yipinc/ky;' THURSDAY AUGUST a, 1063 —48 f AOBS UNITSD PRESS INTERNATIONAL •^¥efe?Hm NOnUft— -■■★ A * Homt Edition Federal funds for Expansion Group Meets Early to Poll Membership The Pontiac Police Officers Association tPPOA), bargain i n agent for Pontiac’s 110-man police force, has given Police Chief Joseph Koren a vote of confidence See Editorial on Page A-6 in his battle with city commissioners. The vote cane at a regular meeting of the group last night. The meeting, originally scheduled for next week, was held Jt week early in view of the City Commission’s suspension of City Manager Robert A. Stiercr. Stierer was suspended Monday, largely'beeauto lie refused’to fire Koren As requeatedby a majority of the commission s! 'secant secret-meetings. | The vote coacnwed'ealy the i with the commis- '■1W***'-* “We called^the meeting early to see how the membership feels about the controversy,said Thomas' Hereford, PPOA president. He said that “a good Majority’ cf the 34 members present voted ip farm: Of supporting the chief.. Total membership of the PPOA is about 85. SPIRITED WINNER - Janice Kieta took her horse Rex out for a ran after R won first place in the halter class at the 4-H fair yesterday. Janice, II, is a member of the Troy Mustangs 4-H Club. She will be riding Rot in competition again Saturday night, when a Horse Club contest doses Out die five-day fair. ■. . ‘ i _ , Cost of Project Is $3 Million Plan 87-Bed Addition, Remodeling of Facility A- 81.5-miUfon federal grant to finance a $3-mi]lion expansion program at Pontiac’s St. Joseph Mercy Hospital wai approved yesterday by the U,S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare. The $1,516,000 grant under accelerated public works fends will provide for an 87-bed addition and remodeling of the present building. Sister Mary Xavier, hospital administrator, said the five-story addition will be constructed on the north end of’ the 388-bed hospital. “The remodeling sf the main building wiU be fairtyexteH-sive,” Sister Xavier aided, “and it will relieve some of the overcrowding.’’ The hospital administrator said Patrick Bouvier in Child Center Kennedy Suddenly Changes Plans; BoyY. Breathing Difficult VISITS WIPE—President Kennedy leaves the Children’s Medical Center in Boston today after seeing his 1-day-old son Patrick. From the center, Kennedy motored to a nearby helicopter for a trip to Otis Air Force Base Hospital in Cape Cod to visit his wife Jacqueline. Showers Loom Airman Gives Blood on City Horizon to Pres From Onr News Wires BOSTON — President Kennedy’s ailing day- old son - took a turn for the worse heSre today and brought the Chief Executive rushing b a c k iron Cape Cod. The baby, Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, encountered “increasing diffleultiw" from a breathing problem, and blood tests Were ordered to determine tbe extent of danger to the infant. The President returned by helicopter six hours before he had planned to do so. The quick trip came after a brief consol-tation with doctors treating the infant. The,. 4-pound-10-ounce infant is suffering from a breathing difficulty which worsened during the - day, . \ \ • After landing . the President went immediately to Children's County Clerk Eyed for Auditors'Head ' i OTIS AIR FORCE BASfr Mass. (A — A young air- \ Pictures .Storks, hlTt y- M .. t . .. . ll0n“1a2ain [man, who volunteered as a blOQddonory had the honor pooe a. jq Utha halanre^flf thecosts of the, g nrsHirting nomthle thunder- I 1 . . —______^7. • .• :■ . rage «jrw ...... IT. ^ ■ , ’ T .J.. iOtiwiMW fMA Knwn nf hnr enn warm with a chance of ■aftei’- [expansion would be borne by the "1 Sisters of Mercy, Detroit. 1 A one-story addition to the west side of ths Catholic hospital will .provide new dietary facilities. A simltor addition to the south end will give new emergency facuities, an outpatient clinic, and fa-cillties for physiotherapy. “Naturally, we don’t agree on everything the chief - does, but we do in this particular situation," Hereford noted. “We believe that those things on which we do disagree can be straightened out. through negotiation." Whan informed of the ,PPQA action this morning, Koren said he was “very gratified. “It should help to set the rec-j ord straight," he noted. I §y DICK HANSON A movement is afoot among mettfbdrg of the Oak.-land County Board of Supervisors to appoint County Clerk - Register Daniel IV Murphy chairman of the County Board of Auditors. The maneuver is planned as the first step toward making Murphy a county manager. As such, he would be directly responsible to the I Sister Xavier said the remodeling of the main building would include setting up four-bed wards instead of the present six-bed facilities, and also provide for more semiprivate and private- rooms. This is the first of a two-phase expansion program that wiU give St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, a 500-bed capacity, according to Sister Xavier. Hodges-Says White Is Guilt Grftwnd Murder Triaf Hears Accusation ♦‘The fact that internal problems arise between myself and the PPOA ir normal and negotiation often results in more efficient operation.’’ Koren added that many members of the department and private citizens bid phoned or come ■ to hDii offering morHs^port. (Special to The Press) KALAMAZOO - Charles E. Hodges took the stand in tbe first* degree murder trial of his uncle, Adoiae White, yesterday and tes- of his dismissal yet by any city officials. tified that White “did all the dating” in the knife slaying of Kro* ger store comanager Robert A. Greene March 16. Ih Today's , Press Diabetes Federal workers fudge on the Job for health — PAGE B-5. Runoff competition tor contract considered •** PAGE B-4. D-Day ■ Special tax reform session begins (Sept. aSr-B PAGE 04. Area News .......'-..••JM.-i Bridge .............D-* ] Comics .... Deepening Crisis WL «M*friria . Pood Section C4, C4, W j 1 Theaters . TV-Radio Programs D-Jl ? Women’s Pages 84-8*11 board of supervisors for the day • to - day adi iuHygovernment. The task currently is split among numerous department heads who must answer separate-ly to various superytton’ Quito mittees and the board of auditors. construction loot of $2.8 Million is expected in 18 months. Hodges, 22, of 174 Prospect, who a day earlier pleaded guilty to tbe robbery-murder, said he tried to discourage White, also 22, of 7l% Wall, from kflling Greene and urged that the victim Ite taken to ■ hospital. __ Appearing as a prosecution witness, Hndgfs said he took no part in tbe slaying and had not known at first that he was participating ' » robbery —--------——- He said White told him they were taking Greece to the store that night “to pick up a check." Hodges admitted taking some of the $lp5M stolen from the safe Greene was forced to open before he Was killed at tbe Kroger store at Tekgniph and Elizabeth Lake roads. - The . county manager’s responsibilities and authority to carry them out would be similar to those held by a city manager. * Murphy said he was asked U consider the position by supervisors attending a recent meeting nf the Nitinnal Association County Officers iu Defiver, Colo. They included Delos Hamlin, ekairman of the board of supervisors;,Frank Webber, vice chairman; David Levinson, past chairman and head of the powerful ways and means committee, and Madison Heights Supervisor Charles B. Edwards Jr. - Also included wart Curtis Pot-ter and Harry Horton of Royal Oak ; R. Clare Qunmings, Pontiac; Thomas O’Donogtue, Fern-dale; John jCarey, Springfield TtonMQp; Curtis Mall, Farming-ton Township; and David Calr houn, Huntington Woods. Blueprints are already in the hands of contractors. Bids will be let in about two weeks. noon thundershowers is tomorrow’s forecast. - Tonight If expected to be fair and cool, the low dipping to near 85. T ’ 7 Lady Jacquelitife Kennedy, during the birth of her sonjHoapital Medicaj cen^ to talk (yesterday. *-at’ 1. - -* with doctors. Hie .ann^mnceirient that Mrs. Kennedy had te-ceived *»Mw>d transfusion was madg by an Air Force b a s e information officer1; Skies will be clear and temperatures cooler Saturday, the high climbing to about 80. Sunday and Monday will be warmer again. Light, variable morning winds will continue through tonight and become south to southwest at 10 to 15 miles per hour tomorrow. . . ;___ ; ~l j. . The low recording hi downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a m. was 63. The thermometer registered 85 at 2 p,m. 18 pinto today, three of them of die type of Mrs. Kennedy’s while President Kennedy visited with his wife at the hospital wing fbday. The donor was Airman John M.j They also could call on the third Bolger of jersey City, NJ., who volunteer donor, Airman Charles provided two pints of his blood- ch Benfer of Washington, 4X0, type A-l-RH positive. The Air Force ’ also hid two other volunteer standby donors, one of them stUi held in readi- who was the last of the trio in toe emergency bl Mrs. Kennedy. The base also disclosed that toe in nf in i .' ^nn Kennedy baby was the 5,624th inpara of need. He is airamn baby born at Otis since records Edward Courtade 3rd of Wind-. sor, Pa.^ ------- - p 1948 and Patrick ------[Bouvier Kennedy waa the 465to Tbe hospital normally retains j baby bora attoeirase hospitaltoiif a blood bank of 18 pints. It had ! year. Sister XaOier said hospital of-i Press Secretary Pierre Salinger toM newsmen: ‘The President’s new son-is encountering increasing new difficulties. There are going to be some tests taken in the next hour which will give U8 additional toformation; Asked about the outlook and condition of toe youngster, Sal- v inger replied: “I think I’ll stand on my previous statement.” Eariier^ lke said the baby’s condition remained about the safflp through the night. It was a source of koine encourage* ment to doctors who thought the baby’s condition woaht get —-— ■■ The prgj^dent will await the result of toe tests at his suite dir-tbe Rita Carlton Hotel, S0- . The 87-bed addition will tile hospital a net gain Of 30 beds, she estimated. It will] eliminate some of “the overcrowd-1 ing in the main building.... Sister Xavier said the construction would tie in with toe city's] new east side sewers. Any enlargement of the hospital is contingent'on thb .city’A: installing new pipe lines to give British Train Robbed •inger^d. ^ ThuJtoby was delivered prematurely by Caesarean section yesterday at Otis Air Force Base Hospital. CHEDDINGTON, England (AP^a million pounds (82.8 million), itl.551.277-taken last Aug. 14 from •A band of 20 to 30 masked ban-1 Exe^tedin-15^nimites,4hi8 vrasta maii truck outside Plymouth, dits decoyed toe ©«8gi^)nido»)tBe^ and boldest train rob- Mass. bery in British history. OTcbSi-1 signal today, blackjacked toejen-1 1 f the hospital added sewage sirv-jgineer and escaped with loot thatlP"^ robberies in' the United] “The loss is likely to be very ice. ----- {the post 'office said may exceed!States, the biggest cash haul was heavy and may well run Into TTiey are recognized as some of toe most7 tnfloentiai members on the board. WILLING CANDIDATE J . .. . -_v T Murphy said he is a willing! His testimony, however, con- candidate for.the board oTnudW tradicted ^ of toe stotemento t0f8 * J mcTs being county he made to pobrt after he and and ^ pay t, ^n. White w«e arrested March 1|.|«^, — ] At that time, Hodges admitted] cutting Greene twice^ Greene’s body wad found With 42 stab wounds. Although Hodges M a r b JT19 statement was introduced dence, no one in eomt compared (Continued on Page 2, Cat. 2) He said III final decision de-peads upon haw much authority and pay the heard of supervisors proves willing to give him. “For one thing," said Munphy, “I would want; to make my own ” the British post of- Even as the president was hur- ; rytof -to—tos infant son’r- side, Richard Cardinal Cushing, spirt-tual leader of the Boston Roman . Catholic Archdiecese, asked for the prayers of all citizens' for " the~~ sp(^y Tecovery ^ ^ ditid." Even though ^ the sudden change in the President’s plans had only been announced less than an hour before, toe news flashed. flee said. “This is the first attack- _______ on y traveling post nrfftee inr4he throu^ ^ cKldren’s hospital ^5~years of toeir Iqstory.” Postmaster General Reginald Bevias offered i 19,000-pODBd ($28,000) reward for iaforma-tion leading to the arrest and conviction of the bandits. The bandits seized about 120 Jugs-of-regisleied mail coMJiliF still valid currency which was being returned to London for reprocessing. There were reports toe haul also included a consignment of diamonds for Hatton Market, London’s gem trading center. The bandits struck shortly after 3 a.m, at a rural crossing 40 miles northwest of London. They covered the green signal at the crossing with u glove and put batteries behind toe red signal to light it. They alto cut railway telephone wires. COVERALLS, MASKS medical center by early afternoon. Crowds of onlookers soon lined windows and corridors within view of the main entrance in anticipation Of Ms arrival, visited the hospi- |ng a large quantityjrf used but tal before going to Cape Cod to n coveralls and various masks, the . bandits! see his wife who was reported in excellent condition and recuperating well from the/*caesarean section. At that time he conferred with doctor! who gave him a hopeful prognosis. The child’s condition remained the same during the night but apparently worsened , during the day. The worsening situation and the mite of blood tests to aid in further diagnosis may indicate a probtoip not fully explained by breathing difficulties alone. Bat, peadiag results of the i teats abd information as to ] their precise aatare, only spec-' ] ulation is possible. ' BOAT RESCUE --Flood victims in the Buffalo, N.Y.«, suburb of Cbeektowaga are '] evacuated tty a* small boat during torrential (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) j rains which left much of the area under 4 feet of water. Damage today was estimated jit 835 millkm as the massive' job of cleaning up the Possibilities ranged from testing the blood cells themselves mud and debfis began. More than 300 had to be evacuated by rescue teams. »' WmMm ] panted the tr.in wHh ctobs Md ^ x^^to ^ th. o«. fo ba?JLTP0« content of the Mood, to chscK- 1 Dinoor jack Mills, 58, halted Ms * - 1 (Continued on Page 2, Col, 1) compatibility. ing far some possible biood to 01273762 $$ ■ r!;1 •~TvA7'“' ■IJlU ■; j ... . -■ 1 ‘ I •!" ■ 7 : ■■ ■ . ^ La—s THK PONTUVC PH^JSS; THURSDAY. AUGUST 8, 1XC -JFK Polishes N-Ban Appeal WASHINGTON (AP)-President Kennedy polished up sn appeal to the Senate for approval of the new SaqhWest limited teat-tea pact today while representatives of many nations signed the treaty in Washington, London and Mos- Ihe “presidential message asking ratification and placing the ‘km due at the Capitol in Tate The President took some time mrt fr»»w datttle run. between "his ailing newborn aba in Boston and his wife at Otis Air Force Base where the baby ops bom, Wednesday, for work on the ap- ------1 ’ ♦ - 1. • ■■ Australian Ambassador Howard Beale started a parade of diplomats through the State Department to sign the pact banning Birmingham Area News New Students Should Register Now nuclear weapon* test everywhere except underground. ♦ t, ’* Twenty-six such signatures were scheduled when the ceremony began and three inDre--Braxil. Ar-gentina and the United Arab Republic—were added before noon. Many of tee countries signing in Washington expected to have their representatives sign also during the^day in London and Moscow. P(|SBjj|B important the, part . _ the signatories, however, and there was no prospect they would adhere to tee ban. They are France, which is becoming a nuclear power; and Red China, which may explode a nuclear device by the end of this year. In Moscow, an East German delegation arrived to sign the ,j treaty from other Eastern European Communist countries and from lany non-Communist BIRMINGHAM -^Tha. Boardjschoola and all incoming, lttb th< '^ucattef to1 urging att u 0ma *,Rl "■"“St dents who wifi enter Birmine-nigh schools. r'rW -v —1 necessary tor iham Public Schools for the first The exams are.necessary for . , „ East Germany is not recognized by the Western powers and therefore cannot sign in London or Washington. Gannany’s Bandits Rob English Train (Continued From Page One) diesel engine. Mills was clubbed -down. --A.----...... Some ainaahed windews of tW” mtfl “l ithe rush to the tmety in the cere- climbed aboard. Hey bound ^ Moscow. Canada’s rep- East meant a total of at least 30 signatures, since a signing in one capital is as binding aa signatures by IM~same country in all three. ‘ ?■ * Sr ★ The Indian ambassador led off resentative was the first t( London. the four mafi sartors. They handcuffed the assistant engineer, David Whitby, to Miffs, uncoupled the two coaches from the remaining 10 cars of the tram and forced theengineer to move the engine and two cars a mile further south. ♦. Whitby laid later he was told by one of the bandits: “If you shout, I will kill yen.*’ He promised he would not shout. He and the engineer were handcuffed together when they were eventually taken to a hospital in Aylesbury and freed. Mills was detained there with head injuries. .......’•»---»-----*. ' ■■■; The tend unloaded the mail ~ bags on a bridge over a narrow country road and dropped them to cars waiting on the road, IS feet below, then they sped away. De-—tectivea speculated that they wenij to some isolated building near the scene to sift through the loot. * ★ • • — “It was obviously a very professional job,” said Detective inghantehire. “They seemed to know their railway signaling.” ■" : Or * * ——| The alarm was given by a postal worker, who ran about a mile from the ecene to Cheddington Station. Police arrived Wife tracker i/am J. Beta: to change the trial's) don; Roadblocks were set up in location from "Pontiac ^ Kabfc ttiirlriiifffvnmehirn ahil latlgld— ann in n.Hnr tn ?n im. counties. Ipartial jury. ments. appointments to head the varicos third member of the board of county departments I would hr] auditors, Robert E. Lilly, a responsible for. - -* “Otherwise, I would have' no real authority over these tions.” ", ................. Hodges Testifies White Did Killing (Continued From Page One) it with Hodges’ testimony yesterday. Oakland County Prosecutor George F, Taylor said he. would Introduce in evidence today -i statement by White, _ Defense attorney Milton R. Henry is seeking White's acquittal on grounds of insanity-lie said be would ask feat White, a stockboy at the Kroger store at tike time of the crime,, be committed to a mental institution, Hodges, who said femMfeffi GRAND CHAMPION — “Black Magic IT was chosen Grand Champion Steer in beef cattle competition at the 4-H fair yesterday. The 979-pound Angus was paraded before the judges by. its owner, 15-year-old Jerry Langley. r«Hu Preii nut* Jerry .is a member of the Ro-Hl Club, which draws 4-lTers from Rose and Highland town-shipe. His steer and other, beef cattle.will be sold at the livestock auction tonight-. , respective possible. Tests and course schedules are to he completed , by students enrolling in the junior and senior high schools. They will be assisted by counselors now on doty at each school. Advaina iwililiattati ii UtiTTiTT =theerfW!TTHie at Grovee High Srhfwri . loot yew, h— been extended to all secondary schools. [PAY FEES F Ail new and, returning students at Baroum, Berkshire, Derby, Groves and Seahohn have been asked to pick up their schedules and pay their fees the week of Aug* 26-30. Students who jvill be out of town may register Sept. 3 and 4. Parents of children attending Birmingham elementary schools for the first time, should contact the schoqj la their, area. Phyaical examinations are r,bOT“torW "™*-| bed*MS' he thinks the job of county man- term. nation. * ■ ^ # eger would be worth. * * * * r, . , Moore has been a member of A sizeable lead in Tuesday s the board of auditors for 33 first primary launched Johnson JACKSON, Misse (UPI) - Paul Lilly. 46-year-oid auditor’s see-}8 Johnson and J. P. Coleman,j . A combined salary of $20,908 as chairman of the board of auditors and county manager is being considered by the supervisors who favor Morphy for the job. Murphy’s present salary as the bounty’s elected clerk-register of deeds is $18,500 annually. The auditors’ chairman is paid $13,400 annually; Murphy said if he is made chairman and thus county manager, he no longer would be a -....... - - "to let me out of here” when tej Congressional District seal realized what was happening at 1904. T prefer to work in county government,” he said, “bat years. Before that, he was Bloomfield Township supervisor for six ’years and township clerk for two years. it Or" ♦'* .. Mufphyy40,ha« boon eterk-reg-iqter since the position was created in 1959. Before ffiat he was county register of deeds since 1966. into the campaign. Coleman entered by virtue pf outpolling another major -contender, Charles L. SuiUvaft, Sullivan, berated by his opponents ns unqualified and teK mature, was considered a “nice guy” again today as Johnson and Coleman began wooing bis supporters. The committee agreed with a New York Stock Exchange report that no discernible single group, or circumstances, could be singled out as the cause of the tremendous drop-te stock prices in Into May of test year. The special committee wound up a massive, two-year study of tbo securities industry With recommendations for changes in the basic Voting power on the New York Stock Exchange, for abolition or strict control outdoor j set wilti 8 ft platform did*, ! swings, ? Mot lawn glider, chinning I bar,, jungle ringt, trapeze par, 2-teot air glider. 108x93" S ft Poked ehomef finish. $3 holds lrr : . free layaway Small charge'for dehv - SUAMS rlH ■OPEN FRI. and MON. J NITES Until 9 P.M. ---Daily Hours Aro 10 A.M. to 5 P.M. whOTs ending a term over the heavy initial fees j Sevin of 10 Passengers Killed in Freeway Crash 'FONTANA, Calif. UB - A ate-lion wagon carrying a man and niite children crashed into a concrete abutment on the San Bern-(in.tn ■ 1 lnche. at a p.xi. ^ - * Mar at 4:|4 car . . ..te Prtdajr at 14:18 • m I •— ------- For one thing, a spot must I first be opened on the three- i member board of auditors for Morphy to fill. ’ „ Murphy’s supporters h 1 v e| their eye on the scat currently] held by Robert Y. Moore^ 77-yearrold vice chairman and past! chairman of the board of auditors. MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS OcseMcr Monogram’ 6‘Cigars Rubber BASKETBALLS Jacksonville iSS‘d* 7* m uunin si m the board of supervisors. met* ■ 74 4) Miami Bell. N 7t * * * tegon (1 68 Milwaukee 76 68 Moore is expected to retire to j msdee room for Murphy, who would then have to be made chairman. But Moore has said he is ! “thinking of running” again. Whether he'would be successful or not would be dedded 1n | ' October when Moore comes up) |th,..... 89c AUTO SAFETY SEAT BELTS SSiOO Value - Beat Belt Council approved., 3* m m . THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8^1963 Romney to Get Budget Advice LAN8IN Q m -The Cttiaen* Committee on Higher Education yesterday announced the appoint-haaat of a staff end ihemhere of • subcommittee to advise Gov. Romney on 1964-05 budget fOo-ommendations for higher education.' Alvin Bentley, fanner chairman of the education commit-tee of the Constitutional Con- . during Am next thre fhroyeer period. Named as members of the sub- of the a old Taylor , i m. Or. Har- hHM Richard Austin, Detroit; Joseph Brady, Howell; Frank Couiens Jr., Detroit; Woodrow Ginsberg, St Clair Shores; Max Heavenrich Jr., Saginaw; Robert Herrick, North Muskegon; Mrs. Mildred Jeffrey, Detroit; William Pine, Dearborn; Joseph Roes, Detroit; Louis Well Jr., Lansing; Charles Boyer, Manistee. Might Rename Michigan Peak After an Author I/AN&5 asm* te teaeto emfc' playgrounds and amusement rides. Crulto homo rofrashsd humanity when we ship, supply - or give hungry people flour fa-stead of wheat. Doing so, we deprive them of some of the elements essential for good nutrition and good tealb, such as nUnmfa. A wEtenpfa B1 (flfaWtal vitamin B2 (riboflavin), vitamin E, calcium, phosphorus.” The pantry of the householder wte knows domestic economy should always be supplied with plain wheat. IT there’s no wheat i the pantry, maybe the householder imagines wheat is dtffw cult to digest or maybe be Just ~ has no gumptioir 'Spirit of St. Louis' Flies to Air Exhibit ST. LOUIS, Mo. (ft— A replica of tire “Spirit of St Louis," the craft in which Charles A. Lindbergh flew the Atlantic in 1827, droned over this city recently. Built in California for a movie, . it was brought tore for an air show. Lindbergh’s original plane is in the Smithsonian Institution. 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Tm ENCYCLOPEDIA OF2500 Tested Recipes! 12 FUU-COLOR RECIPE BOOKS btiitifslly bound aid gift boxed CHARGE YOUR WHITE SALE HEEDS AT WAITE’S! T -4- XH£ PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 k—f doubted. **£*inttusVt^hunev^ You May Hav* Hal-lucinations oubleri # ' r "V- • — , -- ..................*• ■- • ^ ......., ___________ .. ..... Get a Checkup Annually—Catch an Inspiring Disease McaoR-c/nr MADNESS Squeeze Jqtc* of 1/8 lemon Into ted **M*. Half-Ml wttb Cask Rhine Win*. Add lee cubes. FIN with soda wator. SUr. Add sugar, H daalrad. Sarnlah with maraschino charry, tMn la man ellca. larva with straws. CASK II rear fsrertts WJ^tES rnmnrmsr MORE MEN WEAR BOND CLOTHES dfalAN /Vant OTHER CLOTHES BOYLE faQ parties. Finally, an old , [friend took me aside and said: hate to be the 6ne to have to tell you this, but it’s your own fault people have begun to avoid you. You’ve let our set down dreadfully by failing.to get your annual medical checkup. AMERICA No charge for alterations!—-Just say "Charge It" ^0; PONTIAC MALL By HAL BOYLE NEW YOBJC (AP)—Getting an annual medical checkup is a lead' ing. status symbol today—particularly if it turns up a rare ailment no orfe else has. Iwonde. why old acquaintances were cutting me dead in the street, and strangers fled me at cock- Mdre than 2,500 different prskht Icelanders, how - numbering ucts are now packed in cans, with U0,000‘ are descendants of the T over 135 industries utilizing this blond, blue-eyed Norsemen who ' type otcontainer. r - [settled in the 9th Ctmtufy. ........ es on your madly pounding heart As you lie there listening to the pretty technician talk about her vacation, you try vainly to think up some famous test vmrds. The only phrase that comes, to miMJi—“Prir rinw- nair latere Several days later, after the ^ waffly is WTOftg Vflth annual medical checkup was well lJj - .i «... nwV ---------------- -------.u .i____: doctor had reviewed aU this medical machine gossip, I crept cring-ingly into his office tor the verdict. “Well, if you give up your bois- settle down to a calm and aenal- ble way of life/’ said the doctor, ................... ‘ \ time “you should test for a long yet- But, of course, this is no guaradtee.U don’t have a pipeline to the Lord.” , ,tYetoli,duL," 1 auillblAd. "Bflf ‘‘What’s a. protuberant verruca?” I pleaded, wiping my brow. “A big wart!” Well, a glance in the mirror and a penny in the drugstore scales l*n"M IfflVt tlM r»T ha/< “ u,nrt— and was too fat. But I felt my me? OVERWEIGHT ‘Specifically, you’re at least 20 pounds overweight, and you have a protuberant verruca on your thvmid.. or a cobblqtype-Httered gallbladder. But me—I’ve got the only pro-| tuberant verruca in the crowd. And I intend to make the moat of BT worth the price. I should be the Ilfe of the party in my set from now on. AH they have is colitis, ulcers, hyperten-' iero and there a rampant always unusual values ___. The original Liberty Bell wasjl ordered from England in 1751 to j hang in the Pennsylvania Statejl House, now known as Independ-S enne.Hall - ' !■ CARPET 1028 West Huron FE 8*9675 Open 'til 9 p.m.—Saturday ’HI S: SO “This leaves no common ground Jot discussion.” - , i- • I protested ttuTlifter my ttiti checkup five years ago the doctor told me I was “medically uninteresting” and “I'd die rattier than let word of that get around in our crowd.”......T-:-----------A “Oh, surely there’s something wrong with you by now,” replied tny friend eheeririgly. “Get another checkup.” * '' So I did.x ~ SAY‘AH’ Remember whim all the doctor did was to make you stick out your tongue and say “ah/’ thump yiu on the chest, listen to' your ticker, and then tell you to take a dose of epsom salts? Those simple days are past. Medicine is on the assembly line now. My doctor didn’t make me say “ah,” at all, but examined me from stem to stem with in-struments I’d never seen before —and doa’t want to again. “Well?” I asked, when he had finally put me back on my bare feet again. . - “Ypu don’t have athlete’s foot, and your scalp seems okay,” he said. “But everything in between Is suspect.” 7~ —“And Hot nttans—?” “Just a few routine hospital tests,” he answered consolingly, as I tried to remember the name of my friendly neighborhood undertaker. ~~ RoutineTThen X ray you, stare at your gizzard through a fluotoJ. scope, pour liquid chalk and other chemicals into you, run your symptoms through data processing and computer gadgets. TAKE BLOOD Then a pretty technician needles you and draWs off enough blood put the American jRed Cross over its national collection goal for. 1963. Hie technician puts a sample on a glass shde, }ooks at Ole red and white corpuscles as thty wans Bjf UdiiiuiuusgiiUyr “He loves me. he loves me not—” Finally they strap you into a deathhouse-like machine called an electrbcardidgraph that snitch- SHOP TONIGHT TILL 9 corduroy.Vr on a cushion of foam Who! a glorious sensation, what happier way te rete* tired tool Velvety wide wale corduroy, softly Itodd... and foam-cushioned with the sole intentlf n af making you most comfortable. Red, pink, turquoise, block. Wood’s slzos, S (6-5 Vi), M L 9 W). | fkllt’i JYortom . <•“. Stmt Floor______ . SHOP TONIGHT, FRIDAY, SATURDAY and MONDAY NIGHTS ' tl«9P.M. ----- Open a Waite's €€C Account and Shop tha Easy Budgeting Woyl. Foxwood Double Knit Orion Suit Here's casual elegance In a three-piece double kiilTOrloh acrylic suit... o chaneT jacket and seat-lined slim skirt combined with a striped sleeveless shell. Yours in cranberry with white or skipper blue with white in sizes 8 to 16. 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Especially when the uppers are of diamond jubilee patent... flattering to fall and winter dresses and suits: Choose from -d"collection of hi or mid heels. Style shown in brown potent withsjxpwn ombre trim or .ruby red patent with red leather. Bboe FsuJUmm «.« SsiweS Floor *13.99 Here's a group of short sleeve sport shirts that Includes some realty FABULOUS values! Choose from strides; checks, plaids In wash .and wear cotton and Dacron polyester-cotton r blends. Button down or conventional collars. By* Kentfiold, Gunnin ond another maker wo can't name but It's probably the most famous in the business! Sites SAAL Buy npw ter the , rest of tWi summer's warm weather and neat yeqrl/ Men's Wear ,.. Street Floor T i lIStPsM r-?w- mmmm THE PONTIAC PRESS ft Wwt Huron Street tMIjrsday, august «, no ■gWM H TYrkmin a M ________________ ttBii* **” w* vtaWsm is Pontfac’s MaydT"Stri v iiig for Autocratic Government? Mayor -Hotur A. Laothy*$ stite-ment Tuesday night concerning the (Uspenslon of City Manager Robert A. Sturkr makes it only too clear what his theory 0/ government to. Csarism is a good name ifer.lt. The king can do no wrong. • ★ ★ ★ “Internal problems should be solved internally .says Mayor ''Landry. Apparently, he feels that suspension of the city manager is an internal problem in which the. public is not interested. * His prescription for this “internal” ache in the body of city administration issimple: .Amputate.— " -iky ★ ’# And if the public (always designated as “pressure groups”) doesn’t like the cure? He says, ‘‘Any interference by anybody, in 'local policy matters, must be measured in years of .delay, for the much needed redevelopment and rebuilding of the City of Pontiac.” The redevelopment of downtown Pontiac will bear the brunt of any resistance to the desires of the majority of the commission. A threat! ' . •----------- ——/ +. dr k. ’ After suspending the man who has “guided inltttons of dotlara to to provements and redevelopment of Pontiac and placing these vitil matters in the hands of a fledgling and untried civic administrator, Mayor Landry has the gall to mention these project* und-thehr possible delay. -t:.- , '! i#T . r It is the reckless vindictiveness of the majority of the commission which has endangered our progress here. When members of the audience • raised the Siierer suspension at the meeting, Mayor Landry read his statement and then ducked. He didn’t .care to defend l)is position, and quickly gaveled the meeting into-adjournment to s chorus of “boos.” And isn’t it interesting that this bombshell was tossed just before ; mat nf the "commission will be out of town for a week to attend a convention. Well, things will still be warm when they get back. They’ll still be warm when Mayor Landry , Hoarding Cash in Home Often Grave Mistake The tragic loss by theft of $15,000 from the home of a Pontiac resident again points up the foolhardiness of holding treasure of considerable amount in “home banks.” ' * ★ ★ ★ . Since it ib virtually impossible to hoard monty or negotiable wealth in dwellings without 8QMBONE being a party to or Voice of the People; gets back a week later than thr following a one-week vacation . ★ ★ ★ “This commission wUl stand on ita record before ike electorate at Iho next general election,” the mayor aays In his statement. ___ Good. We think so, too. And more and more people are becoming aware of the record. Adlai’s Victory , /« Bittersweet By JAMES MARLOW Amodated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON — Adlai Stevenson was just part of the American delegation which went to Moscow this week tor the signing of the limited nuclear test-ban agreement. But his ' satisfactkmmusthave been special and ironic. The second time he ran . for the presidency, in 1960, he proposed a nuclear test ban. HO wasn’t the first to do it But as the campaign neared its end this became the biggest issue. It didn’t do him any good. ★ * . i ' That wasn’t foe only irony in the stay. The Soviets made the suggestion before he did, on Nov. 29, 1965, proposing that the countries, with nuclear weapons pledge to discontinue their testing. — — -—- Nikita Khrushchov suggested it again in February 1961. And on April 12 of that year Thomas E. Murray, a member of the Atomic Energy Commission, suggested the United States stop testing H-bombs. Stevenson picked up Murray’s idea and if an April 21. That was before he got the nomination. ' " - All through foe campaign, Stevenson hammered away at the idea, which seemed to dwvefop in his mind as he went along. At first he seemed simply to suggest that this country stop the tests unilaterally and ask * the Soviet Union to do the same. DIDN’T QUITE SAY IT In time he seemed to think there should be an agreement with Moscow before this country.stopped, although he didn’t quite say that. But he said the United States should take the teadin stopping hydrogen bomb lobto. :—•--------------t - ■ “ And on Sept, to, 1956. he said “1 have proposed a moratorium" on the tests and “If the Banians don’t go along , - we will know it.. . because we can detect H-bomb explosions without inspection.” Later/he talked of “agreement” to end the tests. High Noon’s Got To Come Sometime David Lawrence Asks: Who Can Define GOP Views? MARLOW WASHINGTON What Sen. GoHwater has said about Gov. Rockefeller’s views, and vice versa, in recent colloquies hardly constitutes, a .meaningful debate so far as determining- who the Republican party’s presi-g dential candidate! will be. f Jhere is semwj_______________ ~Himg~eIse which- lavvrencE will have a reak " : lyr mere important bearing oh the outcome of the contest tar the . presidential nomination. It is the extraordinary resurgence nowadays ol what might be called “conservatism” inside foe Republican party "'- in the populous states'of the Noth. ...★ * ★ There uaed to be a time when conservatism was considered the creed of older voters, but the emergence lately of conservative groups of young Republicans is rather remarkable. For when the younger men ia a political party, who fre- ' quently are captivated'by “radical Hberal” slogans, begin to aee that .sound government is possible only by means of a “conservative liberalism” the tendency is to seek out new ways of achieving beneficial ends for the people without let- ting the government go bank-nipt or permitting it to be transformed 1 n t o a Tammany political machine by means of the allocation of federal fnads. There’s * lot going on jnside the Republican party which in .time will crystallize, a sensible conservatism as opposed to an extreme conservatism. ★ * * When iho party begins Jn_ax— press Spontaneously in every part of foq country what ft really "wants from a candidate, it will* be time enough to consider just who best fits the Republican consensus. ’ ’ T New Yerk n»S^“&m-.. u.,> Capital Letter: City Commission’s Action Sparks Residents’ Replies Twenty yaars ago, Pontiac had a parade of city managers until one ww found who would agree to fire an honeat police chief, Charles Rhodes. Fortunately, an aroused citizenry elected two new city commissioners, who put prirndpies above politics and the threat was stopped. -J— i • ' * to ‘ to • Since that time Pontiac has enjoyed capable city "menagepwnt and has made an outstanding record in prag^il^Tiebtdrge^civic p gress. Afe m aSOttttotSp^ _ to the day of ward-heel political management where untrained, self-interested and politically- obligated commissioners are going to assume the management of - this great city and run it into ’ the ground? ★"•to to1 .. ..... . ,il !xr ..v — I shudder at the thought dffdsiag DONALDSON a capable administrator.j\nother qualified city manager would refuse to risk his futi^by-coRntog to Pontiac to become a puppet for some poweridrunk political hacks. The FBI, under J. Edgar Hoover, has been kept out of " politics and has long been an inspiration to the law-abiding citizens. Both political parties and all Senators and Representatives leave the law enforcing work to 4he law enforcing authority. This includes the President. P,..- - -V-.... to .'to : to ' •': Think now before it is too late.*” wnMam W. Donaldson 256 Chippewa .. • t. - - The recent action of the City Commisskuiirelative to Bob Stierer is. enough to make any decent citizen of Pontiacdubkms about The .future judgments whieh may be forthcoming from this body. '■to ★ to- ■' v.-j. It would seem that it is time for the citizens of Pontiac* to consider placing recall petitions in motion. Perhaps it is the only way to rectify the progressively worsening situation. ~ — Leo Wasserberger 301 Pontiac State Bank Building Having been present at Tuesday’s comnusafon meeting, I would like to recgmrnfrgl the lua^rf-Mayor-famrtrv s “press release" tn Illustrate the definition of “bland” as in “a bland statement.” Like cotton candy, there was more hot air than nourishment. • ■ r • WtiltemO. Beak 51 Franklin Blvd. ’ * This-City CemmlssioiHs-thr most ridiculous tomriF-T ever^hepd of. The members have done nothing but harass the police department since they were elected. They are still trying to cram Straley down our throats and they will not1 stop at anything, even to the point of firing a capable city manager just to get rid of Chief Koren. President Eisenhower wanted no part of the Stevaaaoe-Murray proposition. He clamped down on them fast,'ip April, before the campaign and even before he knew Stevenson would be running against him. He said this country needed to do research both on H-bombs and missiles to carry them and research without tests would be “perfectly useless—a waste of money.” * * The Eisenhower administration wanted some way to check, or inspect, to .prevent cheating. SteVCIBonY point was that explosions would be known anyway. Ex-Fresident Truman backed Eisenhower. He said the Soviets couldn’tlje trusted to keep an agreement. But last week he approved the agreement just made with Moscow. He mid “we are duty bound to explore every opportunity to put an end to this armament race.” Elsenhower bawled Mm out for sticking his nose into the presidential race. He said all,plans for stopping the arms race aid reducing armaments “require systems of inspection and, control.’’ But even foe word “conserve-tism” isn’t clearly defined, and such expressions as “radical left” and “radical rigM” have very little application to what is happening w i t h i n the Republican party. _ The party Is nadergoiag a crystallization oL views, andthe . next presidential candidate will be the man who interprets cer-rectly that eonseanw and Is considered the best fitted to ex-i pound its true meaning. TW ’ Kennedy administration is reaHy responsible for the inela-morphdlis inside the Republican party. This kind of change has often happened in political history. —...—...* * ........* - ------ t For It is the reaction to so ad-ministration’s policies which brings out the need for an alter- -native course. ' The argument going on as to whether the Republican party is influenced by tin John Birchen or others in the “ndlol right” is superficial. Rather, the sentiment worth noting is the grass-roots feeling as a whole about national issues. The Republican piarty'hHs in-it many kinds of conservatives: Some are worried about the'future of the dollar and whether it will have to be devalued again, as in 1933.___------------------ Do Gl Turncoats to Keep TheirCitizenship? By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - Tliings i nev-er understood till now — and still don’t: ft Why should GI turncoats who deliberately choose the enemy over America be permitted to retain their U.S.I ' knowing of the practice, it to straining credulity pretty far to aawnno that the knowledge may not lead to criminal temptation. tor. "to /.tor ■■■■■■ “ Everyone Miould see In the misfortune of^our citizen a warning not to keep money of substantial amount around the house. .. to 1 tor The caae |a point represents the savings of «v« three yearn, and It Must be. Indeed a bitter experience to see the fruits of one’s thrift lost because of improper safeguarding. It to Incomparably wiser to entrust $408*7 to recoiled depositories where it not on^r Insured but capi aim interest for the toepoettor. k Other conservatives are concerned about a trend toward totalitarianism in government—an assumption of power by means of executive orders which ignore precedent and even constitutional Two yean later—on Oct. 31. 1961—the restriction, and, in effect, say Eisenhower administration announced ex- that “the end justifies the actly what Stevenson had proposed: a mora- means ” torium on testing, it said, the United States RESENTMENTS BUILD woMd-stop testing, levying tt upto Moscow ^ administration assumes without any agreement, to do likewise. ^ ^ vote„ wiU ^ entranced WENT ON TALKING -----------——> with a tax cut next year and that The Soviets stopped testing, too. The two by November 1994 they will have sides went on'talkmg about disarmament and. forgotten all about the hiunilia-reaching an agreement qn nuclear test bans. , tk» suffered in Cuba and will Nothing happened. President Kennedy took ., embrace the Khrushchev doctrine over - of^“peaceta coexistence” as a And on Aug. 30, 1961 the Soviet Union “victory for mankind.” announced It was ending Its vohintary test Bat resentments have he e a ban and would start testings It did. So did building np steadily. There is this country. an unfavorable renctioh in the ..... big Northern states already pa • the sfrealM “civil rights” is-sue and a feeling that individual rights, tt the many are being brushed aside to gala the vetet’af minority groups. The defection in foe South from the Omwcfidc party is slgntfl-cant. but jt wi$* bp superseded in electoral votes by the movement away from the Democratic party Lowell D. Skinner, a Korean] W a r turncoat] who refused be repatriated in] the prison - ex-change — prefer-B ring to cast his^HHnmgg lot with the Bedftft^^^S** Chinese — is now RUTH fed up with h I sMON'ftJOMERY “lack of individual freedwn” in the Communist utopia. ___Leaving his partially paralyzed Chinese wife behind, he is preparing, after 10 years as a factory worker in Tsinan, to return to Akron, Ohio. . Other Americans have lost their ciH^sRfouiorHnuritJZHjnause-ous offenses. Under the Sw,"IB-uAmerican living abroad automatically forfeits his U.S. citizenship if he votes in alocal election, or enters foe armed forces of that nation, even if it is our ally. No stich harsh treatment awaits Skinner and his fellow turncoats, some thirteen of whom have already come Wandering back. All* were dishon-dfscharged, talent expended on trying to gave Dr. Stephen Ward, the degenerate who deliberately took a suicidal doae of sleeping pills after realizing that he would be —convicted of Bring off prosth ~ totes’ earnings, could surely have been better spent on easing the sufferiag of charity patients. Other medical teams here and abroad have striven with equal determination to prolong the lives of hopeless incurables, both mental and physical. Somehow the practice reminds one of tiie tortures inflicted by savage tribes who, in revenge killings, refused to grant their victims quick death. Iaitoad, thay sometimes sliced pff their eyelids, ia-fUctod wounds, covered foe bodies with ants, and left them to a alow and ghastly death in the hot sun. # Is it necessary to clutter outer space with* so much manmadejunk that by foe time saliltites vo ready to carry pay-loads to other pliuieto, tiM^«aUi: sion risk will be too great? Scientists speculate that Tel-star-2, the communications satellite that has now lost its voice, may have been knocked out by a-tiny meteor. Or, was it by debris from U.S. and Russian satellites? One moment it was operating perfectly. Eight minutes later, at This comes at a time when they livrfoe town half torn down, and foe manager in the midst of big. new projects. It does not seem to bother them that foe city could be in complete chaos. If this is thafr idea of farthering foe well being af Pontiac, they -ihodiLta^amlnod. ^ voters of Poafiac canaot kt foem get , ‘ * Werried Cttizea You can’t have a good city and a poor city commission. Most people want a good city, so let’s get behind a recall movement that will get rid of bur arrogant mayor and power-hungry commissioners. Five are going to Texas at the taxpayers’ expense. Let’s give them a recall Welcome when they came back. And the mayor j»t got bock from Hawaii at the taxpayers’ expense." * «" Discouraged but Hopeful _—This manager-police phief relatiorishijr has become a baaebali game with the rules favoring the manager when Willman pitched against Straley, Wifo a1 new lineup, foe manager now has to throw slow-motion under-arm, subject to the shots being called by seven men on the opposing bench. And foe other team is un-naraed. ★ ★ ★ However, there’s no cause to be harsh on our commissioners. As individuals they far surpass themselves as a group. Without modesty they each privately could agree to thaL Post-mwtem writ-ing is nasty, but I will puMicly debate our .mayor after he fights Sonny Liston. ★ W ★' • — Congratulations to our commission on foe urban renewal project. I only hope foe city hall doesn't have to be done over. ...- “Hapwr” J. Edgar Hoover made the. statement-that when city hall controls the police department so do the rackets and vice* fords. At present this city Is wide open for vice and crime. The officers are afraid to do their jobs as they should in fear of reprimands fromxity hall. If you. think there was a low morale when Straley was in Office jfou should take a took^ around this place now. A Pontiac Police Officer ^iSBta’STtoteiJjmtetter signed “Mess” does'not bear any name and address for our files?r~"~--— ‘Press Make Mistake in PoweroTPaHh?2-~»l I commend The Press for such wonderful illustrations on The Power of Faith. But knowing the Bible as I do I am sure you made u mistake Aug. 3 by putting an “s” on God making it read Gods. Am IrlgH? ■» y Verbal Orchids to— Mn. C. H. Myers of 913 Elizabeth Lake Road; 91st birthday. _____ ' Mrs, MN** ■ o— of Unfoa Late; 91st birthday. . Mrs; Jessie Kletzing of Chicago, III.; Met birthday Army discloses that $1,716 in back Army pay awaits Skiu-ner for the period from his disappearaace in 1959 until he Kfraed repatriation in *93. Another way tolfte U. S.c}fi-zenship is to be court-martialed for desertion. Skinner and his turncoat buddies were still in the Army when they refused repra-triation. Isn’t ..that one form of desertion? . If so, why weren’t they courtmartialed at the time? —A top legal spokesman for-the Justice Department, in discussing the question, declared: *,Tt could be Called an ‘omission’ in the'immigration and naturalization law. Only Congress can correct it.” Surely lt*s about time! ft Why should top medicaf teams, work around the clock for three days to preserve the life of someone who would obviously bo a mental or moral invalid, even , if he survived? The professional time and KII5 Joint aerospace defuse headquarters reveal that some fo® pieces of junk broken off from our . space vehicles are now circling the earth. Within four years, foe heavenly wastebasket is ex-pected to hold ten times as much litter, with thousands of nuts and bolto merrily chasing each-other in nearly perpetual orbit. Scientists aver that if a meteor knocked oql Telstar-2, it was little larger than a speck of dust. Think what a loose screw could ' Therefore du tu anastronautl----- 36 Lake St. (Editor’s Note: Ri^it you are.)t Homer McCarley At Auoclated TttM agrj. ' Mwipapcr lor repabll-- printed to u >11 o stvs aupucnei. . T3p Pontiac Preu ta delivered I terhvf foi* M eenU a week; whei mailed In Oaplanjl. Oeneiee. Ltvinj Waterford Resident Backs Taxation — It’s fortunate the bulk of the residents* in Watortad don’t feel foe same as “Waterford Township Taxpayer’s” tetter says he does. Waterford has grown so rapidly we are short of Just about everything. Taxation is the way to raise us to the level of surrounding communities. The majority of us would rather pay the money slowly and acquire the accommodations now. Another Waterford Taxpayer ‘Need Equal Rights for All Divorced’ Women should get support when they’re trying to raise a family by themselves. ^ What aboat the womea who have been married two or three times ahd travel toam state to state and the husband never sees foe children tat continues to pay rapport? It’s stated ta the decree that a woaaan is tented to Mkhigaa. % . Some woman-tea Jn Jiim amt spend the support payments on fMrtiridhiH -O'*31-*-’.-—- — --- —......a.*.-——— ... Another One Who’s Had It When will everyone have equal rights? ... !r, THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1B63 Horst Lover Is d Suicide SOUTHAMPTON, England (UPD -Msrilyp Smith, 13, became so The Maryland State House in Annapolis to the oldest state Playful Month Ahead 5 **? stiti* ' ■ of polo playing. LONDON tori 00V- ------------ dray was reported today to have The population of chartered a plane to fly his 14 States increased at polo ponies and three-girl grooms 8,000 dally last year. Sicilian Mafia Hits States. It was first used in 1779, while the Revolutionary War was PALERMO, Sicily (AP) -Another TNTfoaded car blew up in Palermo Wednesday as police ' tightened the screws on the Sicil-1 ten Mafia. i It was the fifth bomb-rigged I , Authorities said the fifth car was exploded outside the home of a Palermo shopkeeper, Salvatore di Noto, in an attempt to ^tonce him-. DENVER, Colo.^AP) 2- Police say Robin R. Roberto, e Denver gambler, was shot to death be* name, “Walkie Talkie.” Roberts’bultokfiddled body waf found Wednesday in a shallow ditch west of Denver. He had been beaten severely and shot four times in the right aide. . “He had e sharp wit and glib tongue,” me patrolman said of Roberts, S3. - A *-hr Nq arrests have been made in the case, police said. Magnavox 3-WAY "STEREO THEATRE" HAS TOTAl, REMOTE CONTROt fh# ultimate In real listening and view-ing pleasure! Just press a button to turn set on or off, select channels end control volume of sourtd. 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Saginaw " L STORE —•Elizabeth Lake and Telegraph Infant^isTrfCar Crash HOWARD City (Ap)- X two-car intersection accident two miles northwest of Howard City kilted 10-month-old Treasi Sue Ryno of Rural City yesterday. SHOP IN COOL, AM-CONDITIONED COMFORT the entire 3-pc. ensemble pre-season priced at just Our greatest shoe sale! Children's and teens' fall dress and school shoes Coat with hand-piped buttonholes, rayon . satin lining. Taupe, beige with Autumn Haze* mink, black with dark natural ranch mink. 8-18. • Special purchases from America's largest thee maker! • All new fad styles —for school, press or casual wear! 4 e Leathers, vahrets, nylons, suedts and mora! XHARGEIT Plenty of Free Parking FEDERAL DEPARTMENT STORES SPECIAL PURCHASE From one of the nation's largest shoe manufacturers ... just in ^ time for back-to-school ^ MSI THE PUMTIAC yKKbS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1068 Vote More Tax on Big Estates Houst Committee OK* levy for Heir* WASHINGTON (UPI) —The House Ways and Means Commit* has voted .fn added tax mi tons who die in 190 and there* The proposal applies only to es* property that has increased in market value during the lifetime of the owner. Approved yesterday by -a 1141 vote, the committee plan would require the heir to pay a capital gains tax on some ef the “paper profits” earned by .the deceased. Under the present tax law, fee liability for these profits is wiped out "when the owner dies. If the new owner selb^the property he must pay a capital gains tax only on profits resulting from a rise in the value of the property since he inherited them. it " it There is one exemption from the provision of the committee plan. Any property acquired by the descendent prior to 1951 would not be affected. The scope of the proposal falls short ef the tax rules recommended by President Kennedy and the compromise provision which the committee adopted on an earlier tentative vote. Designed to yield 1700 million in new revenue, Kennedy’s plan would have required the heir to pay capital gains tax on much of the paper profits even if he did not sell the property. The compromise approved earlier by the committee would Ijave produced about $400 million in annual new revenue. The version adopted yesterday would yield less than $100 million. Under the committee plan, the new rules would apply only to estates with a total market value hi excess of $60,000. Busy Bag Boy Blocks Bold Bandit Brace LOUISVILLE, Ky. tilt — A busy bag boy blocked, a brace of hold bandits — they got befuddled. Chief Special Agent John Walker of a grocery firm gave this account: Two women entered stood store in South Louisville last night and demandedmoney. One had a pistol. The bag boy was unaware of the holdup attempt. He was on his way to a parking area to get shopping baskets. The woman with the gun told her companion, “We’d better get him in here.” They went outside , after the youth. A store official locked the doorsbehlnd them. Flus-. tored,the wotoenfled. Police went looking for them. GREAT MATE-ABLES | NOW THROUGH FALL $1 PR. IF PERFECT SEAMFREE NYLONS THE OUTSTANDING 1.99 BLOUSE BUYS Cottons, Dacron *poly«t«r/eoF-ton blonds in roH, long sleeve styles. Prints, solids, dressy, tailored, sixes 30 to 38 in group. PANTS GO LEAN, COLORS GO BOLD 2.99 values In woof/nylon. Doc-ren*polyef1ef/cetton. Naid or solid in 'leal, cranberry,, olive, loden, grey and black, sizes 10 'to 18 in this sayings. *Rg. TM. DuPont Coif. -T; SHOP IN COOL, AIR-CONDITIONED COMFORT FABULOUS FAKES! 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SALE SEASON-SPAN WNG 7.99™ COTTONS - |>f DARKLING COLORS for Styles you want—priced at a huHqot-pqmparinp—priceLAll— boast smart fashion styling plus minimum care that means easy wearability—little care-obiijty. Tnltn your pick at this— two-for-one price tag on your favorite styles,, colors. Sizes for misses, women In group. JR. JUMPER DRESSES -AT" When it comes to fashion—funiors come to Tedoi til's for the newest, most sought-after styles. The layer-od look, circa '63, taking over the fashion scene on campus and office. Here, bold print blouses accent a rayon cupioni shift and an A-fine jumper In_ sizes 7-15.. Save on our entire stock of 5.99 junior,, misses', half-size and super fashions now at |ust $5. rWilj \ REG. 1.99 LINGERIE klj L SALE vl [M \Shadow panel slips, petticoats, ■ -shift gowns and _ Oocron-^ polyester/cotton, drip-dry cotton, nylon tricot. Solids n pt-lnte* trims. Misses', women's sizes. REGULAR 39c EA. CAMPUS BRIEFS 3“*1 Sand, elastic leg. Rayon or cation with double crotch. White, pastels. Sizes S-M-L-Xl In group. OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON HAIM THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST B, lftflB - clir* seph River turning Msm. wii- Drowns When Boot Flips ^ ^ 3^., i«oot out- ST. JOSEPH »Devki E. board’motor 'boat capsized and, imlth, 41, of Benton Heitor, with the motor in water, eir- SL Jo-cW end hit Smith seOewfl times. fleeted Europe’s sympathy w 1th tor. talks at the Black Sea resort America’s first family and hopes of Gagra, he was exchanging for a good recovery for the child, comments with Soviet Foreign *-—a ---VHv--■;Miniate- Andrei Gromyko. In Moscow, before Secretary of * * * State Dean Rusk left tejoin So- “I bear that President Kennedy viet Premier Nikita Khrushchev had a boy,” Rusk said. FAMOUS PORTABLE Nationally famous fuH sixo Portable Typawritor with many of «ha SPECIAL! CARWASH KEYSTONE COLOR MOVIE BRUSH . with Elactric Eya Matar HERE’S WHAT YOU GET: REGULAR 149.96 Now Only Our August Sales Always Make Value History JEWELERS Europe Pulls jor Kennedy Sort BEATEN BY STORK — President Kennedy gets into his car at Otis Air Force Base, Mass., where his wife gave birth to'their third child, a four-pound-lQtt-ounce son who arrived several weeks prematurely. The baby was born at 11:52 a.m. (Pontiac Time), about an hour before the President’s arrival by Jet from Washington. **Ya«," Gromyko reptted, “and I send him tions through you.” "Anguish of Kennedys" was the seven - column front page headline of FranefrSoir In Paris . 7*X Son for the Kennedys — but the Baby ’Is Sick," said the front page of Abendpost in Frankfurt, Germany. it i In West Berlin (East Berlin papers ■ ignored it) the Nacht Depesche banner - lined “Kennedy Family Worried About Hi Baby.” -----==—★-' i London’s national newspapers all gave top attention to the story. “Jackie’s Boy HI” was the two - inch headline across the Daily Express. “Kennedy Baby Drama” headlined the- Dally Herald. They were typical. Most newspapers also car* ried photos of the Kennedy* Including a worried • looking President on kb dash to Ms wife’s side and many file pictures of Mrs. Kennedy who has been a darling of Europe’s Journalists and photographers since she came to the White House. Most of the newspaper stories were simple accounts of the race to hospital, premature birth of the child and development of his breathing difficulties. There was little editorial comment. . N ★ it .It A number of newspapers pointed out that Mrs. Kennedy always had had difficulties in birth and that all three of her children were delivered by Caesarian sections. JUST WAITING - Air children wait on the lawn Force, Mass., hospital where President Ken- 7-13 IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC ________________ 4 COMPLETE FLOORS of HOME FLUSHINGS l-gggffE • SAWWiWwTa •Provincial* Colonial * TrodWonol • Modern - AH by America'* Leading ManiifodSreril || 0ur S,#f* Open Jonight Till 9 P.M. -Pc. Colonial dining group No Limit tp Number of Caesarians WASHINGTON (AP)-A Washington doctor says Mrs. John F. Kennedy has now had the “average” number of Caesarian deliv-eries—four—for a mother requiring such a type of delivery. But there is no strict medical limit to the number of such operations a healthy young woman may safely undo-go—and there have been instances where a woman has safely delivered 10 children by Caesarian. That was the word today from Dr. Thomas Gflday, an associate of Dr. John Walsh, Mrs. Kennedy’s obstetrician. The doctor said in an interview a woman’s ability to undergo safe-- ly another Caesarian depends entirety upon the condition of her womb-following her most recent delivo by that method. Mrs. Kennedy’s four deliveries ~1>y Caesarian include Caroline, Btt/Jahn Jr., 2%. the newborn baby and an emergency Caesarian August 1960. Mrs. Kennedy suffered an internal hemorrhage and lost a baby due that October. There have been reports that Mrs. Kennedy had still another emergency Caesarian In 19SS when •a baby was born dead a month prematurely. However, informed sources said today there was no rarmrlnn performed st that time, and that Mrs. Kennedy suffered ~ A Caesarian section (sometime* qyJH Cesarian) is the delivery af a baby from the uterus (womb) through a surgical indrian made in (he lower aMopM»-in contrast to normal delivery through the GRIM PRESIDENT — President Kennedy sits grimfaced _ in hi« mr after visiting with his wife in the Otis Air Force Base, Mass., hospital where die gave him to tneir lhird child premahirety. The President late flew to Boston Children’s Medical Hospital where the child was taken after it developed a respiratory ailment. IN MELLOW NUTMEG FINISH 42-Inch Round Extension Table with 8-inch Filler—extends ^ja^G-mchiTTTT^omplete with 4 massive CaptainV Ghqirs in Mellow Nutmeg finish and authentic Colonial Design to enhance yoor Qecor. 46" Buffet with matching Hutch $99 Divides Time Between New Son, Wife Some doctors my the derivation of timtem fa vague. It’s often UMtod with a belief that Julius Comm- was delivered hy tfais technique, although there is no historic record of Ibis. -WBjjm BOSTON (AP)—President Kennedy set upa commuting schedule today between his ailing newborn son, Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, and his wife, Jacqueline. After a second visit to his second son and third child in Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Kennedy flies back to Otis Air Force Base on Cape Cod to spend the day with the First Lady. Then, around 6:90 p. m. (Pontiac time) he witi fly back to Boston for another visit with his new son and spend the ntynt maturely at 'the Air Base hospital Wednesday. The newest Kennedy weighed 4 pounds 10% ounces and was delivered by Caesarian sec; tion. ... .... : Patrick Bouvier Kennedy born five and one-half weeks pre- Congress Applauds Birth WASHINGTON (IJPI) - The newest addition to President Kennedy’s family was greeted with a round of''applause from Con-(gross.' r * it *..... v* I In the Sen ate, Democrats Leader MOte Mansfield _JKont., took time out yesterday from a i^BWiiiwiiWii wn to announce toe tews. IE 6‘ Wide. Beautiful Pattern* and Color*. limited time Li Slightly Irreg Pencale.. ...... «emney»s Luxury Combud Cotton Porealos WHITE twM 72" it or twin 179 fitted bottom *h**t. ———1— foilIV x 10i"HersrfuM----------111 ilosto-fit bottom »ho#t. 1 twin 72"* 10S" flat or twin tfaita-ftt bottom thtit ___________■ . 81"x108" flat or foil Ela*ta - fit bottom *heet Pillow Cases . . . . 63”x108”......... twfo tilwO'TOp ... .--r^Ti ,-r. rsw /ul'i Fitted Top. ........... PENCALE PASTELS... 72"* 108” or Twin fitted Bottom 81 "*1 OS" orfofrfitted Bottom 7 42"*38W Com* ■ • .............. Count on Penney'* lo gj« there roa*t-lo«oast famo wearin* weave, ffnithed liny anytime of year, fabi •is providing Outstanding summer white goods value! Thirsty cotton Tarry towels woven with shrink*resistant borders *-• Choose ensembles to match your every mood! All first quality, of course. Your New Neighbor BLOOMFIELD OFFICE North Woodward at Square Lake Road YOUR NEW NEIGHBOR-^ur Bloomfield Office— all our bank’s services immediately while j?lan» are being completed for the fine banking structure to be erected on North Woodward at Square Lake Road. THE BLOOMFIELD OFFICE will have unexcelled facilities—-for checking and savings, loans of all types, safe deposit boxes and complete trust service. Drive-in windows and ' ample free parking are included in the plans, with appropriate landscaping of the property. YOUR NEW NEIGHBOR welcomes friends and customers, old ~an^^W7for~aH~bankiny services. ^ \ ~ r—-r-v Oftk Resources $547,000,000 BLOOMFIELD OFFICE MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY: 10 A.M. to $ P.M. FRIDAYS: 10 A M. to 6 P M. \ Member Federal RaearVa Syitam and Fadaral Deposit Insurance Corporation SUMMER WHITE GOODS SAVINGS! . 4 Feet Long-more than SLJ feet wide !XTRA:BATH TOWELS LARGE1 face towel . , .59 wash cloth . . .39 98° 25W PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9 30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Mitt POM l AC JKttBS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 Sentence Publisher lor Obscene Mail " TOPEKA, Km. (IL-Uenry J. Haldeman, who inherited a publishing company widely known for its "little blue books,” was sentenced to serve .18 months in federal prison for sending and adverticing obscene literal ‘ through ttd mails. Haldeman was convicted in May of nine charges returned against him by a grand Jury in 1961. Judge George Templar al-lowed him 'to^'nmilA free on 63,500 bond ponding an appeal. Haldeman is 43. Formtr Frondi Rromior Repprted Better Today METZ, France UF — Former French. Premier Robert Schii-man, a leading exponent of Euro- Automation Goes Wrong Secretaries 1 »iocw ------_ ............ j^“J^VW“IT,)0rt*d WM18ld'; ntrv«,AK,n The Little Blue Book Co, ,oferably imProv*d today? He has **7 hwwaiuj Glrard, Kan , w«a founded byhjejbafn terinuily ill with; a hmg1_According to a sdenafle ac- father, the late E. Haldeman-iinfection and a circulatory aihl1C0Unt’ Julius, and publishes more thanfment. . rear iU u^ly head among secre- 5,000 titles-most of them classics ; “Ties - w,th and inspirational tracts. . I Schuman is 77. j Potontial r®' placement w^ m anpower bjf a contri- Plfl nr“* ‘it late getting [ back? FRONT DOOR PARKING Mall 1 WitzABern Lake Wq7 Jhop Non.f Thur*. and Fri. I tHfl" . L Tubs., Wed. and Sat, I till B! -2256 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD 7*£ r/oor Shop 2Blk$.W.«f reU graph VINYL SANDRAN ^rand 12' Width*. Many Color* and Pattam*. FI 4-0218ZZJ Mastic wall TILE 1 ARAASTRONG INLAID TILE 6 9" by 9" c t ea. Armstrong Inlaid TERRAZZO ‘ f* *2*5a 8’ Wide. Metallic Corion Inlaid VINYL ASBESTOS TILE 7. to type form' ■on a letterhead. Pres umably, letters would HELDENBftAND j be produced by a "look-ma,] no-hands” method. Well! I’m not one to spoof the miracles that science has on hand and on order, but on this-omt The wizards Jose me at the first turn. While conceding that they’re ] doing real well in the gimmick : and gadget' dept.,. their batting | average will nosedive if they | start upsetting the status quo of the beauty and the beast id ! business. . » ‘INDISPENSABLE’ For having observed at length a good many bosses and. at longer length a good many secretaries, this keen-eyed observer solemnly states that a secretary would be indispensable even if She never opened a notebook or fingered a key. Item: Who in a secretary-. less and barren office would |_ greet the boss, with a warm, io'ritsi smile relieving somewhat the image of the | yaway breakfast-table presence he jast left? . *■ Item: Who would remind him : of his wife’s birthday, and ! waste a whole lunch-hour scouraging’up a present? i Item: Who would disqualify 1 herself for prospects of heav-1 enly afterlife by ingenious pre-; variations to insulate him : against bores and timewasters^ | ' - *' ' f - -W , , -i- Item: Who would front for t him when he goofs on his after* i luncheon-appointment with the Item: Who would arrange His transportation to all points of GOP Chooses Hole! for Frisco Parley the compass, and fight like a j-wounded tigress with ' travel functionaries -to get him preferential accommodations? ^ Item: Who weald "protect” him against forays by predatory females who occasion-ally take after him? — Item: Who would dlscreetfy edit his dictation and write what he means—not what he SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - The Fairmont Hotel was officially se-! Wteri hy Republican* yesterday for their headquarters during the 1964 nominating convention,’to be1 Held at .the Cow Palace. Robert L. Pierce, vice chair-1 man,, for - arrangements for the convention, said the St. Francis; Hotel would be the official hoteP for distinguished guests. . * * v-* ' .....i i Pierce said the Fairmont was: [selected after a thorough ponsid-eration of the needs for facilities [ {adequate to handle a wide-open' convention, including the requirements of prose, radio and tele-j vision. Hyg?" ------------------_____ e ' ★ —Item; Who would let him think that the ^od idea fftrl improving office routine was Tj W, Instead of hers? Item: Who would break her dinaer dite to stay and finish some work that could have been done yesterday If he hadn’t been playing golf? Item: Who would be so grateful for a-long overdue and rarely expressed word of appreciation, that she’d have to turn away to hide. i quick tear of joy ? . I And, incidentally, after aD these who-who’s, how could a bachelor boss ever fall in love and marry a metal container filled with electronic elements? IB £ Everything F—FOR THE WHOLE Family u $ O.K. to oice May! * all the credit you need! ■' CLOTHING • FURNITURE MAYS CREDIT STORE WK YOU WILL LIKE OUR BUSINESS METHODS IMPERIAL—CHRYSLER—PLYMOUTH—VALIANT Sales BIRMINGHAM • CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 912 S. WOODWARD PENNEY’S ALWAY8 FIRST QUALITY JUST CHARGE IT AT PENNEY'S I Just charge It ] I at Fenf»y*in it's as much at home on Faculty Row as in the dorm T . . os popular with post grads as tt fs wjlh Ihe Class of '50. And where will you find the most abundant selection? Naturally, at our natural shoulder Charter Club Shop$. Illustrated here are a few of many-ideas and fabrics—for you'd find vested suits in hearty worsted herringbones . . . classic cheviots with suede-reversing vests^and solid worsteds with red-reversing vests . . . worsted Glen plaids and han^yme flannels .. . imported sharkskins and luxurious unfinished worsteds—all in traditional three-button models with hooked center vent and trim plain-front trousers. And whether your shade —is asxJassic as charcoal of fresh as pewter, youMh ftn^ inhere. Priced from 49.95to $95. - 111 OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN EVERY EVENING TO 9 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS [Are | THURSDAY, AUGUST 8* 1063 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. * Romeo foPick a Peach Rain, Be Gone! ROMEO—“Weatherman, please That’s th^plea of th« commit* tee planning the annual Peach Queen Contest whi^b^wffiTe staged outitoors tomorrow night. Beciuae of the limited seat- . tog capadiy imhte H Center, the I p.m. program has be£*'wwed, Mt tq the tenis courts to better accommodate i annual Peach Festival tradition-the hundreds expected to at* ally held here over Labor Day weekend. - Eleven areajbeauties will, be ‘competing for the crown. They are all title-holders in the communities which they will repre- The winner and her two maids of honor will reign ova* the list The other eight contestants will form the queen’s court. All 11 girls will be guests in Romeo homes during the three-day celebration and take part I the f u 11 schedule of events, each day: During the contest the queen candidates, will be identified solely by the names of peaches on cards they, wifijcarry. TO APPEAR TWICE They "will appear oh stage twice. The first time will be in street dress for infarmal interviews and.to give a short read1 1®r“ -----------------— Later,' they wID return in ‘for- mal attire to answer several questions drafted by the out-of-town judges before the competition. Each girl will answer the same questions. Those not on stage wifi be kept out of earshot so they won’t know answers given by -prior contestants. * They all will be rated on poise, personality, beauty, appearance and speaking ability, Acting as emcee will be Rich-l are McLean, who performed in the same capacity for the earlier Miss Romeo contest. ★ w - The stage will be a converted float, .entered* by the Youth Center in previous Labor Day children’s and floral parades. A runway else will be set up to afford the spectators a closer look at the title aspirants. The tennis courts are at rear of the Youth Center on Morton Street. The overflow crowd will sit in the picnic area, according to Mrs. Margaret A. Kaiser, contest chairman. . ’ it" 7. .. In case of rain, the contest wifi be moved indoors, she said. '' Competing for the crown will tjr fianey Mg nac; Audene Clark, Miss Romeo; Desy, Miss Utica; Jo Sutton, Miss Ortonville; and Barbara Sue Goodwin of RoseviHe, Miss Metropolitan Beach. . - * ★ * '■ 2 vgtl —Others are Jacqueline Bondar, Miss Rosevifie; Beverly Lambert, Mias Armada; Norma Geisler, Miss Oxford; Charlotte Braden, Miss Waterford; Judy Whipple, ior Miss, Susan Pill. Official Joins TFoy Chief By ROGER SRIGLEY TROY - Fired Police Chief Dev^d Gratopp’s name, remained off the city payroll today, and effective this morning it was to be joined by that of Commissioner Robert J. Bargert. At last night’s special busi- File Charge in Death of Auto Driver The commission last week confined Firestone’s recommendation by a 5 to 2 vote, before he officially gave Gratopp the ax. ness meeting of the commission—staged before some 300 viewers — Troy,’s governing body stood pat on its decision to back City Manager David E. Firestone on, the police chief’s Trov Senior High School jpunna-sium. Firestone's list included a charge of insubordination by fail ing to keep the city manager informed of police activities." Firestone also said the chief had* taken a vacation without notifying city hall, had not complied with a request for daily reports oa serious crimes and had not notified the manager when he was oa eick leave. Gratopp also was accused of failing to show up for certain meetings, being 17 days late turn-tog Jn budget data, and Tefusiiig After last night’s hearing, Bar-got, one of the dissenters, told The Pontiac Press* that “effective tomorrow I am sdbmitting my resignation.” Asked for a reason, the com- WINS FIRST PRIZE — Her showmanship ability again led 14-year-old Sue Patnode Into the winner’s circle yesterday, after she was chosen best in junior beef showmanship com- 4-H Fair Beef Judging Turns day was filled with laughs of tro-phy winners and the bellow of beef cattle, both joyfully blended with the-rhythmic chugs of tree-tors. It was the day for all beef judging, tractor-operating eom-—petition—and horsemanship trials. It was also a day for the Langleys and the Smiths. Jerry Langley, 15, of the Ro-Hi Club, stepped info the spot his Jrd—Tom Middleton, Boat Orion wn-ortownns -^aSSStii. T***. _ n.hhlf Mriittr, MIHcrQ «-K—TfOPht and State Show ■ • ■ Kathryn Smith, Ortonrlllo County Honor! Oa-l Wf»y. Ortonvlll* 4-H—County Honor* Second Tear Richard Theriot. Oakhlll 4-H—Trophy And State Show Jeree Bachelor, Hl-Lo 4-H — County Honors ---Geraldine Denton, Oat hill 4.H—Coun. ty' Honor* Carol Wudaral nd State Show Jedlne Hull, Ortonvlll* 4-H—County Milford Class Sets Reun MILFORD—The Milford Hig (School- Class aL494J witt-hold-its second reunkm^Aug. 25 nt Dodge Park- No. 10 on Pettibone 1 Lake Road, Highland Todhdiip. Thns* planning to attend have been asked to take their own food for the 1 p.m. meal. There Is a shelter in case of rain. The class’ first reunion w a s held five years ago. Brother tiffy occupied last year. Jerry-showed the 979-pound Blade Angus which was chosen Grand Champion Steer yesterdayr--- Jim Smith, II, sf the Nu-Ly-Wix Club, followed the footsteps of his brothers Steve and Phil, when he was awarded top hoa-•rs in the senior showmanship fliMi." _____ ~ —-—- Among the other winners yesterday were: _____.. . lareferi steer lean* Lantley—Ito-Hl ■eaarre IfciMtWtigW"* at* Georg* B*r*—Nu-Ly-Wl* Cbamptan A»»u» Heifer -Marilyn proton, Oakhlll 4-H—County AUTOMOTIVE lit—Doufla* NorUnd, Bloomfield 4-H —Trophy and State Show____ Hu»»ell Hee*^ F -HI 4-H let—Dick Cole. Ro-Hl 3ndr-Ru»sell Hen. Ro-Hl IrdJ-HonkM H*»a. Ro-Hl COatKRVATlOH ■tale Show Gun dafity—Walter AUx, Bloomfield i-K "Ptih 1—Janet Casper, Clarketon Happy Helptra Pore*t Coneeryatlon—Carolyn Middle-ton, Bast Orion Bird* 1—Tony Hart, -Oaymour Lake Clash ' *TT' _ 1 Blrde l—Rtchard Therlot. ^akhlH Chib Rocko—Elt Drake. Arm Olub —t-t Ceaaty Rener Qnn nafetv—Randy Jawnaan, Bloom-iHoM 4-H Bade Conservation—Ann Whims, Bail Orton Club ‘ Poroet Conearvetloa- -Carolyn Middle, ton. Bast Mon Club Pish 1—Janet Casper, Clarketon Happy Btlptra Bird* 1—dau Wray. Ortonvlll* Club Blrdi 3—Leell* Carmean, Ortonvlll OaUoway, Avon CTU* th Thomas Barkham, Paint Cree^ Valley/ ------------------------- A manslaughter warrant was [ordered yesterday against 12-year-old Wilbur WUdfong of 2795 Emmons, Avon Township, in the auto death of a 72-yoar-old Rochester woman Tuesday morning.- ’ Oakland Ceaaty Assistant Prosecutor Barry M. Grant, who ordered the*-warrant, said Wlldfong admitted ll| miles an hour when the woman’s car turned ia front of him on John R la Avon Township; h-™ Killed when she made a left 'torn into thq path of Wildfong’s cur. was Mrs. Hortense Tobin of llSGriggs. She“^Was thrown from her auto by the impact. Wildfong.-wfaauls in raifr' con.-: dltion at Pmg«m Generfbtitos-Dital, also aSimted drinjSH "a couple of bottles of beer*’ shortly before the accident, Grant said. Also injured to the crash was Robert Doral of John R to Avon Township, a hitchhiker riding in Wildfong’s car. hearing chambers i “This is the reason,’’ “If my thinking is so far away from that of those other five men I have no place on the commission,” he stated. ‘MASTER MINDING’ He said another reason he resigned was that he “was accused by Mayor (Robert J.) Huber of masterminding this thii ““ ....| was referring to wad the crowd which attended nigit’s session. Several times the spectators booed and - shouted catcllls to Firestone and gavfc loud applause to Gratopp. Wlien Gratopp was asked to speak to the commission, he introduced his: attorney, Justin GUtnor of Detroit, who taoke . -for the ft^aiia tkro'ughout most of the meeting. Initially tol lawyer requttti) a fiat of the charges^ and jjaid Gratopp knew what he w** accused of only through rumors. * * He reviewed these while the meeting was transferred from tiie overcrowded City Hall to the TOP SENIOR SHOWMAN - Jim Smith, 16, oftije Nu-Ly-Wix Club proved how expertly he could handlO'bia-P'i-year1" old Aberdefr A«ff,MT.ji«wiiWpTgrwinnlhg the senior beef “showmen trimhy at the 4-H Fair last night. He placed tiunr last year. to remove a “virtually raving” maofrom Firestone’s office. ANSWERS CHARGES Answering the charges, Gratopp said “The main gist of all these is that we did not have enough help to take care of the bookwork needed.” -- -“I kave never disobeyed an order, whether, verbal or written. I have never been away without his (Firestone’s) knowledge. I have done my bust without shirking my duty,” the ex-chief retorted. Gratopp said when he -was called to cityjfell to remove a man he found no cause tor the removal, and said Firestone and his guest resumed discussion- to an orderly matter. MAKES STATEMENT After the two men had gone over the specific charges, Commissioner Bargert requested the chair’s permission to make a statement. He said a local i either the police chief or city manager had to go . . . “I might have been thinking it,” he added, “bat I didn’t say it” According to the city charter the only “way Gratopp could be tehlred would be if the comnrfs-sion reversed its decision, or if Firestone changed his mind and had the commission’s concurrence. To Boost Business Farmington Eying Street Plans FARMINGTON - Merchants here are eying additions and subtractions on Grand River Avenue to boost their business. The city plans to lay new sidewalks and pavement do •way with curb steps and eliminate parking metes on a trial' basis. Renovation is directed toward thit highway and curbing at the southwest and northeast corners d Grand River at Farmington Road, for 500* feet on tiie north side of Grand River east from Farmington Road, and about 200 feet on the south tide of Grand River west from Farmington iRoacLt =. a. ’ fEtf&g The proposed $20,000 street fm- ciai assessment district is iched- provement project would align more closely the pavement and sidewalk, now nine- to 18-inches apart. In places, the curb requires two or three steps. Aha included wM ho bow slope from the atHO f r o h 11 to the curb. the State Highway Department-has agreed to pay for the curbing, with the property owners and city- at large paying for tiie rest. Bids on the project are to be opened Aug. 15. HEARING SET Hearing on the proposed spe- » BaltB, Hu-Ljr-WlX-------- fil i| TAIUMfijn m Urf t »»|T y ■ ■ nt-—-----J BLOWING CONTEST V let—DotUlas Lon*. Milford 4-H w 2nd—Tom Middleton. Bait Orion 4-H 3rd-*Jlm WUeon. Xaat Orion 4-H .TBACtOa OFKRATING CONTEST 1 at—Oodtlai Lon*. Milford |-H *«tred • mm pfaeaktod By Tom Hi t Standarcf Truck Driver Killed; Trailer Crushes Cab TROY —• A 39-year-old father of five was killed last night whan the trailer of tiie trade in which he was seated toppled over, crushing tbecab. James Greenlee of St. CJair. Shores was dead oa arrival at William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak. The accident happened about 10:20 p.m. at an 1-75 construction site south of Big Beaver Road. Greenlee, a driver, for the 1 Rs Construction* Co. of Drayton Plains, was dumping a 25-ton load of, sand when the arop box was thrown off balance, jackknifed and crashed the cab, according to 1Toy police. V 'm|j v Pealla* Pratt PkaU GETS GIFT HEIFER — Sixteen-year-old Duane Austin of the Oaufill Club ja the proud new owner of a registered Holstein heifer. He received it last night at the 4-H fairgrounds r from Donald Hicks, president of tiie Kiwanis ‘Club of West Pontiac. The dub gives a heifer every year as part of a perpetual program to help deserving youth in 4-H. uled for 8 p.m. Aug. 19 to the municipal building. City Manager John D. Dinan estimated die work would take two weeks. During the construction-period, the dty wifi also remove parking meters in this area on a 90-day trial basis. ‘’This wifi complete mete re-moval in the city,” Dinan commented. He noted that the absence of parking meters Was expected to aid downtown merchants eortpeting with those who offer free off-street parking. Parking on Grand River will be limited to one hour to Insure turnover, he said. The manager estimated the revenue from the meters “but will gain half7 that amount in not having personnel to check ahd maintain the meters.’SH TRAFFIC PROBLEM Oh Farmington Road, the city iiinriT .has authorized action to correct a traffic problem caused motorists who ignore the 25 m.p h. speed limit as they the City. A recent traffic lurvey indicated that S5 per cent of drivers using the road sped through the area between 19-Mile Road ahd ShiaWassee. Concentrated enforcement cut the percentage to IS. Danger of i peed ing is increased by a curve at the foot of • hill between the two intersections. . * * * The council has accepted the recommendations of the Department* of Safety to install stop Signs- at 19-MUi Road ahd at Shiawassee, to increase the number of warning signs in tiie general area To step up surveillance. Volunteers for the test are instructed to eat their usual fast for two hours after reporting for work, although they may consume water, plain tea, or black, sugarless coffee. CHANCE TO 8.00x14 E^OxW B—t THIS PUXTIAC PKESa, THURSDAY, AUGtlST 8,1968 Fudging for Health Tests Spot Diabetes • The l everage By FRANK CAREY [ Associated Press Science Writer WASHINGTON - Federal ; wortters in nine cities have been i munching on fudge bars on company time. But they’re not | fudging on Uncle Sam. Rather, they are trying to help him— and yon. The candy consumption is pert of a Public Health terlce screening test to detect diabetes. To date, SO,000 bars have heato-eoMtinwH hy 25.000 workers since July 1960 in Washington, -Ddtas, Denver, Boston, New York, Kansas City,-Mo., Greenbelt, Md, Alexandria, Va., and BeUa Mead, This scientific fudge-eating, followed by a blood test, if designed to-get a relatively quick gauge ef a person's ability to .assimilate sugar once it’s introduced Into the t.—1-. « *----J *-* *--------- OMy ni ioc (unn w 1000. In diabetes, the body’s mechanism for properly, handling sugar is defective, and a high blood-sugar is usually a sign of the ailment. i Using a device called an “Auto Analyzer" which himdles up to 00 blood samples an hour. doctors on foe project can quickly spot suspicious cases. Then,'more definite tests are done either by project doctors or by referral to family physicians. Reporting on the first year of screening activities in Washington and Dallas where >5,635 ployes, representing 31 federal departments or agencies vohrn-teersd for foe test, project doc-tors gave these results In Public Health Reports, a health ■service Journal: LANSIltG (JB - firm PtiQM changed for the pa^..J:hr-*ej months, reports the federal-state.Aug* crop uffUST More than 1,600 screened "positive"; that is, there blood plasma showed enough sugar to farm Prices Stable for Past 3 Months 4 Educators to Be Hon Four Oakland County educators honored during Thicfaera* Day at the Michigan State Fair GOP to Inaugurate Fund-Raisktg Drive in Turkey, in 1856 when Nicholas I of Russia banned beards. . ,..... Tsart Fewer foreign workers were their I employed in this country-lost * {year thsm In 1161. * LANSING (IT— Republicans. \ yesterday announced plans tar ir eeoond anmial neighbor^ j nHfUKKft.jM.nl ..i.hip ili'lim-nwt I month. Receiving Stpte Fair Teacher The'index ofprlces received by j Day awards will be: pr. William; Michigan farmers as mid-July J. Emsrsnn, Oakland Count was 220 per cent of the 1910-H «nv»-int»ndAnt- Wattei base for the third straight month. Price increases for potatoes, hogs, beef and eggs were offset superintendent; Waiter Ptel; administrative assistant, Bloomfield] Township; Dr. Chandos Reid, as-: sistaitt to superintendent, Water-j ilp ScJloo'Is ; and] >h W. Rowel, teacher at Ffth-’High School. 1 The statewide drive is scheduled for mid-September but most , counties plan to confine fund-raising efforts to the Sept. 24*26 pe-|| ! riod. At least 42 counties plan toj participate, i Joe Hunting, state GOP finance] director, said the purpose o‘ " ' drive is to raise f and naJjentfRnft'" tae and Hear the Mew | ALL TRANSISTOR^ AMPLIFIER Can be playud anywhura, no electricity necdssary. 3 INPUTS I Complete with tromolo, ■lay it ip yayr car. Ideal 1 for outdoor gatherings. Lmyemay or Eaty Pay"*'* eimn ] EDWARD’S 6 N. Saginaw = ““*CTosa7waclryesday During July and Aug. ALLSTATE Tire Sale Of these, IJ1I were given e more definitive test. Finally, 210 cases of diabetes were diagnosed — a rate of 13.6 per 1,000 population. THE PERCENTAGE The doctors pointed out that in a population of the size screened 15,635 persons, aged 20 to 69, approximately 163.unknown cases might be expected to 6e uncovered. Buy tlie 1st Tire at-flie No Trade-In Trice, o Trade-In Price, lit Tire Plus Tax SIZE Similar 2nd Tire Offer on Most WnitewaHw- ^Attention Truckers . t j Light Delivery Tires Extra Mileage, Traction 7 At This Low. Low Price Express ’59’ ^vlon, ri.OOxl6, 6-ply rating Plus Tax . . .-No Trade-In Req 4uto Accessaries, Perry St. Basement (iti^rpteeq Against All Road Hazards EH SI Eil fc£rl SS3 TIME SERVICE GUARANTEE II tire IsiU during the monthly gu.ranle* pcnoT.wc will, st opr option; either re. pair it Without coat or in exchange for the old tire, gi#e you ■ rrpiscement tire or. i refund, charging only for tin period of ownership. Check before you buy; Rocks, Stones Broken Gloss Holes in Road Broken Concrete Sniket, Mails Railroad Tracks Curbs, Biimps All adjustments mad* by retail stares are prorated at (he regular’retail price plus Federal Excise Tax, lea* trade-in,’ at the time of return. ' Check Sears flow Prices pn Compact Car Tires FREE Allstate lir^Afountinir SEARS Plastic Top Table and 4 Chairs 'Handsomely designed round extension table available with plasTic (wood: grained) top. Fduc mate's chain complete this dining set . . . built and finished to the highest beauty’ standards and ready to provide you with years, and years of service. " ‘Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 / ; y*■..*< / THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘mtntSUAV. »,> Grievance List Grows on Both Sides in Red Skirmish Editor's Note—This is the fourth installment to a five--- pari Associated Press correspondent WiUiafh Ryan which backgrounds the' split between Russia and Red China.) By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent “Certain persona” and “some ■gy fofy «. rta. ai “Certain people” acted like well-fed bourgeois social democrats, lording it over true Coin- aiming hlgber than in the dark Stalbi era. L A new middle class had arisen with Instincts for ownership, ipl> tiative and privilege. |SF"A ^ Russians had contacts with the West, which they openly envied. They wanted the fruits of their labors for their own as well as the sext generation. quests? Soviet power could influence events and movements. World revolution would be slower in coming, but the U.S.S.R, would “Some people” try to let "like | Buddha,” and dictate what Is right er wrong far world communism, said Khrushchev. That nead Mae Tzo-tuag. To (he Chinese — or any dogmatic Communists — Khrushchev was ini ini-devlationistr who ; twisted sacrosanct Leninist theory to suit Soviet national needs. To Mao, Khrushchev was a peasant upstart, a Johnny-come-' lately. Evidently Khrushchev still was an ardent believer in ultimate Red domination of the world. But the Russian people were forcing scriptural changes. Russians were living better and Diamonds Are Hard (to Find) WASHINGTON—Diamonds can . be anyone** best friend, but like good friends, they’re hard to find. Even In the rich, diamondbearing beaches of South-West Africa,, the proportion of diamonds to flie gravel and sand that must be processed to ob-tain them is one part in about 80 millioiv ffir'Wationai- J graphic Society says.——* Massive earth-moving pc ment and back-breaking work are required to find the elusive gems. Recently, .a promising new source of diamonds was discovered in an offshore area of Southwest Africa. An American named Samuel Collins has extracted more than $1,500,IN worth of gem-qaality stones from the Chamais Bay area north of the Orange River since 1M2. The existence of diamond deposits under the Atlantic off the coast ofNAfrica had been suspected for some time, but never proved until Mr. Collins’s find. ' Two theories on the source of Southwest African diamonds had indicated the possibility of underwater deposits. The first theory held that file atones were cast up on the shore currants that carried them from volcanic sources under the sea. The second belief was the gems Originated inland and were carried to the coast and beyond by ancient rivers. The search for underwater diamonds is based on the world’s only floating miftehead. Diamondbearing sand and grave! 1s loosened from the ocean floor by Jets of compressed air, then sucked up to a barge through a pipeline. On the barge, "the sand and! _ gravel is combed for diamonds and dumped bade overboard. Each ton of sand and gravel _ from the oeean bed yields an ” average of one diamond. On the coastal diamond mines, accord-ing to the Consolidated Diamond Mines of Southwest Africa, Limited, the yield is one carat of diamond' for every 20 tons of mineral processed. Party Wa* a Whopper as Thief Take*, the Cake - MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) -Police weren’t invited to the party, but they figured somebody must have had a big one. A burglar entered# bake shop over the weekend and stole 165 cakes. In another weekend - robbery I someone broke into a warehouse and took five cases of orange soda and five cartons of ginger-ale. i ■■■■■■■■■■■ : DOUBLE j Tap Value ! Stamps 2 with - ..la , —. * $5 or More Purchos# | S HALLMAN I DRUGS J SramhHr .. This was treachery to Red Chinese leaders struggling with a have-not nation, frustrated by ' economic independence on PEKING’S LIST According to Peking, "certain persons” committed sins 11 k e these: —Created new theory, to avoid ‘fadns un to the imperialists. MJ . "Btorayed^ the “liberation Struggle,” by which Coqununists mean revolutionary situation in Asia, Africa and Latin Amtfica that can be seized by Commu-ilsts.—*— —Absurdly predicted, victory through peaceful competition. -Palled to understand that Lenin regarded war as an extension of politics by other fflpMI Mill mri rad feaf fiarffie spark from some revolution start World War HI. 4 —Wielded a stick over other parties, interfered with them, forced thenr'to change leadeis, imposed the wrong line on them. —Even erred about their own backyard, damning absurdly that Soviet society already was without classes and had emerged from proletarian dictatorship. MOSCOW’S UST And here, according to Moscow, were a few of “some people’s” sins: —They encouraged /ihe Communists in tiny, ©Utrof-reach Al- a to thumb their noses at file Kremlin. ? ; — Were hopelessly dogmatic, going by'book rates, denying any road to Communist power except sinned Jtruggte, regardless of consequences. —Refused to recognize that peaceful coexistence meant _that flu political straggle tor world communism would con- 'thtae. '........ ■ —Wanted' corritntinlsm vanced by naked military power at every importunity. —Fought de-Stalinizatkm as a Who was right and who was wrong? Both sides claimed to bq Leninists. But the Chinese could show that K h r u s h c h e v had strayed far from Leninism. PREACHED VIOLENCE Lenin preached that Communists were obliged to give total support to any revolutionary movement against a non-Commu-nist regime. IPH Lenin held that temporary al-i liances wifi) capitalism were ail' ■right in •aMckw«d' rountries, but Communists s h o u I d remember .that only revolution could put an end to capitalist states.—r—-Existence et the Soviet state "side by side with the imperialist states tor a long time is unthinkable,” Lenta insisted. One or the other would have to per* iah^ Thcre wa& “no m-l-d dl fc Lenin indicated peaceful coexistence was just a tactic to buy time while Russia was weak. -Stalfo!*- was a tactical device. But Khrushchev says his brand is not a tactic at all. a Enraged, the Red Chinese| called this capitulating to thtf West. For a long time a cloud of ideological semantics shrouded t .h e battle. CLASH OF EMPIRES Essentially, it was a clash of two empires — backward China, afflicted with famines and natural calamities, and~ttie ever more powerful U.S.I3.R., whose leaders felt the pressures of a rising, impatient generation.------ After the Cuba crisis of October 1M2, the battle began to emerge from behind the semantic cloud. ......... Peking accused the Kremlin pf cowardly capitutatkxi in agreeing to withdraw Soviet iqissiles from Cuba. 7 • " “ . :— Equally angry, the Kremlin accused Peking of wanting a Soviet- U.S. war, so China could remain on the sidelines and pick up the pieces when the moke cleared. Pretenses were dropped. The, | two sides attacked one another ‘[by name, pulling no punches. Next: The shattered camp und the prospects. First to Sears..«then to School misses, juniors and half-sizes; fine cotton Shirtwaist Dresses classroom favorites reg. $6.98 I Charge It Just see whst $5 buys .for you school-bound room favorites . . . have all the snap, all the charm you want, yet they .cost so little. All have cluster pleated. skirts, fine detailing inside and out. Shop Sears early for. best selection. Save $1.98! ~ PuublmKnlr Wool Comdiuatas.—■“ Values to $9.96! Choose rieh Q Q gray with,-camel trim or bright ./qX navy with winter white in , blousqp, skirts,sleeveless shells, «acn cardigans and capris. Broken Charge It sizes. , ' ■ a ' -_' children’s shoes -•* reg. $4.99 pr. 397 Charge I* Your choice; Girls’ saddle oxfords with white leather uppers and contrasting sunburst trim or black nylon velvet oxfords. Boys' black moc-toe-oxfords Shoe Dept., or hi-front slip-ons. Polyvinyl soles, sites 8Vi-3, Sears Main Floor D-widths. ' * m Rttgged Cotton Twill Matched Work Outfits boys9 cotton sport shirts Assorted wash *n wear shirts in Reg. S1.T9 plaids, dobbins and cheeks. Top- 99 stitched .spread collars and but-* I ”” ton-downs. Sites 6 to 18. 7*- bovs’ wash 9n wear pants. Reg. $2.99 textured cotton slacks _ . ' w jib extended waistband, side tabs 09 $ CT for trim fit Choice of colors, in^y pg, sizes 8-16. .. . - Charge It Boys' Wear, Matn Furor 1 Satisfaction guaranteed or your_moneY back” Shirts 237 Pants 2®7 Charge It “-^1. Vat dyed, washfast colors Cut over Sears exclusive patterqs-io assure a,comfortable fit. Sanforised and mercerized. in khaki, light gray and green. Pants in sises 30 to 44; shirts in sizes 14Vi to Wnt’i W orking Clothing, Sears Main Floor Shop Tonight, Tomorrow and Sal. ’til 9! CU ADC Downtown Pontiac DLAlyp Phone FE 5-41711 Craftsman Heavy puty 9-In. Radial Saws .s. 12999 Includes Steel Stand -Easy to.use, accurate, dependable. Cu* tom-built motor develops 1%-HP at 4100 RPM, runs on 115-120 volts. Two motor spindles; take standard right-hand or. custom left .hand accessories. Portable for use on job. Charcoal pay color. Reg. $59.99 Just right for pruning, felling 1 small trees. 1-HP motor, UL ,, LUtodL Weight only 12 poundi. Smri.X—fimrTii H— ' ^AVE »2()!~ - Gear Drive Chain Saws With 4-HP Engines Regularly $139.99 With 20-inch Bar! 16-inch Direct Drive Chain Saws NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan .-.a Hie saw you’ve been looking for. low priced, but Reg. $149.99 *1*55 such power! Even cuts upside down. Big 4-HP engine, ihiinirw yet weighs only 28 pounds with guide bar and chain. 5W-HP. industry-rated engine-. Automatic clutch, easy pivot spike bar. Shop tonight ' Weighs 21'lbs. with guide bar, *|jj 9 p>m j chain. Cuts in any position. 19-In., Reg. $154.99 .. $139 Fencing Dept., Perry St. Basement 3 Allstate Grades—in your container MOTOR OIL SALE Regular Motor Oil GOOD Quality! Better Quality 18s* Heavy Duty Motor Oil Sears Best OH Sears All-WntlierOil 2M Charge It Here's the economical way to buy motor oil. V* have a grade just ’ right for your carted budget. Bring your container to Sears today end save on bulk oil. You can count on ns; quality costs no more at Sears! *In Your Container ■ Sale! ALLSTATE Shock Absorbers Reg. $4,99 3" Charge It More ■ fluid, ctpacity for more —Control over bnmps- Fits most popular cars. Seve f 1.1 (! " Satisfaction guaranteed > .or your money back** is Carburetor Air Filter Refills Now Only 2i2. * Chtrgr It Feeds air freely, traps harmfol dust. ^ampitCStiinflMSHr. Buy tonight! Sale! ALLSTATE Spark Plugs Reg. 59c 41m Charge It Cframir ifi*ulator for ton, life. Latest typo alloy in aiertrodm. v Internal seals, y ’ CP A C Downtown Pontiae OrtfUYO Phone FE S-4I71 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 Between Rival Firms Eye Runoff for TFX WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. laenOML RS, D., liCknowl-edged today that “some thought’ is beidg given to a plan to appropriate up to $400 million for a TFX fighter plane runoff competition. LEAVES MILAN Mrs. Christina Austin, Itetiaihbora divorced wife of a British naval officer, enters her car in Milan, Italy, as die departs for St, Moritz, Switzerland. Mrs. Austin's name has been romantically linked with that of Henry Ford II who recently separated from lus wife. Flint Gets U. S. Grant | Prov#d y«»E«tay •*> grant for survey and plahning of the WASHINGTON W—The Urban Central Park urban renewal proj-Renewal Administration ap-|act in Flint, Mich. proposal wHggianiirtMB chief rivals — General Dynamics Corp. and Boeing Co.—in a design competition involving the building of eight prototype planes, Mundt emphasized in an terview that it would be “premature” to consider the p 1 a n adopted! “Nothing is. finalized,” he said. But when questioned about the proposal, Mundt said it- was “among the possible recommendations that will be made” as a result of the current Senate investigation of the disputed TFX contract. • h' ■ O', Pentagon witnesses so far have [rejected any proposals for a , winner-take-all competition at this stage in the development of the supersonic, biservice fighter — eight months after the inital research contract was given to General Dynamics, However, Mundt. a member of flw lnvestlgatihas sabcoa-mittee, contended there have beea recent indications that the Pentagon “would at least cen-ildsr it.” The comments came as the Senate group recalled Air Force iene M. Zukert for Secretary another day of closed-door questioning. I-MON1H PROBE of fee Senato Committee, said the idea “prototype contest” has been discussed with “some of our 'col-leagues” on the committee which controls foe government's purse strings. He declined to elaborate further. Chairman McClellan, In questioning Zuckert during hearings, last week, hinted that such a pro-posal was under consideration. I haye a high regard for the capacity of the appropriations committee of Congress to take an- .... - - - it is finalised and funded," eran investigator told Zuckert. gen. John L. McClellan, D-Ark., Castigating for the past five months Whether influ. ence or errors were involved in the award. CivUain Pentagon officials gavel' the multibillloiHioUar contract last Nov. 24 to Dymunlcs’ plant In Fort Worth, Tex., despite high echelon military recommendations favoring a rival Boeing bid. Mundt said he had received a S WASHINGTON (UPI) — Wash-1 “lot of mall impressed with the {jngton Police Chief Robert vJ validity «f a prototype contest (Murray said yesterday that civil! in such an astronomical con- [ right* leaders are doing every- j tract like this.” The huge thing'possible to assure a peace- 'Rights Leaders Trying for Quiet D.C. March' award, one ef the largest in UJS. military procurement history, is expected to exceed $7 dt, who also is a member thing’ possible to assure a peaceful demonstration in the capita) on Aug. 2ft.. ^ However, Murray safci be was unwilling to predict flatly that there would be no violence. STOP LOOK AT WICKES LOW-PRICES!! FOR AtL YOUR BUILDING NEEDS 'WICKES' offers top quality in lumber, building supplies,, plumbing, hooting and electrical equipment. You'll find ot Wickes thousands of items aHow cash and carry prices. Wickes saves you money, on such big items as:Wot water heaters, gas ranges, and bath tubs, all priced at budget lew prices. STOP AT WICKES TODAYTORTOP VALUE AND TREMENDOUS SAVINGS! 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BATH TUBS rsaw Reynolds Soffit System - Perforated-Soffit Coih=---—:------i 12*—50-ft. coil itt^tttt>19,20 i 24"—50-ft. coil........... 30.00 i 48"—50-ft. coil........... 54.00 i Straight Fascia and Frieze Runner 6"— 10-ft. length..... 2.64 8"—10-ft. length ...... >.. 2.85 >0"—10>ft. length ..-....---3.05 Corner Trim Angle —- White Color 5* Force. steel/l6^37a9B—^ 5' Cast iron, 49.95 55251 . 5' Ca«t Iran, 16" ^ 60.50 7126 WATER CLOSETS Wash-down economy', white . *20.95 Channel Runners ... 10-ft. length 1.44 Color. *28.95 BASEBOARD RADIATION Cabinet, Element and Damper 3'..... ...S4.05 6’.......$ 8110 4*........ _5.40 8*.......10.80 5* . a... 6.75 Basaboard Diffuser—Forced Air Haot___ ~U2.75 48"....$3.75 Dunkirk Blue Circle HOT WATER BOILERS OAS FIRED Extended Jacket Input 115,000 BTU $31 5?0 OIL FIRED Output 83.000 BTU $368.20 FINANCING SERVICE AVAILABLE • INDEPENDENT TRUCKING SERVICE PHONE \.UAABER - BUILDING . ; SUPPLIES 752-3501 PMMPT DELIVERY AT REASONABLE RATES ON HIGHWAY M-53 1 Va MILES SOUTH OF ROMEO OPEN 7:30 TO 5:30 MONDAY THRU SATURDAY ST PHONE PLUMBING * HEATING ELECTRICAL 752-3504 PROMPT DELIVERY AT REASOHARLE RATES BIG VALUE tailRsl^ioiainf 47-55 SOUTH SAGINAW ST. SAVE 60% SALE ENDS SATURDAY 6 P.M. SHOP EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION Many one ofa kind Hams and some sold as is. Most merchandise in .original cartons., Bring, yotir truck or station wagon, or have us deliver. dark our^onditionedstore behind OUR__]__— FREE REFRESHMENTS SERVED DURING THIS SALE NO MONEY DOWN TAKE 36 MONTHS TO LIVING ROOM SUITES 9-PC SUIT! TOOK 1% Nylon C OUfoo v *69“ *99“ 2-PC. SUITE Foam Cuthionr. 100% Nylon, , Wido Modem Am. All colon. (239.00 $^|095 *2-PC. SUm Feam CmMmm. 100% Nyfen iond Foam Rubber Back WMi WWo Aim. ) 14(19 5 $289.95 Volvo........... ... 109 *i4r 3-PC. SECTIONAL 100% Nylon, Foom . Cushion., Wide Modem Ann In All €01*^$^ gg9B Foam Coolilom. 9829.00 Voluo ..... This is only a partial list at over 200 living roam suit.*, remember NO MONEY DOWN, and as LOW AS 95 a MONTH. — .,1 ~1 , ' ; ^1, Sofa and Hide-A-Way Beds SOFA DIO and CHAM 100% Myfen, Choice .( Color.. Foam Cuthionr. $139.00 Value...................... *99** print. 1 Only. $199 Vsiee..... HIDE-A-WAY B8> 1 Only with LMo Tear hi Panel Innertering Mottrou. . - NAM 0169 Valve......... ............. HIDE-A-WAV 9CDTDQ%NylsK Wide, large Modi. Anti, fame Rubber Cuth-•iont with HA She InaonprMg Mattrett. H«au $2reVahMi7n^i.........-iir^. leu *29“KiSSSS* .....*tr *39“ BOXSPRING III! SI *24“ jj. *29“ *79**:£S&? ..........*4T* $7Q95 HOUYWOOO BED )|M| 19 OUTFIT COMPtm s • s s Gtr All Mattrosses Guaranteed lor 8-1,9-18 and 28 Yaan. Available in TWin or Full Size. BUNK BED BUYS $119.99 VALUE I 9199.99 VALUE. SPINDLE BUNK BIDS •89“ *89" BEDROOM SUITE BUYS 4-PC. BLOND BEDROOM Only 2 to Sod. 8119.00 Veloe................. 4-PC. WALNUT MODERN SUITE ftHM 913940 Value.......... '#0^’ 4-PC. TRIPLE OBEY BEDROOM SET. 1109.00 Value............ 4-PC. WHin PROVINCIAL 9UITE, Soliri^ Through and Through. 1 Only. |||||g 4JC.1 ioud wAUUf surti istp proof and Center Inner Oukl*. $239.00 f|2y> 4-PC. SOLID OAK SUITE 1 Only. SI JAM ^ 92994M Vaht.. 1 |j| 1 This Is only a partial list of over 150 suitas. an a lie. Rem.mbar no money d as law,as $5 par month. OCCASIONAL CHAIRS DANISH CHAIR Zipper CsUdiss, tSASS AH Men. SJV.OOVMue............ PLATFORM ROCKER Only 24 |j||| RECLINER, Few. PMsw Sack, AH Ceier*. tMM $69 95 Value .. A./..^......777131. UB HIGH BACK swiva ROCKER, 100% Nytsn Few. Zipper Cedtlsa. $79.00 $^^4 NAUGAHYDE OCCASSIONAL CHAIR. Walnut Amw, 1 Only With UttU Tear. OShna 939.99 Value........................... TP VALUE *49” s-Piwe ohwtte... *29" *79" T-PiM« Dhtettt M • *59“ *129” t-Kecr Dinrltr . • *79^* ODDS 'N ENDS Student Desk Al FWoMee. . • • • s. •«t, ,,, *5" MWif »wc«............... *5” Did TIHn....... V* ..........*r BIG/VALUE^ 47-55 $. SAGINAW ST. Thorough and Rigorous f THE PONTIAC PRESS* THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 B—8 /L, Soviet Spy Success Due to Training (tmtiJlcUr: Tm ft second of tu» articles on tho' Soviet opft network written by Newspaper Enterprise Association correspondent Col. Ray Cromtoy,) Lk By COL. RAT CROMLEY WASHINGTON (NBA) - Whatever successes Soviet intelligence agents enjoy are due In large part to the thorough training they receive before they arp sent on their missions. Despite the security with which the Reds surround their out to die West to give a rough, bat Informative, picture of their thoroughness. The facts are from civilian ex- The Intelligence school students are lectured Oh etiquette,-literature, architecture and religion on the theory that their best sources of material will be in the upper circles. There is continued instruction in English, photography, driving, military training, sports and hand-to-hand fighting. On completing the course, the intelligence students are taken en an extended trip ^ n*rwr .« A.t I nulrad. win become acquainted with the targets they will be workingon. Typical of the security police training methods is the School of Administration in East Berlin, um der the ultimate supervision of the Soviet State Security Committee in Moscow, the‘K.G.B. Forty stadeats are handpicked for ths one-year school. All students receive fictitious names and identity documents. They're forbidden, under heavy penalties, to reveal their true identities, even to each otter. Classes are six days a week Tram 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. There are compulsory sports on Sunday mornings. Sunday afternoon is free if there is no homework, lights are out at 11. ;■ * ^"*"7-*.________ The first six months are devoted to political indoctrination and foreign area studies. Subjects include dialectical materialism, history of the Soviet rnmmnnist party, class structure in foreign countries, the strength of Communist parties in foreign countries. Special emphasis is put on West Germany — such as dis-. sens ions among political parties. The second six months is devoted to practical ejects—audiosurveillance, the use oif audio equipment, lock picking and making copies of keys. ' *- * % Students are required to prepare two “drops” for the concealment and pick-up of intelligence material. These drops are filled by otter students, using such things as hoHowedout coins-and bolts for TWO MEETINGS Each student must prepare and carry through two meeting plans in East Berlin using an experi-enced East German KGB officer to play (he part of a secret agent .. / Each student is required to take and develop clandestine of secret iastalla- is sent out as resident agents. Each of these residents has the 'Responsibility to establish a network of local agents. It Is estimated that up to now the school’s graduates have set up roughly 120 of these local networks in the West. Each year, about half the group Training of intelligence operatives in the Soviet Union Itself is considerably more rigorous. OHtatu picked now for foreign assignments in Soviet military intelligence; GRU, are first re-tahe a graduate of a four-to-six-year military academy or other institution of higher learning. SENT TO ACADEMY Seventy-five of these officers, -Russian national- Hungarian Offers Balm in Rocf -Rifr-t MOSCOW (UPI) - The Soviet Union today published the first. | conciliatory statement in months of bitter exchanges of attacks j with Communist China. ' > ■ * * ■ The Communist party newspaper Pravda quoted a speech by Hungarian Premier Janos Kadar, a firm supporter of,Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev hi I the ideological dispute, in which he said: /“la the historical view, this is a passing phenomenon which will pass, and together with the brotherly Chrtxrrr people we will come to communism and will eater the Communist society.” ity, are sent each year to the Military Diplomatic Academy of the Soviet Army. For three years, they study hi detail the country in which they trill operate and Its language. They run through a series of political courses. • ' They are given thorough “intelligence technical training” — secret writing, microdots, concealment devices. They study ‘“Operational tradecraft” — how to acquire, train and supervise local agents. Both KGB arri GRU make an effort to find the best officers t^janJoUb6lEueadeeer4ak Tunes are good. Says a study by United States experts: “The professional can look forward to a life relatively free d the financial worries that plague most Soviet citi-zens.” Despite the care given the choice of intelligence officers, Russian espionage is handicapped by extreme centralization. Moscow insists that every ac-tion In the field receive prior Moscow approval — even down to the location of drop*,fte decision on who recruits which local agent, on what recognition remarks and signs two agents' meeting for the first time shall use, Where and when agents shall meet. Efficiency is impaired by the bickering that goes on among ! rival intelligence groups. The bickering is ref Hie intensive and continued spying on each other and the resultant lack of trust between agents contribute to inefficiency. Skilled Soviet operatives frequently make mistakes when Moscow lays on heavy requirements forquick results. In desperation, agents take wild chances they’ve teen trained not to take. AT Ph.tof.i CASTRO'S KIN DIES-Senora Lina Ruz de Castro, mother of Prime Minister Fidel Castro, died Tuesday night in Havana. U. S. Defector Headed Home HONG KONG flJPh—An American former prisoner of war who stayedln Red China after the Korea fighting left for Tokyo today on his way home. Reports said the former war prisoner, Lowell D. Skinner, 32, of Akron, Ohio, wai flying under the name of “Brawn.” Skinner chose to remain undo: communism after the Korean War. He lived in China for nine years, but showed up al Hr.no Knng bnga^r^af^eejTand said he wanted to see his par-entsagaln. ★ ★ * “I’ve waited day and nitfit, year in and year out, to see him,” his mother, Mrs. Brady D. Skinqer said in Akron. . ★ ★ ★' Skinner was traveling to the United; States on a certificate of identity issued to him by U.S. officials in Hong Kong instead of a passport. Rains Deluge S. California LOS ANGELES W-ttmnder-showers deluged parts of Southern California Wednesday, causing flash flood! which washed out highways, swept away emu and flooded two. communities. Up to three feet of water flooded Victorville cnd Apple Valley in the Mojave Desert. Residents and businessmen piled sandbags, brooms, shovels ahd rags in fropt of their homes and stores to stem the flood, sheriffs deputies said. Three men in a jeep were res... cued by washed out a portion of Victor- ville and Apple Valley. The road -is a main route from Los Angeles to Las Vegas, Nev. Wrong Kind of Pickup CIRENCESTER, England RJP9 —Reginald Franklin, a milkman who used a milk truck to run away with the wife of another milkman, was fined$28 yesterday for using a company vehicle without permission. ,• Kadar made his speech Ayg. S in, Budapest. He said Hungarian Communists treated thf Chinese Communists w i t h respect and he paid tribute to the “great Chinese people” and their I heritage. But the conciliatory tone of 1 Kadar’s speech was balanced by-j i another attack in today’s Soviet I press. Tass, the official news agency, charged that the Chi-nese nave “joined the imperialist camp” by refusing to sign the nuclear test-ban treaty. Bishops Hear Detroiter CHICAGO m —^Archbishop John F. Dearden of Detroit addressed a meeting of about 150 Roman Catholic bishops here yesterday. The bishops are studying I the subject matter for the second j Vatican ’Council, which will re- -j sume in Vatican City Sept. 29. HOLLOW NICKEL — Soviet agents use hoDowed-out coins 1 to transmit coded messages under intricate espionage training 1 1 conditions that prepare them for duties in the West 630 OAKLAND FE5-4T0T THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1908 County Judges Attend Meeting 6f Jurist Group Junior Editors Quit on— BUDDHISM Thru* municipal judQto from TOKYO «n Men. thru Fri. 9 to 9 Saturdays 9 to A fCJauad iMdaytJ Defense Dept. May Ask Another Pay Hike in '64 10 PM SHOP 9:30 A.M.'til WASHINGTON (UPI) - With a 111 billion military pay raise about to win congressional approval, the Defense Department already is thinking of *«Hpg a* a fartlm boost aariy nextyear, it was learned today. Assistant Defense Secretary Narmaa S. Paul said the pending pny bill will net “solve all the problems,” sach as “mood-Wghriag” by servicemen wbe get off-duty Jobs to mhbe ends meet, “and extreme eases where ealisted men have taraed to relief. Bat it is going to help,” he said. Paul, Pentagon manpower chief, told United Press International that conferences already had started with Army, Navy and Air Force personnel officers on whether to seek a raise, again nextyear. , NEW REQUEST COMING ./ j —“I cannot yet tell you whether, or how much,” he said. But he was sure Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara would back a new request as' early as next January if the pending boost ieavm ,fdiowrities” in military’ pay. *: Vice Adm. William R. Smed-berg III, chief of naval personnel who revealed last winter that some sailors to New York City were entitled to state relief, told UPI the 11.2 billios hike was • “splendid first step” hi getting some equity between civil service and military serV-. to»WF. ‘But we must not under any circumstances let Congress feel that it has settled the pay problem,” Smedberg said. He raid the -military have a long way to fo to catch up with the raioes given civil servants in the laat five| years. -■* * * Although unknown numbers of enlisted men have turned to one) form of relief or another to piece] out their incomes, “‘moonlight-tog” is far mere widespread. And! it is not confined to military men. Many officers of the middle ranks with receat experience commanding troops were eu-thusiastic about the pny hike bat did aot look for it to be a care-nil for servicemen with financial problems. Tber^ls a “sizable block"; in the Service just as to civilian life who don’t know how to manage their finandal affairs regardless bTlhcoine, said one experienced ! army officer. The problem is ' 'one of humln nature, not the wage structure.” ■ % ; -fT W This officer told of personal experience wito young soldiers talked into buying cars, furniture, television sets and washing machines, all on the installment plan. In over their heads, they turned naturally to their service emergency relief _ organizations for loans or grants. { Another officer related that to 1969, just after the last military pay raiae, ha_was wMiunundtng 7S0 men aOa U S. , military post His average receipt of letters [from soldiers’ creditors was 100 ito 150 a month. ,r. l.P. MONAUMl I. sn*10 Si RECORDS |i] LADIES' ORION and WOOL CARDIGANS . ..-4 Tuntsl . Children* M Hundreds Mural asiiiiiiiH* pits SIZES 32-38 Boautifyl Fin* Knit. Lightweight, Just Right for These Cool .Nights. BOYS' HOODED SWEAT SHIRTS 92< SIZES 6 TO 16 White, Blue, Red, Navy. Excellent for Beach or Cool Nites. Detroit Walks to Awards DETROIT (API — The American A uT o n o b I I e { Aaaocla-tion Wednesday awarded Detroit two top awards for pedestrian safety among cities of more than 500,000 and more than a million I population. V Bums CONTROLLED Electric Kitchen SUDS Blankets PILLOWS DETERGENT TOWELS 44 25 Pound BOX Double Super Absorbent Single Control Crushed Chicken Feathers For Mi Automatic Washers Ironing Allergic Non Lint Free Moth Proof Floral Print Ticking rftSVJA'- Prints CHORDS Excellent Lite Value weight 97 ?! MIN'S T-SHIRTS MEN'S SOX PK0. OF 4 LADIES' NYLONS Boya' 100% Nylon Stretch Sox TO S\Z*S Brawn Block 3-99 Bio* ComP°r • Limitud Quantity • First Coma, First Sarvu • Limited Quantity v # First Coma, First Sarvu LIMITED QUANTITIlt SHOP SPARTAN 9:30 A.M. to 10 P.M. DAILY ... SUNDAY 12 NOON to 7 P.M. , You’ll Always Find Super Discounts at SPARTAN CORNER OF DIXIE HIGHWAY ft TELEGRAPH ROAD In Pontiac THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST G, 1963 1 B-7 j At The Compact f- ^MUJREir y°»r n*i?:'on ] WESfiE'S I ■--ndco. ★ WALK LESS * SHOP EASIER * s^Mm ^BS/SB^Plenty af Free Parking Most Stores Open Evsry Night til 9 P.M. 1 nnummuYS0HJ£WELERS ***■&'owH LAST 10 DAYS OF OUR SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE Savings up to 50% All Summer' Clothing, Sports Wear and Furnishings • nrt^FMhrihwIN! ISMUN’S Q STORES FOK MEN AVAILABLE AT BOTH STORES tEL-HURON DOWNTOWN TatafrwkM.Ow.ewM S«|iM* If. Oar. Hum OPEN TUI. ond MON, •»« » OMNIVWYNITt 'TItt Tom., WmL, Than* ran aMKisa t*Twh*o Round Steak Whole Center Slices 79 lb. m Swiss Steak Center Blade Oats Steak Seven Ieoh Oat 5Q( Open Nlflht»| ** *\\, 'Hie 89 iHg Cube 99$ WRIGLEYS ENTIRE SUMMER STOCKS FROM ALL 5 RB STORES NOW AT TEL-HURON... at Gwe^Lwa^ Prices! final dm tile reduction! ew aummor drariai, iwlmiulta, , raokwar, lingerie. ocoeaeeHee. ........ ...... . Pontiac, Birmingham, Royal Oak, Fentdafe. •. Seen in Reetieeter ADVERTISED GOOD THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY ONLY BillytiuKid Annual Billy the Kid— CORDUROY SALE TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE TERRIFIC BUYS! Jl ookyour best onfundays Reg.3” Sixes 3 Ur 7 — Some how you enjoy yourself more on every occasion, when you know you're looking spic and span best! Our diy-cloaning methods glv that 'like new" look to whatever you wear fpr whatever you do. 1 2 pair $650 Reg. H9* Sixes 6 to 12 2 pair ,8®° Regular and Slims Im Dry Cleaners and Shirt Lannderera Both Locations -tTel-Himm and 26 E. Huron 5 COLORS Continentals or Belt Styles _ Open Every Night 'til 9 ch/ldReNsV^ ^1* Use Your leeurlfy Charm ^XFEMH* A m summer playwear now at big 45% - 65% —- ^ savings 99c and up i HurrylAII quantities limited! WINKELMANB TEL-HURON SHORMNO CENTER tttti the family's choir LASTDAYSof SHOE mmm FOR MEN ^FLORSHIEM’S Camera Mart Special to doinalio Projeotor High & Mid Heels *6 Fwistars *5 Permanent Pleat Retention \ Eatron **S5*fis a fine Acetate ---BNOUP OF - AMERICAN GIRL yarn that gives the fabric a hand appearance of pure silk 10 Eaat, breathes, no puckering, no static .electricity, that means no sewing problem Lovely prints tor dresses, blouses and jacket linings* $300 pair KEDETTE’S I SUN STEPS Values to 4.99 $169 JL yd. $-J44 fw°« pair Values to 24.95 —Msn's Orsps Bole CANVAS SHOES $200 to 5.99 Msn's Lssttisr lsmlsls WOMEN’S Stripe Tennis Shoes H1 $144 Menaf. | Many otheiTsavinqs thrIj-out the ttowr SEW ’■ SAVE FABRIC SHOP Ph. FE 6-4451 TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Senator Charge Honored Bern OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL' 9 SECURITY CHARGE ACCOUNT SERYICE Tal-Huron Shopping Center fi# FE 4-0299 Regular *129” Save • ON SALE 89 50 **Oaktand County's Largest Shoe S»ere'f BE SMART, SHOP AT PONTIAC'S_ CAMERA MART 55 S, Tslsgraph FE 4-IM7 Oherie It-No Money Down-* Day* leaie As Oeeh Iff; ? ' THE PONTXAO FRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8,1968 After all, MEN manage to pwUtJhamaehrer-wItff Tall' Tfietools THEY need to make THEIR work easier. WEAKER SEX Adjustment in Denture Outlook CHICAGO (UPI)-The loss of a person’s natural teeth and the prospect of wearing dentures may have psychological repercussions, according; to Dr. Earl Pound, of the University of Southern California Dental SCHool. He told a meeting of t^e American Dental Association ihat thrte worries, permitted' to Unger, can create a men-tal trauma that may be diffi-cult to overcome. He said the wearing of partial dentures during the tranaltiou to full dentures helps some patients to a leas fearful adjustment. - ♦ A- delightful way to pull the wool over someone's eyes is this all-American wool and’ fur blend sweater posting os two. Actually its a pullover with mock button placket, shoulder Arid V-neck banding creating the illusion of a sleeveless cardigan over a pullover. Wide set cowl collar makes an attractive frame for the throat. The layered look is an important fall signature, featured here in a magnificent bulky wool pullover with saddle-stitch contrast trim outlining the neckline and raglan sleeves. It is teamed with a bulky-ribbed Wrapping door prizes far thek Aug.—of Auburn Heigh 24 does reunion arejfrom left) Peter January 1953 g Gutman, Shetland way; Jerry Bloom- Central High-Sa quist, Newberry; and Mrs. AM Wood Aipwny^imge. Tinian's Rainbow' Makes the -First Move? Musical Comedy to Op Musical comedy will light- as organist and musical dl-en ttm itramaHr fanr Trhtm rsrter through tten coopera-“Finian’s Rainbow” opefts tlve management of the Friday evening for a two- * Grinnell Downtown Store, week run at Wljl-O-Way Ap- * * ★ prentice Theatre at West Curtain time for the only Long Lake Road, in Bloom- modern musical in the sum-field Hills. mer student repertory series wtilho p.m. Friday, Bat*--urday and Sunday, and again Aug. 1«, IT and IS. ^ For reservations, telephone WilbO-Way Apprentice The* Group Meets, Hears Speech on Life Goals - Duane Peck of Dearborn directs the comedy about a am wrong aH Uiai the girl’s parents are supposed to male the tint advances. Will you please tell me just what is tiie correct procedure? love and politics. Written by E. Y. Harburg, with music by ’ Burton Lane, “Finian’s Rainbow” was the first Broadway musical to offer a Some <5 members and nutate at Tlpacaa- Chippy -^Tffllencan Susiness Women’s , Association, attended a din-i ner meeting Wednesday at I Airway Laneh. A: Correctly, the man’s comedy. Lee Moore of Ortonville, drama teacher in the Clarks* ton schools, playi Finian and Detroiter, June Lorimer has the female lead of Sharon. Other mafrr roles are sung by Linda Allen, Pleasant Ridge, and Ron Lundmark, Royal Oak. family is opposed to go and call on the girl’s family without watthifc to be invited. It ta surprising,'''however, bow many people are unaware of this convention and it li often necessary for tha girl’s parents to take the. initiative and invltetije man’s parents to come to see them. Mrs. Carroll Welch, president, welcomed the assembly, and Maxine Davison offered the invocation. Esther Middle wood, director, of mental health for the Cte Department of Educate spoke on “The Dilemma Q: Is a demitasse served at the table In the dining of Today’s Woman. She said “It is the responsibility of women to decide what they want out of life. Women do not have to be aR things to all people. Career women must decide what has priority in their lives. This priority is adapted from time to time to changing condiO®*.”^ WhoseKin uni*n Laska spoke of her work in the accounting department of Pontiac Motor Division. She and Mrs. Wank Syron are chairmen of the bylaws committee. Artene NcwopmtiftJgaauaifc -pointed diairman of the AEWA volunteer committee for Pontiac State HospitaL Mrs. Charles A. Stark, ed->imMiiii«1 chitrass. an-ysxtAM OarABWA natlonat president, Louise Waiters of. Greensboro, N.C.r will speak at the second annual scholarship dinner, Sept. 4, at Oak-fa nd University. Thirteen area chapters have been iit vited. ^ Alternating in the role qf the silent girl who speaks with her dancing feet are Connie DesAuteis, Orchard Lake, and Sue Soviak, Dearborn. i In special singing roles are Karen Bush, Rochester, Dianne Jacobites, Birmingham,, mid Robin Turner, Bloomfield Hills. Patricia Dell of Draper Avenue appears in the cut-along with Laura Derr, Darlene and Denise Jacobites of Birmingham, Pam Eslyn, Farmington, andSheryl Dooley, Walled Lake. Mrs. Moore is participating Vested interest is accumulated in this two-piece outfit. The mohair vest covers a blue oxford doth shirt with detail Hatching. Military buttons supply the detail. A vailable locally. A: At formal dinners, after-dinner coffee is served in tiie living room. -At informal dinners, it may either be served at tiie dining table or hi the living room. Sugar Is always served with it and u some people do like cream with it, a thoughtful hostess Offers cream as well. Designs Am Tuneless PARIS (UPI) - Followers of Gabrielle (Coco) Chanel still can wear their old suits. The designer dkl not change her classic toss — Arranging decorations for Wednes-day's Waterford area United Fund orientation luncheon at Pine Knob are Mrs. Clark Easley of Orangegrove Drive, Waterford chairman (left), and Mrs. Don Fraser of Hatchery Road, District 25 chairman. The four area . chairmen assisting Mrs. Easley include Mrs. Gordon Coughlis. Mrs. Gordon Booker, Mrs. Russell See and Mrs. Robert Brown. The annual “Hand of Friendship” brunch is set for Sept. IS at Airway Lanes. The event is hdd simultaneously by all ABWA chapters throughout the United States. . * * ' ★ Guests at Wednesday's dinner included Mrs. Robert Emery, Mrs. David Bede, Mrs. C. T. Huntwork, Mrs. Svead Brandrup and Mrs, Mary Dee Korthman. 'Prefabricated Family' HWlKprcoQ^^ ____•_ _4r _j#__ The Chanel presentation Man- Ay iftarkad the end of press showings for fall and winter clothes. However, Hubert Givenchy and Cristobal Balenciaga, regarded u two of the most influential designers in Paris, showed to buyers only Wednesday and Thursday. Chanel, called “the eternal” in Paris, did not disappoint her fans, including the many French women who follow only her style. While foreign buyers may flock to the other houses? it’s Ch—el that even Paris ihop-girls copy. Her classic suit with its straight skirt and cardigan sweat-er-like, simple Jacket, the lining usually matching -tiie Meuse, to a standard item to Paris. with “pussy cat” scarf-bow at the neckline. The 1963-64 Chanel suit blouses are collarless and vertically tacked for , a long Titfr ______ Q: Will you please tell me the proper way to hold a tea, or coffee cup? I have a friend who always holds it with her little finger held out and cur lea at IM uud and site in------------- sists that this is quite prop* ' Chanel made hernfew suits of Irish tweeds, including one show-stopper of palest apricot yellow-orange with a blouse and jacket ttdng the same color. I think it is affected and in bad'taste. . A: You are absolutely righj. It k. affected and in bad taste. This season the Chanel models in bangs and hair-bows did not wear droopy chain necklaces but ropes of colored beads. Another slight change was the disappearance of the blouse Niblick Club Gets Together , By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: How pan you call a woman with a prefabricated family a "mother in the highest form’’? - That was an insult to true .motherhood. What does a woman who has adopted four children Thirty members of the Niblick Club attended Tuesday’s - luncheon meeting in the Elizabeth Lake home of Mrs.' Arthur Barnes, following a morning of golf at Pohtiac Country Chib. know about first learning that die is to bear a child? What does ABBY and the fulfillment” you mention. But don’t you' think that the woman who asks for tiie measles, mumps, heartaches, risks, sacrifices and the challenges Ofrearing a child, with npne of the attending blessings of bearing her own, is deserving of special praise? Ido. . cm I teach.her to have more confidence in my driving? ALMOST SMASHED DEAR ALMOST: Unless lucinations, her comments and actions are an indication that you are not the careful driver you think you are. Be extra careful in the future, and see how relaxed and full of confidence your wife Heard Around tfoe Hills- By SIGNE K ARLSTROM Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thom of Faxcroft have just returned from several weeks of travel in northern Michigan and Wisconsin. This was one of Mr. Thom’s research trips for a new historical series.___ Mrs. Charles Topalian of Pontiac oh their 40th wedding anniversary. Among some 100 guests were Mr. and Mrs. Oscar To-palian of Los Angeles and their three children, the Al- * h»rt Papaglnns nf PnntiflC, the One suit was betted at the waist but * all others hung straight Some had braid trimmings, some had collars and others were collarless. The collection also included one example of Chanel’s usual ' tailored suit with lapels, and her dark dresses with white collars and cuffs. The coats were one new item: narrow and fitted at the waist, but beltless, of tweeds with fluffy for collars, cuffs and linings. One favorite with the audience was a pale orange-yellow tweed coat with orange fox collar worn over an orange-yellow'tucked silk shirt near Emily Post institute booklet entitled, ‘*For-mal Wedding Procedure,” includes details on the wedding procession, the receiving line and other helpful wedding information. To obtain a copy, send lO cents in coin and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the Emily Post Institute, in care of The Pontiac Press. The Emily Post Institute cannot answer "personal mail, but all questions of general interest are answered in this column. Picnic Pleasure, New Gadget Mrs. Albert Gam ex read the history of the Niblick Club, how in its 35th year, preceding an afternoon of bridle. LI.IJL ---------------------------- carrying achikl under her heart? Wbat does she know about the thrill of a child’s first cry?- _i What does she know about the fulfillment of actually giving life? _____________ ' ■ ■, DEAR - ABBY: We- have, been happily married for one year, and my problem is my wife, when I am driving.1 I have driven over 350,000 safe, accident-free miles in the last nine years. My wife, m the other hand, is a relatively inexperienced driver. However, while Tm driving , she is constantly slamming on imaginary brakes and suddenly shouts warnings such as, “Watch out," “Be care- becomes. i__DEAR ABBY: I’m a ma- gician and the best to the business. How can T get a job? *' ._ .. ..__ —; ' MAGICIAN DEAR MAGICIAN: YOU’RE a magician, and you’re asking ME? The John Stephanians of Castle Drive entertained at a poolside dinner Sunday honoring his parents, Mr. and Peter Demirjians of Taylor Township -and tiie Harry To-palians of Detroit. This was the first family reimiraito^hryears,—_____ Another hit was a Mack wool coat with black ostrich feather collar. — Add to the pleasure of camping and picnicking with a tiny heater fueled with liquefied petroleum gas. It cab be converted to a lantern. Cool Duo Spells Warming Trend Gaps included Mrs. Paul Fox, Tulsa, Okla., Mrs. Os-ear Eckman, Largo, Fla., and. Mrs. Normand E. Durocher. MOTHER OF FIVE DEAR MOTHER: Perhaps she knows nothing of the “joy, the beauty, the thrilL ful,”etc. I have come very close .to having accidents due to her comments and actions. How DEAR ABBY: I wonder if “Disgusted with younger women” is complaining or bragging Sh« sairi sha raised 14 children without a washing machine. Weil, I’d complain. I don’t think younger Women are lazier, I think they’re smart- iPOUTlAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8. 1963 Keynote Red Hues ** £ ** *rou^ ' rich nink i CS School Best Judge of U. S. Schools Polity DlcSy NEW YORK (DPS- Uteylf be jrollta’eut the red Gripet this fall — literally. The American Carpet Inatl-1 tute here said the keynote will be deeper hues such as ruby and raspberry, reds — the funeral expenses, in addition to what die receives for herself and her children. Can you give me more Information about this? What could t widow with two children, 7 and pod anything else that might come up. She is excellent in budgeting her roomy, buFlre don't want her to worry afeput running short. Any infor&uuon you are able to give win be greatly appreciated. mfi.ElK., "Midwest” advice from the dean of women at the college your daughter is planning to attend. Campus life varies, depending on the particular school and locality. While die dean may not care By MARY F1ELEY Consultant fc Money Management It's fairly simple to figure college coats when you’re dealing with the Mg Items, such as tui-tion, lodging, and transportation. But Whenit comes to those vague but vital little extras — occas-^H lonal new clothes, snacks, enter. tainment, ™ybe^HK|lH| the beauty —; that's w benl^Hm parents begin NEW YORK flJPD-To the critics who say tba United States should model its schools after those in Europe, the Catholic Digest offers theee flgurea: Thfrt^four per amt of American students go on to college, compared to nine per cent of die British, eight per cent of the German, and ■even per cent of the Russian. belting Collection of NEW FALL FLATS MALING SHOES ), expect if ha* husband had beencovered by aocW security Dear ma. It: nal pattern followed by tbe giris I I dUA you'd get the soundest tbere^ what tfa« social acdvi-ties are, what oppertonjt&i. I may arise for off-campus ex- Higibte L Ajinainn fjr^L ning your daughter’s wardrobe I Mini I fly myn and estimating yhat additional items she might need. Write the CHICAGO (UPI) — It takes dean in care of the college. Ever 'Oakland Counlyr^^W Leading Song Stylist f iRTOY- ^ ^MANSFIELD Y%L IS BACK! Just what Is aj reasonable allow-' ance for a col-lege - going mother's benefit equal to three- | fourths of flit or 179.80. £ The two children togettwirlM would get one and a half times days. Ebony magazine Surveyed bachelors on what they look for in a wife and discovered that dm bachelors wanted can doubtless/ provide information. J Of course, a chat with an alumna of recent vtotage would tarmining her allowance, since she is the ftrat to no away. •ad nnon of anr frtemfo hmv* tfrB. dren of this age, Ihave no one to ask. There is no financial problem, but we don’t want to give ha too much, either. Her tuition and board will be paid by ua. I assume her allowance (tty tbe month and placed in a checking account) must cover everything else — books', snacks, beauty parlor, occasional clothes, entertainment.(when there are no dates) benefits, fatnu waiM tumuli and hear him sing all your.favorite requests. current events, interested in people', interested in sports and who had a sense of humor.” No mdre sagging, no more rumpling INTERNATIONAL BUFFET . *7!?? $975 9i30 PJL *■ A Mushroom Hat One of the newest faahioni from Paris ts a silk print mushroom bat to be worn with matching shoes. OPEN SUNDAYS Dear Miss Peeiey: A friend of mine who lost her husband recently mentioned that social security paid fa part of Jjby BEVERLY VOGUE >i Our heavenly pettislip is e DORMAN’S & 'fabric miracle—taffeta bad s nylon tricot front. Bordered OLD MILL TAVERN (You can write Mary Feeley In care of The Pontiac Press. She will answer questions of widest interest in heir column.) - Waterford, double rowof exquisite lace. It's the only pettislip in the world that can keep your fashions from .sagging, wrinkling, bagging or walking off in a frightful rumpled nuffl Do try Skirt Saver today! •Tpll, Average lengths. 2,4-30 waist. Black, white, $5*00. Michigan OR 3-1907 PEGGY’S RASY SEWING WITH SIGNATURE Modem as the next minute, am jn handles sewing tasks'gulckv n D ly. Pushbutton drop feed ■■9 saves time. Forward-re* * J® -versa; concealed sewing >BJ#* light. Smart 2-tone color. Fii. and 1 industry. This ms their first visiltothe United States and an automobile assembly plant. And Capogna of Voorheis Road accompanied die girls on their tour and acted as interpreter. She works in the accounting department at Pon-tiac’s administration building. Maria Roselli (right) signs the registration book while Maria Teresa Malatesta waits her turn before the two Italian school teachers visited the Pon-tiac Motor Division production facilities were on a tour of this■ recently. Both Use Jifty-Cut Pattern to one piece for “all-one” versions—OR cut the tissue pieces apart and make eaeh one ef-a different cM- country for a closer look at American Open Monday thru Saturday 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.mi ored remnant. It's thrifty. this pattern — add 15 cents for | each pattern for first-class mail-; tog and special handling. Send to r Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Patton Dept, 243 u WesUTth St., New York 11, N. Y. I Print plainly name, address with zone, size and style number. Pattern free! Mafl coupon Inside new Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog, ready now! Over 300 design ideas, all sizes. Send 50 cents for L Catalog. CHILDREN'S BACK-TO-SCHOOL You’re Invited THE ULTIMATE IN CHIC FOR THE DISCRIMINATING LADY OF FASHION. SATURDAY, AUGUST 10... see the complete sample line of beautiful Printzess coats and Suits ... make selectk — • from nearly 100 flattering slylesl Pure cashmere, fur blends, fine woolens; untrimmed or luxuriously furred with mink; fox, beaver; And every Printzess • coat boasts Milium* insulation! Do plan to attend thb fine showing on SATURDAY! , . / PEGGY’S *MLu Batty*, fauhlon cwnbrnt, and Mr. Chmrtaa Graffary, .i < n il._...____mill Am Jkmr* fa meeial YOU. MirtcU Mite Open Every Evening New Shades in Fall Shoes 1 The shoe tycoon*' want females to look for fall through rainbow-colored glasses. The major phoe makera see lots of red, green, gold, camel injl spice tones. The reds Include Contest Aid? ^Hospital Sew Up Button Crisis SAN FRANCISCO (Ut>I) -Mention the ward “buttons'* to representatives of the City of Hope hospital office here, Adult Heads Mighty!, Holey CHICAGO -I- younger generation. I CHOCOLATE CHIP CAKE I By Mrs. Ida McCullough f 3« cup shortening, preferably lard 1 cup granulated sugar 2 eggs 1 teaspoon vanilla I cup milk. ... 1^ cup sifted flour s baking powder H cup chocolate chips1 1 Vicup chopped huts Beat shortening, sugar. | salt, egg and vanilla to- ft gether until well mixed. 1 Sift dry ingredients and add I alternately with milk. Fold' I in chocolate chips and ‘nuts. I Pour into greased 1x4x2 f pan. Sprinkle another 4 I cup chocolate chips and i ’2 enp nuts on top of § batter. Bake «i 1 at 3to degrees! If, you prefer, you may Put all the chocolate chips WOMENS WEAN ■ thr look 7 you lovo it White fabric shoes TINTED ‘And blood kinship doesn't -mean anything, unless you based on love. For Cain and • Abel, about whom you have studied-^in Sunday school, were blood brothers. “Yet Cain then killed Abel. And King David’s own son, Absalom, even tried to kill King David. “& Jte^ra^Hm enough Iteve to give (tend was a cinch. Tills was going* m reaMH| how ^uchtee wa-t ! ter can drain your energy, I had] 'stayed until I was too tired to Hoping that the tale of my’ ad-! itimed ennugh water to lower TM myself into a boat for the •ventures^ would inspire some oth- the lake level three feet *and ride to shore. In fact I was tool H < v’ •!tired even to climb a ladder into] the boat and had to be “hauled”] h>. ^ . :v:» .—M ' I- Obviously, if I was ever go-j ing to learn to ski it was going to take an exceptional teacher, i Pudge Adler, president of the i GbdrH ; Cass Lake Ski Chib, was the j' answer,- ' J * - I j With the help of Dud Moore, ginner, Pudge will hold him and j lie began bv uliuwiny me all thoTifLhjnLput of the water until be | i things I had done wrong the first 's standing. Ohee standing, be | (time. He was beside me in the^bds the actual sluing easy. | water for my first take-off. ■ After that first good take-off | t VVhen I fell he decided to get; 1 was up and away on my own f me up with the method he uses/all over the lake, the terror of I when .teaching smaller children on the waterways. i fhose Skiingisnever the same twicej 'f^ y standlng ^you’ll never get the same com-1 I ,rs biinattoirof waves and currents.' ift i Standing in back of the be-! Your first time up you want to f ~ ijump for joy. That’s not too ad- I visable, however, for the begin-i • Fabric sotecHon shewn at homo. • Made to exact size you need.' • Alt soams are blind-stitched. • Comers true mi-torod, weighted. • ’WHe array ibf ” handsome pat* CHILDREN’S SHOP Miracle Mile Shoppinc Orator a tor I WORTH EVERY CENT the WIKLER® shoe ./ know 1 can stand up. UfiCu® ®i? Wil DfflQD@D(§ SCa®W DIRECT FROM THE MUSIC JUDE EXFOSITjON IN OBCAGOI Magnavox. "ASTROSO^JdLz NEW TUBELESS STEREO FM-AM RADIO.PHQMnr.8APH No tubes, no heat, no trouble! The new Magnavox Astrosonic radio-phonographs produce uneauailed stereo realism from stereo JFM or -records . . . and they are so service-free that every part is guaranteed for five years! Micromatic record player has diamond stylus guaranteed ten years (records last a life- - 39850 Ho down poymont roqutrad. Shown: Danish Modem, dblnut, 60" long. Also ovoiloWo m Jtolton ProWnctol, fruAood. < -• Grinnetl's, World's Lorgest Moflnavox Dealer Use your Charge,4-PeyPlan(90 days same ascash) br Budget Plan. ;-;-FbKTIAG-;'D0WNT<^/l4: STORI-^27:’ ^ FE-3^^ • » .—: dnd : ...*•." THE MALL ^SrORE — Sfzobeth Lokth-end Tetegroph Rood ‘■ . v 682-0422 ner. N« mqre-l^ng-on beaches--w pr4-rni>y>niioHit baby slum riding .ifl—motorboats~~fSF me..| jFPMB-new-«ft it's water skiing ] summer. If you haven't tried it yet, gals,j| NO DEF0RMIN6 :there is still plenty of good skiing | . [weather ahead. Good luck and l PRESSURES IN I happy,landing! iiHE Wikler, sho BY (BUSTER BROWN Wiklor Shoe by Busier Brown Ml 4 Om of the principlo caueee off deformity in chtldron’a foot ini the hmited tee m* of oowvon-1 tional baby nhoen. The X-nyn I above show a conventional f children * «hoe and tba Wikler 1 Shoo by Buster Brown. Notml that in the Wikler Shoe theft child’s foot may erow to the | end of the shoe withont * countering any deforming pree- f euree. There ie also extra width 1 which allow* for the vital f muscle building, toe spreading action. Plan to atop in today | and give your child’* feet al future... let ue At them in a 1 pair of Wikler Shoe* by Bueter I Brown. . It’s easier this u a Lasting Efci$kets —• Ctewse va-wastTH0FTHf MONTH EARN FROM THE 1ST AT g CURRENT RATE Advanced Payment Shares Certificates nl/a % Current Rate ■f / ■ / w IF HELP TO MATURITY AVAILABLE IN UNITS OF $60 PER SHARE Etlablitbed in 1890 — Merer mined paring • dividend. CAPITOL SAVINGS A LOAN ASSOCIATION 75 West Huron FE 4-0561 DMiiiowiipflifltOffiiii Wothjngton Blvd. Bldg. Cvmw Stgt« Street—r WO 2-1070 South (i aid Off ic •: 27215 Southfiold at 11 Mil* Road KE 7-61 25 Homo Office: Laming ral Home Loan Bank System PAPER BAG? SACK? POKE? No wetter whet If* called (end cell It Whet yen with), they era uted in vary larsa qwontitiet at "MIRACLE MILE". And, what's In thorn? Mott anything flood you can name. Mayka it's candy or hardware, or even a bunch of grapet battery for titter's transistor radio ... whatever R in— if it is whet the people of the Pdntiac and Bloomfiald area want and bawfht, it Watt likely coma ham "Miracle Mila". tHRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER Telegraph I Square Lake Road tllUND ?APIDS VM - Grand Valley State College—still under construction — will treat Rb first freshman class to •' picnic and '‘hootenanny" Saturday nd^it. Lake Michigan Hall, the school’s first building, is without floors and ceilings, but contractors say it will be ready for use Sept. IS for the start of classes. Strikes and weather have caused 1 delays. Personal income the third quarter of 1982 was 5.5 per cent of the .previous year’s earnings for a corresponding -period and retail safes were up 7 par cent. Pulitzer Winner Lilted 'Excellent' at Hospital GLOUCESTER^ Mass. (DPO -Howard Lindsay, 74, Rilifxer Prize-winning playwright, Broadway producer and actor, wap in excellent condition today following an emergency appendectomy. Lindsay underwent surgery for acuta appendicitis Monday night at Addison Gilbert Hospital after hMOBfelg Rt while vfeitirighis partner of nearly $0 yearq, Russell Crouse, a resident here. SMdelly assigned deskf lot • representatives were removed in Congress in 1»14> Members now occupy any vioant chair on their side Of. th^ aisle.______ Michigan T«a«n Losqs ‘ EAO CLAIRE, Wfe. Michigan’s champion, Gardert City, lost to Columbus, Ohio, 1-1, Wednesday In the Ohio Valley Regional Babe Ruth league baseball tournament. AboutM per cent.of ths nation’s steel is produced in Pennsylvania. In addition to promoting safety through the sale of seat belts, the program will serve aaother purpose. The chib’s share from die safe of the equipment will be used for community Toleeta. . . Some 19 .ires merchants will sell the seat belts for the chib, Large red, white and blue signs will identify the participating Available in‘six colors, the belts will cost $6.9S each. Arnold arrangements have been made with the Goodyear The and Rubber Co. to have the •eat belts installed free at die Goodyear Service Store, 39 S. Cass. "The belts purchased from the participating merchants will be installed without charge in 15 to 3$ minutes, depending on whether you have one or two," said Simmons. The club , is anticipating the safe of about 2,000 seat belts, Simmons said. '3,000 Russians Go From Cuba' MIAMI (On — Cuban refugees said today more than 3,000 Russian soldiers were withdrawn from Cuba “recently” through foe ports of Havana and Marie! Luis Conte Aguero, president of !i organization called "Sentinels of Liberty” said foe information he had received from sources Cuba did not give the exact date of ihe reported troop withdrawal.1 - 'Conte also said that about IfiH sailers have been discharged by tiie Castroite aavy hacaase they were , regarded; as “untrustworthy” by foe regime. The "sentinels” also reported that the office of Carlos R. Rodriguez, veteran Communist Chief of Fidel Castro’s Land Reform Institute (INRA), was bombed July 29. Rodrigues waa un-harmed, and there was no mention of other casualties. The report said the Castro regime has reinforced Rodriguez’s bodyguard as a result of the bombing. The INRA chief was slightly wouqded in an assassina-' i tipn attempt about a year ago. Dog Downs Airplane WATERLOO, Iowa (UP!) - An] )zark Ail Ozark Airlines plane bound, for Chicago was forced to return to an airfield here Tuesday because Susie, a spaniel, chewed her way out of a baggage crate and barked so loudly the pilot could i noj hear his radio clearance instructions: -—------------0-1 FINAL! SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE Mamorusli/ tSEN'S WEAR J ENTIRE STOCK of SUMMER SUITS GREATLY REDUCED lor IMMEDIATE CLEARANCE - 4 GREAT GROUPS $19** *31*« $23gfe $39** BUY NOW and SAVE UP TO 40% > Tremendous savings on our regular high qualify, excitingly styled men's wear A big selection of... T - Z*T: • YEAR ROUND SUTS^ SLMXS • SHORT SLEEVE SHIRTS * SPORT COATS •T5B0M.ATTIHF• mHHm 90 DAY CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED STORE NOUNS <• 9:30 TIL'1:00 P.M. IBMfiLE Mlil SNAPPING CENTER PLENTY OF FREf PARKING ,• •1SC0UNT MUCKS | |IIWEST SWmI (easiest tekms| ■ FAMOUS BBAimsl SATISFACTIOIV «JALLYIH»P 2-SPEED! 12-LB. CAPACITY AUTOMATIC WASHER • 1 WATER TEMPERATURES! • 2 CYCLES • 2 WATER LEVEL SELECTIONS • LINT FILTER Specialty priced with trade. Free delivery and service. Full guarantee. ' ana REFRIGERATORS-PLUS-FREEZERS With Exclusive Pdntiao MaH Store! TODAH-THURSDAY, FRiMY and SATURDAY 4^-a.m. t* p.m. SYEAftg PROTECTION GUARANTEE on FARTS and LABOR Ammm Is so absolutely positive of their quality materials, workmanship, and ability to outperform all others, they guarantee your complete refrigerator-freezer for 5 years on parts andlabor in accordance with the warranty printed above ... the only guarantee of its kind in the industry. Come In—Get Our Special Low Prices on Other Among Models! SAVE *42,96 GIANT DELUXE 14 cu. ft. REFRIGERATOR-FLUS-FREEZER ppliances Truly 2 appliances in one! Holds 168 lbs. frozen foodTT Giant bottom freezer, aluminum freezer— It just can t rust! ... Exclusive CONTACT FREEZING flash" freezes food 2% times faster than ordinary freaxers .,. Top Amona features throughout... Automatic defrosting in refrigerator section . . '. Stor-mor doors ... Tempered glass shelf,.. See thru front crisper ** Slide out shelves ,.. You sure get more in Amanal REG. $399.95 SAVE $42.95 *357 INGLUOB FREE DELIVERY, SERVICE, 5-YEAR PARTS t LABOR WARRANTY V 0RNER YOURS RY PRONE . NO MONEY DOWN WtmBl * small lean MICHIGAN GRADE 1 Chunk PINEAPPLE GRAPEFRUIT* DRINK MAXWELL HOUSE or SPARTAN FRESH PRODUCE CANNED ROSEDALE CUCUMBERS or GREEN PEPPERS YOUR CHOICE CAMPBELL'S DAIRY FOODS SPARTAN Irhpjr Krunchy Quart Carton SEALTEST or BORDEN’S NABISCO - DATE & NUT COOKIES Remus Fresh Creamery NABISCO PECAN , Shortbread Cookies BUTTER FROZEM FOODS NATURtPE PURCO MARASCHINO CHERRIES SALEDATES LYSQL SPRAY DEODORANT mm nyr pm THE PON'RIAC PRESS. TttURSDAYi ATOUST C, i003 fwov7iano I 111#*, HURON Mon. thru Sat., 1 ta It r : StMe.lSI ? Writ H \ APPLE-GRAPE DRINK 4tS?I°° DETERGENT % 79* MAZOLA 100% Corn Oil sSb:59l WIIK DETERGENT - -U¥A w 39° l 0 lr*s. 9EC SWIFT'S y .. v Roast Beef 12-oz. Q||d con HAND SOAP FOR FINE FABRICS DNEFT L h» a9 r7ft» DINTYMQRE Beat Stew 39{ JOT LIQUID DETERGENT - FOR LAOlfoRY SALVO Max. "^59° W>wt TOt— i«t 19: THE PbXTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST I, 1M8 high of $105.9 billion. $a htera*) Revenue Service laid yesterday. The MS report laid ladivMaal income and employment taxes rose hi $87.9 billion while eor> porate tax collections hit the $22.3 billion mark. tall* War-Ban Pact 'Definite Possibility' , NEW YORK »— U Thant, United Nation! secretary general, returned tram Moscow Wednee- Tax CoBactiom Reach Record $105.9 Billion* WASHINGTON (UP$ - t $t collections during fiscal !*$$ Values Sanies Selections .. EASY SPINDRIER MOTOROLA 22” foisolettf The 2-in-l Washer . . . oiie tab washes while the other Completely hand-wired Tlothes come out ■after and fla/fiar. reliable performance. Golden 'Voice front mounted speaker offers clearer, richer tone. No Money Down Hated "OnmAmerlwhr Has all the deluxe fee* lures, automatic timer, fast beat, surface units, storage drawer. stunt pilot ^Frank Tallman at tin controls, an ancientlooking biplane skims over the top of a factory building in one of the opening scenes of a movie “The Carpetbaggers.” Tallman is one of $be last of s legendary breed, movie stunt pilots. No Money Down Oven Cleaning is Daredevil firm Puts in Hollywood Flying Films No Longer a Chore Entire door lifts ti /'f off; No more bend- “ I ing and Stretching w-wW. 90 Days ’Same As Cish - GIBSON 1912 Maurice Farman, its wings a maze of wires ... a French . . Fokker D7, veteran of both Spad in Rickenbacker’s colors . . . Fokker D7, veteran of both “Dawn Patrols” and a hundred the P51 with big planes makes, them little more than bus drivers entrapped with bookkeeping. They know nothing of the thrill of flying in ah open cockpit at the controls of a highly responsive aircraft.” . L , By BOB THOMAS f AP Movie-Television Writer —' » i glgl f HOLLYWOOD - The ancient-j looking biplane skimfoed over a factory building,'' ducked under poyrer lines, / 'r' MAYTAG Refrigermlor-F reeser 1041b. True-Zero Freeser. Refrigerator defrosts, automatically. All Deluxe Specialty $1 Aw with Priced lain trade was your mother’s choice ... and grandmother’s too! Big heavy duty Washer other films . . . . .which Mantz won the Bendix pace three times . . . plus Jap-! anese zeros, Flying 1% P40, Boeing P12 fighter, PS1 Mustang, I Lockheed Vega, otc.' i “Nearly all of them will fly,’f : said Tallman. “We’ve got the j best ground crew in the world.” ./Tallman said the firm has been doing well with movies, with “Mad World” and “How the West Was Won” supplying much work. It’s not like the old days- when the studios were [ making lots of air films, however. Television supplies some revenue, but doesn’t pay as well. We took a tour of the airfield, ; and Tallman explained the KEjFT through a narrow street, its whgsls touching for an instant. Extras scurried for cover] .as cameras cap-l hired the stunt.] "Cuff” yelled] director Edward Dmytryk, and Weekly Your trade-in makes the down payment. FREE DELIVERY Wld* 6S’ moisture's good for flowers . ., hut not for basetoeots! < Spanish Mines Closed C0OLERATOR tory df eome of Urn 90 planes inj Afto Labor Dispute the .collection . , -.-'a window i— Jthe scene was repeated a "few DEHUMIDIFIER i nosed B25 which Manta flew OVIEDO, SpainJAP)—ThecivB . iwice around the world for Cbi-’governor closed six Asturias coal ^eraml . . . a Grumman Wild-! mines Wednesday because of coo-7.oT-G, w«v« T«Ui^t nninea ' finiiml ww* stoppages and’ pro-, a Spirit of St. Louis replica usedjduetion slowdowns, officials an- f]n the Undberg film. “A real nounced.__________ t truck to fly; no wonder he didn’t The action was taken after . sleep” .. ___ - workers Ignored a government ul- A .1910 Curtis pusher replica, timatum to resume normal pro-. speed 55 m.p.h. ... an authentic duction. • Exert* Humidity of the legendary movie stunt pi- lots, Frank Tallman. With the noted Paul Mantz he Is operator of the Tallmantsj air service, a thriving concern!; which supplies flying thrills for! I movies and television and does ; Same As Cash FREE DELIVERY FREE SERVICE Open Friday and Monday of PONTIAC test piloting. Evenings ’ti!9 P.M. 51 W^st Huron Street Soon TaQmantz will be adding to the Orange County tourist attractions —Disneyland, Knott’s iBerry Farm, Movieland Wax'. Museum, etc. — an international jfligbt and space museum. — I visited the TaOmantc op- | | eration at the Santa Ana air- ( port and-was met by Mantz, ; [ a stubby, brush - laired vat- ! ! eras who has dene Just about I everything possible with an ! airplane, from “Hell’s Angels” ’ to Cinerama. I His .latest stunt was ftylHg through a hangar for “It’s a Mad, Mad. Mad, Mad WorM,”-and he indicated it might be his 71% Colton, 29% Nylon! MISSES’ PEACHES SUCKS “I’m turning #,” said Mantz,< “and I’ve had it. Ml let ftjnkj do the stunts from nowon,” - Soon Tallman arrived in the; plane he flies daily from Tor-! ranee. ?5 miles away. “It saves me 45 m'nutes and it’s safer than driving, ’ said foe tall, dapper “My father was a Navy fUer fat flit fir11 irsr,” Tallmia said, “I started flying at the end of the helmet - and - goggles era. ' “Iif eel sdjrry for. tkda/*s fliers." tie said. "Handling- those stretch slacks. Easy- enough Move NOTICE EFFECTIVE as of August 1,1963 but toksns will not be sold. Pres- Garden Fresh •nt toktns may be used through August. AFTER September let tokens may bt used by paying eg oddi- 3 SISTERS’ SUPER MKT 608 W. HURON ST., Near Webster School CHARGE IT” AT K-mart Grade 1 Skinless Fresh Ground Pure HOT DOGS GR0UHD BEEF 3ut 89* 2u.7S*' FRYERS PICNICS Fresh 0«,ssstd^^^«v HiQkoiy - 9QC Smoked £||lbK CHUCK WORK -RUtt CHOPS .X Choice VVlk fs O’3 a 5 MW Hickory Smoked SLABBACON NsN QRA0E 1 Chunk Bologna By — w^•,• 171 19 BANANAS mm ORANGES California “"391 California California HEM LETTUCE PASCALCELERY 9 i 90C Trash 1 2! £T “*19* Ample 11-Quart Size! WASTE BASKET . Durable Crystal Plastic 11 OVAL BRUSH Kmart . M A M Ji Discount K Jf A Prtc0 §§ Oval toilet brush in crystal plastic gg holder; replaceable nylon, bristles. , M Crystal Titsua Holder .......... 88c K-mart ANV SHVj Discount M^L J 1 Price TT Jr Durable ’’poly” waste baskets in handy rectangular shape. With footers. In yel-low, sandalwood, turquoise, pink. ' PAN-O-RAMA PRINTS FOR HOME 'N FAMILY SEWING ■JEfnarfl— 4-Pack, Insulated Sets Jumbo Package of Tenl Floral Patterns 36**' wide Pan-O-Rama prints in TISSUE PAK selection of floral and kitchen cafe type fabrics printed on easy-care sailcloth. We also have modern and provincial prints. We have 8 Kmart Discount Pried |g Your choice of tumbler or cup pack- 1 ages. Insulated to keep beverages hot i HI or cold. In pink, yellow, turquoise, sart- 1 j M dal wood. different prints in 20 color tones. Super bargain toilet tissue in big 1ft Troll pakt In white and pastel colosfc 2-ply facial tissue quality. Save now! Perfect for family fashions-and home decorating. You Can Always Depend on K-mart Quality SIMILAC liquid] Stop By for Lunch Soon! BURGER LUNCH The ideal Baby Formula SIMILAC 3-Piece Poly Ensemble NURSERY SET Deticioui. BAKEFHAM SLICED TO ORDER Discount Discount Price Price Step in and enjoy a juicy Vt-\b. ham- Big 13-ounce can qf Similac—easy to | 28-qt. baby bath, 14-qt. covered diaper burger with lettuce and tomato. Served with crisp French fri$s, beverage. prepare and recommended by doctors everywhere. Stock up now at low prices. pail, 13-qt. waste basket. 3 colors. Johnson Baby Powdor ................. , jSgagH .(*■ ; POUND Noxzema Skin Cream mmni ktokmh .Oiont NESCAFE INSTANT COFFEE gg All for only Giant Site Jar Dozens of Usesl Four Delicious Kinds! | 3 Pound 4 Oz. Canned | Whole Chicken | Kmart Discount Price ’ 1-LB. COOKIES Creaselese and medicated to clear up problem skin, cool and soothe sunburn. Arrid Cream J* 4lf? flnMTn . Cotton swabs with flexible, safe stems. Soft and absorbent, tool Save! t- Price Choose from mouth-watering chocolate chip, vanilla wafers, Cocoanut hairs, and' mixed cookies. C barge it ffowt GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD i THU PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. AUGUST 8. 1968 THURS., FRI., SAT, SUN. OPEN DAILY 10-10 SUNDAY 12-7 —- . ' ■ .. ■ ' f /’ Pp 1 I 1Sizzling”j Hot mm iugUSt -J Bargains! | as% THB PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1068 / Chicken ideal for Diet |U* fo * *m have contains; V l" " Imore unsaturatcd fatty acids than Low in Calories, Fats *» «“>» '»•* foi: M pr cant wF [of tha fatty add* in chicken are . . ** Nwft' Coney bland Style (for the djeter) in calories and r ' fat. The tow-calorie bird has a YoaTcm stretch those burgers lawar tat content than any other l#lth chHJ con came. Brown th^ meat; a Three - ounce porflon,ffeM#wrf!,rs an both sides in* broiled, without bone, yields only I big skillet, then add the cbitt ■-L^-iat--Mmrilna kl|l|Wd k* H best gently while fee the National BroBerCoundL AndiSiff^rsfinisfiTO^T"^' Dressing Tenderizes Turn an iipxpenshre chuck [steak into a gourmet troat. 8 B:«chuiogredients,except peach preserves in a 3-quart bowl. Shape witji wet bands into twelve 4xlWt-inCh loaves. Put into a greased 13xfx2-inch pan. Bake near center, of 350 oven (moderate) 30 minutes! Spread preserves evenly over tops of loaves. Bake about 2S minutes s more. Spoon some of Juice in pan over loafers. Serves Slot. Variation: Use 1 cup Apricot Preserves instead of peach. it butter goes so well with mostouiiFTSOdr It’s a cinch to prepare out-of-the-ordinary combination sandwidws in minutes. Dejwndbig on whit else you have available and the extant of your own Imagination, you can come up with wieh that’s different, yet delicious, with very little effort. jmPo^l ‘ ' “ bacon, peanut butter and sliced banana, peanut butter and chopped onion, peanut butter 1075 W. Huron St. Phone 334-9957 If You Don’t Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! Curl Large Bologna v Into Edible Cups If you leave the casing on [ bologna slices, they’ll curl win i you heat them in a skillet in little butter. You can fill the bologna cups any way you like — with a little, thick cheese sauce, I scrambled eggs or creamed vege-| tables. Hie cups won’t hold very h yn» rpn snmetim** yw | up odds and ends of food this I way and have an attractive dish. Hide Sandwich Filling Inside Loafof Bread with Sliced cucumber and Jbh mb' — Just to name a few possibilities. Even better, try this idea for a new and sophisticated partytime sandwich —- Savannah Sandwich Loaf —which can bo prepared ahead .of titoe and stored h too- refrigerator for use later. If you prefer, you cut reheat the sandwich before slicing and serving, or simply dish it up odd. 1 loaf French or Rattan atyla bread 1H cups bread crumbs % cup water M teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon chopped parsley % teaspoon Worcestershire aauce onion 14 teaspoon pepper . "*■ *». 14 cup crunchy peanut butter 3 egg yolks, or 1 whole egg It pound ground beef Aluminum foil Cuts Vebaped piece lengthwise from the top of Mhf of French bread crumbs so that an inch shell of bread and crust remains. mix with watt peanut batter, egg yolks and meat Pile lightly into bread shell, cover with top crust and tie tightly with siring in about three places. Wrap in aluminum foil and heke hi a moderate even 350 degrees one hour. Cut into inch tikes and serve hot. Or may be cooled in foil and chilled in refrigerator and served cold. Makes 8-10 sandwiches. ^ GENUINE 7ie*y DIAMOND Stainless Steel SERVICE FOR 8 PARK JEWELERS 1771 and OPTICIANS MUmI 1 N. SAGINAW flillilfl (Corner HU Si > FE 4*1889 Dr. Chwiwjr we're yroua am m onank Portion HAM 39? Lean, Tender BLADE-GUT CHICK ROUT 43*. STEAKS ■SSI • SWISS • CLUB 0 Mild Cure | sum Lb. _ STEAKS Blade Gut TOUR CHOICE U.S. # 1 Fancy Ripe bananas Corn on the Cob 29t doz. Freeh Cucumbers 5* Frush Homo Grown GREEN PEPPERS K! Westown FOOD CENTER 706 W. HURON BEER-WINE^UQUOR Veal Pattiea 13 lbs. Hot Dogs 3 lbs. *?’ Chunk 1 ' Bologna Farm Frash % These Prices. Good Thursday, Friday and Saturday 1 78 North Saginaw DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Opoti Friday Evenings ’til 9 PM. This Ad In Effect Both Stores Friday and Saturday 2 lbs. Minute Steaks Medium Eggs§ Leg* or I Breasts j MARKETS Quality Meat Since 1931 4348 Dixie Highway DRAYTON PLAINS Open fhura. thru Sat. 9 A.ML.fo 9 P.M. , Open Sundays 9 AM. to 6 P.M. ,. v. t 4- THE frONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 C—4 Remember Nufrit!on_Needs Polka Dotted ANN ARBOR—Perk up your picnic lunches with nutritional treat ideas from dietitians at The Unuiversity of Michigan Medical Center. Variety in Jtexture, color and taste are tbs key points that lead to an attractive and taste-tempting picnic lunch that the whole family will enjoy. The G-M food specialists suggest five pointers in planning your outdoor luncjjea: hearty to eat. Plaa having a meat or meet substance sack as cheese. Try alternate layers of a variety of breads and fittags. Ta pea up cream cheese, mix It with either aadoui, nuts, olives, crashed pineapple or chopped diced beef. Serve it eh French, raisin, ant or tye bread. Something crisp to munch. Ton in a favorite rayt vegetable pars for an extra jreat. —Something sweet, hut nutritious, to chew. Suggestions for desserts include fruit, butt bread sandwiches, cookies and angel or pound cake, -Something to drink. Obe’t forget mflk, a mQk beverage, soap or fruit juke. —Something novel to itibble. Slip in a small snack of popcorn bells for the youngsters. using a sandwich fold. Place on . grill; turn several times. Grill]| 25-30 minutes. Tender Ducklings Fresh Hamburg CM Steak. Lamb Roast.. Leg’o Veal..........IS 49 & Sirloin Steak.. ...A 79 Rib Steak . . o ■ Spscisl Cut 68.i U.S. No. 1 Michigan All Purposa Potatoes -Hi 71 |© MP LINDA LEE Z FOR 430 VALUE White Bread... DAIRY MAID FRESH DREAMERY Butter .>•••■>. & 59* • FARM MAID OLD FASHIONED Buttermilk. ■ ■ ■ * I* Gai. QQc f VI ~g Ctn. PILLSBURY ' § Biscuits. ■.. * i Ik 25* V\\ MISS CLAIROL Cram* formula con- |Q® SIHom the Hair... ■ UP . DEEP HEAT D*ap Hoot nib for fo«t gj® reli.f of muscular pain. TW See How You SAVE! COMBEX CAPSEALS 2“l Regular 4.38 Bottle of TOO by Park# Davis. , la Limit one bag with this coupon and Iff S3.00 pure hale excluding Beer, nr « Wins and Cigarettes; thru Mon., b g Aug. 12. Limit on# coupon. Jiffy Cake Mixes ■ ■ •' ■ Special Label Pkg. Mr Snider1* Tomato Catsup .hm-bow. 10° nmol’s Perk I Bean* .... ...WcmlU* Primrose Cream Style Com ■ .303 Can 10* Campbell’s Tomato Soup a a a ■ ■ .Cat! Mr Gorina Tomato Paste ■ »•*• • or. Can mt Doffs Instant Potatoas. .nsoz.jtg.10* Royal Instant Puddings10* VALUABLE COUPON Onet jar of HEINZ Stroinsd BABY FOOD FREE] with Purchase of 12 Jars aad this oaepaa at SAVON thru Moa^Aag. 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SQUIBB'S Theragran = ^Regular 9.83 ^ tie of . 100, t4 iStaphan's I Hair Tonic TP fS5 ft ^Deep Magic f DRYSKIN |Ory Skin tfm VITAMIN“A" 1 Regular 1.98 "fCCI mlml 2 smb i teatvm ; | Jj | Prices effective thru Monday, August 12. Right reserved to limit quantities. 1 DRUG STORE IO A PACKAGE 48S5 DIXIE HWY. IO H LIQUOR STORE l City-Wide Free Prescription Delivery. I Hive Your Doctor Call Your Nearest THRIFTY for Prompt Frot Dolivtry Service. In Highway in Drayton Plains Williams Lake llogd and Wlltpb Blvd. Dally 9-9, Sat. 8-9-Sunday 9-6 1 Pontiac Mall Shopping Cantar on Telegraph in Watarford Township^ .Doily 9-9, Sat. 8-9-Sunday W --r- Glenwood Plaza, In Pontiac / South Glenwood at Porry Doily 9-10, Sat. 8-10, Sunday 9-6 K? PRES 148 North Saginaw St. PRESCRIPTION . FILLED BY US J QUALITY DRU< T LOWEST PRICI 4895 Dixie Highway X THE roytlAC PUKSS. THURSDAY, AUGUST S, im The Pontiac Press Classified Ads will reach 324,000 the market daily to buy items people who are in your world. They are in to satisfy their needs and wants. The market place is in tl day^ through The Pontiac Press Classified Ads. This is your market place when you want to sell Services merits ... Sell a Home .,. Household Goods . . . Antiqu ... Office Equipment.". . Store Equipment . . . Livestock Farnrfquipment... Airplanes ... Boat or Trailer... Hire Rent Apart- a Painter. Low Cast Pontiac Press Classified Ads Bring You Fast Results! To Place a Pontiac Press The Pontiac Press Clas DETROIT UP) — He’s big and frightening, this Dick Radatz, glowering down off the mound at batters. He stands 54oot4 end he turns hitters’ knees to jelly and their bats to rubber. The Boston Red Sox save him for the toughest situations—when a big out is a must. But baseball’s foremost relief pitcher—nicknamed the monster —is itot'Invincible. Until yesterday the Tigers believed he Was. A1 K a 1 la e .greeted Radatz wt|h a three-run homer t ha t wiped eat a two-run deficit dad produced a 5-4 victory. It was the first toe the. Tigers ever defeated RaArts, a suburban Berkley product their scoots missed whoa he attended Michigan State. “I know," said Kaline as writers clustered around him after the tide-turning 1st homer in the seventh timing*, “You’re surprised. So am I. “That was only the second hit I aver .got off that monster. I’ve been up about 20 times against him and all I ever had was a single in Boston last year , y “He’s the toughest pitcher I have to face — the best relief pitcher I’ve ever seen," The Tigers took over the major leafae record for consecutive rorlesS games, with perfect fielding for the 12th straight game. The 1063 Cincinnati Reds set the old mark of 11, matched by the Tigers Tuesday night* The Red Sox rushed Radatz la to face Kaliae after Dick Mo- on with two out la. the seventh against Jack Lamabe. Kaline whacked Radatz’ third pitch into the lower left field seats. AAXJ SwTm Meef Starts ^ 450 Entries to Compete in Chicago Pool 17-Year-Old Youngest of Six Mark Holders in Championships CHICAGO (AP) —Don Schol-lander, 17, is the youngest of six world record-setters topping a field of 450 contestants who will atttck the stopwatch in the National AAA Outdoor Men’s Swimming and Diving Championships starting Friday. Fourteen swimming events are on the three-day program at Jtidgeland Common Pool, in Oak Park with preliminaries each morning. Finals will start daily at 5d0 p.m., E8T. ' ' i Diving competltkm will be in the Portage Park pool Friday and Sunday. The three-meter spring-board title will be deekfed Friday. Rkk Gilbert of the Indianapolis Athletic Club is defending champion. RECORDS TO FALL Records Are expected to fall in wholesale lota. Competition should be unusually keen since the meet not only will help provide creden-tiala^forto 4964 (Myn^ka ia Tokyo but also will be to basis for selecting** team of 16 swim-, mers and one diver for the sixth Japan-U.S. meet in Tokyo Aug. 17-19. LaRose Adds Beef WEDNESDAY'S IMUI Detroit 1, Boston 4 Mew York I, Washington 1, night Cleveland 4, Baltimore 1, nipt Chicago 7. Kansaa City 3. night —itor ■ I 'to* to Lions Offense ... Kanaaa City iisu ____________ Cleveland (Donovan g-U) at New York at Loa Angeles, night patrott at (Steams 2, twl-nlght Kanaas City at Oavtland. night “*“■----- ‘ Washington, night By BRUNO L. KEARNS ' Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Coach George Wilson of the Detroit Lions behoves that in today’s style of pro football he must match beef against beef. The first task in carrying out this‘thought was. to move Dan LaRose from tackle to.guard. “With these huge 259-and-bet-ter linemen playing on defense, it baa been getting tough to consider an offensive guard at 239 pounds,’’ said Wilson. Harley Sewell, a 10-year veteran, has long tarried the brunt for the Lisps, matching his ger” 230 pounds against 260 and 270-pound tackles. With age creeping up on Sewell, the Lions, made toir move Lb-Rose who starred at the University of Missouri as an All-America Geiger hamered in the** first, the Tigers went ahead 2-1 with runs in the second and third. Gus Triandos tied it with a hom-the second. Kaline doubled hi Don Wert, who’d tripled, in the second. * Bqt the Sox regained the against Bunning in the fifth. Geiger tied it with his second homer . And after Frank Malzone singled, Stuart snapped the .tie with Ms shot off Bunning. The Tigers finish their seven-game homestand today against Boston. Dressen named Phil Regan (74) to pitch against Bit Monbouquette (14-7). ap rstiifaw SCRAMBLES BACK — George Smith, Detroit Tiger la-fielder, slides head first back to first base as the Boston Red Sox attempted a double play. Dick Stuart tries to make the putout after ha took a throw from Frank Malzone who caught a line drive. The Tigers woo to game, 5-4. Michigan Seniors Title d Is Won by 65‘Year shot 43-42-45 for low gross ^ honors. CLASS CHAMPIONS Lot A ■ (Miller 7-7) •! Philadelphia y Cincinnati (Tattourla 74) (Cute 114), Sight araukee (Sadowakl 14 (Friend U-10), night Only gomw mMoM 1 rUDAY’S GAMES tago at New York, (dot * - FrancUeo St Philadelphia, night ‘ Pltteburgh. t twl-nlght BOSTON abrhM 1 MantUla aa S4 3 0Wert3b del««- at 5 3 2 3 McAullfna r Y'tm'aki II 3 0 1 O Kaline (ft ■ I _____ i Malione 3b 4 1 ) IOoMtKo H 4 4 Ml PUUburgh Jb 4 1 I S Freehan lb-e 3 0 2 0 u ii'li title although he *ras runnerup Uiisarv J?* in i960. iJiJSr? B :::: George Haggerty, the defend- 1 4 0 t cCaeh lk SM---- M 4t4 4 Tatala DETROIT BJW — John A. O’Brien, a “youngster” at 65, is the new Michigan Seniors golf champion. O’Brien, past president at Plum Hollow turned in a 77 on the tough par 71 north-course at the Detroit Golf Club Wednesday _ a 150. Thfa edged early lead- C. J. Farley, Neil Boyle and %SSs1 ,«uwei, i Oofclln. I CLAM B p^tMoc!,TgW^^j£-i: Battle Craak. BtS-ti. 188 B (70-741: Oroaa J. c. halfa-Detrolt OC, 83-70—1M. Nat—C. L. Marywood, 10MS-140. “V C (SS4S): Oroas-f-------- “ *Pf.1 for TtV! «rs' C. J. Farley, m 4 j 2 r Dr. Donald Jaffar. RadaU p Monza Kart Class Race Captured by Durutell Howard Durusell won the A Junior Class in the feature event at the PonfiiC Monza Kart trade last bight. Other winners were Dick Harrow, Stock Light, Gary Smith, Juinor n and Roger Volls, Stock Heavy. It was O’Brien’s first Seniors »»i2 ® ing cbampion from Cosmtrv Club Ntehoia of Detroit, finished three nirokes E—Nona. PO-A Boa Ida 84-10, 2T-12. DP—Mantilla. Schilling «o4 Stuart. MantUlA . sad Stuart! McAullffe ' Smith. LOB ftoatoii 7, Detroit * ■ „ _ fengaC na- gctgr 3. Stuart. Trlando*. Kaline. ' RadaU L. 12-3 . back with 153. Farley, 70-year-old Grand Rapids goto, Boyle and Jaffar ail had 151s. The best single round of the tournament was turned. in by Harvey Olsen of Lodunoor who fired a 72. He had an 81 in his first however but still took himors with a 153 In the class C field. In the 75 and over class, H. J. 2 Hydroplanes Qualify for Seafair Trophy Race SEATTLE (AP)^Two more unlimited hydroplanes qualified on Lake Washington Wednesday for Sunday’s Seafair Trophy race, assuring a field of at tost seven. Ron Musson piloted Miss Bar-dahl at an average speed of 114.975 miles pee how for -the three qualifying laps. The water was calm.. Miss Eagje, driven by Rex Manchester, averaged 106.194. It Peterson of Detroit Golf (Sub is the former Mis* Spokane. pfr art™ wrim. far to * tW days to Lkmq’ training camp at Cranbrook after being University of Southern California: and Cbet Jastremski, breast-. stroke; Tom Stock, backstroke; Ted Stickles, individual medley, all members of the Indianapolis AC team and Indiana University stars. AnotftorworldrecorS holderls the Indiana sprint medley relay team which includes Jastremski, Stock, Pete Stotz and either Lary Schulhof wTred Sdumdt. Miss Frechette Advances in Junior Tourney Special to The Pontiac Press ROCKFORD, IB.---------Feather ■echette, 16-year-old daughter Clarkston Golf Club owner ml Frechette, moved into fee mi-finals of fee first flight of e Western Junior Girls touriia-ent yesterday by defeating Pat eyera of Scottsdale, Arizona, ip on fee 20th hole. Miss Frechette faces Gail Bur-sQ of Indianapolis today. n the championship flight ,-ce Kazmierski of Detroit won - match against Julie HoHlhgs-rth of Davenport, Iowa 3 and1 md advanced to the quarter- als against Ctaddia Mavhew of tianspoiis. ' .. . ;; mother Michigan girt Cynthtt 1 of South Haven was elimin-d fay Roberta Albers of Temple rrace, Fla., 5 and 4 In fee aec-i round. mad. He can’t be a nice guy on Sunday afternoon when he has to meet those 260 and 270 pounders opposite him?* c ADDED BEEF are also beefing up the q^nsive tackle spots. Rookie! Lucien Reeberg, who has been m working on the defensive line, H will be tried at offensive tacklej ■/ in workouts nexfwielr. ~ '----h I Reeberg weighs 300 pounds. I Rookie Daryl Sanders, whom Wil-sqn claims is the Lions’ best No. 1 draft choice in couple seasons, is also slated for heavy work at offensive tackle. He weighs 250 pounds. LEG-MAN — Dan LaRose is getting his share of running switched from tackle to guard. LaRose, at 64 and 250 pounds, has played end and tackle before his new assignment at guard. Sanders may not see action this weekend- against the. Browns be-cause of an injury, John Gon-zaga at 240 will start at the other offeHSiVelackle spot.”’’ Game time Saturday night is l;30pjp.___________________ Field amp Leads Western the luxury beer at ct . popular price! lit BENTON HARBOR (UPD—A 19-1 Sikes, 26, shot a two-over-par . Grand Rapids, Labron Harris of year-old college sophomore and 33 on the front nine blit came in Stillwater, Okla., Robert Bourne! a two-time former Nattoal Pub- with a one-under-par 35 on the [of Oberlin. Ohio; Alex Antonio of Hn» rfmmpion led fee field yes- back nine to gain the tie for feejHubbard, Ohio, Don Voth of Ak- M m terday at the end of fee first round of the .61st western amateur golf tournament but the real star was fee Point O' Woods country chib.—*-The field of 192 golfers attacked the par 71 course that tras opened Just six years ago and not one goto was able to even match par. Only three golfers broke 74. Bert Green of Knoxville, Tenn., sophomore at the University of Tennessee, and. Dick Sikes of Springdale, Ark., the two-time National PubUnx champion who won the NCAA tourney last spring while playing for fee University of Arkansas, each fired' 72s. Bod Stevens of Detroit, Michigan State amatoar pion, fired a 73 for (hi Although; the-t^eeurae plagued,by to wind in the mid' die qf fee day, one observer com-it’s not fee wind, It's Just feat gobd a course " lead with Green who played injron, Ohio and Cliff Taylor o£" the morning. jSpring Lake, Midi., tied for the front nimrbut had a twb-over-par 37 on fee back nine. SIX AT 74 Six golfers, Harold Brink of Green shot a onemnder-par ^ fourth place wife 74s. Last Match Is Best for Silver faike Lady flight in her last outing before moving to Florida as a permanent resident In fee second flight Mrs. Bruce Martyn had a net 34 and in fee third flight Mrs. Edwin Laliy and SSte. carl Fffield tied With 38’s. Mrs. Floyd Foras tied for low ptiftl' wtfe Mrs. Stlftqiert with 14 Mrs. Fred Stinqwrt made her last focal golf match in fee Silver lake Golf League a happy one. She had « net 34 in fee first Hudnutt, of Elyria, Ohio, stmt An Downing Gray of Pensacola, Fla., shot a 75 and nine golfers. Dr. Ed Updegraff, of Tucson, Ariz., Jack TufeiU of West Is-lip, N. Y., Jim Ballard ef Arkansas Ctty, Ark., Jim Wto* chen, of Atherton, Calif., Larry Tamto «f Michigan City, tad., Pete Green of Orchard Lake, Rick Norville of Oklahoma City, Tom Weiskopf of Bedford, Ohio aad Tom Draper of Btr-mingham, all shot 7Ss. The defending champion, Art 94 and was far back in toe pack. The field will shoot another li holes today and then it will >fce cut to the low 50 scorers and ties for 36 holes on Friday. The low It scorers will then engage in match play Saturday and Sunday to decide e the title. There are beers and there are beers—but for people who Know and enjoy luxurious living—PFEIFFER is first choice. You, too, will like the brisk, smooth taste of the beer that is brewed from a costlier, superior formula. It's class in a glass. When you could go for a cool glass of beer—bring oul the PFEIFFER, the LUXURY beer at a popular price and bring out the best J ati I >xm THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8t/40fi3 Pro Grid Slate Gets Heavy Defense Must Prove Truth Butts' Rebuttal Begins Today ZZ,ihir "'“T1" Pj f1111 nr libel suit he has filed against Curtis Publishing Co., publishers of the Saturday Evening Post Bryant, Schroder said, probably will testify Friday along with other coaches and players. REBUTTAL BEGINS The rebuttal began after U.8. District Judge Louis R. Morgan, who Wednesday termed the magazine’s March 23 story “libelous per se,” refused a directed verdict in favor of Butts. Judge Morgan said it was up to the Jury to decide whether the Post, in less than three days of testimony, had proved Its charges were true. Attorneys for the publishing company rested their case,,in a surprise «tep, late Wednesday. The magazine charged in its son and Brigham Woodward along with Bryapt later in the week. the story on an affidavit in which insurance salesman George P. Burnett said he overheard a telephone call from Butts to Bryant last Sept. 13, nine days before the game. In the deposition, Graham said he met and interviewed Barnett article without setBur- lltf will* nett said he took while listening to Butts and Bryant on the tele- He said former Alabama plgyer Lee Roy Jordan was eager to appear but is now playing professional football for the Dallas Cowboys and doesn’t know whether he can come to Atlanta. Asked if he would put Furman Bisher, sports editor of the Atlanta Journal, on the stand, Schroder replied: — “That’s the $64 question. We simply have not decided.” There has been testimony that Bisher contributed to the information from which free-lance writer Frank Graham Jr. assembled the artk&Tfor foe Post. T TESTIMONY Graham said in written testimony Wednesday that he based By The Associated Press For those fans who think sports is spelled f-oo-trb-a-1-1, there are happy tidings starting tonight and for the entire week. Los Angeles Rams game at Los Angeles, the teams in the National and American Football 'We were never able to get the notes at anytime during preparation of the story,’’ Graham said. EVIDENCE The notes have been introduced in evidence. Graham said in the deposition that the Put arranged a meeting with Bisher to discuss a story about Georgia football. He said the story turned put to be the (me Graham ultimately wrote for the magazine. Earlier Judge Morgan termed thq Post article “libelous per se,” or as it stands, when he said: “I think the defendant (Curtis) has the burden of proving the libel was true and It is up to the Jury to deckle.” >- Great New Economy I Great New Performance! GREAT NEW TIRE! New shipment just delivered...get your set todayl Our first supply of this great new tire sold out early! LOOK HERE FOR YOUR SIZE AND PRICE! This New Tire Fits Your Size BUDGET! 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Ifcke Your Car Where the Tire Experts Aret 11 Exhibitions Within Week Ramt*Dallas to Meet in lA Tonight tlons for the purpose of conditioning, finding out which players to keep or drop—and tor making money. * * The pre-season schedule has become a big money proposition these days, especially with sponsors picking up fat television tabs for foe booming sport. NFL STARTS On Saturday, foe NFL opens up on Rye fronts with the following MOlia CLOSE-OUT! CHRYSLEB “IMPORT” MOW SEMI ■ *29641 ONLY plus tax • Torquellite tiuu. • Healer and • Windshield defierten washers • Var. ip. electric • Alternate! wlpen . • Unibedy •fenfl illIUi - ieMU«Uei^" »Tu$ree^ dipped 5-YEAR or 50,000-MILE WARRANTY ON THE POWER-TRAIN! ot Clot a-Out Prices! ami Imperials 631 OAKLAND Goodyear store 30 L CASS FE 5-4161 FE 5-4123 Opon Mon., FH. #HI 0 city tire 508 N. PERRY PE 8-0900 Open Fri. 'til 9 exhibitions: Baltimore vs. Philadelphia at Hershey, Pt., Chicago Vs. New York at Ithaca, N.Y7, Cleveland Vs. Detroit at Detroit, Green Bay vs. Pittsburgh at Miami, and Minnesota vs. San Francisco at Portland, Ore. The whole AFL gets into the act, starting on Friday wfepn the new New York Jets, formerly foe Titans, play Houston it Shreveport, La., and foe Buffalo Bills take on the champion Kansas City Chiefs, formerly foe Dallas Texans, at Kansas City. On Saturday Boahp- plays foe Chargers at San Diego, on Sunday It is Denver at Oakland, and Wednesday finds Boston opposing Houston at Lowell, Mass. The AFL already has had three exhibitions in which all of the favorites were beaten. San Diego .thumped Kansas CiQ^gt-lf, Denver toppled Houston, 27-14, and Oakland, wmoi won only one game in 1962, edged Boston 24*17, all- last weekend. , 3 ,Junior Nines Win City Titles The final three city junior baseball championships were settled yesterday in typical close decisions. Hie Widget American and National League titles Went to the Perry Drugs and Moosp teams by orie-run decisions, and Boston claimed the T-BUI championship with a two-run verdict. Perry topped Westside Mobil, 9-8, in foe American Leagne by scoring in every inning. Rick Ryan’s two-run triple in the last inning proved to be the winning hit. [ John Wheeler was the big show as foe Moose nipped foe Rebels, 2-1.' He pitched a tWo-MtteT and drove in both runs' for the ‘i ners—one on a home run. I Boston edged foe Pontiac Op-' i timist A team in T-Ball, 7-5, aided by a four-run inning. " I Only three of the 11 city Unninr 1 a a g u e championships were decided by differences of more than two runs. Jn 68 tournament games, there were 23 one-run decisions. The pitchers I tossed 13 shutouts during foei playoffs, but only one in r title e ' tf-r— R&R MOTORS Chrysler - Plymouth Imperial — Valiant 724 Oakland (Just North of Cass) FE 4-3528 DISCOUNTS ON ALL PLUMBING SUPPLIES WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD! 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Thru f dENVIuE nllllllwi Frfcf A.M. nil 1:ie A.M., Sat. fill A.M.WI12 Tte PotcKce toil Store FE 3-7951 Giants Sanford Loses 1-0 Contest toCotts L Western to Go West BENTON HARBOR, l|ldl < The 1964 Western Amateur goH tournament will be held at the Tucson Country Chib hv Tucson, Ariz., next may 13-17, the Western Qolf Association anoouncad Wednesday. *h By The Associated Press I About this time a year ago [Jack SanfOhl had won seven [straight games in a streak that eventually stretched to; 16 and an outstanding 24-7 record with the ^arBanoieeo=OiefEr^^ befitting the, star pitcher of a National League- championship team- NO RUNS Somehow, all of the little pieces might in the ninth when Orlandoj that fitted so neatly together last year are out of whack this year. For instance takes Wednesday night in Houston. The 34-year-old ace hurled a masterful three-hit-ter. against the Colts but lost .1-0 Round With NEW YORK (AP) - You can't tell a fighter without his lawyer these, days. And'a fighter .can’t get along without the barristers in these complicated days of taxes, ancillary rights and coiporatkms so that getting into the ring seems to be the easiest tiling unless you’re an opponent of heavyweight champion Sonny Liston. That’s Just what brash Cassius Clay says he wants although big bear Liston predicts the boxing bard win be reciting poetry in his legal seconds in there talking big money with Sonny’s representatives Wednesday • night about a title fight, maybe in September and more likely next year. The conference most likely wUl be continued today and maybe for a few more days because there’s a lot of money at stake. One of the rubs against a fight this year is that both boxers have earned a lot of money in 1963 already. And if that’s a problem, everyone should be stuck with something similar. Sanford’s mates got nine hits but couldn’t dent the plate against Dick Farrell and relief star Hal WftwUrilipIr Tt IIS. UwJ Cepeda and Matty Alou singled off Farrell to put men on and third with one out. But Woody stepped in then for his 40th appearance of the year and got WIN $10 . knock The OSMUft'S CARL'S GOULARD 1976 $. Talafraph M. O" The Dodgers upped their advantage by a full game over all of the first division dubs by' nipping the Cubs in Chicago 3-1 on Tommy. Davis’ homer in the 11th berserk and clubbed 7-3, the Rills edged Cincinnati 2-1, and Pittsburgh topped Milwaukee 5-4. Davis’ leadoff homer in the 11th against reliever Lindy McDaniel proved the winner at Chicago although the Dodgers got another to make sure. HITS CYCLE Jim Hickman became the first New York Met to hit for the cycle-single, double, triple and homer—In pacing, the aroused cellar-dwellers to a 7-3 triumph over the contending Cards. Veteran Duke Snider lashed three singles in the Meta’ 11-hK attack against four Card pitchers, starting with loser Ernie Broglio, 1241. ’Firestone GUARANTEED DELUXE CHAMPION NEW TREADS RETREADS. . . ON SOUND TIRE BODIES OR ON YOUR OWN TIRES ANYSIZE WHITEWALLS SLIM TRIM 1963 WHITEWALLS or conventional MVP OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY Till 9 P.M. ^ M N: SAGINAW 146 W. HURON ■ .FE 4-9970 v 333-7917 i C—io the Pontiac press, thtosday, august 8,1068 Wanted: No , Four Fast Rounds he was forced to remove the spiked football shoes in which he arrived at the gym. "I did not have any others" he explained but his offer to'work out barefoot was unnecessary as a pair of gym shoes quickly was produced. The Chief and the rain com-talre the plsy away f the fighters. Tiger completed his sparring Wednesday. Fullmer finished his boxing drills on Tuesday. Both will taper off with light gym workouts. doctor” would be hired to see no showep dampened Liberty Stadium at nearby Badaii, during the fight. Johnson declined to name the rain doctor, but said today: ‘We will have to hire another rain doctor in Ibadan so there will be no Jealousy. My fain doctor is coining from Lagos and I want no* rivalry.” Johnson’s other problem arose when the boxing board refused him a license to fight a prelemi-nary bout on the Tiger-Fullmer card. The 6-foot-2, 220-pound official startled the sports world a few weeks ago by. challenging Jack Toller, a retiretrprofessional heavyweight from Ghana, to a four-round match to pjpveCa man not finished when he passes 50”. Johnson's wife reacted with the And the boxing board reacted by declining to sanction the-fight. Ghana’s boxiqg control commission refused the license for Toller, who also is more than 50 but Johnson says his opponent is due here from Accra today. “Hie board has thwarted me so far. but Tf they continue to interfere I shall dissolve them and appoint caretaker committee.” The battling cabinet minister saji.hebasheeiT keeping intrtm by early morning workouts and exercise in bis office. The last time he appeared in’ the ring was to cautiously spar I two one-minute rounds with Tiger at, the champion’s training camp jto “show how serious I am.” He was a striking, paunchy figure in a sky blue sweatsuit but. 1st Ace in 40 Years Mrs. Olive Bradley has played golf for 40 years. Yesterday she got her biggest thrill by acing the 150-yard 14th'hole-at Plum Hollow with a^iron. Twins Beat Angels, 9~4 Kiilebrew Nits 26th Homer ' By Hie Associated Press Quick-Ating Harmon KlIKBrew ruled murderers’ row today aft-er a power struggle at Los An-geles. in which deposed kingpin Bob Allison issued a warning to the guy who shoved him from the No. 1 spot. ' Hammerin’ Hannon, who along witt Allison aajl Earl Battgy virate, took over the American League home run lead Wednesday night with a three-run eighth inning shot that catapulted the Twins to a 9-4 victory over the Angels. him one more* than Allison and put him five up on Battey. Kiilebrew, who tied for the homer championship with 42 in 1959 and captured the crown with 48 last trying to become only the ninth player in AL history to hold MOWS THEM POVgN - Pitcher Sandy Koufax of the LA Dodgers went over the 200 mark in strikeouts for .the season; against the Chicago Cubs yesterday in a 3-1 victory. This is the third time in his career he has had 200 strikeouts per or share toe-title three of’njore FRACTURteD FINGER Allison, meapwhile, war forced to the sidelines for two or three days with a fracture of the ring finger on his right hand. He was struck by a pitch from Los Angeles’ Dean Chance .in Tuesday night’s game, and warned: hit me this season and I’m getting tired of it.” The Twins’ triumph pulled them into third-place, 9tt games behind the New York Yankees who got homers from Joe Pepitone and Elston Howard in'* 9-1 wal- ond-place Chicago White Sox remained eight games back with a 7-3 decision over. Kansas City. Al Kaline’s home run lifted Detroit to h. 5-4 Victory over slumping Boston apd Cleveland dropped Baltimore into fourth place by downing toe Orioles 4-1. Kiilebrew, who lost a month early in the season with a bad leg, also is out to hit 30 or more homers for the fifth season in succession. Sinde becoming a regular, he has compiled homer marks of 42, 31, 46 and 48. The Angels led 4-2 going into the eighth when Rich Rollins and Vic iWer singled and Kiilebrew tagged Ken McBride, 12-8. Relief specialist Bill Dailey, who premised Camilo Pascual’s 13th .triumph against six losses, hit'a three run homer in the ninth for the Twins to pad the final i gin. Leon Wagner hit No. 22 for the Angels. ROUT STARTED Pepitone started the Yankees’ rout against Steve Ridzik with his Two Upsets Mark Play in Boys' Club Leagues Dave Gian’s five-hitter paced tile Pirates to a.. 5-3 upset win over' the~ Colts ib the Pontiac Boys’ Club National League yesterday. In the club’s Great Lakes League, Seattle dropped Memphis from the league lead with a 9-5 victory. 20th bomer, a three-run shot, in the first and before it was over the AL ieadera had celleotad hits. Howard hit a career high with his 22nd homer. Al Downing, 8-3, checked the Senators on three singles, but Minnie Minoso stole home in the third to spoil his shutout bid. . Rookie Pete Ward triggered the White Sox victory over the A’s, driving in three rum with a homer and two singles. DaveNiehol-son crashed a key two-run double with the base/ loaded in * four-run sixth inning rally that wrapped it up. JUan Pizarro, .with relief help from Jim Bros-44 mm, matched Ms previous season high witt his Wtt VliWTJ. * Jim Grant checked the Orioles ob five hits for an 8-10 record with a two-run third Inning rally making Milt Pappas, 10-7, the loser. Woody Held got the Indians started with a double and scored on a single by A1 Luplow. The other run crossed on Larry-Brown’s grounder. Joe Azcue and Fred Whitfield bomered for Cleveland’s final runs. Void |jP UNSURPASSED!! BRAKES REUNED ONE HOUR SERVICE ALL FORDS • CHEV. AND PLYMOUTH OTHER U4. CARS fio.es GUARANTEED 1 YEAR $T95 •f 20,000 MILES IIICIIOIM titol AND MATERIAL FINEST QUALITY IN THE COUNTRY INSTALIIO PRil IN ONLY II MINUTIS HOLLYWOOD TYPO EXCBPT FOREIGN CARS ANI A FEW LATE MOORLI EASY TERMS—NO CASH NEEDED SPRINGS Guaranteed $*195 REBUILT I- «— OUArtMrt^ R.» HriM» HERCULES SHOCKS L IWTAUII FIEEI 5J95 ORE NICE • AW Car HCUI TORSION IILiV EARS PLYMOUTH fr DODCE '57-'58 SERVICE WHILE U-WAIT EASY TERMS — NO CASH NEEDED *9 w GOLD CREST 973 ORCHARD LAKE RD. (nr. Telegraph) Open Daily S a. m. tft 9 p. m. • Sat. 8 a. n FE 3-9426 Brooks Swings Hot Bat as Clippers Clinch 2nd Felix Brooks left no doubt night that he is the leading batsman in the' eity men’s ’ league. The swift rightfiekler for the Clippers clinched the unofficial batting and runs hatted in leaderships and led his mates to an total to I*- Both figures top the listings in those departments. ! Last night’s affair was a close contest for six innings before two insurance runs were tallied by the winners in the last inning to ice the decision. Hard • throwing Tom . Zink whiffed 13 Oxford hitters for one of the loop’s better performances this season. He allowed four hits and retired nine of the last 11 batters he faced. 8-4 conquest of -the Oxford i } * 1 chants. Hsoetauib | iHHEtnKr i • chants. Hie game closed the regular season schedule of The Class A race. The contest between ^albott Lumber and the Barbers tonight has been canceled due to the latter’s inability to' field a team. —r ~ . CLIPPERS <*) - I >HI Twit Twr~ i > * ft Trueman I, i I 1 Courtney lb 3 0 1 Lundy 3b 3 0 . I Charlton 3b 3 ft Chap* « L4 3 CVerie rt-o 3 ft McOr'w p-rf 3 0 The vfctory clinched second place., for the Clippers, a half game behind Cranbrook and a half game ahead of Huroh-Air-way. The latter two will start playoff action at 8 p.m. Sunday, and the Clippers will meet Loral 594 beginning Monday night. Pitcher—McOraw. LINE SCORE ......^.f..*83 W > .......103 010 ft- Both playoff series will be best-of-three shot ternating nights. Brooks rapped out four singles in four attempts last night, pushing his average to .519, according io Presr records, aad: he Call for OLL Gridders Waterford Out Lady of the ___________________, Lakes fytbaA coach Bob Mine- iwdowns played-on al- weaser has juinuuucud that all players interested in playing on the squad this fall should report for the issuing of uniforms August” J1 at 6 p.m. in the' school [gym. Physical examinations will drove in three runs to raise his be given August 21 at 1p.m. TIRE CENTER FE 3-7068 31 W. MONTCALM THE TERRIFIC DEALS, WE IRE GIVING Jest West of Baldwin 3WU.S. ROYAL TIRES m ' SNOINCCNCD TO KtEf YOUN GRAM IN THE TRUNK _■ ON 239 NEW FORDS! THEY ARE P41ICI BEE 630 Oakland Ave. TO GOl FIRST! FE 5-4101 ^j-CARE SAV1HBS nnilPQHSS^^ FREE PRIZE NOTHING TO BUY OR WRITE! e Easy to enter.. .easy to win! Just come in and register! Get your car service coupons and saveF to everyone who comes inf e Come in for complete sweep-stakes’ rules. Hurry... offer ends Sept. 7. EVERY TIRE ON Save on every size! Every typel Whitewalls! Blackwalfe! Tubeless! Tube-type! HURRY...OFFER WILL NOT BE REPEATED THIS YEAR! Register for the BFG “TON OF MONEY" Sweepstakes at any of these B.F.Goodrich dealers: BT.Good™ 111 North Perry St., Pontiac — Oy«» r«w«y* *hi * >. m— FE 2-0121 I J : THB ^ONTIAC PRBS8, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, ms C~.il * Golf, the gentlemen's game, is the best ambassador of-good wULin our warring world. Gary PlayerTwh^StBinr. ___________________________ foreman; to South Africa and not a diamond mine own* er,” as he stresses for otority, says Ano golfer contain a reputation world wide unless he plays in the United States. “Thie ia ihe proving ground for golfers. TKeti.S. has the grestest golfers in the world, ’ he added. Player thought that with the rise of golf in' moat foreign countries, especially. Japan, Australia and New Zealand, the day would*" come that one Ot every five in Our top 50 players on Neither considered his game U.S. would be. from a for* eign country.. There are many outstanding players in foreign countries but unless they come to the United States, they can’t expect, to gain any great reputation of aortr--' Surprisingly, Arnold Palmer and player, playing at Orchard Lake in their SSrd peryaiil match in Area years of International benefits, wire in agreement when they were asked which tainta- «vry«» e.pwted gvn »k.v ..A'records to-be shattered, but Play- fit ll*y dMnt “y ““'er three-putted three greens end j Palmer never got his putter mov-Open draws |ing until list three holer— when course. Player was putting poorly and close observers indicated that they both thought there was “something fishy" about the greens. One .source indicated that they thought die greens may have been given a tinting and Palmer get wind ef this about the 14th hale, and thus was able to alter his, putting on the final holes when he staged a late flurry to tie Player with ■ ft U.S.G.A. Open. “The USGA In State Tourney Elks City D’ Softball Representative League Pontiac’s final state spftball, had two of the five Elks’ hits i claimed the National playoff spot went to Elks 110 last] and scored, three ef Ms teams’ {championship, night when it toppled' Monicatti! four runs against Monicatti. >WiiMNTNr riiv Chrysler-Plymouth, 4-1. ! Fred MilUroa’s inside-the-park I . “ pelt Elks Into the state! homer drove hi two InsuraJte I. .®eI. Chavaz * foftrth-ujnlng dou- Claas 0 playoffs. « runs in the final frame; Plated to *• Other city' post-season action! r„rv - J fiw.Wr BlB °eRou8?,e 8*v<^ saw Bob A Larry’s Bar nip Local fo?SI vSSrv ^ W ,the wln for Jerry Bantln-063, 8-7. Berry Door pounded Bud1 * * ‘+ Berry Door won its first start ♦ Lou’s Bar, 124, and GAM Con- and Local 653' ta ** cta“ c ****** w,th * Itreenefc^edMotorcar Trans- trX innings* in their! ^‘nn ,tfth [Port,7i«. ; ■ — fl^H fllif " ‘*"’TTU h“* M ““ I Ray Luna and Alex Dillashaw (Ne. ekht litter 8M Gregory i merTTadnoirTi^ gsm reachMWfinsrTWRRa^ the National ’League’s lower! bracket post-season action withj the help of,a 12-hit attack, against MTC. Red Morgan hpmered wjth a mate aboard for the winners! while Charley Gist hit for the circuit in a losing-cause. Tonight's slate of games in I doubleheader atNorthside Pari AT rktMi! ANYTHING FOR, LUCK — Hard luck pitcher Roger Craig of the New York Mete* holds up uniform number 13 which he says he-will wear when He pitches against the Cubs Friday night. Craig has worn number 38 this season. One more loss and Craig will break the National League record for consecutive defeats for a pitcher in a single season. He lias lost of 22 games and 18 in a row. BOAT TIPS such as areas with docks, fkmtsJjfeftri”*.,.^.7 P-®-. p^ea’a] It takes skill to handle a boat anchor* and buoys, swimming I ^Shmon^t^Yt fsTo*!? lor toy rtllng.. J*M [■59’JSF** champion. Harvey’s Colonial be entrusted only^to the most ex-j and anchored boats, perienced drivers. some of the greatest players in the world,’’ said Palmer, "but because the British Empire is still fee British Empire in golf, the British Open U still considered as the greatest In the “‘Jpst as foreigners must gain their reputation in the UJS., any golfer, -including the American player, ian’t the greatest in the eyes of Australians, New Zea- landers, Canadians, Africa rest bf fl he found out the greens were; greener only on the surface. j Anyway, Camp Oakland enjoyed the greenest day, with $20,-; 000 going toward the building pro-) gram at the Oxford site. , SHORT PUTTS The Wayne - Oakland Conference, which Shows good strength in golf with teams such as North-ville, Bloomfield Hills, Milford having outstanding seasons last Writers 'Put' Mark Closer to Pitcher Another Win for Mrs. Gova ' Not aa-much finesse is required, for, family skiing, but there are certain things every driver should 'know and rules*he should follow, to make water skiing foe safe| sport I know ft can .be. .OBSERVER l Whether foe. law, demarida “lt[ | or not, always have an observer;O’Link owner, Midge Cove, In foe tow boat. Tlie driver haa making a habit of winninf foe! his hands full watching foe water , weekly Women’s Metro Golf As-•head. I sociation tournament. , The ideal ski boat has a seat * # " . facing back-ward, so the observer! Mrs. Chris Miller, ex-Pontiac BT. LOUIS (UPI) -r A near ords committee of foe Baseball 9W the *^er A view. anti city woman's champion was tied llf-centlirv fllH' roonrri invnluinrr i Wriiowc A•■AmUIU* !a4 M mUL U.. /I House. 1; Motorcar Transport will play j 1st Church of the Brethren at 7 Ip.m. on the Beaudette Park diamond. Wirlfi Mist PamrM MMrf! 100-H.P. MERCURY OUTBOARD sr* *1075 SPECIAl ONLY 4 NO MONEY DOWN Mrs.7 Julie Cove, wife ot Bob, half-century old" record involving j Writers Association, foe “losingest” pitcher was*re-l The verdict by foe committee vised today, and baseball fans [was that Nabors was improperly malted to see If Roger Craig, in' given one defeat, thus reducing- : his new No. 13 New York Mets’ uniform, could stay away from j’j the late John Nabors’ 19-game foe reit of tlifc British Empire, unieea he fias wdn the British Open," added Palmer. ORCHARD LAKE MATCH Hie two players have been month, won the’GAM caddie matched’ so often in benefits championship at Gowqnie last No. 3$ uniform, they’re hao UTiHViie a firwm*' weetedl ulfli a Aweever per . * tines to please the crowds on! 73. lf Craig 1a.es against the Chi- theirtouttr 19, floating -at half-submerged mcmhiu. his consecutive defeats to one game more then Craig. ____-Hi, hmwm uvmc * * 4 Jects is obvious. Btoifv Mxt 2, n?^.ith'coraeCu^Ve ^ •treak- CWf Kachllpe. records com* E™ good swtamers should of a 14 vear Xd frSu™.rt gth! Craig, with a 2-20 season rec- mUtee ^chairman and an Aaso* wear life belto OT Jackets for cgr-J. " lord and 18 consecutive defeats, : date Editor of foe Sporting Newsvi*1" tyP«* «kflnr BUI Taylor, who wiU be a will try to change his luck Fri-itook the committee member poUi Tow boat*.should stgy clear of nti^kTr",' ui'rtiAi.. sophomore at Hally next day night by switching to^^ni-5UPI asked a check into foe swimmers and away from heavily ouL.» d«,rt* month, wb tte' OXM T«h»fr -fnrw, ^0 13 frqny--htr~r>«piiyr 1916^game. -------j—. traveled.jml. restricted waters. ! at 83 with Mrs, Doug Graham. law practically everywhere. The!§S; of collision or hitting mu? . , 47-1*4—01 «3-«—(1 THE FLORSHEIM STORE FINAL DAT MEN'S FLORSHEIM SHOES •14 SELECTED STYLES Values to $26.95 -THE PONTIAC MAU- m Rrtuul • A^studv of Jiabor’a losing rec- cago Cubs in New York, he he^as _ Taylor, a caddie at Warwick will tie Nabors of n>«» phiih. ^^ited with tl^defeatlaaSept. _________. ^ Hills, tied Jim Cleltnd of St. detphia Athletics, who set the Chicago Clair in the regular round and old record in 1911. - ,^’utIW>J*ft the. t! ^ 1 then won In a playoff with a< n—w-n j .. . k<»atest with a 4-3 lead. Hie com- 'birdie-4, Bowl A Fra mo qt *........- ! TIMBERUNES ItJ Pontiao Rsorsation \ Pontiao Rsorsation 18 N. Pony St. Bowling 25‘ Durfof ttw Month of August. FE 3-9701 Opan 12 to 11 OPEN BflWLINQ AT ALL TIMES arinp Thit Coupon Baseball records showed that teittee’s revision of the old rec- civ ° ^ in uru, xvacniuie said, gives the de- y*! 1916 ^ ^ PMkdetoMa Afo-!foat. to Nabors’ lalief pitcher ! eourse in] the GAM cofopated in letfos until a hurried tpl^hnn* Tnm °fr’ the annual avant. bon Campbell of , 1 a hurried telephone Tom Shaahan, now a stjwit I _}poa of flvr members of- the rec- th^ San Franciseo Giants. was fourth with 76, Russ Streeter of Edgewood John Westhaus of Birmingham and Mark Cykow-ski of Oakland Hills all had TT The team title went to Jack-son with a 478, followed by Birmingham with 483. Softball Thrillers * WEDNESDAY'S FIGHT* af n* Auorlaitd Prut TEANECK. N J.—Frank Dl Pau] West Side, A&W Triumph „ j —rrana „ Pam.,. ,7., Township' softball i Ian* Pharmacy and ousted Jersey City, outpointed Don McAteer 175. Pfoyoff action Was OH the heart-ifrOR) the tOUmeV, p—------------------------ . Stopping side last flight. OAKLAND, C»Mf.-Henry Salcido. . Calif.. 'IMMM Al Medrano Cent., t. • YOU’LL SMILE TOO WHEN YOU SEE THESE PRICES •a 1963 Dsmos and Offioials’ Oars ms Olds F-85 Sedan $2290 00 Plus Tax 1963 Chevy Bel Air 400 •2358“ V-8, Powsrglid*. Bwavtfful Silver Blue Finish, HASKINS CHEVR0LET-0L0S 6751 DIXIE HWY. at M-15 tiaui C«pgs Ifoods fo Qriitir5ov1wpl'' CLARKSTON MA 5-5071 ; In the Class B contest. West! 1 Side Lanes fought from behind to pin a 6-5 upset loss (m Lake-j Spwciol Pricu On FOOTBALL SHOES Another upset almost was forthcoming ia Class C where | AAW Root Beer, regular sea- ’ son champions, blew a 7-0 lead : but hung on for an 8-7 victory j over Rockcote Paint. j . West. Side toppled Lakeland i when Phil Felice singled in the winning run with one out in the bottom of the seventh. Felice.1 who was batting ninth in theiine-j up. doubled In a run in the sixth* inning that put the winner! ahead, for the first time. JUNK CARS ANDTRUCKS WANTED -HIGHEST PRICES PAID- We Pick’Up FE2-0200 TOW BOAT is running too slow, giving skier trouble. ******* AAW also tallied its winning run on a one-out seventh-inning single by Leo Placeneia. Hie hit tallied Bob Diamond, Who had doubled. Diamond hit i hwSaiHiiHMHr epritfr fo the o Top grain Mook eowMde O Nylon stitthoe throughout Wator-rosiotaRt owtoola • Nylon elsats with watai slaavt Manager Ray Jergovich hom-j ered with two men on baae to tin L fat the score in the sixth inning forlM tiie painters. Totdjfot. Ljkeland Pharmacy^*; Class G nine will meet Dinky’s; Hideaway at 7 p m. and Spencer! Floor Covering will play West Side at 8:30 pin. in "B” final round action. S. C. ROGERS SPORTING OOOOr ^arQUEBE(; fAP 24 E. Lowrqnc* Str FE 2-2369 Win In Canada Matchti -Rudy Herntn- vis Cupper Francois Godbout iiv the third round of the Eastern Canada Tennis - Championships; Wednesday. LOW, LOW PRICES iiNO 3s HDWE. # 3 3320 Auburn III 2 2020 WILLS HARDWARE ASM 1 !M 3-2442 mMui t HARDWARE 3545 WnMth FI 54771,/ Royal Treads 4 for 25,000-Mile Guarantee «>M t*M ktuili It Ike io*tl-1*4 >|ilmt deferti • 1* naierUlt And eerkninAlp far lit* 1 trend. ld)Mtw>l> prnrnted on MaggSMWHf n tnt* orte* iHno-xduwuS.— 48 00 N00 • 1:50 X 14 WSW Retreaded with U.S. RoyalTread1 ‘ U.8. Royal AIR RIOt® Nylon 2for«9®o 6.70x15 Tuba-type Blackwsll Whitewall.■■ 2 for M5.90,, All pricae plus tax end smooth tire off your ear. Tires mounted free. AUTO DISCOUNT CENTER 680 Mr. ^Ishishs St., Cor. last ilrU., PmHm Open 9:30 AJL tp f PJL Daily - Phone FI 44975 U.S. ROYAL TIRES! Etiffnoorod to koop your tpaie to thi trank zi sfNuuuhUsuhUhmjmmauauuuiuauNi ONE MAN TEUS ANOTHER AUGUST TOPCOAT SALE HART SCHAFFNER & MARX, MICHAELS STERN and VARSITY TOWN Values to *60.00 .., Values to *69.50.... Values tO'*79.5CU... Values to *95100 . T. Values to *110.00 Values to ’120.00.... New *48.70 *58.70 .. *68.70 ;*78.7Q . *88.70 . *98.70 THrJrinsnTrkr $AGINAW at LAWRENCE WE PAY THE PARKING Open Monday and Friday Nights Until 9 PM. BIRMINGHAM —272 W. MAPLE Qpan Thursday and Friday Nights Until 9 P.M. THE STYLE CORNER & -h 1 arku pootiac pkkss, thIjrsday, august a, im AT B01UT0RE SUMMERS LEFT-OVERS i FamousCANNOR TOWEL ENSEMBLE POWER MOWER • MIX AND MATCH SOLID COLORS AND STRIFES • 100% ABSORBENT COTTON TERRY 24x46-INCH_____________ HAND TOWEL A f] WASH 4Cc UW •* XtV—»i^» pro* di A .hootin, •ach pro 7 SOME DEMONSTRATORS * SOME NEW „ * ALL 100% GUARANTEED L* SELLING FOR COSt AND BELOW! wh*^P* • • • |> ,00000. i'V FILL 0 your Reg.49.95 20-INCH ROTARY MOWER 2% *ttbr*epew*r, 4 cycle CLOSE engine. Heavy gauge OUT • 4mI (hek. Finger tip con- BP||MP-Iroli on handle. rHIOt I ADDRtSS- IciTY—— l STATED- CLOTH ROTARY POWER MOWER ^^Tpecial Mia PURCHASE LARGE Sl2£ SCATTERRUGS Values to 5.98 • IH.horespowor, Sriggi and Sum- CLOSE- ST "* —■ .—“ out MICE Machine Washable BEACON EXtRA WIDE Lined Plastic LADIES1 BETTER Summer Skirts Ladies' 3.95% Sleeve 3.69-3.99 Better JAAAAICAS Blankets DRAPES Choose from 6 Assorted Styles. rtitches for Famous Make? Final Ciearbnce Broken Sizes. WASHABLE S-T-R-E ((WREN'S WM m[ WT } FURNITURE COVERS Covers iri One Piece That Fit Most Furniture^ DECK PANTS Assorted cobra and wWte.,Zipper fly MEN?S 2.95 VALUE Assorted cotton knits. Collor model style. NON ALLERGEI Sixes S-M-L. FREEZER. CONTAINERS 20-Qt. Canners Polyethylfne. Takes up to 40 below PRESSURE COOKER Filled with odor free, washable, pure white kapok. Assorted cotton 4-quart. Sava on fuel. Sava on time. Automatic pressure control. Solid stainloss stool. Never noirds adjusting. Glass in Steal Holds 7 Quarts or 7 Pints Collar modal style. Assorted patterns. Sites 6 to T6. \ Men’s 8” Boots Reg. 12.97 TRADE-IN 2.00 L0GGERB00T Reg. 12.97\ TRADE-IN 2.00s Reg. 6.97 TRADE 2.00 PERRY AT MONTCALM - MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1963 S'V- D—1 Michigan Blueberries flops Now | By JANET ODELL Peutlae Frees Food Editor Michigan fcrflws more blueberries tJban any state In the Union except Nsw Jersey. The peak of the aeaaoe starts this week In Michigan. Ever since pioneer days when wild, blueberries offered welcome artitisf fa tt^bnn^itt^Anwr-Ican women have been inventing ways of using' the berries. -T- What do yea suppose these bring tea boil. Boil 1 to 2 minutes or until clear and slightly thickened, atfe ring carefully to avoid crushing the enormous cultivated blueberries we buy nowadays? •. If you have a freezer, coosUr er freezing a crate of fresh Maries. 'TCfey’ll be delicious in winter ides, muffins and pancakes. —You naadn’ Yield: lfe cups sauce. L, / p. *_ a . I Dieters Can eat blueberries ries* Just pack into freezer containers, leaving half an inch of headspace. When you want to u$e them, rinsing will both clean and defrost them. Blueberry' Baked Alaska is our first treat. The sauce yea make far this is excellent also for waffles or pancakes. Blaeberry Baked Alaska 2 egg whites 3 tablespoons confectioners sugar JAt teaspoon vantite I Mary Ann short cake shells 1% pints vanilla ice cream Blueberry Sauce ' Make meringue by beating egg whites ointil stiff, adding sugar gradually, beating constantly. Beat in variiUa. , ' Place each short cake shell ! on a square of heavy duty ahbimun foil aad arrange on cookie sheet. Fill shell hollows with Blackberry Sance. Top each with a % cup-scoop of ice creinii leaving a rbn of cake exposed. Cover entirely with thick layer of mertague, down to foB time. Brown quickly in very hot oven (450 degrees). Slip from foil to serving plate and serve immediately. If desired, place whole fresh .blueberries in meringue hollows after browning. Yield: S servings. Blaeberry Sauce 1. pint box fresh, cultivated blueberries 14 cup sugar Pinch salt v with t clear conscience. One cupi mixture aad cover with a layer . Garnish aa desired with re- 1 tablespoon cornstarch . contains fewer that} 101 calories.lot lady fjagen. Repeat, usiag maining whipped cream, sweet- 2 tablespoons water - | Made into a chiffon pudding only blaeberry mixture ened with the t tablespoon su- 1 tablespoon lemon Juice urn, thelerim* per l^dngtoL,, w ffa,ger8.. chill until gar. Top with blueberries. Yietol Blase fresh caltivated blue- too good to be true, f|rm*^ ^ ^servings, berries and dr ala well. In 180 ‘ ,t? » saneepaa, mix together sugar, Blaeberry Chlffoa Padding salt, eonutarch. Add wafer aad 1 envelope unflavored gelatin teBMn Juice aad stir until dis- Vk wakfr 7 ■ . """ gj 7 : 1 eggs, separated 1 cup skinr mUk V* teaspoon salt - H 1 ’teaspoon grated lemon rind 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract 1 cup fresh blueberries Dissolve Mints. With Chocolate for Uey Sauce Does one,of your youngsters have a birthday coming up? If you’re planning a party, here’s a recipe for a bomb-made sauce that will go with both^tha ice cream-and the cake. V ,:*■ * * Chocolate Mint Sauce is made with After Dinner Mints for a refreshing flavor all the young birthday guests will like, and the rich, chocolate taste gives added assurance of its appeal. Chocolate Mtot Sance % cup sugar Mi cup light corn syrup 14 cup water ’ ' . 2 cups After Dinner Mints (about 7 ounces) M teaspoon salt ' 3 squares (3 ounces) unsweetened chocolate M cup light cream^ Combine sugar, corn syrup, water, mints, salt aad. chocolate l> buttered saucepan. Cook over medhim heat until mints are dissolved, stirring frequently. Cook to soft ball stage (233 Remove from heat and slowly beat in cream. Chill. Serve on vanilla or chocolate ice cream or over wedges otcake. It’s especially good with angel food cake. Makes 2 cups. 2 tablespoons sugar Soften gelatine in water and set aside. Combine the 14 cop sugar, egg yolks, wMk and salt hi a saucepan. Stir and cook Over vorv tow heat 2 mhnrtcs. Add gelatine, lemon ~rind and pure vanilla extract. Cool aad chill until costard begins to thicken. Fold in blackberries. Beat egg whites until they stand in soft, stiff peaks into which gradually beat remaining sugar. Fold into'mixture. Chill. Serve in' sherbet glasses. YIELD: 1 quart or 3 sherbet dish servings. Total calories — 698. Calories per serving — 113 . e The crowning glory of the meal is dessert — in this case Blaeberry Refrigerator Cake. It’s a beautiful creation. Blueberry Refrigerator Cake 1 envelope unflavored gelatine; 14 cup fresh orange juice Vt cup hot water 1 tablespoon-fresh'lemon juice M cup sugar M teaspoon salt 1 cup fresh blueberries 2 egg whites, beaten W Cup heavy cream, whipped Lady fingers M cup heavy cream, whipped 1 tablespoon sugar Blueberries________• Soften geltine in orange, juice. Stir in hot water. Add lemon juice, sugar and salt. Wash and crash blueberries and add. Chill until mixture begins to thicken. Fold id beaten egg whites along with whipped cream. Line bottom and sides of an 8-iach spring-form pan with lady Hagers. Pour in half the Salad Oil, fruit Gelatin turn Mix to Fancy Cake Turn a plain white cake mix a time, 4 whole eggs, and add 3 ounces flavored dry gelatin. Then bske lkxbrcDng to the cake mix directions. Top with in wnne case mix***»» into a light gtamonAu dessert||r®* froit- wWP^ crMra/ w wift a bland liquid oil. Just addi 2/8 cup salad oil and 2/3 cup milk A 4.inch, so^rim California to a package mix for a double avocado half-shell contains only layer, 9-inch cake. Beat in, one at 1137-calories. ’Shortens Grill Time One good barbecue cook always parboils quartered or cat-up duckling for about 20 minutes before broiling it on (bo outdoor grill. Brush the duck with any sweet barbecue sauce you favor while it’s broiling. PORTABLE TRANSISTOR PHONOGRAPH that on only six flashlight batteries......... Diamonds Aral Inaurrd^ •tM •xtru tip 31 (il 50 FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase tM lb.fr More of CUBE STEAK, -J j sliyryi CoGuew-l«ai«a*Saw., 3ee/li 50 C5S, m m ■ .... • ! --■ -.---i ■ J-J Urnh-l. Crapra^faka* SkAf Awf- t). L943g£^ FREE COLD BELL Stimps With Purchase ah any 3-ibs. of ONIONS \ (■6)nutUrtfrtmrtw»Uiu»wiV(nm«uiwiWiHiwnmfnf6) I WtiMU W UMH ViMIMli iulWUMt WWMt»UM»Pg ^ yj|| Foi Ttwn-FtoRit’t »w»n4hu»»6»ap9w c|| §11 m .AW'\/' FREE GOLD BELL Stamps Witti Purchase on any two pkgs. of COOKIES JlffUmW l-Caaiew-tKahm Sun., Am , THE POXTIACPRESS, tkursday/auqust 8, im' BEN CASEY Buckenwald Becomes Monument Reds Use Nazi Camp for Propaganda dton airmen who were executed in Buckenwald. WEIMAR, East Germany ID —Buchenwald — the last stop for 5MW N^vWtos ^ has i . WarKTWar H anti-Nazi la aa the resistance was sparked and led by Communists, East Ger- the memories ef captured American, British and Cana* MONUMENTS STAND Here and there stand monuments and statues commemo-mnists and Russian prisoners of war who died hem. There to hot a single memorial JACOBY ON BRIDGE '4 neat VII ♦ J10 704. AK10986S Win / • EAST (D) A AQSf » 4>J io»« 5 a W1084S’ I VKQJII ♦ K9S WAS *Q1 A None A K 43 WAT 4d»* AAJ874 i WM North Double 4 A j. After South went to five clubs West could find no excuse for anything but a pass. Of coarse East should have j tried a five heart bid. But East had made one bid with his hand and, feeling that be had done his full duty he passed. This put it up to West to lead and West planked down the ace! of spades. South ruffed in dum-|myT drew trumps, discarded one j heart on the kiigof spades and! [claimed his contract A really | good result because East could make six spades. to the American troops who fell near Buchenwald liberating' it from Naxi SS (elite guardl troops. ■* “That was a minor action anyway,” the guide said, “as the prisoners had already 'Trtart»-4oj¥WJ»efore the , Amis (derogatory dang f»r rlvei.” , ^ Elsewhere are exhibits oHor-ture instruments, gas chambers and cremation ovens. There also are shrunken heads of prisoners and lamp shades made of their skip for n— gw*, the wife of .the camp’s commandant who was dubbed by her American G.I. captors “the bitch of Buchenwald.” ‘BARBARIC [TACTICS' Alongside these exhibits stand yignff saying American tactics against Communist forces in the Korean War were just as barbarijp as anything done in Buchenwald. The rare visitors tram countries of the Atlantic alliance are told that their “West German comrades to arms' are the same mea who ran Buchenwald nnder Hitler and who ao4 do business with the American, British and French monopolists.” . . f 1 Reminded that the Commu-k used hundseds of Hitler’s _______ L |mv officers to recruit and trimtm^EaM^G^L, than army and secret policer JACOBY By OSWALD JACOBY When you should open the bidding, but e 1 e c t to pass the chances sre that you will never i be able to make llf m ~ up for the error. i * - v I Evep if a «Ar«nnri chanee is of-|fered, the type 1 who passes an opening hand to likely to make the right decision later on. East only had 11 points to high cards, bat he hatha-aieo-six card spade salt and a fine twp. suiter. An opening bid was clearly called for, bat he West’s double of the opening club Md Sms shaded, but West had played with East before and knew Butt East was an underbidder. East did pull himself together and go to four spades after North pre-emptod with four clubs. Of course, an aggressive player might have bid five clubs right over four and tried for a slam, but as we have steady noted, East was far from aggressive. V*CflRD Sense** Q—The bidding has bean, ■art South West Narth Doubt* Pass Paw ■■ 7. .. ..You, South, hold: .—---—4 AS WAQJ7S5 04 AAKSS7 I What da you do? A—Paw. 8alts aren’t rates to break WeO far you aad there is ] aa goad raaaaa la redouble. TODAY’S QUE8TI0N j Instead ofbidding three spadea aver your three clubi your partner Jumps to four hearts. What do you do now? BOARDING HOUSE MORTY MEEKLE By Dick Cavalli TT.177|^ 1 — tekmi# \\ ABENOU A MEMBER OF] Wy/\ THE FB«N06H(P CLUB? ] 00NY Byy "vaT ‘ NANCY ‘SOMETHING TELLE MB THAT WaySNTTHe AN6WEB 6HE WAS LOOKING FOR. By 'Ernie Bush miller Btreu ca Mouiitr home lmi Sate Idea la a* wriui progrei ijiTitii Atio, mmaam tarn, wwiifla. i— -“*■—-*■ ' jk^jeaSr t to la Hair. Il>‘ _»1Ui authorities. neWilWr.for ^adtodj - nee dimensions. Avoid .mpul« ve j •^connected Alto'inpnej;, Se eMail ear who tells Jwo he knovs »U -i. am .avn ,. ^ . . ,_r' ip rniDAY m r«m wngmsY ^wir^,«‘yo«?y.nr^id mY.r.; ”ew5*l5u»«her, *3Bw*r.'aa«MmO«rl*o' j THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 ,1^-8 1" 'f'f‘"j$">T ^ -ff ;fgg V^1./ »{'.' , n^r> ;;t-; . ■ ;■■ ^-*---■-- - ?- - -1 , . . ^ » ’ ■, ' - ■ ^ ■ ■-■ Negroes Forced to Nourish White Man (Edtor’t Note-What it U like to be an American Negro f Herr it the way V $. Negroes view the email and the large irritations which boot culminated in o year of racial crisis. Ninth in a special Associated Press series on the integration issue.) By JULIUS GRIFFIN “We ere not something from ‘Porgy and Bess’... we want to share equally with our white brothers-yes, brothers." These are the words of Herbert Fielding, businessman and a leader of the Negro community of Charleston, S.C. An official of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Fielding prides himself on being a moderate. But he sums up the temptation to violence, tto eager* that many American Negroes feel la this immer of crisis. “The Negro is mad,” he siyl, “not angry, but mad and filled with a hate he has nourished for almost a lifetime." ECHOED IN NORTH The feeling is echoed to the north as a Negro youth suddenly snatches a white woman’s band-bag and flings it into the street. “I did it because I hate white people.’he explains. You bear the word “bite’ jgfo" HI • ■« 11 packed into the ghettos of Harlem «nd Washington, fay to articulate their feelings. In Savannah 55 DAYS of FLAMING ACTION! HIGH ADVENTURE! TOMITE AT 1i30 ONLY 55 DAYS AT VIKING SUPER TECHNIRAMA TECHNICOLOR' I mi**<.t« as» and Charleston' you hsar it once mare. In Columbia, S.C., a Negro talks of his “intense dislike” of die white man, fai Charlotte, N.C., a Negro says nqjty:“w» dislike the white man, but he’s doing better” North and South animosity is a palpable things In the South because the Negro feels die weight of “Jim Crow"' laws, written and unwritten; in the North because he faces discrimination when he wants to get a Job or live in certain neighborhoods. •NOT BORN THAT WAY* Hosea Williams, 37, head of the County Voters League Ja Savannah, said: “We Negroes weren’t born hating the white ™»n We have cultivated this hatred and nourished it tor years hoping that one day he would make us ashamed of ourselves. But he halt. He has given us pride .. pride to protest and it neces- HA 4-3135 OPEN 7:15 BeHeDafrUTJoanCraeiNd ‘Hiiin mm1 _jstmmtm warner bros. s^TJoan Crawford i ipl FI1 sary to tell him to go to hell if he doesn’t allow us full and equal opportunities.” Williams said that he once worked for the NAAdP, “but, I became too hot for them, or rather too radical. I don’t believe in tomorrow. I want equal rights for my people now. If necessary, I intend to die in Georgia fighting for what I believe is right and to leave my children an honorable legacy." In Charleston, NAACP official ■ Fielding delights in talking about m the historical beauty of the city and its traditions. “The white man’s great failing here is that he doesn’t know that his Negro neighbors are just as prideful, stubborn and sensitive about this great city as they are," he midi—*------——p-r---------- Of the deepening racial crisis, Fielding said: “We are at the bottom, the end of the rope. Hie only way the Negro can go is up. And if we must fight to-get there, both racea^riU^vear the ~bafile scars for generations to come." • The Rev.i. Dequincey Newman, PIZZA Rig. $1.60 Size C • FRESH SAUSAGE V I# CHEESE (This week only) 1 19 TILL ' Call FE 3-9782 RICKY'S Across from St. Joo's Hosp. I * NOW SHOWING * BEST PICTURE!' Wbm Acadtmy.Awards!1 Mi SATURDAY............. *■« M, senser.............MML AMh Tie, CMMtm llo Mart Sot, fi AMI* Me, OWMim Mo A ir-Conditiomed ★ HILLS THEATRE ★ ROCHESTER-OL1-8311 HAMBURGERS V^fwt 334 Soufti Telegraph V MA 4-3300J PONTIAC ; 785 Pontiac Trail WAllED LAKE NAACP state field secretary, foresees a long and bitter fight for Negroes in Charleston and other parts at South Carolina. “If the white man had any sincere desire about ending this problem, be would take down the barriers of .segregation and allow responsible Negro leaders to concentrate on pgeparing the poor and impoverished Negro for the role he is to play in our new society,” Newman said. HOW MERCY’ "We no longer' ask the Negro masses not to lute,” Newman added. “We tell him that if he must hate he should try to show little mercy. HiUJajs harsh but realistic view.” In Columbia, Dr. Howard E. Wright, president of Allen University, an. ail-Negro school, said “The task of helping our students to face the realities of our times Just A* Important them out into file world with ah academic education. ’The racial tempo here is such that any incident hi a downtown restaurant or store can cause our students to drop their books and take to the streets. “It’s too bad that I can’t join them. I can’t tell them that everything will work itself out. This would be a lie.” In Columbia and Charleston, Negroes who havg light complexions are disdainful of their darker brothers, so much so that often they do < not worship in the same churches, frequent the same club five in the same neighborhoods, or even speak to each other. HINDERS SOLUTION E. Cedric I&rt, publisher and [editor ef-Soutt Carolina’s only Negro newspaper, said this Ultra-racial color problem hinders the solving of the larger racial con-flirt. militant ■person,” Hart said, “But I refuse to use my newspaper as militant mouthpiece for the NAACP and disgruntled persons in the Negro community until they unite for s common good and stop bickering among themselves.’ Charlotte, N.C., has eased racial barriers in hotels, restaurants, schools and recreational facilties, but,still is plagued with racial problems hi hospitals and in job opportunities. !■*••• Sr Dr. Reginald A. Hawkins, a Charlotte dentist and ordained Presbyterian minister, says: "I saved in World War Hand the Korean War and I have no in-tentlon of stopping my people’s fight for equal rights. We want those rights now* not gradually. .. . but now.” Dr. Emory L. Rann, a Charlotte physician and leading Negro moderate, has spoken against ra- “Our demonstrations have simply outgrown their usefulness, Rann said. “It is now time, we started negotiating with the city council. I don’t see what good we can now.derive from an ugly incident which Could occur during demonstration.” Rann stands almost, alone in Charlotte’s Negro community. *. ★ ★ There also is a split between what Negroes call “ceremonial leaders” and others who are close to the pulse of America’S Negro lasses. ' Ceremonial Waders - described fay the Negroes as those who stay away from the underprivileged within their own race and who have lost contact with the Negro people. . ICOMMjRCEl fi^t £ • fc*m*BBa**ms*J ottw Special Session for Tax Reform DEMONSTRATORS DOUSED-A stream of high pressure water slams info Negro demon-strators in Birmingham as they protest segregation measures in the Alabama city. Some Romney, GOP Settle on D-Day—Sept. 11 MACKINAC ISLAND (AP) -Gov. George Romney and Republican legslative leaders have agreed on Sept. 11 as the D-Day for -launching a special session devoted to overhauling Michigan’s tax structure. Romney made the disclosure to newsmen last night after meeting with a score of GOP It”—v—* in another of hie briefing sessions on fiscal re-form. Taking part in file discussion— which will wind up Friday — were members of the House and Senate taxation committees, the majority floor leaders, caucus chairmen and the speaker of the House. T^ey-met at the governor’s summer residehce on Mackinac|^ or a combination ot_Ue system is needed, Romney insists, to provide relief for the business community and create a climate that will make Michigan competitive with other ip-dustrial states. . ‘He also says some of the tax burden should be shifted from low income families to those more able to handle the -—.—_____________ _______1 Romney has narrowed the study of a possible tax reform program down to three basic tematives. They, center around a program which would be based primarily on local option taxes (such as the Detroit city income tax), statewide taxation with kickback to local government units (such as a state income Island; TAX REFORM FIRST Romney said they agreed- that the special session will be Stricted at first to questions of tax reform. When the matter is out of the way, the legislature then wiH be asked to deal with implementation qf the new state constitution. The only exception will be in concerns tax matters, hi which case those provisions will be cal reform problem. In calling a special; session, the governor specifies what siib-jocts are to be considered fay the legislators — but he^ean ex- will call for spending at least $610 million to keep services at their present level for Michigan’s expanding population. The cur-rent budget is 1850million. rim. The governor already bar Indicated that his general fund budget fbr the 1964-65 fiscal year Quit Hunt for Bodies in Boat Explosion "WINDSOR, Out. (UPI)-------Div- ers yesterday quit searching for bodies in the mysterious burning dedMfitf, as . part of the ffa- “£d^SXnT7Sfe£tw* engined cafain cruiser' found in; Republican senators — Emil Lockwood of fltrLouis and Oar-ry Brown of Schoolcraft — floated what they described as a ‘“trail balloon” tax program which has tho principal aim of providing relief on property taxes. The two lawmakers, who said! they would bring up their idea in the discussions with Romney today or tomorrow, declared if an income tax is adopted by the legislature, a direct 30 per cent credit against such a tax' should be granted on property taxes. :.-jt * Neither Lockwood nor Brown was specific on what the income tax rates, wuold be, contending [the answer would depend on how much more money it is decided that the State would need. Under, one'estimate, Brown said, the tax could be aboyt 4 per cent on both individuals and corporations. The two Senators also said there sliould be reduction or elimination of many of- the so-caDef nuisance taxes, plus aboli-tion of the business activities and corporation franchise taxes. Contest Waits World Lovelies LONG BEACH, Calif. (UPI) The International Beauty Pageant got undo1 way today with 88 of the world’s most beautiful women competing for the crown of~Mlss International Beai BLUE SKY DRIVE-IN THEATRE 332-3200 MIDSUMMER MADNESS Today thru Saturday 7-8-V'o $100 Admission for all | _ Your Car Can Hold! Representatives from 46 countries — even Miss Morocco who got lost in Paris but caught later plane—began fittings today for swimsuits, playsuits and evening gowns. . *, ★ ,★ Most of the contestants arrived yesterday within minutes of each other on six jet flights at Los Angeles International Airport. jM THE POyTUC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 10<*8 MARKETS llw following are tap prices covering sales ot locally grow® produce brtetotejEwrad aold by them in wholesale package Wp, Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau Of Markets at of noon Wednesday. —1^- Product BteSEFS-E:!: SSI2«. Peaches. Red Ha»*n, bu. . >»l>n Bun Ha»en, bu. . Penn, Sugar. bu. . ...... Piute*. BjirbMfc. 41 bn. a^... noxiiMiMM I Until green, round . Bum, Si. Waodai, Benin. Una. bu..• Benin. Romeo, bu.... Mart Marks Time Prices Vary in M Trade NEW YORK (AP)—With the Securities and Exchange Coramis-shm’s final report on its investigation^ ofjhe securities industry to be issued later today,' the stock market marked time this afternoon. Wall Street had been -shocked three weeks ago by the severity of the second instalment. Prices were mixed in moder-**|atcly active trading. ““ Brockers speculated that the rally which began Friday and was interrupted yesterday might were particolariy weak after publication of an article speculating oa the likelihood that forthcoming reports on smoking'p. relatiea to health Chrysler opened with a gain of about .half a point , and then “Bank to a loss of ' Some big blocks crossed the tape: Royal Dutch, off 114 at 47% on 30,000 shares; Bendix, off 44 at 48% on 9,000; Union Electric Power, unchanged at 27% on 9,700 and A VC Corp., formerly American Viscose, up Y« at 73. on 7,000. Among the tobaccos, Reynolds, Liggett L Myers, Lorillard and . Ckrrota, qello pak. I Carrot*. toppM, bu. CauUnewer, do*. ... Celery, t“- Cilery, /Fiscal, «tts. ■ i'« have run its course deapitea fa- Philip Morris fell about a point. 1" vorabl* todWnri of business HALF-POlNT GAIN t« news. Some said the market was! _ ..:. . . . .___ . j.w - ______ Brunswick which had been on tfjjdue ** a mt- the decline recently, came hack Aircrafts were abaat the only ito the extent ot -a gain of aboat group to show an improvement, half a point. Prices were mixed on the quiet trading. Gains were posted by Brillo, Falcon SedPOard, Lucky Friday, Swanae Paper and Rayette. Declining were Syntax, Philips Electronics, A wo jet and New Process. Corporate bonds were mixed and U. S. Governments were un- American Stock Exch. 5. Africa Sticks Ignore U. N. Call for World Arms Embargo UNITED NATIONS; N.V. (Apy TBBSffiaofStock ^ Exchange in —South Atrtcw Is expected to stick to its apartheid policy of radii segregation despite the U.N. Security Council’s call for a worldwide arms embargo aginst the South African government. There were indications that all U.N. members would not enforce the embargo. Secretary of State TTudolph Grimes uf Liberia- By 8AM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK,- Its more1 than just hot weather that's making many businessmen, .take it slow and easy these dafrs. They hope^ and most believe —that the economists are right In saying that busl is set toi turn better this] fall. But as of] today there are ihany things1 NEW YORK (AP) Exchange: CillB >0* Creole Pot rOBL OwfwVu v - American Stock 3*1 iu II in 43.4 U*«d John 11.1 Mobewk Alrl 1.1 Mmw-Wwt— 3.4 Twbnlco .. S3 Eggplant. Ion* type. bak. Kohlrabi ....... ........ Okra, pk. baaket ......... Onlona. dry, 80 lb. ...... Oniona, grasp, bob. .... Onlona. pickling, lb........... .. M Paraley. early. Bril. /•••,„■.... • • ,-2 Pairiey. root. Mb. ^KiSs-yl......... JbJ The New York Stock Exchange _____TORE . Aug, 7 -Bestwtrit .an Beth BU 1.00 Blgalow 1.30 Boring 3 Borden 1.00 DETROJT. Aug. 0—W — Tadaye re- ■JL. _________ . calves 30. hags K. sheep 00. Cattle compared with last week good and choice (teen and heifers fully * cents lower, tower grades steady; oows and bulli oo-i.oo h!gMr;_ 11 ^jrind MM X. igfl 1 —Ja*ley~- Brunswk JOp o Ballard ' 'BulOv* "B0 Burllnd COg choice and prime 1105 -----a loo BMi aiab l o prime OOa-llM ___| _.d during the week 34.34-35.50; good to low choice steen a. 10 >4,10; ataaderd to low good a teen aa.oa-nao; M bead high choice 03U-030 lb. half ere 34.00; load high abates 014 lb. - -hitfere-osM %te at 13.75; moat choice hetfera tanged 100-33.78; late trade 31.00-33.60; nod to tow cholee heifers lUORLOO; ------------------------- l-“—ri ________— tow aood hetfen gnpES | w utility heifers 17.00-30.00: 1 closed 17.00-17.00. caonare J I______ J good 30.00-37.00; ntuuyLjaJWHuio. Bheep compared last week—elau latnbe and ewes steady to strong; nd prime, spring slaughter lambs ILtt-n.TSl good and choioa spring lambs 16.1541.70; calf to good slaughter —| Cattle 300. Trade on slaughter classes steady with .week’s close; bulky early supply t ‘ I “hShcl..___________ 14.00; stoadard to tow good n.oa-n.00; utility oows 16 00-17.00; canners and cutters lLOa-lO to ____ Bheep 10. Mot enough ttowo. _^Ll^iB^M,i.lftat.”‘ HUM1St-' barows and gUto _______m 17.75-10.20; OB. 1. I «t 300-400 lb. sows 14.21-10.25; 1 * 1 «l 600 to. am 1360-13.75. Compared last week-barrows end gilts and sow* tally - — -- CHICAGO LIVESTOCK UUlO„ Aug. 8 (AP)—Hogs 4.000; aaU»% batchers and am moatiy 35 hMmr; shippers took M par eeat tf salaM* supply; 1-3 180-M8 lb butcher* ~ ** —“A «to hteJ ii Taali' i ia.eo-iojt: 350-400 lb SOWS 14.70-1060; SI 400-400 , lba 146014.71; 406-604 to* 11.M-14.N. CMMi TOO; calves none; small supply good and ahotea OOO-l.lOa lb riaughtcr states 1166-3441; lead mostly caries 1.131 lbs 34.00; few lots stoadard and MMB1M 07II Including part load ljfil Jb Holstein* at 1160; twe leads _____ I 006-1600 lb. 33.064160; utility and OOOa- “7“m Am mtmf am U60-1046; eaanen and ^------1140-1060; utility sad------- j&^jrijsrzss! xfi ■ alaasbtor < [ slaufhter STST.. 9 07tb If „ . 4 41% 41(4 41(4 - 0 01 61- 61 "—I to 9 28 10% M4 38(4 — Vi n 04(4 64(4 04(4 — (4 21 M l' 2% ” 37 30% 36*4 26(4 107 73(4 73% 73 4 16% 11(4 10% - (4 Houston LP Howesd 10g Hupp Cp .331 fnSmd8t 1.00 13 1 14 13% 33(4 33(4 -146 46% 41% 46(4- 3* »% 1% IV, - to «% »% 4 II »% 11% 28% Interlak 1 80 MBosto 4 IntlHarv 2.40 Intltlner 1.00 Int Mlcb 3* Int Pack 1 intpaui.oob 13 34% 34% 34% 4 7- 0i%JB%JB%--13 43% 43% 41(4 - 6 11% 16% 16(4 — (4 0 11% U*4 11% ” 1 15% 18% 15% ■( H%1 "M(5 W~ .8 17(4 38% 37 41 M% 10% 28% - (4 11 iijk Wk 31%—% 32 38’. 38% 38% cotvik i ComlCre 1.66 Com 18ol (Ob chrice steer* comEd 1 30b choice 2X5IF ConEdle 3.30 - ——* JO 34% 14% 14% (1 70% 76(4 71% __________ >11 33% 82% ||% ^^1 --r;-- g-ioHirijo’ m% »% 7 ft isasb 34V4 33% 34 *----- - » 32% .32% 33% ’ 1 30% 38% 11% ft *% to 30 37 13V* 33 13(4 - % 11 15 48% 50 — “ 36 14% MB 14% -f 71 SOVa 14% 35 — II 14% 14% 14% — _ » 46% 40*4 48% — V« 04 »% 35% 35% — (4 10 17% 17% 17% — % TV'Tlfr ‘ . ft- 41%'41 41% ‘ 4to4 16 36% 16% 38s* + —R-- sr — 3 33% 33% 33% + 14 40% 30% 30% — ’ to TS% 35(4 »% -r: 1 47% 47% 41% — 14 10% 20% W% + 4 11% Mb 21% ... 1 7(4 7% 7(4 — 61 63% 52% 53% 7 16 37% 17 37 — _ 3 50(4 56% Mb 4-31 43% 42% 43%---% i u n% 12% — It 1% 0% 0% + —I— 4 11% 13 23% +. i 50% —1 80 — < > 34% 34 14% 4 43 to 50% 50 10 10% 10% U% 39 29% 28% 29% 16 49% 49% 40% — (4 w +■ .1R.^% 37% 17%— to 35%. 35% 36% ... HHk-fft-fe 10 40% 40% 40% 4 PhUltpsPet 2 PttnBow .00 PltPlat 2.20b Pit itori Polaroid 60 ProdthO 1.00 1% 31% 31% * Steel 1.00 to 33% 33% 13% .....I25M5 u* g 12% 12*4 12% ..... NYCent .33e 34 40% 40% 40% NVCht 8L 2 3 47 46% 47 4 %|Ml6«li Pw 3 133 31(4 30% *1 B 22% n% * % NoAm A via I !'C y*lg|l«i06a 1J6 9% tl% . NoPac 2.30a .. — .* li|% tofib — % NStaPw 1JB P " MOstaw i to 1 ADI. top 1.60 ■riaiir ito ElBondS I N M 31% 33% 13% - % 1:1 ■ Mb Ml' Ulto% 188% MS -lss~ BBR B Ini' 38% 35% - % OUa toath l 1 31 9% 36%- %|Q(BB«bl.to -■ 1% 1% |% ... jOutMar ,40f -1 e—Hr s 47%, —m 17 7|% 75% 75% 63 B 44% 46 . I 9 27% 27% 27% + % U 20% 20% 16% — ft >, 42(4 42% 42% -.% 13 M, 53% 53% -turn 116% 116% to 54% 64% M% i mi w 19 47 #9 41 ... .. 4 16% 15% »% —' % 9 46 M 36% — % I mh to it — “ semi-annual declaration. Special Ira dlridoads or payments not 4b —■led aa rerilar are IdHtttftod In foUowiag footnotes a—Also extra or extras, b—Annual rate n* xtook dividend. « MaablaUng dlvt-d—Declared or paid In 1983 riua e-u-. - b-u iu. (.Mg- distribution i far this 8 33% 33% 33% Pair Oa Mr Batr- SriM, Fanateel, JO . 13% 3% 19 11% 31% 31% > 33% 113% 9% 40(4 40% 46% — % atock dMdaod. a—Paid lai '"to OmPm unT ______ ax-dlvtdend or date, g-boelarwd ar paid __ _ ^--(^SVVtoaiar. -• • “-'Bid meeting, r—De- 1983 plua stoek djri-atock durtag ir-l. on MriMM estimated cash i Ml 1 • M trl&i I Plttrol Ito -i tm 33% ; -J 0% 33% S% 33 36% 38% 39V* « 31 36% 31 lPaapcMr.lt + % PamieV l.Mo ... PaPWW 1.38. * % Pa toR too I&S joa40 w «% + v« Phelps D 31 I to 83% II n% 36% 37V« . R sm. ink n% |i^ 4i*b 18 «% n #% .... .... .4 34(4 MM 34% +.% 61 18% i 18% 18% —\(4 II 51%' 63 ; 13% r- V« “ **“ 49% .-.48%”f M 81% -61% — % 35%. 35% — % 34% 34% ..... Prices Are Varied on Grain Exchange CHICAGO (IT — Prices ranged from weak to firm in the grain _______________ ._ futures market today with trana- li- SS r S*-% acU°Ds unusually slow and some> | what mixed. Th* iaM whoaf >»mp mnnthfF j eased about a cent and soybeans moved up major fractions during die first several minutes of ae-tivity on the board of trade but other contracts shifted only small fractions. Brokers ^aid commercial bust-ness was light and that speculators appeared torbe standing aside, awaiting/new influences -n-eln-d i n g dip govemmpnt’a monthly crop report tomorrow. Businessmen Seek Answers Before Acting^ ducers ancf manufacturers of n terials and goods involved. DAWSON , How much longer die postwar construction boom will laat is ah* other uncertainly, although most experts are stressing that Americans’ needs are KIR far from met; The new car models have yet to make their debut and consumer reaction to them most remain an unknoim quantity midi later. The beat guess is that the auto industry has a bettor than average chance for another good sales year. But that’s still to be proved. Except for the railroads, the la- quickly that the top-heavy majority of Optimistic forecasters could be reversing their guesses —as they’ve been known to do many tones in the past. Odds are that today’s hesitancy will be temporary rad that cool weather will bring an upturn. But where decisions can be postponed many Businessmen are doing ao jusit now. Optimiam ls well soiled with caution. A trade war pitting American chickens in one corner against European wines, flower bulbs, trucks and buam, motion-picture film, electric shavers, among other thingst in the opposite comer, mav have small impact on the general trend of the. national economy. But it would be meaningful to American importing firms and farm producers involved. And the war could spread, although by cool weather time tempers both sides may have fallen. quiet at the moment. But the basic conflict 9 fra front resolved. That is management’s desire for more cost-cutting automation, labor’s demand for job security, and government’s concern over unemployment totals that have changed little in the past but threaten to grow. How far the nuclear test bra may fan out into other cold war fields is a question. And so is the possible effect on individual pro- Business Notes But whether in a hammock, on the beach, in the woods, or even in the office itself, for many it’s a time to wait and see—to get ready for the fall push that is expeeted but not to commit the company ao far that a sudden solution of any of the many uncertainties could, cause atoasu^...... Progressive Welder and. Machinery Co., 915 Oakland, recently was awarded a $229,406 contract by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The contract calls for engineering, fabrication and related space program services. Donald S, Cabral 2300 Devonshire, Bloomfield Township, has been elected a director of the Oakland County Chapter, Nation-. al Association of Accountants. He is supervisor of the General Motors Corp. s a v-CABRAL ings and supplemental benefits section. . Two area men recently com-pleted Life Underwriter Training Council courses. They are Donald McKelvey, 2275 Keith. Union Lake, and Rob-ert L. DeNeen, 2815 Weaverton, Rochester. Both are Aid Association for Lutherans insurance representatives. Roy M. Mar* shall, 2953 Sum-mervale, Bir-I mingham, has been appointed! a vice president! of MacManusJ John and Adams, Inc.’ Marshall,— colint super-1 «% visor, joined the MARSHALL ' advertising agency in 1960. ,Sln-Dleat6r ............. Braun Englnearina ........ Charles of (he Rite -mw Detroiter Mobile Homee . Diamond Crystal ________ Frito-Lay, lnc........ MoLouth Steel Co. .... Msradel Products . . ... ... Mohawk Rubber Co. .. .. Mich. Seamless Tube 'Ci. . Pioneer Finance .......... Sixteen lengths of drainage pipe Valued at 9640 were stolen from under a bridge at the 175 hi 24 crossover in Pontiac Township, the State Highway Department reported to the sheriff’s department yesterday. r’l Olnter Ale ........ a s ____dman't • :„„« ai Wolverine Shoe .............38 Wyandotte r’*-—’-*■ .......it' ____MUTUAL FUNDS Affiliated Fm>~....,,..„. ID .sx.tt U.41 .16.14 17.04 ___ Orowth 1-3 ... Inyeetors Orowth . Maes. I8MMN Trust .. Putnam Orowth ........ Television Electronic* WaUlnftcc Coulty ...... ♦Nominal quotations. ’ News in Brief Mea’i Saits, 44-41; Wardrobe trunk, dishes, misc. Opdyke at Featoerstone. The genaral told a newsman Communist North Koreans “wanted to find out if the 1st Cavalry Division Was alert. Wall, they found out The 1st Cavalry is Rlmt” X Unusually heavy patrol activity and occaakmal fighting brain out at spots along the truce line after three Ajjfarton soldiers In a jeep parini hto Commwte «XM. muefa business planning at the said. “It’s tea oper- ational aituation they just fen . moment. What Congress does about it could activate some programs, scuttle others. And the same is true for consumers’ spending intentions. The stock market has been trying to the traditional summer rally. But here, to», the many uncertainties keep many traders cautious and the public hesitant A lot of this can be laid to the weather, and to vacations that keep key men away froip&fheir decision-making tasks. Truce Line Has Coo led Off in Korean WITH toCavalryDtvtoion, |fo. Leonard, new commander if this front line division,- said’ today the Korean truce tow “(as cooled aa.* yg Leonard, who assumed command of tiie 1st Cavafry Division Wednesday, predicted: “Thera won’t be anything else stirring for killed. BEEFED UP PATROLS The 1st Cavaky beefed 19 its patrols along the demilitarized zone and kitted four Communist raiders in an engagefment in which an American and-a South Korean policeman were also “I don’t ton* there has freon a All was quiet again Wednesday tight for the third night along the U.S. sector of the demilitarized zone. No Communist patrols were agHar " ^——7 “We came back with every round' and grenade that we took out,” said U. Richard Murphy, 23, of 6 Hobbs Terrace, Jefferson City, Mb. The patrol force, commanded by Cant. John Cox, 28, of 2814 Little John Ave., San Antonio, Tex., aet 19 ambush traps along the front and stayed in position until dawn. - North Koreans Radio Pyongyang charged that U.S. reports of North Korean attacks were-“ra entirely groundless fabrication and a whoppingJUe.” '. '-V '* Successful^!nvesting w ar* mmf* By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. “In a recent column you recommended four municipals yielding 3 per cent or less. Why not recommend Turnpike Authority bonds, which carry a better yield? Or Honing An-, thority Bonds, which are very secure and bring 1% per cent?” R.B. A. This Is a very reasonable question. I rarely recommend Turnpike in Authority issues for the main reason that almost all of these bonds are callable within a ret atively short period. Redemption provisions usually work to the advantage of the issuer — rarely to that oTtitie buyer. 0& June 27,1 specifically N|C; ommended La Foilette Housing Authority SVt's at par and explained that these were secured by pledge of annual contributions payable by the 'Public Housing Administration. Aa for ray July 3 column advising issues yielding 3 per cent or less, I plead guilty to « strong preference to quality. The 'only bond advised that yielded below 3 per cent was a short-term Con-necticut issue. whlch I felt might help to stablize the questioner’s list. LONDON (AP)—Scotland 1 pressed perjury investigations today into testimony % two prosti-tutes Who were prosecution witnesses in the vice .trial of the late Dr. Stephen Ward. One of the girls la Vicky Bar-rett, 20 a blonde who testified tiie entertained some 30 customers in Ward’s apartment and he collect- ed the money but gave her none of it. 8TOCK Al 41*4 62 TM 4X7 148.6 iii. ilt;i- The other js Margaret (Ronna) Ricardo, 22. During the trial she re|kidiated testimony she had given against Ward at his preliminary hearing. Wald was convicted of living off the earnings of prostitutes Christine Keeler a n d Marilyn eporita fisc iii year rittuTravali 'ofil. debt ____ _______,306,880.0. (*) 30§.Nf.nriri M ••.aji.i0o.66i.oi Altai Withdrawal tlseri year J Total debt ............. -Mate ...i..U.-j. J&ldl.atLUMO Includes 4)47.38*.044.15 debt V* 4" A 1HE PONTtAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1908 «19 »• w« where the •old it Public Auction tor ciib to mmk kUiM #«m- v* 'T agta.S3 igju&i jn^tha. Court Hou»e‘ Rim fswtfawa sswls ImtL •* JSl.!!50^ni5 vyuuam ns 3? *S2s. * JOSE A. CABAN Prayers will be offered for Jose A. Caban, 7-month-old daughter of Mr. and |fn. Mar-eefino Caban of 121 E. Fair-mount, at 1:90 p.m. Saturday in Sparia-Criffa Chapel. Burial will be hi Oak Hili Ceinetery. The Want died When hit by a ear on. Oakland Avenue yesterday. • ” ■ ' v"T^ • Surviving, besides the parents are two sisters Elisabeth M. Wurm of Pontiac and Katherine M. McCombs of Waterford Town-ship; and two brothers, Kenneth L. McCombs and Carl Gow, both of Pontiac. Also surviving are grandparents Mrs. J. C. Anderson of Pontiac and Mr. and Mrs. Lugo Caban of Puerto Rico. MRS. W. P. CARTWRIGHT The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home for Mrs. P. (Sarala A.) CifF OglHf Count, Record.Thenc, Xuth MW* (loot «• west line of "Birdsland eubdlTUIon"; thenos N. W’ orSriC Pyj awi-Ssa Sr* alpdg on* ™ of "Cherokee HU1»" tei of. bsgtontog. Contalnlnx u.o to liStt of Oakland COTnt,*Dr»lnUCOm-rnt^o to right* ^ W O^UliSd •4- or • Marjorie at—op. BOW known U Mer-Jorle Ho— Kemp. to *- — divided t/ttb tote root, oa r. Frederick F"—-n to divided 1/Mh totore.t to wright, 77, of 1581 Bataan. Service will be 8 a.m. Saturday in Our Lady of Refuge Catholic Church with burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Cartwright died yesterday after a long illness. She was a member of Our Lady of Refuge Church. Surviving are a son, Henry F. Stack of Orchard Lake; two grandchildren; eight great-grandchildren; and a brother. JWW!» tloo, to. north line Si. tton 11 to too NW corn or of "Loon Loko Shore*’’ w recorded to Libor II ' w-af 0*Sis>7n cggw .?«cora?. • thence sooth 1300.00 Toot Horn tht Woot tote of "Loon Lake Shore*" ti the M^oanor of US IS of "Loot Loko Shore*" eeld point betas cell oh point “A”; thenoe (the foUowtag approximate dletanceo and bohring* to ■ BOM* WPia. W «rW. 30.34 feet; thence on i curve to the left (Radius 3*0 feet, LC • 8. U* jgr W) in--datanea *f 40 feet; thence M.M* W WjWBto; thence N. 15’ 45’ W. 1*3 feet; thenoe s. IT W W. a feet; thenoe j. 58* >r W. N foot; thano* S. 53* oo* w. XM foot; thanes s. 16* 53* W. 75 feet; thenoe M. a* |F W. 86 feet; thence 8. SO* 30' W. 100 toot; thenoe on o curve to the left (B « 300 foot, LC = N. Ol*- OS' W) on an dtatence of 111 feet to point "B" WBBI U toe OX corner of Lot IS of “Boa*' mound Subdlvlalon" as recorded to Libor 40. Von 46 ef Oakland --------- Record*, sold point " located approximately 1340 feet from —1 flint "S" ” north 1686. > being U* W of. Lot U of “Loon Lake Subdlvlalon #l'rH recorded to Liber 30. Page 30. the east line of "Loon Lake Heights -.i-r—------------- a Containing concerning toe . nutters set forth to sold Petition, the purpoae of eeld Petition being the condemnation of. property de-•crlbed to said Petition, and toe taking of' told pnforty without too eanssnt or the owners for a certain public improvement. toe acquisition of. additional aabail -“-i within tl ' “ ‘ _._.j District, mbu of the compel rt IS JPUK'IHER ORDERED, that the above named person* appear before Mi OoBrtjm MmHtorrtos lath August. 1(63, ct 8:00 o’clock to A Seen, fa the Court House la Im Pontiac to show cause, if on, the, hove, why toe prayer to said Petition should not be meted: sad.-------- IT IS PUR11UCR ORDERED, that copy of oils order be served upon t persons named to such Petition, who i aide to toe County of r---— — slx <•> day* before t ind that a copy 0 i da, of such hearing, be publl---- successive e Tribune and ... nan, .... newspapers published and circulated to the Count, of Oakland, and that too last such publication bo mads before (ha day of such hearing. a/CLARK J. ADAMS Circuit Judgi (A True Cep,) DAHIML T. MURPHY . . ■ Oakland Count, Clerl Register off Deed* By OERTBUDE POOLEY July 33. 31 and August g'ws? The 6,000 professional laundries in the United States entity approximately 214,000 persons. Deaths in Pontiacf Neighboring Areas WARREN F. CLOUTIER The Rosary will be recited for Warren F. Cloutier, 40, of 4031 Motorwgy, Waterford, Township, at-I p. m. tomorrow in Coata Funeral Home. Service will be at iO a. m. Saturday is St. Michael Catholic Church, with burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery. Leslie, Andrea, Gillie and John, all at home; and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Gillis Van Stell of Kalamazoo. - (*■. WAIN M. TOLONEN Service for Wain M. Tolonen, 55, of 789 Portland will be at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Sparks-Griffin Mr. Ctoutier wasTcHM Tuesday Chsp^-witii buriathi-Party man driving a black Ford Falcon Whan struck by lightning while on a caning trip in the Upper Peninsula/jie was a mechanic for Progreisive Welder A Machine Co. Surviving beside his wife Pauline, are Ms mother, Mrs. Fred Cloutier; three daughters, Mrs. Jerry Beagle of Highland, Gloria of Pontiac and Paula at home; a son, Charles of Burbank, Calif.; a sister, Mrs. Lloyd Cook of Pontiac; and three Mothers, Duward of Pontiac, Lloyd of North Branch and Allen of Marlette. Service for Richard L. Sterling, 15, of 31690 Seventh, Warren, was held today in the Lyle Elliot Funeral Home, Warren. Richard died unexpectedly of a >ceberal hemorrhage Tuesday evening while at play. Surviving are his parents, former Pontiac residents Mr. and Mrs. James Sterling; three sisters, and two brothers, Ricky, Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Tolonen, a member of Dixie Baptist Church, died Tuesday. He was an employe of Pontiac Motor Division and a member of Eagles Lodge. Surviving are his wife Lola L.; a son Paul Board of Jackson, Miss.; three daughters, Mrs. Merlin Frizxle, Mrs. Edward Board and Phyllis Wilson, all of POntiac; 12 grandchildren; three greatgrandchildren; a brother and a sister. GEORGE W. TULIP Hunt Abductor of Detroit Girl Look for 'Young Man, Driving Bfack Falcon' DETROIT (I) — Police today hunted a thin, dark-haired young 3 Sisters Die as Cor Tears Over Curb LONG BEACH, Calif. (kP) A car traveling out of control jumped a curb yesterday and smashed into four young Blisters. Three were killed, one seriously injured. wfio~^aap«hn- 6-year old girl*} d took her to a field and raped her. The girl saM she was riding her new bicycle around die block yesterday when a man in a “black, shiny car, with bright, round lights In the back and red inside, that like that one” (a Ford Falcon), drove ap. The child said, when she refused to enter the car, “he readied out and grabbed me." 'All I heard was screams. One little girl was sitting oh the sidewalk crying and there were two children lying tinder all the broken glass and bricks.” The driver, Donald Eugene RICHARD L. STERLING—. SWVWe tor George W. TuUp, 80, of 78 Douglas, will be 1 p.m. tomorrow in the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Tulip, a retired employe of GMC Truck & Coach Division, died early yesterday morning after a long illness*. Surviving are his wife Flora; a daughter, Mrs. Irene Godrey of Pontiac; two grandchildren; six great-grandchildren; and a brother and sister. World News Say K Eyes Shift of 300,000 Troops BERLIN (AP)—Soviet Premier Khrushchev wants to move some of his 300,000 troops from East Germany to the potentially explosive Soviet-Chinese frontier and for that reason is eager to settle the Berlin issue, Communist sources claim: Chinese patrols are probing Soviet territory and can only be removed by force. TOKYO (AP)-President Ho Chi Minh of Communist North Viet The suggestion, offered Wednesday to Western correspondents by non-German Communists, May i.33_r.'to"itoii b**11 Planted by the Reds, lit Sbid Uni r ------* The Communist sources said that Khrushchev may makd concessions to the West provided agreement is reached for a cut-track in troops by both sides. SOURCES QUOTED The West German paper Frankfurter Rundschau quoted diplomatic sources in Moscow as say-ing that incidents along the 2,066* mile Soviet-Chinese border occur dally and patrols there have been placed on special alert. It said Buffalo, Car Collide; Both End Up Losers KANKAKEE, ID. (UPI) -Lawrence Hitz reported that his new $3,600 convertible automobile was demolished yesterday in a collision with a buffalo. The animal- ■ refugee from a wild game farm, had to be destroyed. Hitx Md police that he did not see the buffalo charge 1mm a fog-shrouded ditch. A vehicle foDowing Hits struck his car after the buffalo impact. Auto Sales Surpass 1962 During July DETROIT aa Job* officiating. Hope Cemetery, wltT lle ra elate OoShan" ^ Card af Thanks OPR SPECIAL THANKS TO ALL Mw* lor the many e—| neea, mseeagst of eympathy and beautiful floral dfWiBp durtog loss of our beloved______________ mother.—W# especially thank Elder Dan forth, thcslw Star Mothers, the women's ' Association of too Presbyterian Church »“d the Dryer Funtral Home. The femily of Mary Jane (Jennie) Cornu. w- ■ 70S Pontiac State Bank Bldg. PB 8-045* - id largest Pay Off Your Bills without a ion— Paymenle iow a* «o wk Protect your Job and Credit Home or Office Appointment* .Qty Adjustment Service 714 W. Huron •' - Fa SAMI “ THE ECHOES, 731-1163 DTOA ____Mu«lc for «U occe«lon«." TRY DIADAX TABLETS (FORM- D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME < - Invalid Car Service ______ FB 4-1311____ Donelson-Johns* FUNERAL BOMB "Designed tor Fuherale’* 7^ COATS FUNERAL HOME . DBATTON PLAINS Pit 3-77W HUNTOON FUNERAL BOMB _ Serving Pontiac for SO Yeare T» Ooktog Ave FB a-HB Voorhees-Siple TVt^&SS!^ar^*m SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL BOMB ."Thoughtful Service" FE UMi CsaisNry L "ti#___________________ DAlkTY MAID SUPPLIES. 731 Menetnlnee. FE S-7105. J. Godhardt 1 wwi mwwi wsy age W, ( hasband pf Pauline Clou-Jear ton of Katherine Peli-quto: dear father of Mrs. Jerry iTillle) Boogie, Gloria, Paulo end Charles Cloutier; dear brother of Mrs. Lloyd (Adelade) Cook, Duward. Lloyd and Allen Cloutier: alee survived by two graextchUdran. Recitation of toe Perish Rosary be mday, August • at I at toe Coata Funeral Home, rdl service will M Saturday, __.it-10 at 10 a.m. at St. Ml-cbael’s Catholic Church;- Interment to Mt. Hope' Cemetery. Mr. Qoutter will lie to state at toe Coata Funeral Home, Drayton Plains, until 3:11 Saturday at which time be will lie taken to the church for service. EICKMEHCR, AUGUST 6, 1363. ED-------* * IMS Yosemlte, Birmlng- w, end-' Dorothy sossneier; dear 'father of Michael and Kurt Btokmeter; dear brother of Mrs. Henry .Rlcksgers. Recitation of ntr RWBy will be Iwinday, 8 at g p.m. at toe Donel- HUFFMAN, AUOOST 6. 1*63, PAUL B.i 135 LeGrande Are.; age 53; beloved husband of Irene L. Huffman; dear son of Mrs. Stella Gtlmore: dear brother of Mrs. Delmer Bert. Mr*. RonsltTFetch- ■ervtce w*Uf,?e *PYld»y? August w ut 3 p.m. at toe Ddnolsoo-Jobn* Funeral Home. Interment In Ot-tswa Writ renjetery Bf Hdft- LOVUHUC. AUGUST I, 1303. MRS. Dorothy. 4*445 Dequlndre, Roch-ter; age 7*; beloved Wife of the former Mattery Lovcnuk • dear , mother of Mrs, Mary Lpeutlbeta, ■ Alegtaadto arf tolteloto Catherine Lovchuk, William, Paul and JtoMI fifT*^"-' - Tt rw-t—d -T '♦ ' grond rhlidren Praver service will be .Wednesday at 7:35 p.m: at the Lefebtek Funeral F------ —* service' Will be Ft at 1:30 a.m. at 'to. neral Home, 1*337 O Bondarchuk officiating. Intel to White Chapel ”----------— ‘ tery. TroyT Mr*. . _.WU08t Memorial Ceme-. Lovchuk will lie Lefchick Funeral ard L. (Skipper). 31030 Seventh Bt., Warren. Mlcb.; age 15; be-tovod ton of Shtriey< and James dear ayyiiieMm at ■I I_____ OUUs Yaa BMH; dear brother of Ricky. Leslie. Andrea. OUUs and John Sterling. Funeral service was held today at thy Lyle > Elliot Funeral Home to WarroetTMtehtguir ArrangemenU by too. Lyle Elliott Funeral Borne. TQLONEk['AuOU8T* ST 15637 WAIN M.. 763 Portland; ate M; beloved husband of Lola L. Tolonen: deer father of Mrs. Merlin Prlsale. Mrs. Bdwatw Board. Paul Board and Phyllis Wilson; dear brother of Dental Tofonan Jr., end Mr*. - ^lL.p)s . 12 gyannentranm antf un ee gTrxt-graudchlldron Fun«ral earvtoa will be Priday. August g at I:3S p.m. at- -too SnanteOrlffto Puperal Bom* with TWr. Haul b: Yuna-man offlciatllif. - Interment to Perry Mt Per* Cemetery. Mr. Tolonen win lie to ettite at the Sporfco-Ornfln Funeral Hooaa-.--|-^j-r-'-.— TULIP. AUGUST 7," ISd^L OBbpUB . William, M DeUglM to. i *|e M: Yre»; dear brother df Ralph milp •And Mrt,. kjargsret OppefWWU— also survived by two grandchildren end to great-grandchildren. Funeral aarvtoe will be Frida*._Aufitol_ O tTl p.m. at ( the D. E. Pursier Funeral Home with Rev. Jataw McKinney ofQet-eting. Interment in Perry Mt. Perk CsmotfitoT Mr. Tulip wifi ye in suit at too- P. B. .mrsloy Funeral Home, VAILLAlfOOURT, AUGUST S.. 1103, William l£, Mllltoidwta Road. Ctarkston; bottwed buo- . band of Iow|i Tolllopnootl dear Wtoot of ltou. Bntoo iBoobto. Clifford. Raymond and Lawrencs ValilancOurt; dear brother, of Mro. niaitta noMMjBffXto^ fito. Loo tad Harvey VaBMiMSUrt. Funeral tervtoo will be Fridty, August t at l.JMa. at too Dentl-son-Johns Funeral Home. Interment to Ottawa Park Cemetery. . Mr. VaUtoaeowt wifi He to state at too Donelson-Johns Funeral ON AND AFTER THIS DATE. August I. 13*1, t Wtu act bo --------on* debt* con. LOR GOLD BRACELET, BETWEEN * - Kresge'e Wti' Cass and X.' Pike ate., reward, -682-2872 after 0. LOST KEY RINO WITH CAR. SHOP, lock, etc, keys attached, license _tof OAJB3, FE »***■ LOR — SIAMESE CAT 8EAL-polht, vicinity Ellaabeth Lake. Reward. gM-lW._______________ LOW; VICINITY OP "RANCH A»W Eagle Rd. walker hound. FE 3-1630 or FE 3-15*7. Sept. tot. Physically |N men, - ego St to 44, tor (Mt to- tokn . time work. Regtotor et 1*074 Yaua to to wart wtth largo -r. Pace, I -Tito. . ATTENTION * AUTO MECHANIC. EXPERIENCED Excellent opportunity. *)• "guaranteed, nitto c<- RATHBUltN CH_ . 550 South U_ _________North vllie_ Blood. Donop3 URGENTLY NEEDED CAB DRIVBtto-FULL OR PART time, day or night. 101 Woo* Huron.______ . R«fr, \ CURB BOY WANTED. MUgT BB , over M, Apply w g, WtoM*. rARPFNTF^ l- ■teady work. Pontiac area. BUNDY CONSTRUCTION CO," -150* >. Telegraph Rd. PI 4-WdS DO YOU WANT TO MAKE 550 TO *1*0 extra? write qustoicaltopo to P.O, Box 70, Penttxc Frees. ( . g . ' Designer, Detailers Checkers -Specari^ Machine Body Fixtures OvorttaM. tong programs libSty Eners wn ronlfos at Hto Press office i the Id-lowing boxes: 2, 3, II, 14* H, 21, 28, 17, II, IS, 84, 87, 78,71, X 71, IT, 188. Pontiac Press Want Adi ' Are Mighty Midgets. *-Thcttmn^s Retd tlienr Dhily-r.Tlwt’a Why Results Are Fait and xthe Cost Low. 'try Only j See ijor Yourself! to on Bquol Oppor- Wrlto. etottng marital etatua. educational ha ok ground, work experience, etc.. Box 14, Pontiac Prase. EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOR advancement with the national ocei-sutner finance company, mnat be between 33 and 31 years af age and fish school griH OtoudytelofTi — , Olvlng complete r EXPERIENCED MECHANIC WANT-ad. Weekly guoyantee, good working condition*, good parts stock, unlimited work. Cxrter-Ryoelll, Inc. Chevrolet - Ohio Dealer. Romeo, Mich. Phone 75|-3*d». EXPERIENCED MECHANll) ft# Brunsmatlc automatic ptotetting , machines, 14 lane establishment. Lakewood Lanes, SUl .W. Huron EXPERIENCED DUCT IN8TALL-era and eervtoe men, must have --- - - -^ Up jgy, | - - - EXPERIENCED automobile POLISH DETAIL MAN. APPLY AT. MAM MOTOR SALES. 3537 DIXIE HIOHWAT FOREMAN QUALIFIED TO HAN- strv ihep. well equipped viui aka end Davenporto. . ply by letter giving full be FULL FAIT— While You Train with too IBM This ussy ho too opportunity you’vu been looking fur. ,B you qualify, you can move Into oas ef today* fastest growing arts* for eto ” technicians by Joining IBM' You will got valuable technical training at one of IBM'* exaeOont •choole while receiving hill pay and a llrtog allowance. tain tha latest training yu atest IBM osatog equipment to t variety af customer offleo*. This challenging Job sails for a Ugh decree of skill and tatofltgonec, neat acpoaroitoo leading producers of tfi * ef the world’s to baaed upon merit end attrnctlvs benefit programs or* fully paid fur Ur too ocenpony.... .------. ' Quallflcatlona; Minimum of high school education plot Iwp yson af advanced training tea-Mfg mechanics and basic atostniiHn or equivalent oxportoooo to nnuNog ibm to an «—*-----------n ployer. W. O. NICHOLS 7700 Second Ssutovond Detroit 3. *ei«Mg~. TR-Mfir'* OROOM OR FARM ILMl take care ef eaddlo horses. Middle aged man preferrad. Oood wages, board end room, t dure <5-. Wk. 33171* W. 14 MUo Md., Birmingham. BLQINE 6-43*3 ______LB mil LOCKE MOWER OPERATORS AMD rtpere, apply ait Dial* -Hwy. MACHINIST ALL ABOORD MAdnQMPvdraMv . ten expert-employ-. i ntea-k pib wo parts, ...ironcie from high . o oleir. Moo4 owotthog* r afternoon rtM* only Con- THE PONTIAC TRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1098 Floor S—Ihg^ CARL L. BIL L 8 SR.. FLOOR < JOHN TAYLOR. FLOOR LAYING, I in* an^ttnlehlng. 11 y*»r» Generator!—Regulators SUrUr* Batteries $5.95 Exchange tod. OH Doan. 0 JRWRtaA _ Awnings Porch - pstlo -WBEPON OO. I GUINN CONSTRUCTION HOME IMPROVEMENTS AND MOD- CARPENTER WORK. NEW AND QENERAL CARPENTRY. Corpot Ssrvies SCHWEITZER CARPET SBBVICX. qsL.arS.'girf" wild 'T. ~~~ 2 Iwwim and ouaRAnteed TV's I BOUT TO SPECIFICS-, 119 95 up. Obel TV tad Radio. * sssOnabls PET-3701 I4R> EUxabetb Lake PE 4-4945 QUALITY OARAGES REASON- Two Triiwhg Iwtteo r MOV AT. CUT THROAT TREE REMOVAL Call around —- Try our low bid_ 852-4070 Lowest .prices 333-383; - General Tree Service *>*■>*• TREE TRIMMING AND REMOVAL. Eoaoanshtg ratoo. .... W iCTil uaS w Call FE S- TRENCHING, SEFTIC TANKS , and flolda. Sswsr and —j LAWN MOWER Repair. U TEARS 1 8 0S 16 or 853-0775. experience, 1- to Mu service. pick up and delivery. OR 34)829. - -tree estimate. OR 3-5741. CEMENT WORK ALL KINDS. REA-aaoahu. JOngoa, OHM PLEASANT ROME FOR CHRONIC-ally Ul. Doctor on call. Graduate nurse on duty at all time*. Individual allondw. Boat. rate*. Lo- ^TWAI^RRAOOHABIERAraS^ Bootrlod Contractors TALBOTT LUMBlft Class Installed In door* and wfc (lows Complete bulldla* service. UBS Oakland Ave. PE 4-453 MOORE PAINTINO ___rlor. Exterior Speclalleti UL 2-3671 Free Estimates TASSI PAINTINO; exterior HOOTS.. _______ INSIDE AND OUT. WORK GUAR- AAA PIANO TUNING ... WIEOAND’8_________FE 2-4924 a>i tuning anin repairh Ooenr Schmidt .. , — rights, e lall rtwi _ ______- ■'"aa ■ T' noiTwiiBj wwifiww A-l PLASTERING AND REPAIRS. RooecpahH. Pat Loo. FE TIM. PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES. P. Meyer*___________EM------ HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME your price Any-ilmeUE. 84)095: LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKINO, ibbtsh, ftU dirt, trading and Fail and (rent and loading, rS Set ClaaaMleaUon No, Track iowtwl Trucks to Rent ,-Toq pickups 1 Mr Ton Stakti TRUCKS — TRACTORS AND tQUlPMElg Dump Truck! — OemA-Tralien Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. WANTED 2 OIRLS. EXPERIENCED wool pressort. experienced shirt pressers. Apply Main Cleanere, Elizabeth * wanted—Mature woman for housework and ream ot 2 children. Whits Lake ares. Phone WHIM. Building Service-Supplies J3 _ dodorpln-. under present homes. 6*6-350. additions, remodeling, con- ent building. 1 COMPLETE BUILDING SERVICE FE t-*-"" Concession ' dtntlod.—alter—9JO P.iht- ..-.- ----- ---- RNRRORTIC CQPPLE TO MAN-ejore Th Wailed Lots aroa. WRir * uriAt HAVE ANMMEDIATE OPENING (Or S aales people in our real estate department. Experience pm-, ferrod but w01 train tf necessary. Plenty of Hoot time and nroapeoti. Can J. A. Taylor, OR 4-«00._____ MAN OR WOMAN WITH CAR, ^ established ----- ’ ter actual________ U) N. Perry. »:45-9;30 . . • J-'- ,1-A MOVING SERVICE. REASON-Jlable .rates. Fg 5-3458;,FE 3-MOO. CAREFUL MOVING. L tfWr Swltt Holy, IBulo f iwsis M ATTENTION TOT DEMONSTRATORS Original Discount Party Plan Ouf demonstratore have proved you soil make more money selling nemo brand toys, gilts, and novel-Moo at legitimate discount prices. Win priew every month. Top com-~ TOS Call for details. , HOME PARTIES INC. \ FE S-7IJT LIGHT MAOUNO REASONABLE Open Dally Including I EAKLES CUSTOM UPHOLSTER-U.^1420 Burielgb. Union Lake. EM BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walls and windows. Ba*>. Satis-Iao^puoro>ri»i.FWB4»n. , . _________________ W«A1. M. ite salssmsu. good opportunity — aggresilvt **” *“ Rd.. FE -24)156 or FE 3-0157. EVta "VOCATIONAL counseling snviL- Telephone FE^-0584— MIDWEST EMPLOYMENT i Pontiac state Bank Building FEMALE PLACEMENT PRESTON WALKER SMITH TON TRUCK AND DRIVER FOR hire. FE MISS.____ - ; HAUL AND MOVE , 1 PaddlUg 33X003. Bob’s Van Service -1 DECORATINO «|*AliTtNO - _ B & C~ PAINTteG •jjirtif >ad ~ Fitffldf, wiBt Workmens connpenaatlon. good ref-erencee. All VMk guaranteed. 33»-. 600911 no anewor saflwr EXPERT PAINTINO, DECORAT-tag, paper removing. OR 3-73^4. GUIFF1S BROTHERS ESSEN HEA7T MOIVmXNT. I --------------- ...^ weeks, on Doaem. Jros W*. rij. PAINING WlTH Pi *■ •■f tag. Mark Nelson, ImlmWBRI Sdl—h HlJ exterior. IW 4S> PAPER *• n » L WASH Finish -High School itfffijjjjr+jxr __ ■fLW OS Job ;Ffir\ffce.booklet-write to De.J trait Officer National School- of - HANGINO. 5-2402, in^ L i dr o o m Unfurnished house for faiqlly df 4 within II miles of Pontiac. Call collect TR 1-9064 after 5 p.~ NEWLY • FURNISHED ------ front home, available Sept, to Jt 7 miles from. Pontiac. EM 3-4 luni. or esinl-i---- Orchard Lake or West Foottae ares, will oonslder fc-pt. to dune arrangement, 682-0333 Renf HoBUs-Unttiinishad 40 1 BEDROOM NEWLY DECORATED, Qdulta, FE 2-4Q90.._______ 2 BEDROOMS. RIVER FRONT TO FAMILY WITH 3 TEEN AGE BOYS Who respect , owr J properly, desire 1 i, bl-level. furn. t of Pontlac by Sept. l. 6»3- | JR. EXECUTIVE J . BEDROOM home, needed Immediately by young Jr. Executive and family moving “ Into arts. Prefer Waterford ares near Lady of . Lake* Parish. Top character and credit- references Available CauLI 9-4776. If tojlrm--verse Charges. 2-BEDROOM BRICK TERRACE. IN-OUlrw lSI 8. Edith. FE 4-6378. 2 SEMtOOM fOMR.. MS 3-BEDROOM HOME. NEWLY DEC- ?S^ri)lefaREALW^^VALU&. STATE TROOPER TRANSFERRED to Pontiac Post, wtahea to mt, HOUSE *so dr root trim option 3-ned-l r,P**** 1 ora homo. Reply to box SB. |THREE UNFURNIBHED lOHI BEDROOM " lor family of 4. non-drink j smokers. Exc. references If i Rfcrif" bAAWoii . 614-0148. J BUNGALOW. I ROOMS, SMALL SMALL HQU8B couple. 61 Ahn N INVESTOR WILL PAY ALL cash tor FHA or GT equltiet even 1 it behind In payments, call dally and Sundays » ~ * *** * * BUILDER Need* lets in Pontine. oHW, jra commission. L.., 626-9576. Real Value Realty. BOULEVARD HEIOHT8 ---2 Bedlnom Unit >> $75 Per Month Contact Resident Manager 544 East SM- at Veleoda • JOHNSON SAYS: Watch for our sold sign* all ov< town. Llat yaur hem* with ua. w have the salesmen twba cen tel WIU trade. AUGUST JOHNSON REALTOR 1704 8, Telegraph _•_____PE 4-2533 > need* eleaning up. Vacant. Open, walk In and lock. Cah Hr. Wagnwr ' 9I3-3JS0. HOUSE TO RENT AMD t BED-room* to rent, tarn. 2W Mechanic. MODERN, CHILDREN WELCOME NEEDEDT Alf types cI Real Estate. V you; have property to sell jail no br Help In disposing of , It. No obU- Rent-Option TO SUAUPIED PARTIES New J-Bedroora Ranch OXFORD—$H0 MO. JOOk. . _ 636-1545 r Rint Lokt Cattwfs* 41 * MODERN COTTAGE ON LAKE. ■■■ ■ I m get oat for you. PAUL JONES REALTY. FE "4-6550. I WOULD- ilME TO LEASE - with option to purch»«e want immediate occupancy. Please cAH Detroit, 235-0633 bet TO.-n.m. DOUBUI lORfBTNqLU. largo. Gentleman. PE 4-1319. MODERN UPPER LAROE ROOM tJFRlaT™ retlrement heme. Leaving itate. “— “‘ ■LBSLjMWJPa. - ___ , - BEDROOM. | enclosed patio, eklra large kitchen with bulit-tn*, prick ranch. 674-1729. BY OWNER. 3 BEDROOM HOUSE - " achnoL 2 bedroom house ly romndolod. Oall IS 2-4190 or FE 6-5971. BY 6WNER ExoeptlpnaUy well cared for I bedroom heme. 21 ft. living ~~ ~ carpeting and remodeled kitchen wwu otnerator. end almost now .jmace. Separate building containing garage and ^haU baQ>. plus flntaned area wUdb could be used for office, additional bedroom, or wbet-oot. Township water and Tel-Htndn. OnhriM- BARGAIN............. MODEL BRICK — 2 BATHS — TRI-LRVIL NOTHING. DOWN WESTOWN REALTY rt 2-3763 3 TO S.F.M. -U 2-4677 AFTER 7:39 P-M. BY Owner ~ Sacrlflct sale due to death Ip family, 1 • bedroom bungalow, m-ear garage, 91,199 for eoalty. 949 Par mo.. lncl. taxes and ‘In-_IlfeORBL-KK 4-9409. CHEAPER THAN RENT north Pontiac ■ $^9 Down MEW 2-BBDROOM home $55 Month basement, carpets, drapes, storms and 'screens, nice yard, paved. 212 Russell Price 99950. RORABAUGH rE 2-5093 Realtor Woodward et square LakeWtoad _ $400 DOWN - - 5-Bedroom, N^trly New IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Everyone Qualifies LAND CONTRACT TERMS. SPOTUTE HUn,piNO CO. ------- 1500 DOWN - 3 BEDROOM. BASE-ment, garage. Oakland Ave. $76 monthly. MI 9-1482. DOWN. 3-BEDROOM BRICK lick posseaalon. 4S4 Moore, JB4- Jg----------g----- 11.900 FOR OUR EQUITY. LARGE I bedroom hsme. lovely floors, new storms and screen*, gas heat, basement. vicinity of Central RMh School. b»U 25.300, 965 a month fnOludlnf taxes and Insurance, , quire 682 Emerson, off Perry. ____ Pontiac Hlghgate St. by Chapel: turn rishi . ________ . model, 3 bedroom gnodel being completed. Nelson. Bldg, Co. iVanhor. 3 Bedroom ranch home. On Urge lot. Priced to sell at gio.ooo Sylvan 9*2-2300 $9,500 oak1*flo RU88 McNAB ' *40.000 INnUTED IN THIS 4 BED-room. 3 baths, noma with family room on Square Lake Rd. near '.elementary school. Transferred ‘ — 25. make offer PE-2J43S, A WYATT REALTY credit problem..” FEATURING Wall to wall carpeting All wood doors Gas heat Permanent bet water Furniture finished cabinet* 626-9575 RIAL VALUE CITY EAST SIDE. 3 BEDROOM brick ranchette. clean as a whistle, naatly decorated and In excellent repair, It’s well built, roomy, mid well located wall-to-wall carpet- ' lug. tiled batb, extra bedroom, OI SPECIAL. Neat 2-bodroom bun-fenced yard, attached garage'. Only ^$7,900, lake prlvflegei to flnlthed recreation room, Iwar garage With nice' work dip, large lot. Owner leaving state and wants quick sale. COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANE For Home Ownership Loans ----- FE 28171 bedroom, alum, i complete ready to Ing picturesque I Groat shade lyrlwgli -HwliW y. ROOM AND OR BOARD. 135 Oakland Ave. FE 4-1654. BLEEPING Ro6W. PRIVATE EN , 1-ROOM EFFICIENCY \Alberta- Apartments tm Rd . Warren. M jj|_______I_______... .WALL;} M OI , „JSl)lng. Tupper. OB 3.7661. I . _ ) 27743 PAINTING, pAPgMW. REMOVAI; | Washing. 673-2877! C. White . 1 2 ROOMS. RATH. GROUND FLOOR, privacy, adulte. 7J ,FE 3-3006 after 4, ' I AND DATH/ gRIYAli . . -------------- ■ entrance, 408 tfi Raglnaw. 332tJ 20 X 59 WITH PARKING Df REAB^ after 1:29 Prri,- ■-* -/ 1 eaet slde UcaQOm PE Wl>. ; ROOMo PRIVATE. 4>N P couple, 324-1999; \ ,NO MONEY DOWN ^lixed Neighborhoods Land ContracL VA. FHA month tncoooo. Vacant lot "as Usd contrast. I your asm borne. ASSOCIApi BROKERS ATTENTION! f, WE BUILD ' 3 BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL rf*THBOiQi bow iii vaalty, eup-bonrds galore, furmica eon liter “PS. oek floors, rl*9t»l* «*U*. hrlcS trim. 99309 on your lot. To see model, call HUtfr Sadly. PE 24)179 or PE 4S999, Lpy' Cost Presg Want Ads WorTfor You Day and Night CUSTOM BUILT HOMES YQUR LQT OR OURS Rpsd Homes, Inc. >7 FE 4-0591 ""CUSTOM HQME^ Quality burn — Priced right -Deal direct, with. Builder. Carrigoh Con3#t Idly 634-9261 Both. OL/MHI ELIZABETH LAKE > 1 PRIVILEGE^ ] - cosy 4 Room year.around LIVEABLE ROME — LARGE LOT Rip I f F6tNTY""0r . awaaw TREES - LAROE SCREENED IN PORCH - WTuotmi- EASY TERMS.. WRIGHT GAYLORD m ucrnm and *n « real >ifi. UmI to __ MM b*v# a bone, * room*, t ear ' (tract. 1 outbuilding*. Nip* wood*. x*nw. mV roun A CRIB W Mo*, tat* of u _|_ „__ JgjggfiS'SfeVS Lawrence W. Gaylord NORTH USE. PavmonU ehctpcr ■ than nut. Caw and cut* Ibodroom Carpeted living room, separate dining, goad ktlgbon. .Baoootont. gas Mat. lta-car garaga. aoment total n> ■ vn.B»im ffgg a TO > Mgr GILES 2 BEDROOMS. MW Down an tbia 7-room bom* with saw aiding, mat, bath. newly daaoratad. Full base-mant, 7-car garaga an • main atraat. Oalg 15.5007uU polo*. ana oatn. 24 dining laoktopped tag tamo*. atraat. Only gg.ua with aaag WATERFORD TOWNSHIP. S roam* with wall to wall cari dining raam. ceramic bath, clou* iritohen. full baaament. 1 recreation mom. ■ GILES REALTY CO. PE 5-0175 . Ill Baldwin Av< Open t a.m. to I p.m. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE lta bath*, ingieoa, dining - gas beat, een-„ atraat*. Large close to aoboou. HUOE 5-bad room brick.-____ - 2-car e*rhg*. near Walled Lab*, lta 'bath*, dining -----“ tHE PONTIAC FBESS THURSDAY* AUGUST 8, 1968 491 Seles Heusts a than rent MEIER living 'room and dining' ceramic tU* bam with i WEST SUBURBAN. Nearly -new T-room trl-lavel with all purpose __family room, lfr bathe, and at- ameTwtore^moSe , ■-■Smm-JS payment, t rooms and bam. 1 William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 *7* W Huron Mixed Neighborhood I BEDROOM—FULL BASEMENT ' No down payment No mortgage cost Pint month free Payments Uka rant MODELS OPEN AFTERNOONS 12 AND SUNDAY ~ WESTOWN REALTY _ 4W Irwin atf Bast Bird. FE 2-2763 afternoons H 1-4677 Eves. . paneled dan, fenced living yard. Share^2-wsy fireplace. Eirfoarrala. EM 525U: EM 2-4814 HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri-Level $9,995 $1,000 DOWN Family Room 12’ Lot iv,-Car Oarage Oaa Beat OFFICE OPEN Mon. Thru Sat. t W t p.m. I. C. HAYDEN. Realtor iM.MtM 10751 Highland Rd. (M-59) Hill ’n’ Dale Homes HIITER - WEST BUB. overlooking lake, this I rooms, 154 baths, larpi living room wlttl fireplace, oak floor*, fail basement. finished yea. roam, large lot, 414i*M.-Tarma. BAST OF AUBURN HE1QHT8, excellent 4 Nome and bam. large living roam flntahad to knotty ptaa. NEAR LOWER STRAITS LAKE. ___ ______________I m garage. Water softener. 100 ft. lot. , 01.100 down. Catt B. C. Hitter, Raalty 3060 Elisabeth Lake Road. PE 50171 or PE 4-3900 or PE ~ urn — 1 - 6 ROOMS AND BATH ON extra large' bedrooms, large unusual Uvug room with natural flraptoe*, aba family mom. carpeted throughout, gas heal, 2-car attached garage, targe well land-' scaped tot. paved drive. Crescent Lake rights. Only 021.500, term* can be arranged. K L. TJl — wooded letij. 3-bedr 2-car samgo. All for M.M0. Near Clarkston A dark green sbtetled ranch ■ black top rand with uftti** at tat*. 2- bedroom* and an_____ tached breeaeway garaga. Extra CARNIVAL By Dick Turner Waterford ELttAirrrw lake privileges ...... 2 bedroom ranoh. ful oak flesr*. SEMINOLE HILLS Engllah stylo— > story — J be< rooms, run basement, larga llvlr ' ream with fireplace. separate dh ins room, i ear garage — SLR down plus mortgage coete. See -4*4ar. __ no monetTSdwif-*?*-, Attractive S hodnou) brisk froi ranch, west suburban, large II ■ 225 foot tot. 1 year’s taxes moves you to -p- Mi g— ----- to las**. Baa It today. tWSnSFSSb REALTY ale Hwy. OB 51975 OPEN SUNDAY ** * siwHymbaTK.au eg use* “I got Junior quiet, Mom . .. and I still got half a roll of tape left!” MlllMMh TRADE 1 - No welting to" sell your bom*. We will b* happy to appraise your hem* for a trade-in -on a new home or on* of our fine listing*. -Family Live to this tower apartment for MO per meoth. 7. toonis end 2 bath*. On* btdraom I ream apart-] Drayton Area Quality—Charm— ' Distinction EXCELLENT ESTABLISHED ear garage, dost r« Waterford (pU yrtoe Roife H. Smith, Realtor __ /jjH S. TELEGRAPH _ ^ (ESTSIDE, ST OWhUt. . . rooms, completely carpeted, ful) basement with fall out shelter WILL BUILD Visit 3-beUroom model on Carlisle aft V, Kenrett. 3 blocks fro — nsber Body. OPEN 10-8 DAILY HANDSOME BRICK RANCH 3-bedroom. lta baths, beau! bullt-la .leatures, situated on 2 big -tote in Fauleen Clrato at WlUlan Lake. Completed for your lean dials poise**Ion. Term* to sul Phone any time for Inspection this outstanding borne. Owner bull phene ,673-4093., WHST SUBURBAN bungalow s sn*ir *W^ra^EOTATE5tc pie or a retiree. Neat nil hardwood floors, gas beat, real n „ —B»,.iiiyto«uiat*i. gaa heat. lta-oar garage, paved drive and larga lot. .Very nice tot auburn heights area 2-badfddm bom* wttt b***-■ TjglftAjMd. IttoUST-jistOili. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE OBOROKR. IRWIN. REALTOR S98 W. Waited '.... _____ a wawnw -iraffaWY —~e / raem*. beiemenf. fares*- Gaa / and hot water. Sleeping porch, down payment. ... ^ . Al Pauly,. Realtor OR 3-3000 ^^vw^ FR ~5756r LAKE Privilege* on Oakland Mid Wood-hull Lake 5-room end utility. Aluminum storm* and screens. Gas hast. Oise end clean. Large beautiful tot with 13 tree*. 57,950. term*. 4 BEDROOMS ^ Full, basement. Recreation apace. Gas beat. Aluminum storm* and screens Beautiful town lta acres. S ml. west 512.5*0 *— . BROKER NICHOLIE WEST SIDE 2-bedroom home .all 01 carpeting in living root tueati nfl hrsl, *Tnm terms. STS VACANT. for* you buy. It's a 6-room ranch typ* home, located Just West ef town with -a 100’ tot. plenty of shad*, fruit trees and garden space, aoliinc at 60.100 with 5200 mortgage OOlta. Frushour Struble FE 6-4035—FE 2-1839 DORRIS $32,556 Firm WELL UNDER VALUE Transferred executive offers ___ etanttaUy built, custom brisk ranch borne: 3 bedim, end study or -bedrm.i 2 full ala* tiled bath separate utility room, oventaed oar garage, on nearly 1 acr landscaped: Spacious ttvtalt Non., air conditioned, with exceptional -1— privacy! floor to ooOtng — Large, ehoerful ------------------------utilities: Sif ersd: secluded front terrace!__ ered. Tasteful atlraotlvt rodeoorat-. ad ISyuugbout by prnfegoinaai to-Many extras, intangibles. Bloomfield school bug picks up obildron: easy walk to Bloomfield High. OPEN DAILY, NOON .TO SIX 179 R. PEMBERTON RD. iBLOOMFTRLP RILLS. d fireplace. 6a, dk£w ar* 6225 WILL BANDU5-THIS LOVELY 3-bedroom brick and frame trl-level. Full dialog room, basement. built-'U oven and range. Excellent neighborhood. Located west r ' bad In Waterford Township. 674 97 mo. plus taxes end anus. Real low Interest. LAKE FRONT — Only about 3 miles from Pontiac, 6-room rancher —“*■ aluminum stdlhg. Oas heat. bath, nice family room. 1 Vs-car garage. Carpeting and drape*. Large let with same fruit tree*, flower*. - etc. Real living. Priced at only 815,595. Term*. SELL OR TRADE A rail idea taka front for this low price. 111,190 5b*draom rancher with attached l's-car garage. 24 ft. living room Wttt large laSgaMene fireplace. Ceramic mod both. 75 ft. of sandy *—V-War view and very —- WILL EXCHANGF g acres, | B.R., basement, bl_ tae. dining room, carpatlng. 2-car garage. 4 stall barn, with separate well, feoead. 620.500. Equity 67AM kiat as Wants amellar bam*, now vacant, • - LEW*' HILEMAN, S.E.C. Realtor-Exchangor ; 1011 W. HURON. FE 4-1579 shaded lot w* have this 3-bedroom .aluminum aided ranch bom* with, gleaming oak noors. carpeted living room, lta baths, spacious family kitchen and an attaebsd, garage, 116.169- WILLIAMS LAKE PRIVILEGES NORTHWEST SUBURBAN LAKE PRIVTLEOEi ON MACEDAY and WUllanu Lakes 9 rooms, lta-story, aesenpat,.___ and good condition. 100x151 lot. * VIRY 00001 SOUTH ANDERSON 5-room bungalow, with living ri__ _dining room, kitchen, anfT 3-bedroom*. basement with gae beat. FULL PRICE 50.3**, 51,900 down. Smith Wideman QPEN EVES., EE 4-4526 ----612-WRST-N8RON BT. | pm: Describee thl lase home in the Orton area, cryi tal-claar waters and white sand 1 what yen'll enjoy with tali stor and a half bungalow, 2-ear a WATERFORD AREA 5b*droom brisk ranch beau, price reduced. OU beet. Just decorated. Large Tot,^ paved etroet. About 1151 move* you in. OFF BALDWIN 3 bedroom*, full basement with ell heat, hardwood floors, ttle bath. Just deeqrnted. NO DOWN .FAY MENT. Closing coat-sf 52M moves Evee. Can 3fR- CASTELL FE ?-7273 G. FLATTLEY. BLDR. 9209 COMMERCE ROAD _ —--- Eve*. W 5*462 NO DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COST NO PAYMENT’ 1st 'TO FULL BASEMENT. Clarence c. Ridgeway WALTON LAKE LtVUkO LOTS —15 MINUTES —la Don ar . 5795. $10 down. IIS mo. n- Fitr — Swim. OR 52215. FE 527M .It, Belaire Home Builders Lf 56W7 agw T RK - pioneer Highlands ; A (harp 2-bed room brisk with all of tte city conveniences plus take privilege*. It bee n lttoear ga-" rata. Ml basement and 'to on a weu shaded street. Asklag glim WARDEN 2626 W. MNen1***"7 235TUy LARGE fAMILY ? Plenty of ream for the eblldrae to tak duptax — Bra to on* side of this e-room (LbedlWOBI) OSBJOt the other make your pavmenu Lo ealod Ha eoaaer lot toXeego Bar- ' bor. Just a stone’s throw bum Cato Lake. Each side baa glaasad-frant and leak porches, full d: ' baoamenta ml ga* beat. City *e er Full price 512.5007 Down os man! and terms to cult. MC^LOvELAND 1 SIM Cass taka Rd. , M51255 —JSJM down V6 NEW 3-BEDROQM FULL BASEMENT $150 DOWN -S75MONTH (Excluding take*) Raady to maifa,SsI • , ASK ABOUT. OUR TRADE-IN ,... C , PLAN ..... CAliUsLB; BUILDING CO, Val-U-Way Hard to booavi, hM it's true, this 3-bedroom ranch home la loaded .with extras. BxHt-tn stove, ovan. ref rig.. Waiher ana- dryer and carpeted. 9*50 move* yes ~ price - only $10,050. FHj - $250 DOWN ment. heated by forced air heat. This home Is completely decorated. with .like new shiny “- Onto 076 per ate. including and lnsuraaace. and Insurance. —INTEGRATED 050 moves an ex-ai into this large 8-room 2-story bomi with Yuli E------* oak floor*. Fla#- taths. Immediate credit approval. rail*. 1 R. J. (Dicks) VALUET” REALTOR FE 4-353! 346 OAKLAND AVE.' OPEN 0-7 OVERLOOKING ELIZABETH LAKE ! ThU large buitotog NtoOf wonderful living quartan glassed-in .urgi k din inf rei at lake, i STORY AND HALF BUNGALOW: lo- VINE COVERED BUNGALOW: is That Bill alinllltTfT 6 bedroom homo with walk-out basement reminds you of. loo*ted In excellent lance of St. Benedict*, separate d tag room and natural flrtptace this cosy Uvtaf room. 59,150. INVESTMENT; A real buy at 6S.I .. Is this brick 3 family. 3 b LAKE FRONT — The ersam of the crop. Just like new and only 5 Sold. 73 ft. brick rancher with to wall carpeting. Beautifully decorated. Almost *" aura nf land ThU one has * professions a landed MNSt by ;lftu tatar n^JE1”* LIST WITH US —^W* trad* and this way manyAUes result II would not otherwise. Wo have pi ty ef mortgagemoooy far fin sac_ to beta our purchaaars. LIST TO-DAY FOR ACTION' TOMORROW. Opon 8:30 *.m. to 0 p.m. Multtpi* Luting sorriea. -I—-H- BROWNV RcrUot 309 Eli! ___Fh.Fl DORRIS 1_ 536 Dixie HWT. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE TAYLOR from Cedar Istond L privileges. Include* 3 ■ enclosed porch for family now oil furnace, stem screens, gang*. A good . . *7.400 — 61.200 down. 5*5 per FARMHOUSE -e-IB W- * privileges TWO ACRES—Lo- Conslsts of Hrtag room, kitchen with dtatog ana, 1 bedroom* and 1 bath, mod office and------------ with let* of itorag* _____ _____ gas furaaoa and water boater. — *--------------------•at.1- ly *10,000 - 6LOOO dowl LAKE FRONT - Estate Nicely landscaped and fenced with attractive gate entrance — Modern two - bedroom masonry dwelling with fireplace, family room. 2-ear garage. Betas sold furnished tor MAIM, terms to suit._ JAMES A. TAYLOR “ 7732 Highland Rd. (MM) OR 4-0306 Open Pally ■ gun. • - Rural-Homes ROOM ROME - to Nolly - good pert at town — privilege* on toko *t ena .of atreet == move rl ' to - t$Mt - with SIAM dawn. WILLI AUB LAKE FRONT - IM <1. «g toautitol tok* bunt. spaekms bi-level hem* to Ut torsi. Carpeted _ _ . . 'ape* and flraptoe*. Lake level eonaUU af family roam with ftrspiaan — kltoban. laundry raan many axtras. Friaad INCOME rtoMtar-w- - with SUM d 2 BEDROOM BOMS l siding — g tar garaga — |_ L*k* prirttogaa — *6 300 -y | Two I Six raem* ana cam on nraii Ooae. 3 roots aag aalh up. B***{6 ROOM CLEAN SblCH - Acroea “to, ga* heat. Two ear ga- street tram eonvenlenl seeole lskt - - Mpi;i,sgB,,t yMfc..tota,j—it—16 m r'-iramumm.......... otowd. Priced to 6MM OL no - da"? pajwient. eleetes onto and * room HOWE — Baismsto - on goad eredtt wiUmeye yeu to. |\s sens kmrri^rtn« golf eom-.s . John K. Irwin Ftoaes read ear add under SALE A SOKO - REALTORS f UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE ; mjrrmm 6656016 -- 0663 Dixie. Clsrksloh Phono FE 3-9446 — Eve. FE 4-3436 1 U no On*. MA g-UM ANNETT . rooms, j _________________n 2nd fir. Full buem'ent. gas furnace. Oftraft. $6,200 to aettlr - h , OHQj -----------——zz\ Sylvan Lake Front . gstow wltS* basement, mat, flreplaoe and cat House needs some wef—.... ------it. at lake frontaes to City . of sylvan Lake. 612.500. cash to mart, Auburn Heights ----- Older frame home an mete street, soned commercls owner’s targe apt and g race plus 2 rentals (tneon $150 par mo.). Priced to eel 04,100 down. Lotus Lake —Extra, Lot Attractive 3 bedrm. one ft., home in good eondltton. 24 ft. ■-------LR wttfa fireplace, dlningr— enclosed tun porch. 1____ basement, ga* neat. 2 ear attached garage. Excellent ■Mid beach end dock. Mortg. terms. .Lake Front Ranch Brick end stum. 28 ft, LR with fireplace, bufU -ta bar Vita refrigerator, -wr ' enT%kltchen with I and alee white bird 2 If*- bedrm*.,-oak floors, utility rm., to ed garage. 1M ft. beach, good water i T&DS Realtors. 28 E. Huron St. Open Evenings fe Sunday 1-4 FE8-Q466 Seminole Hills Engllab colonial. 2 bedrooma and ,u. i*' living room. **Sulet" pcesesatoc ar Brand; New Four • bedroom eoiontot. hew under 'eonetniettoa In aeguler- An-gelua Golf View Estates, toatur-mf ground floor laundry room ‘ — *" betas, family i ARRO We Build^Wfe .Trade EXCLUSIVE PLUS LOVELY BE! 3-bedroom ranch, maple eugbeerde. built • to oven md range In ana-elous kitohan, slate entrance, lta baths 1-tt. family room with flro- D—r l DEAL ON THIS tpoUoas ranch. carpeting in all. Raady kitchen Ml Jaigaea- stun bungalow. MtftoMS, plastered walls etisir* to larga unfinti’ * tie. paved street, weed I near LaBano and Northei achooto. Full prloe $10,500. i part down payment. •lO CASS-EUZABETH ROAD PHONE 682-2211 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE BATEMAN Trading . „ Is Our Buhfness — West Side Ctty 3-Wroom brick with basement and 3-car gang*. Recreation room end other featune. At oily conveniences and country atmosphere. Owner out ef lawn, quick posseMlan end price induced f only 611,950 With $1,200 down piu coete. CAJX NOW. ttoTg TRADE -Everything Special In tbit extra too* > bedroom raae) er bust In UN. Om bet wat* ___MODERN WAY Extra Lot . • * garage Is the twriu* on this 3-bedroom, tile batot. tltoc softener end eta* deal to the city a________■ Just 812.650 with 6L2M down ^ pi us add v*or 'round 1 privileges, too. KAMPSEN m w. Huron MU FE 44021 Iter 0 cell • total SCHRAM $9950 -N^-MQNEY DOWN (on yetoDR)—-— -bedroom ranch, with 14x15 ItvBlf rm* a a 15 combination kltoban amdtaeStovnmlBBWKC g*T “ beat and 12 x 66 ra “ duplicate on your tot c THE BIG T - 3-bedroom tri-level, with bricky front. ' ygg BATEMAN WAT Suburban —■.: With toko privileges. Real alee I- EQUITY IB CASH .. Good Credit And down payment yea can 1__ , will move you tale Into extra sharp 3-bedroom with garage. Proshly decorated end spending Inside and With haaemant. gas heat and 3-ear garage. Convenfinr weatton-wMh-btack top etnto just south at town, wall to wtoTeatpetaig - - - -basement. This la rea should net lr_* ^— disappointed, town. 1X7.050 disappointed. Owner moving o sliding patio am iu ■ neat, wul dupuee,* «, your tot or ours, TRADE to the OLD end LIVE ta the NEW. Northern High —~ 4 bedrooms, carpeted Hvtag room, separate dtotag room. fuU basement. gas boat. On a largo tot. Atom, elding, end lta-eea garage. Price reduced to settle estate. Vacant - 2-bedToom bungalow with carpeted living room. YouoMtown kitchen, oil heat. alum, stormk sod screens, hear Wleuer and Lincoln Jr. high, terms. . -WAN W. SCHRAM r REALTOK FE 5-9471 042 308LYN COR. MANIFIXLD OPEN EVENINOS AND OUNDAYB MULTIPLE L10TINO BERVICE TRADE THE BATEMAN WAT WMUcr ntMlM . M$77 i!'TiS»tr6SBd* KMT Established In 1010 WEAT SIDE .... MBR 2 complete baths. C*r- STOUTS Best Buys -Today HUNTOON LAKE — Pries_ tor quick sale on this attractive t bedroom aluminum Sided ranch iiiinii g| isiiinin Hi tog lew* aita fireplace, family mtobou. til* bate, large utility with oil I—* King stoo M x lit lot. 1 *11.500. easy terms. Owner — consider 10x10 house trailer a* partial payment. intooy w ONE ACRE - Faroe! tali neat 2 bedro— to (Meed area, beat, ahmmtH|BMMiVMMta screen*, fduy Insulated, Xaegf porea swakur. fir'—",1' too at cnlylie.iM. dALL farm - lta asrac I ed-with--tale cue. J>LU8 -----------‘tl pufpose. 11 ------------ratoaLh «^i£S’taTt£2i-- tton of Pontiac. Northern High school ■ are*. Only 66666/Bite eau terasfc— ’ - a M BBTBBIT 11 U BaraW BOhfwd area, attracUr* I bedroem lta MMj — ““ fleers, gUs- s snd*batf fo paled Ilvtne ream, dlnlne ell. topped euf kitchen. Pi____■ _____... . -larga- reereatlen room. Q*S beat. Paved street. Now at 614,000. IMMEDIATE POMEgglON - 10 Hertje cheneo to nave 14 ACRES — Ideal weekend site dr year-around, 2 good modern cabins. Towering pines. Trout itnam. Only M minutes northwest of Pontiac. 815,000. Terms. 5 - ~ Floyd Kent1 Inc., Realtor --- 2200 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph_ FE BV^-Opw^Eve*. O'NEIL MODEL Open Daily. 2 to 9 2602 SHAWNEE — Beauty Rita’* newest ’’idea Home of lawt—A rvnifr" || sm«._ —r ft tor furnished and professionally landscaped far your Ranch . . . A 20X70 ranch'bom* on * setting 164x225! Lake and boaeh privileges on Oakland Lake toot Living" room Is 16x27, full dtatog S. 14x20 FAMILY ROOM and rg* bedroom*, oak floors, trod walls Oversized bear garage. AM OUTSTANDING VALUE AT tlf.MO. CONVENIENT TERMS are POtaOLEI Brick . . . house, caH 714-tak UnuBaatlnveotment INCOME FROM 5FAM9bV WILL PAY FOR IT IN ( YEARS- . Both 5bsdnom apartments, era on W. H. BASS 2-BBDRobiA Rome furnished with 00. ft.v^lake frontage, fire- OAKLAND LAKE FRONT. BEAUTI-«~0N $»»■ -tot la exeaHeat location. CaU B. C. HUMr. Realty, ON HOWARD STREET NEAR PERRY STREET 2 house* and 1 More buHdtag. Now used ** apartments. Beta houses haw I apartments. Rsntola total $265 per manta. 6U.6W on mMMtoMT ----i toqd Hempstead FE 44204. teeSWV WATER FRONT LOT Only 01,600 : 071 down; 625 monthly. 41741 Van Horn Rd.. BeUeviU*. Mlch.PA 1-2161. WATER FRONT — 1-YEAR-OLD FAMILY CABIN BITES 16 - 46 Acres Triwto 635 per aero aud io — Write t phone tor prices • map. / Wilderness Valley, Vsncolona Ed. 7 miles was! at U527, near Gay- 3100 DOWN WiH buy BRAND NEW SPRUCE LOG ntodtrn summer cottage and lot with enclosed bathroom, tub, shower, tollot, -toeoiitofy, fix, tur* light. HxM two bedroom olio. Fin* water well, elec, pump, hot water heater, double beam sink on 0 foot sink board. 4 celling fixtures, aeptte tank, I double Wall receptacles. 220 oloe. rang* receptacle. Lara* picture window, o windows, gjg aaymtarti me. SAVE 5200 brokar tees by buying ____ _j obligation. On Chippewa River located to miles north or Bemas (on M) and 3 miles East. Also new cottage on Townline lak*. 8350 den, bad. 635 per month, includes interest. Mo closing oosts. Weekday afternoon* and all day Saturdays, Sundays. Write Henry Phillips, Baffytoa 477. Ml eh. PhoneKv 2-5567. Fro* brochure end map. overlooking the 1 beat. CALL TO BEE! Lakefront . too. Heatatotor i (tone but laundry _ _ ____ heeled utility room. SEE THIS LOTUS LAKE LAKEFRONT HOME TODAY I- Humphries FE 2-9236 to answer call FE 3-5623 D N. Telegraph Road- ar Multiple Luting Service Partridge REAL VALUE to got Inspiration and Ideas tor adaption to the Homo to Your Futon. Mrs. Bette. OR TRADING 15 TERRIFIC large kitchen end dining area family room----divided -ement — recreation room lta .car garage —»2gnoed r yard. Be* this TODAY! - ORTONVILLE - Petee and quiet you will enjoy. Easy to -ear* for etomtawp sided. 2 bedroom home. Large ltvtad room, separate (fintag, mod-on kitchen: basement, lta car garage. Large lot. ILMe dan plus closing cost. LOOKXNO FOR OOOD EAST 1 arm a B B C. Priced ugu, for quick sale. » PLEASANT LAKE WOODS — 62 last .rancher overlooking Pleasant Lake. Four bedrooms in att. family room, natural flraptoe*. Built In*, lta car plastered garage. Hr-260 den . plua cloetaf coete — WIU Trade. o.i. too mqnHt down Oa* bee*, targe front porch, mclooef rear porch. Corner let. Full price 06.300 Nothing dfewn. no closing oeete- ray o;neil REALTOR ■ 102%. TELMRAFH OPEN 9 TO 9 BE 3-7102 ■' V ...Jr.'OL' UEBj MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE —Look range end we tare sun yen will not find one of demperabl* value. 'Everything In this home, from the bum-ins to tae Mlebea. to tae flraptoe* in the ttvtoKjHito ood end privileges an LI r Lake. CaU soon tar 3 Intment. ICO’LAKEERDNiJ t; has been "buUt for living." Priood et 026.000. It to eurroun-1 od by eonoparaUe property ai to e eight to behold FOX BAY ESTATES oxoeUent be tor you, * |... ,. family room with flroptoe*. den. two baths, basement area, bultt-in even and range, dishwasher and en attached 2-ear garage. tojira WIN* the home la avaUablt tor showing at aU time*. Attractive bank tonne can be arranged. REALTOR PARTRIDGE • Is the Bird to See 100* W. Huron Hkih 3 FAMILY - CHAMBERLIN IT. Yeariy lncom* 61,«l. nlOB aswr 666 month, plus pro-rated tag and insurance 3M-6ill aft*r Atom, 3-FAMILY INCOME Brings ta in per weak. A money maker. AU to good condition. Newly painted and a MW gas furnace. 615.666 wfih tonne. h>-quira et Holtorbaeka AutoFarta, 9-F( Fut your g-g wen paying .-----------------.For farflsei infor- mation. call Warren stout Real-tor. 77 N, Bidtoew St. FE 56165. dto HOWARD STREET NEAR FERRY STREET or wiU trad* fir geed lend 000- 8100 deposit RESERVES a oeautl-ful ntodern cottage and lot. 1 model* to choose from. Payments he low as m month, Ineludum -Interest. Com* early end select dhole* lot. 10 ml. No. of Remui, 3 ml. Eaete Beautiful river tad lak* lots. AU day Saturdays, JMMMsff mobile snEs,'iS6N’T UtHTTiGr NEW SPRUCE LOO COTTAGE Only 110*0. SmaU down payment, baL 620 month. I bomoom sire. On beautiful Ghtppewa. MODERN eotttg*. READY TO MO VS INTO 0360.00 down. Enclosed complete bath eat. Chrome trim, copper plbg. Well, pump, water heater, chimney, septic tank. Late at Diamond. Townline Lake*. Office 10 ml. No. of Remus, lta ml. Bast. Fro*, brochure, map, plats. Writ* Henry FhlUlpl, Barryton NEW REDWOOD FINISH COT-tag* and Lot at Diamond Lake er Chippewa River, Oeateanp* - *7*77 *tyto with eave and awning type picture windows. 10‘xtO' I-bedroom «ti* basic heme en large wooded lot. Elec, water avail. Concrete floor, g models. From 61601 Includes lot. 0600 down, 635 for brochure end map. PHILLIPS CO- Barryton 0M. Mich. 0 miles v at Remus 00 M. Fh. BY * NEW COTTAGE - WOODBD LOT. North retort byttato forest. Hunt, fish, swim, UltS. OUO down, 623 lUi-toiy SCOTT LAKE ROAD month, land cootraet. ~ P"* INDIANWOOD H" SUBDIVISION ^ •slset your bemestl* npw. Ideal pro* torijaW raiBiglgii. toiurtog better s. Phone today. CRAWFORD AGENCY s y- ’ n 5mw ahs . igfUtt * ™-_ TWgriii^a— uk*. mi &.-2Luatoti- -- Cherokee Hills Tea’ll ara thle ceetroted can. ewrentm^^locatloo — L^.‘urn ***** * W« Bird. Realtor • 903 Community^ Bank Bldf. / ~ Wanted!! I . . .. FB 4-0865 j] Mi fwn : si „ 2ta ACRE 8MALL FARM New 3 Mroem brick hem* I North Clarkston area. Sell er dt~ Heat*. Watts Realty. NA 7-2W# ACRES—ON PAVED M15—NEAT ^room hooae, wood floors, oil fur* moo’. Move right to. S*B your pro* S75a moota.400*"" I*,M0, W-d®”* * .acre—near Daviaburg. l block 613.500. 63.500 down. » ACRE BSTATN with attraettva modern dti^ncd ns* lusuHna** w ACRE FARM—right next door home, now furnace. Urge fin, orchard, garage, black paaL -» Make your yjwn lake. Only . ACBBS — near WhlteJLakd ------I ___________ tf flhrarisu. U path of expanalon, tawoqiators Me j tfrrWTim —AU toraLtond, Make offer. 100 ACRES - Jlen t roads. V Clarkston, ■ petti at at 66 OR 00 ACRES — with good bait <® » OOTOor near M15 - 522.0004 ■uttaMe terms to good buyer. « Pica** road ear ad* under ear.# HOUSES entitled RURAL-HOME£ UNDERWOOD REALEOTATB ; *25-2615 <605 DUle. Oarkaten 26 ACRES Treut stream, rich » —— Mostly unable. Will take Mtor to trade tor pert ef down paymeaL - HAGSTROM _ : ---r—'---REALTOR • - • 500 W. Huron OR 44m Evenings oaU 882 T1H1_ 50 ACRES. FOUR BEDROOM HOW§ 80 ACRES—6 B&DRMSi to toed od llvtoi enlM-e land t condition. 1 Basement 5ub^droonl* 3 gMd buna and Lear J ‘ —id town. C away and P • Kuoa Dtnu ana My lMlietped I n parlor, jW|l HH aS ~ COUNTRY LIVING : 76 aero* with 2 bedroem beuo* and fun hue am ant. 1 acre lake id . flowing wett to boot. W.3S0 term#. C. PANGUS, Rctltor I .rr" ORTONVILLE , r 422 MU1 Bt. —----*- ShIq Bk5it«t >f>pw1y y SACRIFICE Hsr.r rip T.im Brick and BUckBuUdlog 5.000 eauara foot, aoned M3, aeq, downtown, 334-4520. Bwi—w OufTtwHItB W “BUiniilft COTTAGE 61995 With river lot. lilt da. IM me. Fro* picture bunting, flitting amp, FHILUPB OO., Burrytun 1 497 Mleh . YEAR AROUND HOME 5 aaft I bedroom home wMBwar bet sand beach no Bald Eagle >*k* near Ortonvffle, 616.960, tome. C PANGUS, Realtor ORTONVILLE t Mfflgt. NA 7-3ela Utt OcrtBH 1* ACRES Jlta OOF of Rd. frontage near Uarkaton. 03.95*. 0305 down. C. PANGUS, Realtor (MtTOHVBiLE 68-MU1 Bt. ' NA T-001A BLOOMFIELD TOWNim?] “IlAtj. avaUablt t ». FE 6-2536, BUBD4EBB LOT Good level ornamental lot 27 x 10F at Elisabeth Lak* Read mid Ascot Streets. Meal tor attic# or XARKBTON. LARGE BEAUTIFUL B. C. HUter ReaSy7T?>4Ht. ‘ Ladd’s RmhbnF Sfto* -»M^6NWII1H7h-8jyBfAkMi^; pajssura aw ACRES - hill;b and dales, mr en wtch- HAGSTROMl RKAi mant. Call RYAN MJLA9VS * ASSOCIATE High Income Potential Service retell outlets I anmoub^t^BLl AAW DRIVE IN. INCLUDES PROp. trty. $10,000 down* wSTm. yNiY3ESSA^ “BETTER THAN A BAR” s Liquor* - patent medtotae* — own* . heart of a torlvtogclto, luS,. REALTOR PARTRIDGE Is the Bird to Set I &3SOSU EX?£pfloNAi; : STANDARD STATIQ1# IN PONTIAC | CALL to! atoll days B8-60SJ altar • gjt WILL TRADE M CADILLAC FOR , TAVERN I We dancing, BO food, building - SUM with firing quarter!, groesed $32,21346 to ML Mi • IM buy. $22,383 with (UN do” *--chid** r**l estate. Divorce lor selling. No. lilt._______ rail RESTAURANT HAB EVERY $0|« Clothing DESIRABLE FEATURE POS8I- -----------------S~ ELK. Ho.' 1 Stainless Steel tlx-tures, clean, iff conditioned, bury, and all packed tat email well designed bldg., e at T:M. SUM down. Will IL UNIVERSAL REALTORS ' 834-355! WYMAfT FURNITURE CO. IT H. HURON PE 4-4981 18 W, PIKE _ PE 2-2150 MAYTAG ELECTRIC PETER. USED hEMALTi T^SEl MAHOGANY DUNCAN PHYFE DIN-lng room eulto, 9-piece, I1H. OL MH1. _________ MAHOGANY DRESSER $1$. CHIP-feTOh* 315. Table li PE 44382.. WANT TCTSELL A GOING BUSINESS? WANT TO BUY A GOING BUSINESS? WeAre < ... Business Specialists MISCELLANEOUS AR' ARTICLES I H7M. —____ola 19" TV. new ........$139,95 Zenith 23” Cohsotette TV .... SIMM Frtgldalre washers, automatic, " cycle, Installed ........... Maytag Electric Drayer v.... *ua Kdvinelor 12 foot retrigefelor $178 Tappan gas range 38“ THE QOOD HOUSEKEEPING SMC ONE POWER MOWER, I TELE' vlilon*. chest, vanity, desk, record player, table*, ddepes. garden tools, and odd* and end. PE 4- WARDEN REALTY 3834 Wert Huron 233-7137 WILL EXCHANGE 817J00 building free and clear restaurant, ylgieH b^nyd condl-tbe street from Lake Charlevoix. Went* Income property, submit. LEW HILEMAN, S.E.C. Sols Land Contracts SMW win handle. G PANGUS, Realtor OBTONVILLB $3$ MIB at. ,___, NA T-38D DAVENPORTS. 3 CHAIRS. Hollywood bed. i table, ran*, pi 4*30IS between 4-5. 3 RCX)MS FURNITURE BRAND NEW WITH RANGE— REFRIGERATOR $319-$1S MONTH New furniture of all kinds. Fee-tory seconds. .About 14 price. Boau-' turn bedroom and living warn guaranteed nuam and washers. All M lies 815, be s $30. Odd______ _ —■ beds, radios. living r I and sofas. Ei =-•- ACTION an pew land contract, large or small, call Mr. Bitter PE MU79 Broker. 3860 Elizabeth Lake Raadt BALANCE DUE $6,937 AT |7S PER month — It per cent discount. Adams Realty. FE 8-4395 CHATTEL MORTGAGE ■ J. J. JOLL REALTY 88 AN IMMEDIATE BALE FOB YOUR Land Contracts Be* ua before you deal, t Stout Realtor. IT N. Sagini SECOND MORTOAOE FOR SALE. Almont, Mteh._____________ WooHd Cafftracti rj. Van Watt, 4M8 DUle Hwy. Land Contracts NO WAITING $25 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE PAST. CONVKNIKNT Ante or Other Security 34 Month* to Repay Home & Auto Loan Co. -li. PERRY------- FE $-8121 BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WH ERE TOO CAR BORROW UP TO $50(X OFFICES Df Signature AUTO or FURNITURE Up to *4 months to rapay , PHONE PE X-9804 • -OAKLAND . LOAN COMPANY B Pontiac Mata Bank Bldg. -LOANS WHEN YOU NEED STvT $25 to $500 Wo win ba glad to help you STATE FINANCE CO. |8g Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 4-1574 TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER ROMEO 214 E. St. CLAIR LOANS,gg TO 8500 AUTOS LrvxirocK HOUSEHOLD OOOD6 LOAMS W» TO gggQ . BAXTER-UVING8TONE »1 Pontiac State Bank Bulldini FE4-T538-9 CASHUNLIMITED BdMW plan. BvmoAel you “— take! or carnal buii fate one low month); m oaujh U Mb CASH toons to $3,000 - Cleoeehdete your debt* with «p to 4$ month* to NW. Mb feet of an i ktadeng ww provide credit Bfr Family Acceptance Corp. Bf Mattenel Bidg. —M W. Hum „ Telephoo* PE g-4*2l BARGAIN HOUSE . Cat* at Lafayette PE 1-8842 BUY—SELL—TRADE tbttrelobed. me Lefayette 9X12 RUGS ........ VINYL LINOLEUM .... PLASTIC WALL TILE BOO TILE OUTLET, 191 paid, $200. 334-7381. 21 INCH USED 1 TV. PE MIST. _ Walton. Corner $fj<_____________ 13 INCH OB ELECTRIC STOVE, timer, perfect condition. $103. PE tan. ____________ 33 INCH ELECTRIC RANGE. GOOD ooudttton.W. PE HW. 31 INCH GAB STOVE. GOOD CON- ABOUT ANYTHING YOU WANT FOB THE BOMB CAN BE POUND AIL A 8 SALES. A little out of the way bat -QRP lee* >e pay. Fqrnltare and nppU- Wa buy, i_____„_________— and look around. 2 acres o parking. Phone FE 54241. Open Mon. joint. Ml 1 24 MONTHS TO PAY 4 mile* B. of Pontiac or . ___ of Auburn Height* on Auburn. M59. UL 2-3300. automatic wnabar $49.95, Dryers I23.I3. TV* >13.98 ~ AUTOMATIC SINGER ZIG-ZAG IN oonaote. Built-in dial for making fancy designs, nr*— holes, monograms. BRAND NEW 1933 RCA 13 INCH portable TV gad' stand, $136, bRown and oold LAwsON TYPi: CARPETING. BEIGE. 100 PERCENT ncqttnisaiTS filament nylon ptla, 133 yerde. will sail ail *r part, $4.75 par yard, Ease Carpet, 30-713T —* sr APR 1-5221___________________ ‘■apt*! ' week -ti- Mtchlgan Fluorescent. CLOSING OUT Bedroom eeta, box aprihge and mat-tree*. living room tote, chairs, rocker*, lassos and lab)**, odd chests, dressers, bed*, bunk bed* EVERYTHING MUST OOl ---Easy Terms UDgMOMooTFirrmo to. 4131 Dixie Drayton Palin* ________ OB 34724 CLEAN I FRIOLDAIRE. 11 CUBIC , tl Park Place. COUCH AND CHAIR. LIKE folding bed couch and matching chair, automatic ovenrangt, 2 months old, lamptabl* and cocktail labia, reasonable prices. FE ELUXE IRONRITE IRONER_______ sale. rob., good' Condition. OR Hit DORMEYER MIXER. NEW. PLAV- DREXEL DINING ROOM SET. MA-hogany with, china cabinet, 386. Lovely china eervUe far 12. $25. MAHOOANY I f tarings up t sugar, coffee I per oent Soap, YES! UP TO tt PER CENT For free catalog and ' showing how voy i paces. $47-1377. I BALE OREEN KRiITHLER GAS STOVE. 37 INCHES. Dm oven ' - ” “ apartment rCKES, WITH i^Refrtjeretor, • QUARTER JARS. 1-10 O M crocks, PE 3-7416.1 t'AMSM* ~ -i—___________ $46 IN GOOD SHAPE. PEAR80NB FURNITURE MOVED PRACTICALLY NEW 5 PIECE Dinette eet and Hotpotnt Electric Rente. MA 5-4631, sacrifice beioe triple width drape*. $35.,6623933. SINGER AUTOMATIC ZIO ZAO sewing machine. Dial model for deailgra. buttcR■. bqlffc. ovegnat par mi Unlver; i oath* at I i cash bala y- dresser. Matching ------- also Underwood portable type-wrtter. OR 3-7773. SPIN WASHER. 160. REPRIGERA- TAKE OVER PAYMENTS ON 36' Magic Chef Ye* range, 1962 model FIRESTONE STORE 40 N. Saginaw USED TVS, $15 UP. PEERS aF-pllance*. EM -3-4I14. VALNUT DINING ROOM SET CON-slstlnt of • chairs Including boat chair, table has 2 extra center leave*. WT Alee Ml *1— bad end vanity. $20. Call 682-3873. WESTINOHOUSE BUILT-IN OVEN. |66. Kemnore Oil Space Banter, 88.333 BTU, 346. Oh 1-1834. WHITE LEATHER SETTEE, *15, brown Danish lounge, $60, .*76 Lenox nff. Joelyn- . . WESTINOHOUSE REFRIGERATOR WYMAN’S USED BARGAIN STORE 4. eta* gee'rang* .... $34.36 ’’ gas rang* . . ..... $43.36 '• Elec. range ....... $».9S ec. refrigerator ........ 839/^ 2 piece oofa bod suite ... 3 piece sectional sola ... 3 piece curved sect tonal .. . 839.95 . $49.95 DeWALT CUT OFF SAW. 4-WHEEL trailer, 335-7548, It Hadrffl Cotirt. ELECTRIC STOVE. HOT WATER heater, refrigerate! dryer, res*., MA t-l ELNA AUTOMATIC ZIO ZAO BEW- "Super fWtenfcl bote*, appliques, etc. Tax. _____ payments of $$.63 per month for FORMICA stock sixes and odd sizes Discount price* — Midi Sic aqaere ft. and up Double sinks glO.IO Paucette $6.96 Ranga Hoods git and up Roll end vinyls op to 53 per cant oft PONTIAC KITCHEN SPECIALTIES FE 4-3323 917 Orchard Lake Bd. fuLL SBT, FAFBR HANQINS tool*, hteludmg stc$teddan. Large canvas 14x15. heavy duty. |- paste brush. Storm windows screens. 267 Stale 8t. GAB FURNACE. USED. LIKE NEW. Call PF 2-7164. Good Used Lumber HOMART OUN TYPE OIL CONVER-ston burner, complete with fittings. Mower end-$88 get: tenk, -363i GR 3-2631. S storm windows •croons, wooden, 24x24 glass, ^ if**' HOT WATER HEATER, JOOALLON — Tonsumera approved 889.95 82*yi and $49.95 mi — ■ -sad construction i any street south - — ...______to Orchard Lake. Mich- igan Fluorescent, 3(1 Orchard Hjiron 81 ,*ntf ui KOTON — th* n MOVED TO 210 E. PIKE — PEAR- LTDN STAINLESS STEEL oouoie sink, slngls lever ' ‘ $49,96. 8pray and strainers »»«». Automatic softener, cash and carry. naw $125. Thompson. 7005 MSI Why didn’t you tell me you wanted to lie down? SEE US FIRST AND HAVE. JOHN DEERE. HARTLAND AREA HDWE. Phone HABTLAND 2511. AN8EN spinets (now at $415) s)W SPINET piano at $546 LEW BETTERLT MUSIC COMPANY NS Pro* parking In rear ----- abwbemYTilWIi BABY GRAND PIANO fruit wood finish. Complstely rafjn-Ished and rebuilt. MM _ -MORRIS MUSIC JULY BARGAINS >nn Spinet Organ .......... H.- Boauttful mahogany and, bench KINSMAN Oritm ............. Ate fuu spinet OR AND PIANO , Am eendWcn. *V and PIANO TUNING—LESSONS WIEGAND music co: PONTIAC’S Shaet Music ~ ' REAL BUYS IN - ANYTHING IN MUSIC AT THE WORLD’S LARGEST MUSIC STORE CHAIN (.RINNElffr 27 8. SaSHiaw, St. •iso at lb* Mall Store PHONE PE 3-7168 «th' Lak* and Telr-PHONE 662-3422 HAMMOND CHORD ORGAN Walnut with bench and lot* muete. $475.00, term*. MORRIS MUSIC Telegraph Bd. FE 14 Acroes from Tel Huron GRINNELL’S PONTIAC MALL .Ofgan Sale toor model* and trade-ins THDMAE OROAN-T THiBudll With dal*, blond ftntib. ortg. tpecial $368. HAMMOND P-100 ORGAN—coni pact •Ingle keyboard with bee* pedals, «vo»>. r prig $805 — special $496. • • ORNAMENTAL IRON PORCH AND LOWERY HOLIDAY—spinet organ. CABINETS. 1578 Opdyt*. glassware and CRANBERRY EPERONE, 2 HANG-lag lamp*. Furniture, dishes,. etc. Y-knot- Antiques, 1034$ OakhlU, ------- — FARM BELL WITH POST BRACK-*t — $4» — Also farm bell stdt-ahls for cupola. $$$■ OB 3-2*32. Hi-Fi—TV—RtHfloi 1962 PORTABLE TVl 1 ,.JF, LIKE new. 236-4394_ two cittpone citizens band I a payments, ,$13$ each, itth transoceanic shortwave refer. $35. WUM Garrett 19W-». PE 4-3470. USED TV — YEAR WARRANTY ..-inch Zenith .. $64 new tub) 17-incb Motorola ...... $44 new tub EYLVAN $TEREQ-TV 682-019 Water Softeners WATER SOFTENER 2 YEARS OLD Sola Miicsllaneodt 1 OAS STOVE. 1 TABLE. 1 t dow fen. 20": l rolleway 24-ft. extension ladder: 15 Lon* Star boat and traitor. ^^3g^m0tor i rntw-oAB forced air fur .floor model, I Heatuig gtnd C TALBOTT LUMBER Olay Inetalled |n doors and win- Petroleum Co., SSi-SOf I WHEEL TRAILER, duty. Call PE l-IT Hj90^:-- -~~"=rrr X*’ HEAVY Asphalt tO* (Rendomy THE FLOOR SHOP 9 BTU. LUX AIR OIL FURNACE, Exc. condition. ~ ‘ 6-1631 - MA 6-8537. 057 FORD. FORD TRACTOR. rotoUtter. ecootcr., skill sew, air , compressor complete. OR tdNt i ' BEAUTIFUL SINGER SEWING machine 4n eensels cabinet Zagger makes monograms, designs and buttonholes with ^ changeable cams. 111.10 cash price. Or. fi.n month. Michigan Necchl-Elna. 333-4521. That Hall will i 3 ARE WILLfNO TO FAY )RE to got a siding madr to t the ttftof your msr. ■ VALLELY GO. PE LOO PHA Terms AUOU8T- AND SEPTEMBER SPE-cial: 18 par cent an all Christmas Card orders. GENERAL FHOfTtNO ANP OFFICE SUPPLY, IT W. Lew- supplies. Brothers ■ Pei and Rustoteu. HEIGHTS SUPPLY Ml Lapeer Bd. / FE 4^421 BATHROOM SINK. MEDICINE with fluorescent llghu. FE 6-4N*. BABY BASKET. AUTOMATIC STEtt-lllser. maternity clothes SMjf. 9 pur at green drape*. 1 pair nr PLA8TIC PISE. -------- priced per hundred feet: t» fM*i I’”$7JJ; IVs” $10J0: 1H’ *12.87; 3” *22.89. O. A. Thomp-V 7005 M-69 West. PLUMBING bargains free standing toilet. *11.1$: lf$Tir~ beater. jiOidd: Fplef * Iw «$M *59.95. Plberglas laundry tray, t $19.95 32-lncn shower stall, t *».«. 3 bowl DM, *2.95. h , *2.95. tuba. til. end up, Pipe ... and threadad. SAVE PLUMBINO CO.,172 S. Saginaw. PE 5-2100. ROUND OAK OIL PURNACB, IN new condition, pipes, duet*, blower. end dec, starter, 153 N. Paddock. SPECIAL^ i g V grooved Mahogany . i ■St Bieeb » j Bearing Nylon Drawer ding Doors any Me* any c STOP THAT DUST CALCIUM CHLORIDE MOVED TO 210 E. PIKE-PEAR* FOR DUSTY ROADS OR DRIVES mi —M0 LB. RAO . BLAYLOCK COAL A SUPPLY CO, Si Orchard Lak* Ave. FE 1-7181 Start Equipment SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE, used office furniture, 'typewriters, and adding machines. Forbes. 4501 hWxto Hwy.. X» 347*7 M Prank gt„ -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------ BUN TUNE UP MACHINE, I 1025 Oakland Ave. ...E SALVATION ARMY "RED SHIELD STORE 118 WEST LAWRENCE ■ ‘ ‘ your i Everything Clothing, Pul -THIS WEEK SPECIALS— V-groove Mag. 4' x 8' . t 1HARDBOARD 4’ x »• .... 11.(9 4t“ A-2 Birch 4' X V . $12.95 -DRAYTON PLYWOOD after «. ~APACHECAMP TRAILER ■ $ • (toy. clearance sale. \ -forced to eell 30 new 1962 Cunp Trailer*, at uaed trailer prices. By MidiMy, August 12. Apache factory home town dealer open dallyjar APACHE CAMP TRAILERS. ML .now.-sold'’ by the Apache fac-■o.y dealer in Detroit. The new improved models el the low'priee. No handling charges. Bring this •4 — save dollari. Campers “ TOUR-AIDE TRAILER HITCH, 1 Desoto tor pasta with ll$4 mo - * sirens, rafrigorator, bed sprl ——d mattreee. OR XI73. TWIN BABY STROLLER, $36. i ALUMINUM AWNINGS. 122 Center St. FE 2- SED ALUM II pies, window $4 to >20. FE t USED SCREENS WATER AND SUMP PUMPS. NEW, rebuilt and aeretced. Used refrigerators 673-0122. Midwest Plumb-Uig. 6005 Highland Bd. at AEPoft-WATER TANKS. 2. GALVANIZED, open top., oval ends. IM mL each. tW ft. dean, Malta offer. FE 1-4944 before 9 p.m. - I da4 T—It-MacM—ry 61 ABE toot FRONT-END LOADER. Oliver 35 Dteeel tractor and roto-vator. -Pant and topsoil xrtodi __Crescent Lake Rd. and Haicnary. COMMERCUL CONVEYOR . horsepower. Wleeeneln engine. IF beK ribbon, tire meant-'*—-■ excellent operating. EM ■wanna)*. beauti- ful walnut finish, ortg. 1(95 — special $433. BALDWIN QROASONIC ORGAN— 3 manuals, bate pedate, beautiful walnut finish, ortg. - $1,495 — special *4*$. HAMMOND M-J—home and church | spinet organ, 3 manuals, bass ptdals, percussion, Walnut finish, *“ jWMjtlJHWMI-—! __________ ..Ini spinet eegnn, percussion, reverberation, 3 manuals, bass pedals, keyboard. Leslie speakers, ortg. $1,7" clal *980. HAMMOND CHORD' ORGAN—orlg. $1036 — special $$M. B8TEY CHORD ORGAN —__________ ful walnut flnltb, bass pedals, orlg. $443 — special $337. HAMMOND CHURCH CONSOLE with locked top, reduce 3159 floor demo, model. GRINNELL’S , PONTIAC MALL ~ . POODLE M3 UP. NO MONEY, down, $1.31 n week. PI $-3111, ------, evenings, till 9.' AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT AKC MINIATURE POODLES. 9 ' AKC DACHSHUND PUPS. *10 down. Stud dogs. FE 8-253$. SEBOUB "PUFFtn. 'akc REOIS-fered. Phase 683-1956. Air-Flp Aircraft, constructed. 1L_- ---- Trotwood. Garway. Bee-line. BLACK COCKER PUPPIEB. CHAM- COCKER SPANIEL. 3 YEAR OLD male, blond, thorough-brad, no papers, trained, loves children, $15. Call after 4:33—OR 3-4344. Rd. OR 3-3MI. ________ CAMPERS FOR RENT OR Bi mm Lhpewr’Rd- 333-M13. RENT V OUR TRAVEL TRAILER I Fit Shop, M Williams. ’ (Steep* up to S people) HOLLY TMYI& C&A0H •— 13213 Roily Rd., Holly Mil 4-4771 ' i Mill Rg&M oM long hal 374-WT3 aftei FREE TO GOOD HOME, YEAR old Labradore Retriever. FE 24813 between 6 and 7 p.m.. r.m. BUifuinv 1245 Plate Hwy OH >141$ SPECIAL FALL PRICES LOVEABLE 3 YEAR OLD AXC brown miniature poodle and Oxter clipper*. FE 1-1636. Sleeps 4-5 MFO. and sold by: WA-WA Trailer MFG Co.. 2481 W. Huron. MALE COCKER PUPPIES. BLACK and buff. $ wka. AKC registered. MA 4-2827. TRAVEL TRAILERS ; Avalalr—The naw Ugnt weight, self contained. Also Fleet Wing end Tawes Brave eelf contained trett-ere. PARAKEET BABY MALES. *4.95. 39$ First, Rochester. OL 14372. PARAKEETS. CANARIES, TROPI-oal flab. Oran** -Bird Hatchery, 24M Auburn. UL 2-2133. 1 ELLSWORTH AUTO _ »nd TRAILER SALES POODLES. SMALL. 8 WEEKS. <177 Dixie Hwv MA 5-1400 II —rn. tends, UL 2-2200. |^”xlLHwy;, btHFaT ENGLISH TOY 1 * mgE — The Aristocrat of the — puppies, LI highway^ M‘10” tong. NOW ON ; - DISPLAY: in Holly. Mtchigoa for PUREBRED SIAMESE KITTEN, your viewing ptoaaum. male or fomate, <30. EM 3-7332. Holly Travel Coach, IlIC. PURE BRED WKIJ4ARANKR PUPS 1521 Holly Rd.. Hollr MB 44771 *6 fttr rttltr rltciTi <344 j —5=52—T~~~" .. p^EM .Bd^ f&lketilB.* 'AfWtj q,^ ^ America'*"'leading travel * >*■ ' y I traitors. REASONABLE AKC CHIHAUHAU<—AMORT'S MOBILE HOMES puppies, 332-7139. 3172 W. Huron St. PE 4-0743 , War- REOISTERED ENGLISH SETTERS. PIONEER PICKUP CAMPER. RUG- ^ --------------------------------------------- ro «E -niE NEW WOLViR-mR WELLTRAINED, WOOLLY MON-1 tr“?k-'c?.ni^.rA. 9.*!1 child’s 1328 B. Hospital Rd. 1 -rTW- a Lak*. Offica Equipment FOR oen’eraT1 ‘ranmNo0 an^1 PICE SUPPLY, 17 W, Lawrence. SOUNDSCRIBER DICTATING chine. Transcribing and conference attachments. Lika new. Halftprlce. Write Pontiac Preti Box 65. 73 IpE CREAM CABINETS, I Ireexera, reach-ln beer or coolers, excellent ooodltion. FE Sporting Goods or bunting lodge — bow mg' bobcat rug — mounted fox. au for tne. OR 3-2533,____________ - ua Krmy squad tent, i$xig. A BEACH SAND. I YARDS, and up QraveL. mi. cushion eat BUI Malei EM 3-6373. ________ BROKEN UP 8IDE-WALK FOR R Uintng walla, delivery, r~-- CRUSHED STONE. $3 YARD. MAN-nfactured rood gravel $!, Pen gravel SI yard. 19-A alone $1 Top •oil SI. Pill dirt Me. DeUvery extra. American Stone ----) RICH FARM TOP » yards $10 delivered. PE 4-6588. GOOD T«CHr BLAci,^3! yards $10, delivered. PE LOADING SARD. GRAVEL. PILL. CEMENT, ffueiilnt. Pontiac Lk. Bldra. Bute Ply. 7M6 Highland Rd. OB 3-1564. BAND AND GRAVEL BLACK DIRT and top soil. FK 4-$$$g. ~~ PotiM—tlngPofs BLACK POOOLB MALE: 1 BRIT- MfirWttm. 8TO^ Pooulea. NA~ NM M fllll) peer. EXP items, glassware, ‘ china, pottery, lamp*, furniture, guns and coins, without reservo, Perkins I galea Service, Auctioneers. MdMM „ Berertu AUCTIONS WEDNESDAYS 7 P.M. Wlll-O-Wny Country Mart. $13 W. Long Laka Rd, MI 7-34M. EVER SUNDAY 2:03 P.M. mowHf Webuy—4*a—taraderretatffdayr^ Consignments welcome 6035 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2717 PRl6k’S AUCTION. FRIDAY AU-gust 9. *33, 7 p.m. Pumtture, household item* end antiques. OA 5-1263. 3327, LakevUte Rd-Oxford. SATURDAY, AUGUST 10. 12 NOON — Dispersal Registered Shetland, Americana and Hackney pony. Auction located 3 miles north of the Lapeer Stale Home to 8287 Mill. TBil Hd. l iBlte west of M2t and M24 Intersection to Lapeer, 21 head Includes 2 yiirtthg Shetland fillies: 4 2-year-qJd Shetland f""— bred: * 5-year-old Shetland___________ 'with stud-colt by side; 3 Shetland meres with Americana foals by side: 2 Hackney mares, 2 and 3 years old: 1 Shetland meres. 3 ——Century's Factory— Authorized Sale ~ August 1 — August 31 ONLY 75 CUSTOM-BUILT TRAVEL TRAILERS CAN RE BO Life-time guarantee, since 1933 organized travelcades. all self-contained. AUGUST ONLY IF Century fully self-contained. —-----$2.563 —.— Stop and Inspect .this model ' TOM 8TACHLER 8t 10x47, GOOD CONDITION. MY equity and taka over payments, _ going mat, 3100 Elisabeth Lk. Rd., 23 Bhady Lane, PE 5-3703. 10x47 OARDNER. LIKE NEW. WILL finance. FE 44333 or FE 2-1656. 85-FOOT MOBIL CRUISER, GOOD ones in melon shades, 615 E. Long ' Lute ltd. Nanearrow Gardens be-tween Rochester Rd. and Livemol*. MU 5-2463.________ - YEAR. -OLD - ENGLISH^ -WELSH, pony! weU broken." saddle' in* *«:t die. 3325. MA 5-4162. NEW BIDING STABLE. 11— Rd. Devleburg, 334-3073. can details. Riding Instructions W '*■’* Oroups welcome. EVENING AND SATURDAY RIDING LESSONS ALL APPAL008A HORSES Children, Adults HORSES BOARDED GOLDEN H CORRAL 1800 Hiller Bdi>.Pflnlifcc.—T- m 3.1811_______ Hay-Groin—Feed ^ HoTe ' .....— Produce Specials Peaches, $2.99. Bushel Tomatoes..... .... 4 tty. 41 r Mich. F$r California oranges ....3 dot. ■New ohfons I lb „ Cucumbers end pepper* ... 4 for Me Honey Reck metont : ;.. 4 for Me Other produce at good price*. Bob & Bill's Produce Co. MM Highland Rd. (M58) ~U$B. ., 673-5631 tU 4. M dan GENERAL 6X45. GOOD CONDI-b. PE 3433$. BR________CHAMPION MOBILE home, completely act up. Idee fenced y*rd. Traitor Park h»« private lake. $2,3$5. MY 3-1462. CASH PAID FOR USED TRAILERS Pontiac Mobil* Homes, PE >9(02 CLOSE OUT SPECIAL ON USED “ , GREAT LAKES-------- - nETROITER . . ■-■■■. PONTIAC CHIEF PACEMAKER---------- NATIONAL -----S FLORENCE ROYAL _ And many more Theee have aU I *” V*iu.*a!so'speclai 54x10 front dining Other Makeb Goodyear; Store FE 5-6123 ETOUtUWE EWTOTS^ 1 L . aSyea PonUxm Floats ^Wlivter^^s: T Harrington Boat Works JET BOATS 1|60 CUSHMAN HUSKY, NEWLY overhauled and exc. eenditton. 2970 Baldwin Rd. and Otagell- Mid-Summer Specials Set Ths Rest Then Buy Th# Bete At Lake & Sea .Marina Owsns_ Cratssr* >4^ to M* ■ BUffi 1359 HARLtY-DAVTOBON, NO. 74, engine overhauled, many extras, PE 2-8059. TERRA MARINA HOUSE BOATS $2,395 to $5,895 - HyoO Telegraph s. . —— -w, VACATION SPECIALS Several Hberglas runabouts complete with electric Bvtnradeo or —-- for skiing, frbm 1M7 MACIO 253CC. OOt» CONDi- * (SM .1963 HONDA SUPER HAWK, LOW nUsage, many neeaea., PI I *”* after 3._______________' Bicydfs USED $$ UP; NEW 62$.M UP. Scarlett'. Bicycles and Hobby Iho. ~~ E. Lawrence 8t.___________PE 3-7843 • FOOT SAILBOAT. FONKOLAS. good rlggtog. JaLjt E Alary, Waterford Twp. PE 8-3110. 4 - FOOT WOLVERINE MOLDED plywood.-Mailt 55 engine, ccotroto, windshield, lights, traitor, 692-0744. 14 FOOT WOODEN RUNABOUT. ° 26 h.p. motor end trailer. $453. OR 34430. 4-POOT WOODEN BOAT. ' gin motor end trailer. $1 after 3:33 p.ro. MA 4-2637. FOOT RUNABOUT. WOOa 25 FOOT MOLDED PLYWOOD Bill Spence, ---HA54861 - 3173 ptxte Hwy. at Ml» 18-FOOT 8PORTSCRAFT SPORTS-r.ian. 7$ Evinrude. TUt trailer. 179- 16-FOOT BOAT. STEERING CON- 16-FOOT PIBREOLAS, MERCURY 60 ■ Electric starter and trailer. *' 1609 Lombardy. E. Highland. 13-FOOT BOAT, MOTOR, AND tratler. 33 Hudson.^_ 17 FT. CHRIS CRAFT. INBOARD, very good shape, $1053. PH 3-tT“ 17-POOT HIOGINS INBOARD, . FOOT CHRIS CRAFT CON-ttnental Inboard - speedboat — beautiful .varnish finish, makes this boat look like new—136 h.p. engine—ulc$ upholstering—Ideal r complete. Test Drive thls/b "ass Lake. 4907 Grand w anda. call LI 1-9399. P ItjCHANAjp New 1W». alumlmro/npaU $1M. 40 elec, motors $443: 15-ft. fiberglass boats, $$34. "— jeeigileta _i— *”< BUY NOW—SAVE! SCOTT—TRAVELER—WINNER ODA'r 8AIL BOATS CANOES—PONTOON BOATS MOISTS—DOCKS MERCURY—SCOTT--- WEST BEND MOTORS- INBOARD—OUT DRIVES _ WE SERVICE ALL MAKES /ALLOY STERLING TRAILERS .CAMP TRAILERS—MARINE PAINT SPORTING ■ GOODS—ACCESSORIES -----SLUMA CRAFT CT and W PLASTRON TERMS 14’ and IF fiberglas canoes, ■lightly ecratehed, reg. $223, CLOSEQUT -______ _ New 12’ aluminum fishing boat*, ■lightly weathered $1M. PAUL A. YOUNG, Inc. 4030 Dtxte Hwy. OR 4-3411 THOUSANDS READ THEM DAILY —THAT'S WHY RESULTS ARE FAST AND THE POST LOW. TRY ONE, SEE FOR YOURSELF. P1BXROLAB INBOARD. $$ horsepower. *700. SHUHE TONY’§ MARINE FOR EVINDUDES VISIT LOOMIS BOAT! "A. BEAD-tlful Marina” Dunphy. Glaasmaster. W ate Third boat*. Johnson. Ma-tors. 14016 Pendton R WATER SKI SHOP .Cypress Oardene - Hydro-Flits Life Saver vests - belts Bayvlewer Ball boAts . Plberglas Car Top Fisherman Sea-Ray - MFO - Bteury Pontoon* - Canoes • campers Johnson Motors - Service Parts ~ PINTER’S 1379 N. Opdyke (M34) WaiitaB Caft-Trada 101 OR 100 JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS $25 MORE For that high grads Ussd ear, U. ua, before you sell. -R; t. Van Welt, 4540 Dixie Highway. Phone OB / ‘ ALWAYS BUYING" 11 JUNK CARS — FREE T TOP $$* CALL FE 541 SAM ALLEN A SON H HI DOLLAR, JUNK I trucks. FE 2-2666 d*y*< evening*. ALWAYS BUYINO AND PAYING — ---1 — CLEAN CABS. 785 JDYDS BUYING Good Clean Cars 2023 Dixie Hwy. We ray mere because r: Wo eeU more MOTOR SALES ' More Money FOR SHARP LATE MODELS OUT-STATE MARKETS 2527 DIXIE HWY. MANSFIELD - Auto Sales , "1076 Baldwin Ave. ~33£S900 *.r: Vi OXFORD TRAILER _j^l_l__SALES- New It' wide Mertottes. Stewarts. Oenends. Vagabonds, Windsor*. Yellowstone aod Gam travel unite -ueieed to sell. AU steee, terms to your matlsfactj »many need 8-10 and campers, units on display. "Order your wide now.‘53 to 82 long. Come out today so* mil* south Lake Orion on M24. MY 14721. Hwy.. Drayton Plain*. OR 3-1202. Parkhurst.Tra/ler Sales WE BU^WE sfL&^C TRADE iy$ BeUy BdTTHoUy ME 4-6771 Tir$s-A«to-Track tt TRUCK TIRES ... —*20 fuu truade^. ,. $23,44 ee.1 4-988*28 Edtor jSaiSMMf . WN £ ---TO lOply nylon let 344.(5 30.- 154-ply traction tubeless llemlsh ....... 222 90 each. I Hoar Service on Recamnmg — is mm - MM3—lMSe2$ Hwy. -: ouAifiail T Dick Curran |, j • ). Home *33-7917 Flberglea—Renken, Clipper-Craft Alumlnum—Mlrro-Craft.Meyera Traitor*—Alley. Dllly, Meyers , Motor*—Scott, Bundy. Neptune Warden’s Cycle Sales __ DAWSON'S CLEARANCE — Price* tlaebed an beating equipment — Many good buys on new and used merchandise/greatly reduced and priced to ran. Traveler. Cherokee. Rlnket. gtewij Gwen* end CnrvHr boau. Kayot. steel and alum. Pontoons, Geneva gtosajnntoOM. Evinrude motors and Ptmoe traders. Take M59 to w. Highland, wight on Hickory Ridge Rd. to DMnqde Rd. Left end. fellow sins to DAWSON'S BALES at TIP8ICO LAKE. Phone MAln >2179. Storting . ___n. 24' Crulee Liner H Alum. IS' Voyager Cruiser Fiberglass Capri (Rear Bent) $571 Square Stern Cnhuea, to $225 Big Seringa an: IS ft. Fiberglass Canoe 1$ ft. Aluminum Cano* North Oakland County's .Largest Leo* Star Dealer ' ^ ttWHtwTfll* i ----«to j33RJP- —■ Qiff Dreyer’s Gun and Sports Center ----Holiy Ita. Holly MR $4771 When in Dflldit I Use. Fast Acting Press Want Ads WANTED; USS-lKl CARS- Ellsworth $$ TOP DOLLAR $$ • « F0* Clean Used Cars -- JEROME "Bright Spot" - Orchard Lake at Caas FE 8-0488 TOP M CLEAN CAfto-fRlJCTtr Economy Discount 2331 D|«u Hwv. WANTED 5= ----3 IN CASH Fischer buick UP DOLLAR FdR CLEAN'LATE Rfo OUT state MARKET PATTERSON HIGHEST PRICKS FAS) Iff WMt*d Cart-Trucks WE NEED CARS -aJutan I'tim 94 to "to-. IhsiTkut»-Tratfc Pum~T(fl condition. PE >-8974: Farit. FK 64340.__________ i*7 Plymouth ’Parts—* n*jS, MM end wlr» whteli. Trutmlt-0M. radio, tutor, generator. darter, radiator tor tala or trad* tor boat 479* Highland Rd. CaMn 1. MW MnB&F fM f£in Pood engine, FE MOM. Nsw aod UsmI Trucks 103 ism ford pickuf. good con. t. TRUCK. ejty'cf ¥jnj5aiS5>' SBCMPAtWrI SON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 S. Woodward AWL itoMtoirham. Mt 1SN CHEVROLET S. %-TON PICK- Wood* 4-2738. 'Oodward Art.. Birmingham. UI i VW PAREL TRUCK, GOOD 1962 T A !» D E M T*UCK, VERY food " " 682-11 *1796. PA+TERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 0. Woodward Art., Birmingham. TO 4-2735, 1963 CHEVROLET V, TON PANEL, 4,000 actual miles, new ear guarantee. Light blue tlnlafa. *1895. PATTERSON___CHEVROLET CO.. “ *' i. Btrwfcg- JEEP 'Tear Authorised Dealer” ► OLIVER BUICK and JEEP *10 Orchard Lai PE 1-9101 New md UsmI Trucks IRS ’gtee. oSfe1mate.. ■*«.ood- Mis: geetenk i P«ralgnqua 6 PONTIAC Btarchlef 4-6oor 1*63 FORD GALAXIE “500” 2-Door Hardtop. Factory 4-speed transmission .on (no IWCjpr engine, radio, neater and whitb-waua. Beautiful dark Mue finish. Yes.. folks., It’s Just like buying “ ~iuw—fm—V»«r- 1*5* PONTIAC Catalina 3-Door. No ear evar rode to fame more nulcklr. Always sought alter, always popular. A vary One INI FORD Country Sedan Wasp on. 9 paasengtr. Rad finish with matching trim. Naw Inside and _______________Ms the anginal ^ «»j# eC0“0B7. .-“dlW# 1N2 VW Sunroof. Beige finish with red leather seats. 1 owner, actual miles. Also, deluge .1962 PONTIAC 2-Door Sedan. Power steering, power brsmee, Hydramatlc, radio, heater and whitewalls. 1 kid you not, tt hak 11,000 guaranteed actual 1N3. PONTIAC Bonneville Was 3 Bonneville Wag- ____,_____• y alr-oondlUoned. Niaf windows. gaaE^ steering and brakes. Automate*, ~ kitchen Sink. Car him saw «•.«», telling price ............*4150 1N0 PONTIAC f-Deer Hardtop, HydramaUe, radio, heater and whitewalls. Kimberly blue finish with Mm to match. Don’t past It up. this la tt ..... 91495 1902 TEMPEST LeMans 2-Door Hardtop, Ftoeat combination j>L beauty. • performance, dependability, economy,' ■ value and all transporta tl gasoline. t tor' anything lata. Get More-Pay Less SHELTON - * PONTIAC - BUICK V Rochester * OL1-8133 OLIVER RENAULT RENAULT .Rochester FORD Dealer v OL 1-9711 ’ TR 3 TRIUMPH SPORT ROADSTER mto —idltlon. sacrifice price. (Buy lanoa owed.) - After I p.m., _ _JB Lane, «*ae» hu e..k efi Casa Lake Rd. 1953 BUICK. RADIO AMD HEATER, “Tod tires, *TI or1 best offar. failed Laka 6M-4IN. r transmission, *3M full prlca with LUCK? AUTO SALES toCI BUICK. 2-DOOR HARDTOP, automatic, radio and beatsr, good transportation, asto. GLENN'S 9M West Huron St. „ 2325 Dlgle Hwy. 1962 BUICK SPECIAL STATU Nearing and brakes, radio, beater, whllawaUa. Only *219*. Easy terms, ainnbuu. nMfgOLR PATTERSON CHE' ‘ i ,». WOODW ARw (PHAM, Ml 4-2735. 1962 BUICK SPECIAL 4-DOOR A0-tomatlr transmission, power steering, radio, heater, many egtrai, *1975. Call OR *6018 after 7 p.m. 1962 BUICK INVICTA JCONVER’fr-Me. Red, power steering ---------------Excellent condition. low mlleago. Always kept la garage. Must sell. OL (tots after 4 BUICk Up TtogARRE, 4-DOOR — Power steering and brakes, to -OR 3 MN. —1--------- - 1964 CADILLAC PMPWBP pwHWIBBaC II white, wbtte top. Full power. tm Urea. 9960. EM 3-2978. or 941 CADILLAC cbUPS. HYDRA-matlc, power iteering and brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls, Ught beige finish. $1045. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 s. Woodward. Ave. MI 4-9735. NmmimIJUsmI Car* Y®iii p5f>n‘ MtmmiU*>4 Our 1*51 CHEVY, 4-DOOR, *5*0.; 1*4* l*»kcHBVT LMlCK RUM OOOD, *60, Saver AuSOl PB H»T*. 1104 CHEVY hBCELLENT CONDI-Uon. New Urea, low mileage MOO: FB 4S9S2 after1 g. ■ ... i n, *- UH CHEVROLET BEL door automatic, radio ana nosier. *1*7 full price. Me down payment er trade required. We handle and arrange aO faaneae, pay only (M* ^ "'liquidation lot . -.wffrajgraift 2 Blocks south of Huron ------------VhUtm inter OTRAIOHT 140 8L Merrlms iwl' UHil jr, IlkJL AIR, 4-1 Spartan DodRC. Inp. Ml BrSMinaW, ! ' w— evenings after 7 p.m , OR 1 xaf. 1M0CHE7 ION », Woodward Ave„ Ml 4-2735. 1*87 CHhvROljl# BIL AOt. * LUCKY AUTO SALES “Pontiac’s' Discount Lot” 1IIJ Batgtoaw ;___PR 4-2*14 tor ' completely overhauled, very clean, Iml price *595 with *5 down. Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Av*. ■ W MW 1987 CHHVY ITATIOM #AQON. 189* CHEVY WAGON. I CYLINDER, good^ economy. NS down, IK.50 BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER . ooo a. woodward mi ttooo I960 CHEVY BEL AIR 2-DOOR NEW Nit, first class emdlttm. Pint tow gate it.---------— 195« CHEVROLET BIL HE 1 DOOH hardtop. fO engine, Powerglide. power ateeilng end brakes, lew mileage. Only *995. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 10N B. WOODWARD AVE., BIR-MIMONAM'MI 4OT», payment er trade m required, We handle and arrange all financing. Pay only *7.9* per week, no credit LIQUIDATION, LOT COMPARE Our prtoee. Pontiac demonstrators, good MMOUOB of new can.— KEROO PONTIAC BALKS 1958 CHHVY 6 DEL RAY 2-DOOR: 1959 CHEVY. 4-DOOR. 9 AUTOMAT-1,. Mechanically onepinl.' good tires, no rust, (996. DIXIE SQUARE DEAL. 4*50 Dlxla, OR 1958 CHEVROLET STATION WAO-on, silver blue, vary clean. V-8. standard transmission, full price 8695 with 85 down. FB *-4671 ----------- BEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. WHITE SIDEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. PAYMENTS OF *11.75 PER MO. Bee Mr, Muks at Earotd Turner Peed, MI >p. fully equipped 1 ■ steering. Beaotltu fas 81,4*5. pew *1,105. 1*18 CHEVY V*. < DOOR W rp. *1,1(8 1959 CHEVY t BEL AIR. j 1*59 CHEVY WAGON. AUTOMATIC, radio, tester. MM full price. SjRMDhQRAM RAMBUtR 1959 Chevrolet rertible, V r, copper < 1900 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2 DOOR hardtop, Powerglide, radio, heater, whitewalls. 912*9. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 10W S. Woodward A v Birmingham, very clean, PE 5-0*02. H>W Ri*d U—d Cn lit 1961 CHEVY Corvair 2-Door with rMto, tosaior. atd autamaOa transmission, and Is only lUM. BEATTIE ‘Tour FORD DEALER Since IMF’ 0(1 DIXIE HWY. Of WATERFORD AT THE SXOPLXOHT OR 3-1291 BgMofiig. power ileafliig and brakas. Autumn Gold finish. Only . «km FATTER. SON CHEVROUT CO., M 8. WOODWARD AVE., UENDIOHAM MI 4-2735. IN* CHEVROLET IMPALA 2 DOOR hardtop, vs, Pewtrgltee. sower altering end krahai. ME*. PAT-TERROE CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 I. Woodward i 1962 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE. hOocrten, 3 speed, power wln- ' . -r^*- gjj,.--- dowi, solid red finish 91.395. rtf-TERSON CHEVROLET CO., UM 6. Woodward Ava . MT laqfr 196i CORVAIR cSuPE 1*62 CHEVROLET IMPALA STA--L. Him waaQa. 88, Pu»M*DJe; pciw-er steering and brakes, aolld red f lnlih. *a.4#». PATTERSON CHEVROLET OO., 19M R. Wood- BIRMINGHAM TRADE whitewalls, light green finish. 91596. — PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. MM B. Woodward Awe,. Burning-ham, Ml 4-273*.______________________ , Summer Specials arr..*' 1961 CORVETTE 1961 CHEVY IMPALA CONVERT!- hie. Power brakes, steering, and - wuatew*. Era aatelllkai, «l!7W. UL "DNIFE WDABLKg" KESSLER'S DODGE N. Lapeer Rd. xt to world’s largaat gravel OA 8-1400 or OA 8-1551 fawn finish, sharp tee-ownar, |l BOB BORST - Llncoln-Mercury washera, heater. Used by Birmingham High gcheat as a driver train-m* ear Laaa than lMO actual mun. New-car guarantee, only lL-"*"““SON CHEVROLET Nobdward Ave.. MI 4-2 100# 8. Wooi 198* STINORAY. AUTOMATIC. POW-steertog and hraka^Rgal Mas- ter tire*, dark b "Bright Spot" uto^NiiW YORgR jutiuyrojt, *- ; guwrtdgj** “ Spartan Dodge, Inc. PE 44*41 1959 CHRYSLER. 2-DOOR HARDTOP FE 8-4641 after 5pm’ I NEW AND CUD CARS WILSON PONTIAC CADILLAC MM H Woodward MI 4-IH Birmingham Mlchiga New and Used Cara 1*44 DESOTO, OOOD RUNNINO aumdMten, 81M, Al a IfawMhM NtaMon, 135 Oakland 3M-9118. 1930 DODO* 3-DOOR. FULL POW- . *705. MI _____________ 1 DODGE POLARA “500** 2-DOOR irdtop. 308 engine, bucket Seats, ust nka new. Specially prised el Spartan Dodge, .Inc. Ill ». teglnaw BIRMINGHAM TRADE UM BDtoEL Banger 2-door hardtop, V* engine, automatic, radio tester, sharp throughout, full prigs. 086. BOB BORST ______________________MI 6-4 1953 FORD. OOOD TRANSPORTS- 1963 FORb cktS^LINF CLUB coupe, MR;’radio, heater, white walls, MI 4-9150, evOs. only, pet. 4 FORD W STICK, 160. RAVE luu mpiiuasicfi price asvi. as eoall weekly paymanto. Liquidation Lot Of Oakland Awo. MM FORD CONVERTIBLE, moat naw with a VI angina, i pi atlc. Power steering, 94*5. JOHN MeAULIFFE FORD oagoakhind Ave. . ___FE M101 ’ 1956 T-BIRD. CONTINENTAL RE- New and Used Cora r *17.06 FEB MO. FAiiliiifiWPJI gee .kb. Pwtoi ’■> Ford MX 4-7966. ■ 1167 FORD PAIRLAH1 100 t-DOOR eJSTteSw pay only *2.50 per wees, enai problem. LIQUIDATION LOT , tog. TELEORAPH 2 Blocks eouth of Huron DON’T BUY ANY NEW OR "fioMF.R HTr.HTi Now aad 9mI On thing down. $11.06 month. Birmingham ramblne 1939 FORD WAC_________ ______ power eteerteg end brakes, radio, heater, toeelfl at toMLjIjilM. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER : «6 s. Woodward MI Ototo REAL GOOD -“OK” *&£', Used Cars at -BILL ROOT-r— CHEVROLE^^^ NOTICE . Immediate Delivery ’. R to In excellent This automobile may be claimed by anyent willing to lake wear weekly payments of 62.25 or pay off the total balanee due cf $197. This King Auto Sales U» K gegtoaw PR_____ 1*57 PORD, OOOD CONDITION, 6 This Week's SPECIAL' WE FINANCE VERY REASONABLY 1963 AUSTIN HEALEY -- "SPRrrgf Roadster ~ Convertible . ■ 650 Actual Miles 1 Moqth Old Sparkling ivory with ^ a Jet Black Top ONLY $1588 Matthews- HflmrmW’ “CHEVYLAND” 631 Oakland Ave. ^FE 4-4547 Marvel Motors YM Oakland A 1963s THRU 1958s tec? *—*We*lim?toance tt “ N.H your dealer “ TVs e * UNm,ii?AT NATIONAL BANK OLIVER BUICK Home of the Famous Double sj / Checked Used Cars 1962 BUICK Skylark Vinyl Hardtop ... .<$2595 1962 BUICK 4-Door LeSabre Hardtop...$2795 1961 BUICK Electra 4-Door Hardtop....$2395 1961 BUICK Special 2-Door V8, Auto........$1695 1961 BUICK Special 4-Door V8, Auto..... $1695 1961 TEMPEST Wagon. Bronze* Auto 1961 BUICK I^Sabre, Steering, Rrakr.i.. .$2195 196L-BUICK -LeSabre Ciwvertible- —.$22?5 1961 BUICK Elects .225 Convertible,.......$2695 ”1*961 OLDS 88 4-Door, Steering, Brakes. ,$1995 1961 OPEL 2-Door Stick, Econotny.. .. $1295 1961 T-BIRD, Steering, Brakes, Hardtop. .$1995 1960 COMET 4-Door, Black) Automatic... $1295 I960 TRIUMPH 4-Door Sedan.....Only S 595 I960 FORD Wagon, Auto., V8 4-Door. ..$ 995 1960 RENAULT . 4-Door, Black, Real Buy $ 595 1960 MERCURY* 4-Door, Auto., Power.. .$1195 I960 OPEL Wagon, Gas Mileage Is .High $1095 1960 BUICK Hardtop, FttH Power, 4-Door $1995 1959 BUICK 2-Door, Rose, White. ......$1295 1959'CHEVY' Wa^ori;" Stick', 995 1959 PONTIAC Star Chief 2-Door, Blue. 41495 1959 CHEVY itnpala Convertible, Blue,- • .$1295 1959 FORD Wagon, White, 2-Door...... .$ 695 1958 CHEVY Wagon, 4-Door, V8 Auto .. $ 895 1957 MERCURY 4-Door Sedan......... .$ 245 1963 RENAULL ^mUPHINE With Standard Factory Equipment • Stick Shift / ■J$USSt e-Alao Automatic Available—$99 Extra On Display—196 Orchard Lake OLIVER BUICK - 196-210.Gr<;hcircl Lqke ' FE 2-9165 2nd ANNIVERSARY WE THANK YOU FOR MAKING SURPLUS MOfORS ONE OF MICHIGAN'S LARGEST AUTO DEALERS. IN APPRECIATION OF YOUR PATRONAGE;' THE FOLLOWING ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS ARE NOW AVAILABLE. -FA1RLANK 500 • $195 *59 STUDEBAKER STATION WAGON- Vtrf- absrp. FttU priea $395 '61 RENAULT DAUPHINE. $495 -----’55 V ORB " STATION WAGON -$125^ :—\sa rHkvtjnT vT-. - TMFALA HARDTOP - ROADMASTER _.... 4-DOOR Radio and heater; Top eondi-tton. Full price only $495 Full tower, radio and haater. FulUSrlc* only. $295 Radio and haater. Beautiful tu-tone. Full prioa only - CEQQC ,58/.MERCUR>r / HARDTOB' ’59 VOLKSWAGEN v ’55 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR, V8 V-8. very clean. A4 condition. ” / FuU pnaa only / - Uke new. l^attier tnterior, rt^ dlo and hedter. Full price only Radio uid heater. Sharp. Full priea ofiy . . : :mh:: $795 $195. ’jlo CHEVROLET * Xtation-wagon . ’57 RAMBLER STATION WAGON ^ '57 OLDSMOBILE T* 88 HARDTOP' Stick. 6-cyIlnder engine, .4-doOT, clean. Full price omy 4-Door with radio and heater. Full price only Mew cam and- Uftera. Full price only - — —» $195 $145 $395 .J. :— -7.— ; • ~~ *59 DODGE V8 ROYAL LANCER ’57. PLYMOUTH STATION WAGON - ’57 FORD “ FAIRLANE V8 Beautiful tu-ten*. FiU prtoo 4-Door with radio and heater. Fill price only Radio and heater. Full price ’ $495 - $145:-.. ' $145 -----*57 DODGE »»»■'=* ROYAL LANCER $19Jr ’57 PLYMOUTH ^—HARDTOP— Belvedere. Radio, haater. 74 $195 ’i ~ *59 PLYMOUTH . FURY HARDTOP $495. ’55 OLDSMOBIli HARDTOP ...,...$69 ’55 MERCURY . ..$69 ’56 PLYMOUTH $95 MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM - FIRST PAYMENT NOT DUE UNTIL AFTER CHANGE O VER. CREDIT OK'D - AND DELIVERY MADE IN 5. minutes; - - - ’ ' n ^©neE-TG> *TH E " PUBLIC fur those who are bankrupt-havenocred- IT - ON THE JOB SHORT TIME - HAVE HAD REPOS-' SESSION - WE CAN PUT YOU IN A CAR WITH -NO MONEY DOWN - . 1 - -- 171 S, SAGINAW FE 8-4036 s D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1068 raci- I Immediate Delivery ' haater. B. to 433£jrSrjSjs® ;:.:WSrey*f5 ■ King Auto Sties BlRMSSliAM TRADE jC cwil O Mam tv angina. power rtiirtM end brakes, radio, heet-ar, aharp lav mllrafa, full prto*. BOB K)RST Haw uudUMdtara __IfWggj iNt' FORD. 1 DOOR WAOON, t cyl.^ a tide, rood oondlUon. Ob 3- ltM FORD 4 DOOR, t CYLINDER, usTfaloon; radio; A-l SHAPE. MBiitt. nrtvoto. MB. HMm. I960. FORD 4-DOOR. V*. NnruriUwdCm mo fAUoo wagon deluxe MO, radio, haater, ataodard Irani 1(61 FALCON WAOON. SB GLENN'S IOMI FEROUSOW eater FORD Dealer obt-om 1*66 FORD 1 - DOOR AUTOMATIC, radio, beater. Clean, imt taF— Waa *1066 now *6*5. 1600. FORD FAIRLAKt WO. OVRR- 1860 FALCON. • Woodward Are. R «St R MOTORS SUMMER CLEARANCE *16 PLYMOUTH taw 04a V-6. auto. .a..... •66 VALOOH Moor, stick *66 gTTJDKBAXIR La*. «-door 0666 V-4, stick *66 VALIANT 1 *61 OOBTAIR Homo TTTTTl ■■■tl.W tact from AUTHENTIC LOCAL BANK — -SALE- NO OnOOCU — Care muat be sold WO APPLICATIONS REFUSED no monkt Down CREDIT CM BCE ED BY PBONKI FE 5-8150 WO PLYMOUTH 2-door Bute 6 M .9 671.37 blaek 6047.61 1187 BUICK Moor Vt Auto. 6 660.31 1*66 FALCON wagon, lufrare rack. ”3I5Z“ V^est Huron Str 1 Mflo W. at Telegraph FE 5-8150 LUCKY AUTO SALES —: ‘VaUirt Dtocount Let" lit B. Sagtnaw FE t-Mll FALCON J-DOOR. RADIO. “*-*■“■ AUTOMATIC TRAMS- GLENN'S JHfManiR _ TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS VI Chevy 6. Powergllde . *67 Chewy l-dooT, atlek .... *64 Chewy 6 - .dear ..... •36 Old* H hardtop ....... ‘M Chery hardtop *57" Ford station vat 17 Port 6 - dear ... SUPERIOR Auto Sales » 9166 DUto atTUagrorh FE 4T6a BIRMINGHAM TRADES Every Used car offered for retail to the public is a bonafide 1-owner, low-mileage, sharp car. 1-year parts and labor warranty. 1*3 SPECIAL 4-door ... 3961 BUICK convertible . 1(61 BCTCK 2-daor aedan 1361 SPECIAL w**..n .... 1966 BUICK convertible . u» pontiac starchier . 1667 BUICK. r*--------------- Iky- new .at BUICK-. FISCHER tit t. Woodward - AUTOMATIC, 6-D p. nia. dona I 1161 FORD, 61.686. SAVE AUTO. FB MgS or FE 5-2397. 1M1 FALOON S-DOOR SEDAN —_ -Meabrtim 0HN McAUUFFB FORD FORD OALAamt t DOOR, BIRMINGHAM TRADE *61 and lltt MBRCUXY, Mao -doors and hardtop*, akarp o: wnar new-car trade*, from 41,4 BOB BORST TitimotnMarpury 566 woodward Awo. • __mlnjliant* . MI MU. 1*57 PONTIAC, POWER STEERING IB f- Bagfaaw lltt FQRD OALAXIE at WITH A a^a^Mgaad tramw*-'-T^HN McAULIFFE FORD 1(63 FORD OALAXIE. 4 1 1 cewlaFTvvIL........Sr 1*66 BUICK Mar hardtop ...7TB Ha ftnwwr«Sif ........« HUTCHINSON SALES Ha Baldwin Rd. B 94741 FI tat. M2 MERCURY METEOR: VS. AU- ItaMllt. a taw —**- —• tastaTi wtewall*. faebry^fWflal'a ear. ttva. JEROME FERGUSON Rocheater FORD Dealer •_________oLi-mi ___________ I 3-7641. Unlveraal CIT Credit BOB. BORST . Llncoln-Mercury - bla, ReMonable, Ht N. Johnaon. MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES CHEVROLET Hat Opepmg for All Late Model Used Cart Call ar drive by - 631 Oakland at Cast TOP PRICES . OFFERED---------- Aik lor Mr. Bauer or Mr. 1 THEY MUST GO 1117 VW, newly ot I Ford*, UK to 1955 Jtep truck t t Oorvair club ebtmo, nice ... I 1*57 Pontiac—195* Buick—Cheap 1956 Fort Station Wagon and Panel Truck ................... $176 Chevy's 1694. 3—1956—445 and up Olbar Cbavya, 1957 to 1941-4645 -Huay-faBav-- xa weTfinance VERY REASONABLE GIGANTIC LIQUIDATION SALE Listed below are some of the terrif priced cars offered in this sale. NQMGNEY DOWN EASY CREDIT TERMS CREDIT NO PROBLEM : . WE ARRANGE ALL FINANCES 2 YEARS TO PAY - -__19S0 Falcon 2-Door, Stick Kpoy/ Ford Fairhne, VK 2-Door Hardtop $147 Chevrolet, 2-Door AMfowiatic. 6-Cvlinder $497 Pontiac, 2-Door Hardtop, V8 $197 "Volkswagen. A Real Gat Sayer ~$597 Chevrolet, Convertible, V8 $797 ~~7T9sr— Oldsmobile 2-Door Hardtop $397 - I960 -English Ford '•$497 Pontiac 2-Door Hardtop $597 Ford Fairlane, V8, Automatic $197 —=49S9L_^r—— Chevrolet, Bel Air $697 Ford, 9-Passenger Station Wagon _ TE697 • ^ *UJS MANY MORE BARGAINS TO CHOOSE FROM LIQUIDATION LOT 338-9661 —-60- S. TELEGItfrffi^ - -■ ■■ J-J 32 2 BLOCKS SOUTH OF HURON^R^T ACROSS FROM TEL-HURONSHOPPING CE^TER^ Ntw aid Used Cars 1M Ntw binI Dttd Can BIRMINGHAM TRADE IMS CONTINENTAL 4daor kart -top.Hghf blue, with contraettn* to-taiior trim, full tower, lneludtnt factory air conditioning. full price, BOB BORST A U T OMATTC WALLTBtta.-------------- MONTY DOWN. PAYMENTS OP MUf MB HO. M ifelwi 81 Harold Turner Ford. MI Vim. 1966 MERCURY. ..s'uir"- PONTIAC CATALINA. 4 DOOR, , tnweY ataartnat end Itavalla. radio, heater 46176. 666 Utarty. I6H PONTIAC i'- 55557 igg, ^ii irriS- ibm flum tow, in# mi barealn of the day. Only 11666. Spartan Dodge, Inc. Ill *. ttdhtaw FB 94641 1941 TEMPEST STATION WAOON 1161 PONTIAC CATALINA OOM-vartlble. hydramatlc, power (toar-hit and brakaa. maroon flnlah with matching Interior. 66366.------ BON CHEVROLET CO.. Waadarard Awe.. MI MHt. JEROME FEROUSON Rochester FORD Daalar 1963 CATALINA 2-DOOR SPORTS sedan Power steeling and brakee Fully (quipped. 14.0(6 mBeage. FE owner, goad top. HM 3-2619. 1956 OLDS. CLEAN — # waaattitatoh KA#AIJka atatlon Wagon, full power, aeaellent oondWon. tow mlleaaa fair 96633. 1957 Olds 4-Door Hardtop. ^ BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1666" ON DIXIE HWY IN WATEEFOED. AT THE 8TOPUOST . , * OR 3-1291 1643 OLDS. 4 UOOlt, 66. POWER brakaa and steering. This la g municipal oar. 614(6 full prlea. with nothing down. LUCkFAUTO SALES "Pontiac’s Discount Lot” E- taglanw - Wt 4-6614 1967 PLYMOUTH WAOON. NOTH-lag down. *37.50 month. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER H t. Woodward -----“ ’ H-4-. DOOR. BBLVB- u Vt attok. OR 6-4754. 1957 PLYMOUTH, RUNS OOOD, |UI. Save Auto. FE 94671. HI PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR. HARD-top. Radio. Heater. power. Tinted glass. Whitewall*. MY 3-4B34 •9 PLTMOUTH VS 2-DOOR, standard shift, wofy nice, bargain. Wre*4A H-Ftot^r— 1959 PLYMOUTH 3-DOOR. 6. BAR-galn. Conway, dealtr EM 3-0061. 1959 PLYMOUTH. S NEEDS BODY Work, $250. OR 3-0879. 1(54 PONTIAC, OOOD ^RANSPOR- 1955 PONTIAC.’ RADIO. HEATER. 1957 PONTIAC HARDTOP. POWER ---ton and brakes. Automate). , down. 635.00 month... [lIXNOHAM RAMBLER maantel . MI ft.MfMI steering Motfarad< BIRMI 1M7 PONTIAC 4-DOOR HARDTOP, smell weekly payments. Liquidation Lot -MS Oakland Awo. Aeroaa from Pontiac Ad BuUdlni 1964 PONTIAC 4-DOOR HARDTOP. m III FOHTIAC 3-DOOR, HYDRA-matlc. Pawar -*— --- *— rolet co„ SrOw Asa., ElrmtoSbam. IC AtW. 1661 PONTIAC 9FASSBNOBB 6TA* er. blue flntoh. nice family ear. 9 GLENN'S NS Weat Knmn.lt. FE 4-7171 FK 44.7871 1963 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, VS bl*. 473-5333. lb lew mllaaga. OA 94644. -SA’t,^-K kaa-aavlng beauty is ready to (0. Come ate and drive a Mtad rUht at $795 $1495 - -1962 PONTIAC— 4-Door 8*dnn. On* awnar, starchier Antomatle, v-s. lestb-if trim, low mfis*t*i 1U, 1* ■ -beauty. Priced to a*B. CjOQQc: 1959 CHEVROLET , WAGON , — ePauOaO 1961 ANGLIA S-Paasangar. 6-oylinder with, standard tranamlaalon. •' a a 1 _ English Pert 3-Door. A real gas aavar .and In kaoutlful eeo-dition. Only ^ $1095 $795 GRAND PRIX Bad with Meek eordova top, white Interior, power steering, brakes and windows, easy ay* fleas, Htjorlnt wheal boas* private DEMONSTRATORS GRAND PRIX 1900 DISCOUNT $1,000 DISCOUNT '63 RAMBLER AMBASSADOR I . Bucket seat*, automatic, power steering, power brake*, easy eyt glaas. white’tbra*. This to a bargain. $600 DISCOUNT . , J ’63 RAMBLER CLASSIC „ual rbellnlng seats, a heater, low mileage. *“*nrtor. Economic $500 DISCOUNT reclining aeata, automatic, (-eyUndtr, radio, heater, low mileage. Gold and white with an weld' interior. Eccnomleal tranapcrtatlon. MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM Russ Johnson PONTIAC, RAMBLER DEALER Lake Orion M-24 at thaStoplioht • MY 3-6266 brakes full •prlS*WrNo ■ ateerlng ai LIOUIDATIOlfLOT (0 S. TELEGRAPH t Blocks south of Huron Atjfoas from Tel-Hr 1959 PONTIAC 3 DOOR, AUTO., ‘ , «77« * Al*a Marl- 126 Oakland. 338- 960 PONTIAC CATALINA CON-verllble. A beautiful clean auto with full power. Waa 11X96. now tun. Spartan Dodge, Inc. Ml S. Saginaw ™ MM NEED ROOM! • ear apeelala. 1954 and 1655 Chevya, ronli and Butcki. 935 to 995. Economy Motor Discount. 3635 Dixie Highway. RAY SIMMONS f6rd, INI FALCON 4-Door aedan. with standard tranamlaalon. boater. — die, extra nlci throughout. UN FORD Oalaxle 2-door bard VI englse. Fordamatlc. heater, dto, leas than 16.000 actual mOm 1901 CHEVY 4-door hardtop. Imp ’ with Vt angina, poworguda tr mlaalim. haalar. radio, extra nlca 1959 JAOUAR 4-door aedan, tu heater, radio and automatic mltalon, exceptionally nice It ... Kannan ’ radio, nice clean RAY — — SIMMONS ' FORD WHERE BETTER SERVICE keeps YOBBeuirzr: Ml S. Lapeer Road ke Orton_______MT 64911 Denio and model clearance sale] 'FANTASTIC SAVINGS RAMBLERS-Are. Going Fast , LARGE •*. TRADE-IN-—^ ■■ ■ Allowtiicci - — BILL SPENCE * Rambler-Jeep 9*76 Dixie Hwy. It ifU _ CLARUTOM 16A ME I960 Chevy Parkwood Wagon $1499 }962 Buick LeSabre Sport Coupe* Fewer brakes, power steering, 1961 Chevy 1962 Chevy II 1962 Chevy Itnpala Convertible 9-Passenger Wagon 6-cylinder engine, Powergllde, radio end heater. Ipsikltuiin. beige finish and fawn balg* Impala. Sport Grape ~tH399—-iti79a mau = 1963 DEMOS ^ walla. Immaculate fat and out. EparkUng Jot blaok with roae Interior. $2588 : 1962 Chevy Biscayne 2-Door A aodan with 6-cyllnder onglnor~ PowargUda, radio and heater, tfa In good condition. Sparkling ’lee-groan flnlah. $1688 1960 Chevy Impala Sport Coupe . 1963 1963 CHEVROLET Impala Sport Coupe Standard tranamlaalon, V-4 engine, power steering, radio, heater, padded da^L .whliewali ■ \ 1963 Monza spider Convertible 4wp*ad transmission, 141 B.P. engine, radio, boater, padded tires, wheel discs, solid allrar NEW CAR OUARAN1EB $2488 CHEVROLET “Impala Sport Coupe dash, easy ay* glass, wU* wheel dl*ca. Maroon with white top. MEW CAB OUARANTEE $2699 1963 “ ~ V-S with PowergHda. radio and haater, power steering, power “brake*, padded dash and white-wan Urea. VoM emrra Id green —-I 1963 “ . CHEVROLET Impala Sport Sedkn V-g—with Pnwarylld*. power brake* end ataorlng. radio, hoat-whljewall Urea^ padded ^da^hj rinl.h ■ ** NEW CAR OUARANTEE - $2699—- CHEVROLET • Biscayne 2-Door : Sedan. Powergllde. whltewaU Urea, radio, beater, bumper guard*, tun shade. Saddle tan flnlah and It has leas than 1,000 . mile* NEW CAB OUARANTEE NEW CAB OUARANTEE $2699 • $2199 1 1959 Chevy . Parkwood Wagon Hat V-8 engine. PowergHda transmission, radio, heater and turn signals. It la a sparkling solid black beauty. ; $899 1958 Chew Biscayne Wagon 6-cyIihder engine, Powergllde to'and banter $888 1962 Chevy Biscayne Wagon ' . tyAto mi* heatar. Thl« to -■eal fine eaoond ear. spar-« balg* and gold flnlah. Act $1588.... 1962 Tempest LeMans Sport Coupe - s p E _L_ A TT 1962 ‘CHEVROLET Impata Sport Coupe Haa a 4-speed tranamlaalon with a powerful 667 engine. ea. power brake* and power steering. $2388 S P 1 •e Has a . powerful (-cylinder • kino with thrifty Povargllde. r dio and haater and la a sol fawn boigo finish that la boa $2088 1958 Chevy Impala Sport Coupe Thte *• baa V-6 engine, power (tearing, radte, and haater. n ys k sparkling allvtr blua with whltewaB tlrea. Claan. A TT 1962 Chevy “300" 4-Door / 4-cyUndar engtne, power ateerlng, -power brakes, radio, heater and standard transmission/ Tu- wSIo t«Ila>nlM *** $1888 $1499 Shop With • 'Confidence at Pontiac’s Onljrs ~ Authoriicd ~ : Chevrolet Dealership 1959 Chevy Bifccayne 2-Door N $988 I960 Monza Club Coupe Mn aft ready tar too tatA. $899 $1388 MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES * —^-^631DAKLAND atGASS ■ OAKLAND COUNTY'S LARGEST VOLUME CHEVROLET DEAlER FE 4-4547 ~ ~~ ^ .—y- ’ FE 54161 mm THE POXyttAC PRESS. T'HrRSnAT, ACCEST, 9, I0M r^rrr -Today's Television Programs Program* fumithnd by itafteniTtotndintfllt column ore auN*** ieht>wy wftftouf notion diQwwi 3-wjtK-Tv owtiAfU-wwj-Tv OwimxiT-wxYz.^rv cwpmmrf >-ckw-tv "Ommimi sa-Wtue Em r Brazil'* name comet from *r reddish >ood greatly] prtzwfjij^ early colonists fmr=dye.W -Me-sdfr TONIGHT 6:06 d) JNews, atBtofial, Sports, Weather - (4) Deputy (7) Movie: “file’s i # dier, Too.” (In Progressf (91 Capt Jolly pod Popeye (56) Wh«t’» Niw 6:25 (4f fl) Weitfaer', * New*, Sports '•» 6:36 (21 Highway Patrol (91 Invisible TUain (S6) French Through TV:. 7:00 ttflWr.Guhn torrtworr GeorgejHa-rot TCol ---------- (7) (Color) Michigan Outdoors (91 Huckleberry Hound (56) Japan: Changing Years 7:36 (2) Fair Exchange (71 Ossie and Harriet ' (9) Movie: “On Borrowed ------TimecM1939) Lionel Barrymore, Sir Cedric Hafd-wicke ----(56) What in the World? 8:06 (2) Perry Maaon (4) Two Faces West (7) Donna Reed* (56) Beyond the Earth 8:36 (4) Dr. Kildar^ (7) Leave It to Beaver 9:00 (3) Twilight Zone (7). My Throe Sons <») Wrestling * 9:36. (4f (Colon Lively Ones (7) McHale’s Navy 10:60 (2) Nurses (4i Summer Special • i7> Wenuipw""'"V" TT (9) News, Weather, Tele-i scope UAW ; 10:39 (9) Mall in a Landscape 11:99 (2) (41. (71 News, Weather, TV Features Jets in -1livelyBallet TWIliGHT ZONE, 9:00 p. m. (21 Young married couple i L | discovers strange- reason why they are unwelcome aboard f decrepit cruise ship. LIVELY ONES, 9:30 p. m . (4) Color show features Barrie Chief, June Christy, trumpeting charioteer*, and | Air Force jet ‘ballet” over Grand Canyon. . PREMIERE, 10:00 p. m. (7) College student, (tippled i by faU, must decide whether to try to fight hia way back ] to health t thij H ^IlIum eteinKalTa win- jciil conditions. [’specify a $1.15 or $125 per hour think about 1(7” ! imum wage were lour indoor t Other employes mentioned whomininium, .probably with theater owners, aa owner of [now work .for wages below $1' ’ Committee members indicated They put the question to some; of the seven supporters and seven opponents of a minimum] page who appeared before them. .‘"niejr’re afraid of losing their jobe,” ■ said Bert IIcbsor, stert* tary of UAW Local 653. EXPRESSED HOPE Committee Chapman ftep!, Don ’Gorddn, R-Leland, and! members Rep. Mrs. Marie Hager. R-Lansing. and Rep.- James Karoub, D-Highland Park, expressed hope that employes] | would submit ‘written statements two Detroit hotels and the an hour were parking lot attend- tions l exemp-modifications for ero- Botsford Inn in Farmington, (ants? retail store clerks, service ployes who receive tips or other! the proprietor of Bedell’s res* [station attendants, and nurses’, compensation or whose pay> is! tauraat la Bloomfield Town* aides, - 'based on something other than ship, and Pontke’s Richad D. 1 Urn businessmen te oppooed!hours worked. Convict Tells How Gunman'Got’ Squealer _____Sparta. - ' (f) Pioneers 11:25 (7) Movie; <‘.The Lady and the Baridit.” Louis Hayward, Patricia Medir* 11:39 (3). Steve Allen--Variety. (4) (Cotarl^Tonlght—Allan Sherman.- , > 49) V. qv i e: "Gentleman’s Fate.” (1931) John Gilbert FRIDAY MORNING 6:15 (3) Meditations 1:29 (2) On the Farttl Tront 6:25 (2) Ners •:9B (2) Family Living 7:99 (21 News (4) Today % (7) Funews 7:95 (2) Fun Parade r" r~ r“ i 4 6 r~ 16 rr IS' 14 14 15 W It 18 19 26 21 1r sr zr i E id . ST 34 36 b 42 49 43 IT IT it TT 52 5r 55 54 it • 7:39 (71 Johnny Ginger____] 7:45 (2) King and Odie * 8:06 (2) Captain Kangaroo 8:39 (7) Big Show 8:56 (9) Warm-Up 8:11 (9) Morgan’s Metry-G>| . .Round.. . t 1:66 (2) December Bride (4) Living it) Movie: “Npb Hill.” (1945) George Raft, Joan] Henson was one of live union leaders who testified in favor (9) Abbott and Costello , 9:36 (2) To Tell the Truth (I) Window on Canada •litt (2) Editorial 16:19 (2) Connie Page (4) Say When. (9). Robin Hood 11:21 (4) News Lucy NEW YORK (IIP!) — “Thatv aad’ the groin in front of a barbershop. Thus Genovese won of a minimum‘wane *not"lie Wm> th>ts" Arnol<1 ” screamed] neighbor’s house. ]the struggle for power which he; cause the workers thev reo- [WaHy Schuster outside his Brook-i Schuster didn’t exactly know^ l* reputed to-held even resent receive substandard home on the night of March[who “they” were, but he knewithough he is in a federal prison, wages, but because “a mini- ;4. “My God! They got him!"!o,ere Were plenty of people who! According to federal author-mum wage would increase pur- Wally Schuster, operator of resented his.son’s sudden famejjji«’ y*lac^ haf chasing power, stimulate the ; a small clothing store, bent - for having recognized America s.Schuster s slaym- as Frederick, economy and benefit evei^* Lr the tmdysf hi. dead son jmpst wanted bank robberWiliel^toane oftwo or.gma^^-, one.” who had been shot in both eyes Sutton, on a subway Feb. 1», pects long sou^jt in tbe%sjil -i ’ ■ J j 1052. > . . fopen case. But Valachi said offi-j It would benefit our workers; j Sutton, was arrested and im-icials will never find Tenuto. An-; DrisOned b se a use of Arnold Vtasia bad him murdered in turn; - • • - ^-------------------------------------- indirectly,” said UAW Local 653 president John is. maye. Employes in food markets that’ do not come under the federal Reports Differ year-old pants salesman got plea-ty of praise and plenty of crack-; ' [pot mall," too, including a few minimum wage taw get less tn; , . •» . * tootls warning that he didn’t hhve wages than workers performing Untfi mi/rtrlorC !ong to live. Dermarket<; HUHI IMVUUCff ^ ^ ^ | on Fate the same work in supermarkets | covered by the law; UAW Local 1596 president G Jfftwf! PORT AU PRINCE. Haiti JAP) Arhold protection and several Waterford Water Plan Goes Slow HHCoIof) Play Your j pointed out. .-President Francois Duvalier’sl d„nt. Then Schuster appeared Hunch ........ ......4- Also supporting a minimum ] government claims the invasion of; „ . tekvlsi(M, inlerview. (9) Movie: “The Lisbon] wage were Democratic Conn- *^attL^,y I^tlia0|ex es! has Only this week - mqre than' §tory.” (1946, British) j ty Chairman Sander B. Levin buf>exl!eiisourcef ;lin thcjn years after Schuster’s ,mur-| ,19:45 (7) News ; and Mrs. Helen E. Slayton, "2f1InlLaa *7puDf m ■ tne ,n*jder — has the real reason fori Back yesterday from a quest |ii;Se ra) McC«y«______ ; former deputy *dfseetq( of the ar^. ^ uM^rrc^,^ ([the crime come out. Albert An-[for public funds, Waterford Town- ! (4) (Colon Price Is Right] Oakland County Department of i Jnfor'111 .?* Mmi>tc|M.?eor^ [astasia, burly Mafia crime cter ship Supervisor James Seeterlin T—T?) Jack LaLanne ' Social Welfare. c^"lmuni215 known as the Hatter Kill-; was not overly optimistic about nr pefe ond Giadvs ! ,^in a ^^a^ sj^^evushed] ,, ^ television,chanees for a -^million water 11.36 u I Pete ana uiaays Levin said a minimum wage the invasion after several hours of; - - • • (Concentration (7) Seven Keys I would “encourage individual in fighting in north Haiti Monday. He ]^" itiative” rather than dampen it claimed the rebels, led by Gefcl^"0®^ when the cocky, good-looking, program grant. on the screen^ Seeterlin said Housing and FRIDAY AFTERNOON ~-lLeon Caiitave a former chief -f Anastasia exploded withall the Home. Finance Agency officials [Lepn urntave, a tormer cnim m ^ ^ ha« hnnfai j ^ •’ j 12:66 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) First Impres t sion ~ (7) Ernie Ford tag (9) Hawkeye .'"j" 12:25 (2) News 12:36 (2) Search for Tomorrow > ’ (4) Trotti or Consequences' (7) Father KnoWs Best l (9) Dr. Hudson’s Journal ! 12:45 (2) Guiding Light iilfMl (47 Newt... 1:00 <2) Star Performance (4) Leave It to the Girls t {__ (7) General Hospital (94 Movie: “Mrs. Pkrking- Mtn Car Hits Buggy; Baby Boy Dies in Chicago informed him Water* application carries no sinwicu. Hit this] pri0rity’ - . Filed last November, the appli* the story of why ArnoM,cation has cleared several steps fttf OB t Is Crossing Oakland [staff, had been driven into the ,. neighboring Dominican Repuhlic.: ^ ^ he shouted; | Adrien Raymond, Foreign office ^ of ^ gunmen ............. [undersecretary, told newsmen* * some rebels were killed or caP~|^Ttvat’«_________ ________________ jtured, but he acknowledged that igchuater "wag hiVh ■" «n and 'is now up for legal review, |Cantave was not among them. Ljjgy as he rushed home to]. It seeks'll million, which (jie The government placed the size|change his clothes for a dance,.township will match, as part of . 'of the Invading force at about 100, accor(jinj» to a man who should a 97-million central water system.; « J j | e J cr one-fifth of what ft» rebelsj^nW— Jo*ph Vaftchi; Serteriin said he requested that v claimed. i . . . [the Oakland County Department] Private sources in Port auj Valachi, wno is (0f Pubiic Works now be listed Prince claimed Cantave was a as aphiicantr acting in hehairdf1 the fWmeinber M fhet^„ship. ! the Mafia, or Nostra' ” r USED TV 16” RCA f i4®« 17” M0T0R0U *19la :m milco *24*5 17” ZENITH/ *2995 il” GE $29®5 21” AIRLINE f34®5 21” SYLVAN IA f39®5 21” RCA •49*5 21” CBS »499S 7A» MUNTZ •49® Cash or Terms 60 OTHER SETS 30-DAY-EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE WAtTONTV SIS E. Walton Blvd. CORNER JOSLYN OPEN 9 to 9 | on Haitian soil pressing his driye ' ACROSS 1 Cottogs------ 4 Foodstuff for poultry 8 Parker House —-7- ; -12-City in Oklahoma 13 Operatic solo TT NauTicil term 15 Brythonic ?ea god 16 State of destitution 18 Monopolize - 20 Chairs *21 Atmosphere 22 Ripped 24 Planet , 26 Genius of amphibians 27 Sun ~ 30 Each 32 Calm 34 Tautened' 35 Nqmber — 36 hfariner’s direction 5 Greek war god 6 Mjdda^snooze -37 Log float 39 From himself 46 Judicial sentence 41 Small tumor 42' Pigpens : y^,1 ... >," ;■ 45 Emblem of Scotland 49 Satisfied ______________ 51 Auricle ." " 52 Trieste wine measures 53 Go hy aircraft 54 Abstract being 55 Hardy heroine " • 56 Nautical gangplank 57 Seine 7 Possessed 8 Hindu queen 9 Genus of true olives 16 Fbr feir that---- it Fewer —. ' ^ 17 Hebrew nation - 119 Gets up .- - ^ |23 Start 24 Ship officer /______ 25 Mimics 26 - Fortification. 27 Ten plus seven 28 Individuals 29 Unaspirated 31 Color * 133 Counsels (dial.) [38 Shackle' 140 FestWats ____________ [41 Short Jine (printing) 4c-Highlander—---------- <19441 Greer Garson, Waiter Pidgeon * 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4^ Best of Groucho i7)\Girl Talk 2:68- (21 Password (4) (Color) People Will Talk. (7) Da^ ih Court 2:21 (4) (7k Nets ■' — 2:36 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) Jane YYyman 2(66 (2) Star Playhouse _____(4) Loretta Yeung j(7) Queen for a Day 3:15 (91 News 3:31 (2) Edge of Night (1) (Cokr^ You Don’t Say (?) Who Do You Trust? —:—( 9) Vacation Time-------- 4:66 (2) Secret Storm seven-month-old boy was [to topple Duvalier. , 1 u • u killed last night when a car ! A rebel spokesman in tb/ Do- ,s ^ *8 known to its me^ rs, struck its baby carriage as the mini An Republic accused Duva-i to‘urn informant on his former '-1 ' ----- mother was push- lierVregime of issuing- false vie-! fellows in syndicated cr‘m*‘ j ing it across Oak-‘tory claims to try ancfdiscourage Valachi was.a lieutenant of Vito land. -/ Haitians from joining the in-Genovese who later ordered An-Dead on arrival vaders. . . astasia’s slaying in a Manhattan . at Pontiac Gen-! Oakland Highway Toll in ’63 82 Oral Hospital was j Jose Antonio Caban, son. of Mr. and Mrs. Marce* lino Caban, 121 E. Fairmount. [ [43 Ripped. [44 Travelers’ stopping places ' 46 Demigod , 47 Narrow .way!-... —....- 48 Formerly _______ -50 Grab -■ (4) Match Game, , — (7) American Bandstand ' 4:25 <4) News I 4:36 (2) Millionaire ] The mother, Clara, 43, was not injured in tiie 8:46 p. m. accident, ■flUst south of West Beulevard. Clarence L. W. Matthews, 86,* ! 810 Arthur, the driver nf the i car, told Pontiac .police be was traveling south bn Oakland at 1 40 miles an' hour when he itrock toe carriage. He said he I was 15 feet away from the [ carriage when he saw it. Police- /Another Marilyn Monroe? Impossible, Says WJlson This technical change would ! be more workable, since the , DPW will actually build the ! water system for the township, and the county is backing a i revenue bond issue. Seeterlin said he asked HHFAI to announce its approval or rejection withhythe next month. Water, system planning has advanced so far the exact amount of money! available tot construction must be known, he explained. 1 Seeterlin also placed on file with the HHFA the township's application tor $31,000 in federal: ffumnt—id uibtch Repairing Wkitciolt Jewelers 'new YORK --It mtm ** ”**! Marilyn Monroe left u$. A tot of drivel was written about Marilyn w ■ uurmfy-when she died and I contributed. But one thing was right. “WhoTThe the new MflrlKn Monroe? Nobody! There isn’t ■wvhady anymore. Lis Tnvtor’H have more money, but she’ll - -*vec have MM1* allure. There's one born a generation.” * *, ■ . > The death of a 55-year-old Pon- And I also wr^e, “Lets make a r»te.^ ttac man. WainTolonen,763 Port-when it’s all over we should give .a little hand ,and hag ^ attl.ibute(j tp a Answer to Previous Puzzle ing he swerved into the north-j bound lane to avoid hitting a boy ] .......... he saw in the^t«»t»i The child] Make Room for Daddy and mother were in the north-j (7) Discovery *63 ----- -rboumyane near the center Jine,_ _j — (91 Mickey Mouse qub,--i * * * 4:55 (7) American Newsstand ' The boy was another son of, 5:66 (2) Sea Hunt 'Mrs. Caban. Folic* Rule Suicide in Death of City Matt USED Refrigerators SQQ50 O v M H ELECTRIC 125 W. Huron COMPANY FE 4-2525 always been.” Right, too; yes? police. — ■ 1 • 111 ! ■ - * ^ —^•’~TMwiBrwartg^ dead on his THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . .. bed Tuesday with a rifle aerpss Mamie Van Doren — here to do “Talent scouts”'his'chest. He had died of a neck ind play “Wildcat”-went to dinnet all -alone- wound ! Rosamond Williams S0N0T0NE Wt . Hi-im Sorvicos m4 Supptios for M.L HEARING AIDS WILSON My heart stilt belongs to Bo Belinsky and l had no date.” she saich. . - Mickey Mantle says he’ll DOWN T Arabian gulf 3 Butter substitute 4 Plantation mansion » / (9) Larry and Jerry the pair,. When he stopped to look meant ^*s 1 HaPPy Murphy. 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant [hack, he said the other car al- ^ rD g^n) THAT: “I’ve quit reviewing books. I reviewed jiMJS)_Whh,lyblrds — readv had hlt ,he buggy'. . and spent so much time writing the review I couldn’t (6$) What’s New r r The carriage was c«rn«r 5:45 (il Rocky and His Friends feet on impact, police said. 5:11 f4)_C«5l Duvall —Today's Radio Programs- InvestigateTfcft of Automobile Tools Very’ find time to read the book. EARL’S PEARLS: “A couple thought the radio was fine tor their toddler till they heard her say her prayer, ‘And bless Mommy. end Daddy, Ampn and FALL!’ ' - * ■ ■ \ r - < REMEMBERED QUOTES: The secretary handed her boss a tetter. "TWs One was marked ‘Personal,*^* she said, “but it isn^ . That’s earl, brother, WJM760) WXYZ(1770) CKIWCOO) V 130) WPON(t 400) WJ6K(t 300) WHM-WAftM.7) »n» thin nr h»twm*, st um .nH *:9»-WJR. World .ToalgM. S:U—WJR. Evening Concert 8:30—WWJ. Music SMUk rw-WJE. Detroit Symphony S:J0—WWJ.^---- tePM- - News „:45—WWJ. Music Scene M:W-m fflm Uimee. li.ee wwj News M£m. News wxyz. News WJBK. Rnhert i- U» wpOIL teuLewrenee Show I CKLW Joe Gen(,1l( warn. _ ; [ w«iL »*•*• far- •:M—WJK. -Niieos* »•" [ WJ*. »«»« ■ ■ | ■W\VJ. Business - U:I»-CKLW. Buh'l * WX¥Z. , Ale* Dreler ’ WWJ.' Oresn MueI CKLW, D. Ihsler ______ WCAB. Ttils I fcl WHPI. Music 1’or- Modems ! wm Music ■»y_«esi %«. teorU \v\v.l. Phone OnthHM / WJBK. j. Bellhey WfcAR.. Mi _ ,n«5=WPONr-Bnr Johnson FRIDAY MtWMNfl J 7ils-wrrz. Lee AtSI CKLW. B. wrist. . wJR .SporU ' 7:s*-wjr. Choral ceraaore I WJBK. Nen WPOM, Ne«s, Arts miw r 1 WHPI." Rost. Musis 1 1 S:SS—WJR Music' Hsll ,1 WPON. Dale Tine 7:00—CKLW. News. Tehy David ; 7:S0—CKLW. New*. DofM [ SdW—WJR. News. Queas CKLW. New*. OeeM . S:SS—WJR. Music Hall i.OS-WJR. Noes. Harris j . CKLW. News. Dsvie J WCAR. News. •‘Mariya? . WHPI. Jfews. McLeod j SUM—WJR Lee Murray i j U:«-WWJ. News. Friday ArriRNOON Township automobile parts deal-t«:ee-wiR M««t. Par* ler is under- investigation today catV'jS y«*“ by Sheriff’s deteeftves WCABvJ"l*t' 4 : Sherwood . Steele, 0 w ner of 2^.0^‘Hetiet Stub* Auto Parts, 2221 Highland, ter- told police yesterday that the-itews.^Jerry . oisen ttjlieves gained entrance hy break-1 1 nri-jn *r_. hijj [ing a window‘at the rear of the; t:SS-WJR. News. Showcase [buttding. ' * ! y^^'eSSSSS. News] 'White a complete ^ventory has ] WJBKJ' News. Reid ] WPON}’ Newt. Olsen [ IS-WU'CICtW Toe Van ['■11:40—WJR. News. Godlrey I V WXYZ . Winter j. CKLW Jes Use- -v— 1 UMSa-wxm. .waaer. -Mjhm— I daw^DarMs torque wrench, 160 or more hand. | j wesat feomto ] tools, wrenches and fAckets, J»WV I i:*s—wjr. Music mu jer drills, spark- plugl and 15 car-r'^Bum^r^rubi, - W»of cigarettes. CONDON'S TV for Big Vilms .... Excellent Service RCA end ZENITH — Color. Black and While SUMMER SALE On AN Cetot TV Srte *399 95 CONDON’S RADIO & TV 730 WIST HURON—Acrme from New Rost Office ft 4^9736 Courtesy of CONSUMERS EOWit CO. THE TODAY SHOW 'Comes to Outstate Michigan AUG. 5 THRU 9 if*7-9 A M + CHANNEL 4 Five, two-hour network television. program* : originating from a different* setting each day, tell all about your State at its summer-wonder-land best. viewers, nationwide, through, the cooperation of Michigan “progress minded” organisations in* eluding ... St'* . CONSUMERS ROWER COMPANY Won-Now ♦» Watch The Today Showl 1 JD—12 yilK PONTIAC PKKSS. YHpBSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 * You Can Count on Us ... Quality Costs No More at Sears DOWNTOWN PONTIAC SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO Yes, We Invite Von to Compare Quality, Features Prices, Guarantee and Service . . . Then Buv At Sear Once Over Does It!;.. Guaranteed to Cover Any Color EVEN BLACK-in just ONE CMT Regular $6.50 Odorless Latex Pai ■ Installed Blown-In Insulation! 1 M 1 30x40’House 1-Story $$ **$ . Frame Construction W 1 Ceiling Only J NO MONEY DOWN* Master-Mixed.. Exterior Paint ,v,. 4s* Gallon Sidewalls Only ... $157 Sidewall ft Ceiling. . .$289 Better Because, • Defies mildew discoloration • Non-chalking; self-cleaning • Flows on easily, hides well • Lab tested and approved One-Coat Interior Latex GUMANTEE ^ If one gallon fail* to cover 450 square feet over any color with one coat when used as directed, we will furnish free additional paint to assure coverage, or, at your option, refund your complete purchase price. Needs no thinning. Just open the can—it's ready to apply with roller or brush. And there’*' no odor. So you can paint in any weather, even * with windows tightly closed. Dries hard and smooth in a mere 20 minutes — juat about the time it takes to clean your hands and tools with ordinary soap and water, Sound .Good? It is! Homart.insulation keeps home cooler in suminer and saves on sir conditioning billi. And it Won'the long before' “Old-Man-Winter” will be here with its bone i under four feet of water- Mayor Chester KoWat eslimated the damage at $35 million and lamed .the city a. “disaster. area.” _' i V .. families To a high school, police, said about 80 per cent of the homes there suffered, flood dam- THE PONTIAC PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, TH0RNDAY, AUGUST** 1968 —48 PAGES If* •’ , / Ser/oos B MDs Hopeful: Boy No Worse President Visits Now Son at Boston Hospital The Weather \P ' V.B. Weetteer Barca* r win if .. \ Fair, Cool tanlght Maybe Shower* Friday tbetella rate •} *- . 'J VOL, lii NO. m . ★ OK CHUM US MIL. Reported Taken in Train Holdup Masked Gang Takes Money, Diamonds at Crossing in 'England i Wire* I N, En| - From Oar News CHEDDINGTON, land — A gang of masked Ttfbbers working with split-second precision held up a ____mail train early today and escaped with loot estimated in value at up to $2.8 million. * A spokesman foi^the post office said the loss "may run well into seven figures* to become the largest train robbery in the his-> tory of Britain, Reports on. the size of the dar-ing gang ran to between 20 pnd ’ 30 men. With stockings, pulled over their heads to conceal their identity, they halted the Glasgow-to-London special mail train near this village before dawn by rigging signals along thertrack like ■experts. -—^TTieX bandits made off with more than 100 bags of registered mail. Included in It was a large quantity of used valid carrency. wMch was he--ing returned to be reprocessed. A shipment of diamonds also was believed lost. The bandits stopped the train 40 miles northwest of London. They covered the green signal at the crossing with a glove and lighted the red signal .They also cut'railway telephone wires. » When engineer Jack Mills,-Wr stopped the train, some of the gang attacked him and his assistant while others smashed windows of the first two mail coaches and climbed aboard. They tiqd up the four mail sorters. UNCOUPLE COACHES The gang then uncoupled the two coaches from the remaining 10, on the train, which had about 50 postal workers aboard. The engineer and his assistant were forced to drive the engine and the first two coaches a mile farther south. The gang unloaded the registered mail bags on a bridge over a narrow country road and dropped them to cars waiting on the road 15 feet below. Then they made their getaway. The alarm was given by a postal worker who ran to Ched* dington station about a mile from the scene. . Police - arrived with tracker dogs. Roadblocks were set up. Both .the engineer and his assistant were taken to a hospital in nearby Aylesbury. Mills was detained with head injuries. *~ assistant whs discharged after treatment. In Today's Press Diabetes ~ ..Federal workers fudge on the Job ... for health - PAGE B-5. TFX Runoff competition for oontrsict considered — PAGE B-4.. D-Day. h , Special tax reform session begins Sept. 11 — PAGE D4. Area News .. ......B-l, Bridge ........... D-8 Comics ......... D-2 Deepening Crisis ...,.D4. Editorials ..—As■ Fond Section C-4, C-5, D-I Markets ....... Obituaries . —... ,t D-5 Sports ..... .Cr7-—C-U ^Spiten■■ ■ • ■ • • • • W * TV-Radio Programs 0-11 . Wilson, Ear! . . . . . .D-ll Women’s Pages B-8—B-l 1 Condition Steady 1st Night VISITS SON—President Kennedy, accom-—papiedby bendon Snedker, assistant to general director ..of Children’s Medical Center in i, arrives last night to visit his new-born irhMu son. The infant was ruHffedbhgr^ fr$m Otis Air 1 Force Base hospital on Cape' Cod when struck with a respiratory ailment Showers Loom on City Horizon Ghee again the weatherman is predicting possible thundershowers. Partly cloudy and warm with a chance of afternoon thundershowers is tomorrow’s forecast. _________ Tonight is expected to be fair'and cool, the low dipping to near 63. t ~ Skies will be peratures cooler Saturday,.rthe high climbing to about 80. Sundayand Monday wilk be warmer again. Light, varible morning winds wilL continue through tonight, and become .south to southwest at 10 to 1& miles per hour tomorrow. The low recording in down,-town Pontiac (Preceding 8 a.m. was 63/ The thermometer registered SS'yrt 1 jutf*** Report First Ladyr Spends Good Nig BOSTON (AP)-Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, day-old son of the President, was listed in serious condition today, but doctors said the way he spent his first night gave some encouragement. The President visited his fiew son this morning at' the Boston Children’s Medical Center and moments later, presidential press secretary Pierre Salinger issued this statement: "The baby’s condition remained about the same through the night. "It Was a source ttf'fomefli-couragement to doctors who felt the baby’s condition would get worse.” ■ "The baby's condition would have to be described as still serious, a cause of some concern, but doctors are still hopeful,’’Slllif-ger The-White House put wraps on release of medical informa-tioa directly at, the .hospital baby Is having breathing difficulties. Federal Grant for Expansion U. S. Department OKs . Financing of 87-Bed Addition, Remodeling ' —.m . r*Ul, Pr,u Pteit* SPIRITED WINNER-' Jitiiice Kiefa took-her horse Rex out for a run after it won first place in the halter class St the 4-H fair yesterday. Janice, 16, is 1 memb®*“6MKe Troy Mustangs 4-H Club. She-will be riding Rex hi -competition again Saturday night, when a Horse dub contest closes out the week-long fair. City Police Vote to Uphold Chief Salinger said the .White House staff would release/ail information on the babyy condition and Afused to discuss details of Jhe He said the diagnosis remained ■ ■. l A |i. ■ ;T ^ Ithe 'sahie as it was Wednesday— OTIS AIK FORCE BASE, Mask. (UPT)— First Cady general term idiopathic respira-Jacqueline Kennedy had a “very good night, and is. in'tory distress syndrome—or diffi-good spirits,” her obstetrician said today. . IcuMy in breathing from unknown Dr. John W. Walsh,'prominent 50-year-old Wash- Although Salinger said the con-kigton physician who performed the Caesarian delivery dhton was atiH serious it wak the of day-old Patrick Bouvier- Kennedy, said that the President’s wife was “tak-i' V'*"; 1 fPPQA), barpin i agent for Pontiac’s 110-man police force, has given Police Chief Joseph Koran a vote of confidence first time he hlM used ..that-word to describe the baby’s condition. The President stayed at the jspital for about a half-hour and then left by helicopter for the Otis ing fluids nicely and herimoming before taking off for Otis indition ffe AFB where he will report on the condition to Mrs. Kennedy Air Force Base Hospital on Cape who is making a remarkably fast recovery from the Caesarian. good.”. . The 34-year-old First Lady - awateotd early today However, Mftv Remedy's mother, M«. she has not yet been in touch With the President concerning their baby boy who is being treat- ed for a lung complication at Children’s Hospital Medical Cen-ter-in'Boston. Kennedy spent, the night in ton to be hear his newborn son and visited; the hospital , this Hugh D. Auchincloss, spent the night at officer’s quarters at Cod, about 65 miles away, where the baby was born Wednesday and' where Mrs.' Kennedy is recovering. •’ The Presideht’i infant sob rushed by amSulance to hospital early today to find out how her daughter was getting All Was quiet around the as-bestos-shingled wing:of the hospital where Mrs. Kennedy was quartered. ' Damage at $35 Million Rains Flood Buffalo in his battle with city commissioners. Boston Children's Medical Center within five hours of his birth nt Otis Air Force Base Hospital, some 85 miles from I^ston, The Kennedy's named the new baby Patrick, after the President’s grandfather, and Bouvier, tor Mrs. Kennedy’s father, the late John V.^Bouvier, a New York stock broker. Because of the premature birth, the bdby was baptised in the sur- The vote came’at a regular meeting of the group last night. The meeting, originally scheduled for next week, was held a week early in view of the City Commission’s suspension of City MahapTRObert A. StlCrer. Stierer was suspended Monday, largely because he refused to fire Koran as requested by a majority of. the . commission at .recent secret meetings. The vote concerned only the chief’s clash with , the commis- gery room shortly after birth by (he base Catholic Chaplain, the Rev. John S. GahiU of Portland, Maine. •ALO, N.Y.(AP)-Flood damage in Buffalo was estimated at. $35 million following torrential rains that virtually swamped some areas apd routed more than 300 persons from their homes. Rains up to'3J8 inches drenched the city and suburbs yesterday tor the second time in 10 . days. Buses stopped runniag. Cars were abandoned as water filled / low areas. Power was knocked ont. Telephone lines were down. Many basements, were flooded. The rains fell mostly during the midmorning rush hours. It was over by noon. Group Meets Early ,-M) Poll Membership The Pontiae Police Officers Ak- (Special to The Press) fttiAXMzOO -t, Charles E. Hodges fax* the stand to the first- degree mwder trial of his unoh^ will give new emergency facili-ABMse WMte, yesterday and ties- Res, an outpatient clinic, and fa- tified that White "did all the cutting” in tlie knife slaying of Kroger store comanager Robert A, Greene March 1$. See Editorial oi) Page A-6 Hodges, 22, *f 174 Prospect, who * a d qjr'earlifcr pleaded guilty -te the robbery-murder, said he tried te discourage White, also 22, of 7»$ Well, from killing Greene and urge#; that the victim be taken-te a hospital. Appearing as a prosecution witness, Hodges said he took no part in the slaying and had not known at first that he was participating tea. robbery. were taking Greene to the store that-n&it “to pick up a check.” "Wo called the meeting, only i see hoW the membeFship feels about the controversy,” said Thomas Hereford, PPOA president. «He said that "a good majority” of the 34 members present voted in favor of supporting the chief. Total membership of the PPOA Is about 85. ‘Naturally, we don’t-agree on everything the chief does, but we do in this 'particular situation,” Hereford noted. "We believe that those things on which we do disagree can bh straightened out through negotiation.”- When informed of the PPOA action this morning, Koran said he was ‘'very gratified. “It should help to set the record straight,” he noted. "The fact that internal problems arise between myself and the PPOA is normal and neyrtia- A $1.5 - million federal grant to finance a $ 3-million expansion program ait Pontiac’s St. Joseph Hospital was approved yesterday by the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare. ' The $1,516,000 grant underaccelerated public works funds will provide for an 87-bed addition and remodeling of the present ~ building. Sister‘ Mary Xavier, hospital administrator, said the five-story addition will be constructed on the north end of the 330-bed hos* pital. Hodges Says White Guilty ijyStqreJGfling ‘The remodeling of the main “I* be fairly , extensive,” Sister Xavier added, “and It will relieve aeme ef the overcrowding.” t The hospital administrator said the ibtiuice of the costs of the expanslon wquM be borne by dm ■s of Mercy, Detroit. A M&tory addition to the west side of the Catholic hospital will provide new dietary facilities. A setter addHhi to tta soutb Hlities for physiotherapy. Sister Xavier said the remodeling of the main building would include setting up four-bed wards instead of the. presort six-bed fa-(Continued on Page 2, Col. <) He said White told him they Hodges, admitted taking some of .the $1JN stolen from the safe Greene was forced to open „i>efore he was killed at the Kro-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) YouflqJ)Bmocrat Leader Dies in Mountain Crash LIGONIER, Pa. W—Roy Schafer, president , of the National Young Democrats- organization during, the election pf PTfesidMlt Kennedy, was found dead today in the wreckage of a ,small plane on Laurel Mountain.. A passenger survival the crash. ' State police said the single-engine blue and white Cessna came down in heavy fog mid struck aii iatermediate ski slope about 1,200 feet from the Laurel' Summit Ski Lodge. 4 ♦ ... Want Daniel Murphy to Head Auditor Board By DICK HANSON A movement is afoot among members of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors to appoint County Clerk - Register Daniel T. Murphy chairman of the County Board of Auditors. The maneuver is planned as the first step toward making Murphy a 'county manager. -As such, he -would be directly responsible to the board of supervisors fqr the day - to “ day administration of county government. IKa task currently is split chairman; DI v I d Levinson, ' past chairman and bead ef the pewerfnl ways aad means committee, and Madfeen Height* Supervisor Charles B. Edwards Jr. Also-includal were Curtis Pot-ler and Harry. Horton of Royal Oak: R. Clare OimaiiWB._««Fr 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TritTB^DAYV AUGUST 8,1968 26 Nations Join to Sign N- Pact WASHINGTON (AP)-At least 26 nations—not including two key powers—began signing the limited nuclear test-ban treaty today In llfgijtftaantly absent France aqd Red China. France is in process of becoming a nuclear power and Prest- ~ WaaMngtop, London and Moscow, dent Charles rts Differ Hodges Testifies on Fate of White Did Killing Haiti Invaders i00"#"1*1 p«*e <»*> ger store, at Telegraph FORT AU PRWCE, Hritf (AP)l EUabe-polptment. Austin was drafted for die chairmanship when the Repub- •i... > it;1' lican-controlled board ..of supervisors refused to appoint the third member of the board of auditors, Robert E. Lilly, Democrat. . Lilly, 46-year-old auditor’s secretary-member, said he w o u 1 d seek the chair again this year if asked by any group of supervisors. He was reappointed to the board last year for a three-year b^^abont tore weeks", term. (Gontinued From Page One) cilities, and also providCIor more semiprivate and private rooms. This is the first of a two-phase expansion program that wiH give St. Joseph Mercy Hospital{ a 500-bed capacity, according to Sister Xavier. Bhwprihts are already in die hands of contractors. Bids will- Moore has been a member of the b o a r d of. auditors for 33 years. Before that, he was Bloomfield Township supervisor for six years. Murphy,-40, has been cferk-reg-ister since the position was mat. ed in 1959. Before that he was cdflhty rqgisterof deeds since 1956. Seven of 10 Passengers Killed in Freeway Crash FONTANA, Calif, tfl — A station wagon carrying'* man, and nine chiftlren-crashed into a con-crete abutment on the San Bern-ardino Freeway today, kiUing seven of them. •“S'gt. Richard C\ Chapman of the CaUfornia Highway Patrol said Sister' Xavier said hospital, officials hope to begin construction by. late September. Completion is expected to 18 months. The 87-bed! addition -will give 30 beds, she estimate'll will eliminate some hi the overcrowding to the main building. Sister Xavier said the construc-tion would tie in with the city’s new east side sewers. Ahy •enlargement of the bos-pital is ^contingent on the city’s installing new pipe lines to give the hospital added sewage serv- Birmingham Area News ^ J ^New Students Shou iisier Now Teats and coarse schedules we to be completed by students enrolling to the junior and senior high schools. They will be assisted by counselors no* m dntyat enchidteisl. Advance registration, tried for the -first time at Groves High School last year, has, been extended to' all secondary schools. PAY FEES All new and returning students at Bamum, Berkshire, Derby, Groves and Seaholm have been asked to pick up (heir schedules and pay their fees the week of Aug. 20-30. Students who will be out of town may register Sept. 3 and 4. Parents of children attend* tag Birmingham elementary school! for tile first time, should contact tbe scbooi to tkelr area.. * Physical examinations -are-re^J quired of all incoming seventh, grade students at Barnum, Berkshire and, Derby junior high schools and all incoming 10th State Polica Searching for Mail Off of Train MET AMOR A — Some ,30 bags of mail which fell from the Beeltaer~trata near here today are being searched for by men of the Romeo State Ftilice Post. - Police said officials of the New York Central Railroad Co. requested the search about 11 a.m. The mail sacks feu out of the train shoptly before^ that. graders at Groves and Seaholm high schools. The exams are necessary fife participation to physical education "activities. Students fTa been asked to pick up the farms at their schools prior to the Sept. 5 opening of school.'1 Btementary and secondary school offices are open from 6 a m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday. The board consists of John Rumsey, chairman; Mrs. Lucille Roehn; Ralph Hesler; Mrs. KatiK ryn King; Mrs. Betty Abbott; The Birmingham ’ school sys- and Philip Caldwell teachers to’ all academic areas they discussed , visits made to The six members of the new Bloomfield Township Library Board were awom hi by Township Clerk Mrs. Details V. Little last night. ' _ for the 1963-04 school year, according .to Personnel Director Kenneth Nagly. A minimum of W semester Lours of college credit at, an approved teacher educatioa institution is required for the Mate's 96-day permit. f .• Those interested can contact the personnel office at the Board Chester and Mar- other area libraries and inter-views^jvith members of the State Library Board The . board members also organized the following six corn-policy and operation, personnel, sites and rental property, contract with Baldwin library, finance and budget and gtfto. Police Rule -Suicide The death of a 55-year-old Pontiac man, Wain Tolonen, 763 Port-, iand. has been^ attributed to a self-inflicted gunshot by Pontiac police. ~Totonen was found dead on his bed Tuesday with a rifle across his chest. He had died of a neck wound. Shop For These EXIM DISCOUNTS TMHTE-FUIMT > S4T0UDAY Mr 2nd Floor HARDWARE DISCOUNTS Special DISCOUNT PRICES Far TONITE-FRIDAY S SATURDAY Only ZIPPER STYLE Tobacco Pouch Rrgulmi ight tobocco pouch in thofct ol block or .brown colon. Htindy zipper style pouefc - 4 Bawls BRIAR PIPE SET 439 BOOKJATCNES 54 Pads Bv Official Sin Rubber Volley Bads 190 $2.95 Value White rubber volley ball for healthful fun and exorcise for all age groups. •••••••••••••••••••I Set For 4 - Players Badminton*™!:? At shown — 4 rockets, stakes, net and birds plus a regulation volley 'ball far outdoor hrn^Jn plastic case. > $6.00 Value plates,, pots, pail, I etc. Nsrt la-1 gather for storage. | top on wood frame, folds compactly for storage or carrying, •eeeeeeaeeeeeeeeeeeeeeaeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee ieeeeeeaeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee with Blanket covering1 2-Qt. Steel Canteen For mosf any make car genuine CHAMPION, guaranteed brand new plugs. Limit 8 per person. 26xir ROBBER MATS Regulqr $1.19 Fat see—Save At Simmt Brand Naw ‘CHAMPION’ SPARK PLUGS $1.05 Vaiue — Each Garden Hose-50 Ft. n< $i.49 value — weatherproof plastic hose with | bross coupling. For lawn, garden or car washes. Easy ta Install It Yourself - Pre-assembled Outdoor IV Antenna Regular $9.95 Value Complete TV aerial kit — K get dear,* bright pictures. Far black 'end white or color TV sets. * ■_____ Car Root Mate 449 Easy to Install-Fits Most Cars Car Helper Spring 99 As shown — heavy duty steel coil springs .increases cor load capacity up to 1000 .pounds. Install °**d save yourself. • CHRYSLER MOTOR PREP I) .25 can — 16 oupce engine additive., 69° ALEMITE CO-2 AOOiTiyE . $1.56 can for all carenginae. Limit 2,. AUTO SAFETY SEAT BELTS |5.9B Vnlua - SeptMtCeencilapproved... TlflB PONTIAC P&BSS, THURSDAY, AUGUST~8:i9C3 ,*1 Chicken Ideal for Diet f Low in Calories, fait r* ‘While chicken isgenerous with 'nutrients, including high-qulity protein, it is» happily miserly dor the dieter) in calories and fit. The low-calorie bird has a . tower fat content than any other ,;mest; a three • ounce portion, -broiled, without bone, yields only .nine grams of fat, according to ■ -y Nattofrai Broiler Council. And fie; (t|t It' dhes have contains nx»fe unsaturated fatty acids than do odiarLmaatwds: 64 pqr cent of the fatty acids in chickeruqre Coney ttlond Slyle Yon can stretch those burgers with c*ili con rente. Brown the hamburgers on both sides.id a big skiUet, 4hen add the chili and let it heat gently while the burgers finish cooking. Dressing Tenderizes tfbirfl an inc^eMive; c h u c k steak Wo t gouKmet,-treat. Dredge a ft; lb:!chuck dleak, abpjut 1VS incj^ea thick.in a .^£|r-ter cup seasoned- flour. Sear, bn all sides. Next combine one (1% oe.) envelope onion sbup gibe and one (6 ox) bottle Russian dressing; poar 'over meat. Shmher gently in covered Dutch oven for ' holms or until tender. f W tMIIMH W« Stock All Matching Floor Til* and Nacaoary Trim WE LOAN TOOLS rmnnnnr^' PONTIAC'S LARGEST TIL! CENTER Our Owfi Installation Work Oono by Experts Ohs Mon., Thur*., Fri. IN SiOOP.M. Taps,, Wed., **• hi ♦■ML.... Ham Loaf Has % Topping Do yod hveit. fohk' U#yo family meals are getting ip ‘main dish dlQ^fben toy TJttk < Ham Loafers. If you’re .a ing homemaker, they’re perfect for a “make die night before* meal: Pretty enough fbr company end hearty enough for the family . . * chances are, you’ve served Little Ham Loaf* ers, you’ll be asked for re( So, keep the recipe handy. Little Ham Loafers 1 pound ground ham 1 ppund ground pork 1 cup fine dry bread crumbs % cup evaporated milk >; : (1 small can) % cup catsup 2 eggs ‘ - * 2 tablespoons instant minced onion 3 tablespoons horseradish 2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce &Jeaspoon salt Few grains pepper L 09 peach preserves Mix wejl all ingredients except peach preserves in a 3-quart bowl. Shape with wet hands into twelve 4x114-inch hives. Put into a’greased 13x9x2-inch pan. Bake near center of 3S0 oven (moder-ate) 30 minutes. .A A A Spread preserves1 evenly over tops of- loaves. Bake about .25 minutes more. Spoon some of juice in pan over loafers. Serves « to 8. Variation: Use 1 cup Apricot Preserves instead of peach. 1075 W. Huron St. Phono 334-9957 If You Don’t Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! Since most households always haVe a for of peqnut butter on US /Sintry shelf, why not make this T>erennial faVorite the basis of your planning for impromptu entertaining? Hide Sandwich Filling Inside-Loaf Bread i imagination, Xha Oawr of peanut butforjfoM so well with most other foods that it’s a cinch to prepare out-of-the-ordinwy combination sandwiches hi minutes. Depending on what you have extent of your own you can come up with a sand wich that’s different, yet delicious, with very little effort. For example, toy peanut butter and crisp bacon, peanut butter and sliced banana, peanut butter and chopped onion, peanut butter and ham, or even peanut butter with sliced cucumber" and matoes — Just to name a few ljossibiUtisr^ Even better, try tikis idea for a' new and sophisticated party* time sandwich Savannah Sandwich Leaf —which red be prepared ahead at time I loaf French or Italian style bread . . ■ 1% cups bre^d crumbs % cup water :% teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon chopped parsley Vt teaspoon Worcestershire sauce % cup finely chopped onion fo teaspoon pepper V« cup crunchypeanut butter I egg yolks, pr 1 whole egg Aluminum foil _ Cut a V-shaped piece lengthwise from the top of loaf of French Italian bread. Remove piece and with' a,, fork pull out soft bread crumbs so that an inch shell of bread* and crust remains. Measure 1 Vi reps crumbs and mix with Water, seasonings, peanut batter, egg yolks and meat Pile lightly, into bread shell, cover whfa tap crest and tie tightly with string in about three places. Wrap in aluminum foil aid bake fa a moderate even 356 degrees one hourl stored hi the refrigerator for —Cut info inch slices and serve Curl Large Bologna jnto Edible Cups - If you' leave *the casing on bologna slices, .they’ll curl when you heat them in a skillet in a tittle butter. You can fill the bologna cups any way you like — >with a little thick cheese sauce, scrambled eggs or creamed vegetables. The cups won’t hold very much so you can sometimes use-up odds and ends of food this way and have an attractive dish. use later. H you prefer, you can reheat the sandwich before slicing and serving, or simply dish it np cold. hot. Or may be cooled in foil and chilled in refrigerator and served .cold. Makes 8-10 sandwiches. we're proud mm • SWISS • CLUB Gov’iT1nspcct$d Qualify Beef Portion HAM 39! Lean, Tender BLADE-CUT can HUT4F. farm Fresh REMUS MITER Tender, VEAL mould! STEAKS YOUR CHOICE , 12 lbs. £%• Veal Patties _ ^2 Dm. aw Minute Steaks! 3 lbs. S:’Hot Dogs 3 lbs. Skinleoe i *t Chunk Bologna HH 78 North Saginaw DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Opaw Friday IvfUwgo *UI9 R.M. , . This A4ln. Effect Bath Stares . *, had Saturday *> f,: I Ion 14 lbs. Logs or (' I Braaotoml jHaHiianu ’' MARKETS Quality Mea Since 1931 4348 Dixie Highway r DRAYTON PLAINS "* Opwn Thurs. thru Sort. 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Open Sundays 9 A M. to 6 P.M. nniiiHinyiiiiiiniamtiiE THE PONTIAC PBJ68S.THURSPAY, AUGUST 8, IMS Teeing " v BRUNO L. KEARNS Golf, the gentlemen’s game, is the beet ambassador of good will in our waning world. . Gary Player, whose fatherb just a “diamond ipjoe foreman in South Africa and not a diamond mine own- a reputation world wide unless he plays in the United States. "This islhe proving ground for golfers. Hie tJ.S. the greatest golfers m the world,” he added.___________• • * Player thought that with the rise of golf in most ^foreign countries, especially Japan; Australia and Mew Zealand, the day would*-come that one of every five in our top 50 players on the tournament trail in the US. would be from a foreign country. fe There ere many outstanding players in foreign countries but unless they come to the United States, they can’t expect to gain any great reputation of sort. _ Surprisingly, Arnold Palmer aad Player, playing at Orchard Lake in their 33rd personal match in three years of International benefits, were in agreement when they were asked which tournament is considered as the world’s greatest. ' ■ No, they didn’tv say the •''U.S.G.A, Open. ’The USGA Open draws jmme of the greatest players in the world,” said Palmer, “but because >tfce British E2mpire is still the British Empire in golf, the British Opea is still considered as the greatest in the “‘Just as foreigners must gain their reputation hi the UJ., any golfer, including the' American player, Isn’t the greatest in the eyes of Australians, New Zealanders, Canadians, Africa and tile rest of the British Empire, ..unless- he..-has won. the British Open,” added Palmer. ORCHARD LAKE MATCH -The two jdayers have been matched so often in benefits they’ve had to devise a few mu-tines to please the crowds' on thrirtonrs. Bowl A F Ct TIMBERLANES Pontiac llocrsation 18 C Parry St. Bowling 25c ■ ernmytmmm of August. FI 3-9701 Opan 12 to 11 OPEN BOWLINS AT ALL TIMES ! Bring This Coupon mmmmm Neither considered his game sharp on the Orchard Lake course. Player wap putting'poorly and dose observers indicated that they both, thought there was "something fishy” about the greens. One source indicated that they .thought the greens" may have been given a tinting and Palmer got wiad of this abont the 14th hole, and thus was able to alter Us potting on the final holes when he staged a late flurry to tie Player with a 71.______________ Most everyone expected course records to be shattered, but Player three-putted three greens and Palmer never got his putter, moving until last three holes — when he found out- the greens were greener, only on the surface. , ] Anyway, Camp Qakland enjoyed the greenest (toy, with $20,-000 going toward the building program at the Oxford Ojte. iOKTPUTTt^_____________—V- The Wayne - Oakland Conference, which shows good strength in golf with teams such as North-ville, Bloomfield Hills, Milford having outstanding seasons tost year, will have to .conteriirwith Holly next year on the strength of a 14 year old freshrfian. Bill Taylor, who. will be a sophomore at Holly next month, won the GAM caddie championship at Gowanie tost weekend with a three-over par 73. , ' ' ... Taylor, a caddie at Warwick Hills, tied Jim Cletond of St. Clair in the regular round and ■tbeu^ww-ln a~ playoff with a Mrdlo..".♦‘a - ch golf MtetPta course in the GAM compel the annual event; Don Catopbell of Birmingham was fourth with 76, Russ Streeter of Edge wood John Westhaus of Birmingham and Mark Cykow-skl of Oakland Hills all had 77’s. The team title went to Jack-son witira 478, followed by Birmingham with 483l wsdNodatV fights ■7 Tke IhmIiM Frau TEANKCK, NJ.—Frank D1 Paula, !7S. Jersey City, outpointed Dob McAtecr. 17S. Paterson, N.J., I. OAKLAND. Cam.—Henry Salcido. ■acraraaDto. CaUL. i. YOU'LL SMILE TOO WHEN YOU SEE THESE PRICES on 1983 Demos and Officials’ Cars 1963 Olds F-85 Sedan Hydramatk, Solid Cordovan SOOQflOO Brown Finish. I BnavV Pius Tax 1963 Chevy Bel Air 400 In State tourney Elks City 'D' Softball Representative Pontiac’s linal state softball playoff spot want to Elks 810 tost night .when it tended Monica ttl Chontof-Hymeuth, 4-1. TfBnrin put Elks Into the state Class D playoffs.. ■ Other city poSfrseason action saw Bob A Larry’s Bar nip Local 663, 8-7, Berry Door pounded Bud & Lou’s Bar, 134,"and GAM Construction topped Motorcar Transport, 7-3. No. eight hitter Sid Gregory had No of the five Elks’ hits awl seared three e< Ms teams’ four rims against MonicattL BVsd MWhweViNlrthrpark homer drove iaNe tofurenco runs in the final frame. Gary Bpe tossed a five-hitter it W ' ,tjr Bob A Larry’s and Local 613 traded six-ftiti innings in their tight Class B struggle but the for-mer had too big~a lead and ANyTHING FOR LUCK — Hard hick pitcher Roger Craig of the New York Mets holds up uniform number 13 which he says he will wear when he pildtes' against toe Cubs Friday . night. Craig has worn number 38, this season. One more loss and Craig' will break the National League record for consecutive defeats for, a pitcher in a single season. Tfc has lost of -22 games and 18 in a row. ' Writers 'Put' , '7y* - Jt -_i_ Closer to Pitcher ST. LOUIS (UPI) - A near half-century old record Involving 16e "Iosingest”pitcher was revised today, and baseball fans waited to see if Roger Craig, in his-new No. 13 New York Mets’ uniform, could stay away from the tote John Nabors’ 10-game consecutive losing streak. -Craig,- with a 3-20 season record and 18 consecutive defeats, will try to change his luck Friday night by switching to uniform No. 13 from his regular No. 38 uniform. If Grllg loses against the Chicago Cobs in .New York, he' will tie Nabors of the Philadelphia Athletics, who set the old record in 1116. ords committee of the Baseball Writers Association. Tlie verdict by the committee was that Nabors was improperly given one defeat, thus reducing his consecutive defeats to It, one game more than Craig. Cliff Kachline, records committee chairman and an Associate Editor of the Sporting News, took the committee member poll when UPI asked a check into the 1916 game. A study of Ntdtor’s toting rhn ord in 1916 showed that he was credited with the defeat in a Sept! 19 game against the Chicago White Sox, although V toft the Baseball records showed lhal Nabors lost 20 straight games in' 1016 with the Philadelphia Athletics until a-Wried telephone poll of five members of the rec- BOAT TIPS . It takes skill to handle a for fancy ekiing, a job that should be entrusted only to the most experienced drivers, T' ===== . -g — +...r*.Tr,..^rq( Not as much finesse is required for family skiing, but there are certain things every driver should know and rules he should follow make water-skiing the safe sport I know it can-her ' OBSERVER ^ Whether the tow demands it or not, always have an observer in the tow boat. The driver has his hands full watching thewater ahead. The ideeL&i, boat has a seat toeing itadMrahtsetoe can keep the skier to view and communication. . ★ Vr ★ - Skiing at night is barred by law practically everywhere. The dangers of collision or hitting floating or half-submerged objector is Obvious. Even good swimmers should wear life belts or jackets for cer-1 tain types of skiing. Tbw boats should stoy clear of swimmers and away from heavily traveled or restricted' waters,| such as areas with docks,1 floats, ora and buoys, .swimming areas, narrow .winding channels and anchored boats. Another Win for Mrs. Cova Mrs. Julie Cova, wife of Bob O’Link owner,-Midge Cova, -to making a habit of winning thk weekly Women’s Metro Golf Association tournafnent. . jtt ■_*“ -■■■■ * Chris Miller,ex-Pontiac city woman’s champjpn was tied! at 83 with Mrs. Doug Graham. I CHAMPIONSHIP FLIGHT I Mrs. Midge Coy* ......40-41—II Mrs. Nick Panariuk' ............40-41—*1, tt*=f niil|r Cbaadiar . ...... Oti—M Mrs. Thomas McMillan ....... 44-40—M kin. Charles Zahm .......... 42-44—SB Isobel Burrell .................. 4*44 ft Mrs. Charles LAtmo ......... H44 SO Mrs. FMd Brooke ........... 47-44-41 m—- ' .ei4pii.it claimed the Ngtiopal League WINNING RUN Del Chavez’s fourth-inning double plated what-proved to be the winning ran. Bill DeROusse saved the win for Jerry Bantto. Berry Door wen its first start to the Chtos C playoffs with a six-run fifth frusiag that saw Ray Luna aad Atox DMashaw GAM readied-tiie final round of the Natimial League’s lower bracket post-season action with the 'help Of'a 13-hit attack against MTC. Red Morgan homered with a mate aboard .for the winners while Charley Gist hit for the dr* cuifin a losing cause. ★ Sr ★ Tonight’s slate of games lias a doubleheader at Northside Park. Beginning at 7 p.m., Poponea’s Market will play Barry Door and an exhibition contest at 8:30 pm. will see Arro Realty playing city chanmkm Harvey’s Colonial mOR Motorcar Transport will play 1st Church of the Brethren at 7 pm. on the Beaudette Put diamond. Wirirs Mist } 100-H.P. MERCURY OUTBOARD K M075 ONLY 4 Hnt Ceaw first Served NO MONEY DOWN ■ Susy Monthly feywesti ^BIRMINGHAM \ soar mat tm a Wn4*w4 at U>» M. BIBMINOHAM JO MW — W 7-flSS DfnDtUrM; M«a.. Than.. Frt. M OFBN SUNDAY 1 to I THE FLORSHEIM STORE SELECTED STYLES Vqhrse to $26.95 FINAL DAYS MEN’S FLORSHEIM SHOES *14 aad $1141 -THE PONTIACMAU-% Mr#. George Scbade mittee’s revision of the Old . ord, Kachline said, gives the. „ feat to Nabors’ relief pitcher, Tom Sheehan, now a scout for theSanfTancisco Giants. West Side Softball Thrillers - Waterfowl Township softball playoff action was on the heart-stopping side last night. In- the Class B contest, West Side Lanes tought from behind to pin a 6-5 upset loss ’on Lake- Special Price On FOOTBALL SHOES $g9! High and Lo-cuts! • Tap grain black cowhide H Nylon (titchad throughout Watar-raaiatant aetsala a Nylon olaatt with aiatal slaeva S. C. ROGERS SPORTING GOODS 24-E. Lawrence St. FE 2-3 land Pharmacy and ousted it from the tourney. - Another upset almost was . forthcoming to' Class C where . A&W Root Beer, regular season champions, blew a 7-0 lead but hung on for an 8-7 victory-over Rockcote Paint. West Side toppled Lakeland when Phil Felice singled to the Winning run with one out in the bottom of -the seventh. Felice, who wte batting ninth in the lineup, doubled in a run in the sixtii toning that put the Winders ^ ahead for the first time. A&W also tallied its winning rue- on a one-out seventh-inning single.by Leo Placencia. His hit tallied. Bob Diamond who bad doubled. Diamond hit a two-run homer earlier jo the game. -Manager Ray Jorgovich hom-ered with two men on bate to tie the score to the sixth toning foi* the painters. Tonight, Lakeland Pharmacy's Class C nine-will meet Dinky’s. Ukfeiwiy at T p m. and Spencer Floor Covering will play West Side at 8:30 p.m. in “B’' final round action. Win in Canacb^Mafthes (QUEBEC (A?)—Rudy Hernando of Detroit upset Canadian Davis Cupfjer FYancois Godbout in the -third round of the Eastern Canada Temtis Championships Wednesday. Silver Blua Finish. LyUP wBM ^Plus Tex : LOYf, LOW PRICES HASKINS CHEVROLET-OLDS KEEGO ' WALLS BULMAN V 6751 DIXIE HWY. at M-15 HD WE. #'3 " HA1DWA1E HARDWARE (Your Crott Roods fa Oraatar Sayings) 3320 Aebarn ‘ mv=Ai,1 4545 Commerce ^ 3545 ESxebtih IsWkw RogNI CLARKSTOH MA 5-5071 AVMfE ntignts IN. 2-2020 EM’3-2442 n^NARDWARM ISSm Royal Treads 4 for- SAflOO i*n "^7“ ■ llrc^pp.bl. 25,000-Mile Guarantee S based sa sals grist watartatr i •f tread, I h aad wsai . when reternrd. 7:56 -1:00 -1:50 x 14 WSW Retreaded with U.S. RoyalTieadT U.S. Royal AIR RIDE* Nylon 2 for $19*0 6.70x15 Tubo-type Blackwall WMtewafl.. .2 for $35J6 kAll prices plus tm and smooth tiro off your car. Tires mounted free. AUTO DISCOUNT CENTEfc 610 Mt. Clsoiem St., Cor. Id* IM7. Ponfiae . Open 9:30 AJVL «e 9 P.M. Daily - Phene FE 4497S U.S. ROYAL. TIRES —**■ —— *- *-unk / ^ ""T . Engineered to keep your spare in the trunk mum ' HART SCHAFFNER & MARX, MICHAELS STERN and VARSITY TOWN / ____V\', —— r—5 NOW. • Values to-*60.00........'.*48.70 Values to *69.50..... *58.70 Values to *79.50.. ,-.T..... *68.70 Values to *95.00......... ..*7870 Vqlyes to *110.00........... *88.70 Values to-*120.00. ......... *98.70 I^icIcihsoit}8 SAGtNAW at LAWRENCE we pay The parking Open Monday and Friday Nights Until,,9 9,M. r BIRMINGHAMMAPLE , Opan Jhursday and Friday Niglifr4Xt!til9 P.M. ] The style corner of pontiac ^ ' -----r~ X Tbs following arc top prion covering aalaa of locally grown product by growers and sold by them in wholesale package Iota. Quotations are furnished by tbs Detroit Btureau of Markets as of noon Wednesday. Cantaloup*,' Iw.*1* . Ftubei, Red Haven, pipoi. Sun j&tm. I m M7*V5 ii Luna, b siotTASttS'' Broecoli/doi. bch. ...... Carrot*. Ium feu. -.... S;. Cauliflower, dot. ... ...... Celery.' Paaoal. 'aUM'. 'il'.'.^w.' CeUry.Paacal.Mdoi. crate*.** ^SkfiSSlid!u trine* ttlwi on the jtawl York Meek Ezchanfe frith noon pltoM: - -i-A— v < thde.) Rif k Lew Laat Chf. (Ua.l it.) High L II H0V« 1« AtcoProd .40 AUe (Lud 1 AlegPw M0 Allied Ch 1.80 AlUod — - . _ a .. J» Wife M. M 4 17 MS MS MS . i Tft 3* jft . i ns » a . ii b m an r i fas u u .. - II MS MS MS H 3 MS Wife MS 1 ii ns It nW i 40 gg~MS» 23S - n ms a sa - (3 14S 73% 14S j It 26%. 36% MS 4 1 MS MS aos . Wife 4 lws its t Net] a Dynam it CM. 040 Elec s .. + S Ota Pood* t M.... ‘-tKN.fi »i iliv'W ii% 4 let a i.40 t il it i m lUot .60* 34 Its Its MS ... CmQ 1.40 n 43S 43S 43S 4- rOptic i l m tt n ... iPnoto .33j t as »s as—-meU a.M 4.81S IIS MS 4> 'SM If , if^ltS Iffa ,tfS--it*t 3.M -n iais iios ms + [fwlH wlls wrws- “•■ 13 80S sis MS — — tat p t by first AMP Inc .40 Ampex Op AmpBorg .80 Anacoo l.M 4R» .40 > com 3 — AeadDO 1.40 AKSSO lift. AtlRef 2.40 JOoto j '■ Babcock 1.73 B BaldLIm .40 SOIMIB ' " Exchange—Butter eteady; wholesale -Jog price* unchanged; M score AA 57S; s iSrivfc-"c •*" Egta mixed; whoiiMilo buying, price* I lower te J higher; to per — *— tat grade A white* ajSt ___ medium* M; ttandards MS; dlrtle* 80S; check* M Llv* poultry; Wholesale buying “■ “rer to S higher; roasters ■____j Jed White Bock fw.r. Birred Rock fryer* 21-: Livestock Pitaonr uvtorocR T^eU^r- ^ ^ ‘■erege apod and better rw. hardly enough to Oil_____ 1 retarding trade early aalee lew good UMO weight — iteady; eewa active, fuly 1 hood high choice. With — ■ ia us lis us ... 14 33S MS a»s -M MS MS MS ... * its its Ifs • 3 it at, a ... . I SO 04- it —is — 1 II MS 44 44 il ms aas aas M MS « MS it Is as . as II liS MS 13S M MS MS MS 1M T3 tIS 73 < , I MS MS MS —B— I US MS * 'MS MS 33S 33S a ms 1 i ns ns - - m is—s M ms aas aas + s 37 MS MS Eg 4 S , a Its atv* ats + t 34S 34S MS I < its MS MS - nm 15: a IMS Mt Mis 4. 171 las MS MS 4. a MS MS MS., t us ml us !. 1' MS MS lis 4. a MS MS MS .. i IL ’aw> at—.. 4a iis ms aos- ataert about iteady; . flteariv: it bead nigh cneuw, viui an IjMnie LMQ^ta" eteera o».4Qi eoat- rerA len Kg 1.80 OTelAB .88 OenTlre .40 Oett^ Abg OUlette 1.10a OlenAf d 50 Ooodroh M0 OWPMt 1 Grace' Oo lb ' OrandU (Ob OniCl 1.40 OtUff 1.30a 3 ... Ha AM Oreyhd 1.30b Orumn l.M ouiTMAo a OlfOli 1.00 - -T an i.u aBubur a.W "imp 1.30b ITlg Mt _jr«Pdr.OO Berta l ie Hewlett Pk iterdenir .go Boll Elect H H ts Mb ... 1 ns aas MS 4 1 MS 80S aos — .. W .-Wfe U M. # u aas ms aas — s Sft' RmchCh .491 RepubAv 1 . Repub tU 41 ' Revlon 1.10b lUtll 60b PnaMot .6# Mfg> Rhoem Mfg " RlchfOll ISO f$S-E=||^F „ .... MS MS — s W 46S 44S 44S - S a its its its — s 1$ MS MS m'.4 dfi io 44V* MS 44S — t MS U M — 4 ia Vi law «/ « -¥ 0*0 MS M 4’ 3 40S 40S 40% 4 01 M . ” 46S ” MS - a 30ye aos aos . —H-- 0 11 v* 11 «is ■ . a aas aas aas. 8 7 ^ a its its its — s I I na ns 3m • touiton LP HoweSd ,30g Hupp Op .33f IllCent tad I 11. Cent 8 + S tag Ranfl 3a — s tabndat l.M htorlnk 1 60 taiMiner i.m Ntok 3a IH Pick 1 IntPap l.06b tat 1ST 1 1TB CktBrkr JohniManv a Jon Logan .70 JanoeAL 2 60 a ats ats ats -S MS aos aas 4 s .11 43S «as 4IS — s ijls-^s *os 2lj3 / 23 23 - a MS MS MS 4 a 5i ms aos - 8 MS .I0S MS 4 a 41S 41 . 4 IS 4 5 -84S -'M ' 24 - 3T4MS 434S 4MS 4 a 68' 66 11 4 4 52S 52 82 - 10 M 60S 58% - (UM mob Low Laet dkg! —R~— - -a* 00% MS oos—s 0 42V* 41 « — s a aos aos Ms 4 •io aas 11s 21s — .M BE , Hit '8s wi A MS -MS — s a aas ass aas — s J H, MS US —S 110 41% 47S 4tS —IS Safewbt l.M OUoeLead lb SanF 1 ___JgP 1.40b fournw .tot 'MMl l.Ma SCM .431 “ lottPap .80 Bean R1.40a OMltfeBl.t Bdcgur 2, SMiCaur 1. ,4. 20% 18S 80S - 13% it ,, ao m aas m 4 a ti% us 11s ^ Ss RNd 30 45% 48% 46S - 30 ItS ttS ttS 4 37 7034 70S 70% 4 w »s jas las 4 Splefe/ l Jr flouare D1 30 StdKolla 80t BtdOUCU 3b StauffCh 1 20 8terlOrug .08 Steven -1.60b _ ...j. MS____ 0 28 .11% M ... ia ms ms My* — 3 14S 34% 34% ... 31 47 48% 487®JSfe 3 30% 18S »**^ t M MS .......... 34 38% 37%. 37% - S —K— t aas 35% aos 4 20.60J3.60; utUity cows 30.00-37.M; norm and cotton M OO-ll.M. Barrow* and gilt* under 2M lb Itiady to Weak; heavier weight* ud aowi •toady; lew lota 3 and 2 217-210 lb barrow* and fUU 18.25; 2 and 3 160-380 lb . 17.60-18.00; 1, 2 and. 3 380-400 lb MW* 14.26-14.00; HU) 400400 lb 13.78. r ' Vealera W. steady, cholca and prime voalera 27.00-34.00: itandard and Wed M.OO-27.00; cull and Utility lLM-M.OO. . 83y* olv*., 3 '40%. 40% 40S f P '„ _ o u% ns ns — ' z±» ^ms aos oos —1 •ar its its 37% 4 j u us to% SOS — ( 38 IS IS IS .... 30 MS 30% 10% .... » M ms M% 4 • 1-14% 14% MS 4 i ao to its 75% — « oj as • M 72% 72 n% — 1. 4 37 IT M — % t its us ns u ms jis u% ia m aas » 6 ais 31% 31S Gas 1 i xaco . an TexOPd ,60a TexOSul .40 Texlnat .60 TexPCO 1.30 Textron 1.40, TtmkR B3.40 Tran* W Air Twant Cent UCferbld l.M Union EHec 1 UnOllCal 2a Bail i ao» CAlrUn .lib Unit Alrc 1 A 13% 33% 33S 4 a gas 46%,. oo% - M 04% 03^ MS-44 71% 70S tl a 07% .07 87% 4 f; 13% 13% 13% — a 21% 21% 21% —% - 3 31% 3IS 31S — •' 12 27 38% 28% 4 1 5«S 3»S 38% 4 44 0% 8% «S 4 360 36% 16% 36% — 6 38 % 38% JIS ;.. •—I— .. M“WMfe M 30% 4 M ns ns ns * »3?$ L Si t 16 tfS 76% 79 -• % 7 MS 60S OOS 4 S 5^ — s 0 30% .JOS 16% ... ■ a 10% 38% 24% 4 * a ois. ms ms '4-1 J 10S MS 13% - j aa 45% MS 48% - 6 aas aos aos . • IMS IMS 168S -100 ats 27%. 27% + .4 74% 74%. 74S -1ft OOS MS MS .. The cmhargD call was the key provision of a resolution-the com-' cil adopted Wednes Itifyblnj4||l to American importing firing and farm producen involved. And the war- could spread, although by cool weather time tempen both sides may have fallen. How fir the nuclear test ban tnay fan out into other cold war fields is a question. And so is ^he possible effect on individual producers and manufacturers of on-terials and goods involved. » V . dr ’ How much longer the postwar construction boom wilMast is another uncertainty,' although experts are stressing that Ameri-cans’ needs arestill far froqnnet. The new car models have yet to make their debut and consumer reaction to them must rem$h| an unknown quantity until later. The best guess is teat the auto industry has a better than average chance for another good sales year. But that’s still to be proved. Except ter the railroads, the labor situation He comparatively quiet at the moment. But the bale conflicTis^ ftu* from resolved. That is managemenrs desire for more icoet-cutting automation, labor’s demand for job security, and government’s concern over unemployment totals^ that have changed little in the past but threaten to grow., Possible tax changes also affect much business planhing at the moment. What Congress does about it could active Some programs, scuttle others. And te* same is true for consumers’ spending intention. The stock market has been trying for the traditional summer rally. But here, too, the many uncertainties keep many traders cautious and the public hesitant. A lot of this can he lakj to the weather, and to vacations that UOMCp ■ UnltMAM 1 .USBorx .80* USPrht 1.80* US Linn lfe USPlywood 3 US Rub 2 20 US Smelt 2 US Statl 2 UnOllPd .60* Upjohn .so VandoCo ,M V* Cxro Ch lBPV 1.04 aas aas — us lis ... ms ms 4 44% 44% MS 4 5JS ' 83% 63% — _ .-aSU&PTfc .tWfelMifeWft Ilf | 3 JS JS IS—%• 1 MS 84% 64% ■— % -0 • f 8 4 % 73 US 81% 61S — S 1 M 38 38 •• tl Its its 37% 4.73% 73 73% —N— t 64% MS MS te M% MS 15S — S i t letenfe sis 87% “ 8 83S MS 83% 17 ml. 25V. a JJS-1J% 33% 1 10% 10% 10% Wife « • 78%. 71% >6% M 4«% M% 44% , j its its ats 4 ft at am Jaf - BC — ft I MS' 43% 42%... ft 8 53% MS 83% - " 8 337% IMS IMS _____ 36 65% 64% M % 6 MS M 52 • 48% 4Mfe 4844 18% MS 20% -- 48% 46% — % a 41% 41% 4SS ... . If 6*%' 60S 60S — S W MS 11%.31% . ’ • 60% 60% 60% 4 -P- M MS MS MS 4 . tes ais iis ..... iN&i '44 44% 40% 40% 4 ft 1 MS M O — S M 46% MS. 8W-4 ft Wnlworth WarnPlc ,5u ,WarLam 70 Wn' B*ncp 1 -WUnT«I 1.40 WatsAB 1.40 W4*UE1 1.20 SspVff Wll»n Do l;M WlnnDIx 1 08 Woolwth 2.60 33 36% MS MS *1 8S 3tft T T. 6 18% 38% 18% — V* J fiS «% 41%- ” 1* #S M MS'..., 8 8S IS 1% ... a m 43% 4t% — % 1 59% Its MS - % 1 46% 44% 46% 4 % 62 00% 88% M-* _ ft M 48% 4fS " ’ 1 8... I M MS 33% 33% — ft ■ » M 40% 46% - ” J lift US MS......... M 16S MS 11% + % 6 38% 36% M% AS 13 TIS tl tl Jr?’ 18 ^42% 42% 42% _Ji rr ats W ■ at a* X* — 13 68% 68% 88% ... —X— MMSsaatsiMS... a aos 30 jf — f IMS 108 IMS ... 13 6t% MS I fir. in oDoflkiil’. m—T -l*e noted, ttit dmd* In On ton|otn« tabta , '"-,-ur»*m«ntt b***d on th* lait qu*rtafly **ml-*nnu*l daetaratton. Spec 1*1 » dividend*’ or pa/nwato wit *1 i&aszL.™ - -ABO extra or *Xtr*f. b—Annual 1 . Mrtdtnd. c—LlquMattoi C 1- d—Declared or Mid In 1883 Mu SS?.«»TMond..o-Patd‘toot yo*rt-fi“ ‘“ 'tek during IJOJ t*tlm*te- - -ex-dlvldend or ox-dlftr .Stocks of Local Interest rtoure* after decimal potato »re eighth* OVER THE COUNTER STOCK* The following quotation* do not aoooa-irllv reprewnt actual .traniactlom bin ?» jSB'® *' *»®fv ttta opproxl-Ato trading mug* of the •ecurltle*. f^Ueclared ____________ ._ ... B n—OcclMVd or paid after a dividend or apllt «p. X Declared or | r.v an accumulattro luue 1 In, arrtars. p—Paid thu r dividend omitted, deterred or' nb aa tdkM at laR dividend tnaotthg. tZ *Ulte *' «*«.,> 18M phi* .fcek « Hod In atbok s ftt ‘..SXd1" rr-?Ji- fgte y»;sWW? warranto. wd*-When dl»! wSm^ior laaued. nd—Next d»y nar ms mm m T ll% . n# BS J0;77% 176% 177 » -?» ■*- ft 13 tOS 71% 76% —I Prices Are Varied on Grain Exchange CHICAGO (ft — Prices ranged from weak to firm in the grain futures market today with transactions unusually slow and somewhat mixed. The 1W4 wheat crop months Cased about a cent and soybeans moved up major fractions during the first several minutes of ac-liyityjm the board of trade but other contracts shifted only wnnii fractions. - Brokers said commercial business was light and that speculators appeared to he standing rfside, aWaiting new influences n c I u ding the government’s monthly crop report tomorrow. Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN 00. Aag. I (Apjv — ::::: 1# BT,; fm Doctor Saves ig^R4ich Escapee Ch arle* of tho Rit* ::s: Oetroltar Mobile Homo* .... 8. Diamond GoMM-v......... 14. SSwSto. Inc......... « deLouth Stool O*. daradel Products ........ dohawk Rubber Co. >.... Mich. Soon*lorn Tube Co. “*---r Finance i Printing ..... Pe Drilling ... SSEv 44.J ...M ' MUTUAL FUNDS Afflllatod ,Pun«f ...........M8*1 MJfqmROPiAl K.-I a a a « a a ■ 9.20 E*y8toco Qroortt* i-i ...... gte Moot, taveator* Growth 8.28 M6*». tavaatdr* Truat . . . .T14J2 JMaiun Growth .. g.74 • gag ■•etooqtoa .........J41 ote M.8046.88 SStel Business Notes Progressive Welder and Ma- ly was awarded a 6229,408 contract by the National Aeronautics end Space Administration. Hie contract calls for engineering. fabricationrand r e 1 a t e d space program services. Donald S. Cabral 2300 Devonshire, Bloomfield Township, | has been elected [a director of the land County [Chapter, Nation-lit Association of Accountants. He is supervisor of [the General Motors Carp! s a v-CABRAL ingg and supple-fltental benefit section. Two area mei recently completed Life Underwriter Training Council courses. They are Donald McKelvey, 2675 Keith, Union Lake, pnd Robert L. DeNeen, 2815 Weaverton, Rochester. Both are Aid Association for Lutheran* insurance representatives. Roy M. Marshall, 2952 Suro-i mervale, Birmingham, has | lfe in appointed a vice president! of -MacManus, John and] A d*m*,. I n c. Marshall, ac-[count supei^ visor, joined the MARSHALL advertising agency in 1960. yTruce Line Has Cooled Off iii Korea' WITH 1st Cavalry Division, Ko-rah (AP)-*llaj. Gen. Charles F. Leonard, new commander of fills front line division, said today the Korean trues line “has cooled off-’*: ! * Leopard, who assumed command of the 1st Cavalry OMskm* Wednesday, jy**4**"*1 won’t be anything dee stirring far ’ ” some time.” '' ♦ * W The general told a newsman Communist NorthKoreans“wsnt-«1 to find out if the lat Cavalry Division was alert. Well, they found out. The 1st Cavalry is plert.” Unusually heavy patrol activity and occasional fighting broke out 1 at spots along the truce line after three American soldiers in a jeep were ambushed July 29. Two were killed. * BEEFED UP. PATROLS The let Cavalry beefed up its patrols .along the demnitfrlted r xone and kiDed four Communist raiders in an engagement in which an American and a South Korean policeman were also v Med. “I don’t think there has been a pattern io the Communist activity,” Leonard said. “It’s an operational situation they just fell Into.” * ■ ~~ keep key men sway from their decision-making tasksr^nB But whether in a hammock, on the beach, in the woods, or even in the office itself, for many it’s a time to wait and see—to get ready for the fall push that is expected but not to connnit the company chinery Co,. 915 Oakland, receptr so far snlntinn of any of tee many uncertainties could ciuse.a loss. All Wis quiet again Wednesday night for the third night Riong the UB. sector rtf tee demilitlrized mne. No Communist patrols were sighted. vWe came back with every round and grenade that we took Out,” said Lt. Richard Murphy, »,-0f 6 Hohjfes T«race, Jefferson City.Mo. Hie patrol Rate, commanded by Gapt. John Cox, 28, of 2814 little John Ave., San Antonio, Tex., set up ambush traps along tee front and stayed in position until dawn. North Korea’s Radio Pyongyang charged that UB. ropolrft N«mL Fnuftm attacks wire «in immte groundless fabrication snd a .whopping lie.’’ # 7# h*mt 1 ^MMMI S’ Successfuhlnvestina' Ify ROGER E. SPEAR Q. ’In a recent cohunn you commended four mnnh-ipyto yielding 3 per cent or less. HELMSTEDT, Germany (OPD— A middle-aged Weft German doctor crawled into' a Communist border “death zone" mine field and Ragged back to safety a fleeing crbninal shattered 4>y a mine blart, police said today. West German police said Dr. Ernst Stoeter, 56, moved 90 yards.,^through barbed wire and land mine strjps_yesterday to reach the wounded fugitive from West German justice. The 26-year-old fugitive had fled on foot froia West Germany into East Germany,with his 21-year-old wife and 4-year-old daughter to escape a year’s prison term on a morals charge. Why not recommend Turnpike Authority bends, which carry a better yield? Or Housing Authority Bonds, which are very lecare had bring Sft per cent?” r.b. A. This is* a vary reasonable question. I rarely recommend Turnpike Perjury Eyed in Ward Trial News in Brief 8ixtoen lengths of pipe valued etl |64fl.were stolen from finder a bridge at the I TS M 24 crossover In Pontiac Township, the State Highway Department reported to [the sheriffs j yeslwiiijSj »’s Suits, 4446; Wardrobe trunlt, dishes, miac. Opdyke at Feathorstone. —Adv. LONDON (AP)-Bcotland Yard pressed perjury investigations] today into testimony by two prostitutes who were prosecution witnesses in the vice friel cif the late Dr. Stephen Ward. One of the girls js Vicky Barrett, 20 a blonde who testified she ■ entertained some 30 customers gird’s apartment and he collected the money but gave her none of U. / m The other is Margaret (Ronnaj Ricardo, 22. During the trial she repudiated testimony she had given against Ward it his preliminary hearing. Ward was convicted of living rtf tee earnings of prostitutes Clfffif&te Keeler Sftd Marilyn (Mindy) Rice-Divls. Hie judge, Justice Sir Archie MvshaD, instructed the jiury- fo disregard Miss Ricardo’s testimony^ TOLD REPORTER . An investigation team headed by Chief Inspector Thomas O’ Shea was expected to interview Miss Barrett about a report that she told R. Barry O’Bijen, a Sunday Telegraph reporter, that she lied ml tear stand . Mills Barrett denied O’Brien’s story. But in another fctory today in the Daily Telegraph, the Sunday paper’s stablemate, O'Brien repeated that die poured out her bgart to him last Saturday after learning of Want's death from an overdose of drugs. ' ',r ★ * ‘ Sr O/Brien said he hu made a H-page statement to Scotland Vard oar the iffidr. !" j A report of the inquiry will pirobably be made io th^ public prosecutor, who will decide if further action Is necessary! Authority issues for the main reason that almost all of these bonds are callable within a relatively short period. Redemption provisions usually work to the advantage of the issuer & rare-ly to that of the buyer. On June 27,1 specifically recommended. La Follette Housing Authority 3ft’s at par and explained that these were secured by pledge of annual contributions payable by the Public Housing Administration. As for my July 3 column ad^— vising issues yielding 3 per cent oi* tess. T plead guflty to a strong preference fra- quality. The only bond advised that yielded below 3 per cent was a short-term Connecticut Jsaue, which I felt might help to stabltee tee questioner’s' list. . , . ' w i -i.. . _ Q. “We are"■*• group ef wom-en who formed an investment dab in 19591 Oar mate purpose |was to ‘learn’. We own Uie following and would appreciate yw a r comments: American Telephone; Champlte Oil; Commonwealth Oil; General Telephone; Home Insurance; 1 ~ Roadway Express; Goodrich; C.I.T.; Revlon; OHn Mathie-son; North Central Co.” A. If you will allow mo to^ ■' say so, I think you have foiled * *. to “learn” one of tee essential rules of investment: determine definite investment objective and Adhere to it rigidly. This rule is so important that I could • repeat It herb every week end atill not overemphasize it. You have a generally good list of stodu, but it is what I call mixed bag — .pointed ndfher strongly to growth, income, or speculative gains. tt. as I suspect, growth ia jrour real aim, I would hold only your . two telephone stocks,' Home Insurance, Roadway, C.LT!, and Revlon. Hie rest I would switch into such issues as Tftfttco, Merck, and Amarican-E^fijMs. (Copyright 19631 Treasury Position *^*OTON (API - ttto oMSjk t •' THE PONTIACPRESS, THURSDAY. AUQt/ST 8. 1968 /s Televisfon'Frogi'ams'--- |] fumislred by stations listod in this column aro subject to change without notice jChmweH-WJtK-TV Chowwi 4- WW>-TV Channel 7-WXmV Channel 9-CKLWTV - Channel 56-WTUS TONIGHT !.*<• (2) News, Editorial, Shorts, Weather ■ (I) Dawtif - (7} Motto: ‘‘She’s to'.'Too.” (In Progress) ) Capt. Jolly and Popeye (•) (56) What's New' 1:25(4) (7) Weather, News; 6:36 (2) Highway Patrol (9) Invisible Man v (56) French Through TV 7:6t (2) Peter Gunn (4) (Color) George Pierrot -ffHGater) Michigan Out- (5) Huckleberry Hound (56) Japan: Changi Years 7:51. (2> Fair Exchange (7) Ozzie and Harriot ' (9) Movie: “On Borrowed ,» Time.” (1999) Lionel Bar- rymoreToir Cedric Hard-wicke. (66) What in the World? 1:69 (9) Perry Mason (4) Two Faces West (7) Donna Reed (56) Beyond the Earth 6:16 (4) Dr. Kildare (7) Leave It to Beaver 1:61 (2) Twilight Zone (7) My Three Sons (I) Wrestling 9:16 (4) (Color) Lively Ones (TLMcHala’s Navy 10:90 (2) Nurses N (4) Summer Special -(7) Premiere (t) News, Weather, Telescope UAW 16:96 (6). Man in a Landscape 11:66 (2) (4) (7) News, Weather, TV Features Jets in 'LivelyBallet TWILIG&T ZONE, 6:00 p. m. (2) Young married couple discovers strange reason Why they are unwelcome aboard ' decrepit cruise ship. _ LIVELY MBS; 1:30 p, ih. (4) Color show features Barrie Chassr June Ghristy, trumpeting charioteers, and1" . Air Force Jet “ballet" over Grafld Ganyon. . PREMIERE, 10:00 p. m. (7) College student, crippled by fall, must decide whether to try to fight his way back to health or to give up. SUMMER SPECIAL, 10:00 p.m. (4) Tells story-of Darryl FrZanuck, one of last Hollywood tycoons. (9) Pioneers 11:25 (7) Movie: “The Lady and the Bandit.” Louis Hayward, Patricia Medina 11:36 (2) Steve Alien-Variety (4) (C6lor) Tonight—Allan Sherman ^ ■ (9) Movie: “Gentleman’s Pate.” (1931) John Gilbert FRIDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) Meditations 6:29 (2) On the Farm Front 4:25(2) News 4:86 (2) Family Living 7^9(2) News •____(4) Today __________ZZ , ” (7) Funews 7:05 (2) Fun Parade 7:36 (7) Johnny Ginger 7.:45 (2) King and Odie 6:66 (2) Captain Kangaroo 6:96 (7) Big Show 9:56 (9) Warm-Up 3:56 (9) Morgan’s *M e r r y-G o-Round. 9:06 (2) December.'Bride . (4) Living (7) Movie: “Nob Hill.’ (1945) George Raft, Joan Bennett (9) Abbott and Costello 9:36 .(2) To Tell the Truth i?) Window on Canada1 r r 4 i 5 6 7 r r 10 rr 12 II 1 r nr IS 16 15 19 s- r 21 A) M 36 ■ 1 4S u HI 48 4b 5r 52 sr 56 56 57 W lUoBFF3 sion (7) Ernie. Ford (9) Hawkeye 12:25 (2) News 12:36 (2) Sec^ fdf "T£itoorrow““ released promised to TeRu 12:45 (2) GulflM* lights 12:55 (4) News ''V .1 ACROSS 1 Cottage------ 4 Foodstuff for' poultry 8 Patter House -—— 12 City in Oklahoma 13'Operatic solo 14 Nhntical term 15 Brythonie sea god 16 State of destitution 18 Monopolize----- 29 Chan 21 Atmosphere 22 Ripped 24 Planet i . . 26 Genius of amphibians 37 Sun..................... 30 Each 32Calm 31 Tautened. 35 Number 36 Mariner’s directioh 37 Log float ... 39 From himself 40 Judicial sentence { ' 41 Small tumor 4L>Pigpens 45 Emblem of Scotland 49 Satisfied _ 51 Auricle ^ 52 Triestae wine measures 53 Go-by aircraft 54 Abstract being 93 Hardy heroine h 56 Nautical gangplank 57 Seine & Greek war god 6 .Midday snooze 7 Possessed 8 Hindu queen 9 Genus of true olives 10 For fear that 11 Fewer 17 Hebrew nation 19 Gits up 23 Start ___i. _ 24 Shipiffiicer 25 Mimics • 26 Fortification 27 Ten plus seven' 28 Individuals 29Unaspirated 31 Color 33 Counsels (dial.) 38 Shackle---- 40 Festivals 41 Short, line'(printing) 42 Highlander 43 Ripped 44 Travelers' stopping places 46 Demigod——*—5 47 Narrow way 48 Formerly 50 Grab DOWN 1 American patriot' 2 Arabian gulf , 3 Butter substitute 4 Plantation mansion 9:5T(2) Editorial 16:06 (2) Connie Page (4) Say Whan------- (9) Robin Hood , 16:25 (4) News 16:96 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch . . (9) Movie: “The Lisbon Story.” (1946, 16:45 (7) News v 11:66 (2) McCoys (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Jade La Lanne 11:36 C) Pete and Gladys (4) Concentration (7) Seven Keys FITTING OCCASION—Alberta McCue, 17, of Cheyenne, Wyo., one of three girl finalists in the annual teen-itye road-e-o, helps White AT W«Wn House press secretary Pierre Salinger into a “safe driving” Jacket as it was presented him yesterday. U.N. Vetoes Negotiations in Kdfanga FRIDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love 41 (4) Truth or Consequences. (7) Father Knows Beet (9) Dr. Hudson's Journal ELIRABkl tfVn .T.TC> Congo (UPI) —The U. N. Katanga command today refused to send four unarmed representatives to negotiate with outlawed Katangese soldiers in the remote fishing town of Kasenga because of the risk to their lives. “We cannot risk the UvfS of our men, and we cannot trast tiie word of the Katangese commander in Kasenga that they will not be harmed,” a -U. N. spokesman said. ' The tiny U.N -advance party flew tb Kasenga Tuesdayjto try to persuade, the rebel katangese troops to surrender to .the au- tral government. The party’s members were shot at, arrested and savagely beaterf by the Katangese, but before be- in two days, today/to negotiate an honorable surrender. Ready forfighf 2 Seek Nomination in Mississippi Election JACKSON,iCss. (UPI) - Pmd B. Johnson slid J. P; Coleman, tor tiie second time in their political careers, squared off today a showdown, battle for the Democratic, gubernatorial nomi- A sizeable lead to Tuesday1 first ntotifiFiM ‘ ”* I tne canq tend by virtue of outpoliing another major contender, Charles L. Sullivan. Sollfvaa, berated* by Ms op-poaeats as aaqaalifled and ha-mature, was considered a “alee gay'-' again today as Johnson and Coleman began wooing Us Johnson, who is ending a term as lieutenant governor, said vot-ers in “ his and Sullivan’s camps tod a common cause — "to save Mississippi from the Kennedys.’ 'Ccwgress to Stay on Job Until Rights Bill Enacted From Onr News Wires WASHINGTON - Speaker John r. McCormack said yesterday that Congress would stay on the Job until it enacts a civil rights bill. McCormack did not say how long he thought it would take- to fOta approval for the bill, but Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield predicted4-* Congress would remain in session all year. Senate Repeblicaas have pet on a neat display of party solidarity on civil rights for visit* ing members of the Nation* al Association for ihe-Advanco-ment of Colored People. By marshaling a 24-1 party; fl)eir ate. the Republicans forced The Kentuckian said many Republicans were artgered by the public rebujfc of Senate GOP Leader Evetett M. Dirksen, HI., leveled by Clarence Mitchell, Washington director for the NAACP, at aA civil rights meeting Tuesday. OWN FILIBUSTER In still another Negro move aimed at Congress, A. Philip Randolph, president of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car-Porters, said 1,000 integmtiflnlsts will wage an around - the - dock filibuster of vote, Wednesday to cast their votes against a proposal by Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., to ban federal grants for - racially segregated hmmttola 59 -pm. :00 (2) Star Performance (4) Leqye It to the Girls (7) General Hospital (9) Movie: “Mrs. Parking-^ ton.” (1944) Greer Garson, Walter Pidgeon 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Best of Groucho > (7) Girl Talk 2:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) People Will Talk. — (7> Day* Com* 2:2f (4) (7) News But the United Nations vetoed the plan, and also refuSoTTb consider a compromise proposal under .which a U. N. aircraft would have dropped a message to the Irebeis waiting for the party at Kasenga airstrip, arranging a later meetfhg under U. N. conditions. 2:30 (?) House-Party___ Ml Daetnrk • — (7) Jane Wyman 3:00 (2)Star Playhouse (4) Loretta Young ___(7) Queen for a Day 3:11 (9) News, 3 JO (2LEjJge of Night 44HColeD-Y< Answer to Previous Puzzle (Cokir) You Don’t S^y! if) Who Do Yoti Trust? (9) Vacation Time 4:99 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) American Bandstand 4:16 (4) News 4:36 (2) Millionaire 14) Make Room for Dadty (7) Discovery V (!) Mickey Mouse Club 4:H (7) American N^gtand 5:66 (2) Sea Hunt (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Black Rgrt.' (1946) Dan Duryea, Yvonne De Carlo (9) Larry and Jerry 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant 1:16 (2) Whirlybirds (56) What’s New 5:45 (9) Rocky pnd His Friends l:fl (4) Clrol Duvall —Today's Radio Programs— WJM760) WXYZd 270) CKLW(600) WWJ(950) WCAIR1130) .W9DWI AMR WfflkffWo) WHf l-MOffAT) CKLW. Bob Staton -f-ftlwja ErentoiCoocart t:M—WWJ, Muiic Beene '=*>—WJE. Detroit SympL l.ie-WWJ., World Neve -:40—WWJ. Muale Scene 00—WJK. Jim La unco U:0»-WWv. Neva CKLW Joe Oentlle WCAH. Newa, Spede • WJH. M«»a Uii»-cp.w. aee pus WWJ. Organ Muale WCAR. Ale I Like ll^O-WJB Muale Don , msn moewing . .Ip-WJS Howe. Agn. WWJL *i»a. Beberu . w* Vt, Fred Wolf, Metre SrSS-WJH. Muale MaU trie—wjr. Neva. Berne CKLW, Move. Dane WCAH. Bows. Marlrn WBFL Neva. MeLeod •:M—wjb, Lee Mvnr * , j. . i,\ WXYZ. Braaklaat Club acLw.'4e**w, Tr TVJBK, Newa, SUrld WFOM. Neva. Olaen itttsa—cklw. Joe. Van UtN-WJR. Mew*. Oodfrer ■ ways wiegar ■ CKLW. Joa Vaa rBIDAY AFTERNOON U:|0—WJR. Bud O t StON.* Newa.^Jerry Olaen WHFL Man. Burdick .:iO—WJR. Garry Moore * WO—WJR, Men. Sbowcaae . WWJ, Met.- -------- WJBK, Newa, I __________k Me ■ WFOM. Men. Lew SrtS—WJB. M e we. ’ Jimmy S«V. . " CKLW, Derlae -1 WCAR. Newa. Sheridan l;SS-WJB. Muale Ban -WWJ. Mewa. The commander of the,, rebel I, forces gave his word tltey would q&t be harmed and insisted on providing a guard of honor, for their return to Kasenga. Tito. Republican move, jfnade before passage of a $5,494,627,250 money bill for the Health, Educa. tion and Welfare and Lattor department, caught the Democrats unaware on a day when many Of them had been visited by NAACP delegations seeking action on civ-il rights legislation. - Every one of the small party which barely escaped death Tuesday had agreed to return today. Tito Lauds U.S. for Assistance__ to Stricken City '4§; -------- By EANi WILSON NEW YORK -r It was just two years ago this - tintoi that Marilyn Monroe left us: A lot of drivel was written about Mwilyn when she-died and I contributed. But one thing was rig^it. “Who’ll be the new Marilyn Monroe? Nobody! There isn’t anybody anymore. Lis Taylor*!! have more money, but she’ll WASHINGTON (AP) - The White* House made public yesterday a telegram, from President Josip Broz Tito of Yugoslavia expressing “deepest gratitude” for U.S. aid to the Yugoslav city Skopje, destroyed by a recent earthquake. Tito’s message said: On behalf of tiie Yugoslav Kopies , anil in. ray own name I beg your excellency to accept our deepest gratitude for the sincere sympathy you have expressed on the occasion of the tragic event sat Skopje. fl am deeply touched by your readiness to offer assistance in the action at rescuing the dis-tressed citizens of Skopje agthy the speed and efficiency by Which this assistance ia bertrg offered.” . Will of LA Merchant Ruled Unclear, Invalid LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The wilP*”Itidlan-born Antonio Porrazzo Was ruled invalid yto-terday bscauae it was unclear in meaning.. Porrazzo, a produce toer^iant who died sit years ago at the age of 95, left two. homes to “my'heirs who are the poorest.”' A Superior Court judge, said yesterday it was impossible to tell whether the will referred Jb| Sen. .Thruston B. Morton; the Senate GOP chairman, warned today that criticism by Negro leaders was making it more dif- ficult to most votes for a strong civil rights MB. ■ • - . With less than 200 of the 1,888 precincts tmreported, Johnson 136,634, and Sullivan 113,986. Welder Robert (Blowtorch) Mason had accumulated 2,660. Eight years ago, Coleman defeated Johnson in their first gubernatorial showdown after Johnson had tod tiie first primary ticket. their own, if Southern senators egin a talkathon against the civil ghts bi" Meanwhile, in New York, pickets returned today to a hospital construction site in Brooklyn in defiance of a trace proclaimed by Negro clergymen after j .conference with' Gov. NelsorA. Rockefeller. Jn Goldsboro, N.C., 32 demon-stfators, including some Air Force men, .were arrested last night in a civil rights demonstration by 300 Negroes. + ^ But David RQey; a representative of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said mass demonstrations would continue “until we obtain fill! integration.” He suggested they join to support qf his candidacy in the Aug. 27 runoff. Cotomih, who served as governor from INI to 1900, called an organisational meeting tor his runoff campaign in a Jack-son hotel tooMrrow. He invited “all Misatoatoptoas who aro interested hi good government” toattend. Burton Says Liz /s Mad;. LONDON (UPI) - Actor Richard Burton was quoted today as saying Elizabeth Taylor was ‘mock- mad at me” for state- ments he made in an with Playboy Magazine. USED 1 rv BOYS 16” RCA *14** 17” MOTOROLA nil** IB” PHILCO *24**y n^ZWITH *29** IT” GE *29** 21” AIRLINE *34** 21” SYLVANIA *39** 21”(RCA *49** 21” CBS *49** 24” MUNTZ *4995 Gash or Terms 60 OTHER SETS 30-DAY-EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE 515 E. Walton Blvd. CORNER JOSLYN OPEN 9ta 9 Another Marilyn Monroe? Impossible, Says Wilson He said, “She has an oven developed chest and she’s rather short in tiie leg.” Burton also denied he had ever been, unfaithful to his wife Sybil Burton, ^either. ‘‘physically spiritually.” generation.” And I also wrote, “Let’s make a note that when it’s all over we should give a little hand toMoe DiMaggio for acting the champion he’s always been.” Right, too; yes? ----. * ★ - * ,---------------------^— THE MIDNIGHT EARL ; . . Mamie Van Doren — here tb do “Taltoit scouts” and play “Wildcat’’ — went to dimer all alone. “My heart still belongs to Bo Belinsky and I had WILSON no date,” she said . . . Mickey Mantle says he’ll have to have an operation for tiie cartillage regardless of how he finishes the> season . . . Bobo Rockefeller — back from Europe reported that everybody she met asked whether she was happy. ‘Nobody’s ever cared before,” -she said. “Then I found out they meant was I Happy Murphy?” . . Ik • jw Ar WISH I’D SAID THAT: “I’ve quit reviewing books. I reviewed one once and spent so much time writing the review T couWn’t find time to read the book. EARL’S PEARLS: “A couple thought the radio was fine for their toddler till they heard, her say her prayer, 'And bless Mommy and Daddy, Amen and F.M.’ ” —— REMEMBERED QUOTES: The secretary handed her tons tetter. “Ttta one was marked ‘Personal,’ ” she said,' '’but it isn’t very” . ,f That’s earl, brother, <»ll» H»H Srnllnt., lac.) CONDON'S TV fer Big Valves.., Excellent Service ICS kid ZENITH—Ceiei, Sleek and White SUMMER SALE- Oirxit Color TV Sets CONDON’S RADIO & TV B^TMMNew fm Office 914-9796 Mias Taylor, who has been Burton’s constant companion since they starred togetiwr to the film “Cleopatra,” was quoted as saying ,“Of course I’m not mad with Richard. I love Rich. I’m gotog to marry him.” Playboy Magazine pubHahat) nn interview with the 37-year-old Welsh actor Tuesday in which he said he could “hardly describe” Miss Taylor as the moat beautiful girl in tiie world. $100,000 Loose as Train Runs Over Money Bag LQg AflngT .gg ^ money bag containing an estimated $100,000 fell from a transfer wagon, was turnover by a train and burst open, scattering $20 bills along the track. 1 i Fortim attly there nd,” said a railroad itation employe, after the mishap Wednesday. “The money was gathered up in about 20 mtoutes/^^, THE TODAY SHOW Comiis to Outstato Michigan AUG. 5 THRU 9 * 7-9 A.M. ★ CHANNEL 4 Five, two-hour network television programs / originating from a different setting, each day, tell ell about your State at ito summer-wonder- land These programa present tiie attractions of Out-atote . Michigan, to more than 25,000,000 - TV viewer*, nationwide, through the eocmmtioe af Michigan “progreaa minded” organhwdona including ... , CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY Phut Now to Wofclbjho. Today Shawl mm