh (Blass 2-1), night Louis (Jaster 3-3) at (Belinsky 1-2), night Atlanta (Lemaster 7-1) at ■ ■■■ ■ Sadeckl 7-5) at San Francis- New York at Philadelphia, nig Chicago at Pittsburgh, night Cincinnati at Houston, night St. Louis at Los Angelas, night Atlanta at San Francisco State Net Play Is Next Stop Local Jaycee Junior Titles Decided Winners and runnersup in the Rochester Jaycee tennis tournament held over the weekend At Oakland University have qualified for the state tournament at Plymouth, June 22-24. * * -k Kirk Beattie of Clarkston won the boys 16Junder division 1^ defeating Roger Befgo of Pontiac, 6-2, 64. In the boys 17-18 diVisiOD, Rick Watson of Rochester successfully defended his local title by defeating Mike Dougherty of Clarkston, 6-1,6-0. Watson earned his way to the finals by a 6-1, 6-0 win over Bob Haggard of Waterford while Dougherty was defeating Mark Erickson of Clarkston, 6-1, 6-4 in the semi-finals. Pontiac Pros> Photoa MADE THE GRADE - Ready for a trip to the Junior Jaycee regional tournament are left to right Dick Kallis, Gene Harry, Ken READY TO GO — Scott Niederluecke (left rear) and Charles Patrick, along with Gary Quitiquit (left front) and Rod Skelton are ready for the regional phase of the Junior Jaycee Golf Tournament. The four qualified yesterday at Pontiac Country Club. Day's Rec 9 Still in Pursuit Widget Hurls No-Hitter; Police Win in Class D in Watertora League d niarked the opening of the 0 Spencer Holds Lead! a no-hitter in Widget League burn Heights Boys Club Pio- “F” triumph over the F.O.P. Yankees; and Pontiac Parks and Recreation Day’s Sanitary continued its]Department’s summer baseball pursuit of unbeaten Spencer!Monday. Floor Covering in the Waterford Moore and Albrey Tipton. The four qualified for the regional tournament in play yesterday at Pontiac Municipal Golf (bourse. Eight Gain Golf Places in Regional Eight local golfers passed their first test yesterday in the annual Junior Jaycee Golf Tournament. * * ★ The eight earned berths in the Jaycee regional slated for Holly Greens June 14. The top performers there will move on to Frankenmuth for the state tournament July 23-24. At Pontiac Country Club, Rod Skelton and Gary Quitiquit carded 76s to pace the 16-17 age group and qualify for the regional, while Scott Niederluecke (81) and Charlen Patrick (84) earned their trips to Holly Green by pacing the IS and under division. Albrey Tipton came in ^)th a four-over-par 73 to lead the field at Pontiac Municipal, and gaining the other qualifying spot in the 16-17 age group was Gene Harry with a 79. Ken Moore came in with an 83 and Dick Kallis fired an 86 to pace the 15 and under group. JAYCBI JUNIOR GOLF (At PmHm CuMitry CM) 14-17 Agu Grwi* 3I-3A-74 Recreation Department’s men’! softball program Monday night at the Drayton Plains diamond. Day’s (11-1) tripped Buckner Finance, 12-7, on a 14-hit attack that features three-hit pierform-ances by John Studt and Dalt Ryan. Six unearned runs in the first inning helped Ken Spears post the mound decision. Buckner’s is now 2-10. The other game saw Dick Rohe’s three-run homer carry McAnnally’s Auto Sales (64) past the winless Waterford Merchants, 10-7. McAnnally’s scored five times in the fifth inning, then added five gift runs in the sixth. Adrain Dutcher hit safely three times for the winners while Ed Miller matched his feat for the Merchants (0-12). John Nellen-bach was the winner. Ted Wright of the Columbia Ave. Recreation Association blanked the Wildcats without a hit or a run while fanning 10 in a 6-0 Widget League conquest. The close contest in “D” action saw the Fraternal Order of Police nip the X-L’s, 54, Eddie Williams’ drove in Al Bessant with a sacrifice fly the bottom of the seventh for ( winning run. * ★ Gerry McKeever tossed three-hitter in a 13-2 win over Clawson by another F.O.P. nine and Steve Bass stopped Bloomfield Hills, 4-1, on three safeties in the other “D” games. Andy Trevino’s double, triple and homer led the House of Barbers to a 26-0 rout of the Vikings to feature the Class E i^ieiiers. Paul Pyke allowed one hit and whiffed nine for the Au- Pro-Am Honors Gained CHICAGO (A — Beth Stone of Muskogee, Okla., fired a 32-37-to win top honors in the third annual ladies pro-am golf tournafnent at the North Shoe Ck)untry Club M(«day. 1 INCLUDING CONCRETE SOs, ...o, on...,, i1 1 ■rlomirumsi^ '17 ggr1MMR.«- 1 FREE ESTIMATES On AM Types of Modernization CALLNOW FE8-0747 1 Call Anytima Day or Nita Oetroit Call 538-0300 Steve Harden hit a grand slam homer as the Pontiac Optimist— II defeated the Boys’ Club, 10-6, in another Widget outing. Ski Meet Dates Slated HOUGHTON (AP)-The Central Division Junior Alpine Championships of the U.S. Skiing Association, known as the largest junior ski meet of the ;, will be held next Feb. 23-25 on Mont Ripley with Micih-igan Tech and the Copper Country Ski aub % hosts. PONTIAC JUNIOR BASEBALL Cluu D Frat. Order of Police 13r Clawson 2 Fret. Order of Police 5, X-L's 4 Arnold Drugs 4, Bloomfield Hills 1 7, Rochester 0 (forfeit) Junior Shoots 74 in District Round Mark Hendrickson of Atlas Valley Golf Club opened the Ju-nior District Golf Association weekly g(df play yesterday at Franklin Hills ciountry Club by firing a gross twoover par 74. He posted five bogeys and three birdies in his round edge Reece Lopucki of Washtenaw CC by three strokes. Low net honors and third place in gross score went to Mike Sheridan of Red Run with 8 78-5-73. In the girls’ division, Bonnie Lauer of Edgewood led the field with an 80. Gail Ernest of Detroit GC was runnerup with a 95. COHSTRUGTION INDUSTRIES 13115 W. 7 Mile Rd. TRUCKLOAD CLOSE-OUT BAR6AINS Reg. Values to $7.98 Gal. SPECIAL SALE OF DISCONTINUED Heuie paint trim colors, intorior -Lotox, flat onomol, aomi-glosB, floor onamol, varnishos, ClooG-Oirt Vinyl S»yl*-tR _______________ CloxG-Oirt Sonlta* Fabric............. ............. 2.99 t.r. CloM-Out Sonltat Shower Curtalno....................1.99 oat Cloto-Out Sioin-proof Vorfor., ACME QUALin PAINTS 3 N. Saginaw, Cemar Pika FE 2-3S _______ OpGB8«o5:30Doily,Fri.»til9_______ Junior Golfers in Clinic Play Golfing clinics got under way today for most of the 132 youngsters enrolled in Waterford Township’s junior golfing program. ★ ★ ★ Some will begin play later in the week vdiile the others will move onto the course for the first time next week. Local Golfer in Pro-Am Charles Pfister of Bloomfield Hills, vice president of Wolverine Aluminum Corp., will play ’ the pro-am tomorrow that cedes the Cleveland Open Golf Tournament. The event is being played at Aurora Country Club. rssiBDi i DEAD.UtUVEi .1 I jBRIGGS' I FBrlimaRBmrdRtaisBnBaia g I 682-0820 a 1.1231 Orabartf Lake IW., Raeiti ■ . OpM«M.Manm.*AjiLi»*rja. > ■' wMMis>«.*ajLi»eML M THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JUNE 20, 1967 C—8 Players Meet PGA Group CLEVELAND (AP) - Both the tournament-touring golfers and the Professional Golfers Association held firm to their positions as they gathered here today for what loomed as a showdown in the players’ fight for more control of their tour. The PGA Executive Committee scheduled a special meeting and invited all players to be on College Golfers in Prelude to NCAA Tourney SHAWNEE-ON-DELA. WARE, Pa. (AP) — The cream of the nation’s college golfers matched strokes today in' an East-West prelude to the 70th annual NCAA Golf Championship. Coaches of the 74 colleges and universities here for the five days of team and individual team competition selected tee regional squads for tee 18 match best ball sectional rivalry. ★ ★ * The East leads 16-14, with two ties, in the previous 32 meetings. But the West was favored to prevail over tee 7,000-yard, par 70, Shawnee Inn golf course. Houston opens defense Wednesday of the team title it has won tee last three years, facing a stiff challenge from San Jose State, Louisiana State, Oklahoma State, Florida, Penn State and Southern California. The team championship will be decided Wednesday and Thursday with 18-hole play each day. Ex-City Titlists in Publinx Field Robertson, Rothborth Among Qualifiers Former Pontiac city champions, Dick Robertson and Ron Rothbarth, took two of the 10 quaiifying spots for the National Public Links golf tournament to be held July 12-15 in Seattle. The qualifying tournament took place yesterday at Burroughs Farms Golf Course near Brighton and Robertson took medal honors in the 111-man field with a two under par 70-70-140. Rothbarth made the trip by winning in a playoff after posting a 74-71—145 in regulation. He and Curtis Walker were playoff winners with Murray Brooks taking the first alternate’s position. One stroke behind' Robertson was Allan Thompson with 71-70—141 ,followed by Claude Dwight with 70-72—142, James Law 72-70—142, Andrew Woodward 70-73—143, Don Brooks 71-73—144 and Timo Kilpelainen 72-72-144. eUOLINX QUALIFIERS Dick Robertson .......... 70-70-140 Allan Thompson ..........71-70—141 Cloude Dwight 70-7J-142 hand to get the PGA version of the present squabbie. ★ ★ it “We feel that 80 per cent of tee men want to remain in the PGA,” said Bob Creasy, executive director of the PGA. There are just a few who wMt 0 make a fuss. The pro tourists, includjng such standout players as Armld Palmer, Jack Nieklaus and Bill Casper, have signed a petition asking for a seven-point reform the pro setup, "rhey are threatening to boycott the PGA National Championship next month in Denver if their demands are not met. Max Elbin of Washington, D.C., president of the PGA, insists the players’ demands are unrealistic and adds: “We cannot give in on aii of these points and keep our position.” The PGA is composed of more than 5,800 professionais, of which only about 200 are playing members. For years the playing pros have said the PGA has too much authority in running the tour and teat the players themselves do not have a strong enough voice. VETO POWER Essentially they are demanding elimination of the executive committee’s veto power in ail policy decisions and the right of the piayers to schedule touma-' ments, conduct television contracts and hire and fire tournament personnel. The current controversy was triggered this year when Frank Sinatra sought to sponsor. a $200,000 tournament at Palm Springs, Calif., two weeks before the Bob Hope Classic, a regular event on the tour for years. The tournament committee, composed of four tournament players and the three top officials of the PGA, voted 4-3 in favor of the Sinatra tournament, with the three officials taking the neptive stand. The PGA Executive Committee then exercised its veto power and ruled out the tournament. ' Alous Rampaging Bat Paces Pirates Victory AP Wirephoto DUGOUT PUTOUT — Houston Astro third baseman Bob Aspromonte takes a foul pop up while falling into the Cardinals dugout in their game last night in Houston. Umpire Harry Wendlestedt keeps a close watch on the play. St. Louis won the game 5-4. Hazel Park Results MONDAY Ut-l2»W; Clilming, «’/l Furiongt Smokomo 22.20 0.40 7.< Turkey Fat Roed 5.60 3; So's Tuss 0. — ------ Claiming, 41' ------ Make Tracks "recklet Bast Dally DouMa; (10-3) Paid $2S2.20 j4—$2400: Claiming, $ Furlonn Kll's Comet Miss MIcha 4111—U500: Claiming, On The Wagon Rompin Stompin Race Results, Entries By tee Associated Press The harder Matty Alou attacks a baseball, the more it bleeds. Alou, the National 155-pound batting king, butchered the Chicago Cubs with a run-scoring, bloop single in tee seventh inning that carried the Pittsburgh Rrates to a 4-3 victory Monday night. ★ it The little Dominican’s third single in the game gave him 12 hits in his last 15 at bats and an impressive .317 average for tee season. “I don’t think anytime in my career I have ever been hitting the ball as hard,” said Alou, who led the league with a .342 mark last season but was under .280 when he began his rampage last Friday night with an eighth inning double at Philadelphia. ★ * ★ While Alou was gouging the Cubs, light-hitting Dick Schofield of Los Angeles overpowered Atlanta 3-2; surprising Julio Gotay of Houston wasted five straight hits in a 5-4 11 inning loss to league-leading St. Louis setbacks as the Dodgers won for and San Francisco whipped Cincinnati 6^3 despite a pair of homers by Don Pa\detich. Philadelphia and the New York Mets were idle. FOURTH WIN Right-hander Don Sutton yielded seven hits and earned his fourth victory against eight Cassius Trial Set to Begin Jury Awaits Testimony in Houston Court tee fifth time in their last six starts. Left-hander Mike McCormick weathered Pavietich’s two hom-and another by Vada while boosting his record to 6-3 the Giants beat rookie Gary Nolan on Willie Mays’ two-run homer and Jim Hart’s bases-ipty blast in a four-run -third. * * ★ Ty Cline, filling in for injured outfielder Ollie Brown, cracked three hits, including a triple, for San Francisco. The loss dropped the second place Reds one-half game behind St. Louis. UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1001 Baldwin Ave. CARL'S GOLFLANO 1976 s. Ttiftgraph Rd: 10.60 6.60 6.60 Northville Results MONDAY l$t—$M0; Condltlontd Trot, 1 Yankee Soldier 6M Go's Fire 3.20 2.40 4.80 7.00 4.40 3.801 Dally Double: (2-3) Paid $15.40. $800; Claiming Pact, 1 Milt: ^■^"ll. V. Blackstohe 13.40 7.M ’■*jlcuriosity““ 5.40 kth—$1000; Conditioned Trot, 1 Mill Furlongi Ijimmie's Girl 5.80 3.40 2.80 50.20 14.40 4.40|Dr. Dorwood 4.80 " 3.40 3.20'Mighty Monarch **#'5tti-$»00; Claiming Paco, 1 Milo: fsm "*!n . ,n Spectacular 4,40 3.40 14.00 4.40 4.80 McGregor 4:20 ’ « J “ Scott's Phil T)pl’.“Tw»n: (1-2) Paid $350.40 ' »th—$1000; Conditioned Pace, 1 Mill lb-$iSdMO; Added Allowance. 4 Furlongs Chief Heather 43.80 14.40 Kentucky Sherry 3,40 2.40 2.40 Miss Wood 8-20 Maize 'N Blue 2:40 2.40 Queen's Tee Pee ...... 3.2 7th-$l400; Conditioned Trot, 1 Mill Ol^cT' ' “' *.20 5.00 3.40 ^ “ 3.“ Rousing Rebel 5.40 3.40 ^rt Wh—$3400: Starter Hdcp., IH Miles ;8th-$1300; Conditioned Pace, 1 Mill 'lelio Park 17.00 9.80 5.20 Queen of Amboy 17.20 8.40 incantatador 14.00 8.00,Hal's Gail Sue 11.80 iflll Land No Twin Double: All I Hazel Park Entries, WEDNESDAY Matson to Try for 70-Footer in AAU Meet Conditioned Pacta 1 Mila: COLLEGE STATION, Tex. (AP) — Randy Matson, Texas A&M’s mighty weightman, will concentrate on the shot at the National AAU meet in Bakersfield, C^f., Friday, leaving the discus for later, if at all. Matson wants to pitch the 16-pound ball 70 feet so there’ll be no question about it. He never has done it outside the state and he fears folks will start calling him a homer or something. Randy set the world’s record of 70 feet 7V$ inches in 1965 at College Station. And he bettered that with a heave of 71 feet 5% inches — also at College Station. He has thrown the shot 70 feet :4ojor better seven times but all of those pitches were in Texas. Ron Rothtarili . Curtiz WBiktr FIral Al Murray Brooks 7473—143 ...71-73-144 72-72-144 . 74-71-145 74-71—145 Women Start Spring Lake Golf Tourney SPRING LAKE (AP)-F i v e golfers in the Spring Lake Women’s Open finished the regulation 18 - hole qualifying round Monday tied with 84’s. It took three additional holes of playoff competition to select four of the five for openings on the championship flight of the 46th annual running of the tournament at the Spring Lake Country Club. * * * On the first playoff hole, Judy Zylstra of Grand Rapids qualified with a four while the others remained tied at five. The four remained tied after the second hole, shooting fives. On the third hole, Mrs. Edgar Reynolds of Lansing shot a three to gain one berth, Mrs. Jack Scripsema and Mrs. Herm Zoerhoff, both of Grand Rapids, fired fours to capture the other two spots while Barbara Rohn of Ludington was eliminated. Two - time champion Patti Shook of Saginaw won medalist honors by firing a one-over par 75. "Martin !“ Northville Entries . Flash k'im! tonight 11st—$800; ConditiontU Trot, I Milt 3'Anna Ensign Star Blaze 117 Devious Sue xli 112 Hamlet's Queen 1 ■■■ ■ ■ Surge 1 e xl08 Misty WMrl Fortune 115 Another Jut Lady Go Go x)05 Morambo Bold Terry 112 Stralghtawo' Sherwinner 113 Gal 4th—$3300: Claiming, 4 Furlongs Little Tonda 113 Steel Haule Mr. Bill Dale 115 Onegood 119 Comes The Arkansas Tom xlll Groom 115 Reigh Princes x109 ilss Hy Gain 112 Whatever 119 Foliage x107 $tl»-$1480: Claming, 4W Furlongs Otomano 117 Milano 115 Brand O’ Fate x105 Rastus Bill 117 - 'stlcal 113 Ripper Pay Day 113 - " 115 Fleet Landing Laurent Ian Way Fisherman's Packet 105 Meetabody Carpenters Rule 115 Erins Luck Court Rule 115 Be Cagey a-LIttle By Little 110 Gold Crown Invalinda 110 a-Owens Lee Natty Feeling a-N. Raiiley t B. Rapp I, Parker Windy Hill 119 Gentllly Maxim Tonga Base x1l2 Jan's Baby Go Rusty Go 113 Lively Lass Mr. Yonts 115 Ala Fire ---- ■ 115 a-Another Firm Offers Rust Warranty No mattar what modal '67 cor you buy, you'll ba gatting tha bast bargain on warrantias avar offarad. Ind««d, Ganaral Motors has axtandad its warrantias to include "avarything except tires which ara warranted by tha tire manufacturers." But is "avarything" except tires on cars getting factory backing for longer periods? Not necessarily. Still unwarranted is tha actual car body, except for defects in workmanship or paint. Ziebart Process Corp., 821 Oakland Ave., Pontiac, is offering a five-year, or 50,000 miles, warrantybn cars treated by its rustproofing process. The warranty will protect against "any rust through" over the prescribed period. The process involves spraying a petroleum-based chemical coating "inside" door panels, headlamp fixtures and other areas susceptible to rusting. The average "treatment" costs about $55. Under the 5/50 warranty, motorists whose cars have been Ziebartad are called in each two years or 20,000 miles for a free inspection and "an extra shot of Chemical if it's needed. Ziebart Process Corp., 821 Oakland Ave., Pontiac, will be happy to discuss their Guaranteed Protection program, just call FE 4-0502. xlSf' Gota Gypsy -----a Son Worthy Harvester Pleasant Yankee Speedy R Rosita Song Ho Bo's Laurie 4th—$804: Condmoned Pace, 1 Mile 115 Tuscola King Shadow Wings lOSlTrotwood Jeff Little Amigo 108 Penny Sue Mite Bye Bye Beezer xllO Tessle Mavourneen Chief's Cindy >5tlv-$1000; Claiming Trot, 1 Mile ’‘1?5 Graystone Ladyt Blaze Goin Famous Shawnee Charlton Direct .,D Baron C ' xl05 Traffic L 119 I Flyer Lad Lord's Lady Paco, 1 Mila Terry Boy Daring Ange ... ________ Patsy Hal Mary Carol Bunny Chief Marlin Grattan R. Sweet Jo 7tb-$1000: Conditioned Paco, 1 Ml Mountain Roxy Adlos Rip MIkedon Duke Spangl Bud's Dream Swiss Pal Junior Tosses No-Hit Effort LeRoy Bone tossed a no-hitter and fanned 15 of the 18 outs in pacing the unbeaten Pirates to a 4-0 win over the Tigers last night in the Union Lake Junior Athletic loop action. The 12-year-old nephew star golfer Gene Bone walked five while upping the little league leaders’ record to 5-0. HOUSTON (AP) - A white jury of six men and six women awaited the first testimony from government witnesses today in the federal trial of world heavyweight champion Cassius Clay on criminal charges of refusing induction into the Armed Forces. Selection of the panel from a pool of 84 prospective jurors consumed the first day of a trial that lawyers for both sides had promised would be swift. * * ★ Lawyers for Clay spent Monday afternoon quizzing the jury pool about their opinions on the war and on Clay’s religion. The 25-year-old fighter is claiming that as Black Muslim minister Muhannmad Ali, he is draft-exempt as are other men of the cloth. In the courtroom, a sullen Clay swiveled in his chair, dangling his arms to the floor, and consulted with lawyers Hayden Covington of New York and Quinnan Hodges of Houston on the exercise of'the defense’s six challenges against jurors. ★ * ★ U.S. Atty. Morton L. Susman, directing the four-man prosecution team, readied four witnesses for the morning session in the court of U.S. Dist. Judge Joe Ingraham. One is legal officer “■ (as Selective Service state headquarters and the other three, officers in the Houston Armed Forces Examining and Entrance Station where Clay refused the oath April 28. If Clay is convicted, he could get five years in prison, a fine up to $10,000 or both. WATERFORD CHURCH SOFTBALL National Ltagua t. Stevens Lutheran .1. Paul Crescent RLDS Central Methodist Donelson Baptist fWill Your Car Pass INSPECTION? It in waiting 'til yeu'r* caui _____mRchanically pofm ear is n... 7 rwquirod by law and it's our plodgo to keep your car safe oil-ways. If you're in doubt, make on oppoiptment now ___ with ... flAG’S NUMBER ONE AUTO SAFEH CENTER NEW FULL 4-PLY NARROW WHITEWALLS 7.35 X 14 - $20.50 7.75 X 14 - $21.50 8.25 X 14 ~ $24.50 8.55 X 14 ~ $25.50. Pricet Include Federal Tax GUARANTEED A 4-pIy tire for less than the price of a 2-ply tire. RETREAD TIRES Grade 1 Premium Custom 6. AQR COMPAREOUR Leading Horse Is Sold NEW YORK (JP) - WheaOey Stable sold Stupendous, a leading handicap horse with winnings of $181,683, Monday for an undisclosed price for stud duty beginning next year in England. Clirist Lutlieran PRICES FIRST! Crescent Lake RLDS 4, St. Stevens 1 St. Paul MettMXlIzt 14, Donelson 0 DLL 7, Mandon Lake Community 2 Elizabetti Lake Church of Christ 19, Memorial Baptist 9 Union Lake Baptist 3, Christ Lutheran 2 Lakeland United Presbyterian 17, Ascension Lutheran 10 jJg'Greenleal Douglas A. Grissom ontry Northco Scotty Charming Boy uannys tpin McHarzey Fleet's Flash 10th—$1400: Condltlontd Trot, I Milo Jen Kaye Impaway B Get All the Money i You Need in One S Convenient Loan! Borrow Up To *5000 With Our J Confidontial 1 HOMEOWNER’S LOAN PUN! ■ Low Convenient S Payments To 2 Suit Your Budget'^ ■ No Closing Costs. ■ No Application Ftos ■ COMPLETE INSURANCE LOAN PROTECTION ^ ■ M Call In Your Application Today! i FAMILY ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION ■ 111 National Buildinf ■ FE 8-4022 ■ PONTIAC MMMMMM'PMMMMMBaBaBMMMBMMM'MMMMMi Hr MIDAS TRANSMISSION SPECIALISTS THIS IS WHAT YOU OET FOH OHLY s A • Scientifically meaturfd and correct caster and camber Ye Correct toe-in and toe-out (the chief cause of tire wear) WHEEL ALIGIMIUEIMT $095 S A F E T Y BRAKE LIIMIIVGS a Remove the pan wCledn the screen • Replace pan gasket • Renew the fluid • Adjust the bonds • Adjust the linkage • Road test $|99 1990 WIDE TRACK DR. W. At tha South End of Wide Track IN PONTIAC Phone 334-4727 Open Monday thru Friday 8 to 6-Saturday 8 to 2 ---FOR MUFFLERS • PIPES • SHOCKS-- MIDAS MUFFLER SHOP 435 South Sasinaw re; n aTwiDETmoKPmvE Tfc fc-imw MOTOR MART; SAFETY CENTER 123 East Montcalm FE 3-lSa C—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1967 Markefstiiite MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown pro4juce by growers and sold by ttim in wholesale package lots Quotat ns are furnished by the Gainers Top Losers Stock Mart Adds to Strength NEW YORK (AP) - The Detroit Bureau of Markets as Wednesday. Produce FRUITS Apples, Delicious, Red, bu. Apples, Delicious, Red, C.A., bu. Apples, McIntosh, bu.......... Apples, McIntosh, C.A., bu.... Apples, Jonethen, bu.......... Apples, Jonathan, C.A., bu. .. Apples, Northern Spy, bu...... Apples, Northern Spy, C.A., bu. Apples, Steele Red, bu........ Apples, Steele Red, C.A„ bu. Asparapus, di. bch............ VEGETABLES Chive . dz. bch. _____j. Green, di. bch...... Parsnips, '/4 bu. —.......... Potatoes, 50 lbs. ........... Radishes, Red, dz. bch....... Radishes, White, dz. bch Potatoes, 20 lbs........... Rhubarb, hothouse, dz. bch. Tomatoes, Hothouse, 8-lb. bsl GREENS Mustard, bu.................. Sorrel, bu.......................... Spinach, bu......................... Turnips, bu. ..................... 2.75 Poultry and Eggs stock market gathered a little more strength early Tuesday afternoon, with gains outnumbering losses by a ratio of about 3-to-2. Trading was active on the M.5o|New York Stock Exchange. On the American Stock Ex-change, however, trading was ^so heavy that the ticker tape 5-w lagged 20 minutes behind trans-3:751 actions at noon. «-"i * ★ * J-”! Attention was drawn to a num--M|ber of speculative favorites on the Amex which was staging a much more vigorous advance than the Big Board. Some big blocks were traded on the smaller exchange. Selective strength among blue chips was reflected on the New York Stock Exchange by the Dow Jones industrial average which at noon was lip 1.84 to 886.38. The advance was marred by weakness in rails. The Dow Jones average was down. Their weakness seemed to stem from a published report that major railroads are projecting gloomy picture of 1967 earnings in an attempt to bolster their, case for a freight rate increase. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was off .1 at 327.9 with industrials up .6, rails off 1.0 and utilities up .3. On the Arnex, Nuclear Corp. of America paced the list on volume. Also very active fractional gainers were Gold field, Reeves Industries, Compudyne and Sterling precision. Vehicle Recall Total Reported 2.2 Million Since Safety Act, Says AAA DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP) - Prlc*» PI pound for No. 1 llv« poultry: f“- 2®: ,, ................ (IncludinQ U.S.): .....e Grade A lumbo 32-3»; extra larm 2»V3-32; large 24'/z-30; medium 20-20'/2; small U. (hdi.) High Low Lait Chg 13 48H 48'/S 481,^ - '/• 33 79'/» 28V< 2844 .... x8 33'^ 33H 33Vi -1- 41* 22 50'/e 497'« 50'/k -t- 4* 194 50'.^ 484> SOVa -t-2'/i 138 654* 63Va 44% +7 ....... — 26 24% 24% 24%-l/i AIrRedtn 1.50 36 424* 42V* 42% - 4* ..................16 28% 28 V* 28 V. — 4* 3 10 10 10 - Va CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile Exchange—Butter »leedyf wholesale buying price* unchenged: 93 score M M: unch*ngrt;°7i’ per cenr or better Grade A Whites 27Vai mixed 26'/a; mediums 21. standard* 23Va» „.cheeks )9W. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) — (USDA) - Live poultry: wholesale, buying Pnees un- changed: roasters 27-29; special ted White Rock fryers 19-21'% Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)-CaWI* t400: several load* and lot* prime slaughter steers 76M-7tJS; choice foo-1200 pound 25J0-26.50; mlxrtjgood and choice 25^2S.»); good 23.75-2S.0«: choice 750-900 pound slaughter heifer* 24.25-25.25; good 23.OOE4.15. Hogs 400; no report unt.. - ... Vealer* 100; high choice and prime 14-37; choice 29-34; good 24-29. Sheep 400; not enough In eai tor market test. 190-240 lbs 22 50-23.25; 1-3 350%00 '^C^ftte t’jlOO; calve* none; load mostly prime around 1,200 lb slaughter stMrs 26.75; tew loads high choice and prime 1,050-1,250 lb slaughter steers 24.(»-26.25; choice 950-1,250 lbs 25.00-24.00; choice 850-1,000 lb slaughter heifers 24.50-25.50; good **ShMO 400; shipment prime 95 lb sprin slaughter lamb* 29,00; cull to good shor ftlaughter ewe» 4.00-7.50. American Stock Exch. AeroiatG .50a AiaxMag .10a AmPafro .35a ArkLGas 1.60 The New York Stock Exchange 38 38'%^ 38'/. 38'/; -t- '. AllegLu 2.40b AllegPw 1.20 Allied C I.90b AlliedSIr 1.32 Alcoa 1.80 ' 53 874* 87 87 Amerada 3 32 814* 81'/. 81'/z AmAIrlln .80 37 434* 43',* 43V'. Am Bosch .60 127 454* 444'. 454* AmBdest 1.60 .......... •’ 11 88% 87 “ *34* 63' 184* 184'* /» 31% 31'/. . . . 54 37'/. 36% 37'A -t- 4* 5 20V* 20 20 . 95 57 55'/* 56% -H'/* 7 *24* 62 62',* -t- ’ no 22V* 21% 214* .. II 55'.* 54% 54% - 427 14% 144* 14% + 57 384. 38 38 -t 42 94. 9% 9% . 45 714* 704* 71'/i -t *4 224* 224* 224* J 594* 584* 59V* -1-1'/z GPubSvc .380 G PubUt 1.50 GTel El 1.28 Gen Tire .80 Ga Pacific 1b Gerber Pd 1 Getty Oil .lOg Gillette 1.20 Glen Aid .70 Goodrich 2.40 Goodyr 1.35 Grace Co 1.40 Granites 1.40 GrantWT 1.10 GtAiP 1.30a Gt Nor Ry 3 Gl West Fini GlWSug 1.60a GreenGnt .80 Greyhound 1 GrumnAir .80 Gull Oil 2.60 Anaconda Anken Chem Armco StI 3 Armour 1.60 ArmsCk 1.20a BechAr 80b Bell How .50 Bendix 1.40 OethStl 1.50a Boeing 1.20 Bois^asc .25 Borden 1.20 . .. BorgWar 2.20 Lest Chg. BriggsS 2.40a ... __ _ 33 — '* Brisf My .80a 5 37 36% 37 -t- %,Brunswick 22 14% 14% 14'/z BucyEr 1.40a 23 39'/* 39V* 39'/, — % Budd Co .80 •“■< ■> >x X I-14 4 3-I6-H-16 BGullard II 24* 2% -t- V* Bulove 70b 2'/4 2'/z + '*!Burl Ind 1.20 8 32 '' 31'/4 31% -t- '/41 Burroughs 1 43 12 114* 13 39^11-1*^9-16^11-16 -t- ’'•|cJlumlIf*"'20 ft o 1 15ilA 1 15-T6 CalumH 1.20 * 7 ^ otI oL V. + ulCampRL .45a m 7^/ii 7’’ft •+■ Soup 1 ’so 2^ 2Ve 2% + 'fu li i^z 20% iSi + 4*?cST?re|:’c’p'^i 5! ^l^TtcarterW .40a Casa Jl AmNGas 1.90 Am Photoepv Am Smalt 3a Am Std 1 Am TAT 2.20 — - ----- - . . Am Tob 1.80 148 37^ 32V^ 32H - AMP Inr 2 38'/S — ■ 60 36’^ 3SVt 3SVt - ’ 112 25?a 25H 25'/ft + ‘ 169 SO’-I 49% 50 + ’ 3 13% 13^ 13'.4 . 19 53Va 53% 53*^9 — ’ 100 33% 33% 33% — ‘ 14 53 52% 53 + » 35 32% 31% 31% - a 14 62% 62% 62% + ’ 73 29'/4 28% 79H — >. 421 97V» 97 97‘a -t- », 74 55% 55% 55% + a 20 105% lp5V4 105% + ^ 17 54% 54V2 5434 + % 6 31% 31% 31% ...... 83 56 S5Va 56 ..... i*i 19% l2Va 12% 68% 703/4 +21 4B'a 48'v -I'a t 7B% 79’ a + J/4 I 47% 48'/4 + >4 hds.) Ri«h LOW Last Hhg. 8 6'M 6 6’,ft + Vi 49 28V4 28% 28'/4 188 49% 49 49% + % 407 29%' 29% 29% ........... 6 56% 56% 56% + Va 64 36Va 35Vi 36% -H 549 66V4 65V4 66V4 •¥ % 132 57Va 56% 56% — % 426 12% 12V4 12% + % 35 61% 60% 61% + % 66 43% 42% 43 + '/• 37 46% 46% 46% + V« 17 27 26Va 27 (hds.) High Low Last Chg. ____ .80b 85 53% 52% S3 .. RalstonP .60 19 28% 27% 28 ‘ % -----‘er 1.40b 93 33% 33% 33’/a - V« eon .80 1 85 85Va 83% 85 ''' :h .40b 47 17'/8 16^ft 16% Hatiiburt 1.90 Harris Int 1 Hecia M 1.20 Hare Inc .50g HawPack .20 23 79 Hoff Eloctron .......... Holid Inn .50 HollySug 1.20 Honey wT 1.10 Hook Ch 1.40 House Rn 1 Houst LP 1 Howmet Cp 1 HuntFds .50b Hupp Cp .17f I 27% + _ —30% . 34 65 64% 65 + % 145 12% 1214 12Vii . 9 591,A 52V4 52% + 38% + % 23% -44% +2 ________ 63% — . 21 25% 25 25 — % ^H— 19 58% 58 58 19 57% 56% 57 ... 11 56 Va 55% 56% - % 15 47% 47% 47% ‘ ’ " — 79 78% 78% .. 11% 11% 11% 22 78% 78% 78% , . 46 29% 29% 29% + % 50 71% 70 Va 71 Va +2% 1 46% 46% 46^ 12 27% 26% 271 13 44% 44% 44', 55 76 21 35 RyderSys .60 1 00 22% 22Vi 22% ____ay l.K SUosLd 2.80 SL SanFran St Reg P 1.401 4% + % 83 4% 4 33 33 33 63 17% 17 17% + 50 62 61% 61% ■ IngerRand 2 Inland StI 2 InsNoAm 2.40 IntertkSt 1.80 I 96% 971/2 + % 16 647_ . . 41 35% 34% 35% + ^ 148 53% 50% 51’4 —2^ 47 37% 37% 37% — ' 27 36% 35% 36 48 9% 9'4 9% + ’ 105 28% 28'ft 28% + ’ 3 36% 36T 36% 41 37% 37 37% 4- = WASHINGTON (AP) - Recall of more than 2.2-miIlion motor vehicles with suspected defects were reported within the first eight months after adoption of the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act, the American Automobile Association (AAA) said Monday. The AAA said it compiled the figures from reports to the National Highway Safety Bureau for the period of Sept. 19 ‘ year, when record-keeping began, until May 31 of this year. The act was approved Sept. 9, )66. The act requires manufacturers to report any defects to the Department of Transporta-jn. Under the act, a defect includes “any defect in performance, construction, components, or materials in motor vehicles or motor vehicle equipment.” SclenData wl SCM Cp .40/ Scott Paper Seab AL 1.8v SearIGD 1.30 Sears Roe la Seeburg .60 Servel Sharon StI 1 Shell Oil 2.10 Shell Trn .58g SherWnWm 2 Sinclair 2.40 SIngerCo 2.20 Smith K 1.80a SoPRSu 1.27g 49 23'/* 22V4 23 . 17 42'/z 42'* 42'/* + 12 47'/* 47H 47'/z -f 51 33 32'/z 32'/* - 13 94'* 93% 93V4 — 55 62'/* 61'* 61'* —1 28 62V4 62H 62'* -h ■3m - ' 2 10** 10** 14 31'* 31 8 68'/z 68'<* oo-/. — 2 22 22 22 . 5 49** 49'.4 49'4 - 47 74'4 73*4 73*4 —I *2 64*» *4** 64*« 45 57'4 56** 57 -I- 37 48'* 477'« 48'* + 107 38 . 37*4 37*4 — 59 26** 26'* 267* .. _ IJ 1.60g StdOilOh 2.50 St Packaging 13 50 49'/. 49',* 93 18'* 17*4 18 573 36*4 36'* 36'* 4 27'* 26*. 267. 15 37*4 37V* 37*. HI 33*4 32*4 33'z 54 56** 56'/ 45 56*4 56' 142 63'* 627 8 65 64’ 35 14' By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst WASHINGTON (AP) - Rarely have the men who held the job of postmaster ^neral inspired much en-i for' anything but* politics, patronage and postal rates: How sudden-j ly that has] changed. No everyone is in-i terested in the’ post office. And CUNNIFF much of the interest is sympathetic rather than antagonistic. * * * We have detected a definite change in the public’s attitude,” REPORTED DEFECTS The AAA emphasized that its reported defects of vehicles—a list of which was publicized— was not meant to imply that all such vehicles were defective. The vehicles are those which may contain defects as determined by the manufacturers themselves,” the AAA said. The report was drawn up by Cornelius R. Gray, director of the AAA legal department, and an aide, Carl A. Modecki. The federal act applies to passenger cars, trucks, motorcycles, buses and ambulances. 1^1 The AAA said a total of 2,214,-'*|925 were found with defects, ^ according to the Highway Safe-s6*!-*I;ty Bureau records. Department Excites Interest Postal Change Mulled said a high-ranking postal official. “By speaking frankly about our problems, we got the media interested. And people are more sympathetic now.” The problems were, as explained recently by Postmaster General Lawrence O’Brien, present head of the $6.5 billion-a-year enterprise, a monumental clutter of i-ed tape and bad habits, the sediment of an entire century of misuse. NEW STRUCTURE The solution, as proposed by O’Brien, was to sweep the entire problem away at once by giving the department a brand new structure and more independence so it wouldn’t be buffeted by outside forces. ‘There has always been a Growth Stocks Said Best Bet Right Now BABSON PARK, Mass.—Withi “The present business slow-the stock market facing a pe-j down,” he continued, “may be riod of inconclusive meadering viewed as nothing more than through the summer months, investment analyst Roger Spear forsees the return widespread favor of the growth stock concept. an interlude between the great 1961-66 boom and a.^otracted period of steady, broadly-based growth leading into the 70s. The coming boom wil! we think, be of unparalleled pro-‘Now is a good time for thej portions.” wise investor to seek out issues for which a fancy premium is justified on the basis of strong predicted earnings for 1968,1969 tendency in Washington that you must take a solid whack at the Post Office Department,” said O’Brien in an interview. ■R ★ ★ It was easy. Often there asn’t a retaliatory peep out of the department, for although as big as an elephant, 1t was timid as a mouse. O’Brien,' Who notes that the department has always “mud-dl^ through” somehow, found that muddling was a crosscurrent to his well-known instinct to move ahead toward goals and accomplishments. BUSINESS ENTERPRISE The unusual interest in a post office proposal was accomplished mrough a reversal of the old post office game. Instead of adding a job, O’Brien proposed to abolish one, his own. He w(Ald remove the department from the Cabinet and run it as a business, as a government corporation. corporation would permit the post office to raise its own funds on the bond markets; it would permit modernization, better use of employe skills, more professional management. It would release the service from niggardly appropriations. Acting on the proposal. President Johnson asked 10 prominent Americans to serve on a study committee. Reportedly tie received no turn-downs; enthusiasm for the project was catch- d beyond,” Spear said. Auto Makers Prepare for Changeover DETROIT (AP) ■ And, from the government Spear said that a number of side, frequent references are highly promising growth situa- heard that seldom has such a tions are to be found in con- high-class panel ever been as-sumer-oriehted companies. ! sembled. It includes, among (Others, George Baker, dean of - - - ' - - - — “Today, about one out of ev-i . three American families ^olph Person, president of the 'Harvard Business School; Ru- ery earn less than $5,000 a year. Byi I 55 55'i Bank of America; and George 1970, in contrast, fewer than onej ^FL- - fifth of the greatly increased number of families are expected iS'TIMULATING TASKS to earn less than this,” he said. | The panel’s unusual interest Criteria for selecting growth I comes largely from the realiza-issues include not only a patternifion that: 1. The modernization of rising sales and earnings but (study must be made. 2. The membership in an industryjbusinesslike proposals are at-The auto group that is likely to becomej tuned to the American creed. 3. JohnMiin 2.20 30 34Va 30% 30^4 — 1, .. j 34 34% . 19 42% 42Vft 42Vft — i 4 S4»/4 54 54 —1 102 741/4 74 741/4 + 1 87 13% 12% 13 16 28% 28% 28% + ’ 22 171/4 17 9144 2»A 32 ^ : AtldsCorp wt Barnes Eng BrazilLtPw 1 Brit Pet 49g Campbl Chib Can So Pet Cdn Javelin Cineama Ctrywida Rit Creole 2.60a r?.*;___. ”11 19 iji/z u i2'4 i0'/4 39 V* 39*. FlyTIger .lOh Frontier 1.6H Gen Plywood Giant Ye I .40 Goldfield Gt Bas Pet Gulf Am Cp Hoerneryy .82 Hycon Mlg imper Oil 2a ic‘,rr?n'? McCrory wt MeadJohn .41 MIctiSug .log Molybden Monog Ind NewPirk Mn pancoait Pal RIC Group Scurry Rain Signal OIIA 1 Sperry R wt 4 B'/4 8'* 14 115-16 8*. 1419 79* 7 1* »— '* 223 14'* 14'* 14H + ^ 6 5*1 5*> 5** - 77 35’/* 35'/. 35'/* - 14 5’/i 5*« 5*. -t- ' 17 53%* 53'* 53'* + \ 31 116 113'/z 115 -1-2 M 5*A 5** 5*4 -t- '* 299 11’* 11** 11’* ■+ 5 41*4 41'* 41*4 ■+ I. wit/, IB 88'/z + ’ , 25** 25*4 — ' .. .4 9'* 9'* .ww 34 24% 24% 24% = Copyrighted by The Associated Press iv( Syntex Cp . Technicol . UnControl .20 66 26% CessnaA 1.40 Ches Ohio 4 ChiAAH StP 1 CFI StI .80 ChPneu 1.80b Chi Rl Pac ChrlsCraft lb Chrysler 2 CievEIIM 1.68 CIT Fin 1.60 C It less VC 1.80 CocaCola 2.10 Colg Palm l CollinRad .80 ColoIntG 1.60 20 16% 16'/4 16% + 12 48% 48% 48% + 4 68 67% 68 - 67 55 53% 54% + 13 20 20 20 + StevenJP 2.25 21 34 —K*- 64 527* 5 45V. Studebak .50g 212 62'/. Sun Oil 1b 5 66'z Sunray 1.40 38 33*. Swift Co 1.20 129 27 Kerr Me 1.40 7 37 37 37 I Ind 31 7*» LOFGIs 2.80a LibbMcN .231 LiggettSiM 5 10 28'z 28'. 28' 63 47*1 46’z 47* 68 198*. 194'. 198* 158 24’. 24*4 24’ 58 72*. 71 *t 72' 41 19** 19'z 1 91130 126** 128’. 91 130 128*1 128'/z -f 62 123*4 122 123'z 4 88 20'/z 20 20'. 4 31 69’. 69'4 69’. 4 ilokol .40 159 26*» 26'/. 26'. -+ 3eOH 1.10g 71 74*. 73*. 74*. 4 m RB 1.80a 20 40' . 39** 397. ansVWAIr 1 199 68',z 67’* 68 4 ansamer i 97 39 38H 38’* - ansitron 77 13** 13 13*. 4 i Cont .42g x42 26** 26 26'-4 - [W 1.40 15 72'-z 72'. 72'-. 4 : ALL RECALLS _ , ___________ _______________ “ Manufacturers are required industry scheduled further 1967 and remain popular with the in-n has been mandated to come X under the act to report aU their car cutbacks yesterday in head-vesting public. ■■ '■ -------- * recalls of vehicles found to have toward next months big; gpear said, “Although this ‘. defects. phasing-out program of current; company may have a Manufacturers reported a demonstrably superior growth up with a specific recommendation, not just another study. As O’Brien views it, the sooner the panel reports the better. , ,*| Tampa El .60 _ Tektronix L, iTeledyne Inc uijTenneco 1.20 /•.‘ Texaco 2.60a r ,^TLEXETrn5.05 ’^1* Tex G Sul .40 ^ i. TexGSul .40 ^iTexasInsI .80 Tex PLd .35g 79 62*. 61*. 62 loneSGa 1 55 4 I 221';. 22’'- - I 40^4 41 + CBS 1 105 43ii 43 15 38% 38% 00^4 - ' 95 31 35 31 67 SIVa 51 51% + ' 33 120Vj 120'/4 120% +I 17 31 30% 30%-’ 165 102 1 01% 101% - ’ U T6i/> .161/4 36% — • + % jLukens StI 1 27 41 —M— Mack Tr 1.59t 155 68% 67' %,MacyRH 1.60 ‘ "•* ’ ;MadFd 2.08g MagmaC 3.60 Magnavor 39*. 39*. -1** UMC Ind 60 Un Carbide 2 Un Elec 1.20 Unocal 1.20a ComlCre 1.80 ComSolv 1. I ComwEd 2.20 Comsat ConEdis 1.80 ConEtecInd 1 ConFood 1.40 141 64*4 c. - - 50 27 26V. 26*. . . 10 26’/. J8** 28*. 46 45'/z 45*. 4 ' 16 47'/z 47'4 47*. 4 ' 67 57*4 57 15 50** S(P* 77 28'. 28'* 18 23*4 Marathn 2.40 5 59*4 59*4 59*. - *. !20 41** 40’/. 41** - 17 697/* 69'/. 697/. ........ , 23 29 28** 28*. MartlnMar 1 2116 24'’z 23** 24V. MayDStr 1.60 46 33*. 33 * 33*4 Maytag 1.60a 5 33*4 33'/. 33*4 McCalf .40b 1 30 30 30 McDonO ,40b 240 48** 47^ 47** McKess ■ ■" r 1.30 Cp 1.90 ____ Sh 1.60 McrcKC 1.40a MerrChap la MGM lb MldSoUtll ,76 MlnerCh 1.30 Stocks of Local Interest __________ 43 - I 79*4 80*. 4 *.;Motiasco 1 OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS i Coni Oil 2,60 220 65*. 63*4 65'/. -41*. ...cr, ... r>nrl>. n.t. 9. 111’. 110V. 11*. 42'/i Quotations from the NASD are repre-, Control Data sentativt inter-dealer prices of approxi-ICooperin .20 inately 11 a.m. 5(ui change throughout the day. Prices “ojCorlJW yoa not Include ritall markup, markdown «nCow^«^M^^ commission. Bid AsWad I CrowCol 1.871 _ , Hi Crown Cork AMT Corp. crownZe 2.20 Associated Truck J®-® Cruc StI 1.20 I . 26;2 26.6 Curtis. Wr 1 17.0 17.4| 14.1 14.4jDan Riv 1.20 31.2 JZOlDaycoCp 1,60 26.0 26.61 Day PL 1.32 27 4 28.oll2eere 1.80a in? tt SlDelta Air 1 iS x JiT DenRGW 1.10 'r? ti'DetEdis 1.40 Braun Engineering ettizens Utilities Class A Detrex Chamlcel Diamond Crystal Frank's Nursery Kelly Services ............. ....---o Co. Monroe A— ------------- North Central Airlines Units Sefran Printing Scripto Wyandotte Chemical MUTUAL FUNDI Keystone Growth K-2 Mass. Investors Growth Mass. Investors Trust Putnam Growth Television Electronics Wellington Fund........... Windsor Fund i............ Bid Asked Dlst Seag i 0 AA 9 80 DomeMin .80 iLH 20:58(g?*C';j' 220 ’!■” '*-Jj!Dre$slnd 1.25 '6 62 '‘■6";Duke Pw 1.20 ’•23 10.07 duPont 7 Xo 7.51 8.20 iDuq Lt 1.65 - — 12.90 lAIOjDynamCp .40 159 1_67_ ■E— ll’e 110',4 111'-. 42'* z 377. 37*. 37*, 41 43*4 43'. 43*, 4 n 347 346"z 347 41 10 18*, I8*t I8’'z 4 5 547. 531, sJ-. -I- 7 58*. 58*» 58'z 4 12 S7*» 57 57 4 22 49*4 49** 49*4 + IS 26** 26'/. 26H — 6 217-. 21*4 2|7* — ' 4 34’/* 34'/z 34*4 4 ' 12 28** 28'/* 28'* + ' 7 67*4 67'/z 67*4 + 20 117 116'/4 116*4 —1'/4 21 19** 19 19 33 29 28’/. 29 6 15'/z 15H 15' xn -MV, 35'/z 36'. . 103'.* 105 41*4 36*. 4 ' 45*, - ... ... 8$'4 - 31' - z 31'/z 31'/z — „ 38’/. 37*. 38'- 12 37'/z 37V* 37' 21 156'/ .............. 39 30' ,16.91 i8.a 13,82 15.10,, ... I?®? !V“'i.n!A^;Ln w'l ^ EKodak * - 3 363ft 26 3 46 34 82’ ■ -. w w..e — 37% 38V» — .. .. . 37% 37’4 H 156% 155% 156% + % 30g 67 5 I 9B»ft 99’4 + ; 195.1 EaonYa 1.25 EIPasoNG- 1 Emar El 1 50 »rocKi £ Johnson xjxw-iiEHatack RR ’ElhylCorr - STDCKt 30 Indus' » Ralls . IS Utils ;;Si B .. 471.1 176.3 146.1 32l.2| ,, 473.9 196.1 159.1 331.8 Fairch Cam .413.4 1 59.4 146.9 •4V2,8iFalr Hill .15g . 537.9 213.9 170.5 369,/| Fansteel Met -3 I4J.9 130.2 269.4 Fjdder,^ .60^ Ferro Cp 1.20 Filtrol 1.40 Firestne 1.40 FirstChrt ,51t Flintkote 1 Fie PLt ■ '' C**C_C« Jl.'714013 22.08-i-0.17 7 FMC Cp .75 FoodFarr .90 •0.62-0.03 FordMot 2.40 rails 72.56 Fore Dair .50 « rails 80.91—0.12 FreepSul 1.25 las 12.08 iFroehCp 1.70 M.96 . I rDIvMaiiM Declared Fa- Ilk. e» Fey- OenAnllF .40 Rale riad Racerd aMa Sen Cig 1.20 INCRRAtID danOynam I Hertce Carp .25 - 7-7 Orl JOwelot *60 ArwB- cere 8-1 MsISSmI^s* i'S 2 49*4 - -. - 47 140'/z 139'/z 139’/i 880 33 32*» 33 92 89'/* 87*4 88Vz 18 36',4 36 36'. 81 28'* 28*. 28*. 31 18'* 18 181* 2 79 78** 79 -43 35 34*4 35 45 9** 9'/j 9'/z 4 Jl 55 48** 48'* 48'* — V. 6 31 31 31 ... 21*4 21'/x 21V. — V* —F— 78 104*4 101 103'/* 4 *4 73 26'* 26 26 . 13 55'* 55'4 S5'/z + *4 95 22 21V* 21*4 + ’/x 13 61'* 61'* 61'* •' 2 29'* 29’* 29’* 18 32% 32<* 32Vi 10 45*4 45*4 45*4 29 23 23'* 23V. 75 23V* 23** 23'* 10 74'A 73'* 73'* 17 W 35'* 35'* — •* 12 15*4 IS** 15*4 93 51H 51** 51'* ISO 27'* 27 27'/4 44 55'* 54 54 37 33*» 33V* 33'* - '* 83 88** 17*4 I8'/| - 23 75** 74’/* 75** 4 6 72*t n 72** 4 104 798* 79'* 794* NatAi Nat Bim. , Nat Can .50b NatCash 1.20 NatDalry 1.40 Nat Diet 1.80 Nat Fuel 1.68 Nat Geni 20 Nat Gyps 7 N Lead t.SOg Nat Steel 2.50 Nat Tea .80 Nevada P .92 Newbrry ,15g NEngEI 1.36 NYCent 3.12a. Nlag MP 1.10 Nortik Wst I NwsI Airl .70 Norton 1.50 Norwich 1.3(f Occident .lOb OhIoEdls 1.30 OlinMath 1.80 Oils Elev 7 Outb Mar .80 OwensMI 1.335 Oxford Pap 1 48 63 102 45'x 23 53'4 34 84 ........... 8 247* 24',', 2454 - t7 537* 53*4 53". ^ 186 ,23'. 22’4 32’/. 32 441. 44 44'4 35 86 65', 855, 14 135. 13'4 13*. 69 43*. 43 62 20'/l 19’ 77 46*. 46 -u - , 7 305.4 30'* 30*4 -* ' 11 30*. 30'* 30*» -I- ' 41 245* 24 24'/. -I- * 5 34'* 34'/, 34'/, « 117 114*4 1165/, + 3 26 26 25*4 25*4 — —N— 33 76% 76Vft 76Vft - Z 5 47% 47 47 - 10 35% 35% 35% - V 25 95% 95V4I 95% + ' 22 35»/i 34% 35 + V US Ind .70 36 21' • 70^4 20% - ’ 142 55 54% 55 — ’ 15 24% 24% 24% + ’ 24 57’/ft 56% 57% + ’ 24 41% 4141% + ’ 6 38% 38’7J 108 79’-4 781/4 106 1 04’/a 103 35 11 10'ft 21 44% 44’’i 112 751/2 24 221/2 ? 26% i 64% _______ - . 50 25% 25V» 253 8 i 31-/ “*• —' 13 51'/ 161 66’. 134 45% models. total of more than 150 recalls: * R ★ ^ record, the stock may still not for a breakdown could come at ’^of foreign and domestic passen-! General Motors plans to phase’ command much of a premium |any time in an (>rpnization that ‘‘ ger cars and trucks, motor- out its Buick Riviera and Olds-; if the industry of which the [handles 200 million pieces of ’’Icycles and buses. mobile Toronado Friday. One; (wmpany is an integral part is a «ay ’’^1" 19th-century ’I' --------------(week later Ford will close its; simply not in fashion. A store itools. u • n ' f nearby Wixom plants, haltlhg may have the best quality Thunderbird and Lincoln pro-1 dress in the world for sale, but duction. : if the hemline is a foot below the knee it might as well be a rag insofar as its market appeal is concerned. Same with stocks.” How successful a company isj LANSING iJ’t — Consumers News in Brief Vasili Cojerean of 6036 Elizabeth Lake, Waterford Township, reported to township police yesterday the larceny of a rotary tiller and lawn mower, total value of $240, from his home. The first of the 1967 models to leave production was American Motors’ Marlin which quit in May. Consumers Gets Bond Issue Okay UGasCp 1.70 112 751/2 74% 75' —A(iv. 5 31% 13 51'/* 161 66'2 134 45% 4 97’ 2 —T — Vanad 1.60a 9 39’ ? 39% 39’2 Varian Asso 406 4T 2 40'4 41' • + Vendo Co 60 22 38% 38’i 38% - ValEPw 16 18 41%% 41% 41'4 - —w— - i! WarnPIc 50a 246 26 25 2P/4 + —. —*. , 37 50;^, 50 SO^B- WashWat 1.16 Westn AirL 1 WnBanc 1.10 WnUnTef I 40 Westg El 1.60 The’67 model phasing out and , . ^ ■ j ,1. the changeover to production of ft penetiatmg estabhshed mar-| Power has received author-1968 mtSels will be in full kets and establishing footholds; ization from the Michigan Pub-MOM’s Rummage: Thursday swing at about mid-July. ® measurejlic Service Commission to issue 9-12 Indianwood and Baldwin w ★ ★ its appeal as a growth in-!and sell $80 million m first ----- mortgage bonds. The bond issue is designed to retire short-term notes incurred in financing the firm’s construction program and to finance continued expansion of its electric utility plant and facilities and transmission and distribution lines. Consumers Power said the bonds, which will mature in 30 tatives. He was formerly vice millionth 1967 passenger car , mechanics picketed 56 president and Detroit manager, this week. This is expected to-!trucking firms. • IP S- Business Notes vestment. Chrysler will close six of its [seven assembly plants July 7. iFord and General Motors wilf be following on a staggered John 1. Sool.ro ol 361(1 Frank.|S*™„ 'J*'; PJ" 11„ Road, Bloomfiold Tawaahlp, was recently elected to tte MILES'TONE LATE i board of directors of Cresmer,| The industry, with sales and DETROIT (AP) — Some de-Woodward, O’Mara and Orms-production down from last year, liveries were slowed or halted ‘ bee, Inc., newspaper represen-expects to turn out its seven- in Detroit Monday as about 700i Mechanics Picket Firms WInnOIx 1 94 13'/x 13'* 13'/a -I- ' 12 38’/. 38*-Annual rate plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dividend, d—Declared or paid in 1967 plus slock dividend, e—Paid last year, f — Payable In stock during 1967, estimated cash value on ex-dIvidend or ex-dlstrlbutlon dale, g—Declared or paid so far this year, h—Declared or paid attar slock dividend or split up. k—Declared or paid this year, an accumulative '------ 1.1 46 4ZA. + ,, dividends In arrears, n—New .. 4 *6*4 26V^ - u P-P»m Wl* ye»7. dividend omitted, *8 68** -I- *. 'erred or no action taken at last dIviL 481, 3*! + vllmeeting. r-Declared or paid In 1966 plus « 21 + ^m,>tocW dividend. t-Pald In stock during X. 44 ti _ 1966, estimated cash value on ex-dIvidend 13l”31W M*4 3t'* + irt!;'’,? '’*’*• cld—Called, x—Ex dividend. _y-Ex dii Pac Petrol PaePwLt 1.20 PacTiT ' ■” 27'. 8 24'* 24 24 — ' ............ 31 269* 26H 269*-h 1 Pan A Sul .60 216 26 25V* 25*k ■ Pan Am .40 564 32*4 319* 32^A - Panh EP 1.60 10 36'/x 3F* 36 * -F ' Phelp D 3.40a Phlla El 1.64 Phil Rdg 1.60 PuUvCol .90 PuMkInd .36t PugSPL 1.6D Punman 2.10 48 43** 439* 439* 32 1IV4 18 to** - 12 63'* OS'* 63V* -I- Vi 14 3094 30V* 3094 ‘ 30 68 67V* 67H 9 H2'/4 11194 112 12 8{v* 89 89',4 6 45 45 45 - 30 30 299* 29*4 + '* 28 8894 88 88 - 52 7194 71'* 719* -F '* 13 32 ' 31’* 319* -F '* 94 65 63'* 6494 -F19* 29 46 4494 45<* -1'* 28 61'* 61'/z 61*4 - '* * 55'/z 55V* 55'* + '* 6 62 61'* 61*4 4 12 12 12 - ' 87 223*4 221'* 222*. -t 30 897* 89 899»*-F 44 219* 21'* 219* dend and sale* In’fulT. x'dis^^x dlstrllnh - Ex rights, xw—Without panics, t tarast eq Ralls liul. Util. Fgn. L.YO Nat Change —.1 Noon Tues. 71.2 92.1 81.2 91.6 85.0 Prev. Dey .n.3 92.1 81.2 91.6 85.0 Week Ago 71.4 "' - " -......... Month Ago 72.0 ........- . - Year Ago 75.5 95.0 82A -92.0 88.1 1967 High 73.0 95.6 04.9 " ' “ ' ) Low 79.5 101.4 The safety pin was patented by Walter Hunt of New York C3ty in 1849. Car assemblies last week totaled 175,182, compared with 173,545 the previous week and 186,372 for the same week a year ago. The industry built 6,903,047 for the year as of last week. This compared with 7,796,401 at '*rr •V' Curtis E. Patton, 314 S. Tilden, year. Pontiac Great-West Life Insurance representative, recently returned from Lucerne, Switzerland, where he attended the 40th annual meeting of the Million Dollar Roundtable. The group is an international association of the top echelon of life insurance salesmen comprising about one per cent of the the same time last year, persons of that vocation Michel Ardisson has been appointed director of design for residential planning at Lewis Furniture C o., 62 S. Saginaw, by the company president, Leonard T. Lewis. Ardisson is a I native of Nice, France, where he worked as partner in ap architect - dec-ARDISSON orating studio. William T. Kent, 670 Jamestown, has been promoted to hospital representative in ttfe Michigan Division of A. H. Robins Co., Richmond-based pharmaceutical manufacturers. Kent joined the company in 1960 and previously served as a medical service representative. He is a member of the American, Michigan and Oakland County Pharmaceutical Associations. |morrow, or 34 dkys behind last Members of International As- sociation of Machinists, Lodge 698, voted to strike Sunday after rejecting an offer of 55 cents an hour more pay over three years. Negotiations were to continue today between the union and the Michigan CaHagemen’s Association, Motor Carriers Employers Association and four independent firms. Treasury Position 0 15, 1967 iuBB IS, 19U "'$ 2,773,644,886.70 $ 4,091,013,S95.06 —* Fiscal Year July 1- 124,7M,«07,104,32 _______________ 13.534,048,962,31 (X) — Includes *263,125,183.97 debt not sublect to statutory limit. UNIQUE AUTOMA’nC LAUNDRY -Highland Center, 900 Mount Clemens, will hold a grand opening offering a free ticket wash, door prize and refreshments to customers Thursday through Sunday. The new automatic laumtiy houses 45 different sized washers, holding 12 to 45 pounds of clothing. and 20 dryers. The laundry vrill be open from 7 a.m. to midnight, seven days a week, according to manager Topi Poponea of 582 Mount Clemens. Patrons buy a programmed ticket to start machines instead of using coins. THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1967 C—5 Man Held Up by Armed Pair An Orion Township man was robbed by a pair of armed assailants yesterday while stopped on South Sanford near East South Boulevard to repair a flat tire, it was reported to Pontiac police. Thomas E. Sheldon, 22, of 87 Summer told officers he had completed changing the Ure and was placing a set of tools in the tounk when two men proached and asked him if lie needed any help. * * ♦ Sli e 1 d 0 n said he answered “no” and when he turned get in the car a hard object he assumed to be a gun was pressed into his back and knife was placed agiinst his throat. The bandits took his wallet containing $35 and miscellaneous papers and fled north on Sanford on foot, he said. WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate debate on the proposed censure of.Sen. Thomas J. Dodd is in a procedural wrangle that Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield says “could last all week.?’ Chances for an early vote on the censure resolution dimmed Monday as Sen. Russell Long, self-appointed defender of Dodd, renew^ his demand for a vote first on the charge that the Connecticut Democrat, knowing* ly double-billed the &nate and private groups for travel ex- No Gas Stations at Rest Areas on State Freeways Dodd Censure Debate Snagged the ethics committee to ti^ to break the impasse. “We got together but we didn’t get anywhere,” Mansfield later told reporters. But he said efforts would continue. Long needs the Senate’s unanimous consent to reverse the order of vote mi the charges leveled by the committee. When he asked for it last week, mem- The Senate Ethics Committee, which recommended Dodd’s censure for what it called financial misconduct, remains insistent'that the Senate vote first on the separate charge that Dodd converted at least $116,083 in political funds to his personal use. Long, D-La., said he has no intenton of filibustering. But neither did he indicate readiness to yield the floor until his colleagues agree to vote first on the double-billing count. EXPECTS REJECT Long said he expects the Senate to reject the double-billing charge and contended it was unfair to leave it hanging over Dodd while the other charge is LANSING (UPI) - The State Highway Department yesterday;debated, warned motorists there are noL Monday with ... . , ,:Dodd, Long, Republican leader service stations at freeway restjE^erett M Dirksen and Chair-I man John Stennis, D-Miss., of However, good, gas and lodging faciUties are often located near freeway exit and access ramps. Federal law prohibits commercial enterprises such aS gas stations, restaurants or concessimis on all 41,000 miles of interstate freeways through out the nation. In Michigan there are 44 rest areas plus 105 roadside parks Arson Likely in Addison Fire bers of the ethics panel objected.' WILLING, IF . . . Mansfield said he would be willing to vote on the doublebilling charge first if an agreement coiild be obtained to follow this, after three or four hours of additional debate; with a vote On the other charge as it now stands. Long maintained that if the double-billing charge were rejected; a couple of days should be allowed for additional debate on the charge Dodd used campaign contributions and the proceeds of political testimonials for personal Resentencing Slated in '45 County Killing Long indicated he plans to offer softening amendments; and probably a substitute, to this count. But he said if the vote went against Dodd on the double-billing count, this would indicate Senate sentiment and he would take very little time in arguing further against the other charge. VERBAL FIRE A 51-year-old Detroit man who has served 22 years in prison for killing a Southfield Township real estate salesman yesterday pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the 1945 shooting. . The plea was entered in lieu A house fire in Addison Township last night was apparently the work of an arsonist, accord-and 1,800 picnic table sites on ing to Township Fire Chief John other state highways. ' Hock. * ★ * i The house, at the corner of Freeway rest areas a r e I ^^d Rochester roads, equipped with rest rooms, tele-j*'®® vacant for about two phone, picnic tables and a high-1 ^e said the way information bulletin board, department arrived at 9:30 p.m. ________________ land found about a dozen small fires set throughout the building. Treasurer Will Get Degree at WSU Tonight Oakland County Treasurer James E. Seeterlin will be one of the 2,946’ Wayne State University graduates participating i in tonight’s commencement program at Cobo Hail. The 40-year-old fiather of nine earned a BA Degree in political science and history by attending night classes for a 12-year period. Seeterlin of 4597 W. Walton, Waterford Township, is a form-, er clerk and supervisor of Waterford Township. He has served of a trial which had been granted to Alexander Gliva. Oakland County Circuit Judge William J. Beer accepted G1 i v a ’ s plea, and then scheduled his sentencing for July 10. A week ago, Beer refused to J c c e p t Gliva’s second-degree murder plea when he began to bargain with the judge on the terms'of his sentence. * * It The Michigan Court of Appeals recently ordered a trial for Gliva when it ruled that he had not been advised of right to an attorney when he was ar-tested. NO TRIAL He had never stood trial since he pleaded guilty to first-degree murder in the county slaying of Arba Hawley. Gliva was sentenced to mandatory life prison term in the state prison at Jackson within 15 hours of his arrest. * * ★ Second-degree murder carries a prison term up to life, but unlike first-degree murder, which New Ford V-8 Cuts Pollution Lima, Ohio (AP> -’Ibe Ford Motor Co. will begin production here this summer of a new V8 engine specially designed for more efficient control of air pollution, Charles H. Patterson, executive vice president, an-nounced Monday. Patterson told a luncheon marking an expansion of Ford’s engine plant here that the new engine will be used in the Thnnderbird. ★ ★ ★ .“While I will not attempt to describe how this reduction has been achieved, I will mention that it includes improvements in drawing the fuel-air mixture into the cylinders and exhausting the burned gases,” Patterson said, adding; “As we gain more knowledge from our research, it will be to new designs which will progressively lower the emission levels of our internal combustion engines to the point where they no longer will be considered a troublesome source of pollution.” Deaths in Pontiac Area Mrs. William H. BrownI Mrs. Manganello died yester-iday. Mrs. William H. (Ida) Brown,| Surviving besides her husband 72, of 800 E, Columbia died to-lare her father, Dewey Johnson; day. Her body is at D E. Purs-j two'sons, Alfonso A. and Dennis ley Funeral Home. ®., both at home; three sisters; Surviving -are her husband; VO sons, Horace of Pontiac and Michael F. of Las Vegas, Nev.; a daughter, Mrs. Gladys Fischer of Grayling; seven grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren: a brother, William Salsbury of Waterford and a brother. Mrs. Claus Olson ORTONVILLE - Service for former resident Mrs. Claus (Emma) Olson, 88, of Grand Blanc will be 1 p.m. Thursday at the C. F. Sherman Funeral The fifth day of debate Monday found Dodd under severe verbal fire from Wallace F. Bennett, R-Utah, vice chairman of the ethics committee. Bennett attacked the white-haired senator’s contention that the double-billings resulted from sloppy bookkeeping by a former Dodd aide, Michael V. O’Hare. “The record shows,” said Bennett, “that it could not have happened except with (Dodd’s) full knowledge under his personal directions and throu^ his actual participation, in a manner and to an extent that demonstrates a willful course of conduct.” Last week Dodd, in an emotional speech, told the Senate that if he deliberately attempted ^ to defraud the government! ADEN (UPIi — Arab troops; through double-billing, he I were reported today to have should be expelled rather than I mutinied against their British Township and two sisters, Mrs. 1 Home. Burial will be in Orton-Roses Edson of Pontiac and tyiiie Cemetery. Mrs. Irene Mike of Milford. i Mrs. Olson died yesterday. ,, c 1/ I ‘ Surviving are two daughters, Merman t. Neel Mrs. Mary Vanhuff of Sacramento, Calif., and Mrs. Elsie Arab Troops, Police Said in Aden Mutiny censured. as county treasurer since No-j’® premeditated, a life sentence! vember 1965. ' is not automatic. Suits, Coats, Shoes Stolen From Home Clothing valued at more than $600 was stolen from a Pontiac man's home, it was reported to city poUce early today. He said the fires had been set with wads of newspaper. Most of them had burned themselves out by the time the firemer; arriv^, however. Firemen were not able to save a car parked outside the house. Hock said the car, a 1940 Ford, had been doused with fuel oil and set afire. A Glassblpwer at Work, Play RICHARDSON, Tex. (AP) -Pursuing one of the most ancient arts in a modern setting, glass-blower Lloyd Jones turns out complicated shapes of glass for experiments at the Graduate Research Center of the Southwest here. When he finishes his day’ work of producing scientific glassware, the 24-ye«--ol^ artisan goes home to follow his hobby — making glass animals. Construction Site Looted Peanuts Lead Skunk's Way WICHITA, Kan. IJFI — Ingenui-! ty and a dime helped Fred Fowl-I er get a skunk Out of his store. ; When Fowler confronted the creature he quickly turned to a icandy machine, bought a bag of peanuts and dribbled them in a line leading out the door. The skunk ate his way out of the store and was last seen waddling down the street- Burglars made off with more than $550 in workmen’s tools site, city police were told yes-from a Pontiac construction terday. Three diamond saw blades used for masonry work and a number of snxaller items were Gunshot Wounds Fatal Clarence E. Jackson, 21, of 230 Franklin Road told officers four suits, eight sport coats and six pairs of shoes were taken by the thief. * * * i A White Lake Township wom- Investigators said entry was|an, Mrs. Alfonso Manganello, 36, made by removing a screenjof 9072 Maplegrove, died yester-from an unlocked window on the day of apparently self-inflicted side of the house. I gunshot wounds. Peanut Diet Bet Has Profit, Loss officer in this Hritish protectorate on the Red Sea. They were joined by arhned native police. A British helicopter was shot down over the crater district of Aden, and mutinous troops were reported to have laid siege to the headquarter buildings of the South Arabian federal government in nearby Ittihad. The pilot and two passengers aboard the helicopter were injured. There was no other reports of casualties or fighting. In London, the Foreign Office said it had no information about the mutiny. The government said it had requested British troops to put down the rebellion. Britain has maintained a sizable force of troops in the protectorate which had been wracked by nationalist violence for months. OXFORD, England (UPI) -'jit’s no more peanuts tor Ox-, ' ford University student Richard a^ng the iTOt taken from two Lee, 20. at least for a long time. C Junior Editors Quiz on- Porker Crisis in Argentina BUENOS AIRES (AP) - The Pig Breeders Association of Argentina has sounded a general alarm; The porker rearing industry is in a crisis. Breeding methods are an- sheds erected by the Kruse Construction Co. of Detroit at 1300 Giddings, police said. RAINBOW tiquated and inefficient, production costs have soar^ and market prices have not increased enough to make up for it. Result: Argentina’s hog population dropped by some 600,000 head — from 3.7 million to 3.1 million — between 1930 andi 1965. j QUESTION: What causes a rainbow? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: "nie usual conditions under which we see natures most magnificent spectacle are shown by Cathy in our picture It is just after a shower; raindrops are still in the air but the sun has broken through and is shining behind Cathy’s back. As you see in the diagram, when a sun ray enters a raindrop, it is broken up into the seven spectrum colors of violet, indigo, blue, green, yellow, orange and red. The color rays, are bent, or refracted, and then reflected de away form the drop as rays are reflected from a mirror. Each color ray has a certain angle between coming ih and going out of the raindrop. When Cathy sees a color ray at one certain angle, it will look red if this is the right angle for the red ray. The other places where she can see this exact red angle (black dots) are arranged in a large ring or bow, and so she wiU see a bow of red. The other colors beside red also have their special angle and make a bow shape, so Cathy sees them grouped side by side as a many colored band. There may be one or more rainbows beside the main one. chain door locks, according to i investigators. To win a one pound ($2.80) bet he ate nothing but peanuts for a week. Entry was made by breaking He was allowed to wash Hefty Theft Leaves No Trail Owner Thanks Battery Thief Vt. (AP) - Robert Lefebvre’s car battery was stolen and he couldn’t be happier. It seems he had been trying to remove the battery, which was so dead it wouldn’t even keep the car running when pushed. * ★ “The bolts were stripped and it was pretty well corroded on,” he told police, and he hadn’t been able to dislodge it. So when he discovered the battery gone, but nothing else missing, he felt grateful to the thief. down the nuts with ale but decided nevertheless that it was I “nuts” to peanuts for awhile. jHe lost 9 pounds on the diet. Blacksmith, 73, Sends Sparks WINSTON-SALEM,' N. C. OP) — After more than 60 years a blacksmith, Frank Crews still making the sparks fly in the shop he has operated behind his house for over a quarter of a century. . Now 73, he learned the trade ds a young boy from his father, who was also a blacksmith. He worked in a local wagon factory for 25 years before concentrating on custom smithing in his own shop. 'Breaks' Make Business Boom RICHMOND, Va. OP) - Accidents keep L. G. Busse, artisan and carver, busy — and an ac-; cident led to establishment ofi his business: “Busse’s Bistro! for Busted Bobeches and Broken! Bits of Bisque.” | A bobeche is a saucer-shaped' 'dish designed to catch candle drippings and bisque is unglazed ceramic ware. AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Pat Costigan of the Costigan Precast Concrete Co. of suburban Cuyahoga Falls reported that 3,500 pounds of concrete curbing w^re stolen from his plant. Since there were no tire marks indicating the use of truck, Costigan was at a lo to figure out how the blocks of concrete curbing were carried away. Police Action Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sher-’ iff’s deputies investigated some 109 reported incidents the past 24 hours. A breakdown of causes for police action: Arrests—10 Vandalisms—11 Burglaries—16 Larcenies—22 Shopliftings—9 Auto Thefts—3 Assaults—14 Armed Robberies—1 Indecent Exposures—1 Property Damage Accidents—14 Injury Accidents—8 Three in State Sentenced in Mortgage Loan Case DETROIT (UPI) — Three Michigan men, including Detroit financier Benjamin Levinson, were sentenced yesterday to 18 months each in prison in a conspiracy and fraud trial involving Veterans Admini§tfhtion (VA) mortgage loans. * h it Each man was also fined $10,-000 by Federal Judge Thomas P. Thornton. Levinson, a long-time fundraiser for Michigan Democrats; Ross C. Howard of Lansing, who was Levinson’s executive assistant; and Edward P. Strang Jr„ Grosse Pointe, former president of the Wayne National Life Insurance Co., were released on $1,006 personal bond each pending appeals. A fouth defendant, Levinson’s Franklin Mortgage Corp., was ordered to pay a $10,000 fine. ★ ★ * The prison sentences climaxed a 10-week trial that ended last July 12 with an allwoman jury returning guilty verdicts against the three men and the Franklin Mortgage Corp. 1965 INDICTMENT Levinson was convicted of entering into an agreement with Strang while Levinson was acting for his mortgage corporation and Strang was using the Wayne National name. Wayne National was used, according to a 1965 indictment, to take advantage of the “automatic lender” designation enjoyed by most banks, insurance companies and lending institutions. U.S. Attorney Lawrence Gu-bow said the indictment pharged the defendants with submitting 22 GI loans to the VA totaling $267,550. Seven of the loans, amounting to $59,650, were rejected by the VA when it was lemed the veterans were credit risks. „ * * ★' At the trial, witnesses testified Franklin Mortgage submitted loan applications for veterans, who were either ineligible for loans or bad credit risks.... Herman E. Keel, 77, of 877 Spence died today. His body is at Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. f Mr. Keel was a Pontiac Motor Division retiree. Surviwng are his wife, Harriett; a daughter, Mrs. James Smith of Waterford Township; two sons, Joseph and Jessie of Pontiac: one brother and one sister. Frank G, Miller Service for Frank G. Miller, 89, of 3690 Brookdale, Waterford Township, will be 1:30 p.m. Thursday at 3690 Brookdale, with burial by Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home at Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. Miller, a retired inspector at GMC Truck and Coach Division, died yesterday. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. George K. Brown of Grand Prairie, Tex., Mrs. Charles Pace of Clarkston and Patricia at home; four grandchildren; and a brother. Raymond R. Cowsert TROY — Raymond R. Cowsert, 33, of 4385 Livernois died today. His body is at the Price Funeral Home. Mrs. Alfonso Manganello WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Alfonso (Carol) Manganello, 36, of 9072 Maple-grove will be 2 p.m.-Thursday at the Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Burial will be in Oakland Hills Memorial Cemetery, Novi. Vanhuff of Grand Blanc; sons, Ralph of Sebring, Fla., and Eina of Elmo, Mo.; and nine grandchildren. George W. Platter ORTONVILLE - Service for former resident George W. Plat-88, of Brighton will be 1 tomorrow at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Platter died Sunday. He as a member of St. Luke’s Methodist Church. Surviving are his wife. Ear-line: two sons, Arthur of Anaheim, Calif., and Robert of Brighton; a daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Zinaw of Troy; two stepsons, Leon Martin of Benton, and William Martin of Warren; two brothers, including Henry of Cooley Lake; and two sisters. State Police Nab . 2 Camp Escapees Two escapees from Camp Pontiac, both serving terms for uttering and publishing, were captured by Pontiac State Police early today shortly after they fled the White Lake Township facility. William R. Hanlan, 17, and Larry T. Lapeer, 21, were apprehended while walking north along 1-75 in Springfield Township. 'They were taken to Oakland {County Jail. NON E MOKE QUALIFIED TO SERVE 'School District of the City of Pontiac Pontiac. Michigan NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING Pursuant to Act 43, Public Acts .. >63 (Second Extra Session) the Board of Education of the School District of City of Pontiac will hold a r ” r July 1, 1»67 through J fiscal yi 1963 at . _______________________ _________ 1967 In the Board of Education office at 3S0 Wide Track Drive, East, Pontiac, Michigan. j copy of the proposed budget will be! lable for inspection at the Board of < Education offices from 8:00 a.m. to 5.001 - 1., Monday through Friday, up to and luding the time ot the hearing. | led: June 7, 1967 ; VERNON L. SCHILLER, Treasurer! School District of the City of Pontiac June 20, 1967 LEGAL NOTICE The following is a list of vehicles which have been declar - ■ ind are ' Public Ai tion 252 of Acts .... ^ 257,252) U4PG 112 657 ffeparks-Griffii]JI ^FUNERAL HOME ^ ® FE 8-9288 Outstanding In Pontiac For Service And Facilities pursuant to Sec-j 1954 Ford - ............... 1954 Cadillac — BUY FW27 757 1957 Cadillac - 56 631 51 949 1955 Chrysler — N55 10 767 ■ 1959 Ford — C9HG1 777115 1953 Plymouth — 181 27 347 1953 Ford - 72G AB 4 L 195 1956 Chevrolet — VC 56F 094 114 1957 Oldsmoblle — 577 M09 829 -------- - iblle — 508 B16 747 I - BAJ60B 067 37C 8292 sale of the above vehicles will be hel Saturday, July 22nd, 1967, at 1:3 ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS The Board of Education of Bkxm mis School District, Bloomfield Hills, I Mchtoan will racelve sealed bids lor’ ..ie furnishing and Installation ol carpeting In lha new Bloonflald Hills Lahser: Road Senior HIg..________ ____ E. D. S. T., Tuesday, June 27, 1967, i oltlce of the Bloomfield Hills Boar Education, Bloomfield Hills, Mlchlga Proposals will be received as follows: «... «... carpeling Work Proposals must by the Architect ___________ _ - Bid Bond or Certified Check lount ot five - ........ e accompanied b m per _...inad. d specifications may be ob-< . and after Monday, June 19,' 1967 at the, office of the Architect, Tarapata ■ MacMahon Associates, Ihc., ArcMtacts • Engineers - Planners, 1191 West Square Cake Road, Bloomfield Hills,! Michigan. | A check In the amount of tiO.OO must, . ^ deposit for each! It specifications, same to --------J upon return of plans and! speclflcathms In good condition within —- '■*' days of the opening of bids. -----....d bidders will be required to furnish satisfactory Performance Bondi —i Labor and Material Bond, each m amount of 100 r‘ — ' . The total cost o ' (30)' c opening of bi—. t Board of Education reserves Ihi ...... to reject any or all bids in when or Inpart, and to walVe any Informalitla thareln. Board of Education Schools lELL Warmth anid Hospitality If you are looking for a real treat, next time you make plans for your business meetings, dinner parties, or special events, choose “The Library Room" at Bedell's. Mable Goodwin, your hostess, will see that every last detail is carried out as you would wish. 2395 Woodward at Sq. Lk. Rd. 334-4561 C“—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JUNE 20, 1967 Death Notices ; Jura K, mil I F. and Horace Toddt of William Salsbury, Mn. ki Edton and Mrs. Irene Mike; a graat-grandchlldran. F 4 Help Wonted Mole COATS . FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS______«T4-CM1 C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOMS KEEL. HERAAAN E.; Jura 20, 1967; 077 Spence Street; age 77; beloved husband ol Harriett Keel; dear father of Mrs. James (Margaret) Smith, Jessie and Joseph Keel; dear brother of Mrs. Flora Loless and George Keel; also survived by 12 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Funeral ar- Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME. 332-0370 Established Over 40 Years voorhees - SIpIo Fi (Suggested visiting t and 7 to 9 p.m.) MANGANELLO, CAROL J.; June 19, 1967; 9072 Maplegrove; age 36; beloved v»ife of Alfonso Manga-nello; beloved daughter ol Mr. Dewey Johnson; dear mother of Alfonso A. and Dennis C. Man-ganello; dear sister of Mrs. Thomas St. Andre, Mrs. Dorothy Ott, Mrs. Clyde McDonna and Edward Johnsr- ■■----- -- Interment In Oakland H rial Cemetery, Novi, ganello will He in stj I. Charles Pace and Miss P Brookdale. Interment in _________ lawn Cemetery, Detroit, Arrangements by the Sparks - Griffin AN GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phone F" ' ' " before 5 p.m. Confidential. ANYONE HAVING STAMP NUMBER EXCITING SPRING FUN FOR Scout groups, church, clubs. -- through fields. Woods, on 6esCH, CAROLINE, . Hialeah, Florida (foi____ . winkleman Street, Pontiac); 7S; dear mother ol Mrs. Willard J. (Leona) Wilson, Mrs. O. R. (Dorothy) Garrison, . Leonard, Charles and Arthur Oesch; dear sister of William Arnbruster; also survived by seven grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Funeral , service will be............... June 21, at 1:30 p.m. at Ti toon Funeral Home. Inten Ottawa Park Cemetery. Oesch w a In state a ffLSON, EMMA S.; June 19, 1967; 0103 Holly Road, Grand Blanc, Michigan (formerly of Ortonvllle); age 88; dear mother of Mrs. Mary Vanhuff and Mrs. Elsie Vanhuff, Elna and Ralph Olson; also vived by nina grandchildren, neral service will be held TI C. F. Sherman Funeral , Orton: , with Rev. Roy Botruff officiating, ferment In Ortonvllle Cemetery. Mrs. Olson will lie In state at ' Ratter, george w.; -— 2764 Tim Avenue, rty of Ortonvllle); — ... 1 husband ol Earline Plat-Tor; oear father of Mrs. Dorothy Zinaw, Arthur and Robert Platter; dear brother of Mrs. Anna will be held Wednesday, Ju at 1 p.m. at the C. F. Sh___________ Funeral Home, 135 South Street, Ortonvllle, with Rev. Roy Botruff officiating. Interment In White Chapel Cemetery. Troy. Mr. Platter wll lie In state at the funeral Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Press Wont Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICf TO ADVERTISERS ADS RECEIVED 8Y 5 P M. Will 8E PUBLISHED THE ff*r »h* iir*t ir "KILINUM I doy prtvioui to publication. CASH WANT AD RATES $3 00 $3 46 $3S4 3 00 3 60 SSI 3 44 4 68 6.64 3 05 5 4G tu • 64 13 44. 973 15 13 Huntoon FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac for SO year. Oakland Ave._FE 2-0189 SPARKS-GR'FFiM APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAK-en lor ushers, IB or over. Pontiac Drive-ln Theater. 7-10 p.m. 343S "assistant MANA(JER Company owned branch. Good starling salary. Excellent company beiwfits In bonus, paM vacations, hospitalization,-------•- ---- business .. ....,__ „. .... _______ tlal. High school education. Excellent opportunity for advancement. We have been in business for 80 years. Acme Quality Paints; Inc., Thomas L. Ball. Manager, 3 N. Saginaw St., FE 2-3M8. B E. Hammond F Debt consultants OF PONTIAC, INC. 814 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 8-0333 STATE licensed-bonded ''■"i_Saturdmr_9 — cooked Spaghetti i I — Lambs, piglets. UPLAND HILLS FARM : T6-A THIS WEEK ONLY 100 per cent human hair wig Machine made. $34.95. Semi '------- made $49.95. Long semi hand $69.95. Hand tied $79.95. Han_ $99.95 Oleg Cassini $179.95. Hair pieces $8.95 and $9.95. Switches $19.95. Falls $59.95 and up. Wig cases $4.95. HOUSE OF WIGS. FE 8-6216. ____ _____________ _ YOU TO JOIN THE il Cabana Club. 333-7906. WE, photography _ --------- Color. Free brochui available. 338-9079 anytime._ WILL PERSON OR PERSONS WHO spoke to the —g, ( 3:15 ... ... ... II 338-3570 Reward. 6|Help Wanted Male ET^PERIENCED SHORT ORDER. Id grill cook. Araly Steak & Egg. fS Dixie Hwy. Waterford bet. 9 EXPERIENCED SHORT O R fringe benefits. A complete raw shop with the best of equipment. Must have hand tools and the will to work. Inquire Mr. Grimaldi 900 Irlvlng record, 40 hrs. Plus _____ lme._Erlngi benefits. Vehicle al-owance. Apply Western Unto " BE A FORD CAREER SALESMAN automotive." This you want to Work naro. WaiW to -aem $V2;i)00 a year or We furnish completa training In-ctodtog a Ford Motor Our demo plan, paid Insurance and other benefits are tops. Investigate our career opening; now. by calling Mr. Bill Paulson at FE 5-4)0) for an Interview. 30 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD grill COOK FOR NIGHT SHIFT, Apply in person only. Blue Star Drive In, corner of Pontiac and Opdyke Rd._________________________ YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS FEMALE TERRIER A ol S. Tasmania. 5-4749. ."OST: 1 SMALL YORKSHIRE TER-rler, about IVj pounds, female, black with red coloring on- feet. _Auburn_ Heights j^res^B52-1920. OST: 2 FEMALETT. BERNARDS, (1)3 mo. old pup named "Sugar," 0) 2 yr. old named "Brandv. Reward. 682-3194. LOST: VICINITY OF MERRIMAC LOST FROM CAR GREEN HAND Reward. 673-6847 LOST - BILLFOLD IN V I Lake Sixteen. Please r It Po^t OHIc^oj -l" white toy y of Northern High. —. _____ ________', OR .3- — REWARD. WIDOW WITH “children DES- the t964 sway June 20, 1964. mu getting weaker, end stood beside you. You had gone before we knew It. And only God knows why. Sadly missed by mother, steplathe; Ferrell and Lyndell Clay, son Ge> 1, daughter Teresa, brother Fa; ris, husband Lae. Lose weight safely with Dex-A-Dlat Tablets. Only 98 at Simms Bros. Drugs. At 10 a.m. toda) there | j were replies at The' I Press Office in the foi-{lowing boxes: BOX REPLIES 2, 3, 12, 15, 17, 20, 28, ] 20, 37, 45, 46, 47, 51, 53, 55, 56, 62, 72, 75, 76, 82, Pontiac Press Want Ads Bring Advertisers and Prospects ' Together JUST CALL• 332-8181 ..... .... RIGHTS law PROHIBITS, WITH X; c e R T AIN exceptions, :v |;:;:oiSCRIMINATION BE-% CAUSE OF sex. since X:SOME occupations are v; X- CONSIDERED MORE AT- X :¥ TRACTIVE TO PERSONS X) OF ONE SEX THAN THE I;!; OTHER. ADVERTISE- X-M E N T S ARE PLACED ;X UNDER THE MALE OR -X female columns for convenience of read- :v •t: ERS.' such listings are X- X: NOT INTENDED TO EX- vl CLUDE PERSONS OF Help Wonted Mole 6 25 TO 64 YEARS OF AGE You are not loo old, II you a( good health. Part time work e able. Mostly weekends and holl . Write letter giving age, history, lelephone, etc. to Pontiac Press Box C 29, Pontiac, Michigan. $55(mUS“CAR' SALES TRAINEE 1-30 Soma I R N E R serviceman, TIME nd a half plus benefits, guarar ted year round work, 21 year Id Co. Salary according -*■ ;de and exp—'- '— ' HELP NEEDED, TOP NtDTCH ME-chanlc, new and used car clean up man. Only top notch men need to apply. Contact Gene Stuart, 625-2635. CABINET MAKER EXPERIENCED HELP-U N SHOP-673-119B.__________ CARPENTERS UNION Journeyman only for scattered idenfial homes. Also foreman .. man willing to learn. Will tfaln. C & B Construction, Phone 682- 1465 after 7 p.m.___________ CARPENTERS WANTED — ROUGH union. North Pontiac area, Kr ‘ ington. Call Jerry at 334-9021 liXiCHANICALLY INCLINED MAN -‘•■-I work and furnace Instal Also pipe fitting. 682-3100. COLLEGE STUDENTS GRADUATE STUDENTS TEACHERS MIDDLE-AGED August. Pa; $7(W minimi laet our requiren 673-9674 COLLEGE STUDENTS HIGH SCHOOL GRADS Summer Work tor 12 manm First Deptm axtp per weak Foxn e38-(0», 9:15 r Order CUTTING TOOL SHOP Has opening for: Surface grinders, mill hands, shipping and sawing, drill press operators, blanchard operator. Overtime and benefits — Equal Tool Co., 626-0626. ChTef LABORATORY ^TECHNI-- Avon Canter Hospital. Mrs. IS. 651-9381. DRY CLEANERS experienced and able to Drayton PLAINS. DIE REPAIR MEN Steady |ob, 58 hour week. Ex( lent working conditions. For n. with progressiva die repair axpa- EXPERIENCED MAN TO PAINT 1080 V $5200 UP HIGH GRADS and college man Interested li manent employment. Many agemant trainee positions -. -available, some lee paid. Employ- $7,200 FEE PAID College Grads-Engineers Management positions In all fields INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL $9,000 PER YEAR Mechanic, C r a n b r o o k ca.- looking lor top notch mechanic and willing to pay top notch pr-days, Sundays off, fringe benefi must have own tools. MT 7-0700: ' NEW COMPANY f '"'iizod PER*M0NTH AA OPPORTUNITY For carpenters, cement man, I and block layers. 335-9237. WICKES Birmingham, Mf 4-5060. AGGRESSIVE YOUNG MEN Nel office will hire and young men tor outside ord and management. Must t. ----- and high school graduatam Salary APPLICATIONS NOW BEING T ir dr over. Apply .. . , to TO. Miracle Mile Drive In Theater. 2103 S. Telegraph. immeediate Openincj For a District Manager to Supervise Newspaper Boys. Pleasant outdoor work. Must have late model car. Prefer man between 30-40 years old but would consider others. Salary and car allowance plus other benefits. This is an excellent opportunity for a man interesteci in working with youth. >\pply between the hours of 9:00-10:00 o,m. or 2:00-3.00 p.m. to: ARLO McCULLY CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT THE PONTIAC PRESS ! 6 Help Wanted Male SHOE DEPARTMENT MANAGER I E N C E D LANDSCAPE r; parMlme,^rre • FASHION MANAGER Aodarate to bdtter fashion spacia y store, opening soon In Pofitls Aall, excellent future, liberal bei experience. Reply I Schoolcraft Detroit. FLOOR INSPECTOR EXPERIENCE ON SMALL PRI CISION MACHINE PART^ j anitor ■ STOCK ROOM SUPERVISOR To receive, oversee marking crew cultivating and 1 GUARDS Full and parhtime, Immedlata City and Suburban lob openings. Mt. Clemens, Utica and Birmingham Included. Bonded Guard Services, 441 E. Grand Blvd., Detroit — LO 8-4152, 10-4 - - MAINTENANCE MEN PERMANENT in downtown office bulld- -. .... _..J hospital insuran d retirement plan. Pontiac Pre IX C33. Pontiac, Michigan. ...wanted to operate GAR- bage and rubbish route. Chauffeurs license required. Cal' 6 p.m., 693-2801._________ MANAGER TRAINEE. school grad. Sharp. Advanc.. ____ SS.OOO. Call Angle Rook. 334-2471. d wages. FE 4-0358. NEEDED AT ONCE Experienced mechanic needed fill our GM staff. Apply to Ha Pontiac, Carkston, (In parson ot NEEDED AT ONCE Experienced mechanic for GM Dealership, Pontlacs, Chevrolats and Buicks. Apply to Mr. Ernst at Hnm»r Hlght Inc., Oxford. f small subdivision. PARTY CHIEF AND INSTRUMENT man, permanent position. Civil Engineering Office. ,651-4330 r" ‘ PARTS SERVICE MANAGER le service orders ai c^n*; neldL''?00^ PIZZA COOK. MUST BE EXPERI-enced and mature. Good pay. Pled Piper Restaurant. 4370 Highland Franks Restaurant, Keego Harl clean restaurant. Midnight .m. 6 days a week. Apply Boy Restaurant. Telegrai RETAIL MANAGEMENT POSITIONS In our h**'*|^ •'I''* which ; Pontiac Mall Shopping Cantor Immediate placamants contact background < these are excellent oppor-I, offering advancement pos-!S with our fast growing MANAGERIAL BENEFITS Winkelman's 25 Parson, Detroit, ^ SALESMEN. NEAT. THIS FIRM sets you up In your own business. Hurryl 6,000 and benafiti. Call Angle Rooje. 334-2471. Sntl-llng 8. Snelling. SALESMAN WANTED, ELECTRI- STOCK ROOM MAN, INVENTORY —. receiving and ordering, " Reitau- 9lS. SERVICE MANAGER We need a larvic# manager to run our GM tarvica da-, partmant. Wa sarvlda Pon-tlaca, Buicks, • - Hlght Atotora, In Mich. OA 8-2528. Shipping & Receiving MANAGER vising large retail operation ... a malor company. Must be able *- handle many employes and —J.--,- ----gjf|ylf|g,_ 6 Help Wanted Female Baker train a lady .... ...._______ parienca. 5-day weak, no Sun. holiday work, hospitalization, ino insurance and sick pay benefits. Day shift. Apply^lfi^person. PONTIAC MALL __________ Help Wanted Female ^ 7 Help Wanted Female boa management axparlenca . . tarred, but will consider shoe sales background. Winkelman's STORES INC. BE assured of a WONDERFUL vacationl Earn $40 to $60 a weel In your spare time. Openings foi capable ambitious women handling Avon Cosmetics., Please call FE 4-0439 or write P. O. Box 91, Dray- SECURITY GUARD Full time posHlon. Rochester area. Call Woodward 3-3011 for appolnt- Inqulre In person 9:30-5:00. PENNEY'S THE COUNTY OF OAKLAND announces THE FOLLOWING OPEN COMPETITIVE EXAMINATION This examination I eligible list from —d FUTURE va- Clerk examination will be accepted until S P.M., June 26, County employment offers security, excellent governrrantal fringe benefits and challanging, worth while work In many Interesting areas in addition to salary. Apply *-• Unskilled Laborers Factory and field laborers Report 6 a.m.-8 a.m. ready to wor Employers Temporary Service 65 S. Mam, ciawson 2320 Hilton, Ferndale 27320 Grand River, Redlord ____Get Paid Same Day. VILU^E A^MT^n^RTTOftTM^U^^ have building experience, licensed builder preferred. Experlanci ~ the operation of Municipal v systems. Knowledge of road structlon, assessing, general « procedure and bookkeeping, references. Salary open for q HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE IN, 5 D 3 school age children, rat., 9012. HOUSEKEEPER-^LIVE IN 6fl OUT — near Lady of the Lakes. " after 6 p.m. during week, ah' r OPERATOR, EXPERI-' "“1. Fashlonette Beau-nr FE 5r70l0. E 3-76^*01 BEAUTY OPERATOR $80 per week guarahtaad, i commission. Steady, good M —Andre Beauty Salon, II N, S HOUSEWIVES Earn 82 to 83 per hour In your spare time. Pick up and deliver Fulikr Brush orders. For Interview phone OR 3-5876. HOUSEKEEPER REFINED WOMAN to assltt In a attractive suburban home, consisting of couple and school aged child. Air conditioned room, TV, ate. Salary and complete maintenance. Exceptional opportunity. Write Pontiac Prr--C 5, Pontiac Michigan. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS BEELINE FASMIONS-NE6DS~Y FOR HOSTESS OR STYLIST- BOOKKEEPER experlehce. in general oi iting ioby call 338-0429 or CASHIER Night shift. Age between 25 and 45. Most be able to wo" ends. Apply at Big Boy "* Telegraph 8. Huron. KITCHEN* HELP, FULL 1 _ part time evenings, Rocco's, Dixie Hwy., Drayton. I time. Call 338-0034 i COOK, SHORT ORDER, EXPERI-enc8d or win train. EM 3.0611 or EM 3-2249 COOKS AND WAITRESSES FOR "■■‘h's Restaurant, 1200 S. I Rd., Highland. Apply Ir ■or day and evening shifts In fir family type restaurant, top wogi and benefits, plus pleasant wor Ing conditions. Must have tran portatlon and soma experience. A ply In person only. HOWARD JOHNSONS TELEGRAPH AT MAPLE RD. BIRMINGHAM________ COOKS, olxto Hi Pete, former Drayton A&W, 435 Apply weekdays 5 to " day Sat. John an Adorns. 334-247). Snelling A Snel- EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNI ty with top firm. Some office experience helpful. 8240. Call Pam Fox. 334-2471. Sralling A Shelling. EXPERIENCED COOK AND WAlt-rrss, steady. Apply at Nicks Fine Foods, 2630 E. Highland Rd.____ “EXPERIENCED HOSTESS SUPER-- . ictlve, neat ap- isant personali-— ,„d working con-. Harvey's Colonial House, ixie Hwy., Waterlord. GENERAL OFFICE Alert lady ter typing and ____ oHIct In a ^***J'/ WAITRESS Weekend — nlghti. RIcky'a 819 woodward, Pontiac. _____ WAITRESS AND KITCHEN GIRLS. 0 do lelephone v WOMEN FOR TELEPHONE CAN-sing, experience preferred but necessary, 334-0067. Pontiac Dine Out Club. Ideal hours ■ ■■ .. and., sfudertL.J3a* " 338-4244._________• : hoaMWIfe i id avanlng shltl KELLY SERVICES i N. Saginaw 338-0338 Equal Opportunity Employer Halp Wanted M. or F. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED KITCHEN help. Restaurant. LPN'S "Charge nurse' pos^ nursing home available. Full or part time. Call Mrs. Ardalean, 335.61)96._______________ SneS*'” LIBRARIAN 5,000 volume medical library, a., conditioned, modern progressive 400 bed hospital, pleasant working r-vironmant, excellent fringe ber fits, degree required. Salary opi based on education and experlem Apply personnel deot.. Ponll General Hospital. MAKE MONEY AND HAVE FUN WITH DINEX No Investment, deliveries or ct. lecting. Wonderful opportunities for from St._ J_oe__Mercy Hos- I, Pontiac. FE 5-7821. NEED WAITRESS FOR short order meals. Apply m person Waterford Hill Country Club, Dixie Highway at Maybea Rd., 9 NURSES AIDES All shifts. Training program on a year-around basis. Good working conditions. Experlonced and Inexperienced. Apply In person Mon., Tues., Wed., from 9:30 to 11:00 a.m. Semlnolo Hills Nursing Home, 532 Orchard Lake Ave., Pontiac. NURSE l._MA4-^1._____ _ ^ORK. LADY OVER 24. :0 not necessary. Will PART TIME HELP ;. Needed for Immediate i___ 1 — 02) houseworkers; ») and aktarly care; (5) nurfes Is Inc.^pl 4- WANTED NEW AND USED CAR SALESMAN Applications now being taken to sell Pontlacs, Ramblers and quality used cars. Call or sea Mr. Ken Johnson, MY 3-6266 RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC-RAMBLER L ' Orion. ___ ____ Factory Workers Afternoon Shift Only P M TO 1:00 A M BEAUTI-__ NEW PLANT AND EXC. WORKING CONDITIONS. APPLY 10:30 A.M., MON. AND TUES. ONLY. MUST HAVE OWN TRANSPORTATION. Allen Industries, Inc. 164 INDUSCO CT. TROV > block N. of 14 Mile Rd. be- ER'S. 642-7900. Call HOMEMAK- Wrlte to Pontiac Press Box 29. prFvate secretary to PRESI Help Wanted M. or F. SHOULD YOU - .. (aka an imptoymaot change? NOW IS THE TIMEI Mishigan Bell 1365 Cass Ave., Detroit 393-2815 Restaurant, Kaago WAITRESSES ..... lanent lob, hourly wages plus tips, paid vacation and pitallzatlon. Apply Big Boy taurani - Tatograph-Huron, WE NEED ' STENOGRAPHERS SECRETARIES — TYPISTS Profitable Temporary Assignments available nr-■■ Sales Help, Male-Female t-A 2 EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE Salespeople to replace 2 who aro leaving tha State's — taka over currant prospect flit — hottest ol-ttce In tha area. Many promotional opportunities. Call EM 36703 —Hackett Realty for Interview. EM I minimum WOULD YOU BELIEVEI The, Toy, Cha&t oileri mot. lass work damonstraling toys, wa win Train. No Invastmenf, delivery -ir collection. Please call 682-6354. APPRAISER TRAINEE ^e'rBsteS°\n^mek°ng^ ■ of $10,000 mad apply___________ tlon plus, many other company benetitsm Call Mr. Foley for con-fldantlal Interview. 674-0363. BON REAL ESTATE ClD. NEEDS 2 more salesmen for Utica office. Exp. unnecessary, will train hospitalization. Up to $150 par wk. to start. Call Mr. Husted. 73M010. MICHIGAN COMMIINIT - SLOOP CBNTES Pontiac FE BROILER COOK, EVENINGS" __ CALL 602-1347 EXPERIENCED COOK, G^NERaX kitchen help. 651-7800 after 10 a.m. XPERIENCED, DEPENDABIE bartender for nalghborhood b,'" Rets, necessary. MY 3-1534. HUDSON'S PONTIAC MALL Alterations Fitters Tailor Fitters Enjoy: Fine Earnings Many Other Benellts! APPLY IN PERSON EMPLOYMENT OFFICE HUDSON'S - PONTIAC MALL - 8120 mo., 624-1972. MAN OR WOMAN FOR n coin operated cleaners. n person. 932 W. Huroh. helpful but not necessary. We h, a good building program and 5 dep. too Norton. WEST OF GENERAL HOSPITAL, 6 room brick, iw baths, gas heat, basentent, $150. 6766339. Rent Luka Cottugas 41 1 BEDROOM COTTAGE ON LAKE Orton, rent by week. 6966860. All Furnisheci Immediote Possession Upper Straits waterfront. Clean, attractive, 2 bedroom home. Good condition. Gas heat. Alumiaum siding.' Beautiful slot, t13,000. Easy ELWOOD REALTY 602-2410 bVf Tawas. $in par wK. FE 4*1767 cottages on lake LEELANAU, 2-bedroom - $60, 3-bodroom _ $70. Boat Included. Call btfora 2 p.m. OR 65540. '"^ston.'^FE*5-l325°2i!or*5^® BY OWNER 2-bedrppm house with lake tot on Elizabeth Lake, 4765128. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP —FOUR bedroom ranch, full basement. Circular drive, large tot, near Brother Rice, AAarian, Seeholm and St. Regia, carpeting and drapes es well as built-in appliances In kitchen 2 baths. Custom built house, less then two years old, has paneled femlly room with fireplace and first floor laundry fecilltles, S42,-500 Owner 646-6949. After 6 P.m. LAKE FRONT, TWO BEDROOMS, modern. Oft Round Lake Rd. 9443 Mondon. 363-2097—427-7577. LAKE ORION - 3 BEOROOIM LAKE boat spec. NORTHERN-MISSAUKEE LAKE, $40 week, 2 bednpoms. 625-4399. BEAT THE HEAT! TOMMY'S. LAKE/GOOD SWIMMING and tlshlSSi-'Sieepi 7 or 8. Avail- In this 3-bedroom home with privileges on Williams Lake. Full base- able July 8 through ?. 693-1364. WILLIAMS LAKE ERONT, FURN-Ished 2 bedroom, good beach. By ment, large living room, 1W car garage, on 2 lots. Beach only a short walk from front door. Owner transferred. About $1500 down. Sale Houses ^ HIITER NEAR DRAYTON - excellent 3 I ---— icher, I'/i ceramic t. . _ ull basement, attached garage, patio, nice ' ‘ • your furniture ~. «..» what havr.... We'll auction It or buy B & B AUCTION sow Dixie________________OR 3-2717 Wanted Mlscen^^^ 1 CALL, THAT'S ALL! CASH FOR H antiques, quality furniture and ■' guns. M. H. Bellow, Holly, 637-5193 Light requirec ... ______ board. PE 4-0652 o» WORKING woman ^^arjment NEW I TO share __________FE 5-9857. Real Estate 36 NEED CASH? loving out of state? Need c settle debts? Need cash______ another home? Want cash for your home? Cash tor y-------- ty? We will buy your I cash today — Call Nick isaci lukas at O'Neil Realty, Inc. I ■real’VALUE 2 ROOMS AND BATH, NO CHIL-no bachelors. FE 5-1.705. A MS',' EVERYtSmo. FURN- - Taylor, 2-8710.______ Rent Roomi middleageo. call 2 ROOMS AND BATH, OUIET COU-pl8 only. ROOM, 1 TO 50 ■■“|P:ftSS.«5S5gf.BS EHTIES, AND LAND CONtRACTS WARime or equity In trade. SILVER LAKE u excelled ment with" liw' oM* furnace, ), large lot with plenty ide. Only 112,500, plus Owners' agent, YORK REALTY, 674-1698. _____________ HIGllLAND ATEA Tri-Level with 1636 sq. 1.. .. living space. 3 bedrooms, family room, m baths, brick and aluminum siding. 2 car garage attached. Lot 130'x160' In an outstanding sub. Swimming pc ' being built for exclusive b use. Real value at tba pri CO 3468 HOWELL Town & Country, Inc. 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH, ALSO 2 rooms, 154 N. Perry.___________ 3 ROOM FURNISHED LAKEFRONT. Cass Lake. OR 3-7046. 3 CLEAN ROOMS, 130, DEPOSIT S50, no drinkers, edults, FE 5-5182, 3 ROOMS AND BATH. ON SILVER Lake, 24 ft. knotty pine living room, adults, no pets. Utilities SHARE OWN LIVING h, TV, rooking. EM 3-2536 Boomt^Wth Board ^ OR 2 GENTLEMEN, EXCELLENT foody luncties packed. FE 4-5580. GENTLEAAAN IN CHRIST I A YORK HAYDEN B. Call FE 2.7164. EavBstroughing 3 ROOMS AND BATH, $35 A WEEK, =. ,; I10Q deposit, references, 674-1933. f* •; 3 ROOMS, BATH, ALL UTILITIES. 3 ROOMS AND BAT utilities, adults, $32.50 Liberty or phone 363-37. I NEWLY DECORAT- ' 1-A ALUMINUM—VINYL SIDING Awnings — storm Windows FHA - Joe Vallely — OL 1 -6623 ALUMINUM SIDING, ROOFING' IN-stalled by "Superior" — your authorM Kaiser dealer. FE 4- I, FURNISHED OR I Medical Center, 2200 " ton! Offlt^SpacB l! ATTENTION DOCTORS 8. DENTIST r Establish your office in this Mod-7 ern Medical Building near Pontiac I General Hospital. Large or ** -life nofv available. Cafl-Ray O r complete details. OR 4-2222. WE TRADE OR 4-03^* le Hwy.p Drayton Plains Crestbrook I'MODEL OPEN DAILY 12-8 3 bedroorh, family room a a priced at only $13 icated In new tub wi "-■-•-r.®“Dr*-'-to Crnttrrobk''street ai New Homes—10 Per Cent Dn. bedroom, 1 room, IW I b^room S4?900 pSfs' lot”.'' bedre— *- 2 car storai r garage, : ASPHALT SEAL COATING, FREE estimatea. 391-0765._________ ASPHALT DISCOUNT PAVING CO. summer special—whelaaalc prices - Free estimates. FE 5-7459. BRAYTON ASPHALT, QUALITY paving and seal coating. fr«- -timatei. 674-0196 or 363-7043. bRIVEWAY SPECIALISTS. FREE Estimates. FE 5-4980. G W. ASPHALT, 15 YEARS EXP. Hurry, hurry, gel your spring price now. FE 2-65M, «k to^r ^ ' TAG ASPHALT PAVING. Excavating BACKHOE, TRENCHING, FOOF-Ings, water and sewer Installed. arry Lotan________ 625-5633 Charles T. OurUn, Excavating, i ter and sewer Installation. Tri ing. Septic repairs. 624-1130, FRONT END LOADER, tW YAITd bucket, with Wk ho, on rubbe SEPTIC FIELDS, DRY WELLS, Rental Equipment BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS-POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER-POWER SAWS 52 Joslyn__________FE 4-6101 ENT ROTOTILLERS, ROTOR” rakes, power sod cutter, lrenc‘ backhoet, Jacksen's, 332-9271. ADULTS ONLY, 3 ROOMS AN ■—*h, air-conditioned, special rati tingle males. 335-9760. AIR CONDITIONED SMALL APART-'sdy only, washer-dryer, -- GIROUX ! Rent Business Preperty 47-A IMMEDIATE POSSESSION SUI “ ■ :areheuse. 60x80' bulldlr It, fenced, get heal, i A C H E R S OR 60x215' flee spi 2-2337. le mortgage. ( ork at 674-1649 Colonial, 2'/j baths, rnermo-seal.windows, 2 car brick garage: Your choice ot,. several distinctive elevations.' plus lot. New model nov TRADES ACCEPTED J. C. HAYDEN Realtor 363-6604 10735 Highland Rd. ___ Is Yours A Small Family? Then this 2 bedroom i ' sided bungalow Is lust yoi a quiet secluded' street, i , Itles, near shopping and schools (M59) 673-7837 in Keego Harbor, basement, fen—' ------------- yard. $9500 — no down Gl. HAGSTROM, Realtor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE >00 W. Huron OR 3-6229 MODEL OPEN "IT'S TRADING TIME" DAILY 2-8 P.M. SAT. 2-6 P.M. SUN. 2-6 P.M. "LAKE ANGELUS LAKEVIEW ESTATES" west Walton Btvd. to ClintonvIlls Rd. to Subdivision 2859 Costa Mesa Ct. at^'^colonlals"’®rom 'smJoso! Including base lot. Lake priv- terfronlT dioo5«'*from SEE THEM SOON. KAMPSEN 1071 W. Huron SI. FE 4-0921 MUST $ELU> 2 BEDROOM 0 N ■ ' 1n Mlltord. 685-1872. TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE . Opdyke _____ _67T0240 * Fencing OR 3-9590._______ _____ CLARKSTON ROO'fTnG CO On« ot the "Best." - 673-9297 3T TAR ROOFINO-SHINgOnG, R. Price. FE 4-1024, . BACHELOR, QUIET, NORTH END, main floor 3 room carpeted, pri-..... --- , FE 2-4376. ---------- BEAUTIFUL AREA, $35 week, utllttle$ included, located f Dixie Hvey, Hotly. ME 4-9107. and ’/>, basement, 2-car garage. extras. $26.600. 391-2954.__ I- IW STORY, 3 BEDROOM. COOlTn shade front and rear. 60'xl20' cor merclal lot. Sashabaw Rd. $15,000. CRAM LANE IN CLARKSTON could you get m< ick 3 bedroom ranch, ... _ I finished basement, family jm with an open he»-“- "" ice. IVi baths, 2 car r»qe. Gas heat, and _ ----- triveway. Can be. boufhgt r FHA terms. Lovely 3 bedroom brick ra with "recreation room" In basement. Built In kitchen i refrigerator. Patio. Fenced y. 2Vz car garage. City water — .. sewer. Nice landscaping. $22,500 for this new listing. 651-6503. Shepard's Real Estate Auta Repair^ IH REP Inr autonr Issloni. e standard transmh luslmanls. Fluid i cs. All makes. All________ Rochaster Transmission 126 Main 51. 651-6820 ___________________ Bouts and Accussaries ST CENTER I haadquMiei and libergli lA.P. tlberala Floor Tiling le orchard, garden s| YHRV JOHNSON 1 V-yi liV EAST SIDE ( BEDROOM HOME. 2 HALF 1 full bath, lo Attached subdivi ' . .. m, Wata ?6y950. OR 3-7440. K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lake Rd. or would accommodate large family. 11 rooms, 2 baths, 1-c;r garage. Presently rented tor $350 a mo. SI2.50O with $2,500 down. Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 330-9294 _____________338-9295 YORK 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains £ BUY WE TRADE OR 4-0363 walks and well shaded end Mved streets. Your for lust $1,600 plus costs down. Warden Realty 434 W. Huron. Pontiac 333-7157 If no answer call 335-1190. Waterford ROOM TO ROAM - Fine older home In stable Waterford neighborhood. For large family. A total -■ ■ bedrooms In this 1W stoty CHARM AND TRADITION — This ■ “m vary old but comfortably irn 2-slory home In Roches- WATERFORD REALTY Dixie Hwy. 673-1273 Multiple Listing Service WATTS REALTY 627-3647 1956 M15 at Bald EsbIo Lake WY6AAN LEWIS REALTY )• WE BUY roof. Bonded material. Free est|! metes. Reasonable. 682-7514. SPECIALIZE IN HOT TAR ROOF- ‘ ■-g. L. J. Price. FE 2-1036. Sond-Gravei-Dirt BULLDOZING. FINIS LAKE FRONT APARTMENT 2 BED- ....Ti shopping ares, imme session, $25,500. 363-9581. 3 OR 4 BEDROOMS. Brick & Block Service BLOCK, BRICK, NEW OR REPAIR. Fireplace expert. F^4-5580. BRICK, BLOCK, STONE, CEMENT . work, llreplaces specialty. 335-4470 FIREPLACES, WRITTEN GUARaN-lee. EMJ41879._____ Building Modernization 1 A 3 CAR GARAGES. 20x22. S87S. COMPLETE LANDSCAPING - ‘ eclalliing In broken taining walls. Free esti ... Waltman. 33M314. MERION BLUE SOD. PICK UP OR delivered. 4643 Sherwood. 628-2000 ' MERION OR KENTUCKY SOD Laid or Del. No money dr“-“ -1 TOP SOIL, SHREDDED PEAT, fill, gravel, sand and stone. Prod. del. 625-2231 or 394-0325. Refs. 673-7466. LOVELY 1 ROC drtnking.^Work NEWLY FURNISHED EFFICIENCY, private e ' .. .. Ing room LARGE LAWNS P R E F E R R anable. Rototllling. 394-0064 LAWN MAINTENANCE 33641582 ? PROCESSED GRAVEL, aITalYZED s ;k dirt and top soil. Fill. ^ Idoilng. FE ^4926. Tree Trimming Service - 3-room with sto nd utilities lurnisi II Euclid. Dick V Y“FlTRNiSHED'D; Pedy-Bullt Garage Co. OR 3-5619. coSTplete remodeling Service Lawn Sprinkling LAWN SPRINKLING PUMPS AND B6.B TREE SERVICE, INSURED. ____ ____ _____ Trimming, removal. Frai DIxIa Hwy. OR 3- mates. 674-1281 or 724-2695. le gals ________ ! to Pontiac Bldg. New carpeting, fu ■----s, big kitchen, 2 II n Glass Rd., Ortonville, Mich._ - STORY, 2 BEDROOMS, C^-merce Rd.. garage, oil heat, $16.-500. For appointment, EM 3-2557. BEDROOM HOUSE. WITH m 'ar garage, Keew Harbor area, leeds work. $6500 Cash. Call lings 682-3373.__________ 3-BEDROOM RANCH Lake privileges on Cass Lake, fully carpeted, with all bullt-ins, large ______ WE TRADE g OR 4-0363 OR 4-0363 - 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains Downtowrt Walled Lake Good Investment, must sell tx cause of age will take offer, aide home, with two apts., small bus ness site. Ideal for residence an Fine Location 1n Walled Lake 2 homes ready to occupy In : days. Ranch 66' long 3 bedroom ----'-- room off master bedroon bath, full basement, 2 ci $22,600 FHA $21,500 Con. Mtg EAST SIDE House, Store, Building, 3 to room, 2*story building with a building which is 25'x30'. L 120'x150'. Rental is now $16 NO MONEY DOWN d ORION - 2-BEDROOM STARTER, Alter 6, call Carroll Braid FE 4-2286 KENT Ing tha attached garage, el "for young folkt, with lake. Priced at $15,000. Terms. EVES. 623 0808 today. down to qualified Gl. Additions—recreation rooms attic rooms — aluminum storm windows — siding and trim. 86 N. Saginaw G 8. M FE 2-1211 . Free astimatas _____ Tarms ' FOR HOME IMPROViMENTS, GA- Luwnmewer Sulei— Riders and Power NORTHSIDE, 507 N. PERRY Yardman and Jacobsen Open Sunday's, 10 to 2 FE 4-0941 or 673-7512 B&L TREE TRIMMING, REMOVAL. < Free ealimate. FE 5-4449, 6- *"* ' "DALBY & SONS' STUMP, TREE, REMOVAL Apartments, Unfurnished 38 - FE 5-3005 Mosquito Spray FE 5-3025 . ^ . ------ CariMted! _____ . ----- conditioned, heated. Rec. Adulta No pels. From S135. ^estimate. FE 8- Corpentry NEW RAILROAD TIES. ROUGH sawn hardwood. Boat, dock li 626-7653. Shrub Care—Free Estimates. Fast Servlee-338-1314 TRIMMING AND REMOV- Rochester, Mich. Call e llcented. Reas, i!? TALBOTT LI “liuTining and'Hard e supplies. ____________ _fEj*-i51 Maintenance Insurance Truct'ing LIGHT MOVING. INTERIOR f FE^a-Tfe. ^ Cement Work CEMENT WORK OF ALL Inds. Free estimate. 335-4510. LL TYPES OF CEMENT WORK OR 4-3267 S OF CEME _ contractor._______ Cement and Block Work Guinn's Construction Co. FE 4-7677 _______Eves. FE 5-9122 LICENSED SIDEWALK BUILDER. Patios, drives, etc. FE 5-3349. MULTI-COLORED PATIOS, FLOORS, — driveways, Ted Elwood Enfer-prlses, 682-3273 or 325-36S7. __ ■’ porCmes, steps, s^idewalks Acme Step Co. 682-6661 MULTI-COLORED PATIO , BL^S. -----... ----‘1, drivet UL 2-4213. Moving and Storage_______ SMITH MOVING AND STORAGE. 1 S. Jessie. F^ 448iM.-------- ^ Mower Seire|«* RIZZUTO POWER MOWER SV^ 3 ROOMS AND BATH, ON LAKE, stove and ------- '''• ' 3 ROOMS, Markle. BEAT THE HEAT your own beach. We have to offer this spacious home, fully -erpeted, 2 bedrooms, separate ining room, large kitchen with }ls of cupboard space. Hot wa. er heat, 2-car attached garage workshop and 1W baths. Will trade. For more Information, call us. C. Schuett FE 3-7088 MA 3-0288 3 BEDROOM - FULL BASEMENT. Acreage. $16,500. 2 BEDROOM - radiant place, $14,500. 3 BEDROOM — full basement, many extras. $20,200. . ■ BEDROOM — full batament. 1 acre and pond. $26,500. 3 BEDROOM — finished basement. Pontiac. $18,500. We have lots In many areas. ■'« acreaga. FHA and VA re es. All property sold on terms LAUINGER REALTY family room, 2 car gar... 123,500 FHA $22,200 Conv mtg. Country living city convi lots left, 3 bedrooms, ^wn' FHA. Occupy 'ln“‘90 'to 120 Immediate occupancy^ ^ --------- ranchy lovely kitchen full basement $7?adown FHA plus closing. frank marotta and assoc. 3195 Union Lake Rd. Office Hrt. 9-5 Office phone 363-7001 Sales. Evelyn McCleese ENJOY YOUR OWN POOL In extra large backyard, well landscaped. 3 bedroom ranch, IW *' WEST SUBURBAN — n! Dan Edmonds REALTOR FHA PROPERTY MAMAGEMENT SALES BROKER 325 Pontiac Trail. Walle 624-4811 FIRST IN VALUE , gas heat, close 1. $9,500 with $1 NICE 2 BEDROOM HOME - wM closed-in sun room and a finishe recreation room 12.9 x 25, full basement, automatic heat, I'/j baths, many other features. Must be seen to appreciate. Floyd Kent, Inc., Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph Fg 2-0123 or FE 2-7342 lake ORION. LAKE FR year around, 2 bedrooms, master bedroom has walk In c et, 2 fireplaces, walk-ln raci tion room, alum, siding, stori screens, carport, large, redwoot cony porch, beautiful vidw ot tz..... Safe swimming, excellent fishing, boating. Cash or tarms — OWNER - Detroit 864-9333. Evenings -Southfield 353-2512. LARGE BRICK HOME: . ________________ ~ ' "IS, about 2 acres, E. Bloom-■llghlands Subdivision. $30,r~ 0 settta Estate. FE 2-4635 Miltord, Michigan PSSTl THERE'S BRAND ----------------- ranch; looking tri-level with studio ceilings, 1st floor: 3 ------ homt won't last at $26,800 lot eluded. $2,700 down and closing cost. Where? Watkins Hills off Dixie, Lorena at Terness. Call 623-0670 2 to 6 p.m. only f'----------- 3-ROOM nildren welcome. 130 Week. 2335 LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, ■ '.ron.!2l.d' l52d1n"a° FE zloSS nd front-end loaging. rc z-ueuj SmItTY'S lawnmow Service. New-Used 1 for sale. 005 Chalmer Lake Rd. FE 8-0809. I. Clemens. Used A Track Rental : Trucks to Rent ROOMS, PARTLY FtiRNISHEO, upstairs. S100 deposit, $35 week Inquire at IS S. Roselewn. ___ AMERICAN HERITAGE APTS. 3365 WATKINS LAKE RD. MANAGER'S APT J3 - and 2-bedroom apirtmanta wll in. We furnish all -BEDROOM, FULL BASEMENT, bath and V>, attached garage. In Waterford Township, $19,700. Also 5172. e by 01 r. 673- 3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Drive out M-59 5ust west of_____ Lake Rd. to Candelstick. Directly behind the Dr- —I- » ------- Center. 3 Bedrooms SAM WARWICK II, DESIGNER, builder. Homei, eddltioni designed YOUI" lot, 612-2820 or 651-8726. ^DrmmaW ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES, KNIT dresses, leather coats OR >7193. ----BETTY JO'S ■"DRESSMAKING Weddings, alterations. 674-3704 _ DRESSMAKING 8, ALTERATIONS Phone: 673-1463_____________ Driver's School Pulntlngjinil Jecorating -1 PAINTING, REASONABLE. Free est. Experienced. 338-3570. A-1 QUALITY PAINTING, REASON- 62B-1670.________ 1-1 PAINTING AND PAPER hanging THOMPSON______________FE 4-8364 attainting, work GUARAN-teed. Free estimates. 682-0620. TuTpaintino and decoratI Free estimates. UL 2-1398 EXPERT PAINTING AjiD PAPER -----Ing. Call Herbie, 673-6790. Piano Tuning b EQUIPMENT Poniiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD FE 64)461 FE 4-1443 Open Dally Including Sunday Water Sefteners SALES AND RENTALS NEW LUXURIOUS APTS. 1- and 2-bedi from 1135 i . No children „. _____ed. Carpeting, drapes, stove and retrIg. furnished, -plus all utilities except eleciricllv. In Dravton ' BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walls cleaned. Reas. Satisfaction guaranteed. Intured. FE 2-1631. WALL WASHINO-11 YEARS EX-perlence. Reasonable. FE 2-9015. Rant Hi>as'.'s, 39 BEDROOM, COZY, CLEAN, MAR-Tied couple only, no pet* “•*' $90 dep. 682-3477 BEDROOM HOUSE, OXFORD LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS MODEL OPEN 579 COLORADO 1:30 to 5 p.m. — 6 day week WESTOWN REALTY FE 8-2763 days After 7:30 p.m. — Ll 2-4677 4 BEDROOM RANCH. 2W CAR GA-rage. 3W acres land. With W acre Trout pond. Phone 628-1784._ 4-H REAL ESTATE lake front living " Relax — Repose — Retreat revive, refresh yourself lor FE $-9693. RENTING $78 Mo. Excluding taxes and Insurance $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA lILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICA-TIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROB-LEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUt OR COME TO 290 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 GAYLORD ochester area. 3 4 beoroSm Basement. Garage. Will trade. Ni Realtor. 651-0221. 852-5375._ ROSS "VENICE OF MICHIGAN" BIG 4-BEDROOM Homes Colonials.. .tri-level from $28,990 total house including lot '•!!?• ““'lakeland ESTATES Dixie Highway across fron Dixie Pottery Waterford, Michigan MODEL: 623-0670 1941 S. Telegraph Rd. FE S-M91 LAZENBY I breakfast nook, i INCOME This 2-tamlly Is convenlantly ed on the East Side Attr____ stone and aluminum exterior. Each apartment has large living rooms 2 bedrooms and completely re modeled kitchens and full baths basement has separate gas fur naces and utilities. 2-csr garage, fenced In -lot. 8980 down on FHA— Full price: $17,800. ROYCE LAZEN8Y, Realtor Open Dally from 9 to 1:30 p.m. Sundays, 1-5 p.m. 4626 W. WALTON — OR 60301 LADD'S OF PONTIAC North end of city, quiet area FIVE ACRES, beautiful n Fireplace In 29 ft. carp room. Large carpeted Excellent kitchen. 2'A i.. Cement drive. Landscapjng bedrooms. gorogo. ’ 2-2$2l! full basement with gas heat, car garage. Asking $2$,500. see and make oftar. Will consider la contract. . COTTAGE AT ELK LAKE, I handy man being rebuilt, 90 p cent completed, $8,500. BUILDING SITES, In High K... Village, stilt available, from S2925. $300 Down. Call ROYER Richard S. Royer, Reoltor Horses Room for hories in Lake Drip area plus ranch home, only 7 yaai old, with 3 bedrooms, water aoftoi er and range Included. Income Property Lake Orion — Older homo coi verted Into apartments. Addition, buildings on lots and room f< expansion. Lakefront Homes 2 lake front homos In Lake Ork area. 1 on Lake Orkm and 1 ( a private lake. Don't pits up Ih opportunity for tho luxury ot lei front living. Lots and Acreage If^Oiftord aru. LocaM Pry W^^n^e_ COMPLETE DRY-WALL SERVICE, dating " ........ $. 627-3 Pinitering Service 1-A PLASTERING REPWRS Free etflmatas — 682-4639. PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMAttS. D. Meyers, 363-8595._____ HuaiMng P Hating CONDRA PLUMBING WASHERS-DRYERS REFRIGERATORS , SERVICE SALES ' WOLTERS REPAIR ------ Pontiac, ne p^. 689-4475. 4 Dixit Hwy. 623-1488 iJ OR 3-0455 OR 62804 ‘ FE 8-4236 $750 DOWN, 3 BEDROOMS, 16x21 - '—”7 room, Vh baths, attached -ar garage, fenced yard, privileges, located on quiet In Holly, many extras IncI 637-3951. ___________ 3 BEDROOM, LAKE FRONT. NEW- ' ly decorated. Near Ml"-" — Highland. $135. Year I 4-1865 - OR 36809._____________ BEAUTIFUL 44 ACRE FARM WitH '.•nTdWrr dep. Inquire en, living ri.... ______ $152 mo. plus at 900 Oakland, Pon- AT ROCHESTER -bodroom Colonial In the rolling lint of Rochotier. 2Vi baths, r amlly room with fireplace, iltchen bullt-lns. gat heat, I nant, patio, attachad 2Vi-car ga- agel paved drive. $3$,700, ---- irranged. Quick possession. MY 2-3021, FE 0-9693. HURON GARDENS BRAND NEW — 3 bedroom i with fuH basement, birchtone boards, close to St. Benae $1900 down. OPEN 4 TO 4 P.M. 1141 PREMONT ST. '$11,190 BRAND NEW. 3-bodrm., ranrt, m your lot, full baiamar.. •“ SULATEO, family I money down. MODEL. LAKE FRONT—JAYNO HEIGHTS "odern — Co/iven-- FE 69230, Sun., Exclusive -lent — Owr OR 62600. t fully IN- YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT Russell Young, 3363030 HOUSE F0R~¥ENT. $100 MONTH. 130 W. Strathmore, Pontiac. HOUSE FOR LEASE, LARGE LOT, near Oakland community College, 7770 Coolty Lake Rd., $175 per 651-0141 MILTON WEAVER, Inc. Realtori In the Village f — no W. UnlverihY A GOOD INCOME Producing propOrty, will decorate lo suit. 380' from Whllo Lake, elderly couple will tell to reipon-sible party. 3400 Duffltld, oft M-59. Inquire In riar. , HOLLY AREA LAKE FRONT. JAYNO HilWfS. Exclusive, modern, convanlent -Owner. FE 69230, Sun., OR 62600. Mixed Area WHITTEMORE STREET. 6 spacious rooms, living room, dining —-kltctnn, 1 bedroom and vS down. 2 bedrooms and full —. up. Basmt, gat heat. Only $10,900 with $350 down plus closing costs - EAST WILSON. 3 bedroom, llv lining room and kitch .... —;h. Located near schi shopping and transportation. J $5,5«) with $750 down at $50 month on land contract. STRUBLE DRAYTON PLAINS Real neat 2 bedroom bungak with full basomant and 2 car garage, In a good area cloaa to thap-plng center and schools. Largo lOOx 150' lot, nicely landieaped. Pxiced •t $14,900 terms. AUBURN HEIGHTS 3 bedrooths, 1VS story, homo. Ing roi plenty I sized s 1 b ranch, aluminum siding, full oasement, gas heat, tot lOOx-tso, $15,400. Call after 4 p.m. or weekends, DR 60081._ Wideman beautiful landscaping. 23' carpet-ad living room with flreptoce, largo dining room, 3 bedrooms, cuslom-bulH kllchon, two baths, den, attachad tolerlum, base hot water heel. 3-car garage, heated. Extra large petto with barbecue, boat dock. ONE OF THE MOST APPEALING HOMES WE HAVE HAD TO OFFER. I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR 412 W. HURON 3364536 ___EVES. CALL 3364490 WATERFORD RANCH A reel nice 3 bedroom horn cated in Drayton Plains area Williams Laka. Includes gst Ibrga combination kitchen -Ing area, outside patio, landscaped yard. Full price $15,000, terms lo suit. PONTIAC LAKE lakefront home. Includes family room, enclosed porch with built-in barbecue pit. Some furnishings Included. Full price. $12,500, farms to suit. . A. TAYLOR, AGENCY, Inc. 7732 Highland Rd. (M59) OR 44006 , Eves. EM 3-9937 or EM 67544 IRWIN NEAR PONTIAC MOTOR 2-car garage. Located In good oroa • with nice lot. A good homo tor tha large family. Priced at $13,-500 FHA. stove Can be bought on land contract with reasonable down paymont. INCOME 3 family Income located In Lake Orton. Has 2 apts.,down and 1 up. Easy walking distance to downtown. Can be bought on land contract with $2500 down. GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 290 W. Walton___FE 67003 ARRO TED McCullough, Realtor narawooa iiavft w«ii-nrw«aoi Dating In 2T living room, wooded lot 100x140 completely fenced. Lake privllawt m Ujton Like. 01S.9Wj 'RICE REDUCED on this new custom-built quadlovol, 3 large bedrooms, caramic bath with 2 iinki and vanity, W bath off mudreom, family room with tlr6 place end tlMIng glass deor6 space tor 4th bodroom or hobby room, basomont, gat heat, attached 2V6cer garage, loads of extras, tpaclout lot In axcaltont neighborhood. PHONE: 682-2211 5143 Ciu-Elinbolh Road 6LS___________Open Dally 9-0 CLARK WEST SIDE. TRADE OR SELL. Modern 6bodroom homo. Immaculate condition, full batament. Gl SPECIAL. NOTHING DOWN. At-trietlve suburban home at edge ot Pontiac tltualtd on let, 1M^-113' — Hat 2 btdrooma, hardwood floors, lorga kiKhon, 1V%- SMALL FARM. 65 ACRES. 6-room large shaded lot. Priced at $16,500. . CARRIGAN QUALITY H 0 M B S t INC., 232-4922 OR 429-0415. ced lo soli at $11,5(10, terms. MILO STRUBLE , 332-0473 FE 84025 ' REALTOR , MLS 3601 Highland (MS9) CLARK REAL ESTATE TO BUY, SELL 6 TRADE 1343 W. HURON PE 67011 _ MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE C—8 THE l^NTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1967 Plenty ot time to get your new home befoi.......... starts. 1 room ranch, built In utility room and I'A car garage. SOUTH lAARSUALL Nice large » room. 2 baths, home for family. Or upstairs apartment a payment. Would also mal good J family Income for Investc PERRY PARK Only $11,500 for this 5 room hon wth hardwood floors. Oil heat, city. Call for terms. Claude McGruder Realtor Multiple Listing Service-open 9-; »1 Baldwin Ave, RHODES LAKE-FRONT HOME. Large s clous rooms, scenic location, bedrooms, I'/j baths, gas heat, nice beach. OMy $28,000, $8,000 down, balance land contract. I acres with nice iFroom home, full basement, garage, 32'x80' workshop, landscaped, zoned commercial, ideal for business and pleasure. Only $«,000. INDIANWOOO SHORES NO. 3 — VON MILLER, Near Fisher Body Lovely 8-room aluminum sided home. 3 nice size bedrooms. heat, paved street, IVs-ear gar^... ...........jhe back AARON BAU6HEY REALTOR WEST SIDE 3-BEDROOM home. I mediate possession. This bargain Like a New House? Call us for information on out $ll,88D 3-bedrootn aluminum sided ranch. Terms to suit you. Conventional, Magic, FHA or Gl. VON REALTY GEORGE VONDERHARR, Realtor n the Mall MLS Room 110 682-5802, It busy 682-5800 WEST SIDE INCOME in A-1 repair 12 rooms, baths. New gas fur naCe, new aluminum storms and screens. Very clean with lots of carpet and completely furnished. SCHRAM STARTERS OR RETIREES 4 rooms, lubedroom, full basement, gas heat and 2 fenced lots. home. Select your choice hontesite Albert J. Rhodes, Realtor FE 8-2306 258 W. Walton FE 5-6712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE HALL l-BEDROOM RANCH — Plus 1' garage, carpeted living root Large bedrooms with plent, closet room, tiled bath, fenced back yard. Only $13,950. As lltth as 10 pet down plus costs. Don' wait on this one. ship, 2-car garage. Is local 100^x150' lot and has been in the best of shape by its er. Full price: $11,000 witl $550 down to move in to fled Gl. $550 DOWN On this 4-bedroom off Kennett, full basement, large family-size kitchen, brick fireplace In living ram,^2-car garage, large '** List With SCHRAM And Call The Van I JOSLYN AVE. FE 5-9471 1-BEDROOM BUNGALOW — fireplace In living room, sec dining room, carpeting and drapes stay, partial basement, 2-car ga- ---!, well shaded lot. Only $10 closing costs only to ex-GI. 'X KINZLER reatipn room, to Include car. . end draperies. $13,500. Easy FHA or Gl terms. NORTHSlOE VACANT 3 or 4 bedrooms, 1'A baths nice basement. 2-car garage. 750 on land contract terms or closing costs only to Gl vetei FAMILY ROOM with fireplace In this new large 3-bedroom IVj baths ranch ho— with walk-out basement and r reatlon. Has gleaming oak floe and thermopane windows. Gas h Well located on high scenic oft Clarkston-Orlon Rd. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 1219 Dixie Hwy. 623-0 Across from Packers Store Multiple Listing Service Open 9-8 FE 5-8183 HERRINGTON HILLS Three bedroom brick with fu basement, tile bath, hardwood floors. Basement floors tiled and partly paneled. Gas heat, n— garage and fenced rear lot. you want something nice c us on this one. BRICK Three bedrooms .all on t floor, lust decorated. Hardwt floors, ^Nle bath, gas heat, • SOUTH SIDE Only $7500 for this two bedroom home. Hardwood floors. in kitchen and bath, — ... nace and hot water heater. Easy terms and payments less than rent. Vacant. SUBURBAN rge lot, paved street, t Iroom ranch with carport. It, tile ---- Brown THREE BEDROOMS. 2 fireplace.. 3 full baths, family room, beautifully landscaped and In an er cluslve area. Immediate posse: Sion. $35,000. ATTRACTIVE HOME on beautifi Lotus Lake. Wonderful view fror every ,room. Large paneled Ih Ing room with fireplace. Formi dining room, full basement, re< reatlon room with bar and fin place, well landscaped yard wit patio. Land contract available i $32,000. Les Brown, Realtor 509 Elizabeth take Rd. (Across from the Mall) FE 2-4810 or FE 4-3564 Frushour LUXURY LIVING citing colonial. There is a beautiful family room with fireplace, '" dining room, large kitchen I------------- Plate with bullt-lns and dishwasher), 4 carpr'-" ------ --------- ------- 28J^ , cedar clo'set, WILL BUILD- 3 bedrooms, alum, ranch wll bath, main bath is ceramic ..... kitchen bullt-lns, 6' sliding glass door (ideal for patio arrangement' full basement and large 2,car al tached garage. On your lot tor $16, 500. Win take your house In trad or 10 per cent down. 4-BEDROOM RANCH This home has a full basement, alum., storms, screens, city sewerr and water. Assume the existini mortgage and your payments w" be $88 per mo.. Including tax: and ins., $13,950. JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor *730 Williams Lake Rd. Ml 674-2245 IRWIN NEAR PONTIAC GENERAL: You can purchase this fir . _ . ar homa for only $1l,90IL Offers 6 large rooms. Including IIV room, dining room, kitchen, )oms and bath up. Full ba . New FA gas furnace. John K. Irwin & Sons Realtors 311 West Huron—Since 1 "BUD" 2-FAMILY INCOME . downtown location, 5 rooms ai bath first floor, 3 rooms ai bath upper floor, full basemer gas fired sfeem heat, auto, gi hot water, additional lavatoi and stall shower, 3-car garag.. paved drive. $2,950 down, bal-• once on land contract. Fast r"' BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP . Colonial Hills Sub., excella . cation, 2 nice level lets, tip-top building aHes, sewer and water, grxar — f>rlcsd at MrOW each. NICHOLIE-HUDSON FI 5-1201 ofter 6 p.m. FE 5-0198 FAMILY HOME In excellent repelr. luring 14'x23' carpeted living n with fireplace and bookc— t-in breakfast nook and t porch and full basement eatlon room. Master bedroom Val-U-Way OFF BALDWIN Recently redecorated 3 bf- bungalow. Features large kitchen and dining area with loads cupboard space, gas heat, ah storms and screens, blown-ln sulafion to keep you cool in s mer and warm In winter, located on a large fenced lot, spacious 2 car garage. Only $550 moves GI-$0 DOWN Super sharp 2 bedroom home located on a large 80x200 lot In Orion Twp. IVz ci. oil FA heat, convenient kitchen 9 TIZZY DORRIS CHAI^M WITH ECONOMY 1 delightful 3-bedroom brick frame ranch home By Kate Osann 22x24 attached 1 IT takes SHORT OF CASH? for this spacious 5 room nome is $450, a Gl eligibility, good employment and good credit. Newly decorated Inside and all new kitchen cabinets and counter tops floors, plastered wells, full ment, garage and located ... . nice shaded lot In the Pontiac Northern school district.-------------- a credit to, the neighborhood. _ very , spacious and comfortable rooms down with stairway ' pansion attic tional bedrooms up. Oak floors, plastered walls and full ‘ with gas heat. $13,950 DORRIS *. SON, REALTORS 536 Dixie Hwy. 674-0324 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE KAMPSEN ''IT'S TRADING TIME' DON OLE DUDS ’"hAGStIiOM, Realtor ------T listing SERVICE Wanted CoBtracti-Mti. 60A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. Sat ui botor you daal. WARREN STOUT, Realtor ISO N. Opdyka Rd. FE MM Opan Evai. 'til 8 p.m. LARGE COUNTRY FARM HOME land contract collac.. FLOYD KENT, REALTOR eaw N. Saginaw_________fe 5-6IOS QUICK CASH FOR LAND CON-tracts. Clark «aal Estate. r~ 3-7888, res. FE ^13, Mr, Clark. surrounded with maple, cherry, (uid pine trees. This home Is complete with a 15'x?8' living room, a 15'xl6' dining room end forced air heat, barn and other out-bi" Ings In excellent condition. I 600, $6,800 down. C. PANGUS INC, Realtors 630 M15 Ortonville CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK '. '$5!- “Do you realize our grandmothers wore miniskirts back in the olden days of the Twenties?” HERRINGTON HILLS Dandy 3 bedroom brick ra on nicely landscaped lot. AI. conveniences, full basement, gas heat,' step-saver kitchen, plenty ot cupboards and closets. Move In for only $600. Full price $14,000. R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 13^^ Oakland Ave. Open 9 to 9 LAKE ORION TRI-LEVEL New three bed trMevel home, t Lake __ 51 CHOICE LAKE FRONT AND LAKE privileges. Lots at Jayno Heights, one of the finest areas In Oakland County. Priced from $4,950, we will take your present lot or home in trade. Custom homes by Zuehike Builders. IcCullough Realty 674-2239 ED MCCULLOUGH JR., REALTOR Lots^Acreoge CORNER 40 ACRES IN THUMB I. Paved frontage. Sandusky I. Asking $12,000. UL 2-1095. CLARKSTON 5,6 ACRES, $6,000 OR trade North*n Cabin MA 5-1502. Vacant. Eves. Call Mr. Castell FE 2-7273 Nicholie & Harger Co. TED'S TRADE IN WEEK ANNETT Approx. 5Vi ac—Comm'l 571 ft. frontage on Baldwin, close to 1-75. $45,000, terms. 30 Acres-Close In Ideal site for small home development. only IVa miles off 1-75. High roiling terrain. 130,000, terms. Drayton Plains having 6 rooms and bath. Large family room, utilities in basement. Oversized 2 car plastered garage on lot lOOx-227. Mtg. terms, $2300 dn. Seminole Hills X 10" kitchen, y room. Aluml-I screens. Full 200 down. —" Ides taxes CLARKSTON AREA Is^ setting overlooking Three bedroom brick ri.._,, I that you will love, t'/j (. nic# kitrhi$r| with t, large lot;^ Askfng” TERMS OR TRADE. WATERFRONT thrw hedrMm *hl*e ____ family i______ room, modern kitchen dining re and full 3 bedrooms ana o. floor. Full basemer rage. Mtg. terms, $2400 dn. BE THE FIRST To call on this clean 2 bedrooi home In Waterford Twp. On a nl< quiet street, new schools and shoi^, ping, full price $1t,000. Available WE West Side Brick Home 'In excellent condition. Living room with cathedral type celling, dining room, family room with fireplace, ultra modem kitchen and Vz bath on first floor, 3 large lot. $32,500, terms. ILL TRADE REALTORS 28 E. Huron St. Olflce Open Evminjs & Sunday 1-4 338-0466 Waterford. Close t. _______ shopping, tVi baths, large room, attached garage. TAKE A DIP Lake privileges, an acre large 3 bedroom ranch wit room. Redwood siding, a CLOSE IN FARM - - TRADER TED'S THERE'S NO Ves or NO. It makes good h: sense to TRADE. McCullough realty ,160 Highland Rd. (M59) I..— 674-2238________________W4-2H9 galow situated on t Vt acre par-wlth 20 X 22 garage. Carpeting, Igeretor and stove Included. A small farm priced at $13,500, lard to find item, see It to- EAST SIDE - Gl TERMS fly remodelsd 2 bedroom alum- O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? STOP - LOOK AND - CALL this lake front rancher. Beautiful, brick, three large - living room, m schools. Only $7500. LET YOUR DOLLARS GROW! - Terrific setup Including and bath unit. Also Includes 60x60 store now leased. Giant 200 x T' property zoned commercial. Ideg ly located near Adams and Ai burn. A very fine property nei lots ot Action. Check this one. NEEDS A LITTLE FINISHING - New ofering In Avon Township o l*.7k*o tion (out basement, i sell I trees. Priced Make your appointment NOW. 13-2 SELLERS LOS'S -YOUR GAIN Owner changing jobs has to leav this custom built brick ranch honr In the Lake Angelus area. Take look, you'll think It was built wii Attractive entry foyer, large ___,„.jd living room with marble fireplace. 9'x18' kitchen and dining IB. tvs Ceramic tiled baths with bath off 16x11 matter bedroom, KEEGO AREA _____ Cleon and neat. Large t..... low spacious living room, saiwrata garage. Large front screened porch. Enclosed rear porch, tewer all In. Priced at $15,000 G.l. Terms. 15-20 Priced CLOSE TO THE BUS LINE end truck & Coach p clean 2 b ■ garage an ■nd excellar buy - <5.1 VACANT AND LOOKING FOR ler. 2 Btdroom honte — -------near Flihar Body cl< Khools and ahgpping. Will " " * " G.l. Payments ch-.,.-. Priced at $10,750. Irtvestl-' and sae how you can can't tpend rent receipts. 15-23 LIST WITH O'NEIL REALTY for 3 Good Reasons: we think out sense of Values— Our list of (5ood Prospects— and Our Tireless Efforts -Will Make You Glad You Called. RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3520 Pontiac Lake Road Opan Dally 9 to 9 , Sunday 1 to 4 OR 4-2222 MLS OR 3-2028 STOUTS Best Buys Today KAMPSEN ''IT' TRADING TIME" ■ dining room, beautiful kitchen with white formica cab'"‘-built-ln appliances with cleaning oven, sealed glass dows and screens. Full THINKING OF SELLING OR TRADING HOMES - GET OUR ESTIMATE BEFORE YOU DEAL - Call Hilda Stewar Bob Emiry, Thurman Wll Elaine Smith, Dave Bradley, Lt. Kerr, Leo Kampsen — FOR MLS = 4-0921 "Buzz" BATEMAN level. Walk-out lake level. Beautiful recreation room, 24x24, with fireplace. A beautiful beach. A home for fun-relaxation. $24,-500. Terms. ' At Upper Straits Attractive 2 bedroom home. Large living room. Large paneled porch overlooking lake. Alunainum siding. Gas heat. Beautiful lot. Completely furnished If desired, $13,000, $2,-500 down. Elwood Realty 682-2410 682-0835 MLS FE 4-0921 KEATINGTON ful lake-front and lake-prlvL )ts available. Plan to II- LAKE FRONT LOT ON DUCK ____ s sloping to nice beach on quiet country Price $18,000, epprox. $5,-“ -2004 4-H REAL ESTATE BREWER I Sale Bushdss Property APARTMENT i unit brick, good location In grossing about $4,800 per yeai 000 down on land contract. 187 FT. DIXIE HWY. Zoned commercial 500 ft. deep, close to PontiaCe will sella trade, or bui*'* M-59 NEAR AIRPORT 190 ft. frontage, 310 ft. deep, zoni '■ 2, Includes good 6 room ram use and garage, ideal for mat •mmercial uses. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT tOMMERCIAL son Park Sub, Waterford Twp CORNER LOTS — Elklnfort and Highland Rd. (M-59). Bt Heights Sub. lake privileges. White CALL EDWARD CHEYZ ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES level, excellent perk test. Sultabli for any style home. Large beach and boating privileges. $3,500. By Owner. FE S-0198. Interested in Acreage? :all UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE tor parcels from acr# LOT IN DRAYTON WOODS OAKLAND COUNTY LCANT 25 -,autiful build lake LAWYERS St. 225 ft. deep with property, exc. investm* tunity. $54,600. 689-0610 525 Rochester Rd. Sale HowsehoW 6>pdi GAS OR ELECTRIC STOVE -up. Used Maytag washere fi jfid'iss.tuTr's'Mhrs’ti tli"ADE.‘irD*EPAfcVTJ%Bl WIN AT WALTON. FE 2-6842. •ney (Cl Jeensed Money Lender) ^ LOANS TO FE 2-9206 Is the numbtt to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 9-5 - Friday 9'' HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL W A MONTH BOVS ? ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Cont its of: ___ placa llvtns room outfit with Jplaca living room luite, cocktail table, 2 table lamps and t1) 9'xl2' rug Included, fplece bedroom suite with douWe •da.4k*Mas> full size bad witn mattress and matching iring and 2 vanity dinette set with ^ end table. All for_$399. Your Is good at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. I? E. HURON If WfSi ’• W. PIKE L 0 A NS $25 to $1,000 li sured Payment Plan BAXTER 8, LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. 401 Pontiac Stele Bank Building FE 4-1S38-9 LOANS $25 TO $1,000 1966 175 CC TEMPO TRAIL BIKE, */.«*! CC_or^b^^er - SWAP ELECTRIC DRYER OR AIR conditioner tor bunk beds or wringer wash machine. FE 5-0436. WILL TRADE PLUMBTHG, MfeAt-ing, air conditioning or lawn sprir kllng lob for down' paymenf < ------erfy. 363-4466. JUNE SPECIALS Gas dryer — Hamilton Electric Range ... $24.95 e- ■ rtgidalre Refrigerator $29,95 Frlgldalre — freezer on bottom Crump Electric- 3465 Auburn Ave._Au^rn Heights ING SIZE b'EAUTY-REST MAT-tress, llks new - purchased 3 mos. ago, $75. OR 4-1109 days. OR 3-2345 after 7. KNEEHOLE DESK, HFLO COCK- KENMORE AUTOMATIC V . -good cond. $25. Utility tub v stand. $5. 338-3137. KENMORE ELECTRIC RAI Westinghouse refrigerator, condition, $60. 682-1309. KIRBY REPOSSESSED Excellent condition . . . $150 or take over payments of $16.50 per MODEL IRONRITE IRONER, condition. FE 5-1889. LINOLEUM RUGS. MOST SIZES, " " ■■ Peartpn'- —’*■— ____ .... _____... - Furniture, 210 E. Pike St., FE 4-7881._________ AUT06AATIC WATER r, $150. 363-2175. 9 ROQM HOME ss or Investment, across from S and Arnolds, extrr Ided. $27,900. Green Aci f 3-6262 or MY 3-1544. Soje or Exchange WANT: . .. REAL ESTATE PROB-HAVE: . . . Ability to solve the Tom Bateman, Realtor FE 8-7161 PINE LAKE AREA 100x150' lake privileges building sites, sell individual or to buMd-ert. Terms - by owner. 473-3488. Business Opportunities For detailed informa C. Schuett, 623-0288 oi Me Clothing 4 FORMALS, 2 Fi ......JEZER. WASHER, ________ set, misc. 673-7462. MOVING: MUST SELL ETFFIHSOL table with 6 leaves, table pads. 4 chairs, $75. Bendix dryer, $35. Hoover vacuum, Airway vacuum with attachments, Reglne polisher and scrubber, $20 each. Chemist's scale. $35. 7024 PIckerIna, Hatcher end, P: LITTLE GIRL'S FLOWER G Hr... with hfliifant xklrf end OR 3-6882. SlZE 12 WEDDING GOWN, EX“ SINGER ZIGZAGGER., In wo case, regular or tency sewl Only $31.53 or $4,00 moniniy. 59 ju COT-: onograms, all sewing needs, a aHachments nfeessary. ^Id r MONTH OLD 2 NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC zag sewing machine ~ cab-' - - | _ embroiders, blind Take over payments ot $5.90 per mo. for 9 mos. or $53 cash bol. Guaranteed UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 I. RHODES, REALTOR, 1966 NECCHI ZIg-Zagger tor button holes, hems, monograms, etc.. Pay only $46.52 PLASTIC WALL TILE B8.G Outlet 1075 W. Huron REFRIGERATOR WITH FREEZER top. Auto, defrost. A-1. OR 4-0234 SCRATTHlT5”rEFRIGERAT^^^^^ . . -------- FE 1-6842 LITTLE JOE'S RARE NO CHARGE to you. NO. SO JUST FOR YOU NEW MODEL RANCHER: 3 s, IVj baths, beautiful kitchen, full basement, 1 glass windows with sc ____ garage and gleamIng-whIte carefree aluminum siding. Priced at ' $16,950 plus Inside decorating -'■-ing site. It's ready tor ction inspection NOW! NO. 1 NO. 6 EDGE OF TOWN $600 DOWN: plus C 1 street, close entoyed by tenants large v— ----------" ga^ge __ "’Miring” outS-state. $2^500 --------- corner site with ..Icely landscaped, dertul condition and must — ---------- — rttirf— -■ Warren Stout, Realtor so N. Opdyke Rd. FE S-81 Multiple Listing Service Dally til 8 TIMES and location, t street with all the city -veniences, only $13,950, no mone down to Gl or $500 FHA. Le us show you this fine buy today. GOING ON VACATION? Why not buy this yeer-around lake-front home with sale sand beech and have fun to your heart's delight? This lovely red- ir camping grounds for consider land contract with s stentlel down payment. Call your personal appointment i ret plain It plus h lly V.. ..... — -.................- nut paneling and parquet flooring, sunken living room with brick fireplace, IVS-car attached garage, paved drive, blaC' street and community . makes this first time oil homa a terrific buy at only 900 with an opportunity to WHEN Yt "JOIN T £ AAARCH TO TIMES" Times Realty - ......, din- ing room plus kitchen and 2 car garage. If you want to add en* ioyment to everyday living — see this. $26x900. Terms. C. PANGUS INC., Realtors 630 MIS Ortonville CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815 -------------A WEEK PONTIAC, CLARKSTON, WOLVER-Ine Lake areas. Lots, $995, $10 mo. Fish, swim, boat. Priv. beaches. 15 min. Pontiac. Open Sunday. Bloch Bros. 623-1333, FE 4-4509. THIS IS A PERFECT WAY TO GET away from It all In this completely furnished cabin on 3 nicely wooded lots, reas. Immediate possesion, with terms or cash. 172' Inner Drive, Perry Lk. Ortinville ^27-34(B. TWO LAKE LOTS ON PONTIAC All reasonable offers considered. privileges. Ground-level n, attached garage. .. •;ounfry Priced UNION LAKE FRONT 3 bedrooms, lull basement, 3-car garage, large glassed-in porch, fine beach. $24,500. Terms. FLATTLEY REALTY 620 Commerce Rd.______363-6981 family lot and family room, * "Happy He plenty of va purchase! _____... $19,500 with S2AI00 down plus costs. Northern Property 51-A CHOICE LAKE FRONT LOTS ON beautiful Negaunf ' ' Claire. 2rlh of Rochester I vp. VS mile fron' r Rd., excallant manf. Priced to sen i I acre. This won't last. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE 2641 S. Lapeer Rd. Lake Orion 391~2000 23 X 147 LOT, ALL CASH OF-fers will be consIdarM. r 363-9551.________ BEAUTIFUL TOWifSiNb 6aNAL lot, $1600 down, 674-2470 be- COMM^RCIAL LOT — IIT C ■ y.. 300' deep, also resid 123'X130'. EM 3-9590. DRY CLEANERS Warden Rec^ltyi 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac 31' ' 22 seres, facing stale tend, to- — vate peaceful for recreation or .prP — ----------ul living, an ly fantastic view, $13,000. C. PANGUS INC, Reaftors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 615 Ortonville ----. COLLECT......... HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty LAKE AREA GROCERY Growing business with S.D.M. license. Everything here to make money. Living quarters at rear now rented at $25 per week. Owner leaving tor Florida. Everything goes. Real estate and fixtures, $2500 down plus approxl- priced right at only $3500 v ird. Hard find w Warren Stout, Realtor iO N, Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8165 Dally til 8 Everett Cummings, Realtor 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3208________________363-7181 iSTOR WITH 85400 BUILDING ^ ’. 20 per cent re- '. OR 4-1581 before SUBURBAN LIVING AT ITS BEST ve like you'd like to live In country with lots of trees 0 quaint, historic cIari»ton, mTs end 1-75. I- and 2-acre ' ' restricted homeslles. See You'll love the area, the neighbors and lust everMhIng r*-- * Alien-Woods Estates. 1-acre from $3,150. 2 acres from $1 Easy terms. Gracious, It's clous out herel PARTRIDGE REALTORS 1050 W. HURON, FE 4-3581 OPEN WEEKNIGHTS 'TIL 9: berry I $5950. I STREAM. Blacktop road WANTED: Wa art In dire need ol building Iota If you have a lot foi tale call — VON REALTY GEORGE VONDERHARR .Realtor WATERFORD HILL MAI Beautiful views. All types of tacturs possible on thast — front, canal front, golf vltw and Inside lots. Prl\^ beach. Pricat start at $4,2*0, 20 per cent down. Farm Real BttoM - Daan Raalty Co. Coldwalar, Michigan. Dale A. Dean Farm Broker and Auctioneer. Wrlta or call S17-27*-2377-dayt or 117 278-6127-nlghts._____________ ;ally mm suttablt tool shad. Other *51,000. C. A. WEBSTER, REALTOR 72-2291 42>-2S1i CALL 335-92*4 RICHMAN BROS. SEWING "QUALITY-VALUE-SERVICE I WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PaV 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $277 $3.50 per week LITTLE JOE'S Bargain House I Baldwin at Waltons FE 2-6S43 Acres ol Free ParklM • 'til 9; Sat. 'tH-4 EZ Terms ■TtOVE, $45; REFRIGERATOR — "jdroom set. UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS, DINING: room set — table, chairs. FE 2-9719. 1 _ M A rTHING GOLD PRINT Italian Provincial cheli " " ' PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" Attention Car-Wash Investors—Compare the Field The sweetness ol a "low price tag" toon disappears when "low price" designs, resulting In Ir—'-— capacity, starts brlngl the bitterness ot high ence cost. Therefore . pare carefully before „, the many quality features of Au-to-Terla, and thus assure low operating expenses for yourself and lasting satisfaction f o r your customers. Call or write to day for complete automatic cai wash Information. "Sink Your Anchor At This Dock" work and enjoy doing It, with 1h« money-making boat sales in tht "Land 0 Lakes." Carries major boat franchises and has a 40 per cent mark-up. 30x60' block bldg, sits on a 200x422' lot that could be also used es trailer camper sales. 75x45' anchor fenced back yard. ........ ' lust '$io^000”down. ’You'li haw smooth sailing with this onel No. 14-3596-GB. Party Time Party Store Everyone knows what a fantastic ---------fh^o ■ n by absentee o» In 3 yrs. time. Is still increasing e nd If II was run bv _____ __________________probably Increase 50 par cant. 1946 gross sales ware over $100,000. The best Is yet ■ ---- ----- ^ Rooms Furniture BRAND NEW $288 $2.50 Weekly PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 E. Pike FE 4-7ISI Between Paddock---- Open------- ■- bargali dotted otted line and you'll go :ags to Riches. No. 14^1-i •AltTRIDGE REAL ESTAT ..._ ESTATE n St. 334-3511 nites 'f* ” SPORTING EQUIPMENT STORE -One of the largest In the Thumb area. Shows good profit, $2T “* down will puf you In busir PIFER REALTY. Phons area 644-3953. Sale LanJ Coiitracte t 1 TO SO LAND CONTRACTS Urgantly ntadod. Sot us bofoi WA^EN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. opdyka Rd. FE *414* Opan Eves. *WI * p.m. ACTION Broker, 3792 Elizabeth Lm__ LAWD CONTRAtt 'Foft "sale - r. Hackatt - EM 347IH. Wantad CoiilraeMIt^ 60-A OR 3-138*. > LAND COMtRAibti. SIMALL ounts. Earl Oarrels. MA, 4-5400. $49; dinette, I SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC ZIg zeg sewing machine — In modern walnut cabinet — makes designs, appliques. buttonholes, etc. Rtpossesssd. Pay off. $54 CASH OR $6 PER MO. PAYMENTS Guaranteed UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 save^'money Have your old furniture custom reuaholsforad. Hundr^ of fabrics and colort. Fra# ast. FE 2-4$74. Fraytrt._________________ UPRIGHT FREEZER. WASHER, (. Pika Stors Only :e offer. 36}97 EASY TERMS CARRIAGE HOUSE ANTIQUES, 9274 4-PIECE BEDROOM SET, (brand ntw) 90 S2.S0 weakly PEARSON'S FURNITURE $3.89 Floor Shop-2255 Elizabeth Lake "Across From the Moll" 20" GAS RANGE, $50 Hi-Fi, TV & Radio* A-1 COMPLETE HOUSEFUL $295 $3.25 week. Call Mr. Adams FE ■ 3904, WORLD WIDE (next *- ■ ■■Mart).______ BRAND-NEW END AND CbFFtl tebles, $5.05 aa. Little Jos's, FE 2-6842. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE sale, BRAND NEW. Largs and small size (round, drop-leaf, rac-tangular) tables In 3, 5- and 7pc sals. $24.95 up. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 E. Pika______________FE 4-7181 complete, $48.50 and u Furniture, 210 E. Pike.______ CHEST dF DRAWERS (NEW) $10.95 up Maple, walnut and whila PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 E. Pike_______FE 4-WBl CHROME DINETTE SETS, ASSEM- ble yourself, ---- ' •* Me, $69.95 \ chair sets. N mica I I 1967 d 393 Orchard Leke, F CLEAN, RECONDITIONED APPLI- DINETTE SET, $25, GAS APT.^SlJ ilove, $25 maple double bed " vacuum cleaner, $14 363-0383. —«... .ssZT psafonfoiK’" DINETTE SET, 40" ROUND TA- 4 upholite Ic de-huni ELECTRIC STOVE, EXCELLENT ELECTRIC STOVE, REFRIOER^ *— -‘-hen table and chain, all or will lell laoarata. 623- dond. $20. 482-2494. IS oood at^yman^ Fo^ Saie Mitceilaneaus 67 BERBER CHAIR, GOOD CONDI-tlon. Bob's Barber Shop, 7449 Highland Rd. Open Tucs. thru Siat. A ALUMINUM-VINYL SIDING vnings, storm windows. For A lallty guarsntsad job. Call Joa Illey "Tht Old Reliable Plonaer" I money down. OL 1-4423 2 AIR pNDITIONERS. $50 EACH~ - reel power mowers. 875 sa. FLAVOR SODA DISPENSER. Used Lumber, r.............. Undercoeting pi FT. BOX TRAILER WITH ninged tailgate and ramp. 2 24" Jacobsen reel mowers, will tell ss unit or separetely. Call Ml 6-7193. ’ CAST IRON SEWER PIPE, 99 cents per foot. No lead required, r. A Thompson. 7005 M59 W. TRAILER, TAnDEM HORSE c. condition. Ml 7-1744. I’4' LINOLEUM RUGS 13.95 EACH Stic Wall tile Ic ee. ling tile — wall paneling, cheap. G Tile. FE 44957. 107* W. Huron 12' TRAILER, SIDES LET' DOWN, heavy duty Singer chain stitch 2 Mamin cutting knives, stand an^ extras. •• Call aarl| morning or 541754._____________________ 4" PORTABLE TV, FM RAblO, ' REEL TYPE vlth two 20" g ea8.,OR 32293. ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN FE S-7471 MOTOh, TkAILErt, To gauM dou 343-WB4, bl CAFETERIA TABLI SUPPLY 500 S. Blvd. E. cTrpTtT TSfigHTf^MAKi mem a oeauTiiul sight with Blue Lustra. Rent electric thampooar, Hudson's Hdwa. 41 E. Walton. SOI MMtaewa-ta^ MAlffo *^1 COINS BOUGHT AND SOLD. traezar space, S25. Apt. i— gas stove, S5. Studio couch, tio. Small tablat, magazlna racks. F|E tread. Reas. Acme Step Co., 482- THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 20. 1067 C-fl 67 For Solo Mlicollaiiooui DEEP WELL JET PUMP, bnt cheap7~33i- BEAUTIFUL WALNUT PIANO. t125 EM MOW_______ , ' CLARINET, tIiS OR BEST OFFER. Mirunlen L»IW Rd._______ DRAFTING BOARDS AND TABLES, t' and 7*. Forbar Draytop. OR M787._______ emersoiTremote control poHabla TV. winchastar 3IK30 daai "la, lavar action. 335-3066. S44.95. G. A. Tbompion, 7 LIKE NEW KIMBALL SPINET UPRIGHT PIANOS TO SELL - For The Finest In Top-Quality Merchandise Shop At Montgomery Ward Pontiac Mall USED PIANOS AND ORGANS Organs from ..... Pianos from.......... GRINNELL'S (Downtown Store) 27 S. Saginaw St. JUNE , , .......Oakland It Dr., Draylon eft Walton. ____ 3 ipeakert, S 1200 watt AC al _____ ...w, 1130. Arlent tui tiller, Vh h.p. with raversa, iiKe new, S130. Many othar I------- movlha out ot itate. 625-300>. HANNAH'S HUSBAND HECTOR hatet hard work to ha cleans the rugt with Blue Lustre. Rent electric thampooar SI. Brownies Hdwe. HC gas. Consumers •PPr«*^'..*^ value, S39.95 and Uf.95. Marred. Also electric and bottle, heaters. These are terrific values In dua'ljr heaters. Michigan f luorotc«"t, 393 Orchard Lake. FE 4-0^.—IS. KIRBY REBUILT with attachments . . . t75. Fully Guaranteed. Kirby Service 8. Supply Co. 2417 Dixie Hwy. _____ 074-2234 lavatories C*bMPLETE value S14.»5 altr ' shower stalls. Michigan ■d Lk., FE 4 Pets—Huntlng Dogs I WANT TO SELL YOUR > call Mr, Buyer at GRI" S Pontiac Malt. 6S2-D4I2. "'urru"® as; Smith Moving 10 S. OLD ENGLISH SHEEP 60G' PUP- osED lqWrey spinet organ . A REAL BUY - SAVE $» USED cable console PIANO. BARGAIN — $445 SMILEY BROS. MU^IC I1» N, SAGINAW FE 4-4721 WURLITZER ANO ^ THOMAS ORGANS AND PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS AND INSTRUMENTS JACK HAGAN MUSIC Ike Rd. 332-OSt Rd. 343-3SI SCOTTiE PUPPidS 6 WiEEKS OLD, $192 Cooley L Music Lessens SCHNAUZER MINIATURE PUPS, Reg. Health, Guaranteed. FE 2-1590 SHIRLEY'S KITTENS, STUD SERV Office Equipment INVENTORY CONTROL SYSTEM, $50. H. A H. Auto Sale) — 3-5200._______________ Sporting Goods . HurotV-FE 4-7651 ______ terrific Fluorescent, E 4-0442.-1.______ LIKE NEW, SMITH CORONA ELIc-—: Cornet Typewriter, $75. 334- Sand-Gravel-Oirt MOWERS USED, i. Taylor's Lawn Mower Service. 'oil FURANCES, fair CONDITION suitable *--------------* OUTDOOR furniture SALES -The old fashioned picnic table and lawn ewlng, 1441 N. Perry. FE 8-04$$ or FE 5-9170.___________ FiCNIC TABTES 5 SIZES, LAWN swings, outdoor ornaments, gifts, gags and lokes. Liberal Bills Out-^st. 3245 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9474. PLASTIC WATER PIPE, M;45 per hundred, 1'', $5.41. IV, ', $0.^, IVj", $10.01. G. a. Thompson. heater, $49.95 $59.95 - , $19.9 BLACK DIRT, TOP SOIL, SAND, ravel and fill dirt, del. FE 1485._____________^1_______ CALL BOB MARTIN AND SON FOR ...... Jdth trim, $39.95j 2bowl sink. $2.95) lavs., $2.95; tubs, $20 and up. Pipe cut and threadrt. SAVE PLUMBING CO., $41 Baldwin. FE 4-1514. ....... rEFRlGElR'A T 0 RTfCmRIC range, Frlgldalre ' * dinette, roll-a-way bed. :‘T- REPOSSESSED Riding Lawnmower Also 4 new ones. $1,25 PER WEEK Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr, West Pontiac _ RAiLRMirrVES, Niw and Used Antique fence rails, split round. OR 3-1972.___________ rUMliurG E^si^^ Frankman, Draylon. June 9:30 -4j ...- . -J) desks, files, typewriters, adding machines drafting tables, etc. Forbes, ■ Dixie, Drayton, or* „..~...g sprinkler, all ya tools, misc. household furnitui Ml 4-7109. _______________________ Sterling silver"^ damask Rosa pattern - 2 place settings and assorted pieces. Make far. 343-5248.______________ GAMBLERS ALLOWED Even though you won't need your gambling abilities, all you'll need Is lust a look at the Apache campers. TRY YOUR LUCK You can't lose, no matter .. of the 4 you choose. Each Apache has plenty ot space, both storage and head room. Special qualities are built In every camper. S as: Crank UP tops, full sen 3 burner stoves and sinks. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 4507 Dixie Hwy. A-1 TESTED TOP SOIL . Cell FE 5-5372. sonable, stud service. FEB POODLE-POINTER PUPS, 5 W POODLE BEAUTY SALON ^Pet'SupidlDs^iimtiT’orlffw __ -. AKC, mete i - mos. 451-4517. RECISTEktED APlie p^les—toy F CARNIVAL d luggege ca tS MIddlebelt R WPERf pop-top I COACHMAN 14' SLEEPS Ilf contained, leeks and sp... e end wheel, $1,250. MY 3-2734. AIRSTREAM LIGHTWI TRAVEL TRAILEf Since 1932. Guarant ‘ See them and get tion at Warner Tral W. Huron (Plan to loin one oi Wally Byam's exciting carevens). APACHE CAMP TRAILERS Save over $300 on new 1944 crtti-up models. Reg. $1495. F.O.B. at $1195 Including 2 gas tanfis mounted nn tongue. New 1944 add-a-room, $495. ‘*2iodel *wit* r'* '"wis.'aii tht .~- on display at an .... .-I camplnirequIpm«rt7open^ dally till 7 P.M., Saturday $• Sundays till 5 P.M. Apache Factory Hometown Dealer. ' COLLER. 1 mile east of $15 each, FE 5-8393. e. Deg, $25. OR 44)842. CAMPING Private lake, safe sandy beach, 14 flush toilets, hot and cold " fishing. Half mile south McFMly Rei J clipping. FE 4-4438. Pet Supplies-Servfee 79-A AQUARIUM - KLGALLON STAIN-less steel cover with lights, motor, filter, 2 heaters, thermometer — Plants and tropical fish, $25 — EVERY FRIDAY . EVERY SATURDAY EVERY SUNDAY Sportir-----"• rting Goo or Prlies es Every ^Auc?lu. — Trade, Retail 7-day BBB AUCTION 089 Dixie Hwy.______ C SATURDAY, JUNE 24 - STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M59) FE 2-4928 n Bly Lake Rd., Davisburg in Thursday vice Auctioneer Phone 435-941 A large pony and equipment auction located 4 ml. south ot Lapeer on M24 to Sutton Rd., then 1 ml. west to 1573 Sutton Rd. Consisting ot 40 head of assorted ponies Include P.O.A.'s, Walshs and lands. 4 register -■ “ “ • with foals by s P.O.A. stallions, Jenny donkeys w Pony saddles, harnesses, 20 assort- I registered yokes, sleigh I tooth drag pl'“ Natlonal BanI ...... _ . Lapeer, Oryden Branch, Clerk. Y-B Rancho. Ernest Young, Prop. Lapeer, 444-4780. Bud HickmoB, General A ------------- - • 428-2159. A BLACK DIRT FOR SALE , gravel, del. FE 4-8944, I THURSDAY, JUNE 22 AT 12 NOON. Nice clean household auction. Located 2 ml. west of Oxford on Seymour Lake Rd. to Granger Rd.) then 'A ml. north to 241 Grangei Rd. A nice 8-plece walnut dininc room suite with china cabinet. 3 piece Rosewood bedroom suite complete. Admiral combination TV, radio and record player. Solid blond maple dinette set w'“- ‘ chairs. Yellow davenport — matching rose chair. Oak china cabinet with oval glass, Combl-ation oval secretary and bookcase. r Grey, Prop, and Bud Hlc-General auctioneer. Oxford HILLVIEW PEAT FARM, BLACK dirt, topsoil and delivered. 493-4409. JOHN COPEMAN SAND-GRAVEL-black dirt, end loading. Bulldozing. FE 5-1081.__ landscapers - WE NOW HAVE Plonts-Trees-Shrubs ______8T-A BEAUTIFUL LARGE PEON IE bushes, $3.95. (Seraniums, 48 cents, Tomatoe flats, 8 doi., $1.79. Produce Market. 2250 Dixie Hwy. Vi> N. of Telegraph. PONTIAL LAKE BUILDERS SUP-ply. Sand, gravel, fill dirt. OR ■■-15'' MAJOR TREE SERVICE. FREE ES- RENTAL, DOZERS, END LOADERS, SCREENED TOP SOIL, WHOLE-sale and retail, loading everyday. 425-2175, or 425-5154._____________ American Stone Produ J;2m_____________ jPets-Hunting Dogs 1-A DACHSHUND, PUPS, AKC, ESTELHEIM KENNELS, 391-1889. Arabian, welsh, POA at stud, f---- k POODLE CLIPPING. $3up. : MINIATURE ) s old. 334-2753. 4'x8'x4S" particle I------ 4'x8xH" particle boar 1025 Oakland ird, $3.75 ard, $4.95 — FE 4-4595 THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your needs Clothing, Furniture, Appliances VERY'GOOD railroad TIES, will deliver, call after 4. UL 2-1492. adorable baby WANTED TO BUY ded glass lamps or leaded glass IP shades. FE 4-9094. WASHED WIPING RAGS low as 19 cents lb. 25 lb. bl d. Supply "discoun? pTicesT” Forbes" Printing and Office Supplies, Hwy^^R^S^MT. We6ding~ gold, 343-7078. AIRDALE, female, AKC, PA-all shots, 9 months. FE «L_______________________ ’UPPIES — ALL PETS, FISH AKC DAD'S FIRST CHOlcfT AKC dachshund PUPPIES. 6R 14' VAN TRAILERS, CAN BE USED on the toad or ideal for storim. Blvd. Supply 333-7081 500 S. Blvd. AIR COMPRESSORS, LUBRICATWN equipment, hy*au Ic iKks, stwr-cleaners, etc. Pontiac Motor Part 1014 Mt. Clemens St. FE 2-0104. -------fork lift truck AKC registered CHIHUAHUA puppies, 8 wks. old, 338-9418, AKC POODLE PUPPIES, DARWIN 8 PIECE DRUM SET, WHITEHALL. ALTO SAXOPHONE, GOOD COND $350 when new, $85 or best offer. BARITONE UKKS. $21 AND i ^''.Wgci^RKORGANS mo^s*"music $4 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 2-0547 Across from Tal-Huron tuned', made of Rosewood - -ternut, fancy carved front. $200. FE 4-3798. TaKC mini DACHSHUND PUPS $50 terms. JAHEIM'S FE 8-2538. AKC beagle pups. WORMED. Shots $35. Stud service. 42B3015. "purebred toy SHELTIE PUP-ples, sacrifice. 492-1901._______ Ffor com_p l e t e poodle ?7”in5. AKC ST. BERNARD PUPS. OL 1-8490. C TOY COLLIE PUPS '/TPRICE AKC MINIAtURE SCHNAUZER male, $75. 343-3035._______1_ kC TOY WHITE MALE POODLE, 11 weeks, exc. coat and disposition - OL 1-1300. KC DACHSHUND, FEMALE, months. $25. OR 3-0432.______ AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPS, 4 WKS. old. FE 5-9052.______________ AKC POODLE. BLACK FEMALE, 4 months, $50. 474-2537._____ AkC REGISTERE6~B0XER PUP; pies. Boxer stud----" ' 8. FE 4-2747 CENTURY YELLOWSTONE WHEEL CAMPER t our complete and beautiful display of travel trailers and ti campers. A size and price to every budget. TRAILER ACCESSORIES By Dick Turner Boots - Aewitorhs 97 BOAT trailer. GOOD CONDITION with hitch $100. FE 4-2348.___ BOAT TRAILER WILL CARRY UP Harrington Has Everything! Just In! state Approved Swim Markers Dealer Distributor for LARSON Boats Specializing in Grumman Canoes and Fishing Boats Aluminum and Wood Docks Do it yourself—easy to install. We will show you how. HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS (Your Evinrude Dealerl 1899 S. Telegraph___FE 2-8033 CHRIS CRAFT, 17* UTILITY IN-'-—1, tandem I ‘ UL 2-1210. R SALE. 14' ___________4934____________ FOR SALE: BOAT, MOTOR, TRAIL-er and access. Phone FE 5-7187. JLASSPAR - STEURY - MIRflO Craft - Grumman - Kayot - Ev rude- Pamco. DAWSON'S SAL Wanted Cert» Trucks 101 HELP! 300 sharp Cad ds and BuIcks rket. Top dollar MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ave. FE 5-5900 ______ PE 8-8825 “It’s Beany Poskins! He wanted to know if I can come over and show his Dad my report card — before Beany shows his!” .. Boat Sale, 28928 C Farmington. 4 blocks e — . GR 4-7320. OAKLAND CAMPER Open for your Inspection KARIBOU KAMPER Tour-A-ifome —Sleeps 6 Only $895 Also aluminum covers 15-0434 ____Baldwin at Colgate Motorcycles 1945 DUCAT! SCRAMBLER 250CC, best offer over $400, A-1 dondltion. 462-0459._________________________ 1945 HONDA 140CC CB TWIN CARBS. 10x50 ANDERSON, 8-1430 after PICKUP TRUCK CAMPERS FATHER'S DAY-Speclals, On Dl Rey, Wildwood, Weak-N-Der, Derby S> Tour-A-Home cabovar pickup campars. Over 20 different models on display to choose from. New $-Ft. cab high chan- 1945 Apache pickup c 1944 PONTIAC CHIEF. HyXSO-. PRI vale lot. 4 min. from GMC. FE 4-2803. peting, washer. Must m $SS” O 1945 DETROITER, x40, assume coni.-.. and weekends, 334-3877. PICKUP COVERS, $245 UP. Va.“cAM?ER 'mFG*. C(?.^' 1180 Auburn P" PICKUP CAMPERS 4'x4' alamers TRAILERS REESE AND DRAW-TITE HITCHES Sold and Installed HOWLAND SALES AND REN'MLS ^Id »nlJns*?l!*|^ ___________ or' >1454 PICKUP SLEEPERS AND COVERS stronger REES. UP TO 4' $2, OVER 4' $5. We've got them, you dig them, Arcadia Hills Golf Club 4 miles. E. of Lapeer, 4 miles W. of C»y. 3801 Haines Rd. asuppiicB SCHOOL BUS-CAMPER, SLEEPS four. 2878 Corinthia, Rochester 852-5153.____________________ TENT TRAILER WITH BUILT IN dressing tent, 588-1497.______ Travel With Quality Line Travel Trailers BOLES-AE RO-TRAVELMASTE R FROLIC-SKAMPER SALES-SERVICE-RENTALS Complete I.T.S. parts center. 3 BAY GELDING DOUBLE D RIDING STABLE HAS all new stock. Gentle end spirited, no waiting. Also horses (or sale. TRAVEL TRAILERS Your dealer for -LAYTON, CORSAIR ROBINHOOD, TALLY HO 20 new and usad tallers In stock NEW SERVICE DEPT. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie Hwy._________425-4400 NEW BALD MT. RIDING STABLE — 4 ml. north of Pontiac on M24. Special rates weekdays. $1.50. Also horses boarded and sold. 391-1704. PONY, CART, I PALOMINO STUD SERVICE. $35. SELL OR TRADE FOR BfefeF CAT-tle. 1 Morgan gelding, seddl-bridle, rides and drives; 1 Q type mere with 2 wk. old c yr. old Filly. 425-1553. "_ SHETLAND PONY COLTS, $5 Shetland pony mares, $100 ui 20 ACRES ALFALFA MIX HAY. 4290 Coolay Lake, Rd._ BALED HAY. PICK UP, 0»7 CUSTOM BALING BEAUTIFUL pups, 8 wk bloodline, ( Female parakeets 0 L E N S VERSA - AAATIC TWO wheel tractor. Complete with er — roller and enow t $275. ME 4-9202 - Holly.___________ CLARK'S TRACTORS AND MA-chinery. 100 used tractors, loaders, dozers, backhoes and trucks. Between Holly and Fenton. MA 9-9374. ____________________ GASOLINE TANK WITH STAN6. 4140 F 42341450 PIONEER CAMPER SALES BARTH TRAILERS 8, CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS (8"-2r'-35" covers) • '•'1LI____ FE 2-3989 ALSO OVERLAND S. COLEMAN :' CHAMPION HOME. V —10 for my eoultv or e. 332-5413. 1942 DETROITER, $2,500 DETROITER-KROPF Vacation Homes h large expanding b« 1944 NORTON ATLAS, 750CC, $900. and large exi only $»95.0 In Michigan. >5.00.. Fre^ bargain livery ft. an< prices. )W 10, 12, 20 and 24 ft. wid) Yes we deliver and set up. BOB HUTCHINSON, INC.' 4301 Dixie Hwy. (U.S. 10) Drayton Plains OR 3-1) 1944, 305 YAMAHA INCLUDING ' —lets and lackef, all good eoi n. 482-4154._______________ 1947 BSA STARFIRE. 250cc. 400 ---). MU 9-29S4._____________ 1947 TRIUMPH 200 CC MOUNTAIN Cub, $425. OA 8-1974. MARLETTES 50'-43' long, 12' to 20' wide. Early American, Traditional r- **“*— Space available In 4 Star . ... rxtra erhage. Also see the famous light weight Winnebago Trailer. OXFORD TRAILER SALES OPEN 9-8, CLOSED SUNDAYS mile south of Lake Orion on M24 MCDONALD MOBILE HOMES Sea our complete line of 12' wides. 2 or 3 bedrooms as low as $4,495. Featuring Travelo, Schult and Vindale. New quality units arriving dally. Models on display *• new Cranberry Lake Mobile - ^!|f.i’'*"9;Wh7aS“gJ!*’'''-* miles west of Williams Lake I— EXCELLENT i„ Sunday H Just like new, high and comfo low In cost. Apache Chief with canopy only $: 1944 Mesa 4 sleeper, $995 National — 4 sleeper, $325 1944 Trade-Winds down to $495 EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 4507 Dixie 425-1711 OPEN HOUSE AT WATERFORD MOBILE HOMES Carrying Deluxe Models only.- 1 Demo at giant saving. Special prices during open house. Star*'— Thurs., June 15. WATERFORD MOBILE HOMES 4333 Highland Rd. *.......Pontiac Airport SOMETHING NEW OLD ENGLISH DECOR . , see our complete line of 12' in 5 decors. We have only ixIT*, brand new. for $4895. os at a giant savings. We will be knowingly undersold. Free ary up to 300 miles. Frde ___p with available parking. PARKWOOD HOLLYPAR Open 9-9 7 days a wei MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie Hwy._________338-0772 Rent Wag-N-Master Tent Camper—8 Sleeper as low as $55 weekly Cliff Dreyer's Holly Travel Coach Inc. tiWs on even groui not quite flat. There are many options you order such as bullt-ln sink, range, heater. Ice box and a dinette that converts Into an extra be" For lust the lew minutes » li to set the Mesa up, you'll li years of enloyment. 425-1711 Mon.-FrI. sat 8-5 DUO FIBERGLASS BOATS SILVERLINE-I-Os Pontoons-Canoes-Prams-Sallboats Aluminum fishing boats Complete line of fishing tackle Scuba diving equipment Little League baseball supplies Hunting supplies and general sports Many fine used complete outfits boat.motor and trailer at 10 P cant down. All guaranteed. New and Used Traefcs 103 ‘TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS 952 W. Huron St. E 4-7371 FE 4-1797 GRIMALDI JEEP 900 OAKLAND FE 5-9421 >45 cHavv "FLedTsibtj! mtKUp W _ ton, long tex, ^ewL coition. We would like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUIGK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 Junk Cars-Trucks 1944 Chevy ton 1945 Chevy M ton 1944 Chevy Vk ton 1943 Chevy 88 ton 4 speed 1943 Chevy Vk ton V-8 1944 Ford Vj ton '945 Ford ’/!> ton 945 GMC 'A ton Mansfielcd Auto Sales AUTOBAHN MOTORS Pickup Clearance Sale 1945 CHEVY fleetside . 1944 CHEVY fleetside .. 1943 CHEVY fleetside . 1943 CHEVY fleetside . 1959 FORD fleetside . BRASS, COPPER, RADIATORS", generators, starters. FE 5-4438. BRASS; .RADIATORS; < CARS AND TRUCKS, FREE Used Auto-Truck Parts 102 II 473-6879 after 5:30. 145 YAMAHA 80, DUAL SPROCKE 2400 miles, adult owned. Ilk cond. $250. $250. 334-5497. CONVERT YOUR ENGINE ... performance. Call us for Informa-tlon. All makes. Tarms. 537-1117. FORD 35^390 ENGINE AND OTH-ers. 327 Chevy Bell housing, -‘* mlsc. tripowers-slleks. Hfctf Sales, OR 3-5200. _____________ ^b. Contact Gary T. Sprinpr, 58L >44 HONDA SUPER 90, BLUE complete with helmet. ~— EM3-M43. MERCURY 20H, WITH QUICKSIL-t, after 4 p.m. 493-5384. >44 NORTON MOTORCYCLE. 750 CC. 3300 ml. Sell or trade ' -500-0450CC Scrambler of equal I TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE 450 r. some extr-“ — ' 0. OR 3-5742. Glestron, MFG boats, - boats. Riviera cruiser .pontoons, complete service of outboards — Mercury outboards 3.9 to 110 B.-and Merc-Crulser authorized dei er. Cypress Gardens skis (i ‘Grumman canoes dealer M*"H?l?.”MeraInr Outboard $149.95. Tradel Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 5210 Holly Rd. , ME 4-4771 Dally and Sundays 1947 YAMAHA 100, $3 ROYAL ENFIELD BULTACO SALES-SERVICE-ACCESSORIES COMPETION CYCLES 343-9312_____7194 Cooley Lk. R< HONDA, 1944, CB-140, SHARPS (SP clal chrome, paint). New battery, low mile., great shape. Maks----------- offer. 444-8032._________________ y personnel. 444-8872. MOTORCYCLE REPAIRS, ALL makes. Tune-ups to complete " build. We specialize In drag i scramble bikes. New shop — waiting. 988 Baldwin, Pontiac. ! SALE - SALEl All used motorcycles marked down Buy now and save. Easy terms. ANDERSON SALES B SERVICE 445 s. Telegraph FE 3-7102 SUZUKI’S NEWEST MODEL "200 CC Invader." 12-month or 12,000-mlle warranty. Other models 50CC-250CC. Rupp Mlni-BIkes as low as $139.95. Helmets, iackets, complete line of cycle accessories. See them "W at DAWSON SALES AT TIPSI-' LAKE. ““ - ■" I. Right WINDSORS I models, J. C. Talkington Mo-e Homes, 2258 8. Telegraph .— —-acle Mile. 338-! YAMAHAS ALL MODELS AVAILABLE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY K. & W. CYCLE SALES 8. SERVICE free pickup on all malor repair Town & Country Mobile Homes Presents 1968 HOME CRAFT For the Budget Minded, k 12'x4(r mobile home at ha amazingly «low price of $4895 Bicycles Beats — Accatsui^es 97 H.p. MERCURY OUTBOARD ...jtor, $75. FE 5-7558._____ 12' BOAT AND COVER, 30 HORSk- 14' Boat, V bottom, $159.50. MONICATTI BOATS AND MOTORS kuburn (A859) 731-0020 BOATS. $108. Old. AKC, champion .... e?S''Kf^ ________FE 5-3445.______ BEAUTIFUL IRISH (RED) puppies, these arr hunting dogs, love ---- make wonderful family pets, FE 8-9488._________________________ bostoiTterrier stud service ------ Most be reg. black ar"< ---- 10 lbs. EM 2-7443. Instinctively WEEKS, I, 825. Also CHAMPION SIRED, STANDARD, .....— ^)pplejL^ 2135 Crooks BRITTANY PUPS, ---->ad, no paper dogs. 334-7554. JOHN DEERE AND NEW IDEA ■ ---- Your Homellta e*-- DAVIS MACHINI FREE klTTENS TO GOOD HOMI _________ 343-5557 _______________ free TO GOOD HOME, 10 WEEK "'d part Beagle duddi 1-0584, between GALLAGHER'S JUNE Piano and Organ Inventory Sale Just arrived brand new spinet and console pianos from $39 Open Eves. 9-9 p.m. Sat. FREE—1 loves c ___________ FREE KITTENS TO home. 444 Nichols Dr. GERMAN SHEPHERDS. Watchdog. 2 7-r" —* With children, i UK.2-5462. SPECIAL BRAND NEW MCCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS, MODEL NO. MAC ' WITH 15" BAR AND CHAIN. ONLY $99.95 KING BROS. F/S CREIS CAMPER, USED times, $1295. FE 4-2397.______ 14' SHASTA. LIKE NEW CONDI- , .. .. SELF- ________________ Exe. condition. .^Asking $150p. 343-4794. WE CARRY THE FAMOUS Franklins—Crees Fans—Monitor Travel Trailers Rent Trailer Space_______W LARGE LOTS, NATURAL Tires-Auto-Track AAANY BEAUTIE^TO CHOOSE HOM"l9?iW»"TON COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES rE 2-1457 ________823-1310 2-BEDROOM HOUSE TRAILER FOR $1,350. 428-1517 after 4 p.m._____________ Ixil FOOT NEW MOON, 2 Be6- “"Iis!! furnished, $1,400. t ALSO FEATURING THE 12'x50' HOMECRAFT AT $3,995 DELIVERED AND S!ET UP TELEGRAPH AT DIXIE HIGHWAY different, 2285 Brown 1-75 arid M-24. 3354)155. 92 I CHEVY Ortonville. 4834>173. Motorcyclet_____________W 5-SPEED DUCATI Scrambler, 30 h.p., 240 lbs. an'dIiTson sAiksTsem'ce ..45 S. Telegraph FE 3-7102 1958 HARLEY DAVIDSON, 145 CC, 1944 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE 450CC. Like hew, $850. 425-2 1945 esA 450CC 5 DUCATI 250 ily Green, exc itfer. 473-5844. MUNCY 4 NEED-TRADE-INS f ell c t Star, New and Use^Tmks 103 1955 CHEVY PICK UP, GOOD COND. FE 8-3420 etter 4 p.m. _____ 1954 FORD, 1-TON STAKE TRUCI $150. 391-2058._____________ 1957 FORD PICKUP 250. COO tires. Make offer. 334-0209. FORD 8 PICKUP, WIDE BOX, On Display SLICKCRAFTS Fiberglas CHRIS-CRAFT misers and speed bo; DEAL NOW PINTER'S "Quality Marine Merchandise" THUNDERBIRD, STARCRAFT MFG., JOHNSON. Boats and .. . tors. Cypress Gardens Water Ski 1941 CHEVY, SUBURBAN, __________482-4140__________ >42 GMC SUBURBAN 8275, 445 Autobahn DID YOU KNOW? $1789.00 Houghten Oli FORD ECON-O-VAN, 1944, NEVER -'1 commercially, perfect condl-. $795 or trade. OR 3-9484. NEW JEEP TRADE I Wlllys Jeep. 4-wheel drive. running. No rust and new ismisslon. Ressontble. Author-_.J Jeep Dealer. GRIMALDI CAR CO. SPECIAL $1875 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 34155 or EM 34158 Aotg InsurnHca Mwlne 104 Mini-Cost Auto. Ins. for good drivers ne owners ihs. nr quality homea Auto risk Insurance Mini-payment plan (Budget) BRUMMETT AGENCY Miracle Mila FE 4-0589 it,.*^^,^:FaraigaCar« 943 CHEVY PICK-UP, VERY good running and clean, $895. Op- dyke Hardware. FE 8-4484._ >44 CHEVY PICKUP, RADIO, heater, runs Ilka new, full prica Only 5895. No Money Down, 810. weekly. Standarci Auto. 1944 INTERNATIONAL ; - -------- ski equipment. $ 52-1413. SPECIAL Carver boat with top-ski cover and gagas. 75 h.p. son Motor with 18 gal. Heavy duty trailer vvilh wheel end tire. Only 8149 CRUISE-OUT, INC. 43 E. Wallon Open 9-8 FE 8-4402 TERRIFIC BUYS AT TONY'S (MARINE I oldest dealer. 31 years re-r experience. We have the hgt-t boat on the water. GW In- I Geneva I.O.'s, 2495 Orchard USED BARGAINS . $1295 18' Cruiser Inc. 1, , Gator trailer « 8^5 14' Chris Craft fiberglass 40 h. Johnson elec. “----- Reedy for tho > tilt trailer. ......... 11795 Free Free Free Radio and tope players installed free at GMC Factory Branch through June. All you have to do is come ond make a deal on one our STOCK units. There are over 200 trucks to choose from that must be sold in June. 11395 LAKE AND SEA MARINA Many more to choose from 245 S. Blvd. E. FE 4-9587 -1 BOYS, GIRLS, USED BIKES 335-4755 -I BOYS, GIRLS, USED BIKES. Trailers 8120. 14' canoes 8159. 900 lb. trailers 8149. New flbsrglat 14' run-about, 8795. 15^^flbergles runabout 8499. 14' FIberglae 8549. BUCHANAN'S I' 4 PLACE IfYDttO, 4'1l>" fcrAM with 40 h.p. eleetric Scott —' Little Dude trailer, complete. 14' PIBERGLAS WITH 34 Cl -r engine, I' hydro- FIMfiGLASS kliAT.6Nfe"OWfr son. $750. 425-4204. FOOT FIBERGLAS, 40 HORSE- ---- motor, trelltr. 334-7702. 15' FIBERGLAS RUNABOUT. 40 "------swer Evinrude Lark. Trailer, Wanted Can-Trucks DOWNEY Olcdsmobile Used Cars TOP DOLLAR FOR CLEAN USED CARS 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road 334-5967 338-0331 isr^'%1_________ 0 M P S 0 N. MOTOR AfId SALES have Immediate need carsi Now ehipping to Calllbmia, Texas end perto — --------peldl Shop r-“ >- BALDWiSr' .Fa_ jW*25 Top d giir ttM 1304 B 0&.________ ___________ 7' CHRIS CRAFT ON LOON LAKE, sories "incTuded'.’Good *SeP« 22' CRUISER, SLEEPS 4, 9* - Chrls-Cralt, Inboerd-outboerd. FE 154--INBOARD HYDROPLANE, EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Pa-d FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "'Cheek the n in get the best" at Averill AUTO SALES FE 2-9071 2020 Dixie Gale McAnnally's STOP HERE LAST M&M MOTOR SALES Now at our new locetlon Wo pay more for sharp, late n* el cert. Corvettee needed. 1150 Oakland at Viaduct 1965 Chevy Ponel-Van with radio, hatter, two to chooi from. Your Choice— $1095 HOMER RIGHT 1941 VOLKSWAGEN BUS S29S WITH nothing down at KING AUTO SALES, M-S9 and ELIZABETH LAKE RD. FE S-4000. >43 Vw WITH RApiO;.HIATER and Is a one owner, full price only $495, no money down, $7* weekly. Stanciarci Auto. 1944 SPITFIRE. LOW , MILEAGE. >59 OPEL RADIO AND HEATER. runs well. Meke oWer. Ml 4-$74^ >40 VAUXHALL STANbARp Shift. Runs like brand new, $99. ADKINS AUTO, 738 Oakland, FE 2-4230._____________________ >40 MGA ROADSTER, GOOD CON-dltlon. 334-5590. __________ Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. Cooley Lake Rd. 1944 VOLKSWAGEN, SEDAN WITH MANY MILES OP ECONOMICAL DRIVING LEFT. HAS RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE $895, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, assume weakly payments of S7.92 CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1945 ENGLISH FORD, CONSUL Cortina, 4-door, Exc. shape. FE 5-542t._______________ 1944 VOLKSWAGEN COttVERTlbLk, I, h44ter, 81,445 at N 1944 VOLKSWAGEN, LOW MILE-A6E, S1J95 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4- Prices Comparoble to These 1967 GMC i-Ton Pickup $1828 Including All Taxes. Free Radio plus heater, defrosters, backup lights seat belts, 2-speed wipers, washers, padded dash and visor, traffic hazard lights, directional signals inside reorview mirror. 2i-Ton EM4700V $3500 all taxes included 7.50 X 20; 10 ply tires, deluxe heater, brake booster Free Radio Installed H19620“ Diesel Tractor $13,500 all taxes included Power engine with 65 injectors, 1000x20; 12-ply tires, power steering. Rood ready. Free Radio and Tape Player Installed PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER GMC 1944 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE ROAb-■ Lika new. 7,ooo ml. Muet Mil, g In service. FE 54447. 1947 VW RADIO, 8,000 MILUS, 81,- Attention Fun SeekersI Sports Cars Galore 1 lor that choice new or used sporte car, we now have the largest selection of the season, immediate delivery, financing arranged. f‘‘-Imum down peymer* »—*‘— dealer for Triumph, Healey, Su—--- Complete ; GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 OAKLAND FE 5-9421 sler warranty, white -rior, exc. condition, $1900. BEA Milford 405-2442 or 473-5048._________ Whet---------------- Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 VW CENTER 85 To Choose From -All Modets-—All Colors— —All Reconditioned—, Autobahn Motors Inc. " VW Dee... 9t Miracle M BW and Used Cart _ W BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You— Just Call Mr. Mason or DON'S USED CARS Small Ad—Big Lot so CARS TO CHOOSI FROM ..J buy or will adlusi your on 477^1i^Lro'r“'*‘*i WE NEED USED CARS NOW ADKINS 738 OAKLAND AVE PONTIAC ^MW#r?**Whl5''wllh bluo 'intorlor. 4,000 mllos. MansfieM C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1967 Ibw iiid Us»d Con BY OWNER, 1959 BU1CK ELEC-irt 2ta, 1941 Chavy BItcayM, t-both In txira good cond. 334- M luTcTrcWElfiBLE, RUNS 106 Hbw BBd UsbJ Cm 106 New aad U»d Cart 1961 CADILLAC AIR-CONDITIONED 190 BUICK, LESABRE . DOOR WITH FULL POWER auto" TRANSMISSION, price $895, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, asiutno waekly payments of $4.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7S0a 1963 RIVIERA Priced for Quick Salcl $1195.00 ROSE RAMBLER SALES 1165 Commerce Rd.____EM 3-4155 i*64 BUICK SPECIAL ^DOOR WITH ------- seats, $1195 at MIKE SA- :hevf----- -------- II 4-2735. VOIE CHEVROLET, 1965 BUICK Special 44laor, radio, heater malic with power. $1395 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymooth 868 S. Wobdward Ml 7-3214 1965 BUICK Elactra 225 Hardtop, full power, auli matic transmission, radio, heate whitewall tires, full price $209 only $49 down and weekly pa' ments of $15.92. ' HAROLD TURNER 1957 CHEVY, STICK, V-8, 2-DOOR hardtop. $599. MARVEL MOTORS, 251 Oakland. — ' — 1945 BUICK SKYLARK - ______________FE 4-3988____________ 1945 BUICK ELECTRA 225, 4-DOOR hardtop, power steering and brakes, factory alr-conditloning, ti, 395 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRO-LET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. 1966 BUICK Skylark, 4-door hardtop, radio, I ar, automatic with power and tory air. $2295 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth “8 S. Woodward ’ 8^5 at MIKE^AVOIE' CHEVRCh LET, Birmingham. Ml'4-2735. 1944 SKY LARK, CUSTOM INTE- 2723 after 4. ____________ 1958 CADILLAC, PINK WITH WHITE top, good condition. Also RenauBTsaiL MY 241495. Wilson Crissman Cadillac Ask for Rich Kroll Ml 4-1930 Ramblerville USA 1964 CHEVY II Nova 4-Door Sedan. Sharp c ....--^ cylinder. Radio $850 ................$850 1965 FORD Galaxia 4-Door. V-8, power sh Ing, Ilka new In every respect $1395 $1195 $1195 VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM 646-3900 COOPER'S AUTO SALES . — Dixie HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME 944 CHEVY IMPALA SPORT coupe, with V8, automatic ' heater, p o W a r steering, black, cresum red Interior, _____ full price, $88 down, $49.97 per "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at; John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Ave.__________FE 5-4101 AL HANOUTE Chevrolet Buick On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 Now Is The Tim To Save On A Newer Model MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 Oakland Ave. 4 fE 44647 Weak Credit? No Credit? Bad Credit? Too Youra? New in Area? For help — Try the No. 1 TeamI We can put you In a new or use car todayl Call BILL FOX CHEVY Rochester, Michigan i CHEVY 2-DOOR, WITH RA-0, heater, beautiful tu-tone finish, III price $595. No Money Down 11.17 weekly. Standard Auto. 109 East Blvd. S. I TRANSPORTATION, ....vy, $50. 363-2795. 1959 CHEVY. 2162 CRESCENT LAKE 1959 CHEVY, $75 1960 CHEVY 2-door with automatic, full price $197. „ down, and $2 weekly, we handle and arrange all financing. Call M Dan, at FE 8-071. Capitol Auto i960 CORVETTE 4-SPEED, TUR-quolse With white top. $895 with nothing down. KING AUTO SALES, STAR AUTO WE FINANCE '61 PONTIAC ....,...$397 '61 CHEVY ..........$397 '60 CADILLAC .......$497 '62 DODGE Hardtop . . . .$497 '62 PONTIAC -Hardtop $697 '62 CHEVY ..........$497 '62CORVAIR ........$397 '6dC0RVAIR ...... . . .$197 '63 CHEVY V-8 stick ...$597 ' FORD ............$397 EASY CREDIT ARRANGEMENTS 962 OAKLAND AVE. FE 8-9661 1962 CHEVY- WAGON, AUTOMATIC, Standard Auto, 109 East. Blvd. S. 1962 CORVETTE, 340, 4-SPEED, $1395. Also, 1960 Pontiac , and transmission, exc. $60 3-0018. 1962 CORVAIR 2-DOOR, AUTOMAT-radio, nylon white tires w brakes and exhaust syste.... St Assume payments. Husband 1943 CHEVY STATION WAGON, --------J, $745. OR 3-5141. 1943 CHEVROLET IMPALA 9-PAS- TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1943 CORVAIR Mor--- . . ..d trim. $495. On US 5, Clarkston. AAA 5-5071. 943 IMPALA SUPER SPORT CON-vertlble, $1295 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. ' ' 1943 BEL AIR 2-DOOR, 8 - AUTO-matlc $795 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, --------- — 964 CHEVROLET 9-PASSENGER wagon, automatic with power $1595 at MIKE SAVOIE CtfEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. 1964 CHEVY IMPALA CONVERTI-bie, V8 auto., $1,195. Can be Marathon Station, Walton 4 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, BLUE 1944 IMPALA 4-DOOR HARBTOP, automatic with power $1395 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blr-mlnqham. Ml 4-2735. 1944 IMPALA CONVERTIBLE, ---- leather Interior, * 334-4788 ext. 241. I IMPALA CONVERTIBLE, I " with powei ........... CHEVRC I 4-2735, SUMMER CARS AT WINTER PRICES 1963 BONNEVILLE Two-door hardtop. Air conditioning, full | solid black baauty..................... 1964 PONTIAC star Chief. Automatic, air conditioning, power steering. An "as 1s" special..................... 1966 TEMPEST Sport coupe. Air conditioning, automatic, power steering and brakes. All red. New car warranty... 1966 CHEVROLET Caprica two60 T-BIRD, NEW TIRES, ALL power, good cond'"— "• ............ after 5, 16 Evelyn. 1960 FQRD heater, t----- $150. MA 6-5769. ronning condition, CLEAN 1960 FORD 33^2027 3 WAGON, ALL POWER, Exc. running condition, $350. 363- , $495. AUTOMATIC, V-8, COOPER'S AUTO SALES 474-2257 "ITS Dixie________Drayton Plains TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1962 FORD convertible, with V-8, stick shift, radio, heater, very good transportation, $595. On US 10 at MIS, Clarkston, MA 5-5071. New and Used Cars 106 New and TRANSMISSION, ^ ^ AND HEATER AND WHITE-WALL TIRES, FULL PRICE $895, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, assume wek-ly payments of $4.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1963 T-BIRD, FULL POWER, AN «ii black beauty w|- — 335-5872, before TOM RADEMACHER 1943 FORD FAIRLANE 500 RADIO AND 1963 T-BIRD, BEAUTIFUL CONDI-tion, full power, runs like new, $1195 full price. No Money Down, $13.17 weekly. Standard Auto. 109 East Blvd. S. ______FE 8-4033 _______ 1963 GALAXIE 500 2^)00“R, 8- automatlc $795 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, --------— 4-2735. 1963 FORD CUSTOM 300 4 DOOR, Robin eggs blue, sale priced at $444 full price, no money down. 1963',t> FORD GALAXIE 500 SPORT coupe, with V8, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, beautiful robins egg blue with matching terlor. Only - $1188 full pr and $88 down, $39.74 month. "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at; John McAuliffe Ford 30 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 condition through-til price. $88 down, 97 per month. 50,000 "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at; John McAuliffe Ford J Oakland Ave. FE 5-4 D CUSTOM 4 DOOR, W Oat "A BETTER DEAL" at John McAuliffe Ford 0 Oakland Ave.______FE 5-4101 FORD 2-DOOR, AUTOMATIC, power steering, $895. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, I "ningham. ' 1964 THUNDERBIRD CONVERT!-bte, alr-conditiong. Exc. condition. Low mileage. Li 9-9190._________________ WITH AUTOMATIC TRANS- 1964 GALAXIE 2-DOOR, POWER steering, auto., g portatlon. 673-0247. I 2-DOOR, 8 — AUTO- ■....... at MIKE SA- , Birmingham. Ml 4-2735._________________________ 1945 FAIRLANE, 4 CYLINDER, door, stick, radio. Excellent con ------ 473-1391, Stranahan. 1945 THUNDERBIRD. A REAL NICE car. $1478, full price. LUCKY AUTO FE 4-1006 silver metallic with_________ bucket seats, V8, 3 spaed, slick, this week's special at $1288 full price. 50,000 mile or 5 year new car warranty. "It only takes a minute" to Get "A Better Deal" el: John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Ave._______FE 5-4101 1945 STICK 4 MUSTANG, BEAUTI- ful condition. FE 8-0511.____ 1945 FORB~OAt55fii~SOO'TB55R hardtop, automatic, power steer Ing $1495 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEV ROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. 1944 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE, 1966 FAIRLANE big c_____ ______ ________ - - owner new car trade. Beautiful Buri^^^ exterior. To ba "'•* GmMANDI CAR CO. 900 OAKLAND aTr coNbitiONED 1M f5R6 Galaxia 500, 4door, vinyl tr- '‘-‘' green, power steering and ----- tinted windshield, $2,299. Ml 40750. 1966 MUSTANG $1788. steering, brakes, power vent .riiidows, mador red finish, with black vinyl top. 4,000 actual miles,; can't be told from new, $3,188. Full Price Only $188 down, . $99.97 par month. 50,000 mile o year new car warranty avallal "It only takas a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffo Ford MARMADUKE By Anderson and Leeming 1957, 2-DOOR HARDTOP, PONTIAC, Vf\/I 1 ' u i V/ l' J I' 1 \ * ’ 1' 5 ^ ' to e mr W M< “Mr. Snyder, you scratched your match on his tongue again!” Can be seen at 788 Menominee. BEEN BANKRUPT? BAD CRbOlY? NEED A CAR? Call FE 8-4088 a-" ask for Mr. White. King. 1960 PONTIAC Catalina sijtomatic, 1964 FAIRLANE GTA. 390 SPORT shift Crulse-O-Matic, 12,000 ml. $2100. OR 3-8897.____________________ BEEN BANKRUPT? BAD CREDIT? NEED A CAR? Call FE 8-r™ ask for Mr. White. King. ;. and Woodward. BEEN BANKRUPT? BAD CREDIT? NEED A CAR? Call FE 8-408T ask for Mr. White. King. Pretty Ponies 1965 & 1966 MUSTANGS SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 As Low As $39 Down And $39 Per Month HAROLD TURNER FORD, Inc. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM transmission, radio and heater, whitewall tires. Full price $1295. only $49 down and weekly payments of $10.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM ' - 1964 OLDS '88' hardtop. Automatic, ... ..i,"d5*H'J‘ GRIAAALDI CAR CO. f 4-7500 ... MUSTANG 2-DOOR HAROTOP. Automatic, power steering, factory air. 13,000 miles. New Car ranty. $1895,. JACK LONG I SALES, Rochester's Newest Ford Dealer. 651-9711. >6 FORD 4-OOOR 8-AUTOMATIC, jering «095 at MIKE SA-VOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. •" 4-2735. OLDS, 1945, DYNAMIC 81 1966 MUSTANG, 1966 T-BIRD COOL, Has air conditioning, full -ower, and all the extra ts." It's really sharp. Downey Oldsmobile, Inc. USED CARS 3400 Eliz. Lk. Rd. FE 4-5967 1959 MERCURY 4-DOOR, V clean, never rusted, EM 3-0081 1961 COMET 2-OOOR, STANDARD transmission. 333-7542. Riggins — BOB BORST LIncoln-Mercury BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-4538 $150. COOPER'S AUTO SALES 674-2257 4278 Dixie______Drayton Plains >62 COMET 2-OR., AUTOMATIC, radio, heater, runs like new. Full prlce^$395. No Money Down, $4.17 Standard Auto. 1963 MERCURY IN TOP CONDI- 1964 COMET CALI ENTE, ALL POW- 1965 COMET 4-DOOR,............- $1195 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRO-LET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. 1966 CYCLONE GT CONVERTIBLE. '181. speed 15,000 'I960 OLDS ''88'' 4 door hardtop, automatic, f steering, brakes, full price Capitol Auto 1962 OLDS STARFIRE CONVERT-ible. Full power, metallic red beauty with white top and red ....... Ajp Discount LUCKY AUTO 190 W. Wide Track FE 4-1004__or____FE 3-7854 1944 OLDS 9-PASSENGER WAGON, automatic, power steering and brakes, $1,05 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, 4-2735. SUBURBAN OLDS HOME OF Quality One-Owner AT LOWEST PRICES Birmingham Trades - - • - 447-5111 9-PASSEN-5 af MjKE SAVOIE* ChIvRG No Mystery About Our Discount IT'S IN THE PRICE BONNEVILLE, __________ _____ MILES, ________EM 3-7233.______________ CLEAN m2 PONTIAC CATALINA, :. condition. FE S-5376. $1795. On US 10 at M15, Clarkston, 1942 PONTIAC VENTURA COUPE. White with blue vinyl roof. Power steering, brakes and automatic. A real nice car with a good body. SEAT COVER KING, 754 Oakland — FE 2-5335.___________________ 1966 OLDS .DO, Has full po Itloning, radio am natic transmission extras, low cost sc ... today. Downey Oldsmobile, Inc. USED CARS 3400 Eliz. Lk. Rd. FE 4-5967 DOOR HARDTOP. Mansfield Auto Sales ty. Only- 1966 OLDS Hordtop^ $2495 HAUPT PONTIAC _n M15 at 1-75 Interchar. Clarkston_____________MA 5-S500 > 34 months on balance ( HAROLD TURNER 1966 OLDS jxury Sedan with full power, matic transmission, radio, er, in mint condition, Sa this one. Downey Oldsmobile, Inc. USED CARS 3400 Eliz. Lk. Rd. FE 4-5967 BEEN BANKRUPT? BAD CREDIT? NEED A CAR? Call FE * and ask for " 1964 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury with bucket seats, V-$ angina, automatic transmission, radio and heater, whitewall tiras, -price SI 195, only S0 down ------------------------ HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 5. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 BEATTIE FORD 1963 leep steering. '4-whael drive. 5nly- $1395 1965 Ch^vy Impale 2-Doar Hardtop, V4, automatic, power ataarlng and brakes. Only- Si 895 1965 Ford Galaxia, Moor hardtop. Automatic, powar ataarlng. Only — $1595 1965 Ford h 4 cyl., (tick shift, radio. $1395 $1095 1965 Chevy 4-pattanger Wagon, with V-0, power itearlng, radio, haatar. " $1895 1964 Ford 4-Patiangar Country Squire with powar ataarlng and brakai, chroma luggage rack. Only- Si 395 —On Dixie Hwy. Iii Waterford— Your Ford Dealer Since 1930 623-0900 , automatic « ' $995 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 1966 PLYMOUTH Fury wagon, radio, heater, ai -'"I power. $2195 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth -------■ Ml 7-3214 Mansfield Auto Soles 104 Baldwin Ava. FE 5-59W 1944 TEMPEST STATION WAGON, automatic trans, powar steering and brakes. $1097 full price. Can ba purchased vdth no money down. LUCKY AUTO 959 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4-DOOR hardtop, power brakes and steer*. Ing, whitewall tires. Exc. cond., $200. 474-209.______________ 1944 PONTIAC TEMPEST CON- 1945 BONNEVILLE, RED, POWER, sharp, reasonabit. MY 3-5752. 1945 CATALINA HAROTOP, HYDRA-...................- whitewalls, handle a conditioning, full price -wh, $2 weekly. Wa srranga all financing. V.BII iY\r. uciii at F'E 8-4071. Capitol Auto . V62 Chevy Sta. w ..'61 CadillB------ Coupe DeVllli OPDVKE MOTORS 2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke .... FE t $550. FE 8-0145. 1966 CATALINA 4 DOORa BUR- ar, tinted glass, 14,oSo miles, $2450 ! 3-4477 atter 5. 1964 PONTIAC Convertible HAUPT PONTIAC Dn M15 at 1-75 Intarchanga TEMPEST, LIKE NEW, STICK, 1 ™* 423-0202 r'-“ - VO metor, $795. ...42$-1O0. 1945 TEMPESV CUSTDM 4 PAS-senger wagon. Powar. 1 owner, Mansfield Auto Sales 1104 Beldwin Ave. FE 5-5900 1965 TEMPEST 2-DOORnHARDTOP, S—automatic $1595 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. LelWANS HARDTOP, . . spaed, double power, AM-FM, radial tires, other extras, warranty ^,^$1,100. 25 E. Beverly, FE 4 BONNEVILLE 4-OOD~R HARD- -------Has. FE 2-1977 after 4. : CATALINA WAGON. "---4 red with red I Factory war- Mansfield Auto Soles ________to________ 1944 TEMPEST CUSTOM SPORT - ipe, auto., V$, 9500 - ■5477 atter 5 p.m. Mansfield I Cars 106 i 'iwulpmeni, powar staertog and brakes. Your choice of colors. KEEGO PONTIAC SALES, KEE-GO HARBOR. 02-7300. «k for 1966 COOL Downey Oldsmobile, Inc. USED CARS 3400 Eliz. Lk. Rd. FE 4-5967 1967 BONNEVILLE. POWi'R. fvt- nlngs. 474-1264._________ 1967 CATALINA 2-DOOR HARDTSp, auto., radio, heater, power steering end brakes. FE 2-7781. 1967 FIREBIRD. TAKE OVER PAY- ments. 338-4293. _____ 1943 CLASSIC 2-DOOR. OVERDRIVE transmission and a real gas sever. New tires. Priced to sell. ROSE RAMBLER SALES, EM 3-4155, UNION LAKE. 1965 CLASSIC WAGON l-owner, new car trade-in. Big '232' 4 engine, radio, and heater. $1188.’ GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 OAKLAND 1965 RAMBLER CLASSIC 770. A one owner car that costs new $3400. V-$, automatic, and power steering. A beautiful metallic cordovan color with matching Interior. Sharp as a tack. Reason- GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 OAKLAND OVER 30 1947 RAMBLERS in -Ck, PETERSON 8, SON RAM-ER to Lapeer, large selection— d cars end parts. 444-4511. VACATION PROBLEMS? STRIKE PROBLEMS? wTlL* ^?ve*‘Them.®“Buy '"This 1966 VW Comes with radio, heater, whlte- $1295 VANDEPUTTE BUICK-OPEL 196-210 Orchard Lak* 1962 PONTIAC Catalina 2 door with automatic# full pricij onlyo$597. $6 down and $6 weekly.' We handle end arrange financing. Ceil Mr. Dan at FE M071. Capitol Auto 1962 CATALINA 2-DOOR sedan, with V8, automatic, power steering, brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls. Only— $895 THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING Troy—Pontiac—Birmingham Area 850 Maple, across from Ban Airpor captfd, call 334-5114 i 943 TEMPEST 4-DOOR, Automatic, $795 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK $55 S. ROCHESTER RD. ______651-5500 I9M PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, S-Jeering, $1095 CHEVROLET, 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA CON- ■—-----------' brakes end siter- 482-4243, libie, power A-t shape. 4 Mansfield tires, all ready for vacation time! FULL PRICE $1595 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 OAKLAND COUNTY CARS 1966 Pontiacs drematlc. new whitewelis $1595 1962 CORVAIR Monza Sport coupe, with 4-speed, radio, heater, whitewalls, sdver blue with blue Inttrlor. Only — $695 1964 OLDS 2-Ooor Hardtop, wim radio, heater, whitewalls, all leather Interior, end Is yours tor Only- $1195 1966 BONNEVILLE Convertible. wHh power steering, brakes, radio, Hydramatic, whlttwalls, hapter, and Is yours -1967 EXECUTIVE CARS- - Many to Select From — Lots of Extros Some With Air Conditioning. Discounts Up to $1500 PONTIAC-RAMBLER Open Doily 'Til 9 P.M. On M24 In Orion MY 3-6266 YOU JUDGE THE APPEARANCE We Guarantee The Condition 1964 OLDS "88” Sedan with a snow shoe white finish, double powar. Immaculate condition. Fine vacation car aioa-r throughout! 889 down, er old car down. ASKING .............................. $138/ 1966 CHARGER with V-8, automatic, powar. with malalllc candy apple rad finish, 899 down or your old 1963 VALIANT 2-Door with baby blue finish. Full factory equipment. No money down, paymants of 128 par month. w ASKING ...................................................................... ^ 00/ 1964 FORD XL Fastback with V-l, powar, with no money down. AS IS SPECIAL! ........................ $ 995 1964 CHEVY Super Sport ^ 4-spaad. Burgundy finish, black vinyl Interior. Naadi minor body work. AS IS SPECIALI .... $ 945 1960 PONTIAC Convertible * oe-, ir, buckatt, Mag whaala. No money down, full price ... $ 28/ SPARTAN DOIDGE 855 OAKLAND FE 8-1122 THE POXTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1967 C—11 —Television Programir- Programc fumithad by stotians iittaci in this column ani subioct to chango without notieo channrit: a^WJlK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXW.TV, 9-CKlW-IV, SO-WmO-TV, S6-Wm TONIGHT «:M m (4) News (C) (7),.Movie: “Forty Guns” (1967) Barbara Stanwyck, Dean Jagger, Barry Sullivan. (R) (50) Superman (R) (C) (56) Friendly Giant •:15 (56) Children’s Hour 6:30 (2) News — Cronkite (C) (4) News — Huntley, Brinkley (C) (9)TwiUghtZone(R) (50) FUntstones (C) (56) What’s New 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences (C) (4) Weekend (C) (9) BatMastersqn (R) (50) McHale’s Navy (R) (56) Spectrum 7:30 (2) Daktari — A woman hunter accidentally shoots the doctor. (C) (R) (4) Girl From U.N.C.L.E. —April and Mark try to foil a plot to steal Vatican art treasures. (R) (C) (7) Combat! — German youngsters try to defaid an important farmhouse. (RXC) (9) Dakotas (R) (50) Honeyipooners (R) (56) Antiques 6:00 (50) Pefiry Mason (R) (56) NET Journal — Life of the Negro in the South is documented. (R) 1:30 (2) Red Skelton Hour A “scrapboidc’’ featuring Red’s favorite sketches. John Wayne is guest. (R) (C) (4) Occasional Wife — Brahms orders Peter and Greta to go to a marriage ccNinsekH'. (R) (C) (7) Invaders — Invaders are suspected in an ambush and theft of a mysterious cylinder. (R) (C) (9) Lock Up 9:00 (4) Movie: “A Touch of Larceny’’ (1960) A British naval officer fakes a defection to win the daugh- James Mason, Vera Miles. (K) (9) Expo This Week (50) Movie: ‘"nicMan Who Came to Dinner’’ (1941) A man marooned at a house because of an accident starts to take oven*. Monty Woolley, Bette Davis, Ann SF dan. (R) NET Playhouse -“Sponono” is a man’s RED SKELTON, p.m. (2) CBS REPORTS, 10 p.m. (2) DISORGANIZED MIND, 10:30 p.m. (9) 1:30 (2) Petticoat Junction ’There are only two eligible men for the three girls to go to the dance with. (R) (C) (7) Peyton Place (C) (0) in Person 10:00 (2) CBS Reports — A profile of Robert F. Kennedy told with interviews and films. (C) (7) Fugitive - Kimble takes the job of a woman who was fired. (R) (9) Country Music 10:30 (9) Disorganized Mind — First of a three-part study of mental illness. 10:55 (4) Ken Murray 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News (C) (9) National News (50) Joe Pyne 11:30 (2) Movie “Going Steady” (1958) Mollie Bee, Alan Reed Jr. (R) (4) Johnny CFarson (C) (7) Joey Bishop (C) (9) Movie: “Cry the Beloved Country” (British, 1951) Canada Lee, Sidney Poitier. (R) 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) Untouchables (R) (9) Window on the World 1:30 (2) News (4) News (C) (7) Wanted Dead or Alive (R) 2:15 (7) Consider This TOMORROW MORNING 6:10 (2) TV Chapel 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News 6:30 (2) Understanding Our W(H-ld (4) Classroom (7) Across the Seven Seas (C) 7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (C) (4) Today (C) (7) Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 3:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) People in Conflict fight against isolation 8:30 (7) Movie: “The Last while imprisoned. (R) | Hurrah” (1958) Spencer MGM in Santa Claus Role for "Dirty Dozen' Opening By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Santa Qaus has not — NOT — been assassinated. He’s alive and living in the MGM Bldg., 6th Ave. and 55 St., N.Y. City. He pick^ up the tab for 200 newsmen flown in from all over the U.S. for the premier of “The Dirty Dozen”® at Loew’s Capitol, and a party for them at the Rainbow Room. ’The visiting press was also being pampered with guest tickets to “Marne,” I “Cabaret,” anid other tough-to-get shows, plus a ^ free boat ride. ’The picture gave many of us a first chance to observe the acting talent of former football star Jimmy Brown who decided during this filming that he was meant to be an actor. Handsome El Morocco bbss Maurice * Uchitel issued a blanket denial that he’d sold WILSON the celebrated cafe to a group in New Jersey. “’They offered me $100,000 profit, but I turned it down,” be said. Tbat's right, Maurice. Who needs $100,000? ★ * ★ Mrs. Oscar Hammerstein 2nd recently went to a charity function, willingly posed for photos with the leaders, hnd saw the pictures in the newspapers later. The pictures told her that she’d gone to the wrong function. She wasn’t associated with the charity she’d honored with her presence — the one she was associated with was surprised she’d never shown up. THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... Betty Grable’s most frequent escort, bearded Bob Remick, just happened to join the “Hello Dolly!” show same day she did. (“Just happened to?”) ... the lUchwd Burtons are vacationing with the Rex Harrisons in Portofino . . . Jack Warner invited some top Hollywood names to his home tot a fund-raising session for Israel; almost $2,000,000 was collected. (Tony Curtis dropped 25Gs in the pot). Astronaut Scott Carpenter tried something really risky — frugging at Arthur . . . Secret Stuff: Some actors were listening to a TV conunentator rap their show, and feveral of them cried, “He dyes his hair!” Footballer-actor Jimmy Brown and authoress Francoise Sagan swapped autographs at Trude Heller’s . . . ’Tuesday Weld starts filming ‘'She Let Him Ckxitinue” next noonth — her first movie in two years . . . Polly Bergen coidd sell her beauty oil company and ^ a millionairess — but figures the value’ll double in a year or two. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: A fellow celebrated because his wife got her driver’s license: “Now all her accidents will be legal.” WISH I’D SAID THAT: Description of Father’s Day: Santa Claus gets i»«sents.” REMEMBERED QUOTE: “The man who doesn’t care what people think about him has very likely reached top or bottom.” —Arnold Glasow. EARL’S PEARLS: For every man who lives to be 85, there I are seven women — but, of course, by that time it’s too late. Lyle Engftl discussed a very popular showgirl: “She’s been on more laps than a seat-belt.” . . . Tliat’s earl brother. Tracy, Jeffrey Hunter. (Part 1) (R) (9) Bonnie Prudden 0:00 (2) Merv Griffin (4) Living (C) (9) Romper Room 10:00 (4) Snap Judgement (C) (7) Girl Talk (9) Havriceye 10:30 (2) Beverly HiUbillies (R) (4) Concentratiim (C) (7) Dateline (9) Hercules (50) Yoga for Health 11:00 (2) Andy of Mayberry (R) (4) Pat Boone (C) (7) Supermarket Sweep (C) (9) Luncheon Date 50) Dickory Doc 11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R) (4) Hollywood ^uares (C) (7) The Family Game (9) Take 30 TOMORROW AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) News (C) (4) Jeopardy (C) (7) Everybody’s Talking (9) Communicata (50) Dialing for Dollars 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Eye-Guess (C) (7) Donna Reed (R) (9) Movie: “Confidential Agent” (1945) Charles Boyer, Lauren Bacall. (R) (50) Movie: “Paris After Dark” (1943) George Sanders, Philip Dorn. (R) 1:00 (2) LoveofUfe(C) (4) Match Game (C) (7) Fugitive (R) 1:25 (2) Jackie Crampton (C) 1:30 (2 As the World ’Turns (C) (4) Let’s Make a Deal (C) 2:00 (2) Password (C) (4) DaysofOur lives (C) (7) Newlywed Game (C) 2:30 (2) House Party (C) (4) Doctors (C) (7) Dream Girl of ’67 (C) (50) Love That Bob (R) 2:55 (9) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the’Truth (C) (4) Another World (C) (7) General Hospital (9) Matches and Mates (C) 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say! (C) (7) Dark Shadows (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (C) (7) Dating Game (C) (56) Managers in Action 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (C) (7) One Step Beyond (9) Fun House (C) (56) Living for the Sixties 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (C) 5:00 (4) George Pierrot. “Amsterdam to Austria” (C) (7) News (C) (50) Alvin (C) (56) What’s in a Word? 5:30 (7) News—Jennings (9) Cheyenne (R) (50) Little Rascals (R) (56) What’s New 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall (C) College Parley INTERLOCHEN (AP) -Enrollment policies facing colleges and universities in the next 10 years is the subject of a conference of admissions directors this week. The conference is being held at the National Music Camp here. Totem-Pole I Monopoly NASSAU, Bahamas (AP) -totem-pole carver with a deft native touch is whittling up a pile t>f business in Nassau these days. ★ ★ Totem poles ranging in size from four or five feet to a monstrous 14 feet are created for idsitors by John Panza, 39, who has s e t up shop in downtown Nassau. * * * Panza says he has little or no competition “from other areas." Jinx Whaler Still on Block White Elephant Ship Has Had Problems BUENOS AIRES (UPI) - The biggest white elephant this side of Kenya has barnacles on har belly. The government would like to sell it. In fact, Argentina has been trying to sell the ill-fated “Cruz del Sur” (Southern Cross) whaling ship since 1955. ’Ibe 639-foot-long factory ship was built in Belfast, Ireland, in the early 1950s. She was jinxed even befwe sliding down the ways. Several months before launching, a steel catwalk on the ship fell. ’Twenty of the 62 workmen .on the catwalk were kUled. ★ ★ ★ On this side of the Atlantic, the Argentine Fishing C!ompany (Compania Argentina de Pesca) had its troubles. It had ordered the ship at a cost of 2.9-milIion ounds sterling ($8,120,000). The company planned to use the ship to process 2,500 tons of whale meat a day, wiUi a crew of 484 men, near South Georgia Island. ‘JUAN PERON’ The ship was first christened 'Juan Peron,” after the Argentine president who had ordered the Central Bank to let the fishing company have pounds to pay for her. The “Juan Peron” arrived in December 1952, loaded with petroienm. Her draught prevented the 32,000-ton ship from entering access channels to port, so the petroienm was loaded into lighters. Within hours of the arrival, the government eihbargoed ship and accused the company of misusing foreign exchange. The “Juan Peron ’ rode at anchor in port for two years as security on the loan for her construction. The company could not hunt whales, anyway: only one of 15 catcher boats had been delivered. The government turned over the ship to the National Maritime Prefecture fw cadet training cruises. She then passed into the hands of the government oil monopoly, YPF (Yacimien-tos Petroliferos Fiscales). (to two trips to (toracao in the Caribbean, she proved worthless as an oil transport. NO TAKERS The regime that deposed Juan Peron from power rechristened the ship “Cruz del in hopes the new name would bring luck. YPF tried to swap her for two other vessels, tossing in 10,000 tons of fuel oil in the bargain, but there were no takers. The “Cruz del Sur” has spent the rest of her career at anchor — either here, or in Rosario, where she was a nuisance to navigation. She has been offered for sale a half dozen times. Hie fifth time, 17 companies bid, but the best offer was about 400,000 pounds sterling ($1,120,000). ★ ★ ★ ’The sixth time, about two years ago, the Buenos Aires Municipal Bank (sort of a city hock-shop) tried to auction the 'Ouz del Sur.” Several newsmen attended the auction, but there were no bidders. Since the whaling industry has shrunk around the world, the “Cruz del Sur” may be worthless except as scrap -32,000 tons of expensive scrap. Hodgepodge ACROSS S7Abovi 1 Feminin* 38 Urge CMk appellitioa 39 ArboNtl horn* 6 Blemlihtt 40 In thi iniddl* 11 Idolin (comb, form) 12 Writor'* mirk 41 Redactor (ab.) 15 Hovel gently 42 Greek letter and amoottaly 43 Expunger 14 Anointa 48 Cupolaman 16 Altitude (ab.) 49 Blundera 17 Pair (ab.) 50 Penetrate ISAdjecUva 51 Weird auffix 52 Hai on, ai ' 19 Ceyloneae clothing , "o™ 22 M one time 1 ArUitic dance ZSiWpea 2 Redactor 25 Mineral apringt, 3 Buihy clump forlnatance —’* Anawer to Prevloua Puiile Gov. Net* (Where he Dwight ■ 10 Offepiive odor 32 Second vending 13 Breachea 33 Undeveloped 15 Female aainta plant shoot ' 34 Seesaw prefix) ______ 5 Affirmative 27 Air (comb, form) 6 Frighten 28 Rodent 7 Is able 29 River barrier 8 Exist 30 Seraglio 9 ^ften in 33 Chides .temper 17 Footlike part . 20 Closer 4 Town (Cornish 21 Card) 35 Natural fats 38 Asterisk 38 Succinct 44 Courtesy title 22 Boat paddler (rare) esnooi jiniai 24 Ancient country 48 Chop 25 Bruin 47 Mariner’s 27 Arabian gUlf direction 30 Dwelling place 48 Indonesian of *' * Mindanao • 31 Reluctant 2 3 6 i 8 9 10 11 12 1^ H 1^ 16 19 23 L _P 31 W SI 3^ 37 to ■41 44 45 49 t\ |52 4 Monday News in State Capital THE GOVERNOR New York, where he met with ■--- Rockefeller; Gettysburg, Pa., iterred with former President and Pittsburgh, t a fund raising THE ATTORNEY GENERAL Ruled that the..... THE SENATE Received seven bills fron.... piietlons committee calling for expendl-"ire of S44S.S mllOon in fiscal 1767-M. sent to the governor- SBm, Fleming. Del___________ purposes of motor vehicle code. SB3)S, Brown. Increase paymer ircuit court ludges retirement tunc SB339, Richardson. Provide >r-releasing medicat data to n___________ SB479, Levin. Abolish office of county oroner, provide for ---------* -----•- SBSS5, Rockwell. ^latlons be contali ilding of I Require ’_______ in Justice of P QUALITY REPAIRS onallmok* HEARMGHDS LaammAvaUahl* HOUSE Sent to the governor-HB2348, Both. -of County Road — -luthorlie boards to develop -ansportation plans. I. Change name of Board ' mlssloners to Boar-* Transpbrtatloh tor long-range ______________ Asked House-Senate confer___________ SB303, Brusley. Empower .governing boards of state universities to enact traf--'c ordinances. SB220, Fleming. Provide temporary -----------.--------lotorists ticketed tor oving ' SB707, violations. s paid by Enable other WaYRr I to form a commu-, excluding Detr ‘ p coordinating section. Wisteria seed pods are poisonous and often are mistaken for peas by children. Layman Named POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. (AP) — For the first time, a layman is chairman of the Board of Trustees of Marist College, a Roman Catholic institution. TTie chairman this year is Harold D. Spencer of Clinton Comers, N.Y. More than 40 million American boating enthusiasts spent $2.8 billion last year pursiiing ffieir hobby in eight million pleasure boats. People in the News! By the Associated Press Marshal Ivan I. Yakubovsky appears the likely choice to become the next commi^der of the Warsaw Pact forces of East Europe. Yakubovsky, one of the Soviet Union’s rising military leaders, is expected to replace Marshall Andrei A. Grechko, the new Soviet defense minister in the job. An official announcement Monday said Yakubovsky, 54, directed maneuvers involving Soviet, Czechoslovak and Hungarian troops June 14-19 in Czechoslovakia and Hungry. Astronaut Finds Rough Going on Land Astronaut Lt. Col. James A. McDivitt has soared through outer ipuce with relative ease but he found the going tougher Sunday in a earthbound parade in Jackson, Mich. The car he was riding in stalled. While onlookers cheered, he got out of the car and helped push it to the side of the road. ’Then he joined his parents in another car and continued to the parade’s end. He was visiting his home town for a rose festival. McDIVITT Red Poet's NY Trip Blocked by Kosygin? Western cultural experts in Moscow suggested today that Soviet poet Andrei A. Voznesensky has been prevented from appearing tomorrow in New York because Premier Alexei N. Kosygin is there. Voznesensky was scheduled to read his poems at the Lincoln Center Summer Festival. The center received a cable yesterday saying, “Can’t come—Voznesensky.” The Soviet Union of Writers, which controls its members foreign travels, said Voznesensky is sick. But a friend said he spoke to him on the telephone today and found him ,well. The friend asked about the trip. Voznesensky “was vagqe —he didn’t seem to want to talk about it,” the friend reported. Singer to Go Cruising With the Kennedys Singer Andy Williams says he’U be cruising down the Colorado River this summer with Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., and his family. Last year Williams’ wife, Claudine Longet, joined the Kennedys for a trip down the middle fork of Idaho’s Salmon River, but he had singing commitments. This year, said Williams, it will be just the opposite. While he takes the boat trip, his wife will be finishing the film, “The Party” in Hollywood, with Peter Sellers. Police Confab ’TRAVERSE CITY (AP) —The International Assocdation of Chiefs of Police, Division of 8 and Provincial Police, opens a sectional conference today. — RacJio Programs- WJM700) WXYZfl 270) aaWfOOO) WWJ(»50) WCARQ130) WI»ON(1460) WJBKd 500) WHFI-fM(94.7) UR, TUm-a/CbI. An^ NiWi, Spoilt, Woafh- CKLW, Now*, Tom Shannon WMFl, Dinner Contort ^JR, Nawt, Sports SiM-WPON, Pontiac CHy llilB-WWJ, Nowt, Sportl. Ovamight. WJR. Newt, Sports, MutIC WPON—Arizona Wstton 1l!3(-WJBK, Concontut WEDNESDAY MORNING WPON, Nowt, Music CKLW, Nawt, Bun Davlai WJBK, Nowt Books, Edit. WCAR, N«wt, Jim Davit WHFI, Undo Jay WWJ, Newt, Atk Your Neighbor »;0g-WXYZ, Brpskfott Club WHFI, Bill Boyle WJBK, Newt, Patrick WJR. Newt, Mueic WCAR, Ron Rota WHFI, Bill Boyle CKLW, Newt, Dave Shafer WJR, News, Linklettar Sherriff-Goslin Co. Penfipc't Oldttt Roofing Frsa Estimatis 332-5231 HARASSMENT? REPOSSESSIONS? BAD CREDIT? GARNISHMENTS? Lot us hGlp you solv# any of thoso problomS. Wo ;on got you a (rath tlort by coniolldoling oil your debit Into one weakly paymant you cqn No limit to tho amount owed or numbar oi cradHert—Nol a loon. Call, lorlMor 4-ome in. Debt Consultants of Pontiac, Inc. OMR SAT. • Ul. to tl NOON PONTIAQ’S F-l-R-S-T Wide-Oval RETREU wheels \ CITY TIRE ! I'7' I SUSPENDED CEILINGS MODERNIUTION Commercial—Rosidnntial No Monoy Down—5 Yrt. to Poy IS Yrs. Local Exptritnea ftork Guaranteed in Writing zflror::,a‘;.!'': X”; caples construction •w'tutpo'ndod coiling con bo FhEf SSTIMTU ie tlort of on entirely now living CillAi^me FES-4468 rao in your home or tiore. Ur«tu«d Mjehican BuiM.r Sweet’s Radio & Appliance: , 422 West Huron “•"tiVpAi'"'" FE4-5677 nV ULSy SIDING YOUR COMPLETE HOUSE 22x24x8 Your ChoicB: • PUIN • COLORS • WOOD GRAIN $389 $25.95 per 100 sq. ft. 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SeMrote Iw IrMier soctien holds over 200 pounds frozen ••od. 5 full vridth freezer shelves. Full width crisper.. Dairy n*w4 ensswU eesMim Goldberg to Explain LBJ Mid?asfWc eace/i UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. - U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg elaborates on President Johnson’s formula for peace in the Middle East before the U.N. General Assembly today. Goldberg was expected to stress Johnson’s stand that before Israel withdraws its victorious troops from Egypt, Jordan and Syria, the Arabs must recognize Israel’s right to exist as a nation and agree to negotiate a peace settlement. The chief U.S. delegate’s speech was billed as an answer to Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin, who insisted yesterday that the United Nations should call on Israel to withdraw unconditionally before anything else is done. Goldberg spoke briefly to the 122-nation assembly yesterday, denying Kosygin’s charge that the United States “incited” Israel to conflict. He said his address today would “set the record straight” and “elaborate our position in detail in the spirit of President Johnson’s ton yesterday. PROSPECTS FADE Prospects for a U.S.-Soviet summit meeting were fading fast following Kosygin’s report turndown of an invitation from Johnson to come to Washington. Administration officials said the So- viet premier had sent word to the President that be had come to the Uniteid States for the U.N. session and not to visit American authorities. There was speculation that Goldberg sooner or later might present a resolution calling on the assembly to open a public U.N. record of arms shipments to the Middle East along lines that J(din-son mentioned yesterday. The President, in his televised speech to educators meeting at the State Department, said: “1 should like to propose that the United Nations immediately call upon all its members to report all shipments of all military arnis into this area, and to keep those shipments on file for all the peoples of the world to observe.” The United States* still has a resolution before the Security Council calling for Arab-Israeli discussions on the withdrawal of “armed personnel, the renun- tal international rights and me « lishment of a durable peace.” ★ * ★ Kosygin inbtxluced a resolution yesterday that would have the assembly do what the Soviet Union failed last Wednesday to get the Security Council to condemn “Israel’s aggressive activities” and demand that it “immediately and unconditionally withdraw all its forces” from the Arab countries. VOL. ns. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1007 ■' V v-'v;' -"IS - NO. 115 ***•★* „„,ti,S«TTSSSm™. -30 PAGES 'V.' ''/.‘'f't'ffefeS Police Crisis Brings Detroit Mayor Bock Kosygin Says No to Johnson; Talk Hopes Dim UNITED NATIONS m - Prospects for a U.S.-Soviet summit meeting were fading fast today after Premier Alexei N. Kosygin reportedly turned down an invitation from President Johnson to come to Washington. Administration officials in Washington said Kosygin sent word to Johnson that he had come to the United States for the U.N.’s emergency session on the Middle East and not for the purpose of visiting American authorities. Kosygin’s message, sent through diplomatic channels, said the Soviet chief therefore was unable at this time to accept Johnson’s offer to meet at the U.S. capital or a nearby place like Camp David, Md., White Sulphur Springs or Hot Springs, Va., the U.S. officials said. This still left the way open for a summit site elsewhere and J o h n s o n’s invitation presumably still stood. But with Jcrfinson preferrtng not to journey to the United Nations area to call on Kosygin, and Kosygin preferring not to leave it, the outlook for their meeting diminished as time grew short. A ★ * 'Fhe Soviet leader arrived in New York Saturday morning and had been expected to stay through next weekend. Now there are reports he may return to Moscow in a couple of days. RUSK ARRIVED Secretary of State Dean Rusk arrived last night with the avowed purpose of meeting with the various foreign dignitaries attending the U.N. General Assembly’s special session. ★ * ★ Rusk had no appointments immediately in sight today. If Kosygin does depart shortly, he may leave Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko behind for talks with Rusk and others. Rusk-Gromyko discussions have been a regular feature during assembly sessions. LI'L ONES In Today's Press Wixom New sewer system serves as catalyst for growth—PAGE A-5. D. C. Schools i Federal judge orders massive revisions of “-lice, a second private vehiclC|' drove up and discharged a pasH * senger who entered the reported, ’ stolen car and drove it away. PA’TH BLOCKED’ ’The patrol car attempted to follow, but the second vehicle made a U-tum, blocking its path, either intentionally or unintentionally, police said. Another scout car followed and stopped the stolen vehicle on Prospect near Sanfmd and the second private car arrived moments later, its occupant allegedly threatening to get a gun and return, according to Police saW Patrolmen Merton Kesselring and Norman Kilmer were then instructed to follow that vehicle, which drove to Baxter Court where the occupant got out and ran. ★ ★ ★ The occupant, identified by police a Lament Tucker, was caught, bqt broke free and ran to the house at 377 Prospect where he was again caught inside the door, but again broke free, officers said. ★ ★ ★ They said Tucker ran into a bedroom where Kilmer^ grabbed him while Kesselring became engaged In a struggle to fend off five persons from interMog in the arresL ★ A ★ When 'Tucker allegedly threw punches at Kilmer and again broke free, Kilmer fired the| Ishot, par-ticipated in rock and bottle throwing when a march on the e (Sapitol was halted by police. City Attorney Ira DeMent timated 12 were arrested before order was restored. One of those arrested was the Rev. Richard Boone, a Southern Christian Leadership Conference staff worker who had led several marches in the past week. He was charged with interfering with an arrest Birmingham Area News Sergeant, 33, Promoted to Fill Police Chief Post DARRYL BRUESTLE ship and a 1951 graduate of Waterford Township and a 1951 graduate of Waterford Township High School, he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Emil Bruestle of 56 Dover, Waterford Township. Following his graduation from Michigan State University with a bachelor degree in police ;ion, Bruestle served De Gaulle Still Firm on British Market Entry PARIS (AP) - French sources say President Charles de Gaulle’s basic opposition to British entry into the European Common Market was not altered by his talks Monday and today with Prime Minister Harold Wilson. ★ ★ ★ De Gaulle was reported holding to the view that the British request must be thoroughly discussed by the six present Common Market members. British sources expres.sed optimism that negotiations on the British application for membership would begin soon. * ★ ★ ’The two leaders also discussed the Arab-Israeli issues before the U-N. General Assembly, Red China’s H-bomb test nd U.S. policy in Vietnam. ★ ★ ★ Both Wilson and de Gaulle were believed to have decided against flying to New York in an attempt to meet with Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and President Johnson for Big Four talks on the Middle East. The French reported de Gaulle is disinclined to lend his prestige to what appears to him to be a propaganda circus at the United Nations. LEFT FOR LONDON Wilson left for London today after an informal half-hour talk with de Gaulle. Monday the two spent nearly two hour's under a chestnut tree in the garden of the Grand Trianon Palace in deep but apparently inconclusive talks. in the U.S. Army for six months and then joined the Waterford Township Police department where he was a patrolman for one year. ★ * ★ Bruestle, his wife, Kaye, and their two children, Bradley, 3, and Lee Ann, 1, live at 571 Bird. The training of 10 members of the Neighborhood Youth Ckirp from the Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity was approved by the city commission last night. ★ ★ * The purpose of the program, financed by federal funds, is to give boys work experience. The boys, 16 through 18 years of.age, will be assigned to the Department of Parks and Recreation, to do maintenance work. Only one commissioner, Robert Page, objected to the program. ★ * * “I don’t see why we in this citadel of the middle class have to ask assistance for our parks program,” said Page. COUNTY HEAD The program was defended by commisioner Carl F. In^a-ham who is also chairman of the county office of Economic Opportunity. “We’re not asking assistance,” explained Ingraham “They are asking ns for assistance by cooperating in the program.” Page said that the city should have its own training program. ★ ★ It was noted by other commissioners, however, that the city had hired as many young men for summer j o b s as the budget will allow. Parties in Press Release Battle State Tax DeatdIock Continues LANSING (AP) — The House tax stalemate—and the battle of the press release—both continr ued Monday without apparent result. Republican and Dembcratic negotiators met most of the aft-amoon but reported no progress toward working out a state income tax paelmge that can attract the needed 56 house votes. ★ ★ ★ Each side, meanwhile, kept up the drundlre of press statements which started Friday and which each party hopes will convince constituents that the other is to blame for the fiscal stalemate. With the new fiscal year to start at the end of next week, the pressure was increasing on both sides to find the votes for a revenue-raising package of some kind. WON’T SIGN BnXS Goy. George Romney has vowed he will not sign aw>ro-priations bills for the coming 12 months unless he is assured revenue intake will be adequate to balance state spending. “Hie Democratic party must shoulder most of the reqxm-sibility for our current fiscal crisis,” House Speaker Ro|>ert Waldron said in his release following the afternoon’s tax talks. “The Democratic party is responsible, in the main, for two years of overspending beyond revenue,” Waldron charged, and it is guilty during that time of completely ignoring the need for new revenue, even though they had the majority to pass a fiscal reform program.” ★ ★ ★ Democratic leader William Ryan said his party, in last fall’s election campai^, asked the voters for le{^slative majorities and for the responsibility of meeting Michigan’s fiscal needs. ‘UP TO GOP’ “But everyplace in the state we went,” he said, “fiiere was a white-haired gentleman (Romney) with his arm around the Republican candidate, saying, ‘if you vote for this man, you’ll get action out of the legislature.’ ” Now, Ryan said, it’s up to the GOP to act ★ ★ ★ Ryan still insisted Monday that to attract -enou^ Democrat votes, a tax package would have to put iabout 27 per cent of thd new-revenue burden on business. Waldnm still insisted that was too high a figure and would hurt Michigan’s economy. Ryan has promised the Republicans 15 Democratic votes either for the program already passed by the Senate, which he estimates would charge business about 29 per cent of the $273 million it Would raise, or a similar program Ryan suggested last week, of which he said the business share would be 27.7 per cent. DEM CHARGE Democrats charge the current Republican proposal would make business shoulder only about 10 per cent of the new-tax load. They add business pays about 30 per cent of state taxes under the existing structure. “The Senate plan is truly a Republican plan,” Ryan said. It passed with 16 Republican votes in the Senate, and we are willing to give it 15 Democrat votes In the House.” But Waldron said most House Republicans feel “this plan put Michigan in a poor competi^e position for employment opportunities. “If business moves from Michigan, the worker suffers because it takes away jobs,** Waldron said. N f\ pTOMR?lt THE PONTIAC l^BESS. Tl ESDAV, JrXK 20. 1907 City Man, Back From Greece, Says Junta Had Stabilizing Effect The troubled and tempestuous Middle East has been noted for at least two decades for strife, discord and upheaval. Yet, at its edge, linking 'Europe to Asia and Africa, Greece stands “peaceful and tranquil. Despite a fierce but relatively quiet struggle for power, a takeover of the. reins of government by a military junta and dark Greece is now better off than at any time jn the postwar era, in the opinion of Socrates Sek-les of 185 Ottawa, a Pontiac resident since 1911. American organization, recently returned from his 40th visit to Greece, one he took in order to evaluate the political, economic and social climate of his birthplace. “I went expecting to find machine guns on top of hotels. I found only order and wellbeing,” he said. Sekles, an officer of the influential American Hellenic Progressive Education Asso-ciation. a national Greek- ing that Greece had to provide soldiers to stand in front of the American Embassy to ward off troublemakers. He said his stay in Greece was in marked contrast to a visit made in August 1965, when Athens — the principal Greek city — was hit by riots an dissension. PERIOD OF TROUBLE “Then we found ourselves in an atmosphere of trouble and anxiety,” he said, remember- Admitting some apprehension over the tide of affairs in Greece before his trip this month, Sekles said he began forming the impression that something had changed shortly after arriving. “It seemed that all in Greece were working with greater zeal and less anxiety.” The now-retired former restaurateur said he traveled throughi^t Greece questioning people. “I talked to not only the government leaders, but the ordinary people, the cabdriver, the farmer, the waiter. Not once did I hear anyone say he was dissatisfied with the government.” government canceled the elections pending revision of the constitution. A 20-member council has been selected to revise the constitution for a vote of the people. Sekles, who in 1965 was chairman of an AHEPA conventional congress in Athens which drew some 15,000 members, said that the United States, while it may be belabored in other countries because of its bigness, prestige and role of world policeman, is loved in Greece. “The (Jreeks realize that it was the United States which saved the country,” he said. The Truman doctrine, advanced under Harry S. Truman, unloosed massive aid to Greece in the years after World War II when a Communist-inspired insurrection threatened to turn the country over to Red hands. The Greeks remember this and are thankful, said Sekles, who has advised presidents since Woodrow Wilson on Greek-American problems. STATUE OF TRUMAN with Israel, but as could not get involved,” he said. EVACUATION STOPOVER Sekles Said he noticed immediately on arriving in Athens that large numbers of Americans and Europeans were leav- To show their appreciatiwi, the Greeks have built a statue of Truman in Athens, he said. Communism is no threat and party membership is less than 1 per cent of the population, be said. nation it in Israel and term the Israelis, "as “hard working, tremendously proud and devoted.’ VAST DIFFERENCE Mrs. Sekles said «he was! amazed standing on the border overlooking neighboring Jordan. .that his adopted land, the U.S., will continue to be the greatest nation on earth. ing the Middle East by way of “On one side are trees, jets routed through, Athens. jchards, green lands. The other Usually there, are five or I'® desolate and poor,” she said, in the airport. When I landed there were about 30. The hotels were full and private residences were rented to accommodate those who had to wait for flights,” he said. Sekles has visited Israel i She said the Israelis have : regular planned programs to start forests in desolate areas. One which is thriving outside of Tel Aviv is named after the late John F. Kennedy. “Time heals everything,” he said, a philosophy that he has I followed and prospered with ever since he fir.st came from Detroit to Pontiac on a tip that he could get a job here. : He spent what must have looked like the biggest quarter Jn the world - his last — to take the trolley ride to Pontiac, but lime has been on his side. Sekles said the Mideast war, which saw Israel humble the Arabic nations, had little effect on the Gfeeks. ‘The Greek sympathy was times and was accompanied on ' o^loction on two or these trips by his «iie, i?!, S,, “j, a Pontiac club leader. IM orde, » 11 c„„,e the M,d- die East, believes that his birth-Both Sekleses have been im-|place, (ireeee, will grow strong-pressed with the progress made! or and',more steady, believes' BAHA 'U'LLAH Sekles said the cost of living has gone down and wages have gone up with the increasing amount of controls assumed by the government. This was a necessary step, he said, in ensuring that Greece would remain stable and would not dissolve into a land of nearanarchy, disrupted by adverse economic conditions. POWER STRUGGLE Greece was put under army control in April by King Constantine after nearly two years of a power struggle between him and former Premier George Papandreou and Papandreou’s America n-educated son, Andreas. VISITING THE ARCHBISHOP - Socrates Sekles (left) falks with the Greek Orthodox Archbishop of Greece, leronymos, in one of his many talks during the past few weeks with Greek leaders. Sekles of 185 Ottawa also had visits with Premier Constantine Kolias, the chief of the general staff of the army and ministers during his recent visit. The 26-year-old monarch, convinced that a period of dictatorship was necessary to avoid grave internal disorder and to save the monarchy, suspended normal constitutional procedure in putting the Army in control. The Papandreous and their leftist followers had fought to make the king a largely ceremonial figure with no real pow- Romney Gets Authority Over Guard Commander L.ANSING (UPl) - The Mich-j igan Senate gave final approval! yesterday to a military reorgan-, ization bill that gives the gover-, nor clear authority as com-' mander-in-chief of the National Guard to hire and fire the adjutant general. | The bill, certain to be signed! by Gov George Romney who, has sought it for two years, re-i organizes the state's military; establishment under an adjutant general directly responsible to the governor. It eliminates the hodgepodge line of command of the existing system. The bill passed 26 to 5 and will take immediate effect with the governor’s signature. LEGAL NOTICE 1953 Ford B3FG ?59 571 The bill ends, for all practical purposes, the squabble that resulted when Romney dismissed Adjutant General Ronald McDonald in 1965 for allegedly being involved in questionable land dealings near the National Guard camp at Grayling. • 10, 1967 LEGAL NOTICE The following is a list of Impounded vehicles which have been declared abandoned and are therefore scheduled for sale at Public Auction, pursuant to Se< tion 252 of Acts 300 of Public Acts i 1949 (C.L. 1948, Sec. 257,252) 1957 Pontiac -- P857H 38 656 1958 Chevrolet - F58F 188 )58 1950 Chevrolet Pickup - IJPA 5047 1959 Ford - C9FT 109 681 Renault ^ 46766 1959 Ford — C9FC 32 587 1953 Buick - 17 203 716 1957 Ford - D7FT 167 544 1952 Kaiser - K5211 207 770 1955 Ford — A5DG 174537 1958 Ford - 573BK58164142 1957 Mercury ~ 575L78B88M Sale of the above vehicles will be he on Saturday, July 22, T967, at 2:30 p.n by the City of Pontiac at Sam Allen' 500 Collier Rd., Pontiac. * a 30* 1967 ...— ...ve been declared aba nd are therefore scheduled f Public Auction, pursuant to Sc y of Pontiac DPW Y Stw Pontiac, Mich. Romney’s authority to dismiss McDonald, who has appealed the case to the Supreme Court, was questioned because of the crossing jurisdiction of the governor, the chief of staff and the State Military Board: The bill eliminates the latter two offices and merges the office of adjutant general with the directorship of the Department of Military Affairs. Ih January Romney appointed Maj. Gen. Clarence C. Schnipke director of the department, a post he held in an acting capacity for two years. Governor Cited FT. CHAFFEE, Ark. (AP) Louisiana Gov. John J. Mc-Keithen was honored for “exemplary service” during the third annual Governor’s Day review of the 39th Infantry Division, Louisiana-Arkansas National Guard. The Unusual In Gijh for The June Bride Shower Gifts Cards Wedding Gifts Wrapping and Ribbon Party Game Prizes Midwest Typewriter Mart 88 N. Saginaw St. FE 4-5788 (N«xt to Simmt) Constantine, fearing a left-wing plot among pro-Papan-dreou army officers to oust the monarchy and take Greece out of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, fired the elder Papandreou from the premiership in July 1965. ELECTIONS CANCELED The Papandreous had Intended to campaign in the May 28 national election, but the new Post Is Won at Boys' State Michael Giroux, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Giroux, 2776 Dixie Highway, GIROUX Waterford Township, was elected prosecuting attorney of ‘Begole County’ at Wolverine Boys’ State, held at Michigan State University. M i c h a e I is staying at ‘Gar- field City’ sponsored by Fisher Body Local 596. The representatives made upj names of counties and named their cities after U.S. presi^lentsl to imitate city, county and state I govermrtent. Wolverine Boys’ State is sponsored by the American Legion. The one-week event concludes tomorrow. in the Relaxing jjjj I Atmosphere of ^ the THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1967 Board Takes Steps to Assess Future Townsh The Waterford Township Board last night took steps to hire financial consultants to launch a study and make recommendations for funding sewers, fire stations and other future community needs. China Staff Confined in New Delhi NEW DELHI, India (AP) Indian police ringed the Chinese Embassy in New Delhi today as the government confined Peking’s diplomatic staff to the embassy grounds. * ★ ★ The confinement was in response to the Chinese siege of the Indian Embassy in Peking where Defense Minister “ Singh told Parliament the members of the staff and their families were “virtual prisoners. ★ ★ ★ Singh said CMna had ire-^nded to Indian demands that the siege be lifted only by ad-mitUng some food parcels for the 66 persons inside the embassy. No effort is planned to sU^ food supplies for the Chinese staff of ^ in New Delhi, said Jagat Mehta, a joint secretary in the Foreign M^try. ★ * ★ “We are not trying to starve the Chinese,” Mehta said. The Indian government said it ordered the confinement of the Chinese to protect them from “the just indignation of the Indian people.” Nine Chinese were beaten last Friday when a mob stormed the emljiassy and broke its windows. CHINESE DEMONSTRATE Demonstrations continued outside the Indian Embassy in Peking, the official New China News Agency reported. It said the demonstrators demanded Indian authorities “guarantee the security of the members of the Chinese Embassy staff in New Delhi and ensure the safe return to China of those who have been injured.” ★ ★ ★ India has said it will not consider the problem of the beaten Chinese until the Red Chinese siege on the Indian Embassy in Peking is ended. ★ ★ ★ Harassment of the diplomats in the two capitals began last week when China accused two Indian diplomats of spying and deported them. As the Indians departed, they were roughed up by Chinese mobs. Clerk Arthur J. Salley was directed to contact iinancial consultant firms, requesting them to submit written proposals for review by the Township Board. Interviews will follow. The action followed a discussion from Johnson and Anderson, Inc., towndiip engineering consultants, regarding a proposed sewer project on parts of Marion, Elteabeth Lake, Voorheis, Chadwick and Colrain. The project recently was delayed when bids ran too high aiid, consequently, were rejected by the board. * ★ ★ The merits of financing the project through county revenue bonds instead of by special assessment were discussed by the board last night. 3 SEWER DISTRICTS The board also weights the feasibility of creating three sew-districts in the area, based on the flow sewers to existing outlets, rather than only one district as hitherto proposed. In other business, the board introduced a rezoning request for a proposed |l-million shopping center with frontage on Dixie Highway, Walton Boulevard and Foradale. Final action will be taken after information is received from the County Drain Commission, County Road Commission and State Highway Department. Drainage and traffic problems exist as the location, according to township officials. RECOMMENDATIONS Nfflietheless, the request to re-zone the property from local business to general business has Dem Gain Cited WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP) - Registrations in Westchester County in the past 15 years grew 20 per cent for Republicans and 117 per cent for Democrats. During that time population of the suburban county increased 36 per cent. been given favorable recommendations by the Township Planning Commission and County Coordinating Zoning and Plahning Committee. Wilkinson Insurance Agency of Waterfwd Township submitted the apparent low bid last night on workmen’s compensation and general liability insurance for township employes with a combined annual premium of $13,032. Three other firms turned in bids. All bids were referred to the township insurance co for review and recommendations. ★ * ★ A public hearing was set for July 10 for a proposed street lighting project on Richmond Street. Three lights would be installed. assessment costs Based on 18 assessments, total annual charge would be $126 with benefiting residents paying $113.40 and the Inferfaifh Parley- traverse city (AP) - An Interfaith Seminar will be held here Aug. 7-11. The seminar is sponsored the Michigan State University Cmitinuing Education Center, the Catholic Diocese of Grand Rapids and the Grand Traverse Area Council Churches. RENT ANEW PIANO Per Month ^8 • NO CHARGE FOR CARTAGE • CHOICE OF STYLE and FINISH • LESSONS INCLUDED • FULL CREDIT IF YOU DECIDE TO PURCHASE PONTIAC MALL 682-0422 CONSUMERS POWER 00. 28 West Lawrence 333-7812 Would you rather buckle this... or this? The Pontiac Press Published to save lives in cooperation with The Advertising Council, The National Safety Council and The International Newspaper Advertising Executives. paying the $12.60 balance. Cost per assessment would be $6.30 per year. Also last night, the board approved a request to add space to the, Ai^rt Tavern, 6115 MS9. The board voted to lease an IBM dictaphone over a three- year period at a cost of $13.50 a month. -A- ★ Ik- Granted, s u b j e c t to school board approval, was a July 4 fireworks permit for Ralph Averil at Sandburg School. Also, the board canceled its July 3 meeting. Aching Muscles You tone to MM thOM pains, avan tamporarUy, until tha causa is claarad up. For palliativa, or taiTiporary, pain rallaf try DaWitt's Pills. Famous for ovar SO yaars DaWitt’s Pil Is contain an ana fgaslc to reduce pain and a vary mild diuretic to halpalimlnata retained fluids thus flushlna out irritating pain causing biaddar wastes. DeWitt'a Pflls often succeed where others fall. If pain persists always see your doctor. Insist on ■DeWitt’sPills-> smi-iiiE SHE SHOP NOW-SAVE NOW COLONIAL CHARM LUXURY LOWBOY WSSWE WOORiSH LOWBOY LUXURY LOWBOY 29&sq.ln.pichirs RCA VICTOR COLOR TV IS STIU NO. 1 EARLY AMERICAN CHARM DECORATOR LOWBOY TABLE COLOR TV Pontiac’s Largest RCA Victor Color IRtVE^ - —- - 589 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-0526 1108 West Huron FE 2-1275 COME EARLY FOR BIGGEST SELECTIONS! AUTHORIZED DEALERS CHRYSLER iMw MOTORS CORPORAnON Giveinto uour driving ambition r^gw MimMA Sm IHa tm 4a wncirw. Our purpose in IH« is to bsttsr yours. With any of 15 different C^irysler models. Every one luxury-sized. Yet every one reason- En'gines range right up to the biggest standard power plant in the class. The 440 cubic Inch engine. With the biggest brakes to match. Choose from over 50 different options. 3 different seating arrangements. Including a unique 3-in-l front seat. Converts from 5-foot sofa to individually adjustable seats for two. And the passenger side reclines. Now that you’ve got the story, go ahead. Better your life. And better ours. Move up to a’67 Chrysler at our place today. OAKLAND CHRYSLER.PLYMOUTH, INC. 724 Oakland Avenue Pontioc, Michigan KESSLER-HAHN CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, INC. 6673 Dixie Highway Clorkston, Michigan A—10 sMJsm THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1967 Programs at Hollywood Museum Shows Prove Film Shorts Can Again Be Entertaining By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer LOS ANGELES (AP) - The power and the glory of the short film has been demonstrated during the past two weekends at the Los Angeles County Museum. And it is to be hoped H 0 11 yw 0 0 d learned a lesson. It’s a lesson Hollywood once' taught the world: that movies of I feature-length can be exploratory and highly entertaining. * * * The production of shorts has a long tradition. The great comedies of the silent era were one-and two-reelers that fostered the talents of Charlie Chaplin, Harold Lloyd, Buster Keaton, Harry Langdon and many others. Even in the sound era, short subjects provided vehicles for the talents of Laurel and Hardy, Robert Benchley and Mickey Mouse. Among the directors who graduated from making shorts: Frank Capra, Leo McCarey, Rio's Street Peddlers Resist Police, Press RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP) — Guerrilla warfare is raging in the streets of downtown Rio, and the guerrillas are winning. The guerrillas are Rio’s ubiq-uitious street peddlers, known as camelos. For months they have successfully resisted the combined onslaughts of police and press campaigns. ★ ★ ★ Selling everything from imported contraband stainless-steel razor blades and cigarettes to cheap plastic combs and mirrors with pinup-picture backing, they clog downtown streets and force pedestrians into the gutter and the jaws of traffic. Along some blocks the camelos are lined up next to each other from corner to comer, hawking their wares. Some set up trays of merchandise on upen^ ed crates while others have only a few items to offer, waving them in the faces of passersby. WARNING SYSTEMS Police have staged several campaigns against them, but the camelos have organized their own defense and early warning systems. Lookouts are posted, and when the police arrive, the quarry has melted into the crowd. When the coast is clear, they filter back. When the police launched “Operation Blitz,” the camelos countered with “Operation Vlet-cong,” sneaking away into the narrow streets and alleys that downtown Rio. Rights Hearing Set in Mount Clemens DETROIT (AP) - The Michigan Civii Rights Commission has scheduled a public hearing on a charge that the Mount Clemens City Commission engaged in racial discrimination. The hearing was scheduled after the Judge Howard Carroll turned down a petition filed by the city to enjoin the commission from holding a hearing. ★ ★ ★ The discrimination charges were filed by Herbert Pearson who was denied permission to transfer a liquor license in 1965. Pearson alleged the city’s refusal was due to “unlawful considerations of race or color.” The hearing will be held in Mount Clemens Aug. 17. Police Teletypist Classes Slated EAST LANSING (AP) -Teletype operators from 73 law forcement posts throughout the state will tegin classes Monday in procedures for the new computer-based state law enforcement information network. Two operators from each of 60 Southeastern Michigan Police and sheriff’s departments and 13 State Police posts will attend the twice daily classes Monday through June 30 and July 5-6. Griffin to Speak MACKINAC ISLAND (AP) -Sen. Robert P. Griffin, RMich. will address the annual Michigan Bankers Association on Mackinac Island Saturday. The convention opens Thursday. Taken together, the camelos re a veritable department store. They offer sweaters and socks, housewares, lemons and tools, old coins, toys, sf and collar stays, camphor balls and roach powder, lighters, spices and multicolored pens, watch bands and costume jewelry, perfumes and even wading bands. Most are men, but there are some women and even children. Like all modern businessmen, they believe in advertising, but instead of newspapers or radio and television they prefer to use their lungs. EVERYBODY’S ANGRY Shopkeepers are furious at the camelos for taking up space in front of their window displays, and pedestrians resent being shoved into the streets. Newspapers are clamoring for action, and the police are trying, but without success. Now that the municipal police have been thwarted, there is a growing demand for action by the semimilitary state militia, which has avoided the battle thus far. But the camelos aren’t worried. In fact they are offended. ‘It’s an affront to free enterprise,” said one as he picked up battered briefcase filled with contraband lighters and ducked into a side street at the approach of a squad car. ■George Stevens, Fred Zinne-mann. VIRTUALLY NO SHORTS The popularity of the double feature put the short into a lamentable decline. Today major studios produce virtually no shorts except for a few violent, uirfunny cartoons. ★ ★ ★ The County Museum, in cooperation with Janus Films, has been presenting two programs of “New Cinema,” — movies from four to 28 minutes in length which have won awards in film festivals around the world. They come from Poland, England, Japan, France Italy, Belgium, Canada, and even the U. S. A. -k * -k The names of some of the creators are significant: Richard Lester, Jean-Luc Godard, Francois Truffaut, Clive Don- ner, Roman Polanski. k k k These are directors who first tried the briefer film, then went on to attempt some of the major advances in recent feature films Truffaut’s “The 400 Blows,” Lester’s “A Hard Day’s Night,” etc. AUDIENCE ENTHUSIASTIC A capacity audience greeted the first of the programs with enthusiasm, and there were ordinary citizens along with the expectable quota of hippies. All seemed most amused by the classic “Running, Jumping, and Standing Still Film” of Lester. Peter Sellers and his fellow members of Britain’s ‘Goon Show” romp through a procession of outrageous gags that presage the Beatles movies, “The Knack,” etc. ★ * * Another favorite was “Enter Hamlet” by the American cartoonist Mogubgub. As the “To or Not to Be” soliloquy is AUTEN’S DONALD C. AUTEN 7uAil2tuA£., GojiJftdr^ (mi, Ottibw.’ ^mkl 'TDjUljftfUMA. AUTEWr FURNITURE 6605 Dixie Hwy. Clarkston 625-2022 NEW MANAQER SPECIAL 8x10 Photograph 99' Omt 17 Tmh MfMIr AMHtofial KENDALE'S ... Photographers 15 W. Huron 335-0322 - 335-3260 | Hmoti «ton.,THM., Thun. ia-tiSO-W*d.,rii., Sot. 9-5 ■ THIS Om* INDS IN 7 DAVS-HnM fw App0i1rtm.nl ^ intoned by Maurice Ehrans, each Word is illustrated by a cartoon comic significance. Tbe im-ss come with almost subliminal rapidity and with delicious humor. Truffaut’s contribution is a not wholly successful fable of how a quintet of subpuberty French boys bedevil a village beauty in heir, romance with a gym teacher. Polanski provides a curious allegory called “The Fat and the Lean,” in which a frenetic young servant tries to please a fat, decadent master. There may be political significance here, but it is elusive. COMIC TECHNIQUES Several of the films use animation and stop-action in ways that commercial film makers would not dare. And there in lies much of the value of these short films. With little investment risked, the shorts makers can explore new avenues of cinematic expression. Many of their discoveries have already found their way into fea%e movies. PROGRESS for HEALTH Four chances our of 10, the prescription you bring in today calls for a drug that didn't exist a mere five years ago. No mailer what you were willing to pay 'et today. It's right on our shelves — leady for your doctor to prescribe — at less than the cost of a good dinner. Thai's why we say . . . TODAY'S PRESCRIPTION IS THE BIOOEST BARGAIN IN HISTORY Pharmacy PLAZA PHARMACY Jerry A Joanne Dunsmore, RPH 3554 Pontiac Lk. Rd., Pontiac, Mich. Phone 673-1267 24 Houn a Day Service FREE DELIVi^RY \ Honey Orders Issued Here Wet'eaturrSandenCandy Teu Hey Fey dll Ulllify Bills el Heie Miermeey d OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE Presents a mini-FILM Festival The second discussion-with-film in the series. ALONE WITHIN: The Approach-Avoidance Conflict Film: The Marlene Dietrich Classic “Blue Angel” Rev. Robert Marshall will lead discussion after fllm. Wednesday, June 21 — 8:00 P.M. BLOOMFIELD HILLS HIGH SCHOOL Long Lake Road Just West of Telegraph SINGLE ADMISSION, 81.50 For Ticket Reservations CaU Conununity Serv. Division 64)2-6210 - 642-6211 - 647-6200 Facility Will Be “Air CooletP’ Ionia Escapee Caught Quickly IONIA (AP) - Frank Powell, 63, of Detroit walked away from Ionia State Hospital for the Criminally Insane Sunday, He was captured’ about four hours later on a nearby farm. Powell has been an intimate at the hospital since 1939. • Frigid'aira Appliances KERSEY ELECTRIC 2620 Dixit Hwy. OB 3-2661 You don't have to head North any more to get “rerief from the heat" A gas central air conditioner gives you comfort at the turn of a dial! When temperatures climb, you have fingertip convenience to as much cool air as you need to beat the heat But more important, gas central air conditioning does something about the humidity too. It circulates filtered, dehumidified air that's so fresh and clean it's a pleasure to breathe it What a break for hay fever sufferers—and with dust shut out, what a breeze for dirt-chasing homemakers! See us today for a free air-conditioning survey. When you learn how easy it is to install gas central air conditioning, and what a difference it makes In summer living, you’ll wonder why everyone doesnt have it! ,, consumm Power TOR INFORMATION ON GASAIRCONDmpNING TELEPHONE 333-7812 \ Mm THE PONTIAC PRESS. '^^ES1)A^^ JI NK 20. 1007 It takes a lot of ingredients to moke tea sandwiches for over 200 guests. Webster School PTA members are busii making and freezing goodies for Sunday's reception honoring Dr. Edith Road Snyder. The event from 3 to 5 p. m. in the school is under the general superv'ision of Mrs. Donald Kline. Lincoln Avenue Deft). With her is refreshment chairman. Mrs. Eugene Carey Jr., Mark Street. Old ? ainlin|E ami l>raw.o|t Register hy (ialling 644-0866 Our All-ieather Italian Let the Sunshine in by Dena Trust the Italions to design the prettiest sandals! Crafted with rich leather soles and uppers, they're poised on little heels and ready for summer fun. Sizes S’z to 10. S-N-M. White, yellow, tan Imports ‘9 HURON at TELEGRAPH Wear neckline pure or add Hash of color with bias tic! You'll fall in love with slim, , young effect this low-waist skimmer has on your figure. Printed I’atlern t.Slfi: Half Sizes 12'::. 14'-, 16'z. 18’z, 20'z, 22'z. Size Ift'z dress, tie 2"i yards 45-ineh fabric. Fifty cents in coins for each: pattern add 15 cents lor each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send toi Anne Adams, car^ of The Pontiac Press, Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St.. New York, N. Y. 10011. Print name, address with Spring s Fashions are a JOY FOR ALL SIZES! See 115 styles,' 2 free hat patterns, fabrics, accessories in new Spring-Summer Pattern Catalog. Gift Coupon for free pattern in Catalog. Send 50 cents. NEW WATERPROOF LEG MAKE-UP BY GIVES YOU THE MOST BEAUTIFUL LEGS TO STAND ON • DOES V OUR Au IG Insurance PAY . . . I ... For loss of any Personal Property STOLEN FROM your J car—whether your tar is stolen or not. ..? • (Under Comprehensive Coverage) • —this is just ot>e of many • , Special Benefits for Non-O^kert • IF YOU DON’T Drink — find out about : yiluiua£ • NON-DRINKERS INSURANCE : CALL : HEMPSTEAD, BARRETT and ASSOC. Main Office I as Elisabeth Lk. Rd. Pontiac, Michigan Phona: FI 4-4724 Branch Office 39 Peninsula Lakeville, Michigan Phone; OA 8-3494 hstcc Lauder -always a step ahead of the current beauty scene— dc.siLins four new fashion colors for her WATERPROOF LEG MAKE-UP to ^ive you the most beautiful Ic^s to stand on. fjer velvet-smooth,w hipped-cream textured make-up creates new excitement in AIuKluct-- a matte linish, off-white make-up to go unde' the white-to-heige and very bright stockings, or to w hiten a tan and Lrold, gleaming with precious shimmer on bare, tanned legs. New‘ Beige, a neutral beige tone, and Tro/)ie, a deep sun-glowy give you a flawlessly natural look that makes legs seem longer, slimmer, younger and more shapely. Each 2 o:. 3,50;. Cold-2 02., base, 3 oz. powder, 5.00. HURON at TELEGRAPH C—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1967 sn'ahcSii' The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by th’jn in wholesale package lots Quotat' "ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Produce Apples, Delicious, Red, bu......... Apples, Delicious, Red, C.A., bu. Apples, McIntosh, bu................ Apples, McIntosh, C.A., bu. Apples, Jonathan, C.A., Asparaous, di. iKh.,/;. ^ :...»2.7S Radishes, Red, d NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market edged higher on balance early today in quite active trading. It was an irregular advance with gains and losses running from fractions to 1 or 2 points. * ★ * Rails, which have been strong I recent sessions, showed a ragged picture following a published report that major railroads are projecting a gloomy picture of 1967 earnings in an attempt to bolster their case for a freight rate increase. Mustard, bu. Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP) - Prlcts^ paid pound for No. 1 live POPjJ'Y: hens 20-21; roasters heavy type 27.21, broilers and fryers Whites l(Vi-20Vj. DETROIT EOOI DETROIT (AP)-Ego , P*'?, dozen by first receivers (Including U.S.). White Grade A lumbo 32-3»; 2»'/j-32; large 26Vj-30; medium 20-20'A; CHICAOO BUTTM, *601 CHICAGO (AP) - Chicam Mercantile Exchange-Butter steady; vrholesale ^Eggs*^'steadw wholesale twylng Pt]P« unchanged to Vi *'i?h*r' or better Grade A White 26; medus 21; CHICAGO POULTRY _ Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)--Caltle 2,400; several loads and lots high choice »"e slaughter »teer» 3I6.5M675; chi 2S.25; gMd 23.00-24.2 VMlers too; high choice J 34-37; choice 20-34; good 24-2» Sheep 400; not enough In ea tor market tr-* until later In day. 25.75- _____ high i> slaughter 27.00; choice Stock Mart Higher on Balance New York Central dropped nearly 2 points. Southern Railway a fraction and Pennsylvania Rairoad eased. BRIGHTER SIDE On the brighter side, Xerox and Control Data rose more than 2 each. Gains of a point or so were made by U. S. Smelting, Merck, IBM, Raytheon and SCM. Opening blocks included: Martin Marietta, up Va at 23% on 31,000 shares; Woolworth, up Va at 26 on 7,000; Pan American World Airways, off Vs at 32% on 4,400 shares, and General Electric, off Va at 88% on 3,500. A kind of watch-and-wait attitude still prevailed on Wall Street. Analysts noted that uncertainty still existed in regard to U.N. discussions about t h e Middle East. On Monday the Associated Press Average of 60 Stocks rose .2 to 328.0. Prices were mostly higher on the American Stock Exchange. Ihe New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP) - New York Stock Exchange selected morning prices: Sales Net (hdt.) High Lew Lest Chg XJtt Lab 1 1 48H 48^ 48H ............ : Con .80 16 29Vk W 29 + V4 (X Cp 1.60 x7 33’/^ 33% 33% + % ~ Ind 2.20 9 50 49% 50 + 'A Aims .40b 70 49t 1.70g GenPrec 1.50 GPubSvc .38g -----*>Ut 1.50 6a Pacific lb AlcanAlom 1 Alleg Cp ^.l^Og ¥ 1.20 - _ 1.90b . _ . AlliedStr 1.32 4 30% 30% Allis Chal Alcoa 1.80 Amerada 3 Am Alrlln .80 Am Bosch .60 * “Idcst 1.60 Can 2.20 :yan 1.25 ...JIP 1.44b AmHome 1.20 35 28% 3 72% W% 6 23% 23% 23% -t V 3BV4 38% -I- I - - - 30% 30% ... 21 23% 23% 23% - 1 } 87% I I 81% I I 43% 43% + 1 'anites 1.40 10 26^ _ -antWT 1.10 10 27’ GtA&P 1.30a 37 30’ Nor Ry 3 16 64» West FInl 125 12a GtWSug 1.60a 14 38% 38% 38% + 13 9% 9% 9% + Amphenol .70 30 32% 31% 32’/4 - 11 62% 62% 62% -I- 60 29’/4 28% 28% - American Stock Exch. NEW YORK (AP) - Am»r)ean Slock Exchange jelertej^noon prices: (hiv) High Law Leal Chg. AaroiatG .50a J1 34Jk 34 34 -4- [A AlaxMag .lOe 4 37V. 37H 37Jk — 44 AmPatro .3M 5 14H uy. uy. . . ArkLGat 4 3*44 3*W 3*45 — 44 Aiamara Oil 31 4 W4 4 1-16 4 W6 ^■ AjtdOII 8. G » Si “J? + i AtlasCorp w* 5 IH - 3'A 2'A — V4 Barnes feng • 324k S’* Jl’* X S BrazllLtPw I 24 12 12 12 -I- Vk lilt Pat .4*i 3 113-16 S 13-1* • 13-14 . . Campbl Chib 32 m 74k 7^ - Vk Can So Pet 13115-14 )W 'IJ—1-Jj r— 31 444 *Vk *'/i - 'A 147 7Vk 74k 7V. + 41 Babcokw 1.36 Balt GE 1.52 Baaunit .1*p I 544k 54'/» 54'/a — Banguat "-ihStI 1.50a Bing 1.20 .IseCasc .25 Borden 1.20 BorgWar 2.20 BrIggiS 2.40a Brunjwtck*”* BucyEr ).60a Budd Co .80 Bullard 1 Bulova .70b Falmont Oil FlyTIgar .lOh Frontier 1.411 Gen Plywgod Giant Yal .40 1 12>/k 12'A 12'A -I 414k 40H 404k-I 4746 47 4246 , 3 4246 -I- ChrlsCratf lb Chrysler 2 CIT Fin 1.60 ClllatSvc 1.80 ClavEIIII 1.68 CocaCela 2.10 5 16% 16% 16% 30 51V. 51 51V. + : 5 38V. 38% 38V. - ' 8 120V. 120V. 120V. + J 6 31 30V. 30% - I LOFGIs 2.80a LIbbMcN 23f ■. jjl0el18.M ^5^ Ivingstn Oil ocKhdA 2.20 Loews Theat LonaS Cam l LoneSGa 1.12 LongIsLt 1.16 Lorlllard 2.50 Stocks of Local Interest _ Vk CBS 1.40b AMT Corp................ Associated Truck Braun Englnaerlng Citizens Utilities Class 4 Frank's Nursery . North Central Airlines Units . Satrsn Printing ............ Scripto .................... Wyandotte Chemical ......... MUTUAL FUNDS AHIIIatad Fond ............. Chemical Fund ........... Commonwealth Stxk .......... Keystone Income K-1 ........ Keystone Growth K-2 ........ Mass. Investors Growth Mass. Investors Trust ...... Putnam Growth .............. Television Electronics ..... Wellington Fund ............ Windsor Fund ............... mEdiS 1.80 37 conElecInd 1 41 ConFood 1,40 13 ConNGas 1.60 12 ConPow 1.*0b 2 Contalnr 1.30 I ContAIrL .40 Cent Can 2 17!4 18.4 CrousaHInd 1 17.0 17.4|CrowCoM.B7t 3U 32’o|cr2c”|ti llo 74>/4 73% 74*/4 + % 33% 33% 33% - ■ 57% 57 57% + . 50% SO^M 50’/^ - I 38Vi 38% 36Vi ... I 34 34 34 ► 34% 34 34% + k 57% 57% 57’/i + i 49% 493/4 + % Marquar .25g 50 17% MartinMar f 1399 24’/4 MayDStr 1.60 32 33% “lytag 1.60a 5 33% ;CaM .40b 1 30 MaadCp 1.90 Melv Sh 1.60 MtrckC 1.40a MGM lb MidSoUtil .76 MidSo_ . MlnerCh MinnMM i.ju Mo Kan Tex MobilOil 1.60 37 25% 25Vi 25V2 DtnRGW 1.10 DefEdis 1.40 Del Steel .60 . .rs DlamAlk 1.20 12.89 14.09 Dl»ney .40b 13.78 15.06 10.93 11.91 13.64 14.83 ITOCK AVERAGES Net Change Noon Mon. y The Associated Press JO 15 IS t. Ind. Ralls Util. Stocks .3 1*4.1 ia.8 4go .........45*.2 148.7 Ago ........455.5 IW.3 152.4 DomeMin .80 DowChm 2.20 DraperC 1.20 DynamCp .40 End Johnson ErleLack RR EthylCorp .60 «0.4 13.7 Gen I 82% . 1 31% 31% 31% - 11 38% 30% 38% - 1 37’;^ 37% 37% + 17 156% 155% 156 .. 16 30% 30% 30’/4 - % 83 16% 16’/t 16i% + •' T-E— 16 *B4k *8'A *84k + 2 4946 4*46 4*46 -t- 17 140'A 140'A 140'A - 14 324k 324k 324k - ^ 38 8*4k B84k 8*4k -HVk 18 36'A 34 34'A + - 31 2846 2846 2846 + 2 7* 784k 7* -t- 22 35 3446 35 . Fairch Cam FalrHMt .I5g Fanstael Met Fad Mog 1.80 Feddars .60 22 Wh 48H 484k .. 2 31 31 31 .. 3 21 55'A 55V. FIrastna 1.40 1 4546 4546 4546 . ForaDaIr .50 FrMpSul 1.2S PruahCp 1.70 10 274k 27 27 - 6 S4Vk S4 S4 .. 16 334k 3346 3346 .. Canl^nam Gan Elec Z 14 2IV4 2746 2IVk . .. if I 33% 33% - % 30 46 45% 45% — 42 90% 89% 90’/4 + 6 132 131% 132 +1 20 69’/4 6 9 69 - 3 37 37 37 + 18 64% 64 64% - I 24% 2A% 34% - % 18 41 40’/^ 40% ^M— . „ * 58*/4 58'/ S 23% 23’% 23% + % J 59% 59% 59% - “ 103 41% 40% 41’A + 13 69% 69’/4 69% + 18 52’A 51% ! 23 84 83% I 3 53% 53% I Motorola 1 Mt'siTT 1.24 NatDalry 1.40 “ * DIst 1.80 Fuel 1.66 Nat GenI .20 Nat Gyps 2 16 13>" 10 38% ^ »5-^% NEng El NYCent 3 ■«s, Northrop 1 Nwst Alri .70 Norton 1.50 Norwich 1.30 13 26% 26% W’A 50 20% 20% 20% 11 108 108 108 ....... 72 48% 47% 48% + % 3 48 48 48 + % 17 60 99% 59% - % 10 30% 30’% 30% . 19 43% 43% 43% - ’A 47 115 113'% 113’% - % 91 40’A 40’A + 75% 75% + (hds.) High Low i t 55 9’/» 8% ) 6 36 35% 0 12 55 54% 54% — % —R— 60 53% 52% 53 1 2 28'A 28’A '‘'‘■ b 54 33% 33% ) 97 8%4 8“ . 28’A 28'/4 — % Sperry Rand StdBrand 1.40 Std Kolls .50 StOIICal 2.50b 44 74’A 73% 73% 43 64% 64% 64% 38 57'A 56% 56% 36 48'A 47% 48'/4 103 38 37% 38 51 26% 8 37% . . . . 65 30% 30’A 30'A — ' 49V? 49'/2 17% 18’A StdbilOh '2*S Staley 1.35 8 37% 37’ 65 30^ 10 50 55 18''- . - - - 458 36% 36% 36% 3 27’A 27% 13 373A 37’A 39 33'/i 32% 42 56% 56'A 39 56% 56'/. Department Excites Interest Postal Change Mulled By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst WASHINGTON (AP) - Rarely have the men who held the job of postmaster general inspired much enthusiasm f 0 r| anything b u tj politics, patron-and postal j rates. How sudden-] ly that has] changed. Now] everyone is in-l terested in the^ post office. And CUNNIFF much of the interest is Sympathetic rather than antagonistic. ★ ♦ * “We have detected a definite change in the public’s attitude,” said a high-ranking postal official. “By speaking frankly about our problems, we got the media interested. And people are more sympathetic now.” The problems were, as explained recently by Postmaster General Lawrence O’Brien, present head of the $6.5 billion-a-year enterprise, a monumental clutter of red tape and bad habits, the sediment of an entire century of misuse. NEW STRUCTURE The solution, as proposed by O’Brien, was to sweep the entire problem away at once by giving the department a brand new structure and more independence so it wouldn’t be buffet^ by outside forces. There has always been Vehicle Recall Total Reported 2.2 Million Since Safety Act, Soys AAA WASHINGTON (AP) - Recall of more than 2.2-million motor vehicles with suspected defects were reported within the first eight months after adoption of the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act, the Ameri-Automobile Association (AAA) said Monday. The AAA said it compiled the figures from reports to the National Highway Safety Bureau for the period of Sept. 19 last year, when record-keeping began, until May 31 of this year. The act was approved Sept. 9, 1966. The act requires manufacturers to report any defects to the Department of Transportation. Under the act, a defect includes “any defect in performance, construction, components, or materials in motor vehicles or motor vehicle equipment.” REPORTED DEFECTS The AAA emphasized that its reported defects of vehicles—a list of which was publicized-was not meant to imply that all such vehicles were defective. 'The vehicles are those which may contain detects as determined by the manufa(;turersjpj.gjjj(,{g(j ggrnings for 1968, 1969' gumer-oriented companies, themselves,” the AAA said. land beyond,” Spear said. The report was drawn up by Cornelius R. Gray, director of the AAA legal department, and an aide, Carl A. Modecki. The federal act applies to passenger cars, trucks, motorcycles, buses and ambulances. The AAA said a total of 2,214,-925 were found with defects, according to the Highway Safety Bureau records. ALL RECALLS Growth Stocks Said Best Bet Right Now “The present business slowdown,” be continued, “may be viewed as nothing more than an interlude between the great 1961-66 boom and a protracted period of steady, broadly-based growth leading into the 70s. The coming boom will we think, be of unparalleled pro-Now is a good time for thei portions.” wise investor to seek out issues, Spear said that a number of for which a fancy premium is | highly promising growth situa-jnstified on the basis of strong itjons are to be found oDi-nintle fnr IQfiR IQfiO'____ BABSON PARK, Mass.-With the stock market facing a period of inconclusive meadering through the summer months, investment analyst Roger E. Spear forsees the return to widespread favor of the growth stock concept. Auto Makers Prepare for Changeover tendency in Washington that you must take a solid whack at the Post Office Department,” said O’Brien in an interview. ★ ★ ★ It was easy. Often there wasn’t a retaliatory peep out of the department, for although as big as an elephant, it was timid as a mouse. O’Brien, who notes that the department has always “muddled through” somehow, found that muddling was a crosscurrent to his well-known instinct to move ahead toward goals and accomplishments. BUSINESS ENTERPRISE The unusual interest in a post office proposal was accomplished through a reversal of the old post office game. Instead of adding a job, O’Brien proposed to abolish one, his own. He would remove the department from the Cabinet and run it as a business, as a government corporation. A corporation would permit the post office to raise its own funds on the bond markets; it would permit modernization, better use of employe skills, more professional management. It would release the service from niggardly appropriations. Acting on the proposal. President Johnson asked 10 prominent Americans to serve on a study committee. Reportedly he received no turn-downs; enthusiasm for the project was catching. And, from the government side, frequent references are heard that seldom has such a high-class panel ever been assembled. It includes, among others, George Baker, dean of Harvard Business School; Rudolph Peterson, president of the Bank of America; and George Meany. president of the AFL-CIO. “Today, about one out of every three American families earn less than $5,000 a year. By 1970, in contrast, fewer than one fifth of the greatly increased number of families are expected jSTIMULATING TASKS to earn less than this,” he said. The panel’s unusual interest Criteria for selecting growth {comes largely from the realiza-issues include not only a patternjtion that: 1. The modernization of rising sales and earnings but {study must be made. 2. The membership in an industryibusinesslike proposals are al-! DETROIT (AP) — The auto group tha( is likely to becomej tuned to the American creed. 3. Manufacturers are required industry scheduled further 1967 and remain popular with the in-|u has been mandated to come . under the act to report all their car cutbacks yesterday in head-'vesting public. | up with a specific recommenda- ;; recalls of vehicles found to hav^ ing toward next month’s big ^ - Although this I t'O". J“st another study. ;^|defects. phasing-out program of current company may have a I As O’Brien views it, the soon- models. demonstrably superior growth |cr the panel reports the bettor _ ... r» Krciolrrinum nmiM /*nmp ;ii H uj defects. Manufacturers reported J1 48H 48 48H -t Jj total of more than 150 recallsj ★ ★ ★ | record, the stock may still not a breakdown could come a j"Jof foreign and domestic passen-' General Motors plans to phase command much of a premium {^"^orgamza ion t a ;-’;ger cars and trucks, motor- out its Buick Riviera and 01ds-| if the industry of which the jhandlcs mi ion pie^^ '■{cycles and buses. Un Carbide 2 On Elec 1.20 Unocal 1.20a ' 24% 24% 24% 72'/4 71% 72'/4 1 19% l9'/a 19% : 130 128'% 128% x40 2649 26 : 15 72% T2'/4 5 36 51’/» 50% ! 29 21'/| 20’» : 55 55 54% : ■\ 24% 24% : 7 57% 56% ! 0 41'/] 41% J 6 38% 38’% : '9 79'/4 78% ; >9 103% 103 II News in Brief %| duction. ,]{ MOM’S Rummage: Thursday( The first of the 1967 models ^i9-12 Indianwood and Baldwin to leave production was ;'*|Rd —Adv.l American Motors’ mobile Toronado Friday. OnCj company is an integral part is week later Ford will close its; simply not in fashion. A store nearby Wixom plants, halting may have the best quality Thunderbird and Lincoln pro- dress in the world for sale, but if the hemline is a foot below the knee it might as well be mail a day with 19th-century tools. which quit in May. a rag insofar as its market appeal is concerned. Same with stocks.” Consumers Gels Bond Issue Okay I Vasili Cojerean of 6036 EIiz-[ *" "‘“y- .f i . . n nv LANSING ifl'i - Consumers ’ I'I’labeth Lake, Waterford T o w n-| The ’67 model phasing out and successiui a tot^a y >s q, received author- ‘{ship, reported to township police the changeover to production of h from the Michigan Pub- ------- n^gdels will be in full establishing footholds-jggy. j; yesterday the larceny of a ro-1! tary tiller and lawn mower, swing at about mid-July, total value of $240, from 'his], home. Chrysler will close six of its^ 'seven assembly plants July 7.{ p ■ Ml General Motors wilfj bllSiriBSS mO|6S •’e following on a staggered basis. AMC may cease 1967 pro-John L. Scolaro of 3610 Frank- duction the first week of July, lin Road, Bloomfield Township, MILESTONE LATE was recently elected to the- ^gj^g gg^ iward of directors of Cresmer, f^^g, ; Woodward, O’Mara and Orms-- ; IJ'^^iibee, Inc newspaper represen-g,j„iggjh ,967 passenger can tatives. He was formerly president and Detroit manager. g^ 34 behind last Curtis E. Patton, 314 S. Tilden,Year. 1 new ones is also a measure of its appeal as a growth in-^ vestment. Mechanics Picket Firms 1* 41H 41W 4I48 - ' —w— W«rnPlc_^S0a 203 26^ 2SV» 28^ + \ 2 22*i 22*8 22H + < 16 S2Vt 51 Vj 52'/8 + ■ WnBanc 1.10 7 2t’/t 28*8 m» + \ WnUnTel 1.40 t 32 38'/4 38>4i 38/8 24 24>/8 27 2638 2638 2638 146 26 25'/8 2534 . . 1*5 3234 32 32V8 - H 5 3* 35’/8 35'/8 - ' 12* 2834 2838 28',8 .. 46 4338 43H 43H .. 20 18V4 11 II .. II *338 63V8 *3'/i -f 7 3034 301/8 SOW - _____ 18 61 *77* *77/8 - Pannzoll 1.40 4 112 112 112 -I- Phlla El 1,64 Phil Rdg 1.60 PhllMorr 1.40 PhlltPot 2.40 PItneyB 1.20 PltPlate 2.60 PIHs Steal Polaroid ,40 ProelarG 2.20 II N34 H34 1138 - V8 46 7138 71W 7138 + 18 7 3118 3118 3138 + 34 SO 6434 6334 6434 +138 “ ""i 45 -l'/4 17 6 ■ 4IW ( 7 S5W S5V8 S5W + 4 43 4134 4134 .. 3 12 12 13 - 3* 33334 223V8 233 +1 14 1*14 H IfW + „ 3* 2138 2138 3138 -14 With divl...., p—Paid this farrad or no _______ ________ .... , ------ r—Declared or paid In H.. .... _____ ...Idend. 1—Paid In stock during 1*66, asllmatad cash value on ax-dlvldetid (-distribution date. .... . -Ex dividend. y-Ex sales In full. x-dls-Ex d»1 — -Ex rights, xw—Without rants, ww—With warrants, wd—When ... trtbuhsd. wl-Wh*n Issued. nd-Next day v|—In' bankruptcy or. racalvarihip being reorganized Act, or securities ..... ..... Denies. tn-Forelgn Issue aubfact to In-tcroat equalization tbx. Manday't 1st Dividends Pe, Rale riod REGULAR .....10 Q » ... .25 0 Docalred fll. el Pa: I Retard ■■ Pontiac Great-West Life Insurance representative, recently returned from Lucerne, Switzerland, where he attended the 40th annual meeting of the Million Dollar Roundtable. The group is an international association of the top echelon of life insurance salesmen comprising about one per cent of the persons of that vocation. Michael Ardisson has been appointed director of design for residential planning at Lewis Furniture C o., 62 S. Saginaw, by the company president, Leonard T. ] Lewis. Ardisson is a I native of Nice, France, where he worked as partner in an architect * dec- ARDISSON orating studio. William T. Kent, 670 Jamestown, has been promoted to hospital representative in the Michigan Division of A. H. Rob-jns Co., Richmond-based pharmaceutical manufacturers. Kent joined the company in 1960 and previously served as a medical service representative. He is a member of the American, Michigan and Oakland County Pharmaceutical Associations. Car assemblies last week totaled 175,182, compared with 1713,545 the previous week and 186,372 for the same week a year ago, The industry built 6,903,047 for the year a; of last week. This compared with 7,796,401 at the same time last year. DETROIT (AP) - Some deliveries were slowed or halted Detroit Monday as about 700 mechanics picketed 56 area trucking firms. Members of International Association of Machinists, Lodge 698, voted to strike Sunday after rejecting an offer of 55 cents an hour more pay over three years. Negotiations were to continue today between the union and the Michigan Cartagemen’s Association, Motor Carriers Employers Association and four independent firms. and sell $80 million in first mortgage bonds. The bond issue is designed to retire short-term notes incurred in financing the firm’s construction program and to finance continued expansion of its electric utility plant and facilities and transmission and distribution lines. Consumers Power said the bonds, which will mature in 30 years, will be offered for competitive bidding. Treasury Position TREASURY POSITION $ 2,773,444,186.70 S 4,0*3,013.5*5.00 Deposits Fiscal Year July 148,600,233,0*5.17 124,784,007,104.32 Withdrawals Fiscal Year— 140,394,572,170.30 138,130,*78,115.58 '■'■I 330,ISmoB,518.21 322,527,218,927.82 Gold 4; 13,534,048,*62.31 (X) — Includes *263,125,183.97 debt not subject to statutory limit.____________________ UNIQUE AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY — Highland Center, 900 Mount Clemens, will hold a grand opening offering a free ticket wash, door pri^e and refreshments to customers Thursday through Sunday. The new automatic laundry houses 45 different sized washers, holding 12 to 45 pounds of clothing, and 20 dryers. The laundry will be open from 20 dryers. The laundry will be open from 7 a,m. to midnight, seven days a week, according to manager Tom Poponea of 582 Mount Clemens: Patrons buy a programmed ticket to start machihes instead of using THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1967 Man Held Up by Armed Pair An Orion Township man was robbed by a pair of armed assailants yesterday while stopped on South Sanford near E a s South Boulevard to repair a flat tire, it was reported to Pontiac police. Thomas E. Sheldon, 22, of 87 Summer told officers he had completed changing the tire and was placing a set of tools in the frunk when two men approached and asked him if he needed any help. ★ ★ ★ Sheldon said he answered “no” and when he turned to get in the car a hard object he assumed to be a gun was pressed into his back and knife was placed against his throat. The bandits took his wallet containing $35 and miscellaneous papers and fled north on Sanford on foot, he said. No Gas Stations at Rest Areas on State Freeways LANSING (UPl) - The State Highway Department yesterday warned motorists there service stations at freeway rest areas. However, good, gas and lodging facilities are often located near freeway exit and access ramps. Federal law prohibits commercial enterprises such as gas stations, restaurants or concessions on all 41,000 miles of interstate freeways through out the nation. In Michigan, there are 44 rest areas plus 105 roadside parks and 1,800 picnic table sites on other state highways. ★ * * Freeway rest areas are equipped with rest rooms, telephone, picnic tables and a highway information bulletin board. Suits, Coats, Shoes Stolen From Home Clothing valued at more than $600 was stolen from a Pontiac man’s home, it was reported to city police early today. * ★ * Clarence E. Jackson, 21, of 230 Franklin Road told officers four suits, eight sport coats and six pairs of shoes were taken by the thief. * ★ ★ Investigators said entry was made by removing a screen from an unlocked window on the side of the house. Dodd Censure Debate Snagged WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate debate on the proposed erasure of Sen. Thomas J. Dodd is snagged in a procedural wrangle that Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield says “could last all week.” Chances for an early vote on the censure resolution dimmed Monday as Sen. Russell Long, self-appointed defender of Dodd, renewed his demand for a vote first on the charge that the Connecticut Democrat knowingly double-billed the Senate and private groups for travel expenses. ★ * * The Senate Ethics Committee, which recommended Dodd’s censure for what it called financial misconduct, remains insistent that the Senate vote first on the separate charge that Dodd converted at least $116,083 in political funds to his personal Long, D-La., said he has no intenton of filibustering. But neither did he indicate readiness to yield the floor until his colleagues agree to vote first the double-billing count, EXPECTS REJECT Long said he expects the Senate to reject the double-billing charge and contended it was unfair to leave it hanging over Dodd while the other charge is debated. Mansfield met Monday with DodcJ, Long, Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen and Chairman John Stennis, D-Miss., of the ethics committee t break the impasse. 'We got together but we didn’t get anywhere,” Mansfield later told reporters. But he said efforts would continue. Long needs the Senate’s unanimous consent to reverse the order of vote on the charges leveled by the committee. When he asked for it last week, mem- Arson Likely in Addison Fire try to bers of the ethics panel objected. WILLING, IF . . , Mansfield said he would be willing to vote on the double-billii)g charge first if an agreement could be obtained to follow this, after three or four hours of additional debate, With a vote on the other charge as it now Resentencing Slated in '45 County, Killing A 51-year-old Detroit man who has served 22 years in prison for killing a Southfield Township real estate salesman yesterday pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the 1945 shooting. The plea was entered in lieu A house fire in Addison Township last night was apparently the work of an arsonist, according to Township Fire Chief John Hock. The bouse, at the corner of Brewer and Rochester roads, has been vacant for about two years, Hock said. He said the department arrived at 9:30 p.m. and found about a dozen small fires set throughout the building. ★ ★ * He said the fires had been set with wads of newspaper. Most of them had burned themselves out by the time the firemen arrived, however. Firemen were not able to save a car parked outside the house. Hock said the car, a 1940 Ford, had been doused with fuel oil and set afire. Gunshot Wounds Fatal A White Lake Township woman, Mrs. Alfonso Manganello, 36, of 9072 Maplegrove, died yesterday 'of apparently self-inflicted gunshot wounds. c Junior Editors Quiz on- RAINBOW Treasurer Will Get Degree at MSU Tonight Oakland County Treasurer James E. Seeterlin will be one of the 2,946 Wayne State University graduates participating in tonight’s commencement program at Cobo Hall. The 40-year^Id father of nine earned a BA Degree in political science and history by attending night classes for a 12-year period. Seeterlin of 4597 W. Walton, Waterford Township, is a former clerk and supervisor of Waterford Township. He has served as county treasurer since November 1965. A Glassbiower at Work, Play RICHARDSON, Tex. (AP) -Pursuing one of the most ancient arts in a modern setting, glass-blower Lloyd Jones turns out complicated shapes of glass for experiments at the Graduate Research Center of the Southwest here. When he finishes his day’s work of producing scientific glassware, the 24-year-old artisan g 0 es home to follow his hobby — making glass animals. Porker Crisis in Argentina BUENOS AIRES (AP) - The Pig Breeders Association of Argentina has sounded a general alarm: The porker rearing industry is in a crisis. Breeding methods are antiquated and inefficient, production costs have soared and market prices have not in-■ enough to make up for QUESTION: What causes a rainbow? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: The usual conditions under which we see natures most magnificent spectacle are shown by Cathy in our picture It is just after a shower; raindrops are still in the air but the sun has broken through and is shining behind Cathy’s back. As you see in the diagram, when a sun ray enters a raindrop, it is broken up into the seven spectrum colors of violet, indigo, blue, green, yellow, orange and red. 'The color rays, arc bent, or refracted, and then reflected de away form the drop as rays are reflected from a mirror. Each color ray has a certain angle between coming in and going oat of the raindrop. When Cathy sees a color ray at one certain angle, it will look red if this is the right angle for the red ray. The other places where she can see this exact red qngle (black dots) are arranged in a large ring or bow, and so she will see a bow of red. ’The other colors beside red also have their special angle and make a bow shape, so Cathy tees them grouped side by side as a many colored band. There may be one or more rainbows beside the njain one. it. Result: Argentina’s hog population dropped by som6 600,000 head -- from 3.7 miliion to 3.1 million •— between 1930 and 19ti^. Hefty Theft Leaves No Trail AKRON, Ohio (AP) — Pat Costigan of the Costigan Precast Concrete Co. of suburban Cuyahoga Falls reported that “,500 pounds of concrete curbing were stolen from his plant. Since there were no tire marks indicating the use of a truck, Costigan was at a loss to figure out how the blocks of concrete curbing were carried away. ' ^ S', . . "ir Police Action Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated some 109 reported incidents the past 24 hours. A breakdown of causes for police action: Arrests—10 Vandalisms—11 Burglaries—16 Larcenies—22 Shopliftings—9 Auto ’Thefts—3 Assaults—14 Armed Robberies—1 Indecent Exposures—1 Property Damage Accidents—14 Injury Accidents—6 of a trial which had been granted to Alexander Gliva. Oakland County Circuit Judge William J. Beer accepted G1 i V a ’ s plea, and then scheduled his sentencing for July 10. A week ago. Beer refused to accept Gliva’s second-degree murder plea when he began to bargain with the judge on the terms of his sentence. ★ * ★ The Michigan Court of Appe recently ordered a trial for Gliva when it ruled that he had not been advised of right to an attorney when he was arrested. NO TRIAL He had never stood trial since he pleaded guilty to first-degree murder in the county slaying of Arba Hawley. The Michigan Court of Appeals recently ordered a trial for Gliva when it ruled that he had not been advised of right to an attorney when he was rested. * ★ ★ Second-degree murder carries a prison term up to life, but unlike first-degree murder, which is premeditated, a life sentence is not automatic. Construction Site Looted Burglars made off with more than $550 in workmen’s tools site, city police were told yes-from a Pontiac construction terday. Three diamond saw blad used for masonry work and number of smaller items were among the loot taken from two sheds erected by the Kruse Construction Co./ of Detroit at 1300 Giddings, police said. Entry was made by breaking chain door locks, according to investigators. Owner Thanks Battery Thief ESSEX, Vt. (AP) - Robert Lefebvre’s car battery was stolen and he couldn’t be haippier. It seems he had been trying to remove the battery, which was so dead it wouldn’t even keep the car running when pushed. “The bolts were stripped and it was pretty well corroded on,” he told police, and he hadn’t been able to dislodge it. So when he discovered the battery gone, but nothing else missing, he feltji grateful to the thief. Long maintained that if the double-billing charge were rejected, a couple of days should be allowed for additional debate on the charge Dodd used campaign contributions and the proceeds of political testimonials for personal expenses. ★ ★ * Long indicated he offer softening and probably a substitute, to this count. But he said if the vote went against Dodd on the double-billing count, this would indicate Senate sentiment and he would take very little time in arguing further against the other charge. VERBAL FIRE The fifth day of debate Monday found Dodd under severe verbal fire from Wallace F. Bennett, R-Utah, vice chairman of the ethics committee. Bennett attacked the white-haired senator’s contention that the double-billings resulted from sloppy bookkeeping by a former D^d aide, Michael V. O’Hare. “The record shows,” said Bennett, “that it could not have happened except with his (Dodd’s) full knowledge under his personal directions and toough his actual participation, in a manner and to an extent that demonstrates a willful course of conduct. Last week Dodd, in an emotional speech, told the Senate that if he deliberately attempted to defraud the government through double-billing, he should be expelled rather than censured. Peanuts Lead Skunk's Way WICHITA, Kan. UP) — Ingenuity and a dime helped Fred Fowl-r get a skunk out of his store. When Fowler confronted the creature he quickly turned to a candy machine, bought a bag of peanuts and dribbled them in a line leading out the door. The skunk ate his way out of the store and was last seen waddling down the street. Peanut Diet Bet Has Profit, Loss OXFORD, England (UPI) -It’s no more peanuts tor Oxford University student Richard Lee, 20, at least for a long time. To win a one pound ($2.80) bet he ate nothing but peanuts for a week. He was allowed to wash down the nuts with ale but decided nevertheless thaj it was “nuts” to peanuts for awhile. He lost 9 pounds on the diet. Blacksmith, 73, Sends Sparks WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. — After more than 60 years as blacksmith, Frank Crews is 11 making the sparks fly the shop he has operated behind his house for over a quarter of century. Now 73, he learned the trade as a young boy from his father, who was also a blacksmith. He worked in a local wagon factory for 25 years before concentrating oh custom smithing in his |own shop.. Three in State Sentenced in Mortgage Loan Case DETROIT (UPI) - Three Michigan men, including Detroit financier Benjamin Levinson, were sentenced yesterday to 18 months each in prison in a conspiracy and fraud triai involving Veterans Administration (VA) mortgage loans. •k -k it Each man was also fined $10,-)0 by Federal Judge Thomas P. Thornton. Levinson, a long-time fundraiser for Michigan Democrats; Ross C. Howard of Lansing, who was Levinson’s executive assistant; and Edward P. Strang Jr., Grosse Pointe, former president of the Wayne National Life Insurance Co., were released on $1,000 personal bond each pending appeals. A fouth defendant, Levinson’s Franklin Mortgage Corp., was ordered to pay a $10,000 fine. k k The prison sentences climaxed a 10-week trial that ended last July 12 with an allwoman jury returning guilty verdicts against the three men the Franklin Mortgage Corp. 1965 INDICTMENT Levinson was convicted of entering into an agreement with Strang while Levinson was acting for his mortgage corporation and Strang was using the Wayne National name. Wayne National was used, according to a 1965 indictment, to take advantage of the “automatic lender” designation enjoyed by most banks, insurance companies and lending U.S. Attorney Lawrence Gu-bow said the indictment charged the defendants with submitting GI loans to the VA totaling $207,550. Seven of the loans, amounting to $59,650,' were rejected by the VA when it was lemed the veterans were credit risks. k k k At the trial, witnesses testified Franklin Mortgage submitted loan applications for veterans, who were either ineligible for loans or bad credit risks. New Ford V-8 Cuts Pollution LIMA, Ohio (AP) -The Ford Motor Co. will begin production here this summer of a new V8 engine specially designed for moi-e efficient control of air pollution, Charles H. Patterson, executive vice president, announced Monday. Patterson told a luncheon marking an expansion of Ford’s engine plant here that the new engine will be used in the 1968 Thunderbird. k k k “While I will not attempt to describe how this reduction has been achieved, I will mention that it includes improvements in drawing the fuel-air mixture into the cylinders and exhausting the burned gases,” Patterson said, adding: “As we gain more knowledge from our research, it will be applied to new designs which will progressively lower the emission levels of our internal combustion engines to the point where they no longer will be considered a troublesome source of pollution.” Arab Troops, Police Said in Aden Mutiny ADEN (UPlI — Arab troops were reported today to have mutinied against their British officer in this British protectorate on the Red Sea. They wefe joined by'armed native police. A British helicopter was shot down over the crater district of Aden, and mutinous troops were reported to have laid siege to the headquarter buildings of the South Arabian federal government in nearby Ittihad. The pilot and two passengers aboard the helicopter were injured. There was no other reports of casualties or fighting. In London, the Foreign Office said it had no information about the mutiny. The government said it had requested British troops to put down the rebellion. Britain has maintained a sizable force of troops in the protectorate which had been wracked by nationalist violence for months. TROY — Raymond R. Cow-sert, 33, of 4385 Livernois died today. His body is at the Price Funeral Home. Mrs. Alfonso Manganello WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Alfonso (Carol) Manganello, 36, of 9072 Maple-grove will be 2 p.m. Thursday at the Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Burial will be in Oakland Hills Memorial Cemetery, Novi. 'Breaks' Make Business Boom RICHMOND, Va. UP) - Accidents keep L. G. Busse, artisan and carver, busy — and an accident led to establishment of his business: “Busse’s Bistro for Busted Bobeches and Brokep its of Bisque.” A bobeche is a saucer-shaped dish designed to catch candle drippings and bisque is unglazed ceramic ware. School District of the City of Pontiac Pontiac, Michigan NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING Pursuant to Act 43, Public Acts of 163 (Sacond Extra Session) the Board : Education of fha School Olstricf of le CIfy of Ponflac will hold a | hearing on its proposed budget fo fiscal year July 1, 1»67 fhrough Jui Michigan. A copy of fhe proposed budget w . .yallable for Inspection at the Board of Education offices from S;00 a.m. ti “ p.m., Monday through Friday, up ti Including the time of the hearing, ad: June 7, 1967 VERNON L. SCHILLER, Trea___________ School District of the City of Pontiac Juno 20, 1967 LEGAL NOTICE The following is a list of ii vehicles which have been declai - ■■ therefore setw lUCtlon, pun - - ---- 300 of Pl_______ IC.L. 1948, Sec. 2S7,252) 1954 Ford — U4PG 112 657 1954 Cadillac — B11Y FW 27 752 1957 Cadillac - 56 631 51 949 1955 Chrysler — N55 10 767 1959 Ford — C9HG1 777115 1953 Plymouth — 181 27 347 >F 094 U -- -.......... - 508 B16 747 1956 Lincoln - BAJ 60B 067 37C 8292 of the above vehicles will be held .................. 22nd, 1967, - • — ADVERTISEMENT FOR.B .... furnishing and Installation of cai peting In the new Bloonfleld Hills Lahsc Road Senior High School until 2:00 P.M E. D. S. T., Tuesday, June 27, 1967, i the office of the Bloomfield Hills Boar of Education, Bloomfield Hills, MIchlgai Proposals will be received as follows: Base Bid "A" — Carpeting Work , Proposals must be on form furnished by the Architect and be accompanied by Bond or Certified Check I- •— of five per cent (5%) c proposal submitted. —' specifications may b d after Monday, Jur.. . . _. . . office of the Architect, Tarapata - MacMahon Associates, Architects - Engineers - Planners, 1 Square Lake Road, Bloomfield c^eck In the amount of 810.00 must ....... a deposit lor specifications, lai Mrs. William H. Brown Mrs. William 1^. (Ida) Brown, 72, of 800 E. Columbia ‘died today. Her body is at D. E. Parsley Funeral Home. Surviving are her husband; two sons, Horace of Pontiac and Michael F. of Las Vegas, Nev. a daughter, Mrs. Gladys Fischer of Grayling; seven grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren; a brother, Wil-liaih Salsbury of Waterford Township and two sisters, Mrs. Roses Edson of Pontiac and Mrs. Irene Mike of Milford. Herman E. Keel Herman E. Keel, 77, of 877 Spence died today. His body is at Voorhees-Siple F u n e r a Home. Mr. Keel was a Pontiac Motor Division retiree. Surviving are his wife, Harriett; a daughter, Mrs. James Smith of Waterford Township; two sons, Joseph and Jessie of Pontiac; one brother and one sister. Frank G. Miller Service for Frank G. Miller, 89, of 3690 Brookdale, Waterford Township, will be 1:30 p.m. Thursday at 3690 Brookdale, with burial by Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home at Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. Miller, a retired inspector at GMC Truck and Coach Division, died yesterday. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. George K. Brown of Grand Prairie, Tex., Mrs. Charles Pace of Clarkston and Patricia at home; four grandchildren; and a brother. Raymond R. Cowsert Mrs. Maqganello died yesterday. Surviving besides her husband are her father, Dewey Johnson; two sras, Alfonso A. and Dennis D., both at home; three sisters; and a brother. Mrs. Claus Olson ORTONVI^LE - Service for former resident Mrs. Claus (Emma) Olson, 88, of Grand Blanc will be 1 p.m. Thursday at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home. Burial will be in Orton-ville Cemetery. Mrs. Olson died yesterday. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Mary Vanhuff of Sacramento, Calif., and Mrs. Elsie Vanhuff of Grand Blanc; two Ralph of Sebring, Fla., and Eina of Elmo, Mo.; and nine grandchildren. George W. Platter ORTONVILLE — Service for former resident George W. Platter, 88, of Brighton will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Platter died Sunday. He was a member of St. Luke’s Methodist Church. Surviving are his wife. Earline; two sons, Arthur of Anaheim, Calif., and Robert Of Brighton; a daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Zinaw of Troy; two stepsons, Leon Martin of Benton, 111., and William Martin of Warren; two brothers, including Henry of Cooley Lake; and two sisters. State Police Nab 2 Camp Escapees Two escapees from Camp Pontiac, both serving terms for uttering and publishing, were captured by Postiac State Police early today shortly after they fled the White Lake Township facility. William R. Hanlan, 17, and Larry T. Lapeer, 21, were apprehended while walking north along'1-75 in Springfield Township. 'They were taken to Oakland County Jail. NON E MORE QUALIFIED TO SERVE feparks-GiiffinV! V * FUNERAL HOME FE 8-9288 Outstanding In Pontia^ For Service And Facilities iPKlflcatfoni good con' ten (10) days of fhe open -------- - -.M , .’Orton Material f fui^l^ ^atlsfactary^ the amount contract. The amount of 100 per cent of the _____ . . accepted I ^ropotal* ^lubmltti after opening of bids. The Board of Education reserves the right to relect any or r” ■- --- " inpart, and to waive rem. Board of-------- Bloomfield Hills . EDWARD 5 Warmth anid Hospitality If you are looking for a real treat, next time you make plans for your business meetings, dinner parties or special events, choose “The library Room" at Bedell's. Mable . Goodwin, your hostess, will see that every last detail is carried out as you would wish. 2395 Woodward at Sq. Lk. Rd. 334-4561 I