"hen it came toward them,' Eleveil	the cap-
Here were four to six per- syle brought Charles Peyrdhnell soni' la die craft, according to the top. He ,appeared to be (Continued pnPage .2,-Col. 1) too weak to weft and wqp lift-
ublican Secretary of State * odock.
M. Jordan' says he’s still .fhe commission, meeting ire Salinger is eligible to will |>e the first for Pontiac’s Angle’s position.	new city manager, Joseph A.
other observers are con- W«?en.
I Salinger is eligible, will Various sources estimated be-ime any court tests and tween SO and 100 employes — et off to a headstart over most of them policemen and. iy by ’ appearing 'on the in"emen—would participate.
mbmt line of type uofer ^ employes, and the demen-stration had the backing of both ) FEELINGS V	the PPOA and Pontiac fire-
“We hofieto have the matter of w-ages'edded to tonight’s agenda.1’ he noted. v * :
A Michigan Municipal League study of employes’ wages is being prepared and is expected, to be completed abbut Aug. 15:. * Business on the prepared agenda tonight includes a report. from City Attorney William A. Ewart on the draft- ' ing Of a “slum clearance -or-. dinance” designed to tighten and darify city condemnation ' of snbitaiidard housing. •
, City officials have been working on an updated ordinance along the lines )of Detroit’s- ordinances controlling the ^condemnation and demolition of dilapidated strdctures and c o d e enforcement in general.
in other business, commissioners will get special assessment estimates-for the Murphy Park trunk .sewer.	.
21-8181 of 274
DRAIN WORK STOPS — X walkout by	k
members of Reinforced’Steel Workers Local to complete this'section when the strj 426 has delayed completion of this section of	halted work yesterday. Only eight additior
the, Clinton River drain tunnel Under South	pourings in a section south of Orchard La
Perry.-Only one pouring of concrete, in the Avenue remain-to complete construction network of steel rod? at lower left, was needed *. the entire,structure. (See story on Page D-!
Tht y/eathir
U.J. WMtlwr tyrMu Fncnl
■ Fate ■
1 Dtteili (n Pagi J)
THE PONTIAC PRESS
Home
Edition
VOL. .122 no. i«
PONTlAC, .MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1964—40 PAGES
Death	Ends an Ambitious Lite
ALAN AKEREY
Warning Made forVietReds
U. S. Protest Stresses 'Grave Consequences'
Alpn Aker ley was an ambitious youth.
A high school dropout who'realized his mistake, he was working nights at Fisher Body Division and going 1o school to obtain his hi#j school diploma, so he could get a better Job.
His jouney on the path to success was cut short last night by the thrashing blades of a power boat propeller.
Alan Uved with his brother in a rentftJ'cot-tage on the eastern shore of Cart‘Lake in Keego Harbor. His landlady described him as a polite, well-mannered boy. Just a tew hours before his death he had been over.to pay the rent, she said.
Alan left many friends in Keego Harbor, where he had Uved most of his life. A group qf them were assembled at Keego Recreation Tuesday afternoon. .They were quiet.
NO ENEMIES
’“He was a real nice guy,” said pne. “Hf
'never had an enemy in the world.”
Alan attended Scott elementary school and Crary Junior high before entering Water-' ford high school when his family moved to ^Waterford township.
They moved back to KCego Harbor two-yqars biter and Alan,entered West Bloomfield High SchboL He was a Junior there when he dropped out\
- Alan wasn t V good swimmer, his friends said. In fact, lie didn’t enjoy swimming much because of ear troubte iwtiich prevented him from putting,Jiis head imcto water. '
change Minds "
But he and Sheila Brennen and their friends decided to go swimming last night Instead of , taking a boat ride because of f threat of rain.
“He thought the world of her,” said Mr*. . f (Continued on Page 2, tol. 2)	•' . ,
Salinger Gets Senate Post Left by Clair Engle's Death
Police Block Cass Lake to , Find Suspects
Craft With Spotlight Rams. Into Swimmer in Marked-Off Area
A l a te evening swim .ended in d e a t h for a KeegoHarbor youthwben he was rammed by a hit* and-run power, craft on Cass Lake yesterday.
\It was the second hit-and run bodtipg accident in the county in less'thaifr • month.
A systematic search of the lake, the largest in-the county, • was .being conducted today by scores of police frdm the area in an attempt to find ute boat.
WASHINGTON WV-The United States warned Communist’North Viet Nam today of' “grave consequences” if any further unprovoked attacks are . made against U.S. military forces.
★ *, .
State Department Press Officer Robert J. McCloskey said the American protest was sent to. the American Embassy in Saigon for “transmittal to the North Viet Nam regime through appropriate channels.*'
It is the first such U.S. communication directly to the Red regime,-with which this country has no diplomatic ties.
. „ Communication channels exist at the Saigon headquarters' of . the International Control Com-missinon (ICC) composed of India, Canada and Poland.
*
■ The ICC has authority to su-,
See Analysis,
Page'D-1
SACRAMENTO, Calif. Gft-Gov. Edmund G. Brown today named Pierre Salinger to the unexpired term>of the late Sen. Clair Engle.
• The Democratic governor made the announce-ment with the forme; White House press secretary at his side at a news conference. -
' They returned together yesterday from funeral service in Red Bluff, Cali£> ’ for Engle, who; Thursday.	t	, V ;
The popular Democrat had five months remaining to serve of his first
CHECK TRACKS—Police are shown studying tire tracks where a boat may have been removed from Cass. Lake while they were searching for a hit-and-run craft that killed a Keego Harbor youth last night. Residents in the area of Oregon and Chipman, Water-
All Rushed to Hospital
ford Township, said they heard noises ft the landing about 2 a.m. today. The launching area is on Gerundegut Bay. Police believe the hit-run craft is still in or near the lake.
Nine Miners Hoisted to Top
Bombs Hurled in Jersey City
ate tefm.
Reports circulated 'th inger would Be sworn in rOw in Washington, D C.
pervise the 1954 Geneva agreement which partitioned Viet Nam. r ; •'* ....
OTHER ORDERS The protest was a. sternly worded follow-up to this orders from President'Johnson yesterday to beef up U.S. Naval forces off Viet Nam fid to destroy any fdhtes attacking them.
A U.S. destroyer fought off three PT boats in the Jonkin Sea Sunday.
In . the wake of Johnson’s or: den. Hie giant U.S.• aircraft carrier Constellation and three other' vessels sailed, hurriedly from Hong Kong today:
A U. S. spokesman in Hong (Continued on Page 2, CM. 5)
DINNER WITH LBJ Brown is to fly to the capitol the same day fo 1st Daytime Violence ner with President Johnson.
Engle’S illness propelled Stalin Strife-Torn Town Infer into the June California primary on the last possi-
JERSEY CITY, N. J. (APK— U,d>jr* .	■_£
Two gasoline bombs were4' The 39-year-old one-time San thrown—one of them atapolice Francisco newspaper reporter car—today in this r a c i a f Ly toppled State Controller Alan troubled city. \	'	.Cranston to win a bitterly coft-
ft was the first daytime vio- fort**! Democratic nomination lence after two nights of rioting, .for Engle’s seat, but police considered it an Iso- Sdlinger’s Republican fOe in
......... November, former movie actor
George Murphy, urged Brown Monday night to appoint someone other than-the former press secretary to Presidents Kennedy qnd Johnson.
ikcAL RIGHTS	•
Murphy contedHed Safinger isn’t legally qualified to serve for an interim appointment.
It took a battle that went to the U. S, Supreme Court to get Salinger opto the pr 1 m nr y
Pay Hike Federal, servicemen in-, creases assured —PAGB .,
Space
New craft to “survey”
| moon — PAGE B-3.
Ruins.
London workers find f Roman remains — PAGE i, B-S. ^	■■
.Area News'..........W
j Astrology .............D-3
Bridge ......... ...D-3
[ Comics ............. D4
I Editorials.... ; . . . .A4
I Markets .......... D-4
Obituaries ...........:D4
j SborHStory . ..... C4
* Sports ...... ...C4—C4
I Theaters . ......... D-2
TV-Radio Programs D-ll
Wilson, Eart... D-H
Women’s Pages B-9—B-ll
latedincident.
The fire department also reported six separate fires set in an abandoned building in the fourth ward, which has : been (he scene of Negro rioting the last two nights. The department said it also was being plagued by false alarms from tile area.
A total' of 20 persons have been arrested and 44 injured-including two Negroes who were shot—in the two days of rioting.
’ '* * . ' . “ *
***	ows were Ri|Wyh!#n secretary of State
anashed ki.23 stores and a num- Frank M Jordan- 8 he,a m )ier of them were looted. not -	' “ “
PATROL SECTION	take
More than 100 policemen, who'’ But during the night had been the r* if target of the gasoline bottles,	_
bricks and rocks Hurled by hit- will get off L -_____
and-run bfcnds of Negro youths, Muiphy by' appearing patroiled a wide area to thepro- Nov. 3 baUot the dominantiy Negro section^ the *f|ncumbent” line of t
nifv Msv	, ,	. **
his name.
HARD FEELINGS 4 Salinger’s appointment would work to asSliage Hard feelings generated by the stormy * rimary, in which Brown , dorsed Cranston.
PIERRE SALINGER
Plan Picketing at Commission
Police aiid Firemen Aim for Higher Pay
Pontiac policemen aAd firemen are planning a mass demonstration in front of .City Hall this evening, according to, Patrolman James Batchelor, president of the Pontiac Police Officers Association (PPOA).
Patrolman Batchelor said the demonstration, aimed at getting higher pay‘for city employes, will begin at 4 p.m. and last through tonight’s City .Commis-
She said the boat was only a few feet away when she went under.
BOAT FLEES ,
When she surfaced, Aker ley had disappeared and the boat, described as brown in color and possibly a “Chris Craft,” was speeding away in a westerly direction, It was about 9:30 p.m.
*	# Sr
Deputies and police from the State, Sylvan Lake, Keego Harbor, Waterford and West Bloomfield Townships, along with state park rangers were able to. obtain several of the numbers of the boat’s registration after questioning witnesses, according to Kratt.
. These have been sent to Lansing by teletype so« oWner records can be checked, Kratt said. ■/* * ★ •
Miss Brennen tdd police that the boat made “several passes” through the swimming area, shining a large spotlight on a handful of bathers, before if hit Akerley.
UGHT SHINING She .said the light was shining directly on tier and Akerley
CHAMPAGNOLE, France UH f — Nine miners who spent eight days huddled in a damp cham-, Her of the collapsed Mt. Rivel limestone mine were hauled up to.,safety through a nirrow rescue shaft today and rushed, one by one, to a hospital.
' * * *
It took about one hour to* bring the' nine men up through a hole pushed through to the men by a special 2S-ind» diame-ter drill.
None of the sarvivsrs appeared to be in serious condition, although all *ef them showed the effects of their long ordeal underground. Several had cloth wrapped ahurid their heads to shield their eyes from the blazing sun.f
* .*	•/' T
Others were quickly fitted’* with dark glasses to protect their eyes.
FIRST TO SURFACE First to reach the surface was Andre Jacques, 28, who seemed slightly dazed.
He shielded his eyes from .the blazing tun until a rescuer gave Mm dark glasses. Relatives and other villagers who had spent long, painful hours waiting on the slopes of Mt. RlvJf, cheered as Jacques was helped' from, the capsule. He lias put in an ambulance and sped to a hospital.
. ■	. '*	*	-4 .
ed from the capsule and carried Jhe men had reached the sur* to a stretcher.	face. *
” -...........- * -•
. Peyronnell,444-year-old father An engineer waa sent down, of three children, managed a in the capsule before the first weak wave to the bystanders rescue. He helped put the men and was greeted with another aboard and instructed them how loud cheer.	to stand in it for the 250-foot
In less thah an hour, five of ride to the surface.
for Waterford School Aid
* A grant of $50,000 from the Mott^mindation to aid establishment of a community school frngram in Waterford Township was announced yesterday by Supt. of Waterford Schools Don O. Tatroe.
The grant, which will span a four-year period?
’ was appropriated on a matching fund basis. •
Hinhf ill fiOs Waterford Township Schools, rfl^ria 111	the township and the township’s
Hi ia W \A/aah recreation department together uue TOf VV e&K must match the Mhtt proposal £ to become eligible for the '
The US. Weather Bure& pre- Sr*?*-	__
diets temperatures' will con- t This could be accomplished tinue in the high SOs for the by Thurpday night, next five days with skies mostly Township board members last sunny. Lows wiU be in the 80s. bight unanimously approved an *
. No rain is forecast until the appropriation	for the
end of the week.	second half of 1864.
Morning 'six-raile-an-hour TOPS AGENDAS winds east to southeast will con- The recreation board meets tinue. ,	tomorrow night and the school
Seventy-ope was today’s low board convenes Thursday night, recording in downtown.Pontiac The Mott proposal tops each prior to 8 a.m. By. 2 p.m. the agenda.
mercury had climbed to 8!
city today.
Two radio patrolmen reported seeing a gasMlne bomb —called a Molotov Cocktail* and made of I gasoline-filled bottle with a cloth wick—ig-
Sgt. Thomas Clougher and, patrolman John Eggers said that when {they drove to the scene to invekigate, another lighted Molotov Cpcktail was thrown at their car. .
The fire bomb hit a pole before it struck the patrol car and-bounced off, the policeman said. EMPTY HUIUHNG8 * Jbe six fires were set, ha various rooms of an abandoned building In the area of the racial disorders. '	•*>
Also during the morning, five Negroes arrested wHile driving through the area last night were cleared of disorderly persons charges in municipal court. Meanwhile, civil rights leaders a»d city officials were at a virtual standoff in attempts to avert a third night of rioting.,
the l fighters t “We r
BETTER HURRY l
CALL L_
Ext. 273 «
,AAd Have ►ONTIAC PRESS fivered to. Your acation Address
the strike t additional
t
Under an earlier agreement by representatives ef the three local boards, the, school system and township each would contribute 87,888 annually and the recreation department 36,-909. This assnmed help from, an outside source.
An alternate plan ^assumed no help.
The Mott Foundation will con- ' tribute 820,000 the first year, 815,000.the second, $10,000 the' third and, rt,000 the fourth year-
Purpose of a community .school program is to more ex-' tensively utilize school facilities by providing activities for everyone in the community.
Waterford’s program will be -patterned after the one in Flint, -but on a much smaller scale.
The township board last-night also accepted a-recommended first-year expenditure of 840,-000* which would match income.
This would Cover the fiscal July l, 1984 to June 30,
______oth tlie school system and
recreation department operate on this fiscal.year and will consider a full year’s appropriation to the prognun at their meetings this Week.
The township bout! made only a half year appropriition because the township functions on a calendar year. Added funds ter the program would have to be incorporated in the 1985 budg-
A~a
jHfc poytiAc phf^ Tuesday, august a, mi
Hit-Run Boater Kills Swimmer
(Continued From Page One) Min Brenden and a half
The boat was equipped with two running lights, witnesses said.
Immediately after Akerley disappeared, Miss Brennen went to the park rangers, who called the sheriff’s department. Blockades were set up at all boating slips on the lake, within a short time, marinas were checked and * house-to-house search started.
★ ♦ 7s♦-
The Lake is mostly In West Bloomfield Township with portions of It in Waterford Township.
Capt. Leo Hazen of the Sheriff’s Office said police are working on the theory that the boat is still on or near the lake.
that a large beat could be re moved ^rithin the dartHae after we got the caB,” said Hates.
Akerley's body ups recovered by skin diver Medward Tessier of the Sheriff’s Department at 11:10 p. m., about two hours after the accident.
P - *	*
It was found in four feet of water and about 35 yards from shore and about the same dis-
Red Defector Gets Asylum
WASHINGTON UB-The State Department said today that Tung Chi-ping, the Chinese Communist diplomat who defected in Burundi May - 16, has been granted asylum in the United
fhe announcement said that Tung, former 24-year-okl cultural attache at the Red Chinese embassy in Bujumbura, was due to arrive; at Kennedy International Airport in Now York this afternoon -aboard a Pan American plane from Rome.
The State Department press officer, Robert J. Mcdoskey, laid Tung contacted the VS. Embassy in Rode yesterday
political asyfaua to the United States.
“Asylum has been extended to Mr. Tung and he la now on a Pan American plana bound for New York,” McCloskey said.
- *. Pi . ★ ./'
Tung' is the second known case of a Chinese Communist diplomat’s defecting. In IMS Chao Fu, a code clerk at the Chinese Communist embassy In Stockholm,'dropped out of sight and later was granted asylum.in the United States.
tancn inside the outer; marker buoys.
Akerley’s left hand had been nearly severi! and his right hand slashed vertically, as if he had thrown up his hands for protection, police said- He suffered a large gash across the fop of his head.
Oa July 11, Daniel Fleeger, 11, ef Detroit was severely ia-t Jared when a power craft passed .over him in’Pontiac Lake, White Lake Township. Neither operator has come forward, nor has any of the passengers in the crafts.
★	* • w
Fleeger is in Old Grace Hospital, Detroit, his arms slashed by the whirling propellor of the craft that cut across his body,
Fleeger and a companion, Carletdh L. Seyler, also of Detroit, were in the water waiting to be picked up after purposely falling off water sMa.
They were being jtowMl by a friend Who was operating Seyler’s boat.
Seyler was about 10 feet from Fleeger when the youth was run over.-
About 100 feet away the hit-and-run craft stopped and then sped away, according to Seyler. ' He said that two young couples were in the boat, described as aqua or.green and white.in color.
.Lie detector tests have been given, to «a number of persons operating boats on the lake that day. All were cleared.
Youth Strove to Be Success
(Continued Frppi Page One) James Brennen. Hut’s the way it had been since Alan met Sheila about four years ago.”
That was hoqr .Sheila’s mother explained the reason for Alan’s heroic act in Cass Lake.
She spoke in tones that reflected the shock felt by Bremen family, J 7 “He saved her life . . . the poor sweet little boy.”
Sheila was in such a slate of shock last night tiiat she was unable to make a formal statement at fhe prosecutor’s office until early this afternoon.
THE EYES HAVE-IT - At least , that is what one would gather, looking at the expression on' Shela Stiltner’s face. This spud, grown in Lancaster County, Pa., appears to have been plagued by a split personality. It
feels like a potato. But it looks like a turtle with a mouse’s tail, Shela decided there’s only one way to And out for sure'what it is: Bake
Played Oo-Between on Red Offer
Newsman Had Key Role in Cuba Crisis
ble in a downtown restaurant he] versed its line and brorddcaii a
quickly got to the point.
MAKES PROPOSAL The Russian asked Seal! to find outat once from his friends in the State Department whether the U S. government would
Funeral Service Set
for Ex-Jayeee Chief
LANSING ’ (AP) - Funeral services will hie held Wednesday for William Kutchey,/a Lansing businessman and former president of the Michigan Junior Chamber of Commerce.
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report .PONTIAC-AND' VICINITY — Chance ef a few showers or thundershowers this morning becoming fair and less humid and a little cooler today. High! mostly la upper 66s. Fair and little temperature change 'tonight and Wednesday. Low to-altytt 17 to M. High Wednesday in 86s. East to southeast winds 6 to Untiles. Outlook for Thursday fair and pleasant.
TMefja Vwrttoc,
At, I ».m.: Wind vMpctty 4 mp.l Kracntn: JM	X
Sun hm TuMtay •» 1:0 KM.
Sun Hm» Wtdnmday «t 5:30 n,m. min wl TumMv «t 5:84 KWS.-"
Moon fitOt Wednesday at 2:42 e.rh.
One YMf Aye in Pontlec
Sunny, windy
Monday's Temperature Chart
rt Worth 1« 74
louMton	si	ao	Lot AMdiea	so	i
AarqiWta	83	48	Miami Baach	84	:
AujMgSt	*4	73	Milwaukea	B
Monday In Pantjnc
70 iSSS City 1(4 I 4f Ua Aqsr-41 Miami m 73 Mllwaukai
. 40 » Naw Orl*_____
‘85 42 Naw -York -WL 71	Omaha -
______	4VN2	p"—
Bismarck	41 55	p
70 P|

Chlct
74	SSfranilsco-	45	!
. .	72	8. ISAUrla	47
84	40	ItawK	48	!
~	Tampa Xv	**	I
NATIONAL WEATHER — Thunderstorms are expected tonight front.the central Plains to- the sou|hern Ohio Valley. A few showers are predicted for .the upper Midwest. Showery weather will prevail in the north Pacific states and- shpwers and thundershower in .the Rocky Mountain afea.^Little change in temperature is expected.
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S.-Soviet messages relayed by an American' newsman and ? Soviet agent helped score a breakthrough in the darkest hours of the Cuban missile crisis! according to a former U.S. intelligence official.
-	•	•■+ it it ,,
Roger Hilsman, State Department intelligence chit at the time of the October lro2 confrontation; discloses in an article for the Aug. 25 issue of Look magazine that American Broadcasting Company correspondent John A. Scab was the American in .the unofficial communications link. ‘
The. Russian was identified only as . “Mr, X,” a senior Soviet official who headed Soviet intelligence In the United States. Other sources said “Air. X” since has left the Russian embassy here.
Hilsman, now teaching” at Columbia University, reported:
By Friday, Oct. 36, of the fateful week, the nuclear antagonists were eyeball-to-eyeball.
President Kennedy had demanded a pullout of the Soviet missiles from Cuba and ordered a naval blockade. The Kremlin had publicly rejected Kennedy’s proclamation. Some Soviet ships at sea had altered course, but chev to Kennedy Also indicating the missile stye building in Cuba a willingness \a negotiate was was continuing full speed. arriving at the/WWte House.
The next day the Krdmlln re-Khrushchev note reneging on its proposals of the night before. Rusk asked Scali to see Mr. X again to find out what happened.
The Soviet official had
accused Way af/a _________|
“ arose” And said.the States
be interested In a solution to^he	his tune, too. SeoM
crista in which the Soviets re-4 *—3	7 7-
moved the missiles; they al-: lowed U.N. inspectors to supervise the pullout; they pledged not to, reintroduce the missiles and America publicly pledged not to invade Cuba.
- Sca|i promptly reported this to Hilsman and Secretary of State Dean Rusk. Rusk said this was the first direct wortl . that the Soviets might be thinking of a deal.
Rusk asked Scali to tell Mr. X that the U.S. government “sees real possibilitTes” in the proposition and to suggest that government representatives could work the matter out at the Unjt-(Continued on Page 2, Col. X) ed Nations. “Time is very/urgent,” Rusk emphasized. /
REVERSE LINE /
While Seal! was relating this word to Mr. X in a cdffee shop that evening, a secret cable from Soviet Premier Khrush-

to/ get the missiles
out'of
Again the Russian presumably sent back word to the Kremlin while Kennedy was makhtg aformal publienroly to the Friday proposition. \
I it-: h * X Sunday morning Khrushchev announced he had ordered the offensive arms withdrawn. The eventual settlement followed much of the formula set forth in /the first Scali-Mr. X meeting. CRISIS BROKEN That evening with the back of the ! crista broken, Mr. X met Scali for the last time. “The Information'you supplied,” he told the newsman, “was very valuable to the chairman in helping him make up his mind quickly.” y * .e *
Seal! was ail Associated Press newsman before joining ABC in 1962 prior to the missile showdown.
Mr. X, one of Scali's news contacts at the Soviet embassy, telephoned . the correspondent asking for an immediate luncheon date. 'Over a luncheon ta-
Citizens Unit Has 1st Confab
The first meeting of top newly appointed Citizens Conututtee on Human Relations war held lost night- in the Pontiac School Board pffices. / *
■' 'it ‘ ity it _	:
Rev. Jack H.C, Clark of First' Christian Church was elected chairman oT the 16 - member group. Rev/ James L. Hayes of St. Michael Catholic Church was selectedhs secretary.
'Hf citizens group, ,which will'act as an advisory committee to the Pontiac School Board in the broad field of in-tergroup relations, will meet
each Monday at 8 pan.—----------
According to school officials, text Monday’s meeting will con-:ern.what other groups have ac-:ompHshed in this field.
. * /',#■' ■ *. • Other comhattee members in-' elude Robert Ahderson, 3570 riverside; Sam Baifor;. 576 Granada; Clarence Banins, executive director, Pontiac Atas Urban League; Charles ‘Bifttegs, 236 Gage^ T. .Warren
Gillespie, 91 N. Anderson; Dr. Rigoberto Guzman. 308 W. South Btvd.; Mrs., Joan Paterson,- 2595 Depew; Circuit Court Judge Philip Pratt, 482 W. Iroquois; Mrs. Frances Reynolds, 7 Illinois; Irving Steinman, 116 Chip-j pewa; Charles Tucker. 161 Earlemoor; Dr. Robert Turpin, 1^6 Franklin; and Walter WijJ-506 W. Iroquois.
EpState DeAide Bores '62 U2
WASHINGTON (^PK — An American U2 plane strayed over the Soviet Union during the height of the Cuban missiles confrontation and caused “a crisis within the crisis,” according to former State Department intelligence chief Roger Hilsman.
Hilsman, onfe of the Kennedy-administration insiders during the October 1962 episode discloses Uie details in an article for the Aug. 25 issue of Look magazine. .	• ,	' /
! The downing of a high-flying!
U2 reconnaissance plane deep inside Soviet territory had in itself causqd a crista in 1960. |
The United "States discontinued Kong said the four ships left-the flights over the Soviet Union accoi^Jing to schedule, after that but has continued to
this U2 flight as a last-minute intelligence reconnaissance in preperation for nuclear war.” .
Kennedy, reported Hilsman, “gave a short laugh that broke the tension. ‘There Is always some so-and-so,’he said, ‘who doesn’t get the wofd.’ ” i JEventnaliy,/ wrote Hilsman, the U2 made it back ’fo base safely. / ^
to N. Rhodesia
Ordared to Captuca 7 Prophetess leader
V	u/	BIRMINGHAM—Concern over
LUSAKA. Northwn Rhod«l. lh'.fnU'*‘Md	^
___	T a 650-million development has
MolM . mre urlifted to- i prompu»d nearby residents to. day te Lundazi, where rampag- j ^the Birmingham ttty uig Lump* warrior, have mas-	to explore all
Birming Fra m Area Wws i / '
New Development Stir$ Concern for. Traffic Flow
sacred 150 persons. ITie troops wbre ordered to capture, dead or .alive, the Lumpa leader, prophetess. Alice Lenshina.
Reports said'the death foil from yesterday’s trail, eg terror and death through 18 villages m 1 g h t be higher because soldiers had not returned with information from Chinsali, one of thetrouble spots.
The Northern Rhodesian government issued the ‘‘dead or alive” order as it temper-a r 11 y outlawed the fanatic sect, whose rampages- in the past 12 days have cost at least 271 lives.
In a nationwide broadcast Monday night after,, the Lumpa massacre of 150 persons at Lundazi, Prime Minister Kenneth Kaunda threatened anyone attending meetings of the cult with seven years in prison. RESTORATION OF ORDER ,
Kaunda said he does not dispute the -right of the Lumpas to their religious beliefs a hodgepodge of African superstition, paganism and Church.of Scotland theology — but he insisted on the restoration of or-] der. JHe said he wfmld. lift the ban in aboqt a month if the carnage ends.
Kaunda is trying desperately to bring peace to the central African country before it receives independence from Britain in 12 weeks. H;. /	•	:
Officials believe the terror at Lundazi, a market center 400 miles northeast of Lusaka, was ii) retaliation for the slaying of 75 Lumpas at the sect’s headquarters at Sione Thursday. The Lumpas died in a suicidal charge with spears and muzzle loaders a g a i n s t government riflemen.	-
Appoint Man Veterans Head
methods of vehicular control in foe area.	- v
Home owners in the Pembroke Manor Subdivision Association last nijtet told commissioners they believed that cars heading west from the Troy development, fronting on Coolidge, would use streets from Maple to Derby as a throughway.
Several recommendations have been made to eliminate the problem, including a boulevard with only a few croosovers.
Raymond of Birmingham i^teree grandsons; and a great-grand- -daughter.
Raymond M. Smith Service for Raymond. M. Smith, 69, of 752 E. Lincoln, Birmingham, will be fl tf.fn. Thursday at Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Acacia Park Cemetery, South-field.
Mr. Smith difcd yesterday' after a long illness.
He was a retired service engineer for Dodge Division of Chrysler Corp.
Surviving are his wife, Mildred; two daughter*; Mr#. Richard Byfers of Lakeville, N. Y.,
! and Mrs. Roger Brown of East Rq^ert Smith, president of Lansing; and one grhnddaugh-Pembroke Manor Association, I ter. said he felt the members favored a proposal for the construction of a service drive from Maple to Derby on tee west- side of Coolidge.
Norman J; Cohen, spokesman for tee BUtmore Development Co. of Oak Park that is to undertake .the Troy project, suggested that signs designating no right turns into Pembroke subdivision from Coolidge would be just as effective.
MEETING DUE*
The cbiomtaaion. * after determining that the improvement of Coolidge ta a necessity, told the group that it will meet soon with th* planning board to determine ar solution.
The appointment of Duane W.
Shaw as Oakland County Veterans Affairs Director was announced today by the Veterans Affairs Commiaston. . v His appointment fills the* vacancy created May 27 of this year by the death of Floyd E.
Cremer. -	■
Several applicants were considered for the position, which had'a salary range of 69,909 to 611,960.
Shaw’s salary will be based!Mary R. of Bloomfield Hills; a
The no-parking zone oh Woodward at Hunter has been extended north another one-sixth of a mile by the State Highway Department.
The ban Jncludes the west side of Woodward between Maple- and a point about 260 feet South of Colonial and on the east side of Hunter from a point shout 470 feet south of Ridge-dale to the north city limits.
Extension of the nchparking zone followed an investigation requested by local officials.
The Highway Department, state police and Birmingham police determined that vehicles parking between the curb and sidewalk were interfering with the vision of drivers usfhg apartment house driveways' in the area.
Mrs. William D. Bplck Service for Mrs. WillAln D. (Winifred It.) Buick, 85, of 777. N. Woodward, Bldomfleld Hills, will be 1 p.m. Thursday at Bell Chapel of the Wiiyam
. HAROLD NEWHOUSER
Ex-Tiger Gets CNB Position™
Newhouser Is Public \ Relations Executive
Harold (ffal) Newhouser. former pitching‘gtar of the Detroit Tigers, has been appointed pub- , lie relations representative for the Community National Bank, it was announced today by A. C. Girard, president and chairman of the boird: ' ‘ ’
Newhouser, who ir 43, was a member of the pennant-winning Tiger teams of ,1940 and 1945. He was named Most Valuable ‘ Player of thfe American League 1944 and 1945 arid played on
the reepmmendatjons of the Veterans Affairs Commission. .
Shaw, who is 40, has been a county employe since January,
1961,	when he took the position of children’s supervisor at Camp Oakland near Oxford. OTHER POSITIONS
. He became assistant Civil Defense director in August,
1962,	and joined the Department
of Veterans Affairs in May, 1963, as. a field service representative. ;•?' . “	;	, •
In January of this, year Shaw, became deputy director of veterans affairs, a position he held at the time of his appointment.
R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. ^
Burial *wiU follow in Woodmere a,,‘8tar teams Cemetery,'Detroit.	He reached the.-peak of his
Mrs. Buick died yesterday ait-! career m 1944, 1945 and 1946, er a lengthy illness. She was a J when he won 29, '25 and\?6 ,' member' of thq First Presbyte- game*- respectively, pad loti riaii Church of Birmingham. .only nine each year.
Surviving are a daughter, He spent two seasons with the Cleveland Indians as a player before taking a scouting position with the Baltimore Orioles.
He later returned to Cleveland as a'liaison, officer between the farm clubs and the major league team. The Indians released him from a contract so he could join the' Community National Bank’s Business Development and Public Relations Department.
Since 1956 Newhoiusec has act- . ed as public relations advisor and athletic, program'coordinator for the Oakland County Jiive-nile Court.
Married and the father of two daughters, Newhouser livhsr at 26057 Romany, Franklip.
Robert D. of Ekmtog^ ham; a brother, W. Whiting
Comedian Succumbs; Started In Vaudeville
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Comedian 'Jack Kirkwood, who appeared on television with Jack. Benny, Bob'kope, A1 Jol-son, Red Skelton and Meredith Wilson, -died Sunday of an ap-. parent -heart attack at the age .of. 69. He made ‘his show business start in vaudeville, burlesque and touring stock com-panies.
Sail oh Unknown Mission
(Continued From F
s One)
Hilsman .wrote that during crucial hours of the Cuban af-fair:
“An American U2, on a routine air-sampling mission between Alaska and tee North Pole hAd picked the wrong star for it& return flight, And was at that moment over the Soviet Union.
-“Soviet fighter planes had scrambled. The U2 pitot had gone on die air — in tee clear —’ 1
4MVU	* •	, »»I88 8W8	* uniot^ 'Ow	--- ^	^
city commissioner; Mrs. Ethel ^to call for help. Aritericaa fightr
tination or to say if the move was connected with Johnson’s announcement.' t hat followed Sunday’s attack on the U.S. destroyer Maddox by three North Vietnamese torpedo boats.
in advance of the departure of the four vessels, shore leave was canceled for off torn and crew, and tin ship* apparently were placed oa alert.
.Resides tin. -Constellation, they Included tiie guided missile frigate Gridtoy; and the destroy* ers Preston and Fechteler.
. it '	it
Meanwhile, U.S. official? here
eresto Alaska tead also scrambledawl wert attempting to rendezvotw with the. US to escort U home.” 'X.
* Hilsman said that when he got | the news he ran upstairs in the! were watching to see if the Sdn-White House to tell President I day attack was an isolated thei-Kennedy.	| dent or pah of a hazardous new
>The implications were ob- j Communist strategy, 7 vkhto and horrofitous,,K he said: j ' .	*	* '
]The-Soviets might well regard ! They said it teas difficult to
determine whether the sudden {damaged and no American sail-attack Sunday, which teft one of i ors. were hurt.
U.S. Defense and State Department officials believe the PT boat sank. A reconnaissance it over the area, tional waters 30 miles off'North Viet Nam, found no trace of the craft.
Adm. U.S. Grant Sharp* top ! U.S. military commander in tee Pacific, said today, “Hie last time we saw it, It was in flames. .	-	,.;...
“Don’t ioiDw if it sank but the chances are pretty good it did.” He said there were no Nqrth Vietnamese casualties “that we know of, but there ta no way of tolling.” \ .
In Sunday’?.clash,~lhe Navy I The State Department do-disclosed yesterday, the destroy- {scribed the engagement as an er Maddox scored a direct hit pn “unprovoked attack” and said it otto of the PT boats with a five- wa?. sending, a protest to the jnch gun. The Communist craft Communist Ncgth Vietnamese later, was strafod by aircraft tgovernraent. from the carrier UR.S. Ticon-j Department spokesmen . re-deroga and left burning in the jectod North » Vietnamese water. Hie Maddox was not {charges that American planes
tee three Red boats burning, was an accident, a misjudgment
. If similar Red assaults are launched, bolstered American naval units in tbe Gulf of Tonkin were prepared to carry out President Johnson’s orders to destroy any attacking force. The President announced to newsmen yesterday hta shoot-to-kiil orders .to the Nayy. Previously orders, had been for the naval unite to ' defend themselves but not necessarily to destroy the attacker.
and ships had attacked its territory in recent’days.
Secretary ef - State Dean Rusk and Secretary of De-
traveled to Capitol Hill bring senate leaders up to date on the developments.
After the closed meeting Rusk was asked, by newsmen if he still thought the attack was an isolated incident. He replied:.
‘‘That remains to be seen. But we are all deadly serious about this.”	v
if it ' / •* Sen. Richard B. Russell, D Ga„ chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, told newsmen both Rusk and McNamara seemed to think the clash was an isolated incident. SOME CONFUSION?
“There have been naval operations in the Gulf of Tonkin by. the South Vietnamese,” Russell . sajd. “This could have confused the North Vietnamese.”' -	'
THE Ktft liAC frKjbiSS, TUESDAY, ALU^ST 4, 1UB4
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AP PheTefei
SENATOR’S WIDOW — Mrs. Locrettia Engle, widow of U.S. Sen. Clair Engle, watches her husband’s casket carried from Tehama County Courthouse in Red Bluff, Calif., to Oak Hill Cemetery. The senator, who died of a brain tumor, was buried yesterday.	'
Sees Sterilization Program as Own 'War on Poverty
NEW YORK (AP) - “I feel there’s a need,” say^ Jesse Hartman.
That’s how he explains why he put up $25,000 for s voluntary sterilisation program among Appalachia’s poor in Kentucky.
■ . ★ ■
“You can’t keep up with die building of inaane asylums and hospitals and schools,” Hartman says.	.
‘You can’t keep up with the demands for relief, all caused by the hordes of people unborn. ONLY HOPE
“.Where is the safety valve? "The only hope lies in closing off the demand. Is there an answer? Are we too late?” w ,e #
His laughter booms. “I sound Uke a prophet of'doom,
Hartman is big, white-thatched and ebullient. He made his pile, as he puts it, in industrial real estate. He Uvea in Stafford, .Conn., keeps offices in Stamford and New York, has second home in Palm Beach, Fla.'
SHRUGGED OFF He shrugs off his phllanthro-tes as if slightly embarrassed. "I’m sitting on the top of the heap. I can afford to be magnanimous.”
★	★ jfr
Hartman, lathet of a married daughter and grandfather of i, says he’s been worried for some time .about the population explosion, particularly among the poor.
“People talk about poverty. Well, this is another tool to fight poverty, he says.
MAN OF ACTION Like his hero, Theodore Roosevelt, he wantaJo.be a man of action.
"I’ve had it in mind right along,” Hartman said in ah interview, and last fall in New York he approached the Humane Betterment Association Voluntary Sterilization, which now is administering the Kentucky project.
T said ‘Let’s see what a one-man cruladecan do.1
‘Numerically; -I’m not doing anything. But I’m tired of all th|p theory, this research. I want to see direct jetton.”
Tim Kentucky project will be reviewed at the end of six months. If It’s considered successful, Hartman will continue footing the bills until enough other funds are available to carry on, hopefully in a year.
“The committee administering the program, they aren’t like the people you see doing good works sitting behind desks,” said Hartman. “This group—they work so hard and they’re so dedicated.
“And the people down there we’re trying to help havg a certain dignity. They have a fierce Self-respect, if I can put it that way;”
BIG FAMILIES He ..talks about big families living ini shacks , pn a few hundred dollars annual .income, ‘with a child coming every year into a world that holds nothing tor him.
He stops a moment and looks sheepish. “You can see I've become quite serious about it — and I don’t like it.”	1
.Hr w W A lot Of mail has come his way since the project started, Hartman says. “Some say I’m crazy or a do-gooder,’but most approve.”
WEDNESDAY—1 to 3 P.M.
REMINGTON
■ssr SERVICE
I TOMORROW!
Come to I
I DOWNTOWN PONTIACgS^
SAVE on These TERRIFIC IN STORE BARGAINS and LOOK For The SIDEWALK SPECIALS Outside
(verybody love, on Sidewalk Days -SIMMS. But don't forgot to coma into We reserve Hit right to limit quaptitia
-Remnant Fabrics In
YARD GOODS
ill of Downtown Pontioc i! • store lor these Odvert.i
in the sidewalk with items priced, to go — especially I i money lover, Prices lor tomorrow and Thurso it quantities fViceseobfeci to stock on hand.
Prints, solids chocks etc Plissos
broadcloths, polished cotton, etc. I- to 10-ydrd remnants. No cutting.	— Basement
‘Sudden Beauty* ( S
HAIR SPRAY

Popular *ROLL-ON*
RAN Dtodorant
Large 20-GALLON
GARBAGE CANS
25c I 43*
Lorye 17-ounce lilt ©f ha if spray for oil hair styling, limit 2.	-Main Floor
World's best seller
Sta inlet* Steel
7-Pfi. BAR-B-Q SET
Wash V Wear*
LADIES’ DRESSES
£QC | its |99 I gf , |00
long handle knife, fork, spatula, soli and popper shakers, lino, ole.
— 2nd floor
Assorted stylo* In this group.
hen siies 10 to 33Mt..Vqhr| choke.	-Me its. .fleer
Shower or Window‘
EZ-FLO Outside
Plastic Curtains | WRITE PAINT
Men's Hi-Cut Style
Basketball Shoes
84* i s |29 I s: |4«
Heavy 11 V«-oz. Danim
Men’s DUNGAREES
For book docks, fences, boms.
Pack 300 Tablet*
Bayer Aspirin
Dock uppers, sure-grlp soles 4.
| sites 7 to 13. Some white-to-• cuts Included.	- Basement
|79 I ;r. |29> j |97..
- uu ■ i	- ■ i *\•	* > f *
Children's 4 to 14’ '
POPLIN JACKET
Boyer lor lost, lost relief of poin duo 10 heodochei, neurolgio, etc.
-	— Morn fleer
Large 10-Quart Six*
Galvanized PaH
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TOILET SEATS
|00 j ss
Wednesday ot every week.
Electric tlWVBfl -Wain floor
100% Colton, drashablo, id assorted colon Zipper fronts. Only 70 left. —Main floor
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|00
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• A' \ „—Snd Heer
Palmolive RAPID SHAVE
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Instant father for lost, smooth, i shove* with any blade, limit 2.	—Main Floor
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OfficiaKleocjue baseballs „wl horsehide tqvtrs. Limit 4 per c-lomer, N. - 2nd floor
I 4-Player Set
Badminton Game
Set has vC/rpckets. not, poles and shuthecoCks. AH tn plastic cast, limit I, —2nd floor
krmbtoc lock with ? keys, fosy to ipdOH oh doors for pro. m.	—2nd floor
Urethano.Foam Fill -
CHAISE-LAWN PAP
Genuine 'Toddle Tyke'
Children’s Wear
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2oo
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DOOR MATS
Mode especially Mor choit iges. but uselul or'lown on b*och pads, jiorpl print V -2nd fib*
STEREO SPECIALS
Sylvonio Stereo Console ^Migh Fidelity AM/FM Fv$iirwoad r..
Philco Mahogany Console Sterea AM/FM Radio .
Westinghouse Blond Stereo.... AM/FM Radio .......
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HTT
S14F*
4149s*
4199s®
/ Plastic Coatad
Playing Cards
zrk 35*
Bridge sire cords, with fancy bocks. Wipes dean With Cloth, limit 2.	- Main Floor
Ingraham 'Fireball*
ALARM CLOCK
Palm
I4«2f:nch grid- iiylo « /disebntinued cplpr, For 6v\ * wbVe IbbR I * t — 2nd
Koroseal Inflatable
WADING POOLS
$2.95
Setter
-Sqco Sit ■on--405hvj»-waj
in clock factory, luntaft..
l«% ted lav — Main Floor
Z$1,8B
Setter i
|39
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Electric Razor
, $19.95 I Value I
: I
nsqn Mon's shaver with sapor/, m tor Sideb Jtns and mushxtwl I'd end cose,. — Main 'Floor
GenuineBiltmore'
POCKET WATCH
-H&.7 inch rif.g wod'ig pool of ' ' -Korosodl by Goodrich, limp I pool per**, ton. — Main Floor
Decongestant
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riiuu available ELECTRIC Its W.Nhree / wf4 COMPANY FE 40/
■SIMMSJL
THE PONTIAC PRESS
ll Wert Huron Street
Ki?
TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1964
* HAROLD A.
Pr.ild.nt ai
ni ^nJaT
Pontiac, Michigan
Joan a. Ru.it

• . Local MM UlBlIM
Another Milestone in Space Exploration
The successful performance of Ranger 7 marks another milestone along the route of .Yankee exploration of space and expansion of scientific knowledge leading to it. Although the Russians suc-eeeded in photographing the moon fire yean ago, the achievement of our space marvel, after failure of six previous attempts, la more advanced and noteworthy in many respects.
★ ★ ★
The four-year $260 million Ranger program has produced close-in lunar pictures 1,000 times better than any made heretofore from American spacecraft or with earth telescopes.
Significantly, Ranger moves America a long step forward In preparation for the $20" billion manned expedition to the mood, tentatively scheduled for 1970.
★ ★ ★
A timely explanation of the U. 8. lag behind Russia in space technology was just given by Jh. Edward Teller, nuclear physicist and professor-at-large at University of California, when he told the graduating class at Flint’s General Motors Institute that though America was ahead of the Reds in the field of pure science, she had trailed in some aspects of applied science.
, ★. ★ 1 ★’ \ "' Recent events indicate tharare are rapidly narrowing the gapln the latter area while still enjfaanff a viable and expanding national . economy—something tpe Kremlin bosses were unable to achieve as the country’s space program was given priority over industrial and agricultural development and the consumer needs of the people.
gun and heavy mortars and how-'itzers. It also innovated the * massive war of the trenches at, the cost of an entire generation of English, French and Germans — more than 8.5 million dead In alL It gave the world poison gas, the tank, the land ! . mine, the flame thrower and aerial warfare.
★ ★	★ •
But worse, it ended in an inconclusive peace and « settlement that made, a second world war almost Inevitable.
Dxnwrrxoif while you wait: A moderate is a person who holds the same views that you do, regardless of how extreme they are.
Safety Belts....
Indiana State Police say that both WOLm Galimors and John Farrington would probably be alive today had they worn safety belts. Officials estimate that approximately 12,000 out of the 40,000 doomed to die In 1964 in automobile accidents .woidd live with safety belts. This Wl|ght include YOU.
It mightbs some of your family.
Mark Anniversary ^f Eruption of WWI
Fifty years ago today World War I was triggered when a German cftfalryman and a Flench sentry killed ln an exchange of shorn near Belfort, France.	/ '
The pretext for the war was the assassination of tho Archduke of Austria-Hungary a month Wore. But historians say the war would have eventuated anyway. Europe in 1914 was drunk with militarism.
Ar ★ ,/fV •'
Gennady’s war Plan haSd » been
drawnup years earlier and involved the violation of the neutrpl series qf Belgium and Holland/
/ Early successes of the Germans Were minimized by 111-advlsed strategy by the high command, and the advance toward.Parls was stopped short in the famous fotuxlay battle at jme Marne.
At the-outset, the German army of 3 million men was opposed by a French force of 1.3 million. Subsequently, the British Joined the French with an Initial expedition-pry force of 160,000 men. The war eventually spread to 28 countries of L six continents.
★	ft «;
The 'tttrqggla introduced, the I use of .the machine
k • L' ‘ Jr
Barry to Strew TV, Base States
By WALTER R. MEAR8 WASHINGTON—Sen. Barry Goldwater’s Republican presidential campaign will rely heavily on television and hit hard it states where the Arizonan already has a strong base of support. ;/ .
And through ff all, the Goldwater forces will be quietly watching the issue of civil righto in the North. On that score, they plan now to be silent. /
For. although men around Goldwater hays said in the past that! the so-called White backlash in Northern states could ’mean votes for their man next November, they have hastened to add that the question will fdPthem be a completely quiet one.
Goldwater, genuinely concerned about Ms explosive implications, la doing Ms best te keep It that way..
The lessons of the long primary campaign are much in the minds of Goldwater’s men as they map strategy for the coming race against President Johnson.	•
• dr jA ★
Three states stand out: New Hampshire,. Oregon and California.
TALKED CONSTANTLY In New Hampshire, where he lost the nation’s first primary to Henry. Cabot Lodge, Goldwater was a candidate who talked constantly, who for a time held almost daily news conferences.
He wound up tired and constantly plagued by demands that be explain to the,voters remarks he had made qa Social SeearMy, oa the United Nations and on » variety of other subjects.
In the wake of that defeat, tha Goldwater forces tightened their planning, turned to prepared speeches instead of off-the-cuff talks with small groups of voters, and sharply cut the candidate’s news conference appearances. !s	.	*
★	W —ak- ; '/ /,
The senator said latef he suffered in New Hampshire from overexposure to the press. '	|
ESCHEWED WHISTLE-STOP The pattern Goldwater’s meh seek to shape la the one they followed in California, where the senator eschewed the whistle-stop style of vote-hunting, took his menage to the voters In an intensive series of‘television appearances—most of them on tape or film—and made hit personal appearances at a series of major rallies.
Together, the California and Oregon primaries signal the third key factor in current cnmpalgn planning. Goldwnter’s forces figured in advance the Oregon primary was lost, and they called off the senator’s personal campaign there. / Instead,, they Concentrated^time.^md money on the California primary. And in California, they worked hardest at the southern ers where Goldwater appeared strongest. "... • *.l/Ry1' ■	J„ M
•' ft /ft ft'!	. ' * .'
And Goldwater. won—on Southern-Cali-fornia votes. Now his strategists are talking of an effort to secure Goldwater’s bases of strength—in the Western, Rocky Moun-‘ i and Midwestern states, sir!‘perhaps
some Southern states—early in the presidential campaign.
Goldwater has worked hard to mute the Issue of civil rights tensions during the presidential race. The senator said Iqpt Wednesday neither he nor Johnson will bring into the campaign the question of the so-called White backlash against the dyil rights movement ,in the North.
Verbal Orchids ip -
Fred Kayga	.
of 7795 Elizabeth Lake Road; 86th birthday.
Robert fiebhardt	(
of Union Lake; 89th birthday.
Mrs. Bessie B-Miller of 12^5 Silver Bell; 91st birthday.
Mr. ami Mrs, Barney Brews \ of Saginaw; golden wedding anniversary.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Griffiths of 98 Oneida; golden wedding anniversary-
V
‘For Heaven^ Sakg, Why Don’t You Look Where You’re Going!’
David Lawrence Says:
Voice of the People::
Another Whtes ot Npise Caused	by M
* What is wrong with “Disguzted Huron Streeter”? Doesn’t she realize that it doesn’t matter if her baby is awakened at 3 a.m. by motorcycle noise? Tho lads on the motorcycles must not be deprived of their fun, fun, fun.
★ ft"	''*•*■
, Who are we to complain—it’s only the sick in the hospitals, the mothers and small children,
’ the men who have to get up to go to work who are being disturbed. Bat what do they matter? Isn’t everyone supposed to drag 'race and roar around the entire city all night?
iff ★	★
The police in. Pontiac must think so. Not much is done in spite of repeated pleadings. Just plug your ears, suffocate with closed windows and pray they will go away so yoii can get at least three hours of sleep before the alarm goes off.	i
A DISGUSTED FEATHERSTONE ROADER
CriticizeTOP Signed ‘Knows the Truth*
I am astonished and disappointed to see an anonymous letter allowed in the VOP column so bigoted as the one signed “Knows the Truth.”
“The truth shall make ymi free,” aid the writer of that letter is not free. He te chained by bigotry and prejudice and fear and jealousy. Until he css see all humsa beings as Individuals witti a direct line of decendency from God, that writer will be enslaved by his own guilt complex. .The prisoner most have, a jailor and neither are free.
U JSHShould Act on Race Riots
7u
JANIE C. PACE / 75 8. JOHNSON
WASHINGTON - From all over the country comes word > that people are wondering why the President and the Congress in Wash- flH ington are do-ing virtually nothing about the violence and disorder — fhei looting and the! thievery—which! have been going" on in some of LAWRENCE the principal cities' qf the nation under the guise of expressing racia) .resentments. ' Y .
it ' +/ <
The quick .answer given by administration officials is that this is ‘a local matter for the stated or for cities.
' % -k w *'	’■
- But oaiy^a few weeks agd the American people were told that racial relations “affect interstate commerce,” and that this * was the main reason for passing the civil rights la&.
Nat ohly have the latest riots involved public places of : business — interfering with commerce—but the hotels in New York City report many cancellations 4f 'reservations ' made by would-be customer* from several state!.
Indeed, civil rights are being taken Sway daily frein innocent citizens.
- .	•*	- ‘y
There are threats, moreover, to limit the activities of the local police and lodge authority In civilian boards ta ttle cities to review and reverie the acta of the police on grounds of alleged “brutality.” « /-NOTHING DONE . ' / But nothing is being dope to discourage resistance to arrest.
If police officers were pheyed, thaw would be no occasion for \ disputes about “brutaUW.”
President Johnson has made
with dismay the various race riots, and the President has spoken of them as regrettable.
However, about as far ps Mr. Johnson has gone is to make this declaration after the Rochester, N. V., riots:
“When machinery does not exist to redress grievances, it is understandable that those wtoy are aggrieved will fake to the 1 -streets, whether rightly' or wrongly!	Y
“Their judgments might be wrong as to how Justice could be obtained, but they would be less or more than human if they did not seek justice.” The administration here has.

hardly as yet begun to realize “Knows the Truth” in the Press VOP column set forth con-the effects of the bitterness and text in direct contradiction of his signature. It would appear that resentment which are sweeping truth was again dishonored by abysmal ignorance of the type the country as city after city la which screams hatred, bigotry, anti-semitlsm, Hitlerism, man’s being subjected to violence and inhumanity to man and every other. non-Christian attitude you disorders in the npme of civil could name.	*
rights demonstrations.	I{ (hero* tie a guilt complex it falls not on the shoulders of l
* ,	*	*	t	a minority group of any color but rather should mantle the hearts
/ The federal power is being to-	of tadividuaja who think they know the truth yet raise their voices
voked to forbid discrimination	loudly to vilification of others. Life is so fleeting . . . how much
in employment and public ac-	better if we could each light one candle of love before we leave,
commodations on the ground of Thr'world then would be so much brighter for posterity, race or color, but it to also /'
discriminatory to allow civil rights to be taken away from white or colored peopla/by means of riots and mol* violence. y . •	'Vy-/, ■. J
(Copyright. 1H4, Nmt York HoroM Tribute Syn0tc»t«, Inc.)
LOVETHY NABOB
Bob Considine Says:
Says Enthusiasm Turned to Butterflies
I waa enthused about The Proas editorial on Barry -Gold-- )'' water until a VOP writer stated dirt it’s die first time to 30 yean he could make a choice. Add ao thinking back 30 years I remembered the soup lines and Hoover1 times. Suddenly I got butterflies In my Stomach and my enthusiasm waned.
Hemingway Estate Stags Free of Fidel Party Line
ROY J . RUMBLE ROCHESTER
about the race riots, bat he hasn’t put the finger of blame on the basic trouble—the.the-ory of civil disobedience which la&fyvhas been acclaimed hy some white and Negro preachers anff organizations to such an extent that the word has spread down through all the Negro communities that it's all right to attack the police.
It Was Adlai Stevenson who, ip) a ~gdbHc speech, recently said that going to JaO in connection with “demonstrations” has come to be regarded as “no longer a dishonor but a proud achievement.’’ .
■ * O' ★ •....
The Congress has watched
HAVANA - Did ajrieoe the other day on a yityjt to Finca La Vigia, tha. pleasant place in nfarby Francisco de Paula tvhere Ernest. Heming-wrjajM lve d' through the last 35 years of his life,
Thought
might be inter-erted in a bit more about the COnsiDINE estate, Whichh Hemingway’s widow, “Miss Mary" left to the Castro government - with the. understanding that nothing would be touched, or tainted by the of-. Octal party line. . v / >”
*	*	♦	■ v:
Caretaker, Rene Villareal, who thought of fhq Hemtag-ways as his Papa and foster mother, appears to have as much to say about who comes and gols by the master’s old domain as does, the Castro government. .
Rene doesn’t., like people poking	around.	He	particularly
doesn’t	like	people	plucking
books out of the bookcases that line all of the flve rooms of the . rhain house.
* *	w	w
If a npn is knoqn by his booh?, this'ts the ldnd of a man'
travel books of Temple Field-tag and more.
In the living toqd ty a tiny rocking chair whoae petite upholstery bears this legend: POOR OLD PAPA.
That’s as good an epitaph as any.
‘Learn About Socialist Labor Party*
Of the five political parties that Will appear on the Michigan ballot in November, the Socialist Labor Party Ja the only organization, with a program that can bring to birth a society of peace, abundance and freedom for all mankind. Learn about the Socialist Industrial Union concept of government by visiting the Socialist Labor Party* exhibit at the Michigan State Fair..
. V LEO CHURUUCH DETROIT
In Washington:
White Backlash Big in Chicago
By BRUCE H06SAT
CHICAGO (NEA) r- “I’m voting Republican for president and so are three others In iny family <1.
The- words, uttened ..hy, a normally Demo-cratic Civil-1 servant, were those of a Polish - American | deeply upset by the influx of Negroes Into his | area, of this . city."
lost moat of these people for November.
Much depends, be says, on what sort of civil rights pbmk the Democrats hammer tato their platform at Aflaattc City, how well they explain the often-mteconstrued 1964 civil righto law, what Presi-■ es to the
OPSSAT
Thoughts

To those who fuOy admit the immortality of the human soul, the destruction of our world will-not -appear so dreadfii). — .£harles Darwin.,
i a .'ft ■ *	•
And poverty will come upon you like a robber, and. want like aa, armed man!—Proverbs 84:34.
.
Where taw ends. ’ there tyr-, ■ anny- begins. —William Pitt,

the Nobel Prize' wbrneT' was:
The last book he was reading in his favorite easy chair to the living room was “Give Me a Ship to Sail” by Alan Villiero.. The last .hook he was reading in bed was Bob Ruisrk’s “Poor No More.”-ON HIS SHELVES - .Hfe .shelves hold.Mark Twain, ‘ Kipling, Saritayana, John O’Hara, the Harvard -classics, Lmdbergh, -Artie' Shaw, Dostoievsky, Sinclair Lewis, George Jean Naitium, Edmund Wilson,' Gene Tunney, Calvin Coolidge, Mahatmi Gandhi, $<> J. Perle-man, J. D. Salinger.
Also Jack Eatt and Lee Mortimer, Jim. Jones, Red Smith, Robert Louis Stevenson. Alex Woollcott, Aden Smith, Bob Sherrod, Bill Matddta, Douglas Southall, . Somerset Maugham,* all the
V ...	&k
they are pure./“baddaih.V And they reflect a senthnent that seems to, be flowing in particularly great volume since the Republican convention in San Francisco.
As of today, the white back-
~Kkl» t« vtr and it looks big. Reports of it are engulftag a variety of political headquarters. They come from city sectors inhabited by citizens of Polish, Italian, .German, Ukrainian and
’ With the towers of Chicago’s Loop rising just a few miles stray, this reporter sat in the office of a prominent Polish-American politician and lawyer — anonymous here — and hetod him discuss his sentiments can-, didly.
He describes the Polish-Americans he sees in great numbers as shocked by heavy Negro incursions. The if present mood, obviously, is one of political revolt,
• ■ ★ • , * ★'
' But he does not flunky the Democrats have yet cempieMy
Negroes behave in the public streets. ’*
In Chicago, as to Milwaukee, Detroit, Cleveland, Philadelphia and other northern industrial centers, the real core of national minorities’ distress over racial change te^-ta the housing field, '
The threat these people feel Is far more to their homes than to their Jobs. To them, tha home the vital symbol of all they
The • lawy/er-politician, interrupting his comments now . and then to chatter to Polish over the telephone, saya;
“They see themselves losing all they have built. Polea, more than most people, own , their own homes. Wbeu they came to this-country they used the tint thousand dollars they saved to buy a home, often taking second and even third mortgages. .Then they worked sight and day to pay off those mortgages.”
''' * .d *
To these folks the Negro in-. flux spells Just one thing — decline. They believe firmly that they have eyeball evidence ’of it. They are convinced that Negroes let their properties run down, never painting or repair-\ing <x> otherwise caring for them. - •
' There la a bitter Joke going the rounds of Chicago's Poliah-American areas. This is it:
“A modern-day Paul Revere It with as- He’s riding up and down Milwaukee Avenue shouting ’The Negroes Are Coming.’” n* *
The problem hits {he national minorities to many ways. They have no wish to move. They cherish their homes, their costly churches, their long-time neigh* bors, their familiar shopping streets.
★. * *
Beyond this*, moving usually means to them a drastic economic setback. It means going from a mortgage-free haqw. one often modernized inside, to a new place twice as costly that may saddle themwith debt for . the rest of their^tos. .
Their response to ttris' proe-pect b: “Why should we have Jo go tato debt again when wa have worked so hard and long to get olear of {*?”'
This, says the Polish lawyer-politician,' is just “too much all - at one time for these people to comprehend.”
And that is why many are preparing to vote for Sen. Barry Goldwater as the only protest they know how to make.
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THE POX-TIAC PRESS. TUESE(At. AUGUST i
• *
Missouri, Katisas, Idaho Holding Elections
LBJ Supporter facing Stiff FigKf in Primary
WASHINGTON (AP) - Three states hold primary elections to-day, with Rep. Richard Rollins, a strong supporter of the Johnson administration oh the pow--erful House Rules Committee, ■ facing a stiff fight in Missouri.
Bolling’s battle and primary contests for gubernatorial nominations in Missouri and Kansas hold the limelight..
Idaho also has a primary, with Democratic incumbent Reps. Ralph Harding and. Compton I.’White unopposed for renomination.
> Bolling, a liberal who for many years was the late speaker Sam Rayburn’s spokesman on the rules committee,'is opposed by a conservative, Judge Hunter Phillips of the Jackson
Court. The district is jnl Kansas City.
HST SUPPORT	J
Philljps has called Bolling ‘^wild-eyed and left-wing character.” Former President Harry jS. Truman has endorsed Bolling, and a close friend of Truman’s, Tom L. Evans, is the congressman’s campaign man-
ager. Bolling has solid support from organized labor.
", Phillips is backed by five splinter groups of the ok! Kansas City Democratic machine of. Tom Pendergast.
while seven incumbent Democrats have opposition.
Foreign News Commentary
Nikita to Vacation Before Red Summit
Missouri Lt, Gov. Hilary A. Bush and state House Majority Leader Warren E. Hearties head a five-man field seeking the Demo&agjc nomination for governor. Ethan Shepley of St. Louis and William B. Ewald of Kirkwood are among four Republican hopefuls.
Retiring Gov. John M. Dalton is ineligible for reelection.
•2 OPPONENTS Sen. Stuart Symiqgtoii, D-Mo.,
\	* By PHIL NEWSOM .
\ UPI Foreign, News Analyst
JUST BEFORE THE, BATTLE \ Soviet Premier Nikltif Khruab-chev will spend the time between now and the meeting of 26 lending 'Communist parties on an inspection touf of Soviet -agricultural areas and- a brief Black Sea coast vacation.
Leonid Brezhnev, touted as Khrashchev’s personal choice'
of successor, end other leading members of - the ruling Presidium already ire on vacation in advance of the. Important meeting which is expected to take the first steps toward rending Bed China out of international communism.
mark time until after the British tad American elections.
two lRtfocnown opponents, while Republicans are picking between Jean Paul Bradshaw ahd Morris D; Duncan.
/ On other items, such as the German problem, spread of .... dear weapons and the Soviet debt to the United Nations, the Russians appear determined to
CYPRUS POWDERKEG President Archbishop rios apparently beUeyes he
holds most of the _________|
in'the Gypras- disppte, an attitude which London diplomat* say could sparl^i fresh international
Two Republican congressmen •are unopposed for renomination,
In Kansas, eight Republicans are running for governor, including Rep; William H, Avery, who .resigned as a member of the House Rules Committee. Other GOP hopefuls indude Mc-Dill Boyd, a close runnenip in I960, Lt. Gov. Harold Chase, Atty. Gen. William M. Ferguson and State Senate President Paul Wunsch.
STATE AIDES Former State Treasurer George Hart and Corporation Commissioner Harry 6. Wiles are among' six Democratic candidates.
Two-term Republican Goy. John Anderson is not seeking redaction. .
In House contents in Kansas, four men are trying for the GOP
nomination to sticceed Avery, while Rep. Garner Shriver has one Republican primary opponent. The other three Republican incumbents are unopposed
Monro# Votes Down Urban Renewal Project
MONROE (API—Voters Monday turned down a $5 million urban renewal project. City of-fidafe- said the projedt would have renovated 27 acres of busi-1 ness and residential property in the downtown area, and turned it into a shopping center. j
Woman Dies in Crash
NEWAYGO (AP) - Selma Wilson, 79, of Grant, was injured fatally Monday when the pickup truck in which she was a passenger and an automobile ■collided at /.rural intersection in Newaygo County.
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concessions to the Turkish minority and ic not likely to take it down. The chances of • surprise Turkish invasion seem to huve gone.
AUGUST
But the danger is that Turkey, disappointed at what it calls a let-down by her major allies, , may. loosen her tie; with the Western alliance. Already there is talk of Turkey considering aid from Russia.
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FRANCE, SATELLITES French President Charles de; Gaulle is reported^ pleased with
the cordial atmosphere created by the Pvis visit of Romanian
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Premier Ion Gheorghe Maurer and to feel similar cordial relations could be established with other East European satellite leaders.
His next invitation may be to Polish top Communist Wlady/ law G o m u 1 k a or Czechoslovakia’s No. 1 Antonin-Novotny.'
OIL TALKS
Algeria and France trill resume their oil talks in Mid-August. These may result in creation of an Algerian national . company for prospecting and exploiting Algeria’s vast, still-untapped. Sahara oil reserves in cooperation with French and other foreign companies which would be granted new prospecting Itemizes-.
Such a “cooperative association”. it Is said, would ensure continued foreign know-how and at the same time■; whaty-Alger-
I MM — ~ XI-i. li— 	*
ian nationalism.
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THE STYLE CORNER OF PONTIAC
MAY BE RIGHT France’s long-time ahiUtas^ sador to Washington Herve Al-phand says he is getting tired of denying refxtrta that he Is to be moved to fiiM)tlfer post.
But Parte reports say that At phand. who has held the Washington job since July 19M, is a likely candidate to replace Born Ambassador Roland de. Margate who has reached retire-ment age.
Charles Lucet, 54, poHflcal chief of the French Foreign Office, is being mentioned for the I Washington'post.
THE A>ON liAC ^Iib£>a, JL ti66i>AV> AUGUST *4, 1^54
A mechanical blueberry pick-1 three men to do the work^f er has been built that enables! 1)0 hand pickers. ^	■
Sea Saga Is Over; Islander Due Home
JOB HUNTING?
PAGO PAGO, Samoa .(UPI) -A 30-year-old watermelon farmer was preparing* today for his trip bgck to Tahiti — a trip he hopes will be faster than the sea journey that brought him to this South Pacific island.
. Kemanihi Tepa left the island of Maupiti in' Tahiti with a friend last February for nearby Bora Bora. That short trip of 23 milep lad to a sea saga that, ended 155 days later on the reef of a Samoa island with Tepa’s
Tepa has been nader the' Bbra Bora. But aU of the mo-care of the Rev. John W. tors failed before they readied
*** Bor. and lk.tr boat , ttonal Church on the island of • J	,
JUau Manna since he arrived started to driff westward in Samoa Jniy l. ,	FOOD, WATER
He has been pronounced fully Tbdr food supply held out unrecovered from his ordeal and til March 7 and they used the is now awaiting transportation last of their water two (jays back to his home.	later^ But they managed to
\ ,	*	*	*	fashion a spear from a pair .of
He left Maupiti with another scissors .and a stick to catch watermelon farmer, Natua Hatf fish and they collected rain wa-ohev-in a small boat with four ter in a receptabievmade of a outboard motors for the trip to rubber mat.
Raiobo, hQwever, succumbed
to the rigors of the' trip three-days before the boat crashed on a reef off Uau Manua. Tepa buried his friend at sea.
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Boy Fatally Injured *
GftAND LEDGE (AJP)—Paul Gordinier, 12, of Grand Ledge, was injured fa tally* Monday when he was struck by a -truck addle crossing M 44 four miles east of Grgnd Ledge. The driver of the truck was not. held.
LOOKING AT MONSTER - Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Keefe of Niles, Mich., and their children get a look at a replica of a prehistoric beast at the Sinclair exhibit at tbe New York World’s Fair. The family was able to make the* tty by learning to cooperate in saving money.
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NEW YORK (UPI)—Dm World’s Fair Monday did Its share In helping a Michigan housewife teach her three children that a penny saved Is a
The fair decided that such industry deserved a reward,
When the family finally arrived yesterday, admittedly spending more than the pennies in the bleach bottle, a World’s Fair official acted as official host, treated the family to lunch and generally gave tbe Keefe family a royal treatment.
It rolled out the rod carpet for the five-member Keafa family of Niles, Midi., who visited the fair partially-on the penny savings of the three children.
Weedy Keefe, Us wife Marie aad their throe cUktrea Kevin, II,*Barry, 19, and Kathy I, of 109 Sheridan draw the atteatisn si fair officials last year whoa Mrs. Keefe wrote asking hr information abeot the fair.
In her letter she mentioned she was trying to teach her children that “an experience as tremendous in their eyes as a trip to New York and the fair, doesn’t just happen.’’
She said the children were paid for doing various chores around the bouse and in their neighborhood. They faithfully saved their pennies in an empty bleach bottle which bora a homemade inscription.

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Legislator: Stock Offer 'Naive
WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. Henry B. Gonzajes, D-Tex., says he refused an offer of $14,000 j worth of bank stock but be feels j it was the idea of a “naive businessman” and a local matter.
“I cannot truthfully say it appeared to be part of any national lobbying attempt," Gonzales told the House Mondayr interrupting a speech by ,Rep. Wright Patman, D-Tex., describing the purported incident without giving any names.
■h f ★
Patman is chairman of the 'House Banking Committee, and Gonzales is a committee member.
* Patman, praising “a member of my committee,” told the story after saying that “dntipublic action by the bankers* lobby”
[sometime; “takes the?form of• would consider this an Outright offering a congressman baink[conflict oftinterest. I reminded stock either free or at a cost I him I, was a member of the I greatly under the market val- j banking committee.- He said he ije*	’did not'know this."
NO MOISEY ’	.	| Gonzales said that “one of the
r	J. .. troubles with businessmen is
I that they often can’t tell the dif-
2E, « I ferenc* between the private and San Antonio district called on i.,
him In Washington suggest- puWk “ctor -ed he become director of a'FINE EXAMPLE bank.: Gonzales said he told the] After Gonzales finished,. Patman that directors are usually man and several other con; stockholders “and 1 didn't have gressmen congratulated him.
I any money.”	; “I think it is a fine example
He said his caller told hlmj that the gentleman from Texas that $14,000 worth of stocktfyg set,” Patman said. “I know -would be available “and I didn't a lot of people wouldn't be so have to have any money." . w I courageous.”
* a *	r *	*	*
“I stopped him at that point,” J Rep. Fred Schwengel, R-Iowa. Gonzales said. “1 told him I i asked, “ought not more of us
when we are tempted in public life nuke known our expert-ence?"
.	......;r:-::
Cwyloin Won't Allow	!
Allies to tlsa Port	j
COLOMBO. Ceylon If)—Cey-j Ion’s government has decided to< deny facUities- at its siiports and seaports to British* and American ships and planes go-! ing to Malaysia, on military mis- j sions against Indonesia, an ■official source said today.
The source said this dedsioi resulted from the government’! determination to. preserve its policy of nonalignment, even though it is a member of the Commonwealth along with Britain and Malaysia.
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.THE PONTUO PRESS* TUESDAY^ ftUGUST I, I96j
Surgery In the OittadT States [ 000 operations herfoffhed every
i AMnimnnloM with fetwuit w . I /4ov
Federal Workers, Military Assured of Pay Increase
|U million classified workers,, with a range of 2.7 t* 22.5 per cent. The top levelin civil service would go from$20,000 fo$24,-
ployes. They must Wait until next January for their raises. LBJ,SUPPORT ‘ . * P The President has' strongly backed this measure, contending it is essential to retain key personnel in government:
WASHINGTON (AP)‘— ^Practically all of Uncle Sam’s employes — from Congress members to postmen and servicemen -r. are assured of fatter pay checks.-'
Congress approved MAnday, and President Johnson is expected to sign quickly, a $207 'million pay raise for the military.
chief Justibe and 139,500 for the* others, and $7,500 for all other federal judges, including a scale of <30,000 for district Judges and fb,000 for those on toe Court of Appeals.
An average 4.3 per cent for
The. gross national product of Nigeria has risen an average o!
3Ap«r cent annually since 1050.
see why these lues are so |
And Senate and House conferees reached agreement on a $556 million increase for the 1.7 million, classified cTWl service and poster workers, and fop government officials, Congress,. members and federal judges. CIVIL PAY BILL The House plans to act today on the civil pay bill, which carries annual raises of $7,500 for Congressmen and $10,000 lor Cabinet officials. The Senate * was expected to art later in the day or Wednesday.
The increases for the armed forces, to take effect the first of next month, will be their second in a year as paj-t of the new policy of reviewing servicemen’s pay scales every year.
I . The House Armed Services Committee told the House it had omitted boosts for draftee* and newly enlisted men because they are in training status and because they will receive three or four increases in their first 11 months of service due to promotions. ‘	\
The pay bill agreed on by Sem ate and House conferees would
See them in the "flesh" ... and you’ll understand why they are among our best sellers!.. . Here refrigerator*--NAME BRANDS, TOP QUAUTY, LOW PRICE AND *PlACE of MIND" SERVICE convenience features .-., plus top-notch performchlpe’rtnd dependability ... Service, delivery and ft ' ' with NO MONEY DOWN at Highland's unchallenged discount prices.
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-W'tvU
14 n. 2-liar
ate and House conferees would' be retroactive to the first pay period after July 1 for all but the members of Congress and high-level congressional | em-
Frostless
with separate giant-size
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ernteuf
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BIG FLUFFY TOWELS! SOLIDS or STRIPES'
X COME IMA
mwKmt
i SPECIAL j \L0W PRICE/
Hand towels.. .3 for $1 wothdothi. . .6 for $1
COMPANY COMING? Are you going to swim away the last days of summer? Do the youngsters have t6 Take towels back to,school? Penney's thought about busy you, so. we hove scads of thirsty towejs waiting for you to scoop up at this tiny price."	♦ -
at Penney’*
THIS LITTLE CARD DOES THE TRICK
1W
^ Vom^HCE co _

PENNEY’S. MIRACLE MILE . OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY A' - 9:10 A. M. to 9 P.M.		
		
MEN’S Tlim LADIES’
WATCHES
Look What You
GIRL’S PLAYWEAR
2 and 3 Pc Sets
Upright
Close out of previous model
$24.95 Value* Your Choice
$144
■ Ownrtww Star*
Sixmo 3 to ex 7rt© 14 Value* to 3.29
•	LADIES' UNIFORMS/ORESSES
•	SJS PERMALIFT BRAS
•	2.00 MEN'S BELTS
•	LADIES' SKIRTS, SUCKS
•	LADIES' VESTS* JACKETS
•	MEN'S SWEATERS, VESTS
•	3.00 BOYS’ RANTS
RESISTANT TO SHOCK WATER and MAGNETISM BUILT TOR RUGGED WEAR PERFECT FOR SPORTS and WORK SMART FOR DRESS
$|Q88
2 speed motor disposable
ban, heavy duty cqnstuc-	While They Lutt
tion, not seconds or used,	a j mono
brand new in sealed	fra. f7.QO
carton.—-—	jT 4 .
The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP
of PONTIAC
51 West Huron	FE 4-1555
Day* Ipselsi
Only I
PONTIAC
NO MONEY DOWN * ENGGASS
CONVENIENT	jewelers
EASY TERMS	21 "• ****"•" st-
FEDERAL DEPT. STDRE
GEORGE’S «*
North Saginaw at Warren
IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC
SAGINAW ST.
Everything
FOR THE HOME!
SAVE J*
SUITS
Genuine Leather
TRAVEL ALARM CLDCK
furniture
clothing
appliances
It*t O.K. to owe
Less Than^/s of Original Price On Many!
|88
Wednesday and Thursday
Downtown Sidewalk Days only
SHAW’S
•	Luminous Dial
•	Folds-Compactly
•	Smart Leather Case
*IDil5*20
CONN’S CLOTHES
YOUR
CHOICE
MAY’S
Michigan** Largett Jeweler*
MNS^lfAWSTREET
PER WEEK
71 N. SAGINAW

Rag. 12.99 3-bullat Polo
»r TREE LAMPS
With walnut troy Table
Rag. 12.99 Doc ora tor .
TABLE LAMPS
WARD’S Home Outfitting Co.
17-19 S. SAGINAW ST. FE 3-4231
BICYCLE ACCESSORIES!
STREAMER GRIPS Atomic Glo. 4 Aq Amarican made.. | 9	BULB HORNS Mony sizes ond ghghr. < **y!**- * NN ell KI|G bikes. ytP1
SEAT COVENS Bag. 1.25 flQe Foam Rubber. 90	OWE FENDERS .Enamel on Nest. QCc AN-sipes.. irll pair
TIRES A TUBES mast *H sizes. $1M goe	CHAIN guards Cosily installed. AA( All tizas. 99
	
SCARLETT’S £
M I. Lswrsnss	PARK FREE IN REAR
unusual shoe values
SPECIAL
AT
$300
PER
PAIR
other top values $4"	$^99	$g99
35 NORTH SAGJNAW
SIDEWALK SPECIALS!
one group of MEN'S
SUMMER SUITS
$35 to $50 Value* oh Sale at
*19-*29 BARNETTS
180 N. Ssfinsw St., Next to Seers
All Summer Merchandise
DRASTICALLY
REDUCED!
Sensational Sidewalk Sate Savings! —
BURTON’S
Ladlea* Apparel
75 NORTH SAGINAW
Take COLOR PICTURES Instantly
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. Complete with FLASH UNIT
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/PRICE
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SIMMS Bros.
M N. SAGINAW . -Mein Fleer
9'xl2'
CANDY COTE RUGS
$19.95 Value
THIS
SALE
*11,T
each
2 for *20**
Foam rubber 'backing. Ideal for Summer Cottages, washable.
VDCCCCC DOWNTOWN ItlfEvlIEO PONTIAC STORE
Consumers Discount . SIDEWALK SPECIALS!
Ladies' Jamaica*...	........ 99c
Ladies' Sleeveless Blouses  .66c
Girls' Back To School Dresses ......	.. .-. 1.00
-Children's Boxer Shorts .......... 19fc
"Large lO-Indh Playball . v .	■ ■... 48.C
' 5-Lb. Bag of Grass Seed .	... 66c ‘
Consumer's Discount Center
178 North Saginaw Street jN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC *
MEN'S
SPORT COATS
$1700
Regular end Yaar Round Weights.
Good selection of sizes
and colors to choose from.
QSMUN’S
Downtown , Store Only
There’s Plenty of
FREE PARKING
V; ‘ y' ^	I:- -	TOT PONTIAC PBiEsk TUESDAY, AUGUST f 1W ' • ' . " '	.. "

DOWNTOWN PONTIAC
•	Values gabre in every store!
e Sidewalk dispbys of newest and most wanted Summer merchandise
•	Buy now for that vacatiori trip ... for the cottage ... for the home
* # SHOPJXJWNTOWN PONTIAC and SAVE!
A&toS
PARK-S HOI fl
In DOWNTOWN PONTIAC
ARTHUR’S 48 N. Saginaw St.
BARNETTS CLOTHES SHOP
1 SO N. Saginaw St. B0BETTE SHOP
IAN. Saginaw
GALLAGHER’S MUSIC SHOP .	17 j. Huron St.
McCANDLESS CARPETS 11 N. Perry St.
OSMUN’S MEN’S WEAR ' 51 N. Saginaw St. ‘4*p FRED N. PAUL! JEWELERS .
21 W. Huron St.
PONTIAC ENQBASS JEWELRY CO*. 25 N.^Saginaw
SCARLETTS Bicycle A Hobby Shop 20 E.:,Lawrence St.
i#4;
THE PONTIAC PRESS 4t W. Huron ^St.
CL00NAN DRUB 00. fl H. Saginow St.
SHAW’S JEWELERS "24 M. Saginaw St.
"WAND’S'HOME OUTFITTING 00. 17-19 S. Saginaw St.
ifP^'impf
'	.	, ■ ■ THE PONTIAC'PKB88. TUESDAY, At'feST «■ liM« ^	. '' .

is Return fo	'Strahge' World
US. NAVAL STATION, Bermuda (UP!) - Four Navy aquanauts are getting reacquainted with life hr a. strange maduiro where birds fly but-no fish swim. -
Except for feeling s bit lost without the companionship of a couple of monstrous fish, named “Wally" and “George,” the four men appear to i*e suffering no ill effects from an 11-day sojourn at the bottom of the sea.
la fact, according to Navy doctors, they are la fine con-dttieh. If they feel mildly elated at having proved men can ,. live amiably together and perform useful Work down among the fishes, yon can’t blame them. «•
No other human beings have lived and worked at such depths for as long.
• * ♦ * •^
They even ate hot tamales, chili and beans, and drank some-
thing called apricot nectar 190 feet, under water, and not only Survived tlifc ordeal but had fun doing so.
SARDINES FOR WALLY
They could have eaten sardines, but they parted with their stock of this edible to appease the appetite of.Wally, a huge fish of the Grouper clan which got the notion they were kin of his.
He aquanauts came to the surface at S a.m. EDT Aug. 1 after a week and a half la a sea bottom motel known as Seahb-1, a’ 40-foot cylinder resembling a submarine aa stilts.	*c
He stilts were legs which supported Sealab atop an ancient submarina volcano 30 miles off the southwest coast of Bermuda.'
The Sealab experiment was sponsorerTby the Office of Naval Research to determine whether human beings could adapt to life on the ocean floor and perform everyday tasks there. CALCULATED STAGES
' He four man went down July 20 and came up last Saturday.. The return to topside took three days and was carried out in carefully calculated stages to keep .the aquanauts from suffering the fib of too-eudden decompression.
He aquanauts are Lt. Cmdr. Robert E. Thompson, 3t, a Navy doctor living at Gales Ferry, Gena.; Gunner’s Mato ' l/C Lester E. Anderson, 11, of Uacasville, Conn.; Chief Quartermaster Robert A. Barth, SI, of Key West, Fla.; and Chief Hospital Corpsman Sanders W. Manning, 33, of Grotoa,
Astronaut Scott Carpenter, who flew three times around tht world in spnce on May 24, 1962, was to hive Joined the aquanauts to pick up information on life in strange circumstances for the benefit of the U.S. lunar landing program.
But ha received a broken arm in a traffic accident and was scratched.



\j i
peer Photo Linked to Charges
LONDON (DP9 - The London1 Daily express todarpubli^hed oil its front page a pfitttograph of” Lord Booth$y, - well known British peer, and RohaldKray, a local nightclub owner, aod | identified it as the picture Lord Boothby linked with claims ofi “sinister rumors” about himself.
TO STUDY PLANETS r This huge new radar telesdbpe at the Areclbo Ionospheric Observatory in Puerto Rico may tall man for the first time whether or not there Is life and movement on the planets. It is 1,000 feet in
\
diameter and covers. 184 acres. Cables suspended from three concrete- towers hold steel girder antenna in space 435 feet above the reflector.
Southern. Backing Hof as Widespread
Dems Like Humphrey in West, Midwest
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Dem-pcratic leaders in more than a dozen Midwestern and Western states today indicated their willingness to support Sen. Hubert Humphrey for vim president, but Southern backing for t h # Minnesota Democrat was not as widespread.
Results of a UPI survey showed that after President Johnson’s elimination of Atty. Geh. Robert F. Kennedy and other Cabinet officers, many governors, state, chairmen and other party leaders preferred Humphrey over Sen. Eugene McCarthy, fD-Mfam., or were willing t o support the President’s choice for a running' mate. .
Roger Kent,
Ignate of the California State Central Committee, said that "Everything I see stakes me think probably Humphrey and I couldn’t be more pleated. This is not only my sentiment bat what I find generally among California and other. Western states’’leadership." Mrs. Maurine Biegert, Democratic national committeewom-an for Nebraska, said that the state’s 19-vote delegation felt ‘that Hmty choice President Johnsoflhmakes will be fine with Us. Hubert Humphrey would probably fill the bill* vary well."
Moritana Democratic leaders indicated they were solidly behind Humphrey unlesr Sen. Mike Mansfield, Mont., became a canadidate for the vice presidency. •' * ’
HUMPHREY POPULARITY In Utah, National Committee: woman Lucy Redd said she would sup port.“the running mate Johnson chooses.” but added that Humphrey is popular in the Mountain States!
predicted Humphrey, probably [ ing that selection of the vice would receive the nomination ‘i “ ’ MM
and that Wisconsin Democrats would be “100 per cent" behind him.
Iowa Gov. Harold E. Hughes called\ Humphrey his personal choice and said he believed 70 per cent of the Iowa Democrats fait the same way.
WOULD RUN BETTER Jack Glares, Kansas Democratic chairman, while indicating that' Johnson should be completely free-to choose hie own running mate, said Humphrey would be as popular as any of the other candidates mentioned. - “I think he would probably run better than Bobby Kennedy In Kansas," be said, •'•But this is not to soy Kennedy would not be popular." Minnesota Gov. Karl R. Rol-vaag said he was “confident’' Humphrey will be Johnson’s choice.
The photo showed the M-year-old peer, who also Is a popular radio and television personality, and Kriy, 31, seated in business salts on a settee in Boothby’s home.
. Last Saturday, in a remarkable letter published in the Times of London, Um < gray-haired peer, friend and former aide oEMF Winston Churchill, chargecpthnt the Sunday Mirror apparently was referring to him in stories about a prominent but unearned peer it.said was involved in a homosexual relationship with a protection racket hoodlum.
The newspaper said it had a photograph of th^_ two men which it could not print.
In his letter & the Timee, Boothby said he was not a homosexual and that the man who had come to his apartment and with whom he' had been photographed was simply a person 'who had come to discuss a possible business deal.
Lord Boothby has since said he it consulting counsel with
presidential candidate be left up | to Johnson, and few expressed i ■
a preference for Humphrey.
Airtina Flight Request Meets No Opposition
Jewish Unit to Probe Education Shortages
GENEVA UR' - An International assembly of Jewish lead-WASHINGTON (AP)-No op; ers has agreed to set up a S0-position developed Monday at e member world-council on educa-Civil Aeronautics Board hearing tion to deal on a global scale to an application of United Air | with “critical shortages" In Lines to operate direct service! Jewish education.
between Philadelphia and Detroit.
Uhited now hail—temporary authority to begin or end at Philadelphia flights to and from Detroit and the west. It wants to make this permanent.
The assembly of 77 cultural, religious and education, leaders decided yesterday that the council should operate as .a coordinating and research body to establish closer educational contacts among Jewish communi-
ties.
Downtown Pontiac Sidewalk Sale!
SAVE
0
9
\ on every pair of
MEN’S & WOMEN’S SHOES!
Hundreds of pairs of famous name .
WOMEN’S SHOES
Values to $16.95	- .
$3
THE
PAIR
2 PAIR FOR $5
Hundreds of pairs of famous name
MEN’S SHOES
AU Drastically Reduced
SALE TABLES BETTER SHOES
>2
DIEM’S
PONTIAC’S POPULAR SHOE STORE
87 N. SAGINAW ST.
IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC
tCf
’ The governor, chairman of the state'delegation, said he expected no effort within the delegation to press for McCarthy or Humphrey.
ALMOST CERTAIN : V] '“We certainly are' prepared to give .Humphrey our support' as it appears almost certain that he.will be the President’s choice,” he said. /
Both James Ronbn, Illinois state Democratic chairman, and Illinois Gov. Otto Kerner said that it was ap to John-sob to pick Ms own running mate, but indicated they 'would be pleased it someone from the Midwest received the nomination.
■ uppert of Humphrey it generally wide^ spread among Democratic of-
Kerner said a Midwesterner would ”*dd strength to _:tlrr 1 ticket” while Henan suggested * that Chicago Mayor Richard Daley or Gov. Matthew Welsh would be attractive Candidates.
Southern Democratic leaders' Wisconsin Gov. John Reynolds * were more pronounced in urg-

Buy .with confidence at WKC during model change* over period . . . at WKC you make no payitfont until 30 days after you rdtum to work!
108 NORTH SAGINAW
★MAN-SIZE RECLIMER Tr GOOSE NECK ROCKER SAVINGS
“iranmr
CHAIR
Man size ,redioer with foam padded spring base. ’Washable, durable plastic and tapestry cover. Full reclining action..
Youi . Choice
GOOsE HECK PLATFORM HOOKER
Foam C4Jsh;ion, foam , back. Deep seat, hi-back comfort. Heavy, durable, woven tapestry. Soothing rocking, action.
LET PUN ATTENDANT PARK YOUR CAR FREE IN
PRIVATE LOT REAR OF C
t STORE
OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9.P.M.
WVZm9! m SIDEWALK A IIP .jsl SALE	
^ .FREE PARKING DOWNTOWN PONTIAC STORE nWTJKS GIANT MMY SALE, WED. andTHUS*. TfWTJP*	
SUMMER 50% CLEARANCE $5,000 worth of summer goods and clothing reduced 50% and more. PURSES JATNHM SUITS TOYS BLOUSES PAJAMAS 00YS’ SHIRTS SHORTS JEWELRY MEN’S SHIRTS DRESSES FOOTWEAR BERMUDAS GIANT 51% OFF GLCAfUNCE	72x90 INCH FIRST QUALITY CANNON BLANKETS\\ $.95 Value Thi* Limit 2 - Solo w KmIi 2 for 6.00 MiHi.|nmI, dm^Hii^mIc kbntiA 'll . -r ; 3-lb. quality rayon mnd acrylic fibar
HANDY PORTABLE GRILL 3.27 Reg. Price sal*	ROTARY MOWERS with 2h-HP aeey spin recoil •tartar and 22-incn blada 45.97-value ; * . Sjo 34.77Umw * Briggs A Stratton Ingina, 1 -Yr Warranty ^
3-Pnce BARBECUE TONG SET	
’ ’' ‘ ' 2v77 Reg. ‘ Price ”! & 96th	
FULL LENGTH DOOR MIRRORS - J.98 Value	GULF SUJPREME MOTOR OIL • • 1135c value ■ - MW .
£ 1.92»r” Natural, white and walnut frames	V||U Limit 8 Qts. Sole <LUw. 4 for 75‘ Availabla in 20 and 30 waights
5-PIECE DINETTE SET 39.95 Value v - -28.88 . . ^ " . Limit V Sot '-v "" '	BACK TO SCHOOL MANGER SALE SKIRT HANOptRS SHOETREE RELT HANDERS TROUSER HANDERS •L0USK TREE * TIE HANDERS ■ 59c to 1.19 valuet. , Your Choice C ~ This Sal# dm 1 ea. 4 for 1.00 .
"CHARGE IT"	AT RRESGE'S
Wi/il

: 9
I ■

'■>	>'• t. i •• <?	fmm § I
TjfK PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGVST 4,1964

B—3
	
	H|
NEW SATELLITE — Tills Is a Nimbus satellite which NASA plans to launch in the near future. The Nimbus, designed to provide close-up cloud photographs while it whirls • around the earth, will carry the same type cameras that provided the spectacular pictures of the moon from Ranger 7 last week.
+
TAA Chief Airs U. S. Position on Super Transports
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -Federal Aviation Agency Administrator Najeeb Halaby says there no longer is any question whether there will be commercial supersonic transports in the future.
Halaby said the issue now Is -whether the United States “will be in a preeminent position’ with other nations that are progressing with similar plans, including Russia, England and France.
Halaby and Gordon Bain, deputy administrator in charge of the SuperSonic Transport development program, appeared Monday night at an Oklahoma City Press Club headliner din-
Nerve Deafness Qaa Be HeipeiR
Nerve deafness is the principal cause of hearing impairment. There is no treatment Or surgical operation that will cure Nerve Deafness. People that say "I can hear but can't understand" usu-« ally suffer from nenve deafness. We have available a brochure telling the inside story of nerve deaf ness. .Write to The Pontiac Press, B6x No. 33.
Funds for Kalamazoo
'KALAMAZOO (APr-A grant of |63,428 .for the Kalamazoo Metropolitan County Planning Commission was .announced Monday in Washington by the Urban Renewal Administration. The federal funds are to be used in a comprehensive planning program.
New Graft Will 'Survey Moon
PASADENA, *Calti. *(AP) -Jet Propulsion Laboratory scientists, equipped wim +SM close-up' photographs of the moon, are thinking eagerly of toe next major step in man’s exploration rtf 'the lunar landscape.
It Is the Surveyor, a soft-landing spacecraft with cameras that may function on toe V«r surface for up to 30 days.
Two more Rangers are scheduled to be launched early next year. Plans call for them to have missions identical to picture-snapping Ranger 7.
Late, next yfcafthe U.S. space agency will fire toe first of seven Surveyors, which are three times heavier than toe "Rangers and have shock absorber legs.
The 806-pound Ranger 7 photographed craters as small as three feet in diameter before it crashed on the moon Friday.
Surveyor program n&nager W.E. Giberson says ‘‘we m use many of Ranger s technical people as they come off jobs such as testing and design, with the idea of cross-fertilization between the two projects. -
'But we’re already well along: We've been woriting on Surveyor since 1960 and we’re quite proud of being able to an-ticipflte some of Ranger’s findings.”
Ranger’s pictures indicate toe moon has a hard crust covered with a thin layer of dust.
The 2,300-pound Surveyor will i to take pictures' of ob-
be able
jects the size of pinheads.
A shot in the arm for Survey or’s designers^ A study ‘of Ranger photographs indicates no major changes will be necessary in the planned model.
Surveyor's tripod legs should be able to survive a landing on terrain similar to Ranger’s im-pace area — a crater-pocked plain in the Sea of Clouds.
Giberson believes Surveyor’s pad-footed, 6-foot-long legs can settle dowif on such a surface with no damage to its serintific instruments.
RANGER CRASH Ranger whs designed to crash into the moon and it did. Surveyor has a. retro-rocket .to break its descent and lent foil free to the surface from a
Russia ProposalReceived Favorably byiaolians
VIENTIANE, "Laos ®—Premier Phouma’s Laotian government announced today it has received "very favorably” the Soviet Union’s latest proposal for a 14-nation conference on Laps.
The announcement made no mention of two conditions Souvanna set earlier for such a conference: Agreement by the Communist Pathet Leo to a cease-fire and .withdrawal of Communist forces to positions they held before they drove Prince Souvanna's neutralists from the Plaine des Jarres in the •pring.
Hie United States and Britain also have insisted that these conditions he met before a conference is set op.
The British, tochairmen with toe Russians of the 1962 Geneva agreement on Laos, also have demanded reestablishment of an effective government of rightists, neutralists and Communists'under Somtonna.
t ■ ★	★	★
Russia fhrned down these conditions last week. Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko insisted that the only ”' “	........... ‘	‘	* “ itiofis
solution to the continuing crisis is a conference of the nal that signed the 1962 agreement. "
But he said there was no hope for such a parley on the t&sls of advance conditions.
★ ★
Hie Soviet Union warned it might resign as cochairman unless effort*, write made to get a 14-nation conference going.
A Laotaln source said Souvanna has drafted a letter to Groniyko urging his government not to withdraw as co-chair-
DOWNTOWN PONTIAC One
t@FS;
PARKING
furnished by JjP? the fattening merchants
49 N. Saginaw St •ARNETT’S CLOTHES SHOP
.190 N. Saginaw St.
■ORETTRWOP' 16 N. SooinawSt
McCANOLESS CARPETS UN. Pony St,
OSMUN’S MEN’S WEAR SI N. Saginaw St.
FRED N. PAULI JEWELERS 28 W. Huron St. \
\YNi PRNTlAC PRESS V 49 W. Huron Jr. itLORNAN DRUB CO. 72 N. Saginaw St.
SHAW’S JEWELERS 24 N. Saginaw St.
PONTIAC ENMASS JEWELRY CO. 75 N. SaginawSt.
WARD’S NOME OOTFITTWR SR. 17-19 9. Saginaw St
Might o
of no more than 19 or 19
fok.
Once it lands, "its two television cameras should be able to string foil circle and up and down, jgiving earth scientists a “you are there” picture of the lunar landscape.
Surveyor also • will have a claw on an extendable arm to pick up objects as far away^as 10 feet and lift them up to the stereoscopic television eyes for three-dimension scrutiny.
Heart of, Surveyor’s soft-landing system is- a 10,000-pound thrust, .solid-fuel retro-rocket that will be turned on 60 miles from the moon.
Opwa;
parachi^
it about the speed of a ' hitting the earth;
With its legs spraddled for landing,' Surveyor will stand 13 feet tall and its base, a big fuel tank, will be supported some 16-inches above- the foot pads.
Be modern with
This will slow Surveyor’s 9,-000-feet-per-second speed .to 450-feet-per-second in less than a minute. By toe time Surveyor has fallen to about 15 feet above the surface three small liquid- i fuel rockets should cut; the speed to zero.
Surveyor jvill drop the Test of j
mjtDSWAlK DAYS ^BARGAINS GALORE!	
ONI LOT Women's Summer Casuals. _♦ Wednesday W Thursday $1 OIKi | Mir	ONI LOT Women's Summer Orris Shoes' Wadnsaday and Thorp day * $1°® £
ONE LOT Women's • Children's Tennis Oxfords Wednesday sad Thursday SI 00 Mr pair	ONI LOT Men’e Summer Casuals Wadeasdsy and Thursday $488
-■on.-
Jfe±,
THE PONTIAC PjtESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, ifteo
News From >' Around the World
E
K Sdys Germany
Main Cdld War
MOSCOW (AP) - Premier Khrushchev has again put Germany at the top of his lilt of unsettled cdd war issues.
Without the “achievement of a German peace settlement,” there can be ho additional relaxation of East-West tensions, the Soviet leader said Monday.
Khrushchev was interviewed by Pravda and Izvestia in connection with the first anniversary of die signing of the limited nuclear test ban treaty. He said the pact had brought, a “store of trust” between the
cold war adversaries;---
“It is very important to guard this s$ore of trust and not to al-*1bw it to run out, but on the con-tray, to strengthen and extend it in every way,” he said.
But without a settlement of the German problem, he said, “It would be difficult to ap-
proach die problem of general and -complete disarmament."
V He called for an international agreement renouncing force in territorial disputes.
“It is necessary to suppress the breeding grounds of tension in the Caribbean, in Southeast Asia, in Cyprus and the Arab, peninsula," said Khrushchev.
KUCHING, Malaysia (AP) -British security forces in Malaysia's Borneo state of Sarawak killed five Indonesian guerrillas Monday in a border region clash.
A spokesman said one.Britiah trooper was slightly wounded.
It was the third such encounter in lb days in Sarawak. Six Indonesians were killed on Friday.
BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP)
DAYS . . . TODD'S INVITE YOU INSIDE TO SHOP IN COOL COMFORT
3 GROUPS of OUTSTANDING ROYS REDUCED FROM MM REGULAR STOCK
MOUP NO. 1- ONE TABU SODS (Ml ENDS
«f woman's shoes, children's shoes, pud house slippers.
WHILE THEY LAST ,	, *	*2* *°,r
GROUP NO. 2— ONE RAOK OF WOMEN’S AND BOYS’SHOES
OUT THIYOOVkT

GROUP NO. S - ONE RAOK OF MEN’S DRESS ARD SPORT SHOES
REDUCED FOR 2 DAYS

ALL SALES FINAL
no phone Orders
KEEP IIP YOUR SPEED
RENT A TYPEWRITER
$
nni
MVMII9S*MMMESS MfntfRRS ■
123 NwM) Saginaw
— A pending agreement between the Vatican and die Communist Hungarian government on church-state matters does not deal with the perennial problem of 4 Joseph Cardinal Mindssenty, a church source says.
The agreement, the first between the Roman Catholic church and the Commdmst regime, will givejthe Vatican the right to nominate bishops, but the government must agree before they can function..
The source said the pact Is expected to be concluded before Aug. 20. Only five of Hungary’s 11 Catholic sees are headed by full bishops.
The informant said the Vatican and the Hungarians agreed to negotiate separately pn Cardinal Mlndmenty, who has been
a refugee In the/u.S. legation since tee ,1956 Hungarian upris-ingwasput '
BANGKOK/Thailand (AP) -Thailand’s ’ /interior ministry says ganga/of Communist Robip Hoods are operating in the underdeveloped northeast, robbing the rid/and giving to die poor.
“They.are Communists trying to wm over the northeastern vit-lagew," Interior Undersecfeta-ry Thawin Sun thorn Sarathoon told newsmen.
/Thailand fears Communist infiltration from Laos throughout its northeastern provinces.
JERUSALEM, Israeli Sector (AP) — Israel has agreed to a minor’ change in its frontier frith Jordan.	'
Israeli officials disclosed to-
Column on Health No Place for Colitis
By DR. WILLIAM BRADY A correspondent is upset because the subject of colitis is so diligently excluded from discussion here.
He emphatically asserts that lie seeks neither diagnosis nor treatment, but having suffered for several years and having tried (a number of weird treatments) 'without result, he merely wishes to ask the allied physician who writes the medical articles for the pjager whether there is a cure and where to obtain it.
I write ealy the health articles, so that tele me out.
It 'is not Just out of the meanness of my heart that I dodge consideration of colitis here. It is because I don’t know anything about it, and die subject does not seem to me to fit in a health column.
★	★ dr
Now I hope readers who imagine they have colitis will not quit — Just as soon as anything turns up that seems to me to be worthy of passing along I’ll pass it along.
NOT SYMPATHETIC Class B neurotics tell me I’m singularly lacking in the attributes which one expects in the good physician, notably sympathy and patience, and this is corroborated by aU my relatives and acquaintances who have attempted to come at me with symptoms — and, fellows, I hope you’ll never know what I have suffered for your sake, ducking one curbstone consultation after another.
Conscience or not, I don’t think I could sleep so wed If everybody well or HI, were exposed to colitis and other maladies in this column.
On the contrary it is a comforting reflection, u I drift off to Innocent slumber, that very few'victims of- autointoxication,
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day thefr government will relinquish a 100-by-125 foot plot In Beit Safafa, a village southwest of Jerusalem that has been divided by a barbed wire *
Rome cap) - The goo pilots
who fly Alitalia’s commercial airliners returned to work today, ending a 78-hour strike. The contract dispute was still
unsettled, however, and more strikes of the stirte-owned airline were possible,
The pilots want eightday e.pff a month instead of six, -
nervous' breakdown, run down condition, neurasthenia, torpid liver, catarrh, obstinate cold or chronic rhumatism can say they got it from Brady>-
An occasional Ttuier may get a pain in the neck — but the column is intended for regular readers, and I know a lof 6f them enjoy excellent health, for they tell me so.
REALCAUSE
Colitis can hhppen, I frankly admit. Yet, I believe the/teal cause of the trouble ottny of these amateur student* of med-1 icine ascribe to “cdlitla” is artificial Ihterfernce with the alimentary function, particularly the abuse of physics, enemas and so-called bowel wadies.
★ ★ *
Slaves of the habit who may resolve to win’bade to freedom should (lay in a supply of a pound of whole flaxseeds, and (2) learn tht elementary physiology of digestion, the - autonomous regulation of Intestinal' motility.
or*lfjjo*worc
addressed”enVeTopt ”ls’ •mT'v1B Tt»0 I Pontiac Prats, Pontiac. Michigan.
(Copyright, 1664)'
Willlam H. Harvie
Candidate for
Stats Senator 17th District
Primary Election Tuts., September 1st
Qual ificatiom I. Lswysr 1. Registered OMI Engineer. | I. Registered Land Surveyor 4. Former Oakland County
I. Former Mayer ORy ef Ulh-. rup Villaga, Oakland fieenty 4.'Former Probata Judge, Lapeer County
1. Veteran, Lt. Cel. Oorps ef Engineers. Commanding
nans* Alaska'Highway I. Member ef the Soard far • Registration ef Arehifaefs, Protastional Engineer and
t. Employed with Wayne Com-ty Road Ciwmissihn II. Employed with the Michigan
11.	Irldga Contractor
12.	Live aa my heaiestead farm at ETCS Lam Read, Lass
tl. Mtiafala a legal dltt at US Pine Street, Lapeer 14. Oemooratio Chairman, Lapeer Ceenty	,
I. Oemocrathi Chairman Lapeer, Cenetee aad Shiewat-eee Counties. Preposed Ilk Congressional MsMht. Latest Oenesee and Lspeer
propose to obtain the ad-Js# -of tho People in tbie district boforo exprdtsing or
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B—5
LOVELIEST INDIAN - Michel* Ann Portwood, 19, coed at the Univeriity of Wyoming, was chosen Miss Indian America. She lives in Riverton, Wyo., and-is an Arapahoe.
Ex-Prisoner's Story Stirs Russia Critics
MOSCOW (UPI) - A former prisoner’s story about guard dogs who kept civilians in line after Stalin-era prison camps were disbanded was causing be-, hind-the-scenes. controversy in Soviet literary agbles today.
Reliable sources said "old guard” literary leaders, who believe that criticism of the past has gone too far, see the story as a parable that would tell readers! that the Stalinist .spirit still Uy« on in humans as well as dogs. 1
The dogs who could not be retrained from their prison routine 1 were described by Alexander Solzhenitsyn, whose earlier account of prison cimp life, “One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich/’ became international best-seller. Solzhenitsyn’s material came from his own experience as an initiate.
The sources said the old guard leadefs oppose publication of the new story, just as they did of “One, Day.” They said the dogs story was first accepted by a literary magazine,' then delayed, and now has been sched-i uled for publication once more. Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev finally gave the go-ahCad' for publishing “One Day,” and the . story has been followed by other accounts of prison camp life! since its appearance in 1962. UNKNOWN POSITION Khrushchev’s position on the story was not known.
The story takes place in a Siberian mining town after
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Stalin’s death. During the dictator’s life, the town was the site of a forced labor camp.
But the camp was disbanded after Stalin’s death,/the prisoners freed, and the vicious guard dogs given to villagers for pets.
On the first Communist holiday, the villagers parade formation But the dogs training, looked to them formed by marching tl
SURROUND VILLAGERS
Snarling and baring their fangs, the dogs surrounded the villagers, forcing them to keep in formation, {fortunately, one of the marchers was a former camp inmate.
He led hi^ frightened townspeople into a courtyard which resembled the old prison compound.
The dogs were satisfied that their duty' had been done. Tbe “prisoners”. were' back behind their walls. They stopped snarling and wandered bade to thejr' homes. ’	/
Texas Crops
Critical in
piySpelV
‘ By The Associated Pres* Chops and pastures were 'in the critical stage in Texas today as the long, dry hot spell continued.
In other areas stiffljng heat and dhoking humidity added up to new high temperature records for the date.
* *
Municipal water supplies dwindled in parts of Texas and Louisiana'. The only spots escaping the long dry spell and the blistering hot weather were around the Texa» coastal bend. " Wichita, Kan., reported p high temperature of 108 degrees for a record for Aug. 3. Chicago also experienced the hottest Aug. 3 on record with an average tern; perature of 87 degrees. Chicago’s high of 96 equalled the record for the’ date set. Aug. 3,' 1944.
MERCURY CLIMBS	!
The mercury. climbed' to 110 agrees in Hutchinson, Kan., and Hennessey, Okla., as the central part of the nation remained in the grip of the heat wave. .
New high .temperature records for Aug. 3 included:
. Louis, DM; Springfield, Mo., 108; Louisville, Ky., 101; Grand Rapids, Mich., 100, and, Muskegon, Mich., 99.
W .# , 1 !
An isolated tornado down Monday northwest of
gansport, Ind.,	.	..
wind-driven rain .measuring 1.90 inches. BraziL/in weSf central Indiana, wap'bit by large hail, heavy rain and strong winds. ' Is and heavy rain blew r at the Randolph grounds in east cen-... Indiana. .	*
More - seasonable conditions prevail today in the Northeast, the extreme North and the northwestern parts of the nation, while precipitation was heavy in the east central section.
1.19 RAIN Langley Field in southeastern Virginia and Raleigh hr-no* ern North Carolina each got^lO inches of rain in six
Denies Pleas in Spy Case
NEWARK, NJt. <AP) .4 AI federal judgd'~hasu refused to invalidate an arrest warrant and suppress evidence in the cage of John William Butenko, eiectron--icg, engineer accused Of spying for the Soviet Union.
But Judge Anthony T. Augelli granted a defense motion Monday that the government assume the cost of getting testi-, many from three Russians ex-, pelled from the country after Butenko's arrest .last Oct. 29.
Butenko ana a Russian chauffeur, Igor A. Ivanov, face trial Sept. 28 on charges of cb'pspir-ing to transmit defense information to the Soviet 'Union.
* *
Butenko’s lawyer, Raymond A. Brown, asked Augelli to rule Butenko's arrest illegal and to suppress-eVideraSe on the ground that Its seizure violated Butenko's constitutional rights. The evidence in question includes an attache case taken from a car owned by the Russians. *,
‘ The judge ruled that the evidence should not be suppressed because thiete was ao proof it’ -belonged to Butenko.-
.	•»” A ♦ •	-----
The three! Russians from whom the testimony will -.be sought are Gleb AT Pavlov, Yuri Romashin and Vladimir I. Olen-ev. They were named coconsp^ rators but not defendants.
Butenko, 38, of Orange,
Ivanov, were arrested by-the FBI with two members of. the Soviet mission to the United Nations in a parking lot in Englewood, N.J. Tbe FBI said the attache case contained documents giving information about a secret Air Force contract.
DOCTORS Will TELL YOU a gentle laxative is best
ntEE M FAMILY SAMPLE lot Lewis-How* Co.. Dipt. BIS, St. Louis 2, Mo. Nt tonight, tomorrow alrifht.
time tumbled a l ,900-year-old | over the weekend by construe? chunk of Roman^walUoday. Lon gangs leveling an area
Bulldozers chugged through about	from the
the section of wall surrobnding what were Roman bfths in toe first^entury after Christ, trucks lugged away the debris.
“That’s about the toughest pile of rock I’ve bad to ■ in a long time,” said i lish bulldozer driver. .
l/dnii
The state capitol building of Arkansas is -patterned/after toe vioua political .parties, which
nation’i.Capitolsi
Iraq Political I Already SfHit in Two
BEIRUT/Lebsnon (A — The Iraqi government is planning to reorganize its two-week-old politics;organization, the Arab So-ciaiist Unkfn, because already it’s split into two factions, the Daily Star reported today. •
The upion, with president Abdel Salam Acef at its head, was born July 14. It includes all pre-
1 dissolved and joined the union..
I But/Three's a Crowd
| fibfi, Love Is Wonderful
LUCERNE, Switzerland (UPl) — Two young lovers walked out of the'woods early yesterday and were greeted by a 3,000-pound hippopotamus.	,
Their screams led police and civilian searchers to the . 19-year-old hippo which, escaped from the Swiss National Circus the night before.
The hippo, Juba, w|is led out to graze after the first part of the toow, but decided to take a longer stroll. An attendant discovered Jubajiad disappeared and notified police. Circus employes and police began the search.
They followed the sound of the scream to the lovers who claimed to have seen a hippopotamus at toe edge of the, woods. Juba was escorted bade to the circus.'
ROjKAN BATH IN LONDON - Volunteer amateur archaeologists help uncover s Roman .bath discovered on the site of a future new
office building in London yeStorday. Archaeologists hoped to have it uncovered before work; men returned to the jpbV
London Work Crews find Roman Ruirc
LONDON (A— The march qf’i The Roman .ruins. were found | s?mbling material on the find.
ONLY ONE! Compact
TRAILER TENT
Rights Group Strikes in LA
LOS, ANGELES (A - About 150 civil rights demonstrators last night' blocked a driveway used by * group jrying to get Alabama Gov. George Wallace to speak here, and 18 had to be carted away on ^police stretchers, officers reported.
Demonstrators carried away were booked on the misdemeanor charge of faffe imprisonment.
They protested a meeting of toe Grenier Los Angeles Citizens Connell with signs reading: “Take Your Sheets and Go Heme” and “Go Home KKK.” •
They were identified as members of ‘toe Congress of Racial Equality and the Los' Angeles Friends of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee.. ★ ■ * i w -i.
PrtwMent of the Council, to-surance broker Clyde Reynold's, told an audience of about 300 persons the council's primary goal is tq work for the repeal of the Rumford Act," which prohibits discrimination to most .California housing.
. He said arrangements are being.made for Gov. Wallace to speak here within thq, next two months.
Archaelolgists were given the chance to extract ail toe information they wanted and the construction work resumed this morning. A big steel and concrete warehouse will cover the site.
RUINS REMAINING A piece of wall and an ancient well still remain. They will go tiso as toe demolition advances.
1 The- ruins were once part of the city of Londinium, roughly tile London mile square now called “The City” and housing Britain’s center of finance and trade.
The Guildhall Museum to as-
The 800,000 buildings of New York City are represented in a scale model at the New York World’s Fair. The model covers 15,000 square feet.
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Officials said experts would' keep an bye on the site just to case the workers turn up Roman artifacts: L'
i w . #/:* ’
'If we find anything that looks promising,! we'll. tell toe museum people,” a gang foreman said. ‘-But the real work to go ahead now.”
Death TqII Reaches 3 in Saturday Collision'
HILLSDALE (AP) - Injured. Saturday in a two-car crash on Mfyneat Hillsdale, William Lee Church died yesterday. Mrs. Anna Heffelfinger, 72, of Toledo, Ohio, also died in the crash. She was riding in a car driven by her husband, Ward M., 79, who suffered a fatal heart attack shortly before the crash, police said. ♦
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PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1964
BALBOA, C*UI. (API - Sen. Barry Goldwater takes to the open sea again today for what could Ik his last day of complete rest until after the Novem-’ her election.
His schedule called for almost a repeat of Sunday’s outing: A leisurely trip on the Sundance, an 8i-foot one-time PT boat that has been converted into a luxury yacht.
* ★
For a moment newsmen and photographers thought that today they might get close to the Republican presidential candidate whom they have not seen since he brushed by them at.the Santa Rosa, Calif., airport Hnirsday.
Gold water apparently considered taking the whole news crew along for a spin on the Sundance. But first the senator ruled out the newsmen because, he said, there wouldn’t be room enough for them. Then it .was reported he had excluded cameramen too.
TWO SECRETARIES
But he will take along his two news secretaries and their two assistants who may phone back news from the boat.
Wednesday Goldwater heads back to Washington to plunge into a campaign schedule.
• W ♦ .. w .
On Thursday and Friday fie will talk to separate groups of Republican senators and House members. Also on Friday’) ^schedule is a speech to a GOP candidate school run by Rep. Bob -Wilson of California.
“I will not be surprised,” Goldwater said Monday, “if the speech has some political overtones. In fact, throughout August, I will be making speeches fairly regularly and I might be dealing fairly regularly with political issues in each appear-- ance.” •
ANSWERS HALF
His comment on campaign plans was in answer to written questions submitted by newsman. A dozen queries were given to his secretaries to give to
i, put he answered only half of them.
One question: “What'are your comments on the PT boat attacks off South Viet Nam?”
Sjt W .'if,,
Goldwater replied by asking these three questions:
“I think the American people are entitled to ask some questions ill regard to this event: Does the-presence of American’ destroyers in the area signify the possible’ landing of larger. American ground forces? -. EYES MEANING
Does it mean medium bombers are going to be used to interdict the supply lines? Does it mean a change is taking place in foreign policy at White House and State Department levels?’'
In other replies, he said:
The moon shot 1% a great achievement but he doesn’t think more money should be tent on it.'
‘ w * ' *
He welcomes the support of Sen. Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., defended Goldwater’s rights to his views against foreign press criticism- \
He thinks the bracero program, in which Mexican labor is used'on U.S. farms, should be continued.	\
. ♦, \
Tie number one question on the list, was political; what about President Johnson eliminating Atty. Gen. Robert Kopw-dy as a vice presidential p bility?
“That is one the Democrats will have to answer,” Goidwater\ said,. “Anyone they choose will be saddled with Bobby Baker, Billy Sol Estes, South Viet Nam and waning U.S. prestige around the world. He sounds like a loser to start with.”
Electrocuted on Job
ST. JOHNS (AP) - Henry Moulder, 46, of Lansing was electrocuted Monday While changing a blade in a planer on a construction job. Police said perspiration on Moulder may have' contributed to the accident.
/KING KONKED OUT - Sinbad, the 500-pound star attraction of Chicago’s Lincoln Park Zoo,dozes on the floor of his cage after being shot by an air gun with a hypodermic
needle containing an apemetic. Sinbad caped from his cage yesterday and spent minutes “on the outside.”
*Gorilla Goes Out on
Winds Up With Hangover
CHICAGO (AP) - Sinbad the gorilla. nursed a hangover to-, day, just like anyone else hot used to being out on the town.'
One of the largest gorillas in captivity, the 6-foot, 506-pound Sinbad slipped out of his cage Monday and romped through 20 minutes of .freedom, his first since coming, to Lincoln Park Zoo in 1948 as an infant.
Sinbad confined his wanderings to the inner corridor of the monkey house, but alarmed zoo officials evacuated 75 persons from the building and called for the police riot squad.
At one time only a screen door separated the powerful an-imaKfrom complete freedom. SCREEN DOOR “If he had come out we would have had to have him killed,” said GepO Hartz, assistant zoo director. “There was nothing to keep him in but a screen dpor and he could have takpn iPnght along with him.”, j (
Hartz .eventually felled Sinbad by firing a 200-milligram dose of
tranquilizer into his shoulder. Five hours after the' injection Sinbad was up and around.
★
“He’ll have a pretty bad. hangover but that’s about aU,” Harts said.
. 4	4 W
Sinbad’s freedom began after a keeper momentarily left his cage door open while cleaning. The gorilla lumbered down a hallway into a kitchen where four workers were fixing lunch for animals in the monkey house.
LOOKED TWICE “I never had an ape in my kitchen before,“ said Barney Gisuti, 54. “I looked twice. Then I went out the front door.’ Sinbad spent the remainder of his freedom in the kitdien, “just taking it all in, smelling things, fooling around,” ssiid Dr. Lester Fisher, zoo director.
.. ★ e w , Both described Sinbad' as “i little bit on the ornery side. He’s full of hell and fantastically strong.”
Over the years the huge gorilla has bent steel shelving in his, cage and smashed in wails and doors. “We have the feeling he’s not the sweet, gentle type animal,” Fisher said.
Greek Cypriot Boat Fires on Small Craft
NICOSIA, Cyprus M -A Grade Cypriot pistrol boat fired eight shots last night at several small boats believed to be Turkish Cypriot* the United Nations reported today.. It was the first naval engagement of the seven-month-old island war.
The action took place in Turk-ish-h;ld Kokkina Harbor, on the northwest coast. There was no announcement of casualties and no word that-foe Greek Cypriot fire was returned.
Kokkina is the principal Turkish village in a 10-mile-long coastal enclave, the only stretch of coast binder Turkish Cypriot control.
Gleanings From the Mailbag
Was America Worth
By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - Things i columnist might-never know if. bit didn’t open his,mail:
It cost Columbus $7,006 to discover America. The big question now. is — was it a good investment?
A century ago anybody over 561 was Considered most of iters Id . A itudy sople
ound BOYLE per cent of the men eent of the women of themselves as el-
It has been estimated that 64 per cent of the world’s great achievements were accomplished by people over 86 years oi age.
\ A quarter of a century ago it cost passengers $200 for $10,000 insurance — one way —i for the first transatlantic flight aboard Pan American's pioneering Dixie Clipper. Today for $12 you can get a $300,000 policy, round trip.
HEAVY DRINKING
portion to your weight, you’d have to drink 10 quarts a day.
To get rich all you need iB to discover a way to profitably miye the mineral wealth in the sea. The'oceans of the world contain some six million tons of gold.
; *	* • 4r
Quotable notables: “Self-pity is our worst .enemy, and if we yield to K we can never do anything wfaje in the world" — Hel-
, Keller.
It would take the light of 80,-000 large fireflies to equal this heat given Ml by one small candle.
DELICATE SHARKS ' In Australia, when you order fish and chips, the chances are you’ll get shark meat. Sharks are quite a delicacy in the land. Down Under.
Ancient Jerusalem has become one of the most polyglot cities on earth. Inhabitants from 70'different nations noW Mve in its new section.
★ w ★ •
Joke of the week: Catholic Digest magazine tells of the proud father who congratulated his son on his 13th birthday and wskediiim how it felt to bew teenager. “It’s all right, I guess,” the boy replied, “except for this reputation.” ‘
It isn’t .true that U.S. presi-from arrest.
President Frankfin Pierce was arrested once after Ris carriage knocked down an elderly woman, but foe case was dropped. President U&/Grant Was arrested for speeding ip his carriage and put' up $20 bond, which he later forfeited.
CHEESE EATERS
Norwegians are the world’s champion cheese consumers. Tiey eat nearly 20 pounds a year each.
Folklore: If a girl sits on a table, she won’t find a husband within the year. If a young lady hangs a cabbage stump over her door on HOUoween, she’ll wed the first man who enters. To get rid of a wart, rub it with a kernel of corn and then throw the kernel into a barnyard. If a chicken eats the kernel, the wirt will immediately go away.
★ *
Know your language: Tib word “radical” comes , from a Latin term meaning “root.” , Theoretically, a radical is someone who likes to go to the roo^of any situation.
Quickies: Tapeworms don’t have hearts. Big league baseball players, get their uniforms free bid have to pay lor their own-shoes and usuirily wear out three* pairs a season. Seven per cent of ambulance calls are unnecessary, and 3 per cent are too late.
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f rr
-XJL

PUT HER FOOT IN IT -* ThTee-year-old Lisa Bedwell of Dover, Dei., got herself into a jam yesterday by putting her foot in a drain pipe. She patiently waits rescue from
AS PltottUx
public works employes. The(pipe'’was removed in a hospital, and Lisa suffered nothing but the loss of a few tears.
Wasn't	Dead-Wentfor Walk
SAN RAFAEL, Calif. UH — Frank W. Meyer, missing for six weeks and presumed dead, turned up yesterday complaining that someone had made off with his' camper truck.
Meyer told sheriff’s officers he had been hiking and camping in Stinson Beach State Park since June 21, the day his truck was found parked on Mount Tamalpais.
Meyer, 41, said he left his home in San Mateo for a church convention In Portland last month, but changed his mind.	\. **
He said a day’s hike to Stinson Beach proved so pleasant he took a sleeping bag and 25 boxes of C rations from his truck and hiked for six .weeks through the park area.
- After Meyer’s truck was.found, deputies and volunteers' aided by bloodhounds, helicopters and airplanes searched the area for days,
News Briefi^From'^ashingticm £
■ -1	•• ••	• • i f..!.. . ?,	■
Says Warren Report* Will Rebut Conspiracy Talk
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Warren Commission plans to devote nujch of its forthcoming report to rebutting speculation that a domestic or international conspiracy caused the assassination of President John F. Kennedy,'says the Washington Evening Star.
■.TV '	*
It said theft the commission's report is expected to be made public the week of Sept. 14, although it will be presented to President Johnson one or two weeks before that.
Chief Justice Earl Warren heads the seven-member, commission named by Johnson to investigate- the slaying of die President in Dallas last Nov. 22.
WASHINGTON (APp -'In r book published today with President Johnson’s endorsement. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey writes that America faces one,of its greatest challenges in lifting 35 million citizens out of poverty.
. * * *
The book, “War oh Poverty,”
is the first written by the Min-|ers of. U.S. . foreign-language, right/M *n American citizen,” . nesota senator, considered ajpublications tor help in he* leading possibility for the Dem-
ocrat^ vice presidential nomination.
* _ ★
Among other proposals Humphrey suggests a domestic investment bank to make the kind of . massive ' investment needed to rehabilitate the nation's depressed communities.
WASHINGTON (AP> - President Johnson appealed Monday to some 150 editors and publish-*
achieving unity and "a peaceful obedience of die law of the land.”
•	■ W-v*-	*
Johnson spoke to the editors and publishers in the East Room of the White House.	<
+
“As President of all the people;'! intend to work to ensure that every person enjoys the hdl constitutional rights and equal opportunity that are his birth-
Rebels Battling for Congo City
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presidential aide Walter Jenkins baa been subpoenaeed in the civil-suit that touched off the senate investigation of Bobby Baker. .
White House press secretary George Reedy confirmed Monday that Jenkins, a. long-time assistant to Johnson, had been subpoenaed to appear in the action brought by the Capitol Vending Corp. against Baker, who resigned under fire as the secretary to senate Democrats on Oct. 7. m
Republican Candidate Won't Refer to Barry
NEW YORK W - Rep. John V. Lindsay of New York’s 17th Congressional District says he’ll seek a fourth term as a Republican candidate but “without reference to the national ticket.” Lindttay,/42, said yesterday that supporters of Sen. Rarry Gold water, the Republican presidential candidate, are trying to defeat him by backing Kieran O’Doherty-, the Conserv a t i v e party nominee in the 17th, Manhattan’s “blue ^stocking” district.^' ' ■	■ • tt
LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo bP—Congolese soldiers clashed with rebels today on.the outskirts of Stanleyville.
Messages from that Eastern Congo city said soldiers had fought with the rebels only about nine mHn. to. the south and there was anxiety that the marauding warriors frigid capture Stanleyville shortly.
Stanleyville has a garrison of about Ml mfi.Tti falhto the rebels, alio are backed by the Chinese Communists, would effectively cat off the entire Northeastern Congo um\ provide a capital for the “Popular Republic of the Congo” 'jsgrocinltoed recently by rebel Gaston EmUe Soumlo-
The rebels were reported equipped with trucks, but lightly armed.
White women and children are being removed by plane , from the. Stanleyville region. Two planeloads of refugees have already reached Leopoldville. HOLDING OUT
- Congolse troops were reported still holding out at Wanie Rukula, about 30 miles south-east of Stanleyville.
StoBleyville is oa the Congo
River just below Stanley from the soldiers. Ip their tri- marching on* the city had not Falls, 775_mlks northeast of | umphal march across the East- moved any closer.
The rebels were reported to be advancing on Bukavu from the town of Shabunda, to ihe-i ***t- Yesterday, central Kivu’s that, in*I Provincial President Simon Ma-
this city. There are estimated ; em to be 7M white persons in a population of about 3M.0M. TENSE SITUATION .
The U.S. Embassy in Leopold- From Kivu capital of ville said dependents of, the j Bukavu tame
American consulate there are being withdrawn.
.. t ★	#
. Of about 45 Americans iff-the region, most are Protestant missionaries/
NO DETAILS	^
The messages gave no details of the fighting outside Stariey-ville, but said it had been a •“light action.”
Stanleyville has always been a center of extremism. It was the seat/of ex-Vice Premier Antoine Gizeaga’s Communist-supported breakaway regime inlNl.
There is a strong ahfigovem-ment fifth column headed by a youth leader named Victor Benanga. His forces recently raided army barracks in the city and stole a' large number of weapons.
* * *
The messages said army mO-r«M> in the city appeared to he ! . . fairly good. Until a-battle yesterday at Wanie Rukula, the .rebels had met .no resistance-
situation there appeared tense, | lagoi-authorized Bukavu’> white but that rebel columns reported popujafibirfarcarry arm?.
Jenkins doesn’t know why because he doesn’t know-anything [ about this matter,” Reedy told newimen.
The suit charges that Baker used his influence to deprive Capitol of a contract to operate vending machines in the Melpar Inc. plant at Falls Church, Va., after having been paid $5,600 to maintain the contracts for Capitol.	.
Jenkins was directed to appear for questioning Sept. I.
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THE POXTIAC PRESS, TUESPA V, AUGXJSt
LANSING W*-State officials today have their fingers stuck in the dyke, protecting thousands of miles of Michigan shorelines
They have,asked a court for a rehearing on a July 8 decision in which it ruled that the state has no control over submerged lands which-were part of private grants by the United prior to Michigan’s ad-to the Union.
In his appeal for-a rehearing, Kelley spelled out state law
CROSS-COUNTRY - Lyman U. FraJn, 80, of Philadelphia is greeted by his son Donald at the Golden Gate Bridge fat San Francisco yesterday after completing a bicycle trip from New York (3ty. Said to be the oldest person to make a crosscountry bike ride, Frain started the 3,244-mile trek on May 10.
Teen-Battling Police Praised in England
HASTINGS, England (UPI)-Pblicemen who were airlifted to Hastings and helped squelch, teenage rowdies by "treating thefh like children won praise today from fed-up citizens, live-thousand mop - headed "v. “Mods” and leather - Jacketed “Rockers” descended on this English Channel resort Saturday ter spend the last three-day weekend of the summer in what has become a ritual of aimless destruction and brawisT'i-Bat 1M policemen, who
___itotosred to remain ea alert
tor the bank heUiay weekend, were flown la from London to
FORMULA 76
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help stop the rongh-honsing. They kept the teen-agers from congregating and forced than to keep moving whenever they tried to loiter. They broke up small scuffles and arrested U mods and rockers.
Yesterday, the police rounded up 500 teen-agers and marched them three miles out of town. Then they marched them bade, told them to pick up their motorcycles and scooters and get out of town.
GRATEFUL TOWN Grateful townspeople handed ^lmonade to the policemen who afeortxi the nonvolunteer marchers, n*.
“It’s been aVT0tten weekend,” one teen-ageajytsid. “The coppers kept on at u» iRvthe time. Pm not coming back to. this towa any more.”
FOUce said this was just what they had in mind.
The weekend contained some violence. Four policemen and several teen-agers were injured slightly ahd one policeman was blocked unconscious.
TWO KILLED One boy was killed by a fall off s' cliff at nearby Margate and one boy was drowned, but there was no indication either death was due to violence.
■m The weekend was far more peaceful than the running brawls which had ruined the summer’s two previous long weekends at Margate and Clacton-on-Sea, and which led to the formation of the police “flying squads."
- Why du the teen-ager^ carry on that way? The London Times said, “none of them seems~fr know why they are doing this. They walk in gloomy silence or at fully clothed on the beach waiting for something to happen. Boredom is the likeliest explanation.”
filling May Alloy

'More Doctors in Drug Firms'
Horf Issues Warning at Start of Hearing
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., aaid today that a growing number of doctors now owirpftsrmacTesor drug companies, lad may turn their patients into “captive consumers."
Hart, chairman of' the Senate Antitrust and Monopoly subcommittee, -opened hearings doctor-owned pharmapies and doctor-owned drug repackaging and redistributing companies.
In Ms statement prepared for the session, Hart said, “Certainly when n patient goes to his doctor and is given a prescription for a drag in which die doctor has an interest, the patient has no choice but to purchase that trade name drag.
“Also, when a doctor suggests using his pharmacy downstairs — or calls a prescription'into a Pharmacy — it i* • uk»iy that the patient seldom protests,” he said.
v *	★	*
Hart said the subcommittee as concerned about the independent druggist who finds his usual prescription business cut off, and the physician’s financial interest in anotnfet company.	\
COMPANIES FOUND -Hart said to date the subcommittee has identified about 106-doctor owned drug companies involving possibly 5,000 doctors.
“We. do not delude ourselves that we have Ruled all of them,” he said. ♦♦Nor do we think the true total would reflect a problem of overwhelming national significance.”
The MicHigm Senator HMMedj however, that these enterprises Could: be significant in certain regions “and perhaps most significant if is a practice which appears to be growing.”
dr W w •
He said the number of doctor-owned pharmacies is Mao increasing although there are no reliable atatiatics since 1962.
covering’ submerged lands as providing “that tends covered by water are subject to the pub-Uc trust tor public use, even though title to such land is vested in the: reparian (waterfront). owner,"
PRIVATE CLAIM Involved* was a 540-acre proclaim — some of it Submerged in* Lake St. Clair granted to the heirs of James A. Abbott on June’ II, 1811. Abbott had settled the land before the Jay. Treaty between the United States and England, when the territory'was conveyed to the U.S.'
Assistant Atty. Gen. Nicholas Olds said the state’s control of filing and dredging in hundreds of acres of recreational water in Lake St. Glair alone is stake.
♦ * ; . ★
Some private claims extend 500 to 1,000 feet out into the lake.
George Taack, submerged lands guardian .in Jhe Conservation Department, said the decision could be extended to the other Great Lakes, as well as Jeopardizing public rights in ail inlajid lakes and Streams. DECISION COVERAGE Although the decision covers only" those grants made before Michigan became a State, enough patented 'land exists to concern conservation official and state attorneys.
■Owners of such land apparently can fill them in, according to the findings of Justice John Dethmers.
In his appeal for rehearing, Kelley complained that the court’s decision “destroys the parainount and inalienable trust which the state has In all of itr waters — both Great Lakes and inland.”
Enclosures
and
Screen
PATIO
r:
x20’
10'x16'
MSU Pupils to Nigeria
in 1 st Exchange Plan-'
EAST LANSING (AP) -Thirty-one Michigan Staie University, students were to leave for Nigeria today tor the first U.S. student exchange program at an. African University. -They will study at the University, of Nigeria 'for the next five weeks and will receive credit from MSU.
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THE Ft)NTlAC PRESS TUESDAY, AUGU$T 4, 19*4
3—9
the Robert Heckmans of Lebanon, hid. and Joseph A. Deimling Jr.,
era Michigan University*.
First Baptist' ■ Church.
Wk Alan Hall H were wed li recently in W4 the Immanuel ’ §| Congregational'
■	Church,
■	Oxford. r H Parents ofv ■f, , the couple—
MRS. JOSEPH A: DEIMLING JR.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. WV-Two families are ready to dispute the old' adage -that lightning never Strike^ twice in tie
Ford Jacobs .. and the Cqsel Halts,
:rojt #;
Oxford.
Colorful Pillows

Spark irriqgihation
a Highlighting the Lazyback pillow collection for fall' 1964 is a group of-unique and unusual stylings in such diverse. fabrics as felt, -wool; Siamese 'silk and fake fur.
The felt pillows, called Daisy, are clusters .of bright petals centered in black on circles of contrasting hue. They retail for about $6.95..
Assorted furry shapes make upon animal fair group of Lazyback pillows from Nettle Creek Industries. Shown here, from left,* are a Dior blue hippopotamus, a gold
camel, a curry colored elephant and d black bear. All are priced at $5.95. Nettle Creek products are available locally.
Art Linkletter, Do You See Grandma Watching on TV ?
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: What do you do with a grandmother who believes that the people on-television can
DEAR GIRLS: Why try? Besides, ask Mr. Linkletter. I'U bet he thinks she looks real nice I
see and hear hep?
We have tried to explain to her that they can’t — that it’s - only - a talking p i c-ture. But it doesn’t do any good.
She gets all dolled up to watch television every day because she says she would hate to have Art Linkletter see her looking a fright.
How can we convince^ her she’s wrong?
woman who brought the candy indicated that it was for the “dub,” you had a right to assume it was* for you alone. —!—	-You committed no social
DEAR ABBY: A few months	error by not opening the
ago'my husband and my best - candy, but. since you didn’t
Natal, also at $6.95, is a‘ double tasseled modern tweed in brilliant colors. Escutcheon, at $11.95, is a 15 inch Italian import with hand fcnot-ted fringe.
Spice box, a charming floral hand embroidered creation in; Madeira, is available at $19.95. SIAMESE SILK
The Siamese silks include 13 inch squares and 9x15 inch rectangle^ in vibrant solids ($9.$5) with coordinated 17 inch pillows/ in plaids and stripes ($18.95).
Fake furs come in half a .dozen different patterns hi 15 inch squares at $6.95 and in 1( inch floo'r cushions for $1595 as well as in assorted, animal shapes.
• Nettle Creek this season show! a new textured fabric called Primitivo, W assorted shapes in solid colors for $5.95 and $7 95 and in Scandinavian low 15 inch square pillows at $9.95. with chain stitch wool embroidery.
Another new fabric is Empire^ a silk taffeta available in four' styles, in solid colors ,(18.95) and in two luxurious Regency styles ($11-95) With bands of velvet ribbon.
tjBgPfS

WmMmm
Outstanding Area Teen-Ager
Girl Js Leader, Scholar
New among Dupioni silk -pillqws is Ardmore, an 11x19. rectangle with velvet panel bordered by gimp applique at $7.95 and in velveteens there is the wool embroidered and wool tasseled Mbonflower, an elegant 14x16 pillow for $12.95 in gold, asparagus,
Delft, emerald, flame and walnut.
Pillows of Nettle C r e‘ e’k ’ s own lustrous Contessa fabric range hem 11 inch squares to big wedges and bedrests, and include the new Peek-a-boo squares and rectangles at $4.95 with colorful netting over a range of solid colors.
(This third in a number of articles on outstanding„ area ’ teen-agers concerns Phyllis Daniels, 14-year-old daughter of Mri. Ernest Daniels of Central Avenue and the late Mr. Daniels.) —-—
club, Eastern* choir., Trench, ’dub, a lieutepant in the hall guards and participated fit a school play.
Having played piano for some five years/ Phyllis enjoys performing classical mu-
ch urch of Christ, Phyllis is a member of tbe church choir. '
Miller says that Phyllis has r JX"
By JEANMAR1E ELKINS She is considering a career “She’s, had an outstanding -in medicine but is not sure
ABBY
friend came to me and confessed that they had had an affair, but it was all over.
They said they told me in order to cleanse their consciences. The woman is also married and the four of us had been friendly for years.
Intend to serve it, you’d have been wise to put K \out of sight.
it \out o
The furry group called Animal Fair includes pot only those animals shown but also a red can and.a white duck. • Another pillow designed for children’s rooms, and shown here, is Chiidlife, With line, drawings of appealing urchins screen printed on homespun.
COLORFUL
Duo-packs and tri-packs featuring two and three shades of color continue in the Lazyback pillow collection in var-. ious fabrics, and in silky Du-perino there are the ever popular Fantastic*, colorful little pillows priced at $2.95.
record at Eastern Junior High School,” said John Miller of the Pontiac YMCA.
.. “This is' one of the things that sold me on her. She’s very versatile. Kids are crazy about her and the staff is too,” he continued.
ft was a good estimation of 14-year-old Phyllis Daniels.
' For her first year at the Y and in the summer fun ■ program Phyllis is a junior leader in charge of a group of 13 girls, -ranging in age from 10 to 13.
what field and would like to attend the University of Michigan.
Ac 11 v e in the Apostolic ,
the potential of “another J (J. L. LaMotte was a former Y leader, one of the most outstanding in Y history.)
No compliment could have been more deserved^ -
Her sparkling personality and ability to put Others at ease should take Phyllis far in any career field she should choose in the future.
As I look back I now realize that she cultivated my friendship so she could get next to my husband.
She even used the children.
I told my husband that I . would forgive him, and I have SUE AND CINDY ' really tried, Abby, but the hurt is so deep I don’t think * I’ll ever get over tt.
Break Up Bread Prior to Buttering
By The Emily Post Institute Q: b it correct to took a slice of bread into quarters, or at least halves, then butter each piece Just before eating R?
• I don’t see it done very often when I am eating out Am I wrong, old-fashioned, or is breaking bread before buttering it Just for the lifted-pinkie set? •	- s
■ ■ ★ * ★/'
r I how refuse to be in this woman’s company, but my husband says there ii no reason why we can’t all be friends.
I get sick when I see her car on the street. Was I wrong to end our frlfedship or not?
WRONGED
GUIDES GROUP She Supervises the group’s periods of gym/ swimming and arts and crafts.
She also works with the boys in arts and crafts* ‘‘helping the kids make things and giving them ideas.”
Phyllis says her worst talent is archery. “Mr, ' Miller. comes out and says —“Who shot that arrow that’s going down Mt. Clemens Street?’ ”
One.of a family of six children, Phyllis is looking forward to starting at Pohtlae Northern High School this fall.
"The most outstanding student I have ever had,” was the way one of her former Eastern teach#* described ' her. ,£
Looking forward to her fu- ’ ture years at Pontiac Northern, Phyllis has chosen a college preparatory schedule.
At Eastern she carried a B average and was a member of the “Bell Ringers,” .glee
DEAR WRONGED: You were right to end the friend-' ship and' your husband it lucky you didn’t choose to end the marriage as well. Stick to your guns!	-
Lazyback pillows to decorate children’s rooms are made by Nettle Creek Industries. Chiidlife pillows have line drawings of wide-eyed urchins screen printed on • colorful
- homespun fabric, tasseled in wool. Pillows sized 13x13 and 10x16 retail at $6.95. Wool fringed 13x13 home-spun pillows in a range of, solid • colors retail at $4.95.
A: Buttering a whole sltee of bread before eating it is not good table inahnen. Bread should always be broken into moderate-sized pieces before eating. '■* .
If it is to be buttered, a piece is held on the edge of the bread and butter plate and enough butter Spread on it
Hot breads or biscuits may be buttered whole while still hot and then broken i n to mouth-size pieces before eat-tag. . -
DEAR ABBY: My bridge dub (two tables) met at my house last week. One of the members brought along ah out-of-town guest who was visiting her.
Baptist Ceremony Unites Couple
nils guest presented me with a 1-pound box of candy. I thanked her for it, and then I set it on the piano.
The Walled Lake First Bap-. tint Church was the setting for the recent vows of Janet Sue Heckman at Union Lake to Joseph A. Deimling Jr. .
Rev. Carl Grapentlne and Rev. W. E. Essex officiated at the ceremony.
Daughter of the Robert
Heckmans of Lebanon, Ind.y the bride chose a floor-length gown of White Irish linen trimmed with b a n ds of Gui-perelace.
A silk pillbox held her illusion veil and a white orchid centered hef bouquet of shattered carnations.
Q: I am a business partner with my husband. What is ttie proper way to sign my name to letters that I, as office manager, must write?
A: You sign Jane Smith with Mrs. John Smith in* parenthesis underneath.
I intentionally did not open the box because the candy would have been eaten up, in no time by the other women.
The next day one of the women called me up and told me that several of the mem-Usg had severely criticized me for not opening the candy, and offering it to the ladies.
Did I commit a social error, or not?
NOT SURE
December
vows are
planned by
“Lynne Ann.
Ashby
daughter of
the John L.
Ashbys of
North Elder
Road and
Robert Edgar
Kramer, son
of the Edgar
H. Kramers
of Kirkway
Drive.
She attends
University
of Michigan
School of
Nursing.
Janet Sue
Heckman,
Union Lake
daughter of
son of the
Joseph
Deimlings of
Benstein Road,
were wed
recently
With maid of honor, Sue Jerrell,' were bridesmaids; Mrs. Cart Seigla of Cleveland* and Dorothy Engel. Suzan Hecktnan attended as flower girl. •
The bridegroom, eon of the Joseph Deimlings of Benstein Road, Commerce Township, asked Douglas Alexander of Walled Lake to be beet man. Guests woe seated by Clyde Black, Chicago, and James Heckman, Indianapolis.
Plan Wedding
A late September wedding is planned by Sharon Kay Heliker, daughter of the Richard Helikers of 14 Mile Road, West Bloomfield Township, and Seaman Rec. David Howard Leach, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harl W. Leach of North Pontiac Trail, Commerce Township.
Her fiance is with ttie US. Coast Guard, Cape May, N. J.
Phyllis Daniels, 14, of Central Avenue is a} junior leader at the Pontiac YMCA. Her-favorite j-. • sport at the Y is working out on the parallel bars, Outstanding xrp school as well as Y activities, j Phyllis will enter Pontiac Northern High School; this fall. She is considered by Y staff members to have great potential as a -future Uadon .1 f ..
Symphony
Pocono Aits., Now York City
Women Meet Honeymoon ing in East]
Mr. Deimling and his bride, an alumina of Bob Jones University, Greenville, S. C. will live in Union Lake.
Reception
Follows
Ceremony
. Mrs. Fred Coleman of West Iroquois Road opened bar home on Monday to board members of the Women’s Association for the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra.
Plans were discussed' for a presidents/ luncheon * in September ana a Pontiac Symphony Orchestra benefit card party inOctober. “
Dates were set for the Women’s Association meetings to be held two weeks preceding each symphony concert in 1964-65.
Off on a honeymoon ta the Pocono Mountains and New York City are the Nathan Ain Halls (Linda Sue Jacob), wed recently In the Immanuel Congregational Church, Oxford.
with bridesmaids, Mrs. James Hale, Sylvia Chojnpwski, Grosse PointeJSnd Mrs/Gary Johnson, hft. Pleasant.
Swiss pouf applique enhanced a bouffant gown of veiled „w h It e organza with chapel train for the daughter of the Ford Jacobi of Oxford. She wore a veil at English illusion and held white roaeS and Stephanotis.
Attending as maid of honor was Marge Hall of Union City
Wendy Jacob was junior, maid; Theresa Hall, flowar-girl and Todd Jacob, ring-bearer.	' , } '
Harold Grove served as best man for the son of tie ” Casel Halls of Oxford. Jon Jacob was groomsman at the ceremony performed by Rev. Anthony Nelson.
A reception in the Addison Township Community Churcb followed the marriage of Mrs. Edward. DeLorge of Crescent
Linda Sue * Jacob, and Nathan ■
. Jack DeLorge of Clarkston escorted his mother at the doublering ceremony performed by Rev. A, J.
For Women-of the Moose
Baughey, pastor of the Evan* gdfcal h~ MM
Officers' Chapter Night *1
Mrs. Roy Ottmar, senior rt- fy WelchThfivVernOti Taylor, gent of Pontiac Chapter 360, Mrs. William VaMpu&a, Mrs. Women of the Moose, conduct- Cedi Diehl. Mrs. Ray Gard, ed Officers’ Chapter Night, Mrs. James Jones,and JMrs. Monday in the Moose Lodge:
Missionary Church. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd & Evans attended ttie couple) Jossmaa Arnold and Gabriel Roth served as ushers/
Buffet luncheon was served the parsonagf in Oxford following the church reception.
LYNNS ANN ASHBY
The class was In honor of Mn. Jack Upton, Junior graduate regent who assisted Mrs. Ottmar along with Mrs. Bar-
John Baxter.
Mrs. Robert Vance and Mrs. Donald Spoils were enrolled in the chapter-
lbs next chapter meeting wflibeAng.27.
Thread on Curlers
Wind embroidery thread an plastic curlers, Which can be snapped shut to keep tbs thread from unwinding.
are. the
Seating guests who also attended ttie reception in the Veterans’ Memorial Hall were R, D* Jacob, Ric Theel of Rolls, N. D., pd Richard Miller of Uttta.
The couple will live in Ypfi-lanti where she attends Ea$t-
Does Lightning Strike Twice?
MRS. NATHAN ALAN HALL
same place.
The house of Mr. fed M$. Philip Troy was hit' for t|e second time in four years dicing' a recent 'severe thunderstorm. .	-	...	.	*
At the hpme of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Burgess, lightning again hit the same elecfaic range ttyd was strudk several years ago. _	*;* „ -LH\

\ '■
B-i-l
, THE PONTIAC PRgSS. TUESDAY, AUGUST d, 1664
Camp, Farm Jobs Popular/
Most Teen-Agers Want Sumitier Work
Gilbert Youth Research, Inc. Moat teen-fgers want to spend the summer working.
Eighty-two per cent of the 1387 boys and girls we Ipies-tioned recently about summer „fdans want to find a job.
Thirty-six per cent SSready had a jab fined op and another it per cent had started looking for employment The most desired Jobs are camp counselor, farmhand, waiter or waitress and office
warif.------
★ * *
Nine per cent of the-boys and 15 per cent ,of the girls would like a camp job.
. FARM WORK
Seventeen per c e n t of the young .men and four per cent
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of the young women want to work on a farm, while' IS per cent of the girls and four per cent of the boys are seeking jobs, as waiters or waitresses.
Office jobs are very popular with the girla, almost one-fourth of whom want such employment
Many of the teens are experienced. Sixty - seven per cent. of the boys held down
jobs last year, and 81 per cent Ot.fisi girls.
Most ot the young people — 45 per cent—expect to put some of their earnings in the bank.
Another 26 per cent are earmarking their . salaries '’tar a college education. .	,
Fifteen per cent am less frugal; they say they’ll just spent} the money.
A big planned expenditure for
16 pier cent of the boys is a, car or car expenses.
BUY CLOTHES	-V
Jeffrey Bryen, 16, of Camp Hill, Pa. explains “I would be able to purchase clothes that are in style and possibly a car, which seem to be esseptial- to * .status seeker.”
The girls are naturally even mom interested in clothes.
Thirty-four per cent of die
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TRUDELL-BELLA1RS
Beatrice Mina Bellairs chose a mhite Irish Unen sheath gown with court train for her recent marriage to Robert Vincent Trudetl in Our Lady of the Lakes Church. Site Seely and Ybonne Bellairs attended the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Bellairs of Aquarina price. Bruce Banks was best man for the son of this Frank T rude Ilf of Marlborough Drive. William Close, Jay and Jeff Pervogal ushered with James Kay. After a reception in thoCond Reef Room at Airway Lanes, the couple left for a northern honeymoon.
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AH cords on electric appliances should be wound loosely so the wires Inside will not break from tension.
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When a woman has weight i lose, she must'have a strong incentive <pr she will not be successful: The motivation may be anything from getting into a lovely dress, to getting a husband or keeping one. Sheer variety is an incentive but thirmust be reinforced by stranger. ones. Of course, danger^) health or the requirements of a career Are very potent activators.
Letters from readers who know the real joy of success ly provide the inspiration you „jd. I’m showing you these personal letters as a privately Conducted “National Josephine Lowman Group Therapy" week — to prod other women Into the same kind of action..
Listen to tfils:
"Dear Mrs. Lowman:
«I felt that no mm cared inti! my 26-year-old son came
Reception in GingeUviUe Community Hall followed the recent vows of Melvina Kay Vogler to Thomas A. Co* be-. fore Rev. Herbert Mansfield in St: Michael’s Church. Their parents are the Melvin Vog-lers of Alberta Drive Pontiac Township, also Mr. and Mrs. Albert •Co* of Jamm Road, Orion Township. With her gown and train of sequmed Chantilly lace over white taffeta, the bride wore a bouffant veil. Attendants were Katherine M filer and Mrs. Richard McGlothtn. With Wayne Carmichael, best man/ were ushers Randy Phillips, James Carpenter and Edward Washburn. A new home on Jamm Road awaits* the couple after their honeymoon in Norfolk, yo. and Washington. ,
SCHALAU-SWEET ■ Reception In the Oxford Knights of Columbus club rooms followed the recent nuptials of Sandra Grace Sweet and Richard Douglas Schalau in the Church of the Sacred Heart, ImtOy City. The bride’s gown of white organza over satin featured a Chantilly lace bodice and skirt applique. . She is the daughter of Mrs. Ratfa Weshalek of Detroit and Stanley' Sweet, Lake Orion. Her attendants were Linda Schalau and Carol Williams. The bridegroom, son of Mrs. Henry Schalau of Attica arid the late Mr. Schalau had his brother Paul for best mbn. Edward Schalau performed usher .duties. A honeymoon in Tahquamenon Fails is planned.
young women plan tp spend, on the wardrobe. Jody Berg,
17,	of Bomm, Iowa la typfeaL "I deed tome new clothes to •tart to Mhool,” she says, and adds, “I love to spend money-”
Typical of those who. {dan to save for college ia Burton A. Kranzel, 17, pf Camp Hill, Pa. He wants to work because 'money ia essential to my future.”
* * *
Explains Maudie Griffith, 16, of Columbus, Ohio, “I would like to earn money on my own.;And I would like to get some appreciation of the responsibility and what is involved in bolding down a'job.” .
SUMMER SCHOOL Many of the "teens who do not want to work plan to go to summer school.	&
One of these is Paul Emery,
18,	of New Egypt, N.J., who “would: much ra*th,e r attend summer school and finish.1
Barbara Gray, 16, of Miami Beach also would “rather devote my time to studying.”
Several of the boys and girls plan to travel daring the summer.
Thomas Dow, 18, of Atlanta, Ga., expects to spend his vacation by hitchhiking across the
Other young people, such as Patricia Evans, 18, of Arlington Va., will, do volunteer work. Patricia says she will work in the college seettoftof the Democratic National-Committee.
Andrea Gladstone, 17, of Valley Stream, tf.Y., doesn’t plan anything too strenuous. She will spend 4»r summer, “loafing, playing golf and getting a sun
Air Fort*. He said, ‘Mom, yon nsed.te be'M pretty and had inch a good figure.’
“Beheve me, I did something about it! My bust measured 40 inches; wflist.M; hips, 44 in-, Now my bust measures 36 inches; waist 30, hips, 40.
•k k ★'
•Another child Is going to be married in a big wedding before long and I am going to make him proud of me/*
Or thiav ® *• \ I WEIGHS, CHECKS ’My husband weighs toe each morning and marks the chart himself ‘and checks the list of foods I -have eaten each night. I would not disappoint him tor anything/’
Another one:
*T did wonderfully with
your BIP plan. I l°st * pounds. I followed It a Couple of weehJfeger than the usual eigto^weeks. My blood pressure was a little high and so 1 checked with my doctor right along.
“My doctor was so proud of me. Now I have slipped and gained back ten pounds. I don’t want io see him until I lose thdto. I am so ashamed! Please send me another BIP KIT.
“The weight chart was so helpful. I kept it toped to the-cupboard door and it made me feel, so good to see my weight line dropping all the time.”
She saved her Job:|
SUPPORT SELF j “I am a woman In the business world. My job is Important to toe since I must support myself. While I do not hope or try to compete with the younger glamour gals in the office, and while I hold a much more responsible position than they and am much more Important to the company, I still felt It was important for' me to lose 20 pounds which had crept up on me.
“I did with BIP. I not only .look -much better and smarter but I am more efficient because I have more energy.”
Sr	k ;
If you' would like to have my Bpauty Improvement Han (BIP) which includes a weight chart on which you plot your weight daily to watch your beauty line rise as your, weight line drops, send 25 cents (plus 15 cents for ftqit class mail, and special handling) with your request for the BIP KIT. Address Josephine Lowman in care of The Pontiac Press.
r
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. OXFORD MATTRESS CO.
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WOOD-RABY
The Ronald Gene Woods (Betty Eileen Roby) pledged recent upws to Rev. David Dee in the %Firet' Baptist Church of Clarkston. Whits Rochelle lace fashioned a gown for the daughter of the Otto W. Rabys of Gtdick Drive, Independence Town-ship. Attendants were Sandra itobley, Rita Curtis, Sandra Powell and Stairla Serda; Dennis Wood, Edward Roby, Victor Serda, Alton Roby and Roger Mayer. Mrs. Rollie Mayer of Eves Road, Independence Townships and Corwin E. Wood of Hanford, Calif, are the bridegroom’s parents. The reception was held in the VFW Hall, Drayton Plains.
Who Needs a Dip loma ?
OMAHA, Neb. WV-Mrs. Mary Ann Steele may not have a high school diploma, but she does have Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees and is well on the way toward a doctorate.
★ k " dr'.
Mrs. Steele, who has been
, .fAflcher and supervisor of
communications ot the Omaha Public schools for 49 years, did not graduate from high school.
She entered cofiege after the tenth grade by passing entrance tests.
^ RICHM AN-WILSON
- Cascading orange glamellias complemented a white organ-mover-taffeta gown for Shar-ran Jeanne Wilson who recently became Mrs. Henry Dolan Rickman in the Lutheran Church of the Ascension. Attending the daughter of .the Eugene Wilsons of Covert" Road were her sister Margaret With Nancy Cook and Onalee Richman. The bridegroom, son of the Oney Richmans, Keego Harbor had Ms brother Japes for best man. Ushers were Wayne Wilson, Michael Pappas and Roger Myers. After a reception in the CIA Building, the couple left for q northern honeymoon. Rev Meres Stein performed the ceremony.
BATESBERGER
Mary Janie Berger apd Gerald Edward Bates of Fort Worth, Tex. were wed recently by Dr. Robert J. Hudgins in Lake Orion Methodist Church. Wearing white silk organza and French lace over taffeta the was-attended by Susan Berger, Penny Shell,' Ginger Dodge and Penny Straub. Her parents are the Clare L. Bergers, Lake Orion. James Bates was best man for the bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ira Bates, Second Strpet, Oxford Township. William Hubble, Gerald Laidlate, David Gark and Thomas Berger ushered. The couple will live in Arlington, Tex. after a western tour.
WHITTAKER-REEDER The Pontiac Church of God worths setting for recent vows of Joyce Gay Reeder, daughter of thf- Ora T. Reed-, era, Lake Orion, and Alfred
Ray Whittaker, son of the Earl
Whittakers, Cass City. Rev. Allred Lowe officiated. The bride wore a net veil with a gown of white taffeta and carried white carnations and rosebuds. Brenda Abel was bridesmaid. With .best man Richard Lowe, the ushers were Eugene Reeder and Guy Whittaker. After a reception to the First Federal Savings of Oakland, lake Orion, the couple left fir northern Michlpan.
Mother Feels Guilty
She', Wishes Baby Dead
By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE .CASE T-483: Laveme Z„ aged 24, has recently had her first baby.
“Dr. Crane,” her worried husband began, “Laveme has been a puzzle ever since.
“in fact, she has even had shock treatment for she has been peculiar in her attitude toward our baby daughter,
1‘At first she seemed rather indifferent but then she developed What looks like ‘smother’ love.
“She will fret and worry lest the baby might be getting sick. And at night she has wild nightmares from which she awakens with tears running down her cheeks. k k . k '
“Then she hops out of bed to rush into the baby’i room just to see if the baby is still breathing.	^
“Right now shells on a tranquilizer binge §gd claims she is losing her mind: Dr, Crane,, I under stand that many mothers develop a psychosis after the birth of their first baby. Why?”
THE DEATH WISH The “Death Wish” is an underlying factor in many of these cases.
For thousands of apparently cultured,.attractive wives,.go bito a tailspin emotionally after theii- first baby is bon. ★' * ★
. And the reason 1a not too difficult to understand if you realize the simple fact that adults can be jealous and selfish and hateful of their own kinfolk, Including their own babies.
. Women are born with-mere-ly a potential capacity for love, but whether they will love themselves or their own sex (homosexuality)' or their parents or their husband or their child, depends, on training, both intentional and also subconscious.
STIFLED CHILDHOOD Ekveme never liked children because they had been the cause of her very stifled childhood.
For Laverne’i mother died at the birth of her 9th child. Laveme, as the oldest, had then been forced to serve as caretaker and homemaker for
.this.Jligbrood——-------------
.k k k J- , She slaved for them and often was beaten by her drunkard father.
Meanwhile, she couldn’t finish high school so aha missed out on the- usual happy times

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. Cool Contfiyti/
-Atyouru
Comp8e£e£y-Enc&MeA
Pontiac Mall Shopping Center
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of teen-agers, including dances and parties.
Finalfy, at the age of-19, she rebelled and ran away to the large city where she got a job as sales clerk in a,-dime store.
GOOD JOB
But she was ambitious, so she. took a night course in typing and landed a good job in an advertising agency.
'Since she was good looking and had clever ideas, her boss praised her a great deal. k\ k *
This was doubly enjoyable, 'for now she revelled in being an important peraoninstead of a family drudge. .
Her boss finally started dating her and then proposed marriage. She was reluctant to leave her exciting life in
the advertising agency, s<fsh<jf, stalled off the wedding for alf most a year.
STOPPED THAT Then her husband agreed that the could still work at the office, bUt tiw arrival of the baby stopped that,
It alio vividly revived her hatred of her stifling child-' hood as nursemaid and cook.
So she was at first indifferent to her baby.
Then she worried lest God might kill the infant to puhish Her, which was when her wild nightmares started, and ahe became overly solicitous about the baby’s health.
Send far my booklet “The Death Wish,” enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20c. Every young wife should read it!
BARRETT-DEAF
Norma-jean Grace Dean and Merrill BdFrett of Chicago were wed Sunday in Pontiac v Riverside Adventist Church before Eider Jerekiafi Florea. Daughter oj the Harry Deans of Duck Lake Road, Highland Township, she wore white lace over taffeta with illusion veil. Her attendants were Mrs. Claude White, St. Louis, Mo., Barbara Carde, Virginia Dean and Janene Bankes. Eldean Barrett, Gordon Winders, Norman Dean, Daniel Dean bnd Gordon Cole attended the bridegroom, son of the Ethan Barretts, Grand Rapids. After a Canadian honeymoon the couple will l toe in Chicago.
: MARTlS-PETERSON
Margaret Ann Peterson, daughter of the William O. Petersons, Walnut Road and Harold Albert Mdrtiii Jr., son of the senior Martin of Rochester, wed ’recently in Grace Lutheran Church befoge Rep. Richard Stuckmeyer. A bouffant illusion veil 'and orchid-centered, bouquet of white rosed complemented her gown and tram of French rose pomte lace over taffeta. Attendants were Sandra Schin-fick, Patricia Erfiurth, Beth Kretchmar; MacheUe Rowe and Darryl Devautt, William Peterson, William Franks, Robert Long and Richard No-pis.
Arm Covers Doubly Needed
When making yfar furniture ■lips, make two sets ot arm coverings separately from the rest ot the slip.
:★ k ' ■ k '
This part soils quicker than any other part of the slip cover and also wears out quicker.
Remove and wash often,
putting op the extra cover when the other ooe is washed.
Butter Your Knife
Put butter ,oil the knife blade before cutting to get a dean cut through a meringue-topped pie.

i BinssiMH, mm
ENROLLMENT OPEN! flnum Begin Each Monday lift 8. SAGINAW, FE 44SSS
■	_ ★<HMRiJVnfrr,>—toy
HiM.tiMHHmnTtirinnn.i.1......^
THEjP5xtlA£ T*RK8S. TUESDAY. AFlH'ST4.1tm
7 Attendants Precede Bride Down the Aisle
Seven attendants "preceded "'-■Betty Carpjjn James to the altar In St/ Michael’s Church at her recent marriage to Mario Gil Garda.
*_ * *
The bride, daughter of the Charles Affoldersvof Washington Avenue, chose, white taffeta with bodice and skirt applique of re-embroidered Alen-con lace.
•	it ' \
Completing her ensemble were art illusion veil and bouquet of white carnations, Pit-tosporum and white butterfly rosebuds.
ATTENDANTS .
With honor matron, Mrs. Ronald Haynes were bridesmaids Sharon Vannatter, Es-tella Garcia, Ella Affolder, Mrs. Glam Cito, Penny James and Dorothy Affojder. Tina and Rita Affolder were flower girls.
★
Robert Garda of 'Detroit was best man for the bride-. groom, son of the Fernando Garcias of South Merrimac Street. Seating the guests were James Garcia, Ronald Haynes, Ronald Maynard, Douglas Vernier and junior usher Johnny C. James.
♦ * ★
'"Reception in the UAW Hall followed the vows solemnized by Rev, Herbert Mansfield.
Strange	Letter May Be Dange
MRS. MARIO G. GARCIA,
! By MRS. MURIEL LAWRENCE DEAR MRS. LAWRENCE: I recently found a filthy, obscene letter in my 15-year-old girl's I sweater -pocket. J am sure she. I wrote it . to hersell though she | denies this. '	«’•
I Never can I tnist her again. >i Should she see a psychiatrist? I don't dare tell her father about the. letter or my suspicion that she wrote it,	1
She has a problem of. overweight and an oily skjn. But I can’t make her stick to a diet. £ am now at my wits’ end..
ANSWER: First, you see a psychiatrist. You need his help
with your shoe!; at this letter You also need, his'guidance in persuading your, child to consult him/ };
We just can't grab' 15-year-old people and haul them off te see psychiatrists. Their own wish to see them has to be , respected.
. Inf’ the meantime, let me remark that writing 'herself a- letter of this kind does pot make your daughter' into a nasty girl.. .......- * ♦ *.
If your suspicion is correct, its self-addressed nastiness sim-‘
ply tells Us that she regards herself as a nsaty gicl.
At her age the young struggle with many doubts of their Iqvs-bleness. They are not used^to the sexual' changes which are taking, place in their bodies. HUMILIATION
>Your daughter's changing body Is "humiliating her with the ugliness of overweight and oily skin. So her adolescent Distrust of it seems .to have become contempt.and scqrn.
Deeply discouraged by the - shaming ugliness which it is
You Lose Money by Not Saving Coupons
—How much money will you Ipse .this year at the supermarket because of an oversight?
' An executive for a food .products firm says at least 50 million homemakers are missing out on $900 million dollars in savings. How?'
* *
It air revolves around the flood of coupons which increases each year.
Their use by food and non- , food producers is up 100 per
mmm
Celebrating their golden wedding anniversary today are Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Griffiths of* Oneida Road. The couple was married Aug. 4, 1914 in Cardiff, South Wales* ingland. They have lived in Pontiac since 1935. Tha Griffiths have two daughters, Mrs. -Robert Hoffman of Nashville, tenn., and Mrs. Albert Drake of Goleta, Calif., and also five grandchildren.
Press Shirt Collar While Traveling
Sometimes a shirt hollar is wrinkled before you ever wear it, particularly from being packed while traveling.
Try dampening the collar at night; press it against the flat inside wall of the bathtub (it will stick); and it will be neat and wearable for next morning. ■
—---------- J
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Spats Catching Fashion Spotlight
Spats, once the trademark of the elegantly dressed male, now appear for feminine footwear. * .
- The National Shoe Institute reports the spat idea is “catching on fast" — and the trend could mean ankle coverings in Various fabrics. They can be worn with high heels for toWn, low heels for almost anywhere.
Remove Marks From Table Tops
Camphorated qR will help -remove heat marksMrjip a polished table top.
Apply K with lintless cloth and stroke gently over marked area. Rub dry, -then wax and polish as usual. -
MWRRRMNMHRRj
FREE EDUCATIONAL BOOK
HEARING AID ?
BUYER'S GUIDE
Points Hit Way
;■ Through Surgory or a Hoofing Aid '' • •.	: '	■ tar :	'v*...
THE PERSON WITH A HEARING LOSS
This FREE Book Explains Hit Following:
•	Head Noises	O Medical Treatment
•	Conductive Hearing Lass • Nerve Loss—Defined > • Hearing AM Specialist .0 Haws Less—Causes
cant in thc last five years:
U n a s h a m.edly they woo homrinakers into buying new Or improved products.
OVER IB BILLION
It is startling to discover that by the end of 1964 more than 10 billion of these slips will turn up in mailboxes, in newspapers and magazines, or be tucked away in a package in a store.’
The great loss referred to by Paul DeDomenico results when these coupons aren't ref-deemed.
* * *
“This year atone,’’ he saysr “50 million homemakers will fall to redeem about. 90 per cqnt of the 10 billion cents-off coupons J’
. Realistically. DeDomenico -odmRs-thaTiB&ny coupons are never used because of taste and product preferences. MAJOR REASONS
But the major reasons coupons aren't used still re-' main—they are lost or thrown away.
*
He suggests keeping a coupon file br dipping coupons to the weekly shopping list.
‘However, the question remains whether you save by using coupons. The average supermarket now stocks some 0,000 items, up from 1,500 at the end of Worjd Warn.
500 ITEMS
Each yeqr nearly 500 new items are introduced.
Despite allegiance to many, products, homemakers try out these new onA. .
If there is art 8- or 10-cent coupon offering for a new or improved item, there is a definite cents-off savings.
: * h it
And unlike trading stamps, the cost of coupons is not passed on to the consumer through an increase: in s{tore micro.
It is absorbed by the product producer. In this sense, too, there is a savings.
Also to figure the amount you might save this year with coupons, hunt up those arottnd' your house.
Add the total value of the4 ones you WOULD redeem.
■ What is the difference, in the amount .you pay for a product' with a coupon and a similar one without?
imposing oi het^ she may have expressed the disgust she * feels Jor it by writing Of it v disgustingly..' -	, .	-
'I am not minimizing the probability that she needs psychiatric help. I think she does. What I’m minimizing is the emphasis you put on nasty sexuality of the letter. .
Its sexuality is' not the problem. The problem is the sdf-s^orn of yodr child. And thgt is not' a new problem. It iS'an old problem,-
*■ It has.expressed itself in sexual self-contempt because adolescence is an age which sexu-alizes all attitudes, toward .ourselves,,
I think you know that in your daughter self-scorn has been a generally unhappy feeling for some tithe.
What you may not know is that the intensity of'your horror at this letter is the explosion of much accumulated worry over her unhappiness.
If the letter has served to make you conscious of your wish for guidance in helping your daughter, it was a blessing that it got written, wasn’t it? -
Polly's Pointers
fhe .engagement is announced of Nancy Lee Thomas, daughter of Mrs. Marion Howe of Spokane Drive and. the late Owen Thomas, to Fred C. Ritfotti, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand Rigotti, also of Spokane Drive. He. is an-alumnus of Michigan State University. An Ocf'dber wedding id planned.
The engagement id announced of Carol Sue Slieff, daughter of Mrs. Aferville Slieff of Oxford and the late, Mr. Slieff, to Robert Lawrence Warnke, son of Iflr. and Mrs. Robert L. Warnke Jtj.. af Lake Orion)
Unusual Paper IdeR
NeecUewdrk Kit
ill Serve for Years
This perpetual calendar will serve you and provide good conversation year after year. What a nice way to keep a record of time!
Needlework Kit 14A includes printed, plastic coated panels for the month pnd days of the month. ,
* You simply insert them* in the linen panel where shown, then slide to the current month and first day of the month and you wiU find that it works fa* every year.
JThe’design is stamped on a wm tan linen, hemstitched at the bottom to make it ready for fringing. Just pull threads to the hemstitched line (this frill keep the calendar linen from unraveling), arid yotf will have a nice fringe-
The embroidery floss comes In the'following colors: light', red, light green, dark green, black; gray and yellow, making a gay combination.
TO HANG IT
flte kit' also includes instructions with color key and a rod and cord to insert at top of calendar for hanging.
After you make one for yourself, think what a welcome gift this would make for a friends—at only $2.	-
' ★	- it. it
To order Needlework Kit 14A, fill- out the coupon and send ih with a $2 check or money order for each kit desired (no - stamp? ' please) to Needlework Kit Service at’ address given.
I bounced like new .--MARCIA
n
wder Ml remiHtnc* to:
YOUR NEEDLEWORK KIT 0.-0. Box 767 Dept. 235 Groat Neck, N. Y.
Enclosed it	. Send....
Nmm..........
14A Noodlework Kiti.
By POLLY CRAMER t ' With' the slat hooked ' to the : DEAR POLLY - To make j bed. there Is real security,. _ yoqr own fancy’ wrapping paper, —MRS. G.C.
take a larjge sheet of ihelf paper. . o_*	*	* . ,
shave several different colors of- DEAR POLLY — I -hope, my , crayons on it arid place another hint helps others as much as ; piece hf paper on top of the|theirs have helped me/ Last! first one, .	’	summer when getting-ready to |
•Cover with a sheet' of news-1 play tennis I discovered that all paper and press with* warm my tennis balls had lost their' iron. RuU'the two sheets of pa-1 bounce. . per apart and you will .have ' My father showed me how .to lovely and unusual paper for j revitalize them. H»e balls had your gifts.—BERNEDETTE;	j'nbt been properly stored and
DEAR POLLY - I knoW’** absorbed moisture whifch _	‘	. jiHi had runted their sponginess.
The girdle will go-on like a whiz, and the .panties can be easily pulled (iff if they, were not pulled up-too far.	v
-MRS. W.RZ
PEAR POLLY — To prpvent spray starch from sticking to the ! iron I spray the piece to be ironed oh the wrong side*and iron on the> right side. The iron- always moves freely and does not stick.—MRS. H.S.
* ★ * -
DEAR POLLY - Our b e d slats fell out periodically.
We purchasjied oid fashioned screen door hooks and eyes at the dime store and. inserted the eye in the side board near the end of the slat and its corresponding hook, at a’^proper distance from the eye* in the side of the slat. .
OlcJ Tooth Brush Removes Anything
Use a discarded tooth brush to .reinove paint or varnish with paint remover.
* # #
; It wilt get at hard-to-reach spots, is easy to hold and wqn't leave scratches.
JKeumode
Safa
82 N. Saginaw St.
Nm
REDUCE
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THEPONTIACP&ESS. TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1064
ONE COLOR

Countries Avoid Suits, Ignore Rulings
Coses Are Rarely-Referred	Court
UNITED NATIONS, „ N.Y. (AP)—The International Court of Justice, popularly known as the World Court, continues to " And business Slow after M years of operation.
★ ( ★ *
This tribunal, located Jn The Hague, is the judicial arm of the United Nations. It has never been used to the extent that the framers of' the UN. charter hoped. Them have been numerous periods when it had nothing to do.
♦	*	★
. The court	has	handled	21
“contentious” cases and 12 ad-visdty opinions. Fourteen othef cases were brought to the court1 but were dropped either because they were settled or be-cause one party refused to .accept the court’s jurisdiction.
The tribunal got off to such a slow start that the U.N. General Assembly	as	early	as 1M7	appealed to	member	nations and
the U.N. specialized agencidio take their disputes to the coui$ instead of trying to settle them elsewhere. ■
, Hie appeal had no visible results/ -
Only some 30 countries have bound themselves to accept compulsory jurisdiction of the court. These do not include the United States or any .of. the. Communist countries. Decisions are hot binding unless the parties to. disputes agree to abide by the decisions.
Advisory opinions, -funded down at the request qf U.N. bodies or groups of countries, are not binding on anyone.
The court Is located in the famous Peace Palace, built in The Hague by steel magnate Andrew Carhops Wore World War I. It has a permanent staff of 30 and its latest annual budg et was |M6,000..
FORMER DIPLOMATS
Almost all the IS judges are former diplomats. Appointment to the court is considered one of t^ie nicest plums a diplomat can get. Judges are chosen by the UN. General Assembly and the Security Council for 0-year
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Europe Youths Join Confab
Welcomed to Parley , on Mackinac Island
MACKINAC ISLAND - More than 2,000 from every part of America have so far attended the Moral Re-Armament Conference .for Tomorrow’s America here.
Yesterday the conference welcomed a 110-member youth delegation just arrived from Europe.
A Cuban refugee, Miss Ramona Abells, declared, “The driving force of the. conviction found by young men and women here w»l 11 American apathy.”
It was evident that the so-eaUed beat generation was setting a new tempo and tone for America.- •	; "jjpfl
The welcome was pven in the
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facing America and the passion needed to overcome them.
“As we sit here today, guerrilla warfare threatens Rochester, NeW York, Boston, St. Au-, gustine,” stated Conference Chairman J. Blanton Be Ik. There has been bloodshed, and the streets of our great cities are no longer safe.
“We ceuld take the force we are training here to Harlem and other areas of America and within six months end racial hatred.’’
Standing together on the platform, young men and wolnen ' the thought of the 1,200 American, Canadian and Latin American delegates present. “Here we are answering the created. by few fanatics in this country,
of southern California, "it is the fault of the many Who do good blit lack a big enough aim.
“When I first came here my revolution was to sit in a corner, beating, my drum of hate and hoping to.prick the conscience of the whites, reacting to stimuli to toy hate instead of offering a solution.
is of injustices we have endured, I now want to give my energy to build world.”
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i The judges are not required to remain in The Hague when they havfe no case to consider but mtut simply1 be “permanently at the disposal of the court.”
■
Representing the ‘Uplted States is Philip C. Jessup, former UR. ambassador and professor of international law at Columbia University.
COURT DECISIONS Among the court’s decisions: Norway was entitled to res-erve certain coastal waters to its own fishermen despite British objections. ‘
A Hindu temple on the Thai-. land-Cambodia border belonged!^ to Cambodia; Thailand was obliged to withdraw its armed guards stationed at the shrine.
' *• v* *
Colombia was not required to surrender Peru’s leftist leader, Victor Raul Haya de la Torre, who had taken refuge In the Colombian Embassy in Lima. .
. ★	; I
The most recent advisory Opinion of the court held that U.N. assessments for peacekeeping operations were jusLss binding as other U.N. budgetary
assessments. Nations in arrears of these assessments have not paid up.
Higgins Vows Halt to Food Salos Tax
REED CITY (AP) - George N. Higgins, Gov. George W. Romney’s rival for tha Republican gubernatorial nomination, Tsllfrated"Monday night that if elected he would remove the state’s four per cent. sales tax from food consumed at home. ★ . ★
The Femdale auto dealer, addressed Osceola County Republicans here in a campaign swing designed to take him to Marquette today and Negaunee,to-night. He is to speak at Houston Copper Harbor Wednesday.
The former state senator renewed his ridicule of Romney’s claim to being a “no tax governor,” saying that “with a $48 million surplus in Lansing, it is time we give those in low income tax brackets a break by taking the sales tax off the food they consume at home.”
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THE PONTIAC PRESS
Redistricting Stall Bill Pushed
/75ft
TUESDAY# AUGUST 4, 1964
.
PONTIAC. MICHIGAN.
Q-l
Quick OK Seen in Senate Unit
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Everett M. Dirksen moved today for speedy committee action on a bill under whfch states could stave off for two years or more court-ordered legislative reapportionment. '
Dirksen, the Senate Republi-'
-can leader, predicted quick approval of the measure by the Senate Judiciary Committee. Once he gets that, he said, be will try to attach to it a bill certain to reach President Johnson.
would permit states or citizens! to obtain stays On court-directed reapportionments until the end i of the • second session of their next legislature.
Federal courts have ordered several states to .reapportion If it becomes law, the bill1 both Jodies of their legislatures
on the basis of the one:map-one vote rule laid down by the Su preme Court sions June IS.
Yank Killed From Ambush
to Die	in Viet Action
SAIGON, Viet Nam (UPI)-Al U.S. army enlisted man was shot and killed today in a Communist ambush 50 miles north of Saigon.
He was the 175th American killed in action in Viet Nam.
Four Vietnamese soldiers riding in a jeep with thp American special forces man also Were killed.
Viet Cong rebels and captured two-others in a dash Sunday morning.
The five were killed when Communist Viet Cong guerrillas opened fire with' -.automatic on their jeep as they from a morning of work on a project, helping Vietnamese villagers clear land for crops.
STATUESQUE GREEKS -Kiriaki Tsopei-of Athens," Greece, the new Miss Universe, stands alongside a Greek statue in the garden of her Miami Beach hotel yesterday. Miss Tsopei spent most of the day with newsmen and posing for photographers.
Hopes High for Approval
of	LBJ'sAntipoverty Bill
WASHINGTON (UPB^-Speaker John W. McCormack depressed “high hopes” today that the House will -approve President • Johnson’s 896.2-million antipoverty bill by Friday.
Following the weekly meeting of Democratic congressional leaders with Johnson, .McCor-made said “this should be a bipartisan measure” and “it will be interesting to watch the vote on Friday,” Republicans are opposing the proposal.
McCormack said the leaders -discussed with Johnsoh pros-■ peets for the measure, scheduled to come up on the House floor tomorrow.
The. bill’s backers claim pub-licty that they have enough votes to pass the bill.' Bui some supporters agree privately with what the opponents are saying aloud—that a sure majority has not been nailed down.
. “The issue js simple," McCormack said: “It is whether this country will, in itstown self interest, open up the doors of opportunity for those who cannot share in the general prosperity and, by opening those doors, make taxpayers out of taxeaters.” •
The antipoverty bill “is a long-standing debt that we -owe morally to those who have been caught In -economic backwaters,’1 the speaker said.
“But it is also good sense-good sense for America’s economy. We have high hopes that this measure will be passed.”.
Diet of Crash Injuries
YPSILANTI (AP)—Terry Ann Wright, 18 months, of Ypsilanti died Mopday night of injuries
Sffered in a two-car crash near stroit., .
The incident focused attention anew on the land fighting a day after President Johnson ordered elements of the U.S. Seventh Fleet to shoot to kUl if attacked while patrolling international waters off Communist North Viet Nam-.
In Quang Tin Province, 350 miles northeast of Saigon, government militiamen reported
they killed nine Communists in two separate clashes northwest of the town of Tam Ky Sunday morning. In one clash, the militia forces lost four killed and three wounded. In the other they lost three wounded.
COMBATLOSS The latest-combat special, forces/ soldier the total number of deaths in Viet Nam large scale military ai in 1961. Besides the 175 action, another\87 have Viet Nam.from outer causes.
Another clash incurred before dawn today less than miles from Saigon and only two miles from the Vietnamese army’s military academy at Thu Due. A defense ministry spt' man said Communists killed one government militiaman and wounded another, with a third listed as missing.
MINOR CLASHES A string of minor clashes in the far northern part of the country- also was reported today.
Near South Viet Nam’s second city of Hue in Thua Thien Province, the Viet Cong poured 46 rounds of 81-mm mortar fire into an army training camp Sunday night. An American military spokesman said three men were wounded in, the attack of the camp at HlepKhanh.
Elsewhere in the province, government troops killed two
U.5., Russia at Odds on N-Ban Agenda
GENEVA IP — The United. States and the Soviet Union fold the 17-nation disarmament, conference today that they still have not, reached agreement on an agenda for a working group to discuss th.e abolition of nuclear delivery Vehicles.
U S. delegate Clare H. Timberlake said he found it “dis? appointing” that the Russians insist that the group confine its discussion to their proposal for the immediate destruction of most atomjc weapons with the nuclear powers each retaining a" small nuclear shield.
Chief Soviet delegate Seirtyon K. Tsarapkin again rejected ' the U.S. position for a percentage reduction in nuclear arms.
DONE GEOGRAPHICALLY
state senates are appor tioned geographically. The effect of the high court’s ordei would be to give cities greatei representation in state legisla tures and to reduce the fluence of rural areas.
Dirksen said time is needed for Congress to com posed constitutional that would upset the court's or der. Such an amendment have (o be approved by fourths of the state legislatu to become effective.
Dirksen told the Senate M< day he had served notice President Johnson Thursday his intentions. Asked by ne\ men what Johnson’s attitu was, Dirksen replied:	;
“I didn’t try to commit him any 'way. I just wanted him know what I was -planning do.”
lieves he will have almost sMid Republican support for his proposal and can attract enough Democratic support to attach it to -some other legislation' Johnson would find difficult to veto.
Sen. George A, Smathers of Florida congratulated- Dirksen on having found a way to take immediate action on the apportionment problem'.
Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La., suggested that Dirksen try to attach his measure to the foreign aid bill.
Dirksen said Oklahoma may have to hold new primary elec-as the result of 'court orders there. •
COLORADO VOTERS He said Colorado voters had accepted one apportionment plan by referendum but thC court refused to accept this. The Colorado General Assembly then reapportioned under the U.S. court’s order but the State Supreme Court ruled against portions of the new act.
A federal court in New York “completely disregarded the1 state constitutional provision providing for two-year terms of members and directed that those members elected this fall ie session said.
must be another fall for members ire only one year, after that a third
GOOpBY, 'POP* — Dowagiac’s controversial alderman, Calvin R. “Pop” Davis, is removed from council chambers of the city hall by two local policeiben. James Vargo (left) and Lewis Trucks. “PopT resigned his post and then met with rebuffs. when he tried-to withdraw his resignation.
Forfner Coun Ejected, Seat and All
DOWAGIAC (AP) - Calvin R. (Pop) Davis clung on to
Dowagiac City Council seat Monday night. But it didn’t- do him any On City Council orders, both Davis and his seat were removed from its meeting.
Two policemen wheeled Divis outside in the swivel armchair in whieh he was sitting, some-" thing in the fashion in which federal agents removed Sewell Avery as chairman of Montgomery Ward & Co. when he defied government orders in World War IL l '
Dissension has racked tha Dowagiac City Council for months, ' -
Davis resigned, his council seat July 16, then retracted the resignation next day. But the
city’s other- councilmen, reject-. tog the retraction, voted to
£CPt the resignation.
Davis claims *the acceptance is meaningless in view of his retraction. So he shaded up Monday/jiightwnd plopped down in a seat, amwuittihg “I will not be removed."
Four other councilmen,. who already had voted to give Davis' seat to Richard Foreman, asked City Attorney Lee Boothby what to do.
Boothby handed the question right back, replying what to do was the council’s problem.
’ There were then four unanimous votes cajlihg upon George Grady,-aetteg^p^ee chief and son of absent councilman, to eject Davis.
- On the chief’s orders, '• two policemen gave Davis a freewheeling ride out the door,
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TIIE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 196i
•:f. -V:-J
Union Lake
UNION LAKE —-.The lor and Junior division, the Paul Bunyan celebration ^ here nett week promises first classification
■	JL. -hi, --.Tiie first classification conto live up to its name, with:	^ watercolor, drawing
enough activities to keep several giants busy.
The Union bake Business Aren Association event will begin Sunday. For the next three days participants will be entertained by parades., a circus, various games*, booths and ex-hibits.
Among the new activities this year is an arts and craftashaw.
Registration for the exhibit will m from 6 to 10 p.m. to-' morrow at 1515 Union Lake, on the corner of Cooley Lake Road.
'cfli. * - * , *
Each of the three classifications for Judging includes a sen-
Note Cheaters on Sales Tax
Sellars at Fairs Must Submit Collections
County fair time is Just around the corner.
While most Michigan citisena -—-»»i fr-ra ■ gw>	the
fain they attend, a few - will ba ■ fleeced by sellers of merchandise who do not keep their word.
Each year, sellers wke do not hove n sales tax llccase issued by the Michigen Department ef Revenue, are active la selling goods at the various county fairs.
Because most people generally buy from local merchants who collect the 4 per cent salee tax mid remit it to the revenue department, it to assumed that el) aellers will do the same, ft- ft * ft -
Unfortunately, this Is hot so, 'according to Attorney General Frank J. Kelley.
Complaints received by his of. flee Indicate that frequently
-----three ont of state aellers do not
remit any sales tax to the State of Michigan, Kelley said.
TAXIS PAID
This happens despite the fact thqt the buyer of such goods pays the ias to the seller and Is assured It will be taken can
Michigan law requirm^me buyers of goods in sum Instances to pay a oapnxt equal to the sales tax. y-The only way for people to protect (hatfisdlves in such a sale Is te^demand to see a copy of Uje^seiter’s sales tax license. Jfht has one; the buyer is /protected. If he does not, buyer X. beware. ■ \ , . .	. • >
Existentialism Lecture Topic
A public lecture on existentialism will climax the summer program of the Oakland County. Great Books Discussion Groups tomorrow in Detroit.
Drf James HSden, Oakland University Department of Philosophy chairman, wiUdtocw’ the 20th century philosophy at 8 p.m. in the auditorium-re the Detroit Main Library, 5201 'Woodward/ * S X
•/' "Jx * S' X
The topic/Will be explored, through the writing of four prominent authors in'the field, Soaat A. Kierkegaard, Karl ' yaapmi. Jean-Plul Sartre and / Albert Camus
and pastels, with the second and worknUfrere is a nominal reg-" |third groups rekerved for sculp- iptrationcBIrge. j turn and crafts.v. 4 v	judges will appraise the
Those planning to display : work and aware) ribbons before crafts should mount their the display opens Sunday. Members of the Jury are Mrs. Sab-ford A. McClean, Clarkston art teacrh e r; Mrs. Russell' P. Foulkes, former color and design leather; and Mrs. James LobdelT, interior decorator.. ABT8BOW
Persons attending the s h o w also will cast votes for their favorite works, with separate - ribbons to be awarded for the popular judging.
The' art show will be open from. 10 a.m. to2 p.m. for the three days of the paul Bunyan celebration;
The creativity of youngsters will.be put to work at the exhibit during clay workshops scheduled for the same hours. Boys and girls will be given free, clay and sculpting hints.
Their handiwork will be displayed and a prize awarded.
Mrs. Ivan J. Stretten of 2300 Locklirt, West Bioomfiald Township, is coordinating the n e w undertaking.
AT PARKING LOT
Her daughter, Maureen, grid Bill Boroska of J859 Henbert, West Bloomfield Township, will emcee, a hootenanny and square dahee scheduled for 8:30 .p.m. Monday; at the parking lot of the shopping center on Cooley Lake Ro«i.
Local talent wUl provide impetus for the festivities, with Linda Davis leading the folk
m&m
Hiifa •
WUmBrnSm
singers and Douglas Reick calling for the square dancing. The three-day Paul Bunyan celebration wiH get under way
' officially at a l:3P p.m. parade Sunday. Route, of march will be up Union Lake Road from Clifford H. Smart Junior High School.
’ ft h ♦"
The Union Lake and White Lake Township fire departments will stage a, water battle at <4 p.m.- at the public fishing site. The competition wiU be followed «t 6 p.m, by a baseball game between the businessmen and the firemen at Russell Beach/
A talent show will be held in the Paschke Building area at
ARTS, CRAFTS, MUSIC — Mrs. Ivan J. .Stretten, sculptress and coordinator of a portion of the Paul Bunyan celebration in Union Lake, shows her daughter Maureen and BUI Boroska two of the objects she will enter in the art and craft ahow to ba held as part of the event. Maureen and BUI are scheduled to emcee a hootenanny and square dance Monday.
Play Must Says Avon Board
AVON TOWNSHIP -Another portion of the-red tape wrapped around construction of the pry 1 community play) here was broken by ' board of appeals last bright.
Despite objections from neighbors of the site of the proposed theater, tite-retard issued a special use pvmit allowing work bn the theater to begin.:
/ne Tewasklp Board earlier okayed resoaiag of fear lots on Washington near Tienken, ana for the 858,181 building and three for parking space. Spokesman for the Avon Players last night was James McCarthy, -treasurer of the Avon Playhouse Corporation.
" - e ♦/- ft Countering objections of some} of . the audience members, he argued in favor of the playhouse/
ROAD NOT SUITABLE Several residents pointed out that Washington* was not a suitable road for the traffic., that would be brought by thejbeateiy They also said tbe area was strictly residential awf questioned the financial standing ef the play heesepefporatloe. McCarthy notedthat the dissenters totfukin’t try to step progress and that the building wqjiirf Mend in with the sur-
An A-frptM type thtater is plaaded Ity the group, to be used for presentation of plays and other community events.
DRAW FUNDS
9 Funds are tobe drawn from the sale of common stock, interest-bearing bonds, tbe present building fund and a theater endowment fund.
A portion of the financtog may
be (tone bn the security , of a real estate mortgage through a local lending institution.
More than 90 attended the one-hearing which preceded the board’s decision.
Man Sought in Holdup Gives Up in Wyoming
DETROIT (AP) - A man sought in the $7,140 holdup of 1 bank at Sawyer in Berrien County last April 2S has surrendered in Cheyenne, Wyo., the FBI announced here'today. * /■ Held pending return to Michigan on a federal warrant is? sued Junr *~at’Grand Rapids was a man identified by the FBI as Donald L. Hodston, 36. of Niles, y- -y /The. bank, branch of thF Bank on T1irde Oaks at Sawyer, wu<he)4"up by a lone pistol-wielding bandit who drdered a teller to place mutey in a gunny rack. , :/ ./	\ f- i
Back Zones for Business off Freeway
PONTIAC TOWNSHIP-K) log pace with highway const] tion hfere, the zoning board night agreed to recommend (fition of a freeway 'service dii trict classification to the zoninj ordinance;. .
Designed to provide services' for freeway traffic at the interchanges and feeder roads, the category would allow construction .of motels, service stations and.other retail establishments for the motorists.
Clement Cleveland, c b a I r-. man ef the aoniag beard, pointed enf that the zoning amendment, if passed by tbe township beard, will not bind individual property owners.
“If tills amendment passed, It would not hinder an individual from immediately selling his property,” Cleveland, said. “It hlsb would nbt bind an individual to all his neighbors so as to force sale of their property.” ’>•
' A * *
Cleveland called the amendment a “good piece of legislation that should be adopted for proper planning of the community.”
. . ■ */* ■
‘ The zoning board’s raboro-mendation will come beforethe township board at next Moo-day>mssion. / jX
Crash Kills Flint Man
STfioNACE (AP) - Joseph, Zdoeck of Flint was killed .Monday when a dadghte^-/ Marie *J. Trudeau Of Detroit, lost control of the car jar which they were riding and fr crashed with another, on U. o: 2 in Mackinac County,//^	- X\
Romeo Contest Date Changed
ROME -The dozen girls who will be competing for the Romeo Peach Queen title this year have an extra day to wait.
The date’ of the contest has been mofod back from Aug. 18 to Aug. 19 because of a conflict of scheduling at the Community Center.	-
To be eligible to vie for die coveted crow a, contestants most already be beauty queens in their own communities. .	,/ : V-■
To. date, towns and cities invited to send representatives include Oxford, Rochester, Orton-ville, Utica, Armada, Algonac, Flint, Mount Clemens, Lapeer,
Entry Deadines \Near for Fair
Increased Facilities Extends 1 Due Date
dline dates are fast for prospective State Fair tarticipants.
Because if the increased facilities lav liable in the new Home Ail Building, it has become m stole to accept more entries in\ his, department and the deadli s, originally set for July 81, t a been a “' Friday.
Eatrfe^ mrses, aad also ba red by Friday, exhibitors
kave until
must submit .by Aug. 21. tbe various drum major an	majorette
groups must Hie b;	ig. 17, al-
though late entries	11 be accepted after that	le if accompanied by the]	entry fee
of jX .	v"
Nominations for/
Citizen Award/ shoul ceived at the Fairgr AUg. 21/
No advarice registratioi rteeded for any of the < children’s contests.

While Awaiting Court Ordetf
Pontiac and Romeo. In addition, Miss Metropolitan Beach will be a candidate.
* * *
During the contest, slated to begin at 8 p.m., the girls a!re identified solely by the names of peaches which will be on the cards they carry.
TRUE NAMES Only after the queen and two honor maids-are picked will the contestants be introduced to the audience by their true names.
Format for the contest will be the same as the earlier Miss Romeo contest except that the settiag will be changed from a garden to “Sidewalks of Paris.”
During the judging, the girls will appear on stage in both street wear and formal gowns. They will be interviewed individually, give brief readings and answer questions drafted by a panel of out-of-town judges, ft *	*
The winner will reipi. over the 32nd annua) Peach Estival Labor Day weekend, two
Beauty their applicat
LAKE ORION—Village Coun-1 cil last night agreed to'eontinue working at full speed’ on the proposed sewage/iystem whilel awaiting an official court Qrder j to increase the pace.
” Atty. Gca. Frank J. Kelley has filed suit against Lake j . Orion, charging tbe village ' with failing to move fast > enough on alleviation oLthe >{ pollution in Paint Creek.
FAVORITE ATTRACTION - One of the moll fun things for families to do at Kensing-ton nietropolitar^Park near Milford is to take a ride bn tbe “Mend Queen,” a replica of an ' old Mississippi riverboat. It makes 45-minute

(ripe around Kent Lake in the park from noon t6 6 p.m. daily. Over 180,000 persons'have boarded the st^n-wheeler since it wa« intro-. duced in the firing of 1958.
.However, as yet the village j lias not received official notice' of tlm suit.
\ ‘.ft
• / Lake Orion is charged with] failing to meet deadlines of ai schedule set up by the Michigan; Water Resources Commissioo: for correcting the sewage and pollution problem. V *SUIT PREMATURE*	j
'■‘This suit is premature,” Village Attorney Robert V. Parent! said today. “The village and the county have been working: on the problem.”
Parent! said tbe village eeaacil leceivwi a letter from tbe county indicating they have already forwarded to the states plans for the sewage system and treatment plant.
“This will show them that we are moving ahead,” he said:
* • ft ft
Ihitially, the village was tokl i j [to have construction plans and j specifications for sewage treat-1 ment facilities forwarded to the ’
' commission by last December, j GRANTED EXTENSION j However, after potting the j project in the haiids of the! Aunty, the/ijtogc. was.-granted j an extension/" H ‘ „v'-. ^ “j I Under terms of the extea-1 j sioR, plans were .to be sab- 1 ! milled to -the State Health j Commissioner by April J I 1914 and contracts were te be I.
awarded by July J, 1994. Tbe system was to be to operation before July 1,1915.
Suit was brought against the village because of- its-’failure to comply jrith the first two dates in the timetable and the opinion of the commission that it was impossible to meet “the July 1,' 1965, deadline.
*.'• ft .	*
Until receiving official notice of the suit, the village council plans to continue Its present efforts, sccordinjftfi ParWti.
Fist Fight • May Bring Closed Court
DETROIT (AP) - Attci* a courtroom fist fight, s Detroit judge asked for extra police and considered a fttfuest to to spectators today aHjhft examination of three union members accused of murdering another,.
J. D. Landrum, 41; R, L. Miller, 49, and Richard Wilson, 40, are accused of fatally shooting Samuel Little Jr. in the Laborers Lo<cal 334 hall July 24 in9 an argument over Who. would be assigned to some jobs. '
•*ft ft *
Police said the courtroom fight broke out between Louis Holmes, secretary-treasurer of the local, and Jerry Otttey, a member.
• Recorder's Judge Arthur J. Kotcinski said he would rule today on defense attorneys’ requests that the examination be conducted in' priyate. The attorneys said they feared for the Tety of witnesses and them-ives.
iators to Discuss DaWit Press Strike
DETROIT i — Negotiators for Jhev publishers aad two liking Waft unions are to meet at l¥ a.m. Wednesday to av, effort Ip- settle a 22-day-old strike at Detroit’s two daily newspapers.
Pressmen's Local IS nod Local 19 of the Plate aad Paper handlers Union, both locals of tbe International Printing Pressmen and Assistants Union of North America, struck tbe newspapers July 18 to a (dispute over new ’ contract
runnersup and (he rest of the contestants will form the queen’s court,,
ALL CONTESTANTS
All' aspirants for the crown will be guests in Romeo homes to be on hand for all events which will -highlight the three-day celebration.
Contest chairman, is. Mrs. Margaret A. Kaiser who is assisted by Mrs. Louis Wolf, in charge of entries.
Delphine Browarski heads the committee working on the stage setting..
7:30 p.m. Sunday, followed. I a hootenanny at 9:30 p.m.
Those wishing te perform can register at the Union Lake Travel Service, 1549 Union Lake, or Talmay Agency, 1888 Union Lake, ■	, •••..*£ ./
Monday’s schedule includes game; and races at 1 p m. at the Cooley Lake Road shopping center, sa horseshoe tournament from 2 to ^ p.m. across from Community National Bank and a water show at 4 p.m.
*	' ft*"’''*'
The water show at the public fishing site on Union Lake will begin with swimming races and skin diving competition.
SHOW’S CLIMAX A water skiing and boat exhibition will climax the four-hour show.
A noon pet parade will fregin Tuesday’s activities, which will feature a three-ring circus behind the Cooley Lake Road shopping center. ’Performances will be at 2:30,6 and 8 p.m.
*	ft.. ft
tickfets are available Prom local merchants.
Among the big-name stars at the free Music Shell programs at the Michigan State Fair, Aug. 28 through Sept. 7, will be Count Basie and his band, Nancy Wilson, the New Christy Minstrels, and the Jimmy Wilkins band.
Bids Are	An
for 3 Lake
High and low bids on two lake level, control projects for three lakes to Oakland County were announced today by the • Oakland County Drain Commis-sion-office. .
Construction costs do not include contingent fees.
Low bidder'on construction
of a pump station'and modiffr cation of the existing dam for. Middle and Lowery Straits lakes in Commero^ownshifor* was Sterling Construction Co. of Utica with a tin of 921,850, Highest of tjrejour' bids‘s^ mitted waslf ^
PARK/RESIDENT' — Chief Yellow/sky Eagle is a striking' Mire in the Tot Lot and oidrachildren's area at Metro-, potitan Beach on Lake St. ‘ lir. The chief is on duty in it of his tepee fromJO a.m. ^:30 p. m. Wbd nek day through Sunday now through Labor Day, Sept/7
The legally established level ' Kes is 930.70 feet above level. Tie latest reading «h Middle Straits showed a ley/A of 927.96, down almost fed. '
Lower Straits was downjnore than four feet with a reading of 926.50.
LOW BIDDERS Harry White A Sons, Inc., Pontiac contractors, 'Were low bidders on a sheet steel piling dam and 49 feet of conduit for Upper Straits Lake to West Bloomfield Township with a bid 4 of $5,918.
j Six bids were submitted.
The highest was 11.571.
| The project ia designed to : hold the lake level at the estab-; lished reading of 930:80.
! Latest reading was r 929.53, I slightly more than a foot low...
■ Contracts will be. awarded 10 days after the date of assessment review, which will be held at the; Drain Commission Office, ' 560 S. Telegraph. Aug. 13 from i 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
jw
MSC0UNT CENTER
| * COSMETICS
*	VITAMINS :
•	HEALTH AIDS i
cam n SMNtw mtuwiNcr
SUDDEN
BERVTY
turn SPRAY I
UR Clairol	\ 11.25 Settle J	St.SO him* )
1 LOVING CARE 1	■ ALLERtST	1 VITAMIN *Cf V
. HAIR COLOR . r LOTION 1	1 24 Toblots 1	> 290 mg. f 1 TeMeta \
99c (	1 99e !	•S 00;
Carnar a( SagiMw a«U lawranca la VywUaa State ImI SM(. /
CAREERS OF THE OUT QF SOUTHFIELD
THE CITY OF SOUTHFIELD'OFFERS
Hospitalisation 2 Waeks Paid Vacation /2 Weeks Sick Leave Free Ufa Insurance, Double indemnity
Applications Art Now Batnf Taken far the Following "Vacancies PUN CXAMINER . .
Salary $5626.48 to $7i68.36 Recent graduate or experienced with constructionai engineering.
HOUSING AND ZONING INSPECTOR ....
Salary $5626.48 te $7168.36 Considerable experience in housing, construction and soning.
PLUMBING -INSPECTOR V.	:	• V;
Salary $5626,48 to $7168.36 Considerabia skilled axpertonce os a Journeyman plumber or plumbing contractor. Applications can be obtained at SoOttalfirbffo City Holl,-26080 Berg Road, Southfield, Michigan frefm. the* information desk., Nofification Will be received ' by mail as to when examinations for these positions Will be held
Examination for the following position will be held,, on August 11,1964 at Southfield Ten School, Berg Rowland Ten Mile Road, Sout^fold, Michigan at 7:30 P M. Applications must be in by August ID; 1964 at 8:00 P. M to the Southfield. City Hail, 26080 Berg Road, Southfield, Michigan. jCUSTODIANS .... Salary $2,110 ta $2,705 / . Considerable experience in maintenance work ond landscaping.
Respectfully Submitted,
Administrative Civil Service Commission DR. HARRY WOLL, Chairmen



THE PONTIAC PKK&& * TUESDAY.
^l
AtQUjS
’ST 4. 1964 i
Jab
*ClinDTV A 2rMinute OnUniT Short Story
Copyright IBM by Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
'The Belly laft*
■ By ESTHER LACY'
The foreman hurried over to my workbench and told “Jack, go, right home. The jxk Uce just called, your house has wen robbed!”
“What? Was Carla there? Did anything happen to her?” “Well,” the foreman hesitated, ‘‘Jack, your wife’s unconscious but the police said there’s nothing to worry about . she’s.,1 • ‘	’7
I dashed out at the plant still wearing my work apron,, kept the gas pedal on the floor and six minutes later skidded into the driveway of ottr new home. ' ,* ★ ★
We’d returned from our honeymoon last week and I had nightmare visions of my darling Carla battered and bruised .‘'Carla, fny child-bride!
POLICE gRESENT '
There was a. police car In the driveway and as I. dashed into the house a burly, man, obviously 'a detective, stripped me and asked; “You her husband?*’
"Yes. Where’s my wife?” ~ “Relax, she’s okay. On the couch.” •
There indeed was .my Carla, sleeping like an angel, looking cute in her new. house dress, her pretty face in r„epose, seemed younger than 18 years. *	★ <k
. There wasn't a mark on her, she looked as if she’d merely stretched out for an afternoon nap.
SLEEPING PILLS.
’But the house was in rough shape, drawers ransacked, bopks knocked off their shelves. I shook Carla buHlie detective said, “Leave her alone, she took a couple of Sleep pills.”
“My C a r.I a doesn’t need any sleep, pill, why she once dozed off as we were -waiting in line ‘<to get into a movie. What happened hero?”
- ! “A b o lit 25 minutes ago a neighbor across the street noticed a man leaving your place with a suitcase, thought he was acting suspicious and phoned us.
MoHi 1st.
PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER
Open Evtningi 111 8 30 PAL' 682-1113
BAKER
and
HANSEN
INSURANCE
AGENCY
Our office will bo closed Saturdays during the v Month of August
INSURANCE
—ALL FORMS—
Hone FE 4-1688
‘	714 COMMUNITY "
NATIONAL BANK BLDG. k PONTIAC
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -A group of clergymen who went to jail Monday on ,a sit-in con. viction after three years of appeals ran out have started a new line of appeal.
The five white and .three Negro clergymen spent the night in segregated celts and were as-“What racket?” I cut in, reali-J s'igned work duties for today.
“We have an alert out for him now, a petty thief who’s worked this racket in other t*owns. This is the first time
zing with a sickening feeling that the silver pitcher, the radio clock and most of our gifts were gone.
“This punk is well dressed and has a glib tongue. He rings the bell aad when the woman of the house answers he claims he represents a vitamin company which (s placing a new pill on the market.
“He asks her to try a few, and if she feels full of pep in a minute, why he’ll give her a whole box, and so on, all for free.
PLENTY OF ‘SAMPLES’
“He gives her one, her maid and kids also get<»samples, if she’s not alone.
“Actually the tablets are sleeping pills and while the housewife' is dozing, he takes his time going through the place.”
“How* long does ‘this sleep pill last?
Naturally the loss of the wed-ing gifts had shaken me, but I was young enough to replace these. I was mpst concerned about Carla, and whether these pills would have any permanent effects.	" i
NEED LIST
“Your wife should awake in; about a half hour. In the meantime give us a list of all missing iefes.
arti<
“We’ll start checking the pawn shops. We’re watching the bus and railway stations, the roads, know from out-of-town police what this guy looks like.”
sat down in our new modern chair, my head spinning. I was dazed, upset, and mostly relieved that my lovely Carla was safe.
The detective said, “This faker isacool one. Your wife must havOftTljHked-an apple pie and..
SURPRISE ‘Carla baked an apple pie? The darling was going to surprise me! I’m nuts about apple pieo.”
“It’s on the kitchen table, still warm. Your wife must be a good cook became before he left this punk sat down and ate haft the pie, with a enp of coffee. Taking prints from the enp now, and..'
“A half a pie? That's impossible. Why the man would need an .iron . . .” I jumped to my feet. * .	-
★ * ★ ★ .
“Officer, we have him trapped!' :Simply alert all doc? tors and hospitals to be. on the watch for him!”
The. detective’s thick face looked puzzled. “What for, the, guy hasn’t been shot.”
“Officer, my wife Is a wonderful girl and she’s trying hard, bat the fact remains she can’t boil water!
“If this guy ate much of her pie he’s going to be very sick within'a few minutes. I know!"
~ * , * it
The detective nodded and as he started for tHe phone his face- turned slightly pale. That figured; for no man alive could have eaten a whole half of anything my Carla baked!
(The End) .
Convicted in Tallahas&e Sit-In
Jailed Ministers launch New Appeal
But their lawyer said the men probably would, pay $500 fines and go home if the U.$. 5th Circuit Coftrt of Appeals in New Orleans refuses to take jurisdiction and grant bond during appeals. -
The lawyer, Howard Dixon, said he sent the court an emergency telegram and he ejected a decision by tomorrow. TURNED DOWN
U.S, Dist. Judge G. Harrold Carswell turned down , the der-, gymen’s petition ‘Monday. It contended there was no evi-. dence of unlawful assembly and that an Interstate Commerce Commission order had wiped out segregation at Tallahassee transportation terminals.
The clergymen were “freedom riders”, testing compliance with the ICC order. They were1
Housewives Fight
*
to Preserve Trees
ELMONT, . N.Y.- (AP) -Housewives pushing baby carriages have routed the tree-choppers in the first skirmish over the, shade trpes of Evans Avenue.
Town officials of this Long Island community want to widen
Exile Says Castro Is Inciting Negroes
MIAMI. Fla. (AP) - Fortner Cuban President Manuel Urru-tia has accused Fidel Castro of having a hand in racial -violence in the United States.
'♦ • #• ★
Urrutia, Castro’s.,first chief executive, said Monday that the Cuban., dictator "has from the start of his rule shown an interest in stirring up American Negroes, Now he maintains a . regular piglish language broadcast from Havana designed to incite American Negroes to rebellion.” -	■
Urrutia referred^ to “Radio Free Dixie,” a broadcast 'by Robert Williams, a Negro from Monroe, N.C., who fled to Cuba after being indicted on a kidnaping charge stemming from racial trouble.
..Urrutia broke with Castro in ( 1888^
Union Local ExDo 0itS
CHICAOO (AP) - Michael
Frank Darling, president of the 30.000 member Local 1031, International Brotherhood ofEiee-trical Workers, largest Union local in Illinois,1’died Monday iit Houston, Tex., following a heart operation.'
JUNK CARS '
/ AND TRUCKS
WANTED
-HIGHEST PRICES PAID—
We Pick
FE 2-0200
g pomtiac. scrap
Russians Urged Not. to Dd Twist
MOSCOW IB — Something un-Soviet is happening' in Soviet homes at night — people are doing the Twist. ‘
The pratice was denounced today by; the director of the Soviet Union’s leading folk baljet, Igor Moiseyev, who said that the country needs modern dances based on national traditions.
He bhmed the popularity of such dances as the Twist in some Soviet circles on the “vacuum” caused by the absence of acceptable modem Soviet dances.
“The dances bora in the West between the. tables of nightclubs, dances carrying to us an alien aesthetic and morality, are filled with a' dose of pathology and eroticism,” Moiseyev wrote in the newspaper Literaturnaya Ga-zeta (LiteracyGazette).
“We must have our own dances to counterpose those that ore coming to us from the West. oWe need a mass Soviet dance, modern, and at the same time based on national traditions.”
the streets, lined with oaks and elms that stand, between the sidewalks and the pavement.
■k /.. ★. w
. The women of Elmont, many of them refugees from the concrete canyons of New York (Sty, want to preserve the greenery.
They moved out in force Monday.
UNDER TREfe
Mrs, Charles Spanler stationed- herself under a condemned tree, looked up at a workman and said:
“ft you cut off ope. more *anch, you’ll have to drop it on myhead to get rid of it.”
\ *	* or
The Wbrjpmmulimhed down. Pushing tHelr infants of them, a dozen housewivei ter. Mrs. Hope Fox surrounded' truck that was to haul away the dismembered trees. They clogged Evans Avenue arid, after an hour, forced the workman to give up for the day.
V * . ★ ‘ Sr They also started circulating a petition and organized a tele-, phone squad to Swamp the office of thetoWn board with com; plaints.
NOT AVAILABLE Town officials were not.available for comment.
“I have nothing against drainage pipes or new curbing,” Said Mrs. Fox. “It’s just that we moved out to the suburb*- be: cause we like-the country atmosphere, which is rapidly disappearing.
‘‘This ' whole thing started months , ago, when we first heard that the streets in a 22-block area south of the Hempstead turnpike were going to be j widened.
WWW
'We "understood their that some of toe trees would have to go, but tngfc would be enoqgh room between the sidewalk and the curb to plant new ones ft we wanted to. But, when the man came around last Friday to mark the trees that .were to be cut, he marked all but fopr in the whole area-and'told us-that the curbs would be right next tp the sidewalk.
“Solid cement! Imagine that!”
arrested for’unlawful assembly when they refused to leave a segregated airport restaurant.
w W	1 * *
Carswell said the clergymen must return to Municipal Court Judge Johp. Rudd, who had convicted them three years ago. . % In arguing for* their release before federal courts Dixon said the police “had two choices — to" arrest the clergymen or to arrest> the hoodlums and rednecks -who were threatening them from outside the terminal. He made the wrong choice.” „ LOST APPEALS The clergymen have lost appeals to the circuit court, State Supreme Court and the U.S. Supreme Court. They are:
* * * ^ The Rev; John W. Collier of Newark, N.J.; Dr. Robert M. Brown of Stanford, Calif.; the Rev. Robert J. Stone of New York City; the Rev- A. McArven Warner of New York City ; Rabbi; Israel Dresner of Springfield, N.J.; Rabbi Martin Freedman of Paterson, N.J.; the Rev; Arthur L. Hardge of New Britain, Conn., and the Rev. Petty D. McKinney of Nyack, N. Y.
it. ■
The llev. Wayne Hartmife Jr., of Culver City, Calif., arrived Monday flight and said he would decide on whether to go jail after appearing before Judge Carswell.
Dixon said a 10th clergyman Convicted with the others would pay his fine.* He identified hitn as the Rev. Ralph Lord Roy of New York City. *
Retired General Dies; Veteran of Both Wars
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -Retired Brig. Gen. William K. MacNulty, a Marine Corps combat veteran of both world wars who commanded the Marine garrispn on Guam that was overrun by Japanese in World War II, died Monday of a heart attack. He spent nearly years in Japanese prison camps. He won the Silver Star for his part in five major battles in World War l. He was 73..»
JAILED CLERGYMEN - These ministers are Sitting in segregated jail cells in Tallahassee, Fla., awaiting the outcome of an appeal to the U.S. 5th. Circuit Court of Appeals on a 1961 Tallahassee sit-in conviction. They are (frpm-left)-Rev. John W. Collier, Newark, N.J.; Rev. A'. McArven Warner, New
York City; Rabbi Martin Freedman, Pa ter -son, N.J.; Rev. Arthur L. Hardge, New Bri- . tain, Corin.; Rabbi Israel Dressnef, Spring-field, N.J.; Rev. Robert J. Stone, New York City; Dr. Robert McAfee Brown, Stanford, Calif.; and Rev. Petty D. McKinney, Nyick, N.J.
By Citizens Band Radio Operators
Local REACT Chapter Organized
A jocal chapter of REACT has been organized by Pontiac area Citizens Band radio operators.
. REACT is anationalorganization whoselocal groups are frequently called upon to perform emergency public services. The name stands for Radio Emer-
C Junior Editors Quiz on—
SUNBURN
QUESTION: What makes your skin get sunburned?
ANSWER: As light rays pour down on us from the sun, only a small fraction of them affect or change our sUii; These rays are-invisible, and lie just beyond the viojpt end oLthe visible spectrum.
They are part of the group called “ultra violet rayi.” But even if yon can’t see them, your skin feels these ultra violet rays most definitely. Fifteen minutes, of exposing an imtanftld skin to height sunlight will cause tan to start forming. Twenty minutes may cause sunburn.
Look at the diagram. In the outermost of the skin’s two iayers, the epidermis, are networks of special .cells called “melanocytes.”
.These can produce particles of the' brownish pigment melanin. When the ultra violet rays pour down, this starts the melanocytes working and the melanin they turn out (right) makes tbilkin tan.	* .
Melanin absorbs the ultra violet rays and so a tank s protection — up tp a point Stay ia the sun too long aad a chemical i$ released which works down into the skin’s letter level, and makes the blood., vessels swell.
Then your skin gets red and uncomfortable. A light, sun-'.burn will do, little damage, but too much may Cause great discomfort arid even serious illness,
. ★. W • tjr
FOR YOU TO DO:'The next time you start sunning with a untanned skin, Veipember these hints: Tan gradually — no more than 15 minutes in the sun at' first. Use a suntan lotion. And wear sunglasses. .	-	’	\ * •■' >
New aerosol spray checks perspiration. Keeps feet odor-free 24 hours J
Medical scientists ha- e developed • new aerosol spray that chscks perspiration... stops foot odor 24
Deodorant with triple-action affec-
1.	KMl odor-causing germa-on contact with a continuous-acting
• sntissptic that hasps working oil day, edt night.
2.	Instantly chsck the flow of perspiration that breed* odor-causing germs—helping block the return of foot odor.
3.	Cool, soothe and refresh your hot, tirod feet making them dry and comfortable.
Faster, osn iffictfvt rtlitf
Mennen Foot Deodorant
aerosol spray, it stops the dl of hot, sweaty fast fact. It 'istas odor so olfoetiuoly be-
_____i)s fins spray penetratee even
the tinieet foot creoioee.
Cslsrimt, RM-staMnt Mennen Foot Deodorant is colorless and will not stain or ham nylon, wool, cotton or bather. In fact, you can npray’ib cooling refreshment right through hoea or down into your shoe* to help pd them of lingering odors. Gat new MENNBN FOOT DBODORAbT with amasing triple-action offectivoness that thseks perspiration as it keeps fast odor-free M UMfiiHufi Mennen Foot Deodorant, by the makers of' Famous Quinsana Foot Powder. At drug counters everywhere,
JA-
THE OFFICE HEEDS TOO!
ABE YOU QUALIFIED?
Commercial, Industrial and safes organ! ratio ns anr seeking young men and women who have had further education In the secretarial, accounting, and otfice machine fields.
Fall TUm Enrollments Now Being Accepted
i' ' (buy School arid Evening Division)
''Basic end Advanced Classes .
Free Placement Service to Graduates
•	Secretaries	\ • Office Machine &
e Stenographers	Kay Punch
• Clerk-Typists	Operators.
• and Other Positions ■
Pontiac Business Institute
■■Jv •	Pkooe sil-'JI
A ' : . ’tl>-------
fS W. Lawrence Street
gency Associated Citizens Team.
K- Is made np of Citizens Band radio operators, who are licensed by the Federal Communications Commission for voice transmission -on 27 megacycles under five watts.
Most of the members of the Pontiac group were formerly associated with,; the 1,000 Lakes Citizens Band Club.
, w of ★
Formally organized July 12 with 28 members, the group already has grown to a membership of 40.
MEETS ONCE MONTHLY
The club meets - once jeach month afltl conducts frequent drills to test the effectiveness pf the field organisation. Their central transmitter Is Keego Qab-Co. of Keego Harbor.
Members of ihe board of directors are Owen Martin, 2242 Crane, Waterford Township, president; Marvin Krueger, 201 Yale, vice president; ’ Mildred Lisclum, 6 S. Sanford, secretary-treasurer.
it
. Others ,are Charles Spain, 3113 Bessie, Pontiac Township, operations officer and field director;- his. wife, Charlotte, assistant secretary; C. H. Sutton, 26 Feneley, assistant field officer; and Raymond BarteltvgOlYw. Rutgers, publicity director "^-7.
CAR JIM MBRCia WRIACH
e» the
PONTIAC
MALL
MID-AUGUST REVIVAL
YOU LEARN ELECTRONICS
FULL AND PART-TIME CUSSES NOW FORMING
•	ELECTRONICS ENGINEERING
•	ELECTRONICS TECHNOLOGY TRAIN NOW FOR YOUR SPACE-AGE CAREER! '
EJ.T. IS MOW CO EDUCATIONAL SEND FOR NEW FREE ILLUSTRATED CATALOG
ELECTRONIC INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
| Street .............. ------------------»v.	J
J City i. , . , . . .‘‘ . . v...	-Phone . .	----
I our oaaaaaao tuition autas arc availablb to all	J
AN ADDITION???
Whin Your Family Starts To | Grow and You’re Thinking of Buying or Building A law Roma
that's tha time to maka an appointmont with ana of Capitol Saving* experienced Hama Loan Cauncalorc. Hie most important job ie to chaw you tha way to HaBftV Hpma Ownerchip eawnealhna yaw in a repayment plan bast ewHad to your naade qnd budgat. Since 1390, Capitol Savings hoe made home ownership possible far thousands of now young families whd preferred our plan over pit the others. Remember . there's for leas 'red tape' with Capitol, payments like rent, and your application is acted upon prampiHy.
75
West Huron
Established 1890
FE 4-0561
CUSTOMER PARKING IN REAR * OF BUILDING
T****’
Member Federal Home Lodri Bdnk System
THE POyflAC ttU&SB* TtXB$j)AY, AUODST 4/IMS*
ONE COLOR


THE PONTIAC PBKS& TtASDAY, AUGjL'STAli**
u ~

$2,000,000^° Modernization and Expansion Program...
Helping More PeopleSolve More Problems... That's!Why We Keep Browing

Here We
G-R-O-W
Again...«
v These are your modernized and expanded . bari offices ... v
YOURS.... because youi provide the.means by which theV prosper YOURS .x,. because Community National , Js, and irv facfevery bank should be j/v devoted to the. public welfare ''YOURS .. . because your*, needs'and your requirements determine the extent of our services.
DIRECTORS
LMto B.M	t	Alfred R. Clancy, Jr.
* Robert R. Eldrad	Herald S. Goldberg
/ Herald A. FiUgereld Howard W. Huttenlocher Aifcyd C. Girard, Chairman	Harry MPryale
OFFICERS
ALFRED C. GIRARD........................
ROBERT R. ELDRED ... w.Executive VUcPruldant
JOHN P. NIGCEMAN.......................SMlarFlMPrwUNtf
CARROLLL.OMIUN.......................... W<,rHc.Pr.,W.*t
CORDON M. McLEOD..................Vice PruitUnt A Cashier
FRANK G. ANDREONI........... .. ..U............... ttc« President
, WILLIAM E.CASHIN* JR.,............w...rk.Pr~W«u
CHABLSSB.HABBIS.  ..........................Vice President
WILLARD V. JOHNSON.. f .......................... FD.Prw«ra*
EDWARDS.LADD..............................Vic. President
OBAN C. THOMAS.	^ ............... yu. AmUmI
DAWSON C. BAER...................&....AuUtant Vic. President
JACK D. CRAWFORD.. .. ................. l.^Ubtant Vice President
ROBERT M. HOWLAND.................. AuUtant Vic. President
HORACE W. LUNGE, JR...............Assistant Vice President
HAROLD I. OWEN...,.	..AuUtant Plea President
W. H. SHOliP tw... .... ............ ..AuUtant Vice President
DONALDD.TAYLOR......................AuUtant Vice President
PAUL R. BREININCER .................... AuUtant	CaMmr
L. JAY CLARK..........................    AuUtant	CaMmr
FLOYD A. COMPTON.......V,...	.... AuUtant Cashier
JACKE. GARDINER.......................  .AuUtant	CaAtar
Burton r. hauxwell ......	....ammm* c»A<«r
RICHARD J. LONG   ..................AUUtant CaMmr
,LEO J. McCALL...........................AuUtant Csuhiar
ROBERTNORBERC...........................AuUtant Cathiar
F. WARD RICHARDS........... ,iV&  ......AiMiitltiitBF
ROGER P. RUMMEL   ....................... ...AuUtant CatMar
ROBERT L. SHUELLER... ........................Assistant CaMmr,
GERALD E.2UBAUK.....................i...A.Mont CaMmr
RICHARD F. BENHAM......SJX .......l.^.o...v%.4.dSar
MARVIN G. CASWELL....I
THOMAS E. GLENN.........................Branch M,
DON ALDF.MHSAAC......................... Branch Me
DAYTON F. PATERSON .......... ..........Branch Mt
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY^ AUGUST 4,1964-
GIANTS’ BACKFIELD IN ACTION - At Fairfield, Conn ,
■ the New York {Hants'practice a running play yesterday in (workout clothes. Quarterback -Y. A.‘Tittle takes the .ienter . (upper left); wheels toward his backs- (upper right)'; hands
Phatetax
off to fullback jUex Webster (lower left); halfback^, dick James leads the interference (lower right). Flanking is halfback Clarence Childs.
Batting Aids Me Au
DETROIT (APO—A somewhat slight bdlld and an awkward batting stance make Detroit Tigers shortstop Dick McAuliffe look like anything but a major league baseball player, much less a slugger.
• # w.
Yet the 24-year-old McAuliffe has already bettered a personal season’s high in one hitting category and could' well improve on three or four more before the reason is over.
Jt Detroit hitting coach Wayne
Lions Prepare for 1st Exhibition
Redskins First Foe Saturday
By BRUNO L. KEARNS. Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Everyone likes to win' add coach George Wilson of the Detroit Lions is no different.
During the forthcoming NFL exhibition season however, Which starts against the Washington Redskins Saturday night, Wilson puts winning second in importance to the experience he wants to give Lions’ rookies and newcomers.
“Sure we want to win even "" the exhibition games, but this is the time to give the new players a chance to play and Bust’s what we aim on doing Saturday night,” Wilson said. "We’ll start all bur veterans but then all the rookies left on -the squad and players at new positions will play most of the* way,” he added.
TRAVELING SQUAD By dropping three rookies, end Doug Bldde and linemen Ron Frank and Currie Ball yesterday, the traveling squad for ' Saturday night’s encounter at Charlotte, N.C. against the Skips will be 47 players.
. -Wally Hilgenberg, rookie guard and linebacker from Iowa, is playing in the college All-Star game against!the Chicago Bears Friday night and he Will accompany ." Director of Player Personnel, Russ Thomas to Charlotte on Saturday.
He .is not expected to play .against the Skins however.
, Who Wilson will start «t quarterback is uncertain, but most likely it will be Earl ' Morrall, Whose fantastic finish at the end of the INS season moved him out of the relief role into a starting berth.
Morrall and Milt Plum made ■jmUar showings in the intrasquad scrimmage last Saturday night at U. of D. Stadium and Plum’s Blue squad emerged the winper, KM.
■ ★
. Together they completed 18 of 45 passes, somewhat below per, but Wilson admitted this was “pretty good” in view of the fact that the defenses knew what the offense was planning.
“..... * i moved
from defensive end into an ok fensive guard slot, will get a good test at his hew position Saturday night.
Veteran guards John Gordy and J. D. Smith were going both
- ZOOMING IN — Coach George* Wilson of the Detroit Lions' zooms in on his two quarterbacks Milt Plum, (left) and Earl Morrall typing'this is fhe year the two tested signal callers will, make the Lions strong contenders in NFL title chase. The Lions start their exhibition season Saturday night against the Redskins in Charlotte, N. C.
College Kicker Key to Upset of
-CHICAGO (API - During the College All-Star drills when big strong men battered each other in preparation . for Friday night's game agdinst the Chicago. Bears, one big-, strong man jtyyed a relatively lonely foie. rt- Dick Van Raephorst of Ohio State took no part in the muscle vs. muscle scrimmages. If it hadn’t been for his football uniform, Van Raaphorst would have appeared to-be a stranger to the practice sessions.
Over and over again. Van Raaphorst practiced what he does best — kicking field goals. And if the All-Stars defeat the in Soldier ,Field, the booting Buckeye might provide the margin of victory. -The last three victories scored, in the series by the All-Stars
ways in the/criirimage and i mon’s shov»g at this position will be a big factor in the Lions’ offensive depth this year.
"Well give Dick Compton and Larry Vargo a good crack at the defensive backfield. They have to be considered rookies at these positions,” noted Wilson.	* *
Nick Pletrosante, who .missed the scrimmage because of a leg Injury, is expected to staff at fullback against Washington.
■it . W ★
• Twice daily drills will continue through Thursdl# at Cran-brook. The squad wtu leave Friday afternoon and hold a light workout at Chariotte, N.C. nFri-dayevenk^. ". -j
P/fos Patching Up Players
Buddy Dial Will Be Out 6 Weeks
By The Associated Press 'Buddy Dial, a i to tty' Dallas Cowboys’ pass-receiving corps, rested today after a successful operation but the former Pittsburgh Stealers star will be a.big question mark when his new club open? the National Football League season next month.
Dial, acquired from the Steel-;
'★ ft': 'ft '
......_____ ers last December, underwent
prize additiotf *5*r8ery in Dallas Monday to correct a tear in the middle mucle of his right- thigh. The Rice ilumnUs was hurt last week during'a workout at the Cowboys’ training camp Thousand Oaks, Calif.
♦ ★ ★'
“We are very pleased with the results,” said General Manager
ExrPacker Rin Ready to Prove Trade Mistake
HERSHEY, Pa. (AP) - Jim Ringo was the center at Green Bay for 11 long years — some lean, some fat. When Vince Lombardi traded him to Philadelphia tyring the winter he was shaken.
[•fJim thought-the return of Paul Hornung might mean another title. Instead, he was going to a club that finished last two years in a row.
' The shock has worn off now. The - 32-year-old ex-Packer is anxious to prove himself agaihst the second great challenge of his career.
“Sure, I was shocked at the deal/’ said Ringo at tty Eagles’ training camp. “I didn’t think Green Bay Was in 9 position to make such a deal.”
“WelC Were they in a position to make it?" Ringo was asked.; ’"You’lj have to ask ljjdr. Lombardi.”
FIRST CHALLENGE Ringo said the first big challenge came when he entered the National Football League in 1853. There were new challenges every time tty Packers mqde a coaching change. But Ringo had played 126 consecutive games. I
“Now, there is the preserft situation,” said Ringo. “Mr. Lombardi indicated maybe I couldn’t maintain myself as a skilled athlete. 1 am out to prove.I am jult-as good as I Was at Green Bay.”
ers’ chances?
“They have the material' to win llr,” he said. “Whether the spirit , is there or hot, I don’t know. They have made a lot of* Changes. Lew Carpenter (eft to go Jn the coaching John Roach and Bill Forester retired. Ken Iman, Earl Gres and I were traded. In . my opinion, Gres is every bit as good as Jim Taylor. His only problem is inexperteped. |
“I’ll say one thing about Paul Hornung. He is the type of individual to rise to a situation. H* realizes the' challenge-he-faces. I am qure I, and many others, will be pulling for him to make
W
.- Joe Kuharich, new coach of the Eagles, is excited about Ringo’s spirit and leadership quality, lie has fitted .Into the club as a key njan on tty offensive line, if the Eagles surprise, people, Ringo will., be in the thick of it.v'	.<•'•
Tex Schramm. But, according to team doctors, Dial won’t be able to run at full speed for about six weeks. The Cowboys and St. Louis Cardinals kick off the regular NFL schedule 'at Dallas Sept. 12.
Hr 4, ’#*■;V
In CaUfirnia, meanwhile, the Cowboys stepped up preparations for their preseason debut against Los Angered. Coach Tom Ldndry , announced top ball-carrier Don Perkins would switch’Trom halfback to fullback for the encounter with the Rams.
KNEE SIFRGERY '
Another' pass-catching standout, Chris Biirford of the Kansas City Chiefs, 'underwent a knee operation today in Dallas. The American Football League star had a similar operation two years ago. He injured the knee two weeks ago and will be sidelined, for six morr weeks. KC Coach Hank Stramm said halfback Abner Haynes will replace at split' end in the" Chiefs’ jfexhibition opener with the Oakland Raiders Sunday?'
Fullback Curtis McClintbn, whose left hand was broken in a scrimmage last week, also will miss the Oakland game. He is expected, to be available, for the next exhibition, against Buffalo Aug. 14. .
* " *’ * V,
A1 Davis/* the Oakland pilot; listed six casualties, including all-AFL linebicker Archie Mat-sos, who will sit out the Raiders-Chiefs game. J)avis said none of the six is seriously hurt.
/The NFL hampion Chicago Bears, propping for their Friday night date with the College All-Stars at Chicago,. went through stiff offensive and defensive drills after Coach George Halas said scouting reports show the current All-Star squad to stronger than the finfe which upset Gjjtyn Bay last year,
have resulted directly from the art of field goal kicking. Last year Bob Jencks, now of. the Bears, maty good kicks of 20 and 33 -yards in the 20-17 triumph over the Green Bay Pack-
In 1058, Bobby Joe Conrad of Texas^ A&M. kicked field goals to give tty All-Stars a35-19 triumph over Detroit, *ln 1955, another Buckeye, diminutive Tad Weed, kicked, three field' goals in. a 30-27 triumph over the Cleveland Browns.
SET RECORD
Van Raaphorst, a 21-year-old 6-1 220 pounder, was one of the top field goal kickers in colle->giate ranks last season. He set a Big Ten record with six goals in conference * competition and eight for the year.' He boots them long and he boots them styrt.	- r’-
Because of the tremendous defense the Bears are. expected to throw at the All-Stars, Van Raaphorst should have plenty of chances to try his specialty.
The. All-Stars will find the going rough when they get into Bear territory and the Bears’ secondary has no intention of allowing All-Star quarterback-ers to throw touchdown bombs. More often than not. Van Raaphorst will be called, upon to attempt field goals. * ’
*	■ * v it
If the big guy is reasonably successful, he could provide the All-Stars with the necessary points to upset the Bears.
The Bear offense was any-thing but terrifying tatft year, and thert is little reason to be: lieve that things have changed.
Owner-Coach George Halas/ however, has promised a more versatile and explosive offense for the 1964 campaign.
Balckburo had one col make When McAuliffe to the Tigers camp at last spring:
*	* . w ,
“Dick, you’re ready to go right now. "That swing of is going to get you a lot of After a somewhat slow start, McAuliffe has vaulted into the team leadership in home Tuns with 19. He had 13 last year after hitting 12 in 1962, his first full year with the team. . PREVIOUS HIGH With 47 runs batted in, McAu-liffe seems certain to top his previous high of 63 in 1962. He had 61 last year.
He’s already tied his previous season’s high >n triples with six and needs just 5 more doubles to top the 28 he hit in 1962.
Though disappointed that he is not hitting closer to the .300 mark, McAuliffe feels that his hitting will continue to improve and that he will eventually make the grade. .	•	.
ft
“I’ve been hitting the ball well and staying above my lifetime average (.261),” McAuliffe said. “I’ve been feeling good all year and took good care of myself in the 0ft season. This, I think, has given me more power.”/	’	. *• : * I
Despite moments of britiance, McAuliffe has been criticized for his fielding. Some so-called experts feel that he lacks the range.to be.a. great shortstop, while rrigny point out the fact that he commits a number of errors. •	. ?
MORE CHANCES.
But pitcher Hank Aguirre, speaking for the rest of tty staff, defended McAuliffe’s fielding.
“Sure he’s committed a lot of errors,” Aguirre said. “But he also gets more chances than anyone else and it figures, he’s going to miss a few more.. ?”• “He’s made a lot of good plays, too. But there always seem to get lost in the shuffle. Everyone always remembers the missed plays.”
*r / ’H
.The Tigers, after losing two to Cleveland Sunday, were in -Chicago today to open a'topee-game set with the White *Sox. All three games will be. played at night.	, .	.
‘The Tigers return home Friday for a night game against Kansas City, the first of a four-game weekend series.
Tigers Call for Navarro
To Replace Injured Sherry as Reliefer
DETROIT (AP)—With pitcher Larry Sherry disabled by a broken bone • in his right foot, tty Detroit Tigers have called "up Julio Navarro from their Syracuse farm club to take. Sherry’s place in the relief corps.-*
★ * • * ... Navarro, who was 4-3 after being sent down to. Syracuse May 31, was scheduled to join the Tigers in .‘ Chicago in time for tonight’s game against the White Sox,
X-rays disclosed Monday- that a smash off the bat' of Leon Wagner in Sunday * s second game at Gevetand had fractured a bone in Shtjyy’s foot, just above his little toe.
Dr. RuSsell Wright, team physician, said Sherry would he out ef action at least a month and he was placed on the .disabled list to make room for Navarro.
Navarro was acquired from Los Angeles last April 28 in the swap of pitcher-outfielder Willie Smith .to the Angels.
In 12 innings of relief work with the Tigers, Navarro threw 10 home run balls.
jMqfort
leggael
STANDINGS
Los Ang«es yesterday, just as third baseman Felix Ttytys grabs the toss. Baltimore Wort
Tourney Starts Thursday at . Warwick Hills
Jim Smith Is.. Back to Defend Title; Play Will End on Sunday
Five former champions including three-time wiqner Bud Stevens of-Western Golf Gub will be on hand for the'opening round of the Golf Association of Michigan tourney opening Thursday at Warwick Hills near Grand Blanc.
Returning to defend his 1963 title is Jim Smith of Lakepointe, who defeated Bill Albright of Detroit in tty-finals, 5 and 4. , Bud Stevens captured the title in 1958, repeated in 1959 and came home first again to' 1982.
Other ex-champs in the 129-mqn field are Tom Draper (1$$ and 1960) of Red Run, Glen Johnson (1955) of Grosse He and Gene Woodard of ^ochmoor.
The Jield will be trimmed to the tow 95 plus the defending titljst following tomorrow’s 18-hole qualifying round over tty 7,280-yard, par 72 Warwick layout.
MATCH PLAY
The loir 31 scorers win join Smith in championship flighty play lot two 18-hole rounds Fri- ' day and two on Saturday. Semifinals and finals will be played . Sunday.
The remaining 64 players will be divided into four flights for match-play competition. They Will play one round Friday, one Saturday and close the tourney with semifinal and final rounds Sunday,
* .* *
Some of the players, expected to give the former champs a strong battle for the crown are Fred Ewald of Oakland Hills, Bob Corley of Country Gub of Jackson, Cal Cooke of Grosse lie, Don Stevens (Bud’s brother) ’of Plum* Hollow and Lee Palmer . of Grosse lie.
Ewald and Bill Adams of Red Run teamed up Sunday in winning the Black River Country Elub Invitational Golf Tournament at Port Huron.
2 Local Girls Qualify in Junior Meet '
(Special to the Pontiac Press)
Two area girls are among three from Michigan in the championship flight of the 38th Junior tournament of Women’s Western Golf Association being held at Waukegan, III.
Feather Frechette of Clarks-Ire fired an 87; Linda Fuller of Union Lake an 84 and Cynthia Hill of South Haven an 87.
Medal honors were won by Marsha Houghton a 14ryear-old from Modesto, California who shot a 40-37—77.
A score of 89 or less was re- * quired.to make the championship flight.
The Mi’c'higan girls Were ' among late starters as match play started today.
Continue Qualifying for Newsboys' Meet
Qualifying continues Wednesday moroing in the Pontiac.
Putt tour?: napient tying Heldatthe course on Dixie Highwayr Ail Press newsboys are eligible to enter the tournament which will begin next week after qualifying this week.
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TO HIGH, TOO LATE - Bob Johnson, Baltimore Orioles’ third baseman, slides safely mto^^uird base In the foiiulh
. Net Winners Advance -
MONTREAL (#>-*-Ron Holm-berg of DaUas, defeated Jean Laverdure of Montreal S-2, 8-2, 6-3 Monday and advanced to the second round of the Canadian Open Championship.
Compote Lema With Hagen
By JACK CUDDY NEW YORK JJPD-As Champagne Tony Lema headed back to Chicago today he admitted that his glass -runneth over— with joy.
sports writers to> champagne after each , of his victories since he won his first small tournament in California - two years ago. He had told them: "If I win, you fellows will all drink
Since hd* married beautiful j champagne, blonde Betty Cline of Oklahoma At St. Andrews; he gained ad-City a year ago, he has won ditkmal respect by giving $1,000 more than $100,000 in- golfing to his caddy, Tip Anderson, 32-prize money. During the past! year-old father of four, two months, he played more „	*	*'	*
sensationally perhaps than any Lema is one professional who previous professional in a simi-{ appreciates the advice of cad* lar streak. '	. I dies over tough courses. Some
And now, atop all this, tall of.that advice unquestionably Tony with .the. green eyes and helped him on this year’s curly black' hair is getting a ning spree. Ub
peak thrill because so mapy of his admirers—from ' pros to, duffers—are celling him- “another Walter Hagen”—another great golfing ambassador of goodwill for America.-
"I know it’s not ■ fair to Hagen,” said' Tony, “when people mention nw in the same breath with the 'great Sir Walter,” he grinned. “But r love it/’ ^
Only a couple of weeks ago, 30-year-old Lema of San Leandro, Calif., got a tremendous kick out of meeting 72-year-old Hagen of Detroit at Columbus, Ohio, during the PGA tourney. PRINCE OF CHAMPIONS A It was, Hagen, a swashbuckling champion of the links of the world and top-flight judge of good vintages, who opened th$ doors of exclusive .clubhouses to golf professionals in Great Britain in the late 20’s.
It seems that when ■ Walter walked through those doors, he often was accompanied by a prince pr by lords .and ladies,
‘ *.• . | Also, ’’Sir” Welter was the first American to 'win the Erit* ish Open.
British .sports writer* were quick to compare Lenuv with Hagen-recently when youfg Tony, with only two days of practice, won the British Open at St. Andrews, Scotland—.on his first try, an unprecedented feat. And he did it by five strokes.
Then, Tony had four cases of French champagne—on ice -wheeled into the press room.
Lema has been treating the
Tony flewlidC to Chicago today to compete there over the weekend in ■ the Western Open championship at the Thm-O-Shanter Country Club.
He was in New,- Yorif briefly for Monday night’s diner honoring him and Arnold Palmer, the Masters champion; Ken Yen? turi, the UJS. Open champ, and Bobby Nichols, PGA champ.
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A bases loaded single by Chet | uation id the fifth to save., the Woodmore in the third inning victory, scored both runs as UAW>Local uaw '	on X <-J a S
594 defeated Elks 24 in ■ tense	m *-< i •
.American League softball play- *^wp—Pcvmmi to »?in 11-4 ** * off game at Beaudette Park, last »»‘yMo<^5,ruc,w'
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J Cal Atwood’s three-run homer ! triggered Sam Reeves to a M{~ victory over Bob 4 Ken’s in the MK‘ A If CA—-I other AL game. '	. I WO AlhOlOr
{ Bob & Larry's downed ‘Or-chard Lanes, 4-2, and Berry! fckninn Door edged G AM Construction,| LCylUfl VJPUliitro 12-1, in Nation*! League playoff
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'Bad Boy' Aussie Net Stars Solidly Back in Graces
action at Northside.
HAW collected its saly two hits fff J.D. Jacobs la the third.
Two walks around a single by. Alex DUlaahaw set the stage for Woodmore’s Mow. Lee Sherey held the winners hitless the rest of the way.
Jake Mazur picked ay the victory with a two-hitter, fanning eight.
BIG INNING
I Atwood teed off during Reeves’ five-run second inning that put the winners ahead 5-4.1 At\yood then put' the - finishing * touches on the verdict by {* tripling home the insurance tal-' ly in the fifth.
All-Star baseball teams from the 7th’ and. ISth American Legion Districts wiU meet in two exhibition contests this week.
The squads will meet tomorrow at 1:30 p.m. at Tiger Stadium and again Saturday at 8 p.m. at Berkley Community Field. ■	.	.	.
Among the players on the 18th District team are Bud Williams and ' Don Rickard of Walled Lake, Bill Stevenson and Steve Page of Farmington, Rich Brewer of Southfield and Ed Sparkman of Milford. *
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788 N. Perry St.	FE 4-8781
By The Associated. Press , Roy Emerson and Fred Stolle, tagged with a “bad. boy” label by the Australian tennis brass, now are back in favor; solidly, thoroughly and completely back in the good graces.
* * *
Winning does ft.
The duo swept Mexico’s best
4-1 in Davis Cup American Zone semifinals Monday and have only two more steps to take before meeting the United States in the Challenge Round, climax to the Atftsies’ drive to recapture the cup they had considered private property until the US. UPSET LAST YEAR.
Emerson and Stolle, among
Red Run CC Hosts ladies
A.golfer from Club de Golf, Mexico City, Mrs. Marjorie Hauck, will compete in the fifth annual Ladles Invitational Golf Tournament at Red Run Golf Club in Royal Oak.
The tournament begins morrow . and will have three days of medal play, best ball, with prizes awarded for first throe places in each of three flights. Handicap will be 1“ par cent. ,
* ★ ★
On concluding day Friday, low net prize will be awarded in each flight.
Players from the following clubs are expected to com-,pete: Pine L>ke, Oakland Hills, Birmingham Country dub, Bloomfield Hills, Dearborn Country Chib, Indian Wood, Saginaw Country Club, Edge-wood, Western Country Club, and Plum Hollow.
Mrs. Marjorie Hume of Red Run and Mrs. Hilkene of In* dianwood pre defending champions and they will return to defend their titles.
Tom/Walters pitched and helped with the bat as Cran-brook defeated the Clippers, 8-3 in the city class A League baseball game last night.
Walters allowed the Clippers only three hits and struck out 10 batters in posting his victory.
In the first Inning be laced out a double and drove la a run to start the Cranbrook •coring.
The winners had two runs in
Cranbrook Winner. 8-3
CRANBROOK^)" CUPP.R.^ N
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the first inning, cine in the 4th and1 five in the Oth inning.
Ron Murray and Dick . Mosher I each allovfed two hits for Cran-
ran- _#
brook. The Clippers were helped1 ™ by three errors in getting their throe runs id the 3rd, 5th and 6th frames.
Don Glowaz' took the loss.
the players suspended by Aus-. trails after they had. bolted :a tumey there to play abroad, won the final singles matches in Mexfco City In straight set Monday, beating Antonio' Palafox and Rafael Osuna.
Stolle, who lost to Osuna in a singles match Saturday, clinch*! the meet'for Australia when he scored a surprisingly easy 6-3, M, 6-4 triumph over Mexican national champion Palafox.
That made the best of five series 3-1 and Emerson’s match with Osuna was academic. Emerson won 6-3. 6-4,11-9-NO SURPRISE Australian captain Harry lopman, who had predicted the
4-1 outcome from' the start, ex-] tk>nal Women's Golf Touma-
Netter Wins Tournament in Bloomfield
■Tom; a M
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Bruce Gouid, who is still in the running for the Oakland Grnmtjr Open tennis singles title to bp continued next r Saturday, took crowns in the ’Bloomfield T j-j-jl Hills recreation department mmm p-S | i ] tournament last weekend .
Gould wop the junior boys singles and hf teamed with Dave &ttiieb to win the Junior Boys ’doubles.
Next Saturday in the Oakland County tournament at Oakland University at 11:00 a.m., he will face Dakrin Ornekian in the semifinals 9I the upper bracket.
These were the Rfoomfipkl Hills winners:
Boy,' singles: Bob Ousseau Rtf. Mika
Junior Boys' Singles: Bruce Gould del. Larry Parrott.
Junior Boys' Doubles: Bruco Gould and lava Gotti Mb doTjbn Hopfclna and Craig uohy.
Junior Girls' Singles: 'EmUy I del. Sue Rumsey.
Miami Boat in L$ad
CHICAGO (AF) — Star class skipper James Schoonmaker of Miami, Fla. takes a slim lead into the second day of the Olympic trials at the Jackson Park Yacht club today. *
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Bill LaRose’s two-run single in the fifth chased across what proved to be the winning runs for Boh 81 Larry’s. Lloyd Harper scattered six hits to pitch the win.	, j|
Tom Haller blasted a double | ■ that scored both of Berry Door’s ~ runs in the second inning- Win-1. _ ning pitcher Bob Marshbanks J worked dqt of bases loaded sit- $
Woman Golfer in Lead j ■
COLORADO SPRINGS,. Colo, tJh— Barbara "Fay White , of Shreveport, La. fired a six-un-der-par 71 Monday to take medalist honors in the qualifying round of the Broadmoor Invita-
Frae Consultation In Tha Privacy el Tenr Heme.
FE 4-3737
CALL
ANYTIME
MICHAEL ALLEN	CO AST-TO-CO AST
MORTQAGrSIIIVICC	
pressed satisfaction and said Stolle’s performance, tnay have surprised some, but not him. -
"I knew that once he Had gotten over -the nervousness of playing in the Davis Cup for the first time, he’d play the game he’s capable of,” Hopnum said.
Stolle, who teamed with Emerson in the key doubles Victory Sunday, jumped off to a quick advantage , against Palafox, breaking the Mexican’s serve when be double faulted hi the second gamc of the first set.
From that point on, the 6-foot-5 Australian played a calm, determined game and won easily.
The victory puts the Australians into the American Zone finals against Chile, considered a much weaker opponent than Mexico. The match Is scheduled in Minneapolis Aug. 14-16.
The winner goes against the winner of the Sweden-PtdUp-pines interzone match, scheduled in Baas tad, Sweden, later this moijth.
Sweden clinched- the European Zone title Monday when Jan Erik Lundquist, Sweden’s top player, beat Pierre Darmon of France 34, 7-5, 6-4, 6-1 in the singles match that gave the j Swedes an unbeatable 3-1 lead. Ulf Schmidt completed the. job by defeating Pierre Barthes 6-2, 6-4, 6-8, 6-2.
The Philippines previously won the Asian Zone.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. tftSSDAYC AtfcUST 4, 196|
Some Weakness Shows in U. S. Track Olympics
Resulls Show Competition Wilt Be Stiff
Jonas Wins Evant, but Foreign Teams Score Some Upsets
NEW YORK (AP) - The United States, still flushed with •its record triumph over Russia, won four events in a major in* temational track and field meet in London but some other week-rad results could be cause for concern in this Olympic year.
196 one is really sayint anything, of course. The comments run from “interesting,” through “very good performance,” to “my, my.” But there were some indications the U.S. may'not be so overpowering as thought in • some key events.
* ♦ *
First there was the world-record-shattering discus toss of 211 feet, 9tt inches by Ludvig Danek of Czechoslovakia in Prague Sunday.
That one was a real eyebrow-raiser. First, it’s more than five feet beyond tne pending record of 208-8 by A1 Oerter, Walnut, Calif:, who has won the event in the last two Olympics and is this country's No. 1 man ag this year.
Oerter, who has gone over feat a half dozen times this season, had a throw of 192-1% in vinning a special event in Canadian Olympic decathlon rad women's pentathlon trials at Toronto a day earlier. DEFINITE THREAT Danek’s throw stamped him a definite threat in' an event the United States has virtually owned throughout the history of Hie modern Olympics. This country has faired to win the discus only three times, and has taken seven of the last-eight ;old medals.
The tLS. team’s victories in London Monday came in the 400 neter hurdles, by Billy Hardin; he 110 meter hurdles, by Hayes lones; the 400 meter dash, by 'dike Larrabee, and the 800 meters, by Morgan Groth.
But Witold Bar an of Poland scored an upset victory in the mile, running a European rec-■ rd 3.58 flat and beating Cary Veisiger and John Camien. ■Veisiger finished* fourth, running 4:00.3 and trailing dohn Vhetton of Britain and Basil Clifford of Ireland, each under . our minutes.
SMALL FRY TROTS — Twelve-year-old Richard Polhamer of Brentwood, N.Y. looks .the part of a top notch driver as he guides his pony Nibbles to a victory at the Small
Fry track on Long Island, N.y., which has been.in operation three years racing miniature sulkies.
British Cfiamp/on*
in Failing
LONDON (AP)—It’s the moment every champion dreads — to quit in front of his family and home crowd.
This happened Monday to Britain’s Bruce Tulloh, reigning 5,-000 meters champion, for the second time in three days.
Last Saturday Tulloh, once one of Britain’s brightest hopes for the Tokyo Olympics, gave up after Oft laps in the 5/ meters at a London meet.
His wife, Pat, was there to watcfy. him walk dejectedly ofl the track. She cried.
NOT THERE
Monday, in another meet, Tulloh, lagging well behind the rest of the field, quit on the seventh lap — .just over, the halfway stage in the 5,000 meters.
“It just ’ wasn’t there," he said. -
His wife and a holiday crowd of 35,000 saw. him fail for the second time.
“Bruce is shattered,” said his wife later. “He’s not used to failure.’
The Caddie team from Bloomfield Hills Country Club took GAM district championship yesterday at Meadowbrook CC with a six-player score of 51L -Individual medal honors Went to John Di’Cicco of Detroit Golf Club and Jim Giroux of Edge-wood. They each posted a 76 and Di’Cicco won in a sudden- death playoff.
Ttillfrh rinid “Thrrr in nothing I	the Oakland HUls
team was John ChrislUuisenrl8-t
The U.S., with Tom O’Hara nd Dyrol Burleson, was expected to have an excellent shot <t the 1,500 meter title in thq okyo Olympics, but may encounter more difficulties than expected.
Simo Vazic of Yugoslavia fan m excellent 3:41 flat in winding >he 1,500 meterj in a dual meet
-	Wth the Bulgarian. nat
•	earn in Ljubljana, Yugoslavia londay. It’s the equivalent of a
" ' ;58 mile.
*	Other events there saw Slavko
'pan of Yugoslavia with an 0:55.9 steeplechase, Vasil Khi-nov of Buigtyja with a 206-10 lammer throw and Roman Le-«k of Yugoslavia with a 16-1 Vi .)ole vault. \ .	* IP
In London, Hardin won the 400 neter hurdles in 50.3;. Jones took the highs in 14 flat; Groth was timed In 1:48.5 and Larra->ee just nipped teammate Ollah , Jassell in 46.2.
But' a 1,600 meter relay team of Cassell, Hardin, Larrabee •rad George‘Kerr was beaten by m English team anchored by -lobMe Brightwell in 3:06.
-	And, if there was any specula^ ‘ion that old age may bp catch-ng up with Formosa’s .C.. K.. Yang, the world record holder .in the dfeaftfilon dispelled it in Toronto. He rolled up 8,087 mints and won seven of the 10 individual events.
The performance was far off da record of 9,121, but Yang, •vent only 21-11 in the broad unqf.
Bonus Baby Rated Top •Soph'
By The Associated Press
Bob Bailey, who last year had a price on his head, his picture all over town and a record that left him suspect, is going straight — to Sophomore of the Year honors.
A $150,000 bonus baby who batted a dismal .228 last season, Bailey continued hte heavy hTt-ting Monday night by slumming a key triple in the eighth inning and a .game-winning single in the ninth that gave the Pittsburgh Pirates a 3-2 victory over the San Francisco Giants.
The two hits lifted Bailey’s average to -.304 and boosted the Pirates into third place in the
tight National League pennant struggle, 4V4 games behind the front-running Philadelphia Phillies and 2V4 lengths behind the Giants.
A vital offensive weapon in the Pirates’ bid to duplicate their I960 vpennant, Bailey has always spoken freely about the pressure applied by the gigantic bonus and his meager accomplishments as a rookie last year i the Pirates nosedived to eighth [dace.
★
TVs forgotten - about the money pretty much,” said the 21-year-old third baseman. “That’s In the past. I used to
: about it a lot. I didn’t runs. He has six. And an extra
be the big failure. I hit 28 home runs at Columbus and 4hat turned my head.
BEAT HIMSELF .
“I thought I would be able to cope with, the major leagues,” he explained- “I thought I would, be able to do the job- But I Mat myself. The chib was going bad and I felt I could help the club best by hitting the ball out of the park..
“That’s where I fouled up. I just should have swung the bat. If ypu hit .228, you got to hit SO home runs*. Maybe 60.”
Bailey doesn’t have 00 home
76 points on his batting average..
Bailey’s key'Ms dropped the Giants , two games behind - the PhillifeS, who were rained out of a game against the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Only- two other games were scheduled, both in the American League. Baltimore rode Milt Pappas’ shutout pitching to a 7-0 victory over the-Los Angeles^ Angels and to within one percentage point or the first-place
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CINCINNATI (AP) - Coach-Dick Sister is enjoying running the .Cincinnati Reds but “Phope and pray” that Manager Fred Hutofiinson recovers and- he ‘can take over again.”: Hutchinson, stricken with a chest cancer, Was released Monday from Christ Hospital where he was confined for a week of tests. But it was n6t announced if the 44-year-old Manager would rejoin the team TQesday night for a doubleheader with the Milwaukee Braves..
* it it.
"The decision- apparently' will be.left to Hutchinson. A club spokesman said Hutch will return when “he says he feels up
to it.” Hutchinson went from the hospital to his suburban home to relax.	j
Sisler, Who has guided the Reds since July 27, also said he didn’t know when Hutch win re-turn..
“As far as I know I’ll still be in charge until he comes hack actively," Sisler said Monday night.	•' ;
FEELING BETTER Sisler said he met with Hutchinson after his release and the' manager told him he’s “feeling a little better.” The Reds have refused to comment on the results of Hutchinson’s examination.
“I just hope he tan shake this
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or at least hell be in comfort,-’ Sisler said of Hutchinson. “That’s-the feeling of everyone I’ye talked to all season.” *
Sisler named Bob Purkey and Jim O^Toole to face the Braves’ Tony Cloninger and Bob Sadow-ski Tuesday night.
it ’ r ir ★	v
Sisler, 43, in his first-rate as manager, of a major league dub* said he was surprised1 when told he would be in charge during Hutch’s absence-
“It’s added to my gray hairs a little, ’but I enjoyed it,” he said. “I knew I had some good coaches to help, me and that the players would give -me eydrys thing they had just like they-do for Hutch.” -	.
“I had a lot of pride tedding it for Huteh.”i .
“But as soqn- as Hutch. is ready, it’sjiis ball club,” said Sisler who managed four years in tite minors and joined the Jtdds in I960.
3-3 RECORD
The Beds have won three and lost three under Sisler.
.The Reds art in third place id the National League, 414 games behind front-running Philadelphia and three games behind San Francisco.
Sisler, an ex-Philadelphia xtar. mid the Reds’	nf
tend defeated Washington 4-2.
Jose Pagan was involved in both San Francisco runs as the Giadts built a 2-0 lead. He beat out a bunt in the fifth inning and eventually stored on Duke Snider’s single. In the sixth he drove in- Tom Haller, who had doubled, with a sacrifice fly.
Bailey then got the Pirates rolling against Bob Bolin, who had a five-hit shutout through seven innings.- After Manny Mota stroked a pinch-hit double with one out' in foe eighth, Bailey slammed bis triple and came home with the tying run on Bill Vlrdon’s single.
CLINCHING HIT
In the ninth, after BUI Mazer-! oski and-Dick Sehpfield had singled, Bailey came up with two rat and poked a grounder up the middle for the clincher.
Pappas, bringing-his record to 10-5, blankpd the Angels on eight hits and did not allow a runner past second base. While he was shutting out Los Angeles for thtf third time this season, the Orioles pounded Bo Belinsky and four successors for 13 hits.'
Dick Brown collected three hits for Baltimore while Brooks, Robinson and Sam Bowens eaeh drove in two runs with a pair of hits.
.The Indians broke a 2-2 tie against the Senators in the fourth when Chico Salmon doubled, Vic DavattHo beat out an infield hit and Billy Moran, followed with a sacrifice fly.' Da* valillo and Dick Howser each collected three hits in a 14-hit attack.
, Dick Donovan, 6-7, got the victery with Luis Tiant’s relief help.
wrong with me physically, butL ■
am mentally mixed up and worried about qualifying Mr Tokyo.” /	rjgK!
The 28-year-old Briton has one more chance to qualify for Bri-» tain’s Olympic squad — by doing well in England’s meet against Poland at London’s White City Stadium Aug. 15.,
Bloomfield Caddie Team GAM Winner
year-old caddie from Rochester. He fired a 79. Other members of the team were John Mallory, Tom Dunseith, Chuck Storm and James Ross. .
Edgewood’s Caddie team took second place with a 515 total and Jackson Country Club was third with 519. ,
On the Edgewood team were Jim Giroux with 76, Bob Bowman, Russ Streeter, Russ Herron, T6m Nakj and Bob Clark,
Monza Track Under New RacingrProgram A new racing .progFam has
begun at the Monza Go-Kart „ I	Speedway 1 o c a t e d at Walton
New YorkYankees. And Clove- ^Hi end	rtmrif
Under new management, Richard Chartiefr and Bill Wilson prizes are being awarded, .for winners in the weekly S. r.-day races.
.Among the'winners last Sunday were: John Korinic Jr., Stock; Dick Harroitn, Stock Lite; AI Frjedenstab, Stock Heavy; Bud Bugger-; B-Stock; Don Rother, B-Open; Don " Class. C; Frank Ryan Jr., Modified and Jack Wilt, B-Limited.
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wrmm

Peking May Be Planning Buildup
Attack	on OS. Ship Start?
By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent The torpedo attack on a U.S. destroyer in the Gulf of Tonkin may bekjust the beginning of an
China’s highly sensitive Luichow Peninsula, across the gulf from North Viet Nam, If there is a link' between this and' the attack on tiie U.S. destroyer Maddox there is a good chance of .jnore incidents.
attempt to hept up the Southeast Asia situation to the danger point. ,
. Something out of the ordinary —perhaps a big military buildup—seems to be going on in Red
Behind these will be a suggestion of political overtones, taking into consideration the presidential election in the United States and a gathering showdown storm within the Communist world.
The Chinese are touchy
about the Tonkin Gulf area. Over the signature of Premier Chou En-lai, the Peking government has'issued warnings to foreign shipping in the area of the Luichow Peninsula, the southernmost point of militarily important Kwang-tung Province.
f The warning were in the form of new regulations fin* foreign shipping, concerned principally with the 15-mjle-wide strait separating Red China’s Hainan • Island from Luichow Peninsula on the mainland.
the Tune of 'Yanl^^poodle'
wmmmmmmmmmm.
I
Singsong With Fillmore
The regulations laid down ex-traordinary precautions against the possibility of prying foreign eyes. . v .t Ships using the strait were forbidden to ilse radar or photographic or survey. equipment. They must use the middle of the strait, cruising only in strictly described areas,* and must immediately obey any query or challenge.
STRICT REGULATIONS Ships were not permltted lo enter the strait fronj either side without 48 hours prior notice and must give complete details: marking, identification, nationality, tonnage, cargo, destiha-1 tion and the like. Ships' failing to obey thlse regulations will be stopped and searched, Red China said.
point inside Communist North Viet Nam, where it connects with a ,coastal Tonkin Road.
IMPORTANT ROUTE This road was used to Ho Chi Minh in* his war the French a decade probably remains an supply route for Ho in to tnvelopi South Viet
Invelvemeat of the 7th Fleet in shooting incidents in Southeast Asian waters could apply heat to generate a new' situation* which could play upon the political uncertainties both ia the East and West in the next few months.
By DICK WEST WASHINGTON OJPD - Time, Incf" which can get pretty gay when it wants to, has brought out a new re-cord album called “Sing -Along With v Millard Fillmore."
It Is a collection of pkl
campaign songs.
Which is the nex{ best thing to a collection of old campaign speeches.
Anyone who longs for the good old dhys should hear;a few bars of. “Get on the Baft with Taft” or “Keep Cool and Keep Coolidge.” It u a sure, cure for nostalgia.
. I ‘particularly admired the Coolidge song, the lyrics of which contain sbme rather ingenious rhymes. Consider, for instance, this couplet:
"A lot of politicians cannot do a tiling but knock,
“But Calvin Coolidge is a man of action and not talk."
I don’t, know what sort of political impact that song had,
but it probahjv set poetry back several generatj
In my judgment, it cl topped the campaign of 1900^ whep a song writer in the Me-1 Kinley camp rhymed “band"' with “Unde Sam."
. Rhyming “knock” with “talk” was nothing, however, compared to the challenge facing the lyricist who wrote the words for the W}iig Party’s 1844 campaign song.
TOUGH ASSIGNMENT It was his task to make, something rhyme with the vk$ presidential candidate, whose name was Theodore Freling-huysen. I think he solved, the problem very neatly. To the tune of “Old Dan Tucker,” be wrote: ■	-
“Hurrah, hurrah, the country’s risln”
“Hairy Clay and FreUng-huysen.”	>
Needless to say, they lost. Unfortunately, some of the truly Inspirational numbers in our legacy of campaign songs ' were crowded put of the album.
One notable omission was “Hie General Harrison Log Cabin March & Quick Step."
The orders, issued by the Peking Council of State Jupe suggest extreme vigilance ,ln the area.
s. Also left out were such chappy compositions as "J Think We’ve Get Another Washingtahapd Wilson Is His Name," “Letfi^Lmd Landon ia the White Hodse!* and “Where There’s a Wfflkte There’s a Way."
Nor does the album include “The Calvin Coolidge Mard^to the White House,” whose coi poser add the same song to fj opposition party under thetii .“The John W. Davis March u the White House.”
The Luichow Peninsula %nd Kwangtung Province could have vast importance with rqgariJp Red China's future plans for Southeast Asia:
A 600-mile military Kighw/y snakes from Canton down into the peninsula and then over to a
Incidents could cause acrimonious debate in the United States which might add to the apprehensions of Asians. * ;
But there .is another side to the coin. If the Soviet Communists are determined to call a world Qommunist meeting to condemn the course and policies of Chinese Communism, heating up the .Southeast Asia situation to the danger point could present the Russians with a dilemma.	.	-
In the eyes of the world Communists, this would be no time to turn tiie Soviet back on Communist-ruled nations.
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There is, howevet, no point in quibbling- over what is not in the album. Ten songs were recorded and they are enough to make the album richly benumbing.
Apart from their entertainment value, the revival of these old campaign songs serves as an educational purpose.
They help explain the American political system. They help us understand why there were so many write-ins.
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HOLLYWOOD (IV—A report on actress Joan Crawford was expected today from thrpe respiratory specialists.
The 56-year-old film star, was hospitalized Friday for the third tone in two months. Officials at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital said riie had a recurrence of pneumonia,-but that her condition was good.
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‘KITTY’ TO 'MARRY RANCHER — Actress Amanda Blake, “Kitty” on the "Gunsmoke” show, signs for a marriage license In Santa Monica, Cal., yesterday. With her is her future husband, Jason Day," a randier from Scottsdale, Ariz. .
'Tax Car Parts From Canada'
WASHINGTON (API -Tfie government was urged by Rep-Henry C. Schadeberg, R-Wis.„ today to impose countervailing duties on Canadian motgr-ve-hicle parts imported, .into the UJ}. undo- subsidy from the Canadian government.
•	• ♦ • g
■ Schadeberg said in a prepared Nouse speech that three of the plants of Modine' Manufacturing Co., Racine, Wis., may close “If this Canadian scheme is not halted” and more than 1,000 of Modine’s workers stand ty lose their jobs.
* *
The Canadian government’s giving of a “bounty or grant" to Canadian manuteturers, Schadeberg said, enables them to compete illegally and unfairly with U.S. makers. REPRESENT8JMANDATE
Schadeberg said this represents a mandate to the Treasury Department to kvy an addition-si duty equal to the amount of such subsidy.
*	★ ■
“This action, clearly called
for by US. statute, would enable American vehicle parts producers to operate to fair .And open competition with their Canadian counterparts," Schadeberg -said.
U S*. Airmen Confer on Safety Problems
MONTGOMERY, Alt. (AP) — The fifth annual worldwide U S. Air Force safety congress opens today *it Maxwell Air Force Base.
Hie, two-day seminar . deals with five areas of operation. It is,being attended by'top military and civilian safety experts, Who will hold discussions on nuclear safety, conventional explosives, aircraft, missile and ground safety.
Citizens Unit Being Formed for Goldwa
LANSING (AP)—Groundwork was laid Monday for establishment of a Michigan “Citizens for Goldwater-Miller”.-organization foe the 1964 election. 1
Apparently destined to serve as,the state’s campaign machinery for Sen. Barry- Gold-water and William Miller — the Republican presidential and-vice presidential nominees—the group wiH have chairmen to each of the state’s 19 Congressional districts.
Creighton Holden of St. Clair, who headed the “GoldwAter-for-President” organization in Michigan, is- expected to be named state chairman for Gold-water’s campaign,
Ty Gillespie, a Dow Chemical Co. executive, probably will serve as director-of “Citizens for Goldwater-MiUer."
ATTEND MEETING
In addition to. Holden and Gillespie, the meeting was attended by Leonard Schoenherr, former treasurer on the “Draft Goldwater" drive, and Raymond Plank, both of Ludtog-ton; Lee Boothby, a former Constitutional Convention delegate and candidate for the State Senate from Niles, and Mrs. Joanne Smith of Hillsdale, among others. ~
By BOB THOMAS AP Mtvie-Televisteo Writer HOLLYWOOD- Film histifry sometimes. get$ a rerun, just like television shows, and now we see/Universal once again opening ita gates to tOW-tets. '• • -It happened years ago when sage « Carl Latmmit charged visitor*
25 cents s head to stand behind glass walls and watch movies being made.
Now the smart ,young bosses of Universal are replaying the old i theme in modern terms.
This time the tab is $2.50,1 half-price for kids, for a tram ride through the movieland wonders. It’s a pilot tor a future, j project which will include a luxury hotel and amusement park, sort of a Disneyland north. ,
* * *
Haying seen the inside of a studio, I assigned two operatives, age 16 and 12, to recover the tpurT Here is their dispatch: Our Visit to Universal City By Nancy and Janet Thomas We loaded onto a three-car tram which was pretty and .pink with a fringe on top. Our hostess told us to remain seated and take as many photos as we wanted, except that they couldn’t be used for commercial { purposes. That was all right because we didn’t bring a camera. THROUGH GATE The tram went through the gate and the hostess started pointing out where the producers, writers and stars have their offices. We saw Cary Grant’s and Gene Kelly’s parking spaces, ’but their cars weren’t there.
We drove down a street lined with sound stages and- with dressing rooms that belonged to Leslie Caron, Ethel Merman and Sandra Dee.
Next we drove down a street that had houses with no backs. One of them was built in 1924 for “Uncle Tom’s Cabin." Gee, it’s almost as old as daddy. Another house they used to “Leave it to Beaver.” Then there was one that appeared in movies of Deanna Durbin. Who’s Deanna Durbin?	-
We passed through lots of streets — New York, Chinatown, Paris, Denver, etc. Then a Western street
which dates back to Tom 'Mix, I Who’s Tom Mix?
1 We passed a bunch of shacks | where “To Kill a Mockingbird” was,filmed. There wis a little boy bouncing on a hobby horse to front of one. Our hostess said he belonged to one of tip security polios. It seems that somebody has to live to University City so it can legally be a city.
• it *. yaft 7 The tram stopped on top of a trill where they had Visitors’ Village. There were covered wagons, old .cars* a saloon, an animal cage, and a bouncing car far front of a moving background. Refreshments, too. Lost 1 cent in tfae lemonade machine.
On w&went, past the motel to "Psycho,” the set of “McHale's Navy" a war scene for “Stoto-pense Theater,” a European street, and lots of other places. Then we were taken downstairs in the new commissary where we saw a makeup demonstration, rushes of ’the. new filpas, miniature sets, and postcards of t!)e studio.
WWW
It was fun.. Let’s do it again.
Director Out of Film
DUBLIN, Ireland UF> - John Ford, 69-year-old Hollywood di-j. rector, has stepped out of the1 film "Young Cassidy” because of a streptococci throat which failed, to respond to treatment. Ford is flying home to California today. His replacement has not beep named.'

Dairy Queen
•••«#«••«••••• LIVE |T UP! enjoy a ROYAL TREATS
Dairy Queen

y
F«Y‘s Daily Queen
FmNm Troll at Maple R4. Watted Laka
Stephen's Dairy Queen
560* M59 (Highland M.)
(2 Block. lest ---at Pontiac Airport)
Dawn's Dairy Qnea*
" . 1525 Baldwin J.
<2 Blocka N. of Walton)
5S90 MIS
(2 Blocks off Dial# Hwy.)
MclHillin's Dairy Qneen
4710 Dixie Highway (Nextto AMi Drayton Nairn
Mehlberq's Dairy Qaaaa
2186 Orchard U.
_	Koago Harhor
"fttiriW
£>REA DAIRY QUEENS Clarkston Dairy Qneen Forsythe Dairy Qiaai
Joslyn Dairy Qntli
lotlyn at Firtt St.
Union Laka Dairy Qneen
Union Laka Shopping Cantor ‘
%


THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1964
uwr mm
Morse Leading Fight for Reduction,
Senate May Vole on Aid Cuts Today
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Wayne Morse said the Senate may begin voting today on his proposals to cut over 1500 million froni the $9,460,700,000 foreign aid authorization bill.
The Oregon Democrat, leading off toe fight against the House-passed pleasure, called the foreign aid program “a colossal failure as. a deterrent to Communism" to a 2ft hour speech Monday. . \ '
He told newsmen he planned a batch of other amendments aimed at “reforming" foreign aid policies and would seek roll pall votes on them later in the week. But he said he was ready for voting on his money-cutting proposals this afternoon.
Whether voting could start ap- , The Senate Foreign Relations parently depends on the speed I Committee./ recommended ihe with which the Senate acts on $3,516,700,000 authorization re-
an interest equalisation 'measure that -temporarily sidetracked the foreign aid bill Monday. *
. W ★	■
The tax measure would levy an excise on purchases of foreign securities by Americans. It is designed jto reduce' the drain of U.S. funds to overseas countries.
Morse condemned “handing out money and weapons with the idea they will promote political stability, or keep friendly governments in power, or prop up a bloated military establishment iq a foreign country.”
quested by President Johnson be reduced by only $50 million. The House has'approved the authorization by the full amount asked for but in acting on the. follow-up •appropriations Mil — which provides the funds for the program while the authorisations sets only the celling —cut foreign aid tq $3,316,572,400. ft- *	★
The chances "of an adjournment of Conness before the Democratic national convention in Atlantic City, N.J., opening Aug. 24, may rest on how fast it-clears foreign aid.

Jacoby on Bridge
JACOBY
By OSWALD JACOBY . Experts are much luck 1 p r than -average players. If you don’t think so, look, hqw unlucky Southwas.
He ruffed the opening dub. - One. trump lead picked up | both adverse ’ trumps and South led ‘■ten of diamonds.
The finesse ■lost to East’s P|dng and back came the jack of hearts. South had to lose three heart tricks and his contract.
A really expert South would not have run' into all tost bad luck. He could have done nothing against a diamond opening, but .West had bade a normal king of clubs lead.
This gave South a chance to Insure his contract by means of an avoidance play- South should have duegrded a diamond on the king of clubs.
Then, after trumps were
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drawn, South could play ace and queen of diamonds from dummy.-
East whould cover with the king, whereupon South would ruff and enter dummy with a trump in order to get rid oT one losing heart
He would lose two hearts later on, but two hearts and one other trick aren't enough to set a’four spade contract.
In case Westfield the diamond king, expept South would still make the hand. He would discard one heart on the diamond queen. West would take the dia-mond king and one more trick rer the same total of three.
Teen Crushed to Death
MOUNT PLEASANT TAP)— Charles Verdon, 17, of' Farwell, was crushed to death Monday when the tractor on which he was riding with his father, Harry Verdon, overturned on an embankment about 10 miles of here. The father was not injured.
BERRY'S WORLD
U. SriPurchasesj, 630,000 Cases ■ of Pitted Cherries
^JVAsktNqrciN TAP) *-i. The Agriculture Department said Monday it bought 630,000, cases of canned red tart pitted cherries—many of\ (hem in-Michigan. ■ \
The purchase\ls to. bolster producer priges opJ this year’s record cherry cropland to supply toe national school lunch program, the department said.
The largest purchase'from a single bidder was 82,000\%ases from-the F and M Packink Co. of Traverse City.
Purchases were made from 26 bidders at prices radging from $3.91 to $4-05 a case. Lowest prices were paid in big producing and processing centers in Michigan and highest prices, in areas of smaller production.
The department said the -purchase represents about 5.5 servings per child taking part in the lunch program.
r CA8RY
Among married women, larger proportion of - college graduates than high school graduates hold jobs, according to the Bureau of the Census.
By V- T. Hamlin
MMRAL TENDENCIES: D»y wh«n • HOME APPLIANCE receivM national #♦-
In	
	
	

THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1964

MARKETS
The following are top prices covering sake of locally grown produce by growers and add by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. ,
Moderate Trading
Steels, Motors Drop
Nab Suspects in Shooting
Produce
N&W YORK . (AP) - Steels and motors declined as the stock market took a fairly sharp loss early this afternoon in moderately active trading.
Losses of fractions' to a point or so prevailed among most key
> * i..-
The list was mixed and sluggish in early trading but the pace picked up as the steels and motors began to slide.
Analysts said the motors were upset by uncertainty in regard to the selection of possible “targets” by the United Auto Work-
ers in labor contract negotia-
Since the auto industry is steel’s best customer, the steels — which have shown signs of strength lately on talk of a possible price increase — declined in sympathy. .*•' y *• The over-all list backtracked pretty generally with the exception of utilities which were firm, playing the usual defensive role.
The Associated Press average of 00 stocks at noon was off 1.3 at 317.9 with industrials off 11, rails off LI and utilities unchanged.
Aside from the auto labor situation, brokers said the Street also was concerned dbout Washington developments regarding Southeast Asia.
AMERICAN EXCHANGE Prices were mixed ii> moderate trading on the American Stock Exchange. Tel-A-Sign was a heavily traded fractional gain-
Tough' Cabbie OK; Shot Twice in Head
Corporate bonds were mixed. Mdfct U.S. Government bonds were unchanged although a few -short-maturity bonds edged higher.
Carrot*, dot. beh*.
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C»tory, PmhL dz. . eSwy. PMCal, crt.................I
CdUry, whit*, dz. ................ IJt
CMtry, whit*, crt.	dM
Com, Sweat, baa .
Cucumber, dill. Vt CucumbOr*. pick I*
The New York Stock Exchange
NEW YORK (UPI) - Two suspects have been arrested in the bizarre shooting of a cab driver who chased his assailants and then refused medical attention despite two bullet wounds in the head One of the men admitted the Shooting, police said.
The cab driver, Charles Newfield, 55, . was shot twice ; in the head with a .22 caliber pistol when he refused to give two holdup men his money early yesterday.
- Newfield, a 250-pound ex-policeman, chased his assailants until police caujght up with him. He was taken to Mary Immaculate Hospital-'but decided he didn’t Want to stay. ' •
He went back to a police station where he had left his belongings and police persuaded him1 to go to another hospital,’ where the bullet fragments were removed.
One of the suspects, James E. 'Johnson, 21, was picked up late last night and admitted the shooting, police sa|d.
He named Marvin E. Grin-nage.also Jl, as his accomplice, police said, qnd Grinnage was arrested today.'
Weak Spots Show in Futures Market
CHICAGO (A — The grain futures market developed some weak spots today after the broad advances of the previous session and prices wereiBtxed in early transactions on the Board of Trade.
At the end *of the first hour wheat was IV* to 2 cents a bushel lower, September - new grade $140%; com % lower to % higher, September $1.14%; oats % higher to . % lower, September 63% cents; rye % to % lower, September $1.25; soybeans % to % tower, August $2-49%.
Grain Prices
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Savings Rise No Indication
Spending Curb
By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW Y6RK -A buildup to savings is reported this summer. This reverses the trend earlier in the year. And it adds a new chapter, however brief it may prove to be, to' the business and government’s hardy whodunit: What will the Ameri-
i consumer with his money?
Retail sales DAWSON are still rising. The American consumer isn’t pinching pennies yet. The total of personal incomes keeps growing and collectively he has more to spend. So he is spending a little more. Also, federal income’ tax rates are lower and he has more to spend. So he’s spending a little more of that.

HMHHH
By ROGER E. SPEARS Q) “I am (5 years old with just enough to get by. I would like to put $3,000 into some good stocks. Can yen recommend two that pay a good dividend? A friend recommended Revete Raceway. What do you think of it?” / iff.
A) Revere Raceway operates a dog track in Massachusetts and is generally Considered to. be a well-managed* enterprise. But there is an element of speculation in all race truck stocks because of the very nature of their business and the constant pressure fop higher taxes.
Revere Raceway sells to yield 6.7 per cent. That yield alone indicates, that the market considers there is risk involved, which you cannot possibly afford.
I suggest instead United Gas, yielding 4J .per cent, and 111 S. Rubber preferred offered on the same basis.
Q) “Would you explain what is meant by ’adjusted to reflect Additional shares.’ Does it npan Oat the price has lowered to reflect the I have never seen explained hi your column would appreciate your aa-J. ML
A) When a company increases its* stock outstanding by means of a stock split or stock dividend only, the analyst towers proportionately the earnings, dividends, and price recorded previous to the action taken.
Let me give you an example. Stock “A” on July 1 paid a 25 per cent stock dividend. We divide the earnings,. dividend an4 price previous to that date by 125, which “adjusts” for the stock dividend. It is . necessary to do tilts'for comparative purposes since a split or stock dividend increases the amount of common outstanding; without adding to or diminishing a stockholder’s proportionate ownership — and brings in no new capital.
(Copyright ISM)
News in Brief
The home of Lester Brown, 432 S. Paddock, was burglarised over the weekend. A TV set
lSw .: *0J TS;j ftj fcj JMled at $100, and a woman’s
coat valued at $40, were taken.
A portable TV set and a portable record player were taken from 030 Arthur over the weekend. The $200 theft was re ported by Donne Jean BdL
MOM’S Rummage: Thursday, 9-12. Indianwood and Baldwin.
—edv.
Lodge Calendar
i *m ioi* |m + » •
W M W	V* f
The Regular Wednesday night meeting of Waterford Aerie No. 2007, Fraternal Order of Eagles, scheduled tor August 5th, has been canceled due to the National Convention. Duane O. Johnson, Sec. !	—adv.
But in the first weeks after the tax cut, hip extra dollars seemed to be Iplng largely toward trimming his debt toad. This is a kind of savings in itself. Charge accounts and other forms! of personal short-term debt shrunk a bit. And while the consumer was paying his bills, his savings accounts in various institutions were either not growing at all or at a noticeably reduced rate.
Thai sales of many big-ticket items, like autos and household appliances, were healthier than in recent years. The'taking on of new instalment credit to finance such sales was noted. ACHIEVING PURPOSE From this, government and some corporate economists decided that .the tax - cut was achieving its avowed purpose, spurring economic growth. People were baying, so industry could produce, and expand to produce more.	. *
But now the savings institutions report that the savings rate it increasing again — and this time without the stimulus of any new increase in interest rates on savingst Having settled their more nagging bills, some Americans apparently are putting'away more of their in-, creased take-home pay.
Wallace Hits tC. Stench'
Redistricting PI ea Made 1o Legislature
That* still, leaves money enough in the country to raise the total of retail sales. And the outlook for fall business is good, most merchants agree.
Manufacturers hfve been more inspired by the tax cuts * depreciation allowances. Their spending for expansion and modernization increases with each new report. .And most of them have the sales and profits gains to back up their, optimism for the future.
NO DRAG	jfc
Savings by consumers, so long as total spending'isn’t cut, is no drag in itself on tits economy.
The funds pouring into the institutions are available for the financing of the growth which industry is starting or planning.
This is vital to the economic advances which is the "goal of government and business alike. Business spending, however, is mostly for projects that take time to materialize. Consumer spending is felt almost immediately.
The present moderate rise In the rate of savings isn’t worrying many economists. In fact, more were worriedJest the consumers would g0 <on a spending spree, overheating the economy and bringing on a boom that would traditionally lead to a bust.
This summer’s concern with putting a little more aside for future use, therefore, may affect the timetable of economic growth e bit, but few would call It unhealthy or a sign of switch from confidence to more caution.
Business Notes
Hariy J. Woodman, president ! the Michigan Credit Union League, has been named general chairman of the Great Lakes Consumer Conference to be held in Detroit Sept.ll/,
Woodman, who fives at 405 Gateway, Waterford. Township, is general manager of the GMTC Employees Federal Credit Union.	, " \	‘
He will head the third in a series of regional consumer conferences sponsored by"thePresi-
Interests.
Jerry Hamlin, has opened a barber shop, at 5275 Dixie, Waterford Township, neXt to Dixie Floral. The shop is air-conditioned.
Howard H. Kehrl, 3070 S. Millerway, Bloomfield Township, has been appointed amintant chief- engineer In, charge of chassis, body and sheet metal design and development for Oidsmobile Division at Lansing.
Presently divisional manager of quality control $lt Chevrolet Division, Kehrl has been with General Motors since 1950.
He is a graduate of Notre Dame University and be attended Massachusetts -’Institute of Technology fat a year on a Sloan Fellowship in tadustrial
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Gov. George C. Wallace coupled a plea for congressional re-districting today with an angry, attack on what he called “the repulsive stench” in Washington.
He told members of the Alabama Legislature meeting in special session that. It is, their .duty to divide the state Into new congressional districts. But he emphasized' that big call to the session was not prompted by “fear of the federal court system.” -
A three-judge federal court has said it will redistript the state unless the legislature does it before the 1906 elections.
Wallace, in a prepared speech, made no mention of the fact that he summoned the legislature at this time to consider redistricting legislation In the face of -a growing Republican threat to unseat some of the Democratic congressmen in the state at-large election in November.	'
LESSEN CHANCES?
But there was hope within the congressional. delegation that passage of a redistricting bill would lessen GOP chances.
No redistricting bill' has been enacted since Alabaqga lost one House feat because of the 1960 census. In the absence of district lines, the congressmen are elected.statewide-
Wallace urged the legislature to join other states in petitioning for a constitutional amendment to rifimfy the Supreme Court’s population-^-only decision affecting legislative apportionment.
Walhtoe reviewed his recently abandoned presidential campaign and what he'called his battle to “the preservation of constitutional government, our Judeo-Christian moral and ethical values, and our Anglo-Saxon tradition of justice and jurisprudence.’’ .
Governor Politicks in 14th District
DETROIT (AP)-Gov. George Romney spent Monday night in political fence • building in Wayne County.
He met first with Wayne County Republican candidates for office, then*addressed an estimated 450 at an East Side ’ rally sponsored by the Republican campaign' organization on the 14th District.
Romney is campaigning to reelection to a new two-year term as chief executive. He is opposed within the GOP by farmer State Senator George Higgins, a Femdale auto dealer.
The 14tfar Republican campaign organization is led by Jack Matheus, who also is leader of the Republican Citizens Group which opposes Richard Durant as chairman of the 14th District Republican Committee. NOT INVITED
Durant and several Of his followers, however, attended the reception for ROjfnney by Matheus’ organization, Matheus said they had not beeh invited.
Matheus said Romney , was warmly received and In answer to questions regarding the presidential candidacy of Sen. Burry Goidwater, R-Ariz., said he was encouraging the state party to support the entire GOP ticket, top to’bottom. \
Postmaster Puzzle: Pigeon on Porch.
The Pontiac postmaster got a pigeon last night. Evidently somebody has lost a white Pigeon with the Identification NTA 03 C 309 Imprinted on its Mg band.
\ Postmaster William W. Donaldson of 256 Chippewp found the pigeon last night parched on his back port*.
In .anybody has information that would help in returning the plg*wn\ to its rightful owner, Postmaster Donaldson would like to be contacted.
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Year Aoo 1044 High 1044 urn . 1043 High
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MU lS3 117.1 14M 144.7* 171J UM
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THE PONTIAC BRESS/TUESDAV,
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AUGUST, 4, 1
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Arraignment * Is Set Aside
Mall Workers Request Exam in lowtr Court
Circuit Court arraignment of three Pontiac Mali Montgomery Ward store employes accused of being in a theft ring was. set azide yesterday when&e trio* asked for examination in a lower court.
The request- was granted by Judge Philip Pratt, who ordered the three remanded bade to the court of Waterford Township Justice John McGrath.
The men had earlier waived the examination stage before Judge McGrath, bat contended they were now represented by attorneys and wanted the hearing. Each is charged with , larceny in a building.
They are Lloyd H. Hearns, 43, of 38 Lexington; Robert N. Schroyer, 29, of 4866 Circle, Wa-terford Township; and Jerome T. Pomeroy, 26, of 16401 Glastonbury, Detroit. .
★..L# it
Police arrested them a week
ago following a lengthy investigation over merchandise missing froiha the store. Three other employes have been arrested on the same charge and are awaiting Justice court arraignment.
The six nee accused of taking part in a ring which-is said to haye taken some $l,5to worth of merchandise. AH are department managers or salesmen.
Vandals Damage 3 Pontiac Schools
It was reported late yesterday that vandals damaged three Pontiac schools over the weekend.
The .side doors of Malklm School, 50Q E. Walton, * smashed. The estimated damage was $180.
Three windows of Cottage Street School were broken with rocks causing 175 damage.
A coffee pot ya* taken from Bethune School, "164 Lake St., after vandals had broken windows to get in. .
• Bloomfield Mailing Addrtit a Adjacent is Ckrytler Exp. <t..s»us»as.a.sj>*w«ss.
OX MmMMmmi MWM flj
F-A-S-T
MIMEOGRAPH SERVICE Churches—Schools Groups
CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES
55 Oakland Ave... FE 4-9591
For Waterford Twp. Officials
Statement on Recall Move
Samuel A., Ferguson, William G. Beal and Maynard J. Peters, leaders of a campaign to recall two Waterford Township officials, issued the following statement today:
In regard to the petitions to recall James Seeterlin and John Coleman, some clarifications must be made.
This move is nonpartisan and has been instituted only in defense of the rights and* privileges of til township voters ami taxpayers.
The ' charges made have been based"ea action taken* by Seeterlin and Coleman and do not In any way reflect the political afffliatteM or goals of any individuals or groups, This actionjhas been termed ‘political blackmail” by .Col*1 man. We can assure Coleman that a “fearful and neurotic minority," as he calls us, raising its vdipe in protest is not to be considered political blackmail by any stretch of the imagination; but simply a group of upset citizens demonstrating
their disapproval of the administrative policies of the township board. ''
Coleman’s unfortunate-accusation of Loren Anderson, township trustee, indicates his apparent lack of respect for his associate because of party affiliations.	i
timated costs • of furnishings, $24,000. It might also be added here that the contract award for library construction was in s iof $60,000 ,or .approximately $62,000.	/,
Anderson must be commended for his willingness to publicly show concern for the citizens’ welfare in the township. However, it must be stated here that Anderson has in no way been instrumental in the move to recall Seeterlin and Coleman.
The reasons for the charges on the library are as follows: The costs to the township stated by Mr. Seeterlin were: $19,666 township tax money, $30,006 federal grant, sales tax refund $11,000, bringing the total to approximately $60,000.
Seeterlin neglects to motion the following facts: operational costs for one year, $26,800, es-
These projected costs.add up to a, total of $112,800. Deducting the $30,000 federal grant this leaves a total cost to. the taxpayers of Waterford Township at $82,800.
The final question on this fibject wouki be: Cad the town-snip board Justify the expenditure of these -funds when the township voters voted against a (library) proposal and when there is such a crying need for funds in other areas of township government?
It has been, noted recently that we have lost some of our police officers because of low wages, and Chief Stokes finds little response to his present recruiting because -of low wages, Wouldn't this moqey better be spent in this department?
Service Is Thursday for Catholic Pastor
The second charge set forth in the recall petitions has previously been reported thus:* “They violated the trust of foe people of Waterford. Township by the transfer of title to tee. Lake Oakland Heights Water “ ‘ m to be included in a Central Water System.”
ORION TOWNSHIP - Pontifical Requiem High Mass for Rev. R.. Vincent. Myrick, 55-year-old pastor of St. Joseph's Catholic Church, will be sung at 11 a.m. Tbursday in tee church by Most Rev. John F. Dearden, Archbishop of Detroit diocese.
Interment will follow in the priest’s plot of Hedy Sepulchre Cemetpry, Southfield.
Fetter Myrick; pastor of the church for the past stx years, died unexpectedly yesterday of a heart attack.
Solemn Requiem High Mass will be 0:30 a.m.' Thursday in the church.
Rosaries will be recited In the rectory it 8 p.m. today, -by the Altar Society, and 8 p.m. tomorrow in the church, by Council No. 4714, Knights, of Columbus, and the Holy Name Society. . 3 P.M. SERVICE The body win be transferred from the rectory t» the church in a 3 p.m. service tomorrow.
Fatter Myrick was active in athletic events for area young people and was founding pastor ef the. local Knights of Columbus Council.
Prior to taking a position if St. Joseph's he held a five-year post as> pastor of St. Peter’s Catholic Church in Blissfield.
He was former Michigan State chaplain, for the American Le-gion, chaplain in tee Army during WWII and the first Catholic chaplain of the Civfl Conservation CorpsUfMichigan.
CRASH IN WILDS .
In 1962*Father Myrick, along with Father Lambert LaVoy of Detroit, made national headlines when they crashed in a small plane in the wilds of British Columbia and survived without food and water for three days.
Ordained Jane 9, 191$, he studied theology at Meant St Mary’s, Ohio, and attended Sacred Heart Seminary, Detroit.
He was assistant pastor of several Detroit churches. Including Holy Name, Assump-
supervision preferred ...
The supervision of investments calls for trained minds. That's why sp mefny investors turn 1o~Mu-'tuai,Vunds —Tihe supervisors of these funds are
professionals who.se life work is the study of values.
And did you know that many Mutual funds have plans to oid yov to invest as little^or os much as you wish of income — on a systematic basis!
V hy not phone or write u*today for full detail*?
INVESTMENT BROKERS AND COUNSELORS
FE 2-9117
818 COMMUNITY NATIONAL 8ANK BLDG.
IMMEDIATE QUOTATION SERVICE
Out FaeHitiM	From Coat* to Coot*
tion Grotto, St. Theresa's, and ~t, Matthew’s.
Father Myrick was born Watervliet where he attended public schools prior to his seminary training.
SURVIVORS
Surviving are his mother, Mrs. Mary Myrick, and a sister, Mrs. Charles Herman, both of Kalamazoo.
Memorial contributions can be made to the St. Vincent DePaul Fund.,
New Fee Schedule OK'd in Waterford
Waterford Township Board members last ngiht approved a* revised permit fee schedule reflecting, a general upward adjustment.
The new schedule becomes effective August lO. It supercedes the previous one adopted 1953.'
Purpose of the reviskmwas to meet Increasing expenses in the electrical department, accordihg to Township Supervisor James E. Seeterlin. -
Under the previous schedule, fees often were below the -cost of making inspections, he added.
The new minimum inspection fee for both residential and commercial dwellings to $4. It had been $2.50.
$1,500 Pa mages Are Estimated in House Fire
Fite at 3:54 a.m. today caused an estimated1 $ljto0 damage to a house and contents at 2526-Williams, Waterford Township, occupied by Janies Bowden.
Cause of tee blaze' to b e i n investigated.
The flre'started in a bedroom of the singie-sotry frame house and resulted in an estamated damage of $1,000 to the building and $500 to contents.
Bofafon, 45, who was sitting in a car outside the house when firemen arrived, later was arrested by police on a charge of drunk and disorderly.
He faces an arraignment oh the charge today.
Important News ..sfor
Pontiac Investors!
Walling, Lerchen A Co. now brinp you foe Dow-Jones Closing Averages, plus dosing prices on sixty-six leading stocks, daily, at 3:50 P.M. and 6:25 P.M., wvsr Radio Station WPON, Pontiac ... 1460 on your dial.
For ths latest, up-to-ths minute news from Wall Streit, tuns in today and svsryday.
Watling, Lerchen & Co.
Nm Ytrk m
This is not a correct report, The following ig a true quote from the petition;'
Kb) twit ho did hi fact violate tec trust of the people of Waterford Township by the transfer of certain real estate and monies contrary to the best Interest of the eleetors of the township and contrary to tow.”
Building Work ala Standstill
Reinforced concrete construction work to at a standstill,in southeast Michigan today, and no negotiations are scheduled between striking building tradesmen and contractors.
The strike was called yesterday by tee 500-man Reinforced Steel Local 416 of Detroit, an affiliate of the Bridge,. Structural and Ornamental Iron Workers union. . ■ *
Biggest local project affected is the enclosing of the Clinton River drain at two potato: a small section it Perry and Water and another east of the Grand Trank Railroad tracks south of Orchard Lake Blvd.
The delay will hold up paving of West Wide Track, which could be further set back when labor contracts with paving firms expire Sept. L
Worjt-on the $30-million south-ast Macomb County d r a i n program, which resumed last week following a seven week laborers strike, is also halted along with a new General tors plant at Saginaw.
ALSO AFFECTED A number of other heavy construction projects throughout the Detroit area in the re?
Deaths jn Pontiac, Neighboring Areas
JOSEPH J. TAUNT
Requiem Miss for Joseph F. Taunt, 76, of 2354 Montroyal Waterford Township, will be at 9:30 h.m. Thursday in St. Michael Catholic jfl| * rial in Mt. Hope. Cemetery.
The Rosary will be recited at 7 p.m. tomorrow.in the Donel-son-Johns Funeral Home.
Mr. Taunt,.a retired pipe fitter at Pontijfc Motor Division, died yesterday after a long illness. Hie was a member of St. Michael Church.
Surviving are his wife, Martha M,; two sons, Joseph L.
ron T. Heurtevise of Milford, I Kidd of Highland, Mrs. Vernon and a sister. *	• Doha and 'Mrs. LaVern Long,
!	, . ] both of Milford, Mrs. Glen Wa-
. MRS."CLYDE MICHAEL	ters of Milan, Mrs. Leslie Boyce ,
PH I. LAPEER TOWNSHIP—Serv- j of Durand, Misses Peggy, Bren- ’ lurch 'with hu-1 *ce -ior Mrs. Clyde (Marion) j da and Nancy Themm, all of ■ Michael, .74, of 88 Michael will Fenton; and a brother, be 1:30,pin. tomorrow at the Milken Funeral Home, Utica. I Burial will be id-Utica]
Cemetery. ■
Mrs. Michael died Sunday af-1 ter a lengthy'illness.
Surviving besides her husband are two sons, Frank and Walter, both of New Baltimore; a daughter, Mildred of Lapeer; and
Wearing • on Township Tax Appeal
of Poiitoo, and dime. E. Of K,S2?2l"!IS?2?2
Phoenix'; Ariz.; eight grandchildren; andlhtiHg^-
DAV1D R. OGDEN
^Service for David R. Ogden, ’72, of 575 E. Madison will be at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the De-Witt C. Davis Funelal Home with burial in Pprry Mount Park Cemetery.
Mr. Ogden, an employe of Pontiac Motor, Division, died
of Utica,- Eustace Chapoton of Boyne .City, H. James Oiapoton of Romeo, and Clarence Chapoton of Mount Clemens.
MRS. REU&EN F. OWENS
FARMINGTON - Service for Mrs. Reuben F. (Caroline G.) Owens, 74, of 330223 W. 14 Mile will be 4 p.m. tomorrow at Spencer J. Heeney Funeral Home. Cremation will be in White
yesterday after'a seven-month - G“pet Memorial Cemetery,
illness.	¥?/•	'	...	.	.
1 Mrs. Owens died yesterday after h two-month illness.
She was i member of the
inforced- concrete installation
Surviving, are a sister, Mrs. Ethel Nierstheimer of Pontiac; and p brother, Irtvin of Washington!
FRED E. COYKENDALL NOVI - Service for Fred E.
stage are also affected.
Coykendall, 80, of Novi wijL be
Regis O’Brien, business agent for Local 426, Mid no new negotiations have been requested by representatives of the-Asset-flntlnn ^ General Contractors of Detroit and the Micteigui Chapter of Contractors.
This charge does not single out the Lake Oakland Heights system. It has been found that the funds and properties of at toast six self-contained water systems in the township have been involved in'this transfer.
He explained the strike was approved by local members Subday on the expiration of a 90-day extension of a previous contract which died May 1.
10:30 a.m. tomorrow, at Spencer 4. Heeney Funeral Home, Farmington. Burial will be In Rural HUl Cemetery, Northville.;
Mr. Coykendall died Sunday after a three-year illness. ’. Surviving are his wife, Angie ; two sons, Keith J. of South Lyon and Fred W. of Pontiac; a daughter, Mrs. Allen Shaw of Nigeria, Africa; and seven grandchildren. -
It may bear some investigation by the’ users of some of these other systems as to the disposition oil their properties and escrow held In trust.
It has bean mild teat the people initiating this recall move are against progress in the community. Nothing could be further from the truth-It to unfortunate that an action of this type must be undertaken to convince the township admin-
istrators that the people of the township are dissatisfied with their methods and apparent unconcern for the wishes 'of the voters.. .
The township board, no doubt, has progress in mind when they look into suite things as townshipwide garbage collection, rezoning, township park and suoh other items of development, but the old chicken and the egg question has a plate here.
Any properly operated business projects its needs, and then investigates its financial capabilities. Progress to then made, based on necessity first and financial capabilities second.
Premature progress can be expensive tq tee taxpayers of any ares. And while progress must toe made or an area will become stagqant, it must be made carefully* and with full consideration to all facets of the community.
Big Turnout Expected for C. of C. Event
A big turnout is expected at Pontiac Country Club tomorrow for, the'annual summer meeting of. the Pontiac Area Chamber ofCommerce.
Some 425 tickets fave been sold so far for the outing, which gets underway at 9:90 a.m., according to Max ’Adams, manager of the chamber.
Headlining the evening entertainment bill is Mark Russell, nationally known night-
0. Hurtuvise, 67, of 316 N. Main will be 11 a.m. Thursday at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home. Burial will follow in West Highland Cemetery. .
Mr, Hurtuvise, a retired mechanic,V died yesterday of a heart attack. ■„	, f ; .
He was a member of Ernest Oldenburg Post No. 216, American Legion.
Surviving are a brother, By-
Washington, D.C.
Russell also headlined last year’s program.
Back for the third straight year to act as master of ceremonies and preside over the awarding of door prizes to Sidney Yudain, editor and publisher of Roll Coll, the newspaper of capitol hill in Washington, D.C.
ALL-DAY EVENT The all-day event will include golfing, lunch, dinner and eh-tertainment. Dinner music will, be provided by a combo from
First Church of Christ Scientist and Farmington Chapter. No 239, Order of the Eastern Star.
Suryiving besides her husband are two sons, Virgil R, of Royal Oak and William J. of North: ville; two daughters, Mrs. Day-ton Graham fend Mrs. Clyde Graham, both of Farmington; a brother; a sister; and 12 grandchildren.	''
DAN 0. HURTUVISE MILFORD — Service for Dan
Stpte Tax Commission hearing will be held at 11 a d. Monday at the County Service Center on a tax appeal bjr Farmington Township.
The appeal could set a precedent that would trim the tax revenues of 10 Oakland County school districts by -nearly $1 -million. ‘
Farmington Township has appealed its 1964 lax allocation, alleging that the uniform rale of taxation was not followed by the County Tax Allocation Board when it split the 15-mill statutory tax levy between, schools, townships and County government.
The a p p e a 1 questions the added rate or variable millage panted Farmington Public. Schoola. Similar variable mill-ages were allowed nine other local school districts including Pontiac.
RICHARD F. THEMM ROSE TOWNSHIP - Service for Richard F. Themm. 33, of 7441 Tlpoico Lake will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Richardaon-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will follow in Highland Cemetery, ■ -Mr. Themm, a driver for the Wolverine Trucking Co., died yesterday in a swimming mishap in Hartland Township.
Surviving are his wife,. Joan; two sons, Robert and Harold, both' at home; five 'daughters, Veronica, Carlo, Rita, Barbara and Bonnie, all at home; and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Themm of Fenton. l„ Also eight sisters, Mrs. John

If the township's appeal were granted, Pontiac might lose $500,000 from its-variable rate of $1.40 per $1,000 state equalized valuation levied in t h e city.	’ >
Robert Lt Purnell, tax commission chairman, will preside at Monday’s hearthg.
A process has been developed for sterilizing food before canning. It to claimed to result in better, preservation of flavor and appearance.
Dixie Negro Registration Up
ATLANTA, Ga. W> — The number of Negroes registered to vote hi tee South has increased by 551,838 dulng the past two years, according to the Southern Regional Council
The council reports that 1,937,962 Negroes are registered to vote in 11 southern states. Southern white registration is 13,800*000.
The council estimated that 38,6 per cent of southern Negroes who met registration qualifications have been placed oq the voting polls.
By states, the percentage is :\Mississippi, 6.7; Georgia, 39.1; Tennessee, 67.2; Alabama, 21.6; Virginia, 27.7; Arkansas, 41.5; Florida, 51.1; Louisiana, 31.6; North Carolina, 45; South Carolina, 34.2; and Texas, 57.7.
Death Notices
(RICHMOND), ___________ ..
Colorado, age Mi l>*lov«d:*i ..
Captain Chatter Catani star dttar of Albert E. Richmond; dear nitca of Mrs. Florence O'Toole. Drove- '
side service will be MM Thurs-
jpry__________
- Ernest Morris, Mrs. Mormon Lag-go, and A. John Church; daar sla-
grandchlldran. Funeral service w M . held Wednesday August f at g.m. a) the Sparke-Grlma Furor
CLINTON, AUGUST l, IMA RUTH A.,, an Ennest, Whitt LakO Township; ago Mi baMuod wtta at MH-Hard J. Clinton,- dOOr sister oI Mrs.
t Otnoison Johns Funeral Home. Informant In Wttartard Center Cemetery. (Suggested visit-
Tickets are $10 and are available at the chamber of commerce office in the Riker Building at West Huron and Wayne.
2 Motto Saginaw St Pontiac, Michigan FE 2-9274
Cash and finances are not a matter of concern to some ... to others they, are. We have a complete-range of services and extended payments are availablje, if necessary.
Outstanding in Pontiac for Service, Facilities Thoughtful Service :	-
46 Williams'Street	f E_^5641
I sl and 2nd
HOME MORTGAGE LOANS
811,000 to -5,000
Mcujuie-
tom

.Without obligation, see and talk with Mr. Merlac^osa or Mr. Buckner, who have been loaning money to hundreds" of people in Pontiac during the past 40 -years. A It our borrowers-will testify to receiving fair, honest, end courteous trestroent.(Do not take • chance, dealing with strangely or flytey-oight lenders).
||/p* *	When you deal here, you receive the full amount of
W U mm year lout in cashnt once. Nb papers to sign until the
nothing to
Aeftbut
Ouh/f
1 dosed. No charge for inspection, appraisal or survey. No charge for abstract, title search or title insurance,
Borrow from us to consolidate your debts, to pay ott the balance yon owp oh your contract, to p|jr taxes, to make home repairs or improvements, or for any other good purpose. See us today.
SMALL	fZ---—--------
Monthly PaymenU / VO» ^ndBlickner
FREE
Credit Life Insurance
-M.VC
7
D—6
wr
THE PONTIA^fiES& TUESDAY. AUGUST 4, 1964
Death Mqfe
COYKENOALL. AUGUST ' 31 WS4, ' rREOET Novi Convatoacant Homo,
■ ' Novi; ago * *0; beloved husband of -Anglo I. Caykondall; dear MMr of Mri. Alton (Marguerite) Show. Koltti J. and rood W. Coykondoll;
. MM survived by sevon orondcWt-Oroo. Funeral sorvica win be held
• GRAHAM. AUGUST 2. 1004. GAYLE ANN. 2100 Cost Columbia. Dans Villa, Michigan; ago 12; beloved daughter,of Mr. and Mrs, Norman H. Grahaml dear. slater ot Janice Marie Graham. Funeral service 1 Will Bo IwW Wednesday, August 5 at l.RJit W tor*S0Oncer J. Heaney ’Funeral Hama, uni North Farm-
HANSON, OLOF I
Dewey Fritu also survived tor seven grandchild ran. Funeral service Was hold Nils morning at 10 a.m.,et St. Mary's Church, Milford.
' Arrangements snore by the Vosu-Lynch Funorol Hama.
HURTOVISB, AUGUST I, 1044, DAN 0„ ns North Main Strost, MIHordi ago S7i doer brother ot Mrs. Allda Childers and Byron f. Heurtevlse. Funeral ssrvlea will be hoM Thurs-
ssr&n
Jbwii AUGUST 1 m Stirling Avtmi mother or Harrlai klkv^oulsa
Mildrad (Elvle)
service will bo ------ .
August 5 at IS a.m. at
a Jones, Pearl hehfy) Fleming, sssel, and Mrs.
i MK!
Parsley Funeral Home with Rev. Jack H. & Clark officiating. Interment In Oak HIH Cemetery.
----- t;it un m *:W
Visiting hi tom. dally
McClelland, august a, 1*44. FLORA S-, 7341 Globa, OotroH; ago 77; hstoded wife of Matthew McClelland; dear mother el Mrs. Leonard (Mabel) Coats. Mrs. David (Isobell) McWhlrter and James
cMldran. Funeral sarvl
sysrt
_________ __ ____i Funeral Hams.
10050 Jay Road. Datrolt. Interment In Oekvtow Cemetery, Royal . Oak. Arrangements by the Coats Funeral Homo, -Drayton Plains. MOYER. AUGUST 1 HS4, fcURTlt . winflold, lows, formerly at IS Washington Strsat, Pontiac; ago
74;
YrsnL. —	m
brother ot Mrs. Lattto ivorotl) al
S5*Si U&BSSTZ
neral ssrvfe* will be haW wednes-
- _^_Jf VisitIna
______ . s l aJK and T to S BUM
MYRICK, AUGUST t, 1tt4, REV. FATHER R. VINCENT, W AMP CatjaBc Church, 71» Math Lspssr RoOd, Laks Orion; ago SSj botovod son ot Mrs. Maty M. Myrlckrdear brother at Mrs. Cturtos (Dstdsol Harman; else sdrvtvsd by throe iwetwws and ana ntoea. The Altar Society wtH hovo a Ratary at S p.m. Tuesday evening In too rae-
cSncT1#4744 ’snlf’tho Holy Name
f Farttfidn*
Fr. Myrlck will be transform! tram the rectory to ttwdwrth at a sorvica canductod by OaanMtgrJ
olemn Requler I by Archblsho
■mmstceiB
the Rev. Fr. Lambert M. LeVoy and Sub Dae car Rev.. Fr. Eemard Plening at jl ajw. Thursday morning. The #rmonwlll be preached by Fr. RlSwrd Haney, interment tm made In the Priests' Plot
aru
Hay a
OObKit, AUGUST • ■*, 15*4, .DAVlb R„ 575 Cast Madison Street; age 72; dssr brother of Mrs. Ethel Ntorsttwtmsr add trwto Ogden. Pik neral service wlll ba fuitfWsdiu*-day, August 5 at 2 a-t"- at the DeWItt C. Davis FUWtto.-FPto interment to Parry -Mount tark Cdmetary.
Graham. Mrs. Clyde (MM) H ham, Virall 1. and WIMtom John Owens; deor sister_ot Mrs. toll* Hem SllvarntE End Ralph Richardson; alto survived by 11 grandchildren. Funeral service will bo hold Wodnooday, August f at 4 OJn. at ttu Spencer J. Ilssnsy Funeral Home, 23720 North Forming-ton Rood. Farmington with Roodor WIMtam Linden wfletoting. Cre-m at ion at white Chapel Cemetery,
_____________i
ta(JnT,. AU&ust j. m jqsbph
2M4 Mount Royol, . Wotortord
brother ot Mrs, is; etto survived by
Charles Kearns; — ------------ to
eight grandchildren. Recitation ot
b'HMTMMM
Dohn,
vom	RIEE I
, Martin. Paggy, Brandi Themm. Funeral
iwral jArvtee—win dwuPmiguat 5 at -ttichardson-Bird f
’neral Homo, Minoru, wim new, Ellery. J. Boadway otllciatlngv Interment in Highland Cemetery.
WALTER. AUGUST 2, 1*44. CLAR-ENCE G-. air Perry Read. Atlas.
- Michigan; stoo Hi beloved huehanS of Etta Welter; dear father of Mrs. Loo Sherwood. Mrs. Donald Aravestoan, Mrs. Richard Couture, Charles, Bon, Clifford and Lsslis
- iPr>r— ■—i
grandchildren and four gratMraad-SiUdran. Funeral service win be hold Thursday. August 4 At 1a.m. at tha'HIII Funeral Home, 11723 (Mllh Saginaw, Grand Blanc, with
,, MR,-. tjguls Efflngsr officietmg. Interment to Goodrich Cemetery.
Cir<stftwh	1
WE WISH TO THANK ALL OUR
movement ot ot
MICHIGAN CREDIT
* COUNSELORS m pDntiac state bank bldg.
-• FE 8-0454
Ponttec’s oldest and largest budget assistance company._________
Pay Off Your Bills: .
—without • than-Payments tow at MO week - -Protect your lob end credit
tHl regular WVdnes&AV
' night MMtMdnMR mooting of dtof “o.-1
LOSE WEIGHT1 SAFELY Dox-A-Dtot Tobtotl. Only to ot SRnmo EigEtors Drugs.
m
WITH
-BOX REPLIES— At M a. m. today there wen replies at The Frees Office in the
11, II, », S3, 34, 3$,
a, n, a, a, 57, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, 70, n, 75, n, si, a, a, a, si,
Ml, lCt^HS, 108, 111, 1U.
Fsufij Dlricttos t
C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME Kstgo Harbor. Fh. SttUOO
COftfs
FUNERAL HOME
DRAYTON PLAINS- OR -2-77W
D. E. PuTsley'
FUNERAL. HOME Ihvolld Car Sarvlco FI 4-1111
DONlLSON-JOHNS
FUNERAL HOME
HUNTOON
FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac tor H years 7V Oakland Ayt,_FE 1-01W
SPARKS-GRIFFIN 7
... .
FE SdMI
V00RHEES-SIPLE
...AL HOME Fi M Estobllshod Over 40 Yaars-
CiawlBry lets
1 LOT AT OAKLAND HILU MEM-•rial Gordons, Novi. S3M. GR
4-5170.__________________
ITCEMETERY LOTl, GARDEN OP
4 GRAVE LOTS - 1400 ry Mount Pork Camoto13 FE *tm otter 4 a-m.
4-PIECI COMM
41. Avellsblo
w'aCpS
CALL TlM kL*S Aarty^. wf‘
DAINTY	.
Manamtoaa. PE 5-7SM.	, --
6n and after tHI*' BffmW.
4, 1H4, 1 will not Re mainsMii tor any debts ton traded <by any other than myoott. Laurence J. Timm, 3111	1
LARGE LEMON AND ' WHITE -
please phone OE 3-2634.
LOST1 * * 3 * * * _ In DOWNTOWN MNTlAi email black, tin "
2-5254, NA 7-tltl. \
LOST IN UL, c“ port*
UMT _
Welmorener,' tomato. . Thin, t ».. toattior cotier. Reward M». 47H137. LOST:' SMALL CLEAR PLASTIC coin purse containing change and Hoys. Rewesd. ■ tkNHTf otter 5-LdtT: VAil' O# oUkUEl. VICIN-Ity Grand Trunk depot and Huron St., Reward. M7-5273.
■............ . Douglas St. Reward.
574-12)3.
LOtti 'ftRdWH STRAIGHT CAN^, ~ Oakland Fork. Reward. FE 2-37*8.
•TILL LOST — MASK AND WHITE cot. Soon by sovorol to Oonoral Hosahol oroo. Reword. 3354344,
2 MEN PART TIME
4	to 5 evenings per weak, guar-antsed 5200 per mo., calr between
5	end 7, 651-4424.
S MEN TO REPLACE 3 MEN WHO won't work, FE 2-3S73.
3 REAL ESTATE SALES PEOPLE. Men or women tor new and used homes. Will train. Cell 473-1273.
Soto* opportunity for college, men behften 23 end 30 Miffing a now Uno 01 Mlnnosoto Mining and
-----r-j-j— Co. buotooss mas
compensation plan a r v commissions vance, full 3M MR ■ bo looking for career opportunity. Equal opportunity orngtoyor. T. R. Hilo, BR 37MB,	_______j_________
is Clothes Shop, Ito N. SOalnew.
AFTER 6 P.M. PART-TIME $200
rsXM
- AGENTS-C0LLECT0RS
AGES 21 TO 45. PERMANENT POSITION. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. WE TRAIN YOU. POTENTIAL EARNINGS. FIRST YEAR, S7,0E0 OR' MORE. FRINGE ‘ BENEFITS. GOOD CAR ‘NECESSARY. MR. POTBURY - FE 5-4450, 730 A-M. TO It NOON. 7
ARC
WELDERS
' $2.78 PER HOUR y\
Structural STmI Layout Men $3.15 Psr Hour
PAID VACATIONS AND HOLIDAYS GROUP INSURANCE
PARAGON BRIDGE AND STEEL
CCL
Architectural Draftsmen
At toast 4 years dxperlence on commercial prelects. Send resume to CIEtotd N, Wright Assoclatee Architects. 4044 W. Maple Ed. Blr-' mlngham.
ARE . YOU WILLING TO WORK for $240 per week? I will personally train Ambitious men. Cpli CecH Male «t 473-1244-
ASPHALT DISCOUNT CO. LOW pricer at 2 year guarantee. Free estimates. FE 5-7457. ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTSMEN Position vacancies exist —
1 for commercial
if educational end
professional background to .C
IW Second Avenue Detroit. Michigan 41232 woodward 34t0S
ARBJtiOUl 22-457
ntanad, you k«M It at Rama, wa pay ail axpanset. Goad retirement and prottHhartag plan as weir as guaranteed salary, commissions and bonus. See Mr. Dwyer ot Savoy Motel, 120 S. Telegraph, Tuaa.. Aug. » 34 p.m. . ,
AUTO FAETS STORE MACHINE man, txpariancad only, top wagas, steady. Mr. Magtd. LI J-1700 or call 402-3)40 alter 7 p.m,
AUTO*RE - CONDITIONING MfN wanted, year round ensilUmint, good wagm. Call 334-0771. barber, jouEnEyman to RUN •hop, present owner will Mil er give option to buy. Fenton MA ♦-2S11 or MA 7-0744,	-
BENCH HANDS, DIE MAlfgRS. OP-portunlty to gat Into- steady shop apaclallztoo |n stolntoos Hail tool-Ing. All banaHts pakt. MB-TW*.
BODY MAN, UWYBR'S. COLLI-slan, Kaago Harbor.
BOYS, MUST Bi ll - TOP WAGES, goad tips. Apply R Blot Star Drlva-to. 1
bus my wanted Bob Bull
Curb
Supervisors
1 25 to 41 M 0 curb on the night shift. Ras-
____ ... parlance necessary. —
Drlvt-ln experience pretorrad. Call Ml A77B4.
Designer
Engineer
of
, Electrical Controls
Koltanbar
Engineering Company
1455 MAPLE CLAWSON, MICHIGAN PHONEl 544-2211
Contact Mr. Brawn. Mr. Furr,’ Mr. DMtorcurto, Mr. Hallman, Mr. Iswiders
Designers
DETAILERS BODY FIXTURES .Tools and Gouges MACHINES LONG PROGRAM , OVERTIME TIME •ENGINEERING
. 734 E. LEWISTON, FEENDALE
Designers
Detailers
Checkers
Far body fixtures. Apply new. lav-, oral openings available tor qual-Iflod personnel. Opportunities for advancement. Overtime—Long pro-grama. Contact; Mr. Brown, Mr. Furr, Mr. DIMorturk), Mr. Halt-man, or Mr. Sdundars.
Koltanbar Eng. Co.
*50 MAPLE AND ISIS MAPLE CLAWSON 544-22)1
Designers and oetailErs £68
dies and flxturaa. Apply at 1775 Orchard Lake Road, Pontiac.
DIE LEADER. SMALL STAMPING plant, pdhNiaanl pssltton, II 1-1S75
DIECAST, DIEMAKER
See Mr, K*nt, Grand Stool • and 'Manufacturing Ca., 14 Mila and Craeka, Clawson.
DISSATISFIED With Factory Work?
Can u
1 3 mors ambitious married
to ssrvics estobllshod customers on a protected routs, Excaltont training with wrlttsn guaranies to start. Rsport to Michigan Stats Employ-msnt Ssrvks IG Ooklond Wsdnot-doy at 4 g.m. Ask tor Mr, Bryan.
Display
Man
Wt hove on txcEllant opportunity for 0 man with some DISPLAY ExpErienc* or education to assist our Display Manager in' bit phases of his work. Many company benefits. Apply personnel Department between 9:30 a.m. ond 9:00 p.m;. daily. .	•
Montgomery
Ward
PONTIAC MALL
DEiveer wiaov paet 1 time
Afternoons 2-5, estobllshod drug store routs. In Pgntlac. Must bs ’ good driver. Hits Photo lncu 471 W. Milwaukee near Third Ava„ Dstrelt.	'
DRIVER SALESMAN
Guaranteed salary apd ftlngt benefits. No Invastmant raqulrad. If. you das Ire good income, steady work and top tKUrlty, call Jack Ralph, FE 2-4417 or call In parson
MILLS BAKERiY
An Eaual Opportunity Co.
~ Education r“
COUNSELOR
WANTED
to represent Electronics Institute ot Technology In this areal Excellent pay I Dignified, rows
1 Loads furnished. Ago
bXrrler
ELECTRONICS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY . DETROIT I, MICH.
Needs man for sales and sorties. 23*7 Elizabeth Lake Rd„ Pontiac.
ENERGETIC SALESMAN
Lang fitabllshed vocational school M||ibN|UU|k Mid energetic representative Ithed. Cer noc
L Box t The Pontiac Press.
Help WoeM Melg »
MCGREGOR MFG. CORP.
2715 W. Maple Rd. Troy, Mien. (Between Crooks and Cooiidgei Ml 4-3S4I
ENGINE LATHE OPERATOR Must be experienced In machining hard alleys. Pontiac Pram las 47.
EXPERIENCED'
AH around heating man. Apply hi person only, Caat’ Hooting k Cooi-Ing Co.. 463 S. Saginaw. EXPERIENCED ARC WELDERS WANTED. 1341 Lyndop A VO., Dstrelt.
EXPERIENCED TREE TRIMMER.
S451 Perry Lake Rdv CIsNmon. EXPERIENCED TRUCK .MtCHANj. k, awn Mala, only quel Med need apply. SS4 Franklin Read. EXPERIENCED TREE TRIMMER ■ between the ogas ot 3544, needed by firm aatoMihad 43 years — Steady smbloymant for right man. Ml 4-44M.
EXPERIENCED YARD MAN TO work In auto wracking yard, references required Kercheval Auto Parts, Oatreit. VA 2-7231. experienced Das station at-
tsndant. 4B73 Orchard Loks Rd.
. Field
Representative
outside collections. Car' and expanses furnished by company, — Must bs High School GrMMts. Ctofigs 'Training In BusaMSlM-ntoWrstton hoiph ...................
FURNACE MAN, EXPERIENCED
furnAce mEn, INSTALLERS AND

______________ O'Brien Hooting, 371 Voorholt, FE 2-27)7.
aJw^TYTITOW^Tn^iNDA^
wonted, over II yssrs St t$t. Am , Ply 37347 W. IB Mils, Southfield.
GAS STATION SHIFT MANAGER.
afternoons. Must bs exserianesd en 1 tuns ups. broket, ole, 'Goad pay. Cookie's runoco. Telegraph and
Mania Roads. _____ ■
GENERAL MECHANIC SCAR dealership. Mm, Experience
GENERAL
MECHANIC
Must have common eat a* taels. GM man preferred. Phene dTMBtf Ask for Jim, Syvlca Manager. .
oooo carEenYIrI WlfM bkY-eut ’ experience, no ethers need oppy.^fop wsges^yesr-round work,
GRINDER HAlib! SUll*ACE ID* AND 00. AFFLY 155 N. ROCHESTER RD-. CLAWSON.
GROOM TO TAKE CARE OF SAO-dto horses, goad wages, board and room, 4 days a week, iHITS W. 14 Mile Reed.
HIGH SCHOOL GEAbUATE$ AND college students, part and full tlms" work, FE 2-3473-
HORSE ’FARM MANAGER — SAL^ ary plus private apartment on. premises lncluded.1634424.
IF YOU WOULD Bi SATISFIED. ot an average of *2.50 per hour to start,, rapid advancamant In Sates Raid of home products, call v UL 2-1067 aitor 4 am._
Interested in a Change? Tired of Lay-Offs?.
Full Time — Part time openings Need ambitious married nr" —“*■
work. SI3S plus expanses guaranteed, for quellftod man.
*2.70 hourly for part tlmo man . working IS hours or more weakly. Call OR 34505. for personal Inter-
start. PE 5-4240 7-s Mr Intorvlaw. LIFE INSURANCE SALESMAN
FUNDS?
If 10, wt..
portuntties efforsd —JEM Insurance Companies? Rem » you Horn. Cell At Burhtry. hu,.-dsy tnn 3324151, Thursday and ~Friday t»to7.
LOAN AND FINANCE COMPANY needs young man, draft exsmpt to train1 as assistant manager. This * could be a lifetime career tor the right map. Experience not neces sary, willingness to work and atatll ty to toern to more Important See Mr. Hutton at 141 Pontiac State Bank EM*, or Phone FE
work. Days only. Smell shop. Apply 217 Central Ava., Pontiac, between S. Saginaw ond railroad.
MAJOR CORPORATION
HIRING IN 1 DEPARTMENTS
2—Marketing trainees for career —■— Leads. Weekly salary.
meant trainees toward edition end personnel sugar Requires high school edu-ar better with sincere desire ter permanent employment. Far confidential Intorvlaw call 1133532551, ext. 144, 7:34 a.m. till naan. •
MAN -WANTED TO WORK IN
MANAGEMENT TRAINEE^
Da you like to'work with people? Do you Tiave a pleasant personality? if so we would Iks to talk to you about the' Finance Business.
' Those eetoctod trill receive good salary, outstanding employe benefits and the best possible opportunity to advance Info management positions. Must Ra 21-30, drett-sxsmpt end at toast a high school -graduate. Ask ter Mr.- Taylor, LI !■ . ■
MAN Mk air-cDol motDEs. general mechanic and melnton-ence work. Fentlec Press Box 51. MECHANICALLY INCLINED MAN ■■r- •** *	~ *3 warn
tlec Preu Box 44.
NATIONAL CORPORATION -XaE immediate opening tor 3 good men. .If you- quality. Opportunity from 4104 to 1150 per week. Phone for appointment. FE Mill
NEEDED 11 MEN AT ONCE NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
"NEEDED PART-TIME SALES ' , HELP
3 hours per aliening. Guaranteed pay. Far Information cell Mr. Dale, .OR 34733 S p.m. to 7 p.m..	-
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
-Atourad 1140 par weak With effort, *150 per week
Hard Work. U40 per weex ,
No traveling (absolutely) Dependable firm (largest In notion)
- High Income (permanent) • Fer'lntorvtow sppslnlmsnt, phone
SHARP AGGRESSIVE pert or' full time Work. imedletely. MY 34374,
* Office.
j ’.art':'""
‘ Credit Manager
fits. Apply In person only.
FIRESTONE STORE 146 W. Huron
, AN ROUAL OPPORTUNITY ■MPLOYER
Dutboard MECHANIC J
PART-TIME CASHIER.. 4 TO 4 hour*. • night, eettege student pro-ferrsd, apply 722 Oakland, Pontiac.
Permanent—Part-Time or Summer Work
PAINT CHEMIST TO SUPERVISE production of pointed plastic parts, excellent opportunity, all benefits, salary open. Reply, kept confidential. Sand resume to Pontiac .Press
Real Estate Salesman
sEhRAM.1 f2 Vt471.U
Fw oddflobs, Nest side. FE 2-4317, ROCHESTER ROUTE SBRl
come. Cell FE 2-3053 44 *.m. or UL 32to7 after 4 p-m. •
ROOM AND BOARD FOR HANDY! men m. widow's Christian homo.
. Rsply to Pontiac Press Rax 57. ■ k<X/Tf~fXLes. finaEAIaL IS;
dependence for qualified salesman (homo products). Good Income. Ap-pty 15511. Ferry Before )B #.m.
SALESMEN
i»rt
_ FIRE AND CAS-Ihsurance. Can apt
appsmtmsnt. FE 44314.
SALESMAN — LEARN THE S7m-ptp modern trend In INSURANCE SALES, By psetjaftof LIFE. AUTO
HEALTH, AND FIRE INBURANCE
SHOE SALESMAN
Experienced ftttor, permanent position. Apply In person. Hansel end Grater Shop, Birmingham.
SHORT ORDER COOK. GOOD ►aV, paid vacations. Insurance pregrem. Pled Piper Restaurant, 4370 Hloh-
Isnd Rd. FE B4741._____________
SERYICI oEDER wfcltjR, |X-perienced, good pay, pension plan. Immediate opening. Contact Service Manager Bob Borst Lincoln Mercury Inc., 477 s. Woodward,
STORE MANAGER Ladies’ reedy to wear, good salary, commission, toeyrincsXWen-. dertul opportunity. Pontiac t Write Mr. GINin, WjP™*-”
Detroit, or WO 1-342).	________
TOOL MAKER WluiLD AND RE-pelr smell, progressive press dies. Small shop. Stoidy work. Part time retirees considered. Apply . In person, 217 Contra) Avo., Pontiac, bo-. tween 4. Seglnaw and railroad. TOOL AND MACHINE DESIGNERS.
TOOLROOM LATHE OPERATOR
TOOLROOM GRINDER . , HAND
DETROIT BROACH & . MACHINE CO.
TOP NOTCH SALES OROANlfA-Nan has 3 openings $134 per a—| guarantee, apply Sir*
jlvd-Mtod., Twirs, i__
UNUSUAL OPPORtUN
be. pertormlrtg a . needed . service to people fo tnh area. Far interviews, tifiy Bankers Life and Casualty Co., *7340 Southfield Rd., Lathrup Village or cpH EL 7-4477 from 14 a.m. to 4 pm. Please ' ask for Mr. Babich. ____________________
.™-_. ,-iPPLY AL. RHODES, BROKER. 255
WANTED STOCK MAN,* F ULL Him, opportunity for advancement. $85 week to start, liberal benefits. Write Pontiac Frees Box 54 stating qualifications.
Wanted Youno aaan who can
dunes lor - advancamant, give qualifications and references. Rep-* Bonttoc Press, Box 47,	.
TV AND RADIO SERVICE MAN, Bench stork, experienced only. Hod's-TV. FES4112.	,
WE frEib i TIRE CHANGERS ANb 1 delivery men — valid driver's Means*, famlNar with area.
Apply -In person only.
144 W. Huron
YARD MAN WANTED
For lumber yard, experience necessary, apply 7744 Cooley Lake Rd. Union Lake.
Y6UNG MEN, 1325, fOr 6£stau-rsnt sierk, no experience required, lrein quellftod —** m
managers. Good working . <
ATTENTION TOY DEMONSTRATORS
George's Toys and Home Parties havo cpmbined to bring you bettor service,i wide selection of namebrand toys, gifts and novettte* at 24 psr cant discount. Prim awry month. Call lor details.' OR 34564.
HOME PARTIES INC.
RARY SITTER, 34' YBABfc Ok over. Own transportation or live In. ' 6734614.
IMp WEartl Nrt» _	71
^bewarTtoy
DEMONSTRATORS
Thara are many ails with fpwtaatte' claim* sf high Bsrcentsgs. They donT say what you pay out *7 that par can to go. Be fair to yaursatvaa end without obligation calf Etot
THE TOY CHEST
fog manager position available In the Pontiac area. Must Be personable. aggressive end have ability ta daww and train a staff of ceamattc csittultanta. This posl-
i above average gamings
counter girl. Personality
■-feats.
Cleaners, 534 S'

• COUNTER GIRL, NEAT, , Chlet, Telegrep it Dtxte.l CURB GIRLS. MUST Bf OVER'IS top wag**, good ttpe. Apply In person only. Blue Star Drtvp-ln 3043 Updyka.
Department
Managers
Due to our Expansion program, wt need two (2) mature, capable women experienced in managing large departments at loir
l0WS:
CHILDREN'S
WEAR
(flrls 7-14}
• LINGERIE'
’ These are excellent posi-- tions with good potential a nd incentives. Many -company benefits, apply personnel department between 9:30 a.m. and* 9:00 p m. daily.l
Montgomery'
Ward
Dining Room Waitresses
onjoV working wl will train' you k waitrss*. Appllci
■dlatoty or otter August id night shifts avalldiia. benefits, paid vseattoin.
TED'S
WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE ’'
bestRE Live-in baby sitter,'
references rtqulrsd. 4135147 after
6u'e. t6 YH! N#AR COMPLETION of MS* the Pled Piper Restaurant will b* adding on a complete ehHt. Waitresses, lull or port time; curb girls, and kltchan help needed. FE
EXPERIENCED ASSISTANT BOOK keeper, jBdbd Typist, Shut Tim* new, Full Tim* during Tax Season. Stovsns Accounting, 500 N. Pontiac Trallf-W*lled*Lak».
EXPERIENCED WOMAN TO HAN-
■N store. Should be .3545, set-I down, good with customers, I have congenial tempermant.
’ FULL TIME
Greslum Ctomsrs, 605 Oakland
general' HcJuSfcKfcerer.'>ee.'
; lersbly live In. Bkxxnfietd Township ares, must bo nest end clean and lllta children. Own tranaparta-
General Staff Nurse $5,000-$5,600
Position now open for registered nurse Interested In the core of children end Intents. Prater woman between ages of 25-50 who to willing to work afternoon shift and weekends. Exc. fringe benefits. APPLY PERSONNEL OFFICE, OAKLAND COUNTY COUET-HOUSE, 1244 NORTH TELEGRAPH, PONTIAC. 3334751, EXT.
. OR WOMAN IS OR OVER, ural housework, live In, .524 week, *MA 33523. Call ousnlngi^
has the following .positions oeep Dinlngy room ■ waitress, catetena counter lady, carry out soles tody. Free meals, uniforms, Mid vacation* and other benefits. Apply Greenfields Restaurant, 725 t. Hun-ter ()lvd.. Birmingham, betwesn f
HAIRDRESSER, EXPERIENCED, Mr. Thomas's HsirFr*"— “ *4351
I 24 hr*, working
______	... duly. 4BJir. work
Wlhlngnoes to mark to die-
HOUSEKEEPER P56 mStHER-Mss homo. 4 children, Itva-to, references. Ml 7-4421.
JAIL MAtk6H $3,900-14,500
Healthy, Strang, oktor woman 33 55, to supervise woman prisoners
Creator, Oakland County Jell to* Wayne tt.	__________
KEY PUNCH OPERATORS
Ktlley Girl Setvice >
II w. Huron, Beam 14	. 3337747
LADY CAE bElYERj; "JtlAbY, salaried. APPhr 1151 E. Ruttnsr,
L ioAt SECRETARY WANTED,. experience desirable. Call 3314553 ter Interview. ,	•	- -
Ll»N. FOR DOCTORS OFFlEA, DAY wort: and t' eves, approximately 34 hours. MA 6-7544.	_
NEW CALIFORNIA COSMETIC— now Ideas? CammMan basts. 333 ,3745.	, , ’
Z NURSES Alb. PHONE '	4731145
’ NUR1B1 AIOE1, EWST EE feX-
office. Apply In paratoi 11-3, ■< Wednesday August 5, Michigan Employment lacurity Commission, 141 / Oakland Ave. Ina Mr, Dimmitt. PART tlMS WOMAN, AM. AND
Real EstatE Saltsman
d model to s
RECEPTIONIST FOR
^DOCTOR! O
RECEPTIONIST FOR . DOCTORS offict* pert time* evenings* 4-10, MA 6-7544. '
SALES WOMAN,
Experienced. Pul) or part, time. , Tap salary plus, commission. ’Apply
N AGON'S
MIRACLE MILE CENTER
good transportation. Guarantee plus commission. Ball 133-1111 for ap-
Bflamwitfe n__________________•
SHOE SALESWOMAN
Exparlancad fitter, permanent po-attun. Apply to parson. Hanzsl and Gretsl Shop, Birmingham.
steady Employment for re-
STENOGRAPHER, WOMAN WITH general office experience for small office. 704 yoodword Ave., Roch-
STORE MANAGER Ladies' ready, to wear, good sal-, ary, commissi**, Insursncs. wm. derlul opportunity. Pontiac Write MFraittln 14“
Dotroll or WO 1-113).___
TOP SALARY FOR EXPERIENCED cosmetic girl. Gsmral drug. Currant references. Lake Cantor Drug, 23S7 Orchard Lake Rd.
’ luma. No tolling,
'' SALARY .
........... Pontiac area phone ne(
assary. itt-WEL ______ajs.
W Club, 35E t* Saginaw.
■- OA W parlods. i
rr:
o or porter tog. Apply s
WAITRESSES WANTED, FRIDAY Saturday, Sunday nlghta tM*. Mill, Auburn Heights. UL 35333. WAITRESS-WANTED, NO EXPBRi-tnot pecessary, out of actual Bob's Restaurant, Kaago Harbor.
Waitress, days, steady, also
part lima. Moray's Golf and Coun-Club, 22M Union Laka Read,
____ to Pontiac Prttt Box I_____
WARTEb - LADY FOR GENERAL housework, 2 In family, llva-ln. Phono OR 3-7346.
WOMAN WITH BANKING, Fl-nance, or executive secretary experience ta manage dental office. Typing necessary, shorthand de-- slraBle. Write Pontiac *"*'
S3, stating 'UN||toto|M
-WOMAN 6VER 35, 35B TO 173
much needed made to measure girdles, bras, fashion knit dresses and suits oy .world famous Spsncor, -inc. No knocking on doors —Thorough training. Two evenings, three days weekly, car necessary. For details phone FE 44845 or FR B-tl17.	»	-
__i Press 31.
AFRuoiYibNs n6w being Ad-
copied lor hotel and restaurant work, apply at Local 774 Union bfflet, 712 Community National Bank Bldg, • between 14 am. and 3 p.m. Monday Ihreugh Friday.
BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED
ALL RH POSITIVE 14 DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE 14 1. Cato (» a.m.-4 pm.1 FE 44747 CASHIER AND CAR BILLER, WITH bookkeeping experience, fringe benefits and good salary to qualified eppIlcantTXafl Miss Welker tor toaolnlnrunt. LI 31444. Falvay
Motor Seles.
CASHIERS	—CONCi
and jishers. Apply 1-
ucts. Average S2 .hour. Call FE 33053 fromTte 10 a.m.
NOVif NtkfMa At- 900 JKJWL, 100 S. CMS Lake Road. WdlMtan* clerical, mechanical and totwr
PIANO PLAYER. FRIDAY AND Saturday night. Morey's Gelt and Country Clu£. 22to Union Lake Rd.
SeIw HeI^ MeIe FieieIi l-A
TWO FULL TIME SHOE- SALES
Employment Agencies 9
EVELYN EDWARDS
CLRRK;TYFItT .........-5254
Telephone FE 4-0584
24L> E. Huron	■ Suits 4
lEltTECHEEl idlEEb' 10
A FUTURE BY LEARNING
IBM MACHINES ,
Loom IBM key punch, machine operation and wiring. Computer pro-grsftitog. 4 week courses. Free placement service. No money
d°WGENERAL INSTITUTE
22525 Woodward	Fsmdsto
CALL COLLECT
543-9737 IBM TRAINING
Lssrn I BAA, Keypunch, machine operation and wiring, 140) computer ^programming. Mich. State Board of Education approved. Free placement service. Fret parking.
SYSTEMS INSTITUTE
- 4-4304__________ 54)_______
DIESEL ENGINE MECHANICS
*-Bpjjg “ ----------
LEARN TO DRIVE
Chask a-O.k. Driving School's summer rates. Call 547-4405.
SEMI - blESSl TRUCK’ DRIVER training, achodl. Kay Training, uSa Livarnoto, OatronT Ceil-UN 44*4*.
Work WaMrt NMe
Wtrk Wwirt Rab - ’	11
CAJtPtMTBiY WORK
cemEnY .wor? of ALL tip* patio Spaclapy, free estimates. VL . 35516. / ;	■■	■■ 3HJM. , V
CHEF- ty. TEAxy KFWI^
/up AND LIGlft HAULlfrG. FE *5417
FAMILY MAN WANTS IT I AD Y
--- °* ' '
, LIGHT HAULING
ODD JOBS WA*rtlB.r
PE45S15.	....
KINDS.
PLASTERING — AL Meyers. OR 31345.
YOUNG MAN WOULL .
:u4 any kind. OR 377*4.
Wri* INfUiIfrtrtr	IT
2 WOMEN WANT WALL WASHING end houesetosotoa. 4*2-4*63. 17-YEAR-OLO WANTS CHILD CARE Keego ires. 6*32)70.
ANIN6 AND V
.	~ 6*2-6653 *r _______
“IISNSED PRACTICAL
Days I to is hour duly. FE 33334.
—WAflTIB - lAV WORK
FE 37*31
WANTED STEADY IRONING
________FE 34574 ■■	<
WHITE LAB? DESIRES BS?
work. Osod ref. FE 32764 after 5. WILL CARE FOR^2	C^IL*
IeUWei SETEkE-tEHPRw 13
A-l RECLAIMED BRICK, DELIV-sred. 454-1435 * OA S5S41. CEMENT WpRK, FATld1, AFTOfr 5 CHRISTIAN'S RECLAIMED ERICK
tor sal*. 541-1455, Pstrett._
>	, TRu4iLt	~7~
BUILDING PRODUCTS CO.
BUILDERS SUPPLIES '
AND STRUCTURAL STEEL CtMil AND CONCRETE BLOCK
ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN FENS repel red by factory trained man General Printing A Office Supply . CW15 W. Lawrence Street.
Phone FE ‘435St
FLAGPOLE SERVICE, PAINYiNO and repair. 4431711 or OL 37775.. PLUMBING REPAIRS AND ALTBr-. atlons. Fret osllmato*. 4733534.	'
PhiemMii $ TeIMm 17
REMODELING, TAILOEINO AND tor work. Edna Womor. FE 33331 DRESSMAKING, TAILORING AND alteration*. Mrs. Bodell. FE 44B53.
Irtwipln ' 1M
Paint Co", 45 ThoqWs St. Phdh*
RAILR6AD TIES, SOD, PEAT, TOP-•oil, mowing, complete landscap-tng. 682-5812.______________________•
! FOR ELDERLY FOLKS, • home, quiet vlltMU, $154 onth. qimont, Mteh. 1545114.
1-A MOVING SERVICE, REASON-abto rate*. FE.33454, FE 32705. AA MOVING, CAREFUL LbW rates. Equipped. UL 2-3577, 62335)8
Bob's Von Strvlcs''’’*
MOVING AND STORAGE . REASONABLE RATES •
MEtiEg * DtcErEtiEg it
A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR: v Popering. FE34343.
-	^t fAIKTING AND
PAPER HANGING THOMPSON	FE 45354
ERNIE'S SERVICE - PAINTING, decorating and remodeling. 482-4132. EXPERIENCED INTERIOR AN O exterior painting, work guaranteed.
15 year* exporlonce FE 32853._
EXPERT PAINTING, DECORATING, paper removtoa. OR 37354.
HOUSE PAINTING, INTERIOR AND exterior, call after Saturday. FE 24773.	\
PAINTING AND CAULKING - Intorly.axtorior.raaionobl^
5, Free estimates. 3
PAINTING, PAPERING, ^WA-L WASHING, MINOR: REPAIRS.
=--------a- --uoK p1-^—
washing. Tupptr, OR 31041. FAINTINE AND WALL WASHING. No job too small. FE 3440*. ,
HAVE YOUR
RADIO AND TELEVISION REPAIR WORK DONE’WHILE. YOU SHOP	^
Trained service man, pries*. Free tub* testing.
—'	Fanttoc *
Montgomery Ward
CALIFORNIA DRIVE-AWAY
Planning to go waatT Drive one of our sharp late medal can. Wa will , share expenses. ■	' ' .TT'. -
M &M MOTOR SALES
1537 Dixie Hwy. . OR 44301 ( LEAVING SUNbAY AUGUST * PllR Dexter, Missouri through Harrisburg. Returning August II. Pss-x. sengers to share dxpensss. FE Nl^338.	.	_______•
W-M Hstslwy OeeA «
AUCTION SALE EVERY SATVJR-; day at Bku Bird Auction. WS’H buy tornlturs, tools Md appliances. OR 35»47 ot MEIreo* 75155.
CASH FOE FURNITU"XrjM5 "AK pllsncos. 1 piece or houaatol. Pearson's. FE 4-7151.
LET us BUY OR SELL IT FOR YOU. O X F O R D -COMMUNITY * AUCTION. 47335U
Woirttd MIsceIIeheem 30
3-BEDROOM -APARTMENT OR house, 2 children. Can pay ISO of 865 pgr month, OR 3-22t0.
ASSISTANT MANAGER K-MART needs 5-bod room modem homo, untomlalud. within IB miles. 683 -
family ofT'kilU riSMTTS
. rast er option to buy. FE 54403.
■' NEGDED IMMEDIATELY .
Drayton, Waterford, Clarkstan •res*. Reference* SvaNaMa. Will fabto with option to Buy, or will )•*•• by the year, pfoase call ' Mr^ King at OR 31155 anytime
frO FEE RENTAL SERVICE. HAVE Selected tenants, wlfltog to sign leases with sacurtty deposits. Any suburban location. Mr? >lnskl, 626-
OAKLANO . COLLROi STUbEftT ' wlthjritoandifoung child desires
for 3 ytor*. will pay its* per
. Phone Davison Collect. OL
PRONE 682-2211
, 5143	Road
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
- V Mafc.M ALBERT J: RHODES, Broksr
I EE 12306 25« W. IMtftofl PE 5-6711

the ro,\TiAr ruKss. Tuesday, August 'a me
"SMITH"

Grovtland Township. Tarim avail-aWa.
7 ACRES
NaAr 1-75 and Dixie, vary aeanlc and ratling, 14,200. Tanm.
Rolfe K Smith, Realtor
244 5. Telegraph
FI 57040	EVES/ 78 57102
HIITER
TRAM YOUR HOUSETRAILER I
ft® I
paved drive 1
$* INwh 1	4f
Frusjiour
Struble
Suburban Living
SYLVAN VILLAGE.
. CUwmf.... fro*. P9NM ... down or 1)5,MO
DRAYTON PLAINS
tooklng l
WFT. LAKEFRONT — 27-ft. living room with fireplace. large car-poood dining raam, walk-out be so-mam, 5car ..garaga, overlooking
120-FT. WATER FRONTAGE—large 4 rooms and battt, Hit. living raam with flraplaca, full basement, JdoJJoot. now tear. garaga. IlfcMO
KENT
WEST JSIDE - Nice oolh, >1541. carpeted I pleasant kitchen. Fut
aMda trees. New at IMA terms.
DRAYTON AREA — Attractive t mam home with 5 nice bedrooms. 1 both*, roomy kitchen with cabinet sink, recreation room, garage.
Ct
Kent Inc., Realtor
DORRIS.
»—OTUP AMOUR A PROVE at - teaming shade traaa and aver-
CHARM FLU* Is the anly way fa describe this story and W bun-
hSS* akdtS^Ph '!**1*0
it, kitchen with

BARGAIN TRI-LEVEL
2838
side and ..
ur?:
rRI-LEVEL —Owners deei now. Engk aai construction ,ajT]l&
am
yard, jit.900.
SACRIFICE ERICK RANCH Mod-room home with full basement offered at 09*0 tor complete equity. Leceted In trice suburb,
;:ftcgf,aw'i
dMunwraxletbig 01 tnurtg«>a at
HONEYMOON SPECIAL —MS down wM Pews vau Urn ntf* 5-bed tlth Mar
33
JOHNSON
screened In front porch. Texes *71.75. A nice little home far only ' *7,000.
FOUR-EBDROOM, It's, an elder home sltuatod an a large land-seeped lot. Large rooms throughout. 1 bedroom down and 3 up. FuN basement with »N furnace, fleered attic. Cleat to school and
dll newly decorated Inside and o Call us far mare Information.
A. JOHNSON & SONS FE 4-2533
I Tbf I, Ttlagreah ,
KAMPSEN
SONS, REALTORS ,. Huron,-Sines 1925 Phone FE S-Otst Evening call FE 5-5X3
O'NEIL
2 BEAUTY RITE MODELS 2 Open Every Evening 6-8:30 Sunday 3 to 7
"-roam IVb-bdlh Colonial Large Deluxe Ranch
iv#llaole>tor im-:y; gr'wlH due-
Yaur Nt
lelphboi t Don't
YOU*
DRAYTON WOODS
Far the careful- buyer. ,... could aek for lh • home. Three
:. bedrooms,' large	~	-13
a kitchen the li__ - ____ ______
would love and enloy. Attached forage. Alt thw ter onlr “ down elus^cests, or trade
$350 DOWN
■vAlua dosing FHA casts b
Wn pegatn wlfh unflniih___
and- well located Bait side b Full 1|—""" “*
end-well located Be FuN Eemwient, ou h ,ifci condition. Lot us
lerth of Auburn, SMdrpom heme, utl basement. gai conversion heal, -car garage an two nice lots. Ndy W>9*0, SLIM down. Don't »aN.	,	-
PIONEER HIGHLANDS
3-bed ream brick, all. carpeted and In excellent condition. Toromle tile
-----wt, oil heal, screened
■ IVVcer garage, " Sylvan Lake. Often . Inly SOM down an FHA
ter a brand new heme In a prime location. Directions: Dixie Highway to Mil to Clerk Hon Meadows. Mr.-Howard. EM 3-0531.
mode!
> glerm windows to change rlndowa art seeled glass. I beautiful* sunken living tth curved bey window, fly designed kitchen has cupboards built In range

BATEMAN
TRADING
• IS 0JJR BUSINESS D0NELS0N PARK
' NEW 4-BEDROOM; with I full baths, large spacious closets e
Bv Dick Turner
place, attached garage, end basement. Extra large lot. with ptonty of garden space. Only IS years-old and nlce as new. Only *13,500 with

many ether line and sharp and 0 with lust SI,*50
attached .Mai
SILVER LAKE-ESTATES
almost nEwi Custom
, lull basement and garage. Fireplace, off kitchen plus loeos at orm luxe, features. Owners want sale; your gain, their loss. Full price only (20,MO with $2,100 dow plus costs. Make your eppplntmer TODAY. .
CUTE AND COZY
3-BEDROOM BUNGALOW, I us west, of town. Hot water heat, lt_ aw garage and. large lOxIM-loot lot. Budget priced at *4,9*0 with lust M50 down and NO MORTGAGE COSTS Call today,
' OPEN
' Doily 6=30 to 8:30
FURNISHED MODELS- at prices you can afford; starting at *10,500 on your let. Lott’Of custom Ir lures end many plant. MS* < posit# city slrport. Turn left Whittier at Big Bateman sign,
.Sold, Sold, Sold, Sold
family recreation
place and pentllnt ___
end palntod. Gat heat.ahd community water. All. this on a (ergo weeded lot end a short distance to the community beech. C-*-" out Elisabeth LokaTRoad Id craal, follow OPEN signs.
TRADING IS TERRIFIC
LAKE PRIVILEGE*. Share SW-
weU-bullt. tVkcer garage, i mlnum storms and (Cradns, tar cad dir httt. Carpeting drkpet In living ——'
This ham# has rsdacoreted Inside.
Macdday ’Lake" "i113,30a
leges I
EASY 1
CLARK
i Suburban, t
1 Vary nice

K*fei
vanity In 7(1x300.
ISSJf.r
CLARKSTON AREA HOME - Ah tractive with antra large room* U>U an foundation wtth a comfortable and homey livbig room, • TMTjlb iBBomalNif n Later fireplace; ell ceramic bath, walk planned kitchen, bra IM way, attached 3<ar garage, let 75x1*0,
sum	.
MULTIPLE LISTING |
fireplace, large _ h plenty of closet space. Corom-~ ,c tile balh, fxIO-tt. dining room. All elaetersd wane and hardwood floors. Aluminum slprms end ecreeos^ sttedjedgjirjyd^TbU
end located in Pontiac's finest area. Hemes ranging from OIMOO •o OedAOO. The lull price is 11*400
everything to offer. Large carpeted living room 33x12. Three extra large bedrooms (master bedroom 11x14), There Is a real awRhr’ifTW kttenaa. iw Man*. •Ice NnleheO family room, etteehed tw-cer aerige. Large 100x1*0 lawn ooeytlfufty lands csead with etonty
.perch. Them ere two large be rooms, one Is 10x11. Garage, e catlenl location. The full price •11,570 with *1,200 down or yo present home in trade.
NORTHERN HIGH AREA THREE BEDROOMS Large 2-slory home with thre*lergr bedrqpmt, aiiuii dining rear-baths, fuff basement, paved
n___________________
for someone retiring. Prlca M,500, must im c«fi dial.
"rS
____L YOURTI
p Call Us - Multiple Listing Service
GILES
PRRRY PARK -
garage, cieee Northern High School. Full price «MM, terms.
SUMMER AND WINTER RESORT ' You'll find these spc~*~ the comfort a* living In 1 p 4-room bungalow. New t -------------g. FufTbp -
lots. Price 00,500.
EAST SIDE
7-room ben— — ________—------
11x14' dining room. Basement, gas heal, j-dar garaga. win sell V rrada far equity. Full price MAM.
GILES REALTY CO.
E. 5-*i7s	m Baldwin Avi
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
WITH $500 DOWN
SIX-ROOM, ONE-STORY "I
RIM" ranch in new con._____________
Owner plans M move. Built In 1M3, the rmopent 77 windows, -Barns, merMe wtnEew sills, family ream with flraplaca.
(Ml basement, plastered brick siding with 3Vb<ar garage. Let else ft* ■ m. wolf landscaped. Sacrificing tar 124,too —r-Is far Maw our duplication Dapt mist It.
LINCOLN HEIGHTS ERICK Story and • halt, three lovety bedrooms. Vary attractlva kitchen. Pull. Iliad batamanf, gat fumact, community water. Ovtrsfse ivy-car garaga, paved drive. Attractively priced it SIMM and inciudea baau-ttful carpeting In living
NIGHOLIE
EAJIT^SIC
ty roi *275 n
n bungalow. Living i. Kitcnan and wiflT
bedroom bungaldw. LI tg area. Kitchen and . Attached garage, a
IRWIN
WOODS -This gnt It d beautiful ranch type 3-bedroom - sff*. kgrng with attached, garage, full basement, and sltualed on ■ tovaly tarracad and shadad lawn
io exclusive Drayton Woodr -------
Has GIMevnaeMr windows, wood floors, carpeted living dining root? end | w ”
price has- b
salt.
4W PER CENT * bedroom brick r r without |
—fra, automa...
laraba. Moderate	^ _
ind lake oyw-Gi mortgage al 4Vi «r cent Interest. Payments of $91 er njpnth includes faxes and- in-jJfjWS. This home Is priced' to

tl*m<*Onl?r?> the Pontiac F
tto walk 1 *».««.
f living e will bt a large 23-ft. living’ i with a natural brick fireplace i large bedroome (matter bed i YjajJ), e huge 1»R. MWten
baths. The full k
days. Ful 9 down o
M>f^E°£oSSE]
ner of this I
POSSESSION
btuneGHsli
renen nome nes moved to Cell-. fornle end you cpn move rlgM In dftor we dose the sale. Three -MMffOr PEI 2*-ff. living ream. Ivy baths, the full bath It ceramic . tHa, Ptoaeanf cheery kitchen r“-ptonty of cupboard apace. Cove paHo, 2vy-car garaga, largo i ner. Ml, Aluminum storm* , scream. AN In perfect condt price Of*,500 and SSM moves
DO YOU HAVE A HOME TO SELL OR_nML WV* OS A TRY. TWEWfTY"Eiv»H YEARS SERV ING THE PONTIAC ARIA,’ WE HERB LISTINGS IN ALL RESIDENTIAL AREAS. IF WE CAN .HELM YOU IN ANY WAY -PLEASE DON'T HESITATE TO
l. H. BROWN, Raoltor

lot with Lena Lake privileges. FULL PRICE. *3,500.
CITY-NORTH
3-bedroom bungalow, kitchen, I4x-20-fool carpeted living room. Gas FA heal. Large let. 40x210 feet. Home in excellent condition FULLYRICE. 110,600.
■ ■ Y EAST SIDE
FHA TERMS
Attractive 3-bedroom horn*, i ly-sited dining room. Large kitchen. S closets, plus linen closet. Fell basement: Oil FA heat. New T-car garage, welt landscaped tot- CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.
Smith <& Wideman.
REALTORS FE 44S2&
A-l BUYS
WATKINS HILLS
3-bedroom brick, ranch with fu, finished basement, carpeted living room, large 24,x30' attached garage. Gas incinerator, water softener. ’ A lovely home. Offered at *16.990 - *1,700 down. Call today,
Clost to Drayton Plaint
AH whIM aluminum sided 1-bad-room bunco km. Basement, l'Vcar garage. Cloit 10 nOW fk— center. Priced of $10,S00.
(35?
STGXfTS
Best Buys Todcfy
Lika to Liva in Rochester?
New offering locatod'ln the vll lege. This roomy 4-bedrpom Ism ily home I* tost wh*l 'you ,h«vi bean leaking tor containing f tot rooms and both on the. first floor tyltti fireplace, Snd floor 1 largo dormitory bedrooms lust loaded with built-ins. Attractive tSxM recreation room with bar In basement. GAS heat. Attached
room end hall, kitchen, plus 12x 14 dining areo, utility room, got hoot, oftoeboer garage, beautifu landscaped lot. with 100-foot front age. Gnly *11,39* with aaai
Herringtan Hills
Lovely .butt brick rancher, 3 bed rooms, cerpetod living FMRL well planned kitchen and dining area,
Ining ed-off kitchen, ■awwnf ana gas heat.
, level lOOx
IM N,. Oodyke Rd. FE *4165
WARREN STOUT, .Rgoltor
• Multiple Listing' Service Dally til f
IN THE NORTH END Nat large living room dining r,L". Hardwood basement, l'/j-cer ga-street and niCa neigh-three thgro homes
CLARKITON 4 I brick ranch; IVb baths, gi rear porch. ^|^Hvlng
Office Open Sunday I
"BUD'
Brick Btauty
Most attractive 3-bedroerh _
ranch home near 1-7* and MSUO with -attached Bear garage, approximately one aero grounds and featuring Mg 24' living roonr ■2 fireplaces, carpeting and drape: Immaculate kitchen with built in.stove, oven end refrigerator ivy baths, full basement, ponalei
“What’sthe matter witH Cavendish? He looks dead beat and He hasn’t even HAD his vacation yet!-’
4-PEDRO&M LAKE FRONT, WALK-In basement, private tefcc, owner, MA 5-2878. No Sunday cplte.
10 ACRE PARCELS c6RNIR OF WhIM Lake and Ormond Roads. *4,93# M (5,950, 10 par cant down.
LAKE-FRONT LOT AT WATKINS Lake, excellent location, a—I shape. (6,000.	.
AL PAULY, Realtor
6616 Dixit, roar
3-3000	~ Ivtqlnot FIE 3-7444
LeIm PrEfirty
WATERFRONT
• .•«, Land of Plenty
m oerts with 1l*#>
*tXtin)**3 S* *B*"™**' <*••]
10 Woodad Acres
Ju»t off Spshobqw Rood, *5,730 gb
14 Waodod -Acrts
and near tchools and shoppie
(15,000 and (2,000 down.
80 Acib form_____________
North of OrMnVllM, good modi
"
dings, *274
C. PANGUS, Reolty
422 MIH S»„ OftoflvilM -CALL COLLECT	HA 7-
WATTS REAL ESTATE	H/THFI*
19*6 Mii at Said Eads tar -
SYLVAN
6052300	or ' 62S-HM
REALTOR PARTRIDGE
"IS THE EIRD TO >EE"
$*di Mmm Prsgsrty 57
24 x 60 Feet Clear Span -. Commercial Building ’
with frontage on 2 roods In growing community. *9,300, si,
Sl'xllO' LOT, IDEAL FOR RESTAU-
ront or drive.In. Musi toll.----------
FE 2-0437.
20,000 SQUARE FEET Zoned 'Mfg„ in Pontiac
XBWIakefront"
rur fflO executive, this be . Roman' Brick ronch homo, country kitchen with bar king-sited rooms throughout Mod. fireplace,. HHH (IMI 2 baths, 3-car gdrogo, MM trot; perfact Sandy boot Ward's Point (4*400.
EL WOOD REALTY <02-2410 602-0035
bass lAKs RRoHtagR NEAR
Travers* City, SMlOST beautlful
BY OWNER LAXl ORION 3 BED —~n lake front homo. 2-car go-
____l lancad yatit MY >104.	.
COTTAGE WltM LAkR .ACROSS
CALL US FOR
LAKE SUBURBAN AND FARM PROPERTY
CRAWFORD AGENCY
MY.	~	MY 34171
C. 0. BALES
realtor
121* Comntorcd Rd. EM 34109 LAKE FRONT HOMES, NEW ANb
EN'S lAKI. 1 Mltki UGrYM Pontiac, 2,000 Mat canal '— i, room tor 40 cottagoo ir paving, .Moan wafer, .... ting and swimming, bargain tor
. -cSSwfl area, or** Nt Nine land, owner 7914044.
.V LAKE , FRONTS
CRANBERRY LAKE — Estate Size • situated high above lake. I toet on wotor, 4315 Mot deep.
LAKE NEVA -
n subdivision. Fop-
(4,950, *1,6 EASANT L
LAKE - Year-ore ~ homo. platMrod w i, family room, I
Full Price $7,450
l school,
Hi room, full bosomont
“Bud" Nicholie, Realtor
69 Mt. Clemens St.
FE ^1201 .After 6 P.M. FM=3370
> P.M. pMv
AiflErT
Close In-West Side
floor. 3 end both on Ir
Cooley Lake Front
I high Jot
pm beach? 0
M belt. -L
room, ivvcer garage, only, (IS,*00. Terms
PDNTlAc LAKE — Cozy Island cot-logo located on large shady u Feoturss 2 ballrooms. 111 room with fireplace. Large ■ age shod. This property la bU-
REAL ESTATE—INSURAI------
Open 9 M 9- ___________OR 44306
HOME Sifts, 00'XIM', SUNNY



Lake Front Wooded Lots
Just- released tor oaM by own., of Scotch Union Lafcu. Only 11,360 oa„ with easy terms.
LAKELAND AGENCY
* VA and FHA approved brokers 314 N. Pontiac Trail ' WALLED LAKE
LAKE LIVING lake front tot. tor ring lust off the main high-
PANGUS, Realty
,	<22 Mill St., airtanvmo-
1 CALL COLLECT	-
3-Bedr6om Brick Ranch
rage. Paved street.
carpet, kitchen lorn bunt-ins. Full g-nc. roam On the I-car attached go-J—* —
4-BEDROOM RANCH
WATERFORD REALTY
— .Dixit Hwy.' - VonWett Bt D. Bryson Realtor ..	- OR 51
West Suburban
#SLr
rge Hying, room, family; I kitchen. Fuff basomonr c room of ground ievol. trill. 5cor garage. Large
beamed calling and flraplaca, MWKE LIVING, PONTIAC I* front end roar porches on-1 "tot. Lots *795, fig down, closed. 2<*r garage, lots of month. _ewlm, ft*h, boat docks- FE Shade. ^Gcod beach Extra I . 4-4509, OR >119*. Bloch trot, lot, botlw tor only *12,000 or I	'	1	• ■■■■
MOVE IN NOW I
Lake front og wolverine Lake. 2-’ bedroom, room tor 3rd. Walk-out batamanf, lancad yard, shade tr— dock, safe beach. (2,000 dowi land controct, balahc* at *71 m
WARDEN REALTY
434 -w. Huron, Pontiac 33571*7
2-Family Brick
ar*M furnaces.
wiwise, oas tired, each ha«, own utitltMs. Full —„ mptf. I-car garage. *13,900,
Mrmo >
Lake Aiigelus Front
Containing a custom 'built,
Partial basem, tot air. heating t
y -r A * n	• woitors u t. Huron it.
W>s£ries FE M466
SELL. TRADE OR.

*2* down, *25 month. FE 4-4509 OR 5129*. „
UNION LAKE AREA
Wtll-ktpl 2-bedroom home on 1 oig lot, largo living roortb full both, handy kitchen, ho lament with •II fumoct, I-car attached garage S6.93B. Terms.	.
EMBREE & GREGG, Realty
. 1*6* UNION LAKE ROAD Day* EM. 56393 EvOS. EM 342S*
m
earns, tencea iot, 60x193, toko prlvilegos, 412 per cent mortgage, SII.9M lull prlc*. terms.
J.J.J0LL Realty
tm ■-	| hi imi'
Ft 1-34M.
WRIGHT
LAKE LOTS
91 A C E F U L SURROUNDINGS, IDEAL for THAT DREAM - ON I BLACKTOPPfD ROAD. LO “*1 DOWN PAYMENT, BZ TERMS. ALSO HAVg-ty ACRE-
LAKE privileges.
312 Oak lend Avi _	.. .. /E 24141
Eves, after s WATER FRON.
LSke-Orchord Lake M Moddy Li North M L*k*. is **r com da
SSzTOtn’Kr ,”*4-WATER FRONT LOT
W PRICE, *75 C Owner, PA MU
2WACRS CAMPING SITE near. Rapid River, inside th* Au Seuble Stele Forest border, ‘Only *395
with, *10 down and  ---—•*■
ADAMS REALTY* l .fcdTS NEAR Pll
•CoUimercial
t several desirable e
DON WHITE, INC.
>1 Dixie Hwy.
West Huron-Commercial
Good location tor any rommardal us* with 130 iIt. ftqntdl* *n.9““-over 274M Square feet IIn all frontage on f Johnson and •i._
buildings.
Annett Inc... Realtors
M E. Huron	PE 0-0666
Open Evenings and Sunday 1 I
260-FOOT FRONTAGE ON TROUT ‘“*tm. Eloclricily end 25toot troll-*1 property. Northwest o' " ' t. felOO Cash terms. MY
• THUNDER RAY AREA, trailer sites <*' x 150-, down, *9 month. Roach, clubhouse, Bloch Bros.
FE 4-4509, Pit 511
________________51195^	_________
CABIN AND' 20 ACltSS nSaA Lovells, S4.7S0. MY >OT.
H. MUw mSoePn Cabi ly fumtihed. UL >1313. .
ReeertPregerty
BEST OFFER, COTTAGE ON LAKE, beach, dock, close to Detroit, lust decorated, el 7-07*4.
P6l)NO LAKl 15 MlNUtli ?fl
Bros., E 4-4509, QR 5)195.
lefcpitnR Preggrty 51
LAPEER AREA. LAKE FRONT
REALTOR
.Day*. OfWco MO 44141 Eves, and Sundaye-MO 44025
LOW SACRIFICE PRICE, DOWN payment reduced to *730, Woltod Lake frontage, 3 bedrooms, goo furnace, extra bath, Inspect at ---------------- Troll, Phono
ACRE SITES OR MORE II
SYLVAN
I ACRES NEAR MJ9 AND OXBOW likt, 1 mil* from Pontiac ‘ "1 State Park, IS miles from P« good pMc* for taddl* horses modern woti auilf log house
679-0022.
1 JO-FOOT FRONTAGE (IN OlfAY-ton Woods. OR 3-2267.	•
CHOICE 1 ACRE LOTS IN SUB-dlvislon near Oakland University. Alto floor I-7S Interchange. <1,2M -J1.I00. Beautiful rolling cougfry-
BUY NOW BILL LATER TROT REALTY ;
500 6409
CLARKSTON AREA POMimiM. At SUO *4*46.
- J- ACRES.
CLARKSTON AREA "
2-acre homestte near Clarktton. ... rtsfrlcMd, Only S3.495, terms.
Clorkston Real Estate
MM S. Main	MA 5
GOOD BUILDING LOT ON
BufiiMssOppetfvisities 59
A GOOO RESTAURANT NEAR PO-tlac Airport. Over SUM dally, btau-liful modern sol-up. R*nf *50 per
Partridge
UNDER-VALUED GIANT
This three-valued motel will be your success story, 10 unit* busy *1 tortuna bulldki. Modern twy rastauronl muHiplytng your Income. 7-unit mobile home, park, paying pH the expenses of your itwtal. A S25 It. vacant comar lot that's a hidden gold min*. BooutHul moddtn ■*■ bedroom ham* for th* King, end Quoin of ml* Investment empire. All this estate-bulMing potential it
. DRIVE-IN MONEY TREE—
Yes, you tariff mink you own a money trot If you own this, drlvo-m restaurant. IPs "alive" with bust nose and will have you 1 too busy to count your currency cache. On main highway with (coda of bitch top parking tor restaurant customers and covered, parking with T9 phones tar your cor service customers. This Is a tortime bulld-er and your Investment I* only *29,000 down wito tSytorim.
OFFICES THRUL,. _______
INTERNATIONAL TRADERS CLUB COAST-TJO-COAST TRADES
RESTAURANT FOR SALE At Il6l 'Sabir Lake Rotd, Union Uko, topping center. OR 3-5235 If In-
i and induitriet nearby. Own* «r r«ady to liffen to otter.
MICHIGAN.
Business Sales, Ine.
JOHN LANOMESSER, BROKER 573 S. Telegraph	FE 4-1*42
TEXACO INCORPORATED
Wa have a now station tor Meta in Ctorkstwi, Mich. SMtionto 16-1 cated at 7230 Ortonvllle Rd. at Interstate 7*. Station Is now averaging 1,000 gallons of gasoline per day. Station Is. aeon U hoursr a
4
JM AMR AIRCO PORTABLE WELD-s orr trade tor lair model cor or •cashwSOHMS;	•
(bS3 tHfevV eiCkUP.’ ECJ!4TRIC
USED 1., and washer, swo* tor poodlos, OR 34170 or FE STIIS. •	.	'
Sole OoHiIr*	"R
PERSIAN LAMB .CAPE, S7J, FE 3-4771 offer 6
WEbOING DRESS AND HOOP, size 15 formal, sto* 14, 3144301.	,
.WEDDING DREie, iHORT, NEVER Sen worn, sllt f S5*. 0*7-4601.
Sale HeeseheM GeeBs 65
ROOMS i
FURNITURE
-.choirs. 682-445?.
i-fffECE RE6r SECTIOHAL.
desk and Choir, *'' --------
items, tUO takes 2926 SlIvsfMlI.
S, many n *11. OR >1
3 R0QMS
BRAND NEW FURNITURE
ONLY $3 WEEKLY
» 2 step x 1 doe-
y protlti
Sale iaai C—Wacii;	68
:	1 TO 50
PLN0 CONTRACTS
WARREN STOUT, Realtor
SO N. Opdyke Rd. FE 54l<
ACTION
m your land contract; loro* or mail Call Mr. Hlltor, FE 50179. Iroktr. 30*0 Ellzobflh Lotto Rood.
Lako Villogt.
♦to", 124 dolly. 6262 Cooley Lake Rood.
Be Your Own Boss!
WallMPor, point, archery i
^'SSo^^^.nr1
lures and Inventory.
The Hottest, v
Drive-In Restuerant in . Oakland County. Terrific gross snd liter**' ing every d*y. Will net *2,000 in month mis year. See If now!
BATEMAN.
COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT
>PW, »-. “7 *• T,“*r**W «B 04641	_______PE 4-3710
bKR-party store
fice root ___- ,______
63,000 down. Grab if.
WARDEN REALTY
PtAflOC 3357157
BUMP MtO PMhT SHOP FOR
Not lost , S3,000
HIGHWAY NEAR M47, 110' wrclal frontage — go ' I house and business ton
of Pontiac. Paved road *N lh
•OFT CRBAM AND'LIGHT LUNCH business In busy shopping cent on u.S.io—(3.500 (ash and to
UNDERWOOD Real Estate
08-3515	BW0*. 6351453
Drive-In Restouront
Located In lh* HEART of MICHIGAN'S UPPER PENINSULA voce-tlonlond at Rudyard, Mich., 4 miles

IMi service. Fully in A-l SIMM. Oohro vary business. Con be oniratod N ally or year-round. Owner mui because of other bustoots •sts. For more Inrormotton contact your broker or ARROWHEAD DRIVE-IN, Egii 47, Rudyard, Michigan. Phono, home: 4753511; Bus!-
FOR SALE r_ New and Used
LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING EQUIPMENT TRADE-IN PROGRAM . Financing eveltowr ’
NORGE SALES C0RP.
Waated CaatractsMtf. 60-A
.. 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRAUS
Urgently wanted. So* us baforf
’warren STOUT, Realtor
45* N. Opdyke Rd. FE S4MS Open Evoe. 'HI I p.m.
For tor|d contracts, equities mortgogos. Don't lost that ti
S»S,
ARRO RE
lAiH WR DBIB c6nt*ac?s~ Hr J. Van Watt, 4548 Dlxto Hwy. OR 5118,
NEED LAND CONTRACTS, REA-sonoblo discounts. Earl Gorrols, Realtor, 6417 Commerce ItofiL^^to EMplra')8jl	—‘
BUCKNER
FINANCE COMPANY
WHERE YOU CAN
BORROW UP TO $1,000
" OFFICES IN Pontiac—Drayton Plalns-Utica Walled Lake—Birmingham
loans to
$1,000 .
UsCally on first visit. Quick, friendly, helpful.
FE 2-9206
It th* number to coll.
OAKLAND LOAN CO:
M2 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 9:3S to I;M WSdtTga to * '
LOANS
■	■ S2S to (1,000
; COMMUNITY LOAN CO.
* " LAWRENCE PE *4421
tables and 1 c orator lamps.
(-piece bedroom, doubt# dresser, bookcase bod, chest of drsvtors, large mirror, box spring and Inner spring, 2'vsnlty lamp*.
5-piece chroma or bronze dinette formica tops.
All for $288
CASH, LAYAWAY, R-Z TERMS Visit our trade-in dept.
For mors bargains.
Pearson's Fumltura 210 E.. Pike	FE 4-7IZ1
Open Mon. and Frl. tW 9 p.m. Between Paddpckbnd CWy Hall ’ 9X12 LINOLEUM RUGS" ...I S 1J9
PLASTIC TILE	 ....... 1«	fa.
VINYL ASBESTOS	(Random)	5c	Ea.
eMAM(g THu	....	Sc	Eo.
ASPHALT TILE	(RANDOM)	4C	E*.
THE FLOOR SHOP 2255 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD
APARTMdNf ""IS iLECTRIC
~ A BIGGER STGr£
TO SAVE YOU MORE!
Shop in cool comfort GRAND OPENING
Just moved across Ifto Streot to
1461 Baldwin at Walton PHONE FE 2-6842
First traffic light south of 1-75* Lots of fro* porting,
MAIN'FLOOR
Lora* display W beautiful quality Early American living room suttos, sofas, tovestat rockers, bedrooms, tables,. lamps and rugs, Low low priced so that everyone con now afford Ihoso wonderful stylings.
Beautiful dough, box**	117
1	piece mo#It end tobto sot .. lit
High bock maple roSiar .... (20
2	place modern living room ... *79 UNBELIEVABLY LOW PRICED~~
3	rooms- of brand now furniture
(299.9*
Bargain Basement Specials
Used roll-s-wty bed ....... Sll
New bunk beds complete .... *19
New large 7 piece dinette ...
New 5 piece dinette, second ..
Used cabins! sink ......	«<
Used ranges ......StT to (M
7 piece drop leaf dining sot ... 141
LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE
EZ TERMS—SUY—SELL—TRADE
(26
kA VALUES “*
Adjustable bedframa ........ S 5.9J f
Hollywood hotdbMrd :....... ( 5.9S
Cotton mattrosi ........... S 9.9*
Innerspring mattress........(19.95
BEDROOM OUTFITTING CO.
4470 DIXIE HWY. Orayton Plaint 673-9441
ADMIRAL DUAL-TEMP FREEZER irlgerstor, 12 -WT ft.,. good COO-[■-- OR 51*33.
ALUMINUM fclDING iNSYALLED.
AUBURN
HOME FURNISHINGS
-Special group W now tobto lamps. *1 Now swivel reckon ......... (24.9*
Uso^ eiortrlc^raftgei	125.0* .
Buy—soil—trad#
Optn dolly 12 ffffto 291S Auburn Ri
rvico, couh-
»niur». v.r«ait iits insurance |VfH able. Stop in or phone FE 5-812}
HOME & AUTO LOAN CO.
SL Perry St.	FES412I
.9 to S Dolly. Sot.,9 to l
INVESTIGATE
,. Meeting—Holiday In PontiacAugust 21st ’ v Writ* for Dotalls >Box 546. Champaign. Illinois , l6cab photograpSTc STUDIO
tor Ipl*.	- ■-------
RfttMA
__________
lust off Baldwin. $1,20* cosh. BEAUTIFUL BUILDING SITE n excellent neighborhood W now homes, toko privileges. WtW of Fontlacr SIN down.
LAKE, PRIVILEGES, tots on Si Lake, i mltta wtst W Pan (30* down.
CLARENCE RIDGEWAY
REALTOR
I W. WALTON	33540*6
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
START YOUR HOME NOW
' homo trill serve ax the A
— H jOMctma one at me------------
beautiful
■electing •
sites. Cari
„ ..WATERFRONT
Building lot on canal — co ing Sylvan Lake. 40 n. W water. 62.95*. Terms.
JACK LOVELAND
III* Cass Lake Rood
110x14*.
u— AS 9200 DOWN
LADD'S, INC.
IMS Leader Read Parry (MM). FE >9291 or OR 51231 Offtr 7:3*
- Oowt dotte 114; Sunder WEST tLOOMFlffLO 121'
■ y lap1
road, churches,
------Cup*. *2* down,
Bloch Bros.<FE 445*9,
..WATERFORD HIU
II* corner tot tor salt by t ' FE *4771	”
motel:
2* .per MPWPNHPm (80.000 down rkgulrod to h_t_.
Chopin Motel Brokers
TIN WEST t MILE . 35741 SOUTHFIELD. MICHIGAN
MARATHON
- SERVICE STATION ISpPORTUNl.TIEI OPDYKE AND HEMPSTEAD ^	125 OAKLAND _
Be In business for yourself, paid training program, no layoffs. Financing available to rsspnnittil*
Mr. Carter Sow. Toil Iree prise .79*2- —Ex*. MR or collect 474-70*3 after 6 p.m.
BAXTER I. LIVINGSTONE , Finance Co.-
401 Pontiac State Bank Building
________FE 4-1538rSL
WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $1,000
W* will be glad ft-ha Ip you. '
STATE FINANCE CO.
501 Pontiac Slot* Bank Bldg.
FE *1574
MORTGAGE ON.ONE ACRE UP. Wffh 150-foot frontage. No op. praisol top. B. D. Charles, Saui--tobto Farm Loan (ervlce. 6*24704.
CASE
Loans to $3,OOC
Consolidate your ibllN with onl one payment. No doling coots .on life Insurance Included on unpel
bttonco 'pt NO extra row.
Repay over a convsnlont form , Phan# or Apply In Parian
Family Acceptance Carp.
17 National Bldg. M W. Hum Telephone FE 1-4022
Home Owners
NEED CASH NOW?
CALL'ANY TIME
L0AN-BY-PH0NE
SYSTEM* , 5
WIDOWS, PENSIONERS CAN BE ELIGIBLE. -
CHECK, LOWEST RATES
BUNK BEDS
Choleo W IS stylos, trundl* tads, triple trundl* bod* and bunk* bods complete, (49.5* and up. Poor. eon's Furniture, 21* 8. Pika. COLONIAL FURNITUR#, l Aft'S I fgffr rmw ■ ing*, 213!
CLEARANCE
SALE
1964 \ Floor-• Models*'
Alt 'Most Go To Make Way for 1965 Models This Week!
Kelvlnatpr refrigerators, wtshtrt,
ASK FOR JOf CRONIN
B. F. Goodrich Store -
N„ Ferry	V FE 24121
CLOCKS, LIVING ROOM. Gtftil size 22, tloc. sowing mochlnt ree-
COLLECTOR5' PINffTIQUe hutdi, commode end lama, wing-beck choir, antique dishes, oil lamp boot and cut glass/ 211 CharltN Rochester, 4524031.
CROSLEY ELECTRIC STGvE A|Td refrigerstor, good condition. Ham. ““ d*s dryer and Frigldatm tu-fk: wesher, gas conversion
nM£1<£l': °" * «
THE PONflAC PRESS. TUESDAY, ^GUSTXn064
D—®
‘'Mmw
sofa, lamps, lot* of mr— jto etter 4 HtV W. If Birmingham, (corner i
*"««4 SCTiff*1
Mi W. Huron._____ FE 4-2525
MRNITUtk., STOVE, CURTAINS
studio couch, baby crib, complete, play ban. Mlac. AAA MU
HdusiridCb fjJrnishing* for
*al«. MrooRV living room# AM and FAA- consol# stereo, dinette set, aectional bookcases and Argus C4 camera and prelector, mlsc. name. Altar i Sat. and all day
. sun, and Man. FE MOM,_______
ICE CEEAA*-FREEZER, H 2-10, 5 i etrtgaretars. etactric^drjgf, etop-
BRUNER AUTOMATIC, model >
Cooley Soft Water Co.
■ FE*-im ' • -WATER SOFTENER RENTAL. IjK-limited gedonege, tipper month. 487-5020, Universal So»rilMi5r; VHITE, 2 YEARS OLD, LIKE NEW
"eTwe
Woter Softeners'Used
15 semi-automatics In above average condition, ffour choice, -OS.
Cooley Soft Water Co.
kELVINATOR AAATCHINO FREEZ-fr and retrlgerator, sjoo. Maytag gat dryer, 8100. Signature front Md.aONmatlc washer, siso. From 9:30 to * call PE 5-9281,. after , FE 4-0657, Ask tor Mrs. Shoults.
klREY VACUUM, LATE MODELS, 159.54 533.50 ..................... 539.50
9xtf LINOLEUM RUSS . . 53.95 EA.
Plastic Wall.tlla ........ lc Ea.
"''ling tile-wall paneling, cheap, O TIIa. FE 49957. 1075 W. Huron 540-FEET OF ANCHOR FENCING, carpet and pad - 10 x li ft., Hollywood bed complete, rellaway bad, ^55 Ford convertible. 331-4371.
SBMaLross-
2-5541, 3M Ottawa Drive.
MOVING, WILL SACRIFICE EN-tlra contents of Nine. FE 44233 ' after 0,	\	-
NEW AND USED CARPEtlNG FOR sale. Many assorted ' braids to choose from. Also several roll ends and remnants. Select from our stock. We also specialise In canal and furniture cleaning. We taka —trade N» Auqn Tray Carpet Sales, 105t E. Auburn Rd„ Rochester, past John R. 551-2444._____
ANCHOR FENCES
4IO MONEY DOWN	FE 5-7471
4x5 TRAILER, 505. SICKLE BAR mower, pipe vise and house tacks. Cont'S, FE 5-5043.
FULL SIZE BALL POINT PENS with pocket dips — “*“
Retrlgerator 51.45. per week and w TVs at Sl55 par weak and p Ranges attl J9 par weak and is gas and electric dryers at Sl j par Vraak and up.
SEE US FOR TERRIFIC BUYS
GOODYEAR STORE
10 S. Caae_____ FE 54121
" ^Tav^arA?1x*7;IN^ML\Kl*19N and 5X12. 002-2425.
OIL HEATER. DUO-THERM, 535; ■ imt* 21-lhah — —
AIR CONDITIONER,v 1-TON FED-ders window untt, 220 volt, SIOO. Daylsburg Market, Davlsburg. AUTOMATIC SINGER ZIG ZAG
! COMPLETfr .m.OND ita,,1 2-piece baaragm
blind hems, embroider*.. ale. Pay ,oft account In 9 months at 50.10 per month or SOI cash. Universal Co. FE 4-5955.
iAfttaOOM FIXTURES, OIL AND gas furnace and boilers, automatic water heaters, hardware and ***"-trlcal supplies. Crack, ML —,-per, blade and gOlvanlzad pipe and fittings. Sentry «nd Lowe --**—1	super Kam-Tone
ONi EPIECl CURVED SEC-t Iona I, bedroom furniture, aofr Md cottas and lamp tables, 17-lr _ . TV, Haywoad-wakaflald breakfast refrigerator and mlgc. MA
PONfiAC KITCHEN SPECIALTIES
Spring clearance of kitchen cal tu'fficKerd Lake,	3344329
RE-ESTABLISH YOUR CREDIT —
carpeting am could give i Family' Hon
Dixie Nwy., i___ .... 
REFRIGERATORS, 525 OT
stltchea, Inc
Taka over u,-------- ..	„
month or full price 545.55. 16-yaai written guarantee. Domelco, Inc., 2257 S. Telegraph, Miracle MIN. Next to Pontiac State Bank. FE 5-4521,
Renewed Appliances
JfCTIONAL DAVENPORT, tHAIRI
_________ I	I Choir, FE
1-1974.______________;
iET OF RUSSELL WRIGHt dish-
SPECMI
525 A MONTH BUYS 11 ROOMS OP PURHiTURB Consists 5fl BpMco living room sutt* with 2 stog-tablas, t cocktail tabN and 2 tads
springs to match
5-p Nos'd Matte set, 4 chroma chairs, Formica top tabN, 1 bookcase, 5x12 rug Indudad. AM tor 5199.
WYMAN FURNITURE-CO.
W B. HURON 1TW. PIKE
-.JTfV'l . Washer 5. Dryar
FE 3-2155 ..... 5 19.95
TmdwRMftotofiiatic WATER SOFTENERS
I Reynolds automattcsi 1 CuMgan Spartan automatic.
For Sift Mhc5»EEB5Ee El
HORSEPOWER LAWN SPRINKL-%on^an-
■A ALUMINUM SIDING, STORMS, awnings. Vinyl siding. Inataltod or materials. Quality - low cost.
FE 59545 VALLELY OL 1-4423
ROTH TRACTOR, 0
.furnace) a ly install# Haatlng an 482-5574,
12-GAUGE BROWNING' AUTOMA-ventllated rib, gold trigger.
SUS. OR 3-9222.
r compressor elec-
F AND E 5-7941.
Bottlevfios Installation
Two lOO-pouniT-cylindors endr~* ment, 112. OrealNFJeln* Gal FE 54571.
"birCN week\
105 PIBCgS 4'xlW' ANTlOUE
BIRCH PANELING

PANELING ........... Hi
xTxto" 2 GOOD-SIDES .... $12.95 PONTIAC PLYWOOD -
m BALDWIN________ FE >3543
CLEARANCE OF USED OFFICE *-—**■— —1 machines. Psrbos, . OR >9747. Wd
CLOSED IN 2-WHEBL OtlLltY
COMPLETE STOCK OP PIPE AND fittings — plastic, cogjsr^anc' —*
Monica In
D; J. CABINET SHOP
24 W. HURON	334-0934
Custom coMnots, Formica tops, sales of Formica, sinks, heeds and faucets. COMPARE OUR PRICES.
Supply Co.. 2475 Orchard L
ck Supply i I. 482-2520.
for' dusty-Concrete floors Use Liquid Floor Hardener Simple inexpensive Application alee Bulktarslupply -PE 54154 TRACTOR, R|Q RIDING
GASfURNACE. USED. LIKE HEW
r HAS IT!
, dike Lin. . ..
I __t Doug. Fir, Tike Lin. Ft.
HAGGERTY LUMBER CO.
HJGGERTY 1
.......Hatchary. OR 4400.
Waakdays 12-9	Sarturdhy '_
"KEEP YOUR CARPETS REAUTI-ful despite constant footsteps ot busy family. Oat Blue Luatr Rent nNctrfc- ahaMpooer 51. M Candlesa Carpets. ■'
" ORhamIntal iron foAOH .
1570 QpdyM	FE 4-010
OUR OFFICE AND St6RE HAVE MOVED TO 45 CONGRESS ST.
. next to AINn's ^en tren yard DRAINAGE SUPPUV^BMWf Grease traps, steal culvert pip# uwntaau uUm _ covert — grates
SL, prints 42 Inches w
for Sak WtcoEisdtst 47
inouncemEnts at
GOOD CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT
-BULLDOZERS
John Deere Modal 45, Intamatleaal TD-9, Case Model 1505, Caes Modal m Cladrac.
LOADERS
-Casa Model 406 and .,1505, John-Deere Modal 445 crawler, - Ford
MISCELLANEOUS
|toM*,JeHn-
w5u!*D R I L L I N G MACHINES, reaaanlblg. Brighton, AC 9-4290.
SOIL, SI.
•55,-qnd
aasiad .read graveC HJS a I. DELIVERY EXTRA. AMEIL N (TONE —AAA <55141.
Pdts-HuEHf Pf«
2-YEAR-OLD MALE, Ilk YEAR tomato Bassett hounds, must sell,
raaaonnbln. 343-7942.	____
?\ POODLE STYLING ANb grooming. 473-5404.__
- dachshund pups, terms, toTfe ~1—
Orduard Orevo Kanndta. MA 4-1113 AKC POODLE PUPPIES, WHITE1 tiny toys, apricot or sliver mini-toy, stud service, birds, fish, pats supplies. Crane's, UL 2-2300.
XkcTPOODLE PUPS, SILVER FE-I mold, T ----- ‘	-
71
AT GALLAGHER'S
BRAND NEW LOWREY ORGANS
AS .OW AS $495 ,
NO MONEY DOWN — NO PAYMENT TILL SEPTEMBER.
SHOP US REPORE YOU BUY
GALLAGHER'S MUSIC CO.
OPEN MON. AND PRI. 'TIL 9 P.M. II E. HURON	FE 44544
GULBRANSEN MODEL B-2 ORGAN,
Doga _________
Helm's Kennel'v FE 1-
ASGHAN POPPY, AKC,. pBMALE,
UP AND DELIVERY. 4II-S455. BEAUTIFUL GERMAN SHEPHERD, 1-year-old female (spayed). Gentle, ■ watchdog, sacrificing. 473-
lo Spaakar. 473-3S74.
LOWREY HOLIDAY fruitWool Organ 1
used but Ilka now with glide pedal. 1495 CONN MINUET MAHOGANY Fleer Model 81,200 CONN MINUET WALNUT
MORRis’wiUSIC
54 S, Telegraph Rd.
Across from Tei-Huren —FE 2454)
PIANO
SPECIALS
Floor Samplts Reduced . Up to
$185
SPINETS
Prictd (ul Low as
$388’
\|K|D UPRIGHTS
‘ $48"C
LOW, EASY TERMS
GRINNELLS
PONTIAC MALL OPEN DAILY 9:SB TO 9 PM.
682-0422
SALE QUITARS . . . AdcbRDIONS.
0. Record Cabinet. FE 2-4411.
PIANO SALE
SOHMER-KOHLER * A CAMPBELL ■ Buy now at Sumer Prices CONN ORGANS — FULL LINE Used Wurlltzer Spinet Organ LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. Across from Birmingham Theatre Free Parking	Ml 44502
THOMAS ORGANS FOR 196$, one of Amorico's greates values. Full spinet orgon, starting at $495. WIEGAND MUSIC CO., 469 Elizabeth Lake Road. Pi-ano tuning and organ re-.
I — Terms. Estsl
good
tno.
BEAGLE. MALE 540. CALL OL
BEAGLE .PUPPY, 9 WEEKS OLD
BELGIAN SHEEPDOGS, CHAM-i bloodline, J-month. MuY MB ». S35. MU 94145.
CHIHUAHUA, WHITE AND F bluepoint Siamese kitten, podlgreod, tor S50, 452-4204.
d setylCQi 731-2044.
COLLIE, 7 YEARS OLD, STUD, 452-1355.
:«LLtE PUPPIES, REGISTEREb. As reasonable as 825. Also V small grown female end 1 meld toy colltd pup. 424-3540.	-
■ PUPPIES, GENTLE, GOOb
r -children.
DACHSHUND PUPPY, mete, excellent pet. SID.
GERMAN SHEPHEf AKC registered, all i ground, sable-gray -to « 7139'
LABRADOR RETRIEVER PUP-plat. 573-0515..	-	'
7 AKC MINIA#UAe " POODLES,
good hunter, 555. FE 54791,
__Flrat, Rochdstor, OL 1-457R_
PART GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS 515, PE 5-4953.
months. AKC registered. OA POODLE STUD SERVICE. WHITI *— EtBcfr^mtnleture. OA 9-8397,
PUPPIES. NO MgNEY DOWN, »l.35
Eegales, Poodles, Br and lots more comln
PUPS, SHEPHERD • LABRADOk Watch-bird deg*. Si. 551-3587.
PURE BRED GERMAN SHfPHlfcb
pies. Different prices, colore d
----.Also, Toy Fox Terriers. T
and Chihuahua stud servk PE 3-14W.
iil, I think he wants a refill on the lemonade!”
HUP Oakland Orchards, wm Commerce Rd. between Burns < Duck Lake Rds.. Mlherd.
PEACHES-APPLES Sunhaven peaches — luscious eating. Red Astrschan, Transparent, Early McIntosh apples. Excel lent duality as always. Oakland Orchards, 2305 East Commerce Rd.
NEW AND USED TRACTORS equipment, parts and service.
KING BROS.
FE 44734	FE 4-1541
Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke NEW AND USED TRACYORS: Evans Equipment. 425-
USED FRAZER ROfOTiLLERS, PARTS AND SERVICE.
__ L. W. AvV „	*
iCHHAUZERi, miniaYuRe fuK 5 AKC ragtatorad, ears	ear.
manent shots. MS-3157.
SPRINGER SPANIEL AKC. * WMBl m
STvBERNARb W«eks. AKC
old. mottwr, father, irs. Children's pa*
MALI WIW9T
1953 SHASTA, 14-FOOT, GAS RE-frlgarator, heat, lights, mate hitch, electric brakes. Ilka new, $1,395,
_______ _________ ____ to days,
$1,150. OR 34255,	____________
JRO - FLOW LlAVflMB GUAR-
leeh-Accesseries
A eShtWolverine, 22 horse
* Mercury,	lyalieY^Exeellenl
14- FOoT' CADILLAC, CLOStD deck, electric start, running Itoits, 15 hp . Johnson meter, new bet-tery. My«r'i bfMkdoww tralter, FI 2-6706.
li-FOOT FiREROLASS, MOTOR." ii h.p., trailer, OL. 1-2907, f e.m., to
97ileNh-Afceeeei<ee 97
WE WILL BOAT ANY PEAL. ’» Boats. • Mstors. Lotto Orton 101
traitor, OC * p.m.
15-FOOT FIBERGLAS BOAtl
WsntBd CervInKfcs
ALWAYS: BUYING ANO PAYING MORE FOR oOOO CLEAN CARS. ASK FOR BERNIE AT-
> BIRMINGHAM
CHRYStER-PLYMOUTH IfK.
----------- *“ JN#J5
15FOOT FIBERGLAS RUNABOUT with 40 horse Evlnrude plus Train rw,	an n-year-old. I*“
Complete. 424-3814.
15-FOOT FIBERGLAS. 45HOR5E electric" start and generator, tin-bad trailer, 14*1 modal sharp, ask--ing 8195. 4824451.	3
17-FOOT CRUISER, 1550 OR 3-7355
17-FOOT OWENS, 75 -HORSEPOWER • Evlnrude. traitor. Lots of extras.
Did You Know? VILLAGE RAMBLER
tor Appraisal . <erd	Ml 5
AVERILL'S
Fri-
FE 5
FOR CLEAN CARS ...
I ----r- Economy Cars, 2335 Dixie.
]h^'R6N MOTOR SALES STAYING K (Hocks “north at Walton FEJ,-""
rRQITBR ALMA
RPNfMirCHtVP ■ IPW4r-WIDES
A size and prlba tor avaryoha. Stop out today and let us show
or used mobile home. Now 10' wldes 2 bedrooms lor only 83,941 Delivered and set-up. Many models on display tor your shapplrtg con-
ALL-WAYS A BETTER t
BOATS—MOTORS
MERCURY-SCOTT McCULLOUGH j
MANSFIELD AliTO SALES
i bu^in^, sharp late i * *11*04 Baldwin .Ave.
FE 5-5900
M 6c M
MOTOR SALES
2527 Dlxlo Hwy.
LATE MODEL CARS High Cash Prices , Sullivan Buick-Pontlac Sa
ib Hutchinson
Highway OR Drayton Plains 9 Ditty	S«
CENTURY, 18 FOOT, 115 HOrB-- Rebuilt engine, excellent ft—HIM. 3374217, 482-1825.
CHRIS tRAFJ 1957, 28-FOOT, TWIN 95's. Flying bridge. Ml 74757. MARINE INSURANCE, 82.50 per -----!L*9!2S^___________PE 3
and accessories. Bod Hutchinson. Homo. Sato* IhcTYSU Dix-Drayton Plains, OR 3-1202.
MARLETTE. VAGABOND, GARD-nar, ^Skyllrw,^ General.................
Open daft
Oxford-Trailer Sales
Oakland
Chrysler-Plymoyth
1943 DURO HOUSETRAILER IT x ID*, original eq
$1895
, Trotwood. Garway,
____ ... Liiia.
campers and used traitors. S' JACOBSON TRAILER SALr RENTAL, 5495. Williams “—)	ton Plain
foV POoBbRi. 1 ADULT SCHllAU- Read, Drayton zor, fomatoroE 3-4793.
TOY POODLE PUPPIES, MALE,
550. famaia tii. OittoH*4 THOROUGHBRED GERj hard puppies, papers
ALL NEW 1964 Avolairs, Hollys, Tawos, Cree Travel Trailars
14 to 15 ft> self-contained *
>rder now and have It (br vecatkx
ELLSWORTH AUTO ind, TRAILER SALES
5-1455
In 3 styles.
EARLY. AMBRICAI
CONTEMJ ORARY
FREh :H PROVINCIAL Cranbrook 11* WH t ......*4,495
Midland fr Iter Sales
__	94 7 DAYS A WEEK
2257 DIXIE /	FE 94772
"iniiftr i
CUSTI TRAVI
® ringel'joln tba Cisntury
OfflftSiqrtpiNBiil 72
USED INDUSTRIAL FLUORESCENT lights, show cases, stack filing cabinets, office desks with glass toes, •met Chairs. PontlacFon" and Industrtaf1Stoctor Ca. FE 4-
StGIE IjqlREBBt .	78
ELECTRIC NATIONAL CASK REG-
RESTAURANT FIXTURES
j, 2340 W. Maple,
month ot May, buy A
Sweet's Radio Si Appllenco In
S 75.55
USED ELECTRIC ITOVE, 825. I Maple comer cabinet, 825. 479 W. Watton Blvd.
Westinghouse UPRIGHT FRE12-
waSKIC' SFEib'^fcfeN wtflHi er, good condition. 831, 482-1592. WKC, WE SERVICE WHAT W sell. 25 w. Attov. Wr S-miT
WYMAN'S
. USED BARGAIN STORE , „ AT OUR 15 W. PIKE STORE (WLY
Giaranteed e^'^rWret^
EASY TERMS	PE 4-1IS4
654
^MAnSuatTun Hetty. MB 7-419S, C
- 1551 21-INCH EMERSON COLOR TV,
iRANb NEW 4-SPEAKER ZENItR Original coat 8399. Asking price Wi. Call 33M5M attar 6 p.m, _ ORAN CO 1TERBO FM RAIWy Walton TV F* 3-2257 Open 94.' 115 «. Walton Comer at JoaMl MOTOROLA CAR RADIOS AND RE-VERBS, *29.95 up. PHILCO and , Zenith ttaiwaajl aa.laa and ’ service. Large dock at partsbtos, ..........-j, DALBY RADIO and TV,
pLUMBINb. BARGAINS FRli Standlng^tollet, 817.45;. SGgaWan
WRX-vBmh	jj* ”1
shower MMjifll Mm, W-Ml 2-bowi sink, S2.9SI Lava., 55.45; tub* 515 and lip, Pip# ait and thrMdad SAVE PLUMBING 541 Baldwin, FE 4-1514. » REFRIGERATOR FOR SALE S3! axcaBant condition. 4254547.
payments of 55.2 full price' 845.40. m«HM5i.' aaMMg
Telegraph, Mlrac Pontiac Mato Banl
I over monthly I par month.or 'tHBar" written », (new
TOrg PLYWOOD '	,,
.... dtoaTWafton	OR 34912
STAINLESS STEEL DOUBLESINKS
.95. G.
frovi AJj 6 ItE FRIGE RATO R, good candltlon UP, FB.M714. jTALL SHOWERS, ty.95. COM-Plata with faucets. OA Thompson
hardwood floor-. 34115.
______________ OIL dfURI^-
ChandDer Howim. OR IdtM.
“*TBI5TFT(IJl
FE 94057
* nyE.teRf ANY FOOO SERVICE TO MATCH TNI “Why buy a treaowrr'
Use our leaner freezer M to— Taka advantage- ot these great savings ddttvared to yobr horr-AN meats and gracsrjaa For free Information, *47-1*77-
SjtortiRg Good*
APACHE
'CAMP TRAILERS
p trailers at greatly
rag. 554S at 1451
APACHE FACTORY HOMETOWN DEALER
OPEN DAILY 5 a.m. to 5 p.m. SUNDAYS 10 a.m. fo 4 p.m.
BILLCfHlfR 1 Mile East of Lapeer On M21_____________.
HA TOP SOIL, BLACK DIRT, FILL,
ss/xi^srs,"
Bill MALfcf. FIT, SANbi_GRAV.
CHOICfc BLACK DIRI 1-2 YARDS
d. FE_________
■ FAST _DlLlVt*Y,.
PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-ply. aand, gravel «« dir*
-T-	'•	-•
SUNDAY	UN F.
.... ' £ttnAXl
Wd. Buy—Selt-Trada, Retail - g ~ algnmants Walcon'
MB AUCTION
EE Dtxta hSt,	e
PRIOR'S AUCTION.
New dimensions ter camaert J all the new klng-slza campers 1 Holland. The roomtoit camper t wheats. See It now at JACOBSEN’S TRAILER SALES AND RENTAL SON Williams Lake Read,. Drayton Plains. OR 3-1W1.
SALE-RENT F. I. HOWLAND 3255 Pixie Hwy.
CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE —	rebuilding and valva
Zudr_ Machine Shop, 23
s, and 12-volt lights, St495.
See Our Complete
line or FANS, FEANKLINt, 15* te
- lie, 5355. 852-2370.____
ARABI^N^tT^P, At< Si|. NAVE
MOVING-MUST SELL, MORGAN Gelding, good rider, will pull also sleigh and complete harness.
to 194S that I tatnedt
Holly Travel Coach, Inc.
11210 Holly Rd. Holly ME 4-4771 •* Open Petty end SUNDAYS -
QOARTER-TYPE SHOW MARE; 4
l NH4419, 3141 I
Way Gt<bIe FbH^^ 84
GOOD HORSE HAY AND IT------
IAY FOR SALE. WEST SIDE OF PonttOC. 35 bents a bale pick J In field. 55 cants deflvered. a
quality. No. 1 Mich. Potatoes. 55 IbH 82.19, 15 tba. 49c. Home grown com. 45c doz. Other err*— M good prlcesiBeG(Mn
7405 Highland Read, Pc---- .
mil# west pi Airport Rd. Phene 473-5431.	-	1
■SPPIVATED BLUEBERRIES pick your own, bring containers, 8.30 a quart. OriNra tahm. * “ '
quart. 7505 Pontiac Lake Rd ._
ner of Wilitama Lake Road. OR -3-3475.
DUTCHESS APFLisi, (YOU FfCK or w* pkk. Marvin Middleton, 1510 Predmore Road, Lake Orton MY >1551 attar 4.	■»
LARGE CULTIVATED BLUEBER-rles, -330 Wise Rend, Commerce. EM 3-4071
MONTMORENCY CHERKiEA. \AL-
RIFE PIE CHjRRtri, PlcK Votifc
R*Rd.
Holtz Orchard, 1
PHOENIX TRUCK CAMPERS 5-15-114, (rent and aide models, Ftonaor gikiirmr*~~ " “
SOMETHING NEW THE COACHMAN CADET ,
14’Zi-ff. travtl trailer that will tleap
4 te I. You will never see 8-
room In t Check this er. Abo
TRAVELMASTER » ANDERETT SAGE
. TOM STACHLER AUTO A MOBILE SALES 881 W. Huron St.	33
fOlVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS and llaapare. New and. uadd 8395 up. EMPERIOR Tent Traitors. 8449 up. Jackx, Intercoms; totosceptne bumper*. LOWRY Camper Sato*
AAA TRUCKERS SPECIALS
Tread damaged frev ofherwt
and up. Credit evaliable.
IDYEAR STORE
*	--------FE 5-4123
ULY SPdtlAU" ----------
actorY-blemished ends. Guaranteed
5.H-5 hwy^x 9.B-5 tracfian'V
8.25 X 15 hwy. IMMtJP hwy. 10.00 x 22 traction Call Dick Curran
Pate's Motor Salas

4-SPEED DUCATI
250 ikjkycle engine , OnhfWtl^ ^* “—'—
28719
h of builder.
r. May t I, Mad iso
SPECIAL PRICE
PAID FOR.1955-1943 CARS
VAN'S AUTO SALES
4545 Dixie Hwy, 7 OR S-13S5
GLENN'S
r 3-7553
CtosB-Out on All LONE STAR, GLASTR0N ■and MFG BOATS
14-toot fishing beat with 15 hp Ms
12-taot Cheka run-about bolt i traitor, 3150.
75A Mercury with controls, 8445.
CLIFF DRYER'S
id Spoilt Cbnter Rd. Holly, ME *477
oily Rd. H m Pally ei
EVINRUDE MOTORS
Boats and Accessories' yoed. Aluminum, Ftberglas I to find but easy to debt wit
DAWSON'S SALES
Tlpslce Lafct- \ MA t-21
FOR
YOUR.
CHRIS CRAFT . . OWENS.
G-3 FIBERGLAS SKI >0*1 V45 motor, lull equipment, skis ““ traitor, used 20 hours. 451-3059.
Marine engine, excelleitt condl Including new 4mtheel trailer. 1 be seen te bd appreciated. pldtoUtyru MAM Motors.
teak Con-Trucks	101A
Jet Boat, Savi $1,o0o
FIBERGLAS, 14-FOOT Inbodrd, new lest July, sparkling red -~* white; 110 tun Chrysler M. engine, excel tons condition. Inc Ing new 4-wheel traitor. Myst seen to be appreciated. 2SH Hwy.. MAM Motors. 474-0309.
AND BOAT ACCESSORIES
See	j,
Michigan Turbocraft Saws
Kessler's
See Ray Boato — Johnson Motors 'sCaryer Beats — Mlrro Aluminum
CWnJtTE SERVICE AND PARTS N*fa welcome •'**■
Open Mon. hnd
NEW FIBERGLAS \B O A horsepower Evlnrude Wjotoi
ll'Vtf*A8lyIlnum boats
BSA-N0RT0N—HONDA
.. Pontiac cycle sales
372 t. lagkytw	"*
HARLEY-PAyi^SON 74, 8275. 1959- TRIUMPH 450. OK 34721 AFt-
1943 . NORTON, 75 CC. 'CALL . FE 5-7732.
1944 HONbA SUPER HAWK, LESS
Clarkston. MA.
aatt. ■
\tu N6NbA 6rEaM, CttftAiU MTs
Ormond Rd„ Highland.
KAW CYCLE, 50CC AND 55CC.
SAVE MORE ON BOATING NE^DS Fabulous HydrodWM^Comkoords Larson — Chetek — Sea Nympth ItomwWg — Tee Nd* — A lax 'Aluminum and wood do Jrumman and Old Town C...—. fYOUR EVINRUDE DEALER'
Honda Hawk

I Be rmw ______. re
yanUha ......
5-Speed-Transmission
8415 VXiM.
K&W Cycle.
543d Auburn Rd. Phana%-a290
kho expert Honda service Roger White,
condition, 83J89. Phone 458-411,
ANOTHER FIRST
35’xT wide. With .living ream a pension.
Bob Hutchinson
iGits—Accessories .
FOOT ' LYMAN WITH WIND* *, 40 hjt. Mercury motor, traitor, skis and laefcet, 5455.'
■■■■■■■ Priced
quldt safe. Lakeland Hardv_
Airport and Hatchery Rd. OR
Bff.
fr SCHWEITZBRCRAFT, 2S JOHN-’
’ ROW BOAT, 1924 CASS LAirB
PONTOON BOATS CLEARANCE SALE
B models to choose from, $445 to $1900. far a nick 26' houseboat with aluminum pontoons., . ■ ■*
BILL C0UER 1 Mile East of Lapeer On M21
Ellsworth
AUTO SALES
Pixie Hwy,	MA 5
‘ WE NEED YOUR
LATE MODEL USED CAR .TODAY
1945 TO 1953 MODELS.
''Top Dollar Paid"
John McAulKfo
: FORD
tX Oakland Aua.
WE NEED CARS I
TOP DOLLAR FOR > GOOD CLEAN CARS
MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES
*31 Oakland Aye-Pf *4jg.
__________CARS AND TRUCKS
wanted. OR 3-2924.
TO 45 JUNK CARS ANb fRUCKi,
to tew anytime, FE 2-1444.
ALWAYS BUYING NK CAR* - FREE TOW 11 TOP 88 CALL PE 5*142 AM ALLEN G 5QN INC , k cars hauled awaV,
gplf blue.
Autobahn
Motors, Inc.
AUTHORIZED VW DEALER V3 mils norih of Miracle Mil* — ~ Tatoaraph	a|
1943 TR4, BRITISH RACING, green, mult "tall before Wednesday 482-5290.between *-7,	____ _______
Homer Hight
PONTIAC-BUICK-CHEVROLET
uA 9-2525____Oxford, Michigan
TRIUMPH 1944. SPITFIRE, 81,850. 444-0591 attar 4.
New gw< IIegB Cow 106
1939 BUICK COUPE, REBUILT ME chanlcally, no rust, 8350 or best offer. 402-0585.
1954 &UICK 4-DOOR ROADMASYKk, good condition. 9* Florence;
1957 BUICK ROADMASTBR. FULL
s:
. 82.355, Ml 44535 dflbr 5 e.m. anytime wnfcandr, - -BUICK 5PECIAL, ,otUtxB
>. 7,000 •
1957 CADILLAC FOOOR MARDYbf*, Fleetwood, V*. automatic transmission, full power. Almost like brend nOW. 1-owner. JEROME FERGUSON, Rochester FORD Peator, OL l-sni..	»	.
CADILLAC "CONVERTIBLE, lew.
"I960 CADILLAC"
New aod Ustd Tracks 103
1955 CHEVROLET PtCKuF WITH
good condition. FE 5445k 940 FORC)' Vk-TON Fi£KUE With camper, OR 3-7744 aWif 4:30 p."
„„	. . PICKUP. W-T6N,
Fleet side. Has utility units buIttJh. Only 8895. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO^ 1005 S.
CAMPRS'SPEClAl
12 FORD M-ton pickup. Geylln-r. tour speed transmtoalML Leeks Irly like
tty payments.
SPARTAN Dl
lll^l.iagnaw^
DODGE
an w# pwiftwsy .	FE 8*4541
FORD ECONOLINE BUS, 1942. BX-
iWFBodc
^CADILLAC v COHVERTIBLE '
Eldorado, 1941, In rose, p I n k. matching Interior, bucket seats, and air the goodies. 5291 down.
WILSON, .
PONTIAC-CADILLAC
HO N. Woodward ...Ml 4-1935
BlrmStoriam. Mlchlgin ■_
1914 CHEVY, 1(4, STICK. fL6o* X ihtft, oauoes. 425-3551.
1957 CHEVROL^”bEL AIR, i-tr v-5, automatic. 8195 tun pried
____No Money Down-•-----
. No Dawn Fayntant
*No Credit PreSenS*
Cooper Motors l
dio, heater, i slon. Very like.
Save $800 SPARTAN DODGE
FE *4541
1944‘CNeVY 1/i-TON PICKUF, ItA-
dio and heatar, 4.20T -----
car ^warranty. - 81,450.
EM 34339.
1857 CHEVY 4, toil^E. FE 3-7S41 H
G.M.C.
Factory Branch NEW and USED TRUCKS . % FE 5-9485'
1957 CHEVROLET. PUWLlSS C6J^ dition, 4 spead, haatanj. **. FE
1958 CHEvV WAGON, KYLlNBltA. *4par.iwtamatljj, JS7^t
chevy7*tick,4, OOOO 4“'
■ tWMBton. ------------
152-4397.
1PF
OLIVER . BUICK *{4 JEEP
215 Ordtartf Laka FE 2-9151
_ CHEVY, 4-DOOR BEL AtR,
clean, OR 3-1565._________■
1955 CHEVY 2-DOOR SEDAN, ME-tallto Mia, autamaWe. v*. — 54-45 weekly. No menay dawn. Cad Mr. Johnson — MA $-1404, Haskins Chivy.
1958 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE.
HI
SAVE $1.5001
20- Chris Craft, 1943, 185 power. Lais than 20 hours. WIN demonstrate. Port Huron, - t
AUTO INSURANCE
Lew Rata* tar:
Sate Drivers 1 ALSO v Cancfc.ed and Refused PAYMENT PLANS AVAILABLE
Stop In Today!
1044 Joslyn Ave.
Frank A. Andersen Agency FE 4-3535	Pontla
Grumman and Old fawn *YOUR EVINRUDE. DE*~-.-HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS 1159 S, Telegreph Rd._332-8033
THOMPSON 19-FOOT CABlN CRUlS-—	uu 75 hp Evlnru-"-
tr. FE 84494,
THOMPSONS DORSETTS JOHNSONS DUOS .
MODELS IN WATER FOR DEMONSTRATION RIDES. CANOES-PONTOONS4ILIMINATORS.
0>$N
PAUL A. YOUNG, INC.
4538 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plaint MARINA on LOON LAKE OR 4-0411
rartboH goaT. MOtbR, trail-
PROBLEMS
8 willcdoL (Sir VIry bej
TO HELP
YOU
budget Payments available
BRUMMETT AGENCY
da Mlfa	Ff - . „
» Pentlac Stata Bank
Foreign Ci»E .	,	105
S2 MG, TD, good shape. i£00.
Bast attar. *93-1779.
TONY'S MARINE for JOHNSON MOTORS
, Shellaka, Geneva, Areocraft, bo and canoes. 25 years repair perlence, open. 9 '9|| 5.
, KEEG0 HARBOR
TRADIN' DAYS
rede up to that BIGGER BOAT NO JOHNSON MOTOR NOW! larcrett — «ea - RayThor*-
PINTER'S
imH
FE 44924
IPBh^mRPRR
largest euppltoa et Mefflry grto
E«djr1
1959 MERCEOES BENZ.
WNflBlhwMaftl
425-4747,
32,160;
SUNBEAM roadster,
. enplne^antt to excellent s
TuperioTrambler
550 .Oakland Ava.	FE *4421
TRIUMPH TR3 NEW TRaKS-
mission, good tin Inquire 6W-1771
Autobahn
Motors,. Inc.
AUTHORIZED V! " tiJle north ot ■ l. Telegraph
_	new. Garage
kept and Immaculate throughout! Only 31447 par week, puts this "car at care1' In.your driveway. Call Mr. Data, Credit Ceerdlnetor.
LLOYD'S .
Ltoceln Marcury-Comat
New Location/.-^
1250 Oaklaruf'Avt.
• FIJKM

•ERI0R RAMBLER
M lull price with na mo
"lucky auto sales
193 or 254 S. Saginaw < FE 44fMgr FE 3-7853
'	$795	.
Gw warranty SPARTAN DODGE
I. Saginaw	FE 84I41-.
matte, Ml _________ ______
condition, 5495.
VAN' CAMP KHEVY
MILFORD . ,__________ MU 4-J525 ,
... PONTIAC STATION wAgON. hydrematic, power steering and brakes, radio — only 41455 miles
■	' let «— '
L 2715
________Lake Rd. and Scott Lake
Rd.) FE 5*1392.	- ,
859 CHEVY IMP ALA 2-DOOR hardtop. FB 54791.
1919 CHEVAOLET, BEL Mn, has V4 engine with automatic
■	insmlsslon, clue book price, 3550, IR ^ PRICE 5397, weekly gay-
King Auto Sales
3275 W. Huron St. •
, FE544W_________ .
dltlon, 45095 Grant Park. Utica. 7314494 "
1940 CHEVY CORVAIR MONZA, RA-
dlo, heater , and standard, transmission. A sharp ttttto jear and only 55 down and U months on ^balance.- Ask, about our mangy Dack guarantee.
VILLAGE..
RAMBLER

THE POfltiAC frRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST Kim

/ibIwl Cwr
1757 CHEVY BEL-AIR, 341 ENGINE
RtFOMBSStOM-tTie Chevy C5n-
vertlble. No money down. Call Mr. ghnom - MA MM4, Haskins
wTSUfmi ,^vI»Yi«LCT-
■pant rldlo, heater, while with
OT Wtortor. Pcb? **’"IvJ?t5£
terms. PATTER^ CHEVROLET CO., I0al S. WOODWARD jJfcE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml *2735, ~
fM Ch4vy )-6poR, Power
■taarlng and brakes. $1,070. FE
Powar staying.- r wtillawalla. Turquolaa	JH
Np. Extra clean. Oily tlJN. Eew terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET COw tool S. WOODWARD AVE./ BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-?735.
Chevrolet two statiqn wagon
at Lincoln and Main. LI 1-9357.
WMJfSS »1SK! :
LY NO MONEY DOWN.fiymant* , at-13.75 par waak. See Mr. Parka at HyoMTurny Ford. Ml 4-HOO,
1946 tHiVYWAGON
. we believe
Nbw end Used Cart 104
New end Used Cara 104
t««l CHEVROLET IMPALA *TA-
'■> r—
life
V-3 anginot Powar-
£B -rs* M
log Rim. Offty UK Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET GO* 1100 I. WOODWARD AVE- BIRMINGHAM. *"
mt FORD COUPE. OOOO CONDI* Man, fiat i: Rea# cantor ~‘ Hotly, Phono; 436N77. ,
►57 FORD WAgOn, Its. P6NTIAC Auto Brokara. FE 4*130.
W0 FORD TRANSPORTATION 1100
1*3 CORVtttit i* M6rsep6w-■' Si. PEWIM.^*'?/ :__Li.
1M1 CHEVY CORVAlA CONVER-tlble Couoa. radio, hoi tar and automatic
monay back guarantee.
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
Special to you
Hunter Dodge
WHERE. THE HUNT ENDS
40* $. HUNTER BIRMINGHAM
Ml 7-0955 .
'^«i?^utOTatlc*trilSmlsalon. White WRQg.%»l"*MI&. Eerrtarbu. •	BIR-
MtNOHAM. Ml 4-1715.
Ml CORVAIR. RADIO, HEATER, automatic tranamlaalon. Ajnaw Birmingham one-owner trad*. SO* down, tank rater.
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
TROY/MICHIGAN ' JUM536
mi cn»vB6LfT BiiCAVttrryg;
door sedan, frcylindor, atandard ahtn. 11 Jta,actual^mllOk tjtare
On'ty'SSlfS, Easy* terms. PATTER-, ION CHEVROLET CO- 1000 0. WOODWARD AVE- BIRMING-
Autobahn
Motors, Inc.
authorized vw dealer ,
V* Mila north of Miracle Mil* _ IMS s. Telegraph	PE Mill
mi CtafvTW*, XUtftMAf^
V-3, radio, haator, whltawalls.t7.50
• wlr/Stavr coRVAiR too *pWn.
,/Atk
RAMBLER
7 TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8-0536
s-7010. pi 4-am.
1962 Chevy II
Novo 2-Door Sedan
id priced at *1.175.
BEATTIE
"Your PORD DEALER line* IW ON DIXIE IH^raRTORli Homo of SERVICE after the tele AT THE STOPLIGHT
OR 3-1291
mi imBaLa convertible, f t dard ahltt, l-cyllndy, power a .7 tag, 327 BMBIK radio, he whltewalla. Rad wtlh rad W-and whHa tap- DON'S. 077 I. La-—r RE. Orton. MV MW.
chevy ii driver traiifjri
High » 1000 tc
a Birmingham
mnm n. •••» talanc* E Bl factory warranty. Priced from 0J<*»J; Choice of colors. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO- 1000 I.. WOODWARD AVE- BIRMINGHAM. Ml r 4-2715.
mrflbto, no monay dawn. Call Mr. Johnson, MA f-MOL Haaktaa Cheuy.
Haaktaa Chevy.
' CMvrOI** Impaia *07,'dark groan, w%/new, car warranty. OL 1-0*11*
Hal CHEVY 4-bOOR
l nil uoouiy mi i. wmhw,
___mdlc, ra^ ltalvr an4	3
Clean Inside and evil Puff prlc*
JEROME
\. Motor Sales
280 S. SAGINAW PE 8-0488
v. lloy:
" Llncoln-Mercury-Comet'.
New Location ,1250 Oakland Ave.
• PE 1-71*3
17*1 CHEVROLET SUPER SPORT convertible, 407 engine, 4-»—■* ,i transmission, 1-owner. *44-4104.
144 t. Woodward, Birmingham
_________Ml 4-37*3
I CORVAIR GREENBRIER CUS-9-pasienger,
___ _______ ..*Eir. aHjtai
. Luggage rack, picnic table.
Powergllde,
rad Interior. Only *2,075. E a a y terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO- 1000 1. WOODWARD AVE* BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2715.
“SUPER SPORT"
And |uat thofahorpoat ota any-where. Sneppy tapped with Chevy’s Ultra-quick “IIV1 engine. Imagine yourself et the wheal of this tloarl Many, many 15 gif the original price. Call Mr. Dale, Credit Coordinator.
LLOYD'.S
Llncoln-Mercury-Comot
New. Location 1250 Oakland Avt.
1757 FORD 2-DOOR, CUSTOM, I* -•Under engine, automata. 1—
n*?fuRON MOTOR SALES
1101 Baldwin t blocks north of Walton PE 2-2441
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
^OOR
VA MM -TO„— r, *2.473, OR 1-7414. ry BEL-AIR VdoOA, 407
1757 FORD. POUR DOOR SEDAN. *— fine, 3-critady. Only
OW WARRANTY W
SPARTAN DODGE
211 S. SOglnew	FE 0-4541
1760 FORD WAGON, ECONOMICAL
1964 Chevy
Biscayna 4-Door
a tayltader angina apd automatic
1760 FALCON, 4-DOOR,'WHltE, RA-
BEATTIE
"Your FORD DEALER Since 1*30* ON DIXIE IN WATERFORD Homo of SERVICE after the Ml# AT THE STOPLIGHT .
OR 3-1291
logo S. .WOODWARD AVI- BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4-2715.
1757 DODGE D-500, *250.	“
FE 50060 altar 4 pjn. ,/f-
Autobahn
Motors, |na
AUTHORIZED VW DEALER W mile north Of Miracle Mile 1761 S. Totadtoph „ PE B45H 1760 POkG TOWN SEDAN, GlIAN
4-SPEED^
,424 En^ina
OODOE Polora M lop. WUh bucket	-
Hunter Dodo©
WHERE THE HUNT ENDS
417 S. HUNTER	BIRf ““***'
Ml 7-0955
and reedy It Ont
OW WARRANTY
SPARTAN DODGE
211 S. Saginaw	FBI-4541
1.7601 FAIRLANB ^SOO.. HARD
■■■I ffsiaft.
fi*5P OOfcGE STATION WA06«,
1^60 DODGE
You would' ta proud to bt .....
^nvsr^ou^K
OPENING SPECIAL TOj YOU.
Hunter Dodge
WHERE THE HUNT ENDS
•* S. HUNTER BIRMINGHAM
Ml 7-095^1
1940 DeSOTO
Moor hardtop, VS automata, HP er steering and brakes.. All black with matching Interior. This car Is real sharp. Salt prloa *1,175.
Hunter Dodge
WHERE THE HUNT ENDS
4*7 S. HUNTER BIRMINGHAM
Ml 7-0955
>551
iORlTi
Mwtsi
___-nv H«r«
No Crtill ProWtm* .
Cooper Motors
4171 Dial* - Dradtai Platas
1943 DODGE DART
27* Series, Moor, tayltader, automatic. The most papular compact car on the iharfcdt today. Bay trom our*graS&*open*ng*spec*al
I. *1,575.
Hunter Dodge
WHERE THE HUNT ENDS
m S. HUNTER	f HtMINOHAM
Ml 7-0955
666GI 5aBt coupe,. 1777. Bit;
cellent frensportetlon. Today’s tael
Autobahn
Motors, Inc.
AUTHORIZED VW DIALER VI mile north of Miracle.Mile 1765 S. Telegraph	PE
1757 DE r ^
LUCKY
173 dr 254 S. Saginaw v PE 44114 or FE 1-7853 A [Access open to lots while Street
1741 DODGE, VERY CLEAN, .... /cylinder, standard transmission. ■■.Only ■■ -V.	\
$795
GW WARRANTY
SPARTAN DODGE
JcoM?®n tKt5pT 4S: »tr«5 HURON MOTOR SALES' ,’-jWilld«l«
w
£6RvAIR COUPE. AUTOMAt-
Ml—
*1,1*5. Ea«y terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO- 1*00 S. WOODWARD AVE- BIRMINGHAM -’’’ 4-2715.	||
1*41 corYair AAONZA, 4-SPEfib
-.-ZTr----*. OR *4HH ;
R 4-DOOR
■MHBRw lim*
• finish. Matching
Hunter Dodge
WHERE THE HUNT ENDS
Hat/R. fine selection of 1*64 Dodges, factory official cart and
finest selection of u
Hunter Dodge
very good. *450. PE *-1*45.
BIRMINGHAM TRADES x
Every used car offered for' retail to tha public Is 4 bonafide 1-owner, low mileage, sharp cat. 1-year parts and labor warranty.
1*44 BUICK i 1*44 BUICK C
1*44 BUIOK	, ■ • ■ v >
1*4) BUICK Station Wagon 0,1 1*43 BUICK ElOClrajt.—S’ 1*41 BUICK Conyertlblo ..... *2,1 17*3 iuiCK1 Hardtop, olr ... 0,1 174) BURK Hardtop )	O.
1742 BUICK Station Waeon 0.1 tm BUICK llactra . . . . . . . o.s 1*42 BUICK Invlctp custom 0.1 1*42 BUICK 2-door .. ........ 0,(1
1*42 BUICK 4-doOr ...i. §1.1
mi BUICK Hardtop --—(M
1*41 BUICK 2-door eedan ., *M 1*40 BUICK ConvaraWa .... §14
174#BUICK Hardtop ..-... *U
1757 BUICK Hardtop .. *8
FISCHER
BUICK
r,' 515 S.‘ Woodward
Nfw and Used Care'' JNi'llbw.mi Dead Cere ' Hi
175* OLDSMbilLI 2 DOOR HARO*
"superior' RAMBLER
IXAIUMISSIDN, RADIO, HEX
ER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSi LUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Pa BURT* rn $4.95 per wogftr. Sea M Porks «t Harold TtiriM# Ford, h
4.7MB.	■	”
. "Pontiac's Discount Lot"
LUCKY AUTOSALES
17) or 214 S. Saginaw PE 4-2214 or F8>7BS)
(Access open to lots sHiHo str
_____under construction)_
1757 FORD FAIRLANE 500, VERY •nice. PE 1-7542. M. Rig--—
THUNDERBIRD, HARDTOP,

windows, . i finish, or
10HN McAULIFFE
.FORD
430 oakidhd Ava.
PH HEATER. WHITE WAL TIRES, CHROME LUGGAGE Ckl. RIER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Paymants of *4.75 par waak. See Mir. Parks at Harold Turner Ford. MI 4-7500.
1741 FALCON 2-DOOR, DELUXE,
1962 Cutlass
WAGON
► passenger, l-cyllndar autamattc, power sheering, power bratat. Extra daon/SIl* dawn. •»
BOB BORST
Lincoln-Mereury 520 S. Woodward BlimiNOHAM •
i radio a
Honing, *
.many extras. Pa 11,473. -
JOHN MCAULIFFE
FORD
1962 Ford
Foirlone 2-Door
Ilea gnen with radio, hooter. For o-Matlc transmission, tayttad angina and priced at *1,375.
BEATTIE
"Your PORD DEALER Slnct 1730* ON DIXIE IN WATERFORD Homo of SERVICE after the tala
_ PLYMOUTH, 175. p0nYIa6 FE 4-7100.
Auto Brokers, Walton at tarry, 1751 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR STATION
r______..    BT'pric4 *277;
Weekly payments (1.10.
ESTATE STORAGE
It* E. South Blvd.
PE 3-7161
1*5* PLYMOUTH 4-OOOR, RADIO
1*41 OALAklE SB* 4-DOOR
"*	-,u,ii6S»rd
I, automatic. US-4347.
1*43 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN door station wagon, ^cylinder out mafic, racHd, heater and bow
1740 PLYMOUTH, NINE »ASSEN-gor sport Fury wagon. Fully oqulppad Including power ottering, power tailgate^ On^
OW WARRANTY
SPARTAN DODGE
211 8. Saolnaj
il Emerald green, ra-l 1963 FORD 2-D00l^ Special today, *471. a snappy matador rad t-door sat set on by a set of like new wh walls, and ell vinyl Interior, Vo for tin amazing taw price el o
1960 FALCON
2-door, atandard shlfl. radio and haatar, all blua, blue Interior, economy special. OUR GRAND OPENING SPECIAL TO YOU. 14*1 .
Hunter Dodge
WHERE THE HUNT ENDS,
7 S. HUNTER BIRMINGHAM
Ml 7-0955
ISSION, RA-
________ WHITEWALL
TIRE*. ABSOLUTELY NO BY OOWN. Payments of *4 •“•O', Sot Mr. Parks a*
IT Fold* Ml 4-7900.
1740 PORB CUITOMLINki Y4 IN-glne with automatic tranamlaalon. Extra ntaa. BluV book price $765. OUR PRICE S3**, weakly pay-manta *4.11.
King Auto Solos
PE G4M*
in If.
LLOYD'S
Llncota-Mercury-Comat
New Location 1250 Oakland Ave.
._____PE 3-7B43
1943W for6 OALudi Mb fa* tack. Excellent condition. Ml 4-4070
61VS Fokb 2-DOQR HARDtGp with radio and ^heater, ao-er steering, power brakes and W wall tlresi full price. S2.275. r* JOHN McAULIFFE
FORD
*30 Oakland Ava..
DELUXE CLUB WAGON, 1*44 W
a savings el MW in original daHvary price. Prlcad sail today - with as, little *> *
■ —- -■-* --ir down and up to
1*44 FAIRLANE 500. 2-006R MAR0-‘op, m. 4 spied. Must tell. OR
» LINCOLN PREMIER 4-D O O
g air-conditioning. . jr euiaT tr-WARRANTY
SPARTAN DODGE
1960 FORD 500
2-door. This car has no -rust. Has an economical tayUnder angina with automatic transmission plus new tires. For your driving com; tort. Only $777. GUR G R A NO OPiNINO SPECIAL TO YOU.
Hunter Dodge
WHERE THE HUNT ENDS
47* S. HUNTER BIRMINGHAM
Ml 7-OMT
LUCKY AUTO SALES
173 or 1S4 S. tagtajw FE 4-2214 or FE ilJSl ~<en to tab while etn sr construction)
1751 CONTINENTAL — ABOVE AV-osago — Prlvoto — MV Shell. ' CONTINENTAL
Moor hardtop. — equipped. Gotham Gold mmeculate. Only 11,*95. ,ION CHEVROLET CO., WOOOWARO AVI., BIR-
..... (M, Ml 4-173S.
ltei LiNCOLN CONTINENTAL 14,000 miles, original owner, many pow-ersd Items, dark blua. PE 4-7470. 1*57 MERCURY 2-DOOR. 1 .OWNER
“I960 BIRD'
A brand new specimen of this classic. Executive owned,, garage kept, and showroom new In ovory detail. Como look at a taauNful vintage T-BIr* tad ta|,Jhrlljad; Buy with any old car dBta. Call Mr. Data, Credit Ce-ordlnator
LLOYD'S
: Ltaeoln-Mercury-Comet
New Locdtimv 1250 Oaklond Avt.
PI 1-7141
P F^SpiE's' AUTO SALES "
I .Oakland_____ Ft
I960 Comet
CUSTOM
2-doer, tayllndor, outomdHe, ppn er sieerlng. *,«M.actual mltai New car warranty. SI 17 down.
BOB BORST
Lincoln Mercury
■TIT
BIRMINGHAM
condition. OR M3*»-►41 COMET, 2-DOOR STICk dto, excellent condition, gob by. 4471 OR 1-1154.	•
1961 T-Bird
HARDTOP
Sharp/ power swlng-a-way whes Must see- to appreciate.
BOB BORST
^ta^Moreury.
BEATTIE
"Yoiir PORO DEALER SbtM 1730 ON DIXIE IN WATERFORD A S«VICE any the sell
\CAPIT0L AUTO SALES • LIQUIDATION LOT SEE US TODAY! .
312 W. Montcolm FE 8-4071 X WEY MUST GO
1757 Pohtlac and 1*57 Marcury.
1*55 and 1*56 Chaw .*45 k.
1*55 Dodge and 1755 Plym., *45 tach.
IIP DamKIwUiH HU ClMIlk ’
1740 Chevy and 1747 Chevy.
-bSSpj^w--
4 Plymouth*, tl ECONOMY CAI
$145 up I OIXW
1964 ' RAMBLER Close-Gut
BILL SPENCE
<;, for That Rambler I
•	4473 Dixie Hwy.
trade-in. $577 fi nn no money down.
lucky auto sales
W PB S-TkB
„ tab while Str« w construction)
Ndw Hdtftal Cm “i960 PONTIAC"
Tiyllndwr autom«t1c, r^adio, and heater. Car fnm, * ROM» FERGUSON, Rochttfar FORD Dealer, Oi- 1-9711.
Olds m 2-door hardtop,
tow mileage, fully equipped, $2*75 AAA 5-5071. Ask tor Cecil. Atty '
mmo.
monay tack guarahtog. -
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
TROY, MICHIGAN JU 84)536
FE S-7M)
i ro wts while street
_____ construction)
1741 PLYMOUTH, RADIO, HEATER, whitewalls, stick 4. Must sail. Will accept first S550. Ml 4-1*57.

211 S. Saginaw
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8-0536
174) PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE
m' gw warS^Hity'* 1
SAVE SLOOQ, SPARTAN DODGr
, Saginaw	FE M541
I960 VALIANT
ING SPECIAL TO YOU.
Hunter Dodge
WHERE THE HUNT ENDS
77 S. HUNTER BIRMINGHAM
Ml 7-0955
1740 VALIANT V IM WAGON, STICK
J960 VALIANT WAGON
4-door aadan, wt mission, radio.
Hunter Dodge
WHERE THE HUNT ENDS
** S. HUNTER BIRMINGHAM
•i Ml 7-0955
1*43 VALIANT, POuA-bOOR StpAN —It's got ovorfthlng, tow miloaga.
SAVE $800
1*S7 PONTIAC 4-DOOR, RADIO AND hoaty, power staying and brakes, JJjq condition, --------
new. On* owner; Birmingham trade -OUR GRAND OPENING SPECIAL T9 YOU, SJ.TO.-
Hunter Dodge
WHERE THE HUNT ENDS
177 S.-HUNTER BIRMINGHAM
Ml 7-0955
1757 PONTIAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP Bonneville. FuU powy. $875 ‘ price with’ no money down.
LUCKY AUTO SALES
m Or 254 S. Saginaw FE A22I4 y PE 3-7*53
1757 PONTIAC CATALINA, WHITE, ' "~ar, hardtop, power, vary clean, it offy.. 5l» Elizabeth Lake
1963 Comet
2-D00R
BOB BORST,
Mtop
Auto Salts, Inc.
You C(NI
BUY
With No . Moneys Down
. No Credit Problems Spot Dwliywry!
*hisslw
rawiliil
IAC CATALINA 2-DOOR
Lake. tM, »Wil
I960'BONNEVILLE, 2-OOOR hARL I—1 vary sharp. Radio, :fwgtar, y steering bratat. Only
i or your old cor down, i ithly paymenls.*GW Worry
SPARTAN DODGE
'51,173. OR HOI.
New and Used Con 196
1757 RAMBLER V-A_CLEAK, NO
Credit Ceydtaetor
LLOYD'S
/	’ Lincoln Mercury-Cottar
New Location 1250 Oakland Are.
______' FE 3-7*43	'
1744’ PONTIAC STATION WAGON,
rtfico' LI «-77li or OR HW. i
-SPECIAL-
1961
PONTIAC Catalina
STATION WAGON
d pow*r steering, whitewall tires d luggage rack on lop, Ea*r *“* ■as. • '
$1795
PONTIAC RETAIL STORE
65 Mt. Clemens St.
FE 3-7964
"Homo of Wide Trick"
*1962 Ppntiac
2-poor, Hardtop ,
BEATTIE
"Your FORD DEALER Sine* 1*117 ON DIXIE IN WATERFORD Homo of SERVICE *fty the seta AT THE STOPLIGHT7. ,
OR 3-1291
1742 TEMPEST LtMANS SPORT Coup*, auto., A-l snap* owny. *1 Ml. EM 1-747Z TEMPEST,
MONEY-DOWN. Payment* per week. Sot. Mr. Park* SI Turner Ford. Ml 4-7500.
1*41 TEMPEST, 4-DOOR SEDAN. Si automatic, radio, other extras, 1-437-4505.
741’ EQUA GRAND PRlJt powy, automatic, AM-PM,-g«-
1743 4-DOOR CATALINA HARQTOP Ventura trim, *11 powy, low —-ago. OR S-31K____;
jer, radio, hoaty, auto. --
ston, powy roar windows, llr
___mltos. FE 5-5414 attar.» p m. ,
1744 b6nneviui Convertible
walls, solid whit* wHtl gold tarter, low mileage. DON’S” 477 S. Lapeer Rd., Orion. MY 2-2041.
1744 PONTiAC CATALINA, WHITE,
1744 GRAND PRIX
mil**,
3-4114
sllvy-gray’, nSB ORXu
^jor^OR
1764 PONJIAC CAfALlJlA, S2>4.
1757 RAMBLER CLASSIC 4-000* station wagon, Jew mileage, ax cellent condition. 1475, ■ down.
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
444 t. Woodward, Birmingham Ml frVM
RAMBLER CLASSIC CUSTOM 4-door aadan, 1740. Beautiful silver gray. Immaculate condition. Com-
se»ts|y ^	sea^ ^ ajrtomyfc
Autobahn
Motors, Inc.
AUTHORIZED VW DEALER to mil* north of Mirada Mil* lift B, t«l*Br«ph _ Fi P45 1740 AMBASSAOOR 4-DOOR. RADIO, Mir, automatic transmission ■ $475, 145 down, bank rat**..
VILLAGE
RAMBLEB
TROY, MICHIGAN \ JU 8-0536
If Prices Confasa You 777 See a Dealer Who Doesn't
MARVEL v.
FE 84079 FE 8-4079
Ml RAMBLER 4-000*, RApIO, hoaty, autamatlc transmlsaion. *7*5, S4I dew* tank rate*.
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
44* 1L WOodwaid, Blrmlnghem
1961 Rambler.
Amtdcan
ston. prHe It only 17*5.
BEATTIE
"Your PORO DEALER Since 1730" ON DIXIE IN WATERFORD Home of SERVICE efty the iota AT THE STOPLIGHT
OR 3-1291
ibl RAMBLER CUSTOM CLAtSld, 4-door, raMta heater, automatic
IhwwalleildCfei 111
ImTram^^
Classic 1 dew wlth sttck shlft, ro-dio and heety Idea famhy car tor picnics and hauling Jha ktos and gracartaa around. .SPRCIM-GRAND OPENINO PRICE, only Hti r
Hunter Podge
WHERE THE HUNT ENDS
477 S. HUNTER BIRMINGHAM
Ml 7-0955
17*2 RAMBLER *775, 571 down, bank rates.
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8-0536
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
INI RAMtaER 4-DOOR WAGON
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
446 S. Woodward, Birmingham
RAMBLER,
REPOSSESSION fc I
no money down^Ci.....
MA 5-2604, Haskins Chevy.
1761 RAMBLER CLASSIC 4-OOOR station wagon, radio, heater, auto matic transmission. *745, 145 down
village!
RAMBLER
664. $. Woodward* Birmlnpham Ml 6-3900.
iti; hnftWiAq, glabbic 4-door.
money back guarante*.
VILLAGE:
RAMBLER
‘TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8-0536
1742 RAMBLE k jRAD 10,
i^ATER, 75 down
village”
RAMBLER
TROY, MICHIGAN JU 80536
SHELTON
PONTIAC-BUICK I
232 S. MAIN, ROCHESTER OL tall)
\Credit orUuGget
Problems?
We Can Fttujnce You I TOO Cars to Select Fron\!
‘GallMnDdle FE 3-7865
LLOYDS
OLIVER
BUIGK
1740 ELBCTRA ConvorHblo,
14 RftNAULT R-4 black.
D PORO Sataxl* "500" 4-door
IS RENAULT Oerdtal, 4-
1762	BUICK Ipactal 4-door,
pew«r.> white ............Si
jfit'iMPALA 2-door, automatic. power .............01
1763	JEEP Wagonaar. powy, •
Mu* ..................... *3
IN) ILCCTRA 225-4-door bard-
62 MERCURY Converttbto,
>1742 USABRE top, pow*
INI BUICK b
OLIVER
BUICK
210 Orchard-Lake FE 2-9165
Oakland
Chrysler --Plymouth
17 tatuWul NEW YORKER* AND CHRYSLER 330*. Mutt. Clean out
$1,000
CONVERTIBLE SPECIALS
47 Dodge, 1 47 Ford/IT!
CMini Out Our 1964 Ramblers Year-Ehtk Discounts in affect right now ROSE RAMBLER
1143 Commerce, Union Lata
EM 3-4155
CLOSE-OUT, NEW CARS AND demos. Plenty of qgetlty used 'tar*. KEEGO PONTIAC .BALES,
HAUPT
PONTIAC
Houghten & Son
I. Main	OL
ROCHESTER
. Haupt Ponliac
1, milt north et U.S. WB ta Mi* -.Open MONDAY. TUESDAY and ^ THURSDAYS Til * p.m. MA 5-4544
1755 BUICK Hardtop 175* CHEVY 2-door
1757 Chevy wagon
INS FALCON Meon 175r-FONTIAC I
Auto, or, nice white

________________________ S51-575;
1742 CHEVY lnW|la Convert. *1775 eulCK ctadBar'- **“*'
FORD 1
T-BlRP ___
MERC. .4-door A FORD dolaxle 1 "—	’ Convert.
32175
1764 ChEVY Impale Hardtop 12575 17*4 PONTIAC 4-door Hertftpp 531751
962 Oakland :
FE 4-9969
Brand New 1964 Rambler Compare all claims Then get-more for less
VILLAGE/RAMBLER
V	We won't be undersold
Tail us if «►* era
.. Nothing Down—Special Finance Plan
$49,71
$1-66
VILLAGE RAMBLER.
444 S. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM	Ml
FORD COMPANY' TRUCKS
WE HAVE OVER
4Q, TRUCKS
NOW IN STOCK
Pickups ~ Stakes— Tractors Vans - Tandems - Diesels
. JEROME FERGUSON. '
ROCHESTER FARO DEALER
; 0L 4-9711
SUBURBAN OLDS
"Birmingham Trades"
100% . WRITTEN GUARANTEE
Every car listed carries this guarantee. Take the guesswork out of buying. Get one of our Certified Used cars! Bank rates.
1963 Olds “88"
V 1962 Olds Starfire
Coupe — like new all th* way. *ul ” ■	two |p chaee*
1962 OLDS Dynamic 88
1959 OLDS Dynamic “88"
1963 Cutlass Hardtop
1961 OLD* F-85
Ibeor, New New. Only tlHf
1963 Buick LaSabre
1958 CADILLAC OeVille
Sedan, all power, factory air con
1964 OLDS Demos.
1963 OLDS 2-Door
Hardtop, Dynamic "*»", autom lc, realo, whitewalls, pawarl i
VACATION SPECIALS' Over 50 Used Cars to Choose Froth
2 Year. Warranty ’
SEE 808 MARflN, STUB STUBBLEFIELD
565 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM ' MI 44485
Mansfield
Auto Sales
1104 BALDWIN PE 5-5900 BANK RATES
STATION WAGONS
INI FORD .Country jad*^ 1742 CHEVY PARKWOQP. Vj,
INI POffTIAC Bormavllto Safari. ^^^fii'oNeisTiKe
PONTIAC^CatsItay SjPtaj white'top."#REAL'»HARP. 174* CHEVY Parfcwood. y* automatic, ^tawmaer. Ehi* with whit* lop. READY TO DOI 1*17 CHIVY 4-Piisengy. *«yi-Indy, automatic. Clean “ pin. New tl
to heety*
-Ann i u> Full powy, ___________________ Inter tor.
1743 PONTIAC Bonneville. Hoc-' irn blue, while top. Sway |B* r. 7,000 mil**. OM warrenty. 1962 OLDS P-15 Cutlest. Bucket
whit* Top.
1757 PONTIAC Bennavlll*. Blue with a whit* tap. A SHARP LITTLE CAR I	i
1753 CHEVY IMPALA. V4, automatic, pewy steering and
vj?!nr' peS?* lKSTtin* one!
"taw top."
2-DOOft HARDT0PS
•tallna. Fowl •s. whit* wit DM warranty.
174) PONTIAC Grind Prlx. Loaded with extras. Mag. wheats. 11,MB mitoa. om Warranty. 17*3 CHEVY Impel*. V-l, slk*. A one-owner, tow mltoee* nr.
DM warranty, Yorktown blua. mt PONTIAC Catalina. Powy staarhto, a**y~ *y*_ glass, now
)NI PONTIAC Catalina. ^ V-3, automatic, powar stsyin* and brtan. Gold with new rubby. ITM/POtfriAC Ventura. Powy
1743 PONTIAC Cetelln*. Red with white top, poWy ileering and brake*. YOU MUST SEE THIS LITTLE BEAUTY.
1740 CHEVV Impel*. V-3, automatic,' blue, pewy staying. White, whitewall). A REAL CLEAN HARDTOP.
1740 CHEVY Impale. *> stick, safety belts, brwti* with white top.
1*40 PONTIAC C
la tap, pow< as. Nk* to
1*3* PONTIAC Catalina. Powy (toying and brake*. Clean as can be.
1*5* CHEVY Impale. V-*, auto-matic, whit* with bin* Intortor.
FAMILY CARS
1744 MERCURY Cantata. V-* automatic, power jMW'JM. brakes, 4.500 (dual mil**. Un-dy warranty. Bucket seats and
Ilk* MW.
1743 PONTIAC Catalina ADear, Powy staying and brakaa, Yorktown Mu*. Just Ilk* new. 174) FORD 2-Door. V-B, stick. Custom "3M". A nice etoaiv tom mileage car. lltat actual. 1742 CHEVY Impala (pert Sedan. v-3, autamatlc, pow a r slaying and braky. 11,000 actual miles, and a one-owner, mi PONTIAC Cetelln* Viet* 4-Door Hardtop. Powar steering end brake*. LIKE NEW. mi CMEW BIsceyn*. V-B,
INI BUICK Special 4-Door. Powy slaying and brakaa. Rad and white. AJtEAL NICE LOW MILEAGE CAR.
I FORD GalaxL
, V-3, automatic, ti INI CHEVY Bal Air 4 Baer HgtaRta. V-», automatic, power staying and bratas. Blue with whit* top. Clean top original. 1740 PONTIAC ITARCHIEP 2-
174* PONTIAC CalallnlOvitt* 4-Door Hardtop. Pesmr steylM and brakaa. Rad and prlcad
walls. Maltdgany. This car rv .. perfect.
1740 OLDS "M" 4-Door Hardtgp. Full pewy, air conditioning, new tires and a one-owner. This one you must see.	, .
1957 CHEVY 6. Automatic. Blue and Whit*. A nice second tar. -me PONTIAC Catalina 4-Day
1737 CHEVY BEL AIR L.ItlCk. Priced rigid.
1757 DODGE, v-i, automatic, pesmr steering andbrtfcee. Rad
COMPACTS
1763 MONZA Ctryalr, 4-speed, rad. Mack Intortor, SHARPTTTT m3 PONTIAC Tempest, 314, , floor shift. Nedvmr mml new lira*.’
CORVAIR "7*9" 4-Doer.
1741 COMET AOaor. Automata. Rad. A real fin* s*cgnd car. 1740 COMET »Oa*r A Stick.
TRUCKS
JNj CHEVY >Ton Fleets Ida
iZLVjar-oZf'jti*'
See Our Sharp Cgrs Today
Mansfield
Auto\Sales
1104 Baldwin *
FE 5-5900
: ,X\\,
Wmm
m
HI

mmm
Bm


THE POXTUC PRESS, TTESDA Y, ArC*rST 4. 1R«4
D^ll
—Television Programs-
Programs fumishod by stations listed in this column are subject to'change without notice.
Channel 3-WmC-TV Channel 4-WWJ-TV Chonnal 7-WXYIi-TV ChnnnRt 9-CKLW-TV Clwnnnl 5B-WTV$
EVENING
C:M (2) (4) Newt, Weather ' Sports
(7)t Movie: “Alf Strike”; (In Process)
( 91 Woody Woodpecker (56) Indian Experiment C:30 (7) (Color) News, Sports (9) Tombstone Territory Brutal killer escapes from j ~ his guard on a train. (Re- i pieat).
(56) Science Reporter 7:06, (2) Suspense
■	(4) (Color) Weekend Combination of boat racing and marine history is shown at Vermillion, Ohio. !
' (7) Rifleman Man wanted by the law! agrees to be turned in- so1 his girl cah get the re- j ward money. (Repeat).
(9) Bat Masterson Bat meets .a local bandit! and a pretty senorita in Southern California. (Repeat).
- (56) French Lesson '7:29 (2) Twilight Zone ’’ Soldiers on maneuvers nedr the Custer Battle FieldJ slip through time. .(Repeat) \
(4) Mr. Novak Old-fashioned teacher is
■	subject of criticism. (Re-■ "pent) . \
<7> Combat •	.
Strict lieutenant has to
•	lead platoon on a-dagger*. i, ous mission. (Repeat)\
(9) Movie: “Dangerous" (1925) Bette Davis, Fran-. chot Tone, Alison Skip-worth. Young architect --V meets former star, actress (56) (Special) Great Ju-vgl
9:16 (2) Baseball: Tigers vs. Chicago
8:30 (4) Moment of Fear Scotland Yard detective must track down the mur-. derer of a nrodel. (Repeat)
X7) McHMe’s Navy Ensign Parker imitates, a * famous English general. (Repeat).
9:06 (4) Richard Boone
Newspaperwoman poses - as h sister of a convict to get a story. (Repeat (71 (Color) Greatest Show
Slate's dad wants him to make the cir'cufe a paying proposition. (Repeat) (OWSingalong Jubilee 9:30 (9) Nature of Things 10:00 (4) (Special) Primer on Communism Report on the Communist P a r t y movement. (Repeat). -(7) Fugitive
----^ViendoffeM^-ewitcb
.- identities with Kimble.
*	(Repeat).
(9) Plane Makers Shop worker is fired for a mistake, but an executive ‘ gets pff Ught. (Repeat). 10:56 (2) Baseball Scoreboard 11:09 (2) (4) (7) (9) Newi Weather, Shorts ’ I 11:25 (9) Movie: “Rhapsody in . Blue"
11:26 (2) Steve Allen v (4) (Color) Tonight (7) Les Crape 1:00 (2) Peter Gunn (4) Best of Groucho (9) Featurette .
.1:15 (7) After Hours
TV Features
Facts on Communism
By United Press International MR. NOVAK, 7:30 p.m. (4) Long-time teacher is object of parental, complaints when she begins teaching students social hygiene.
BASEBALL, 8:00 p.m. (2) Tigers meet white Sox at Chicago^ Comiskey Park.	.	«	*
PRIMER ON COMMUNISM, 10:00 p.m. (4) Report on various stages of Communist party movement starting with 19th Century poverty in Europe as known by Karl Marx.
PLANE MAKERS, 10:00 p.m. (9) Trouble erupts at plant when laborer is fired for mistake equal to one that brought only a reprimand to executive.
'65 Car Models
‘	. ■	: • V- V J
Begin Rolling
. Crossword
Answer to previous Puzzle
*Ford Plants FirsVinj .New Line Production
I 49 Acquire "knowledge 50 Sunbathers desire
. ACROSS
I	Abie’s Irish bride 5 Mother of Jesus >
and Metuchen, | 9 Community in New, York
II	World -
(var.)
WEDNESDAY MORNING
(7) Big Theater
.8:21 (7)-Movie: “The Whole, Truth." (1958) Stewart1 Granger', Donna Reed,! George Sanders. Producer is framed for screen stag’s murder
8:55 (9)' Morgan's Merry-Go-Round
9:99 (2) Movie:	’’Music for
Madame.’* (1937) Joan Fontaine. Young tenor joins band of thieves*. ,,
(4) Living — Women -(9) Kiddy Komer Kar-’ : tOQM • .'•»	. * '
9:39 (9) Jack La: Lanne—Ex-. ercise •	,
10:00 (4) Make Room for Daddy: Panny Wiiu hfipe op-
eration while Kathy is on jury. (Repeat)
(7) Girl Talk: Actresses Patricia Cutts, Mary Fick?. ett, model Christina Paolozzi are panelists.
(9) Robin -Hopd: Robin, Maid Marian play cupid, for one of Merry Men. (Repeat)
11:39 (2) I Love Lucy : Lucy’s mother wants to accompany Ricardos on California trip. (Reheat)
(4) (Color) Word for Word (.7) Price Is Right (9) Moviw “Triple Decep-t i 0 n." (1956) Michael Craig. Police find sailor who's double for dead - smuggler.
16:55 (4) News
11:99 (2) McCoys: George runs for town counciLv(Repeat)
. (4) Concentration (7) Get the Message: Mar-\ jorie Lord, comedy team ,Rossi and Allen, Constance . Ford are guests.
I1^6i2)Jtot^Hmd-€Hto dyr . Gladys tries to get Mickey Rooney to star in her c,lub’s benefit. (Repeat:
(4) (Color) Jeopardy if) Missing Links: Sam Levgrwm, Robert Q. Lewis, Phyllis Diller join host Dick Ctafk.
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
lilt (2) Meditations-6:20 (2) On the Farm Front 0:25 (2) News
6:29 (2) S u mme r Semester: ’ Lecture op “The Giant Planets.'"
(4) Classroom." Processing of-court case is discussed. (7) Funews — Cartoons 7:90 (2) News, Editorial
(4) Today: Book on bats will be discussed.
-	1(7)-Johnny Ginger
7:10 (4) Fun Parade-Cartoons 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo. Captain receives, strange picture,
^12:00 (2) Love of Life ^	' (4) (Color) Say When! .
(7) Father Knows Best: Bud act; as though he’s * ashamed of hew girlfriend. (Repeat)
<9) Mile? de Paris 12:25 (2)NNews
12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow r (4) (CokrKfYuth or Consequences .(7) Ernie Fordf^Ernie discusses juvenile « qtlency.
(9) People in Conflict 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:55 (4) News
1:99 (2) December Bride: Hil-' da’s boyfriend’s father doesn’t approve Of "his choice,
(4) News
(7) Movie:	"Caught.
(1949) James Mason,
the Navy1 ■ hey, Pat O’Brieii.
1:10 (4) Elipt's Abnaoac 1:15 (4) Topic for Today 1:S9 (2) As the World Turds (4) (Color) Let's Make a Deal
1:50 (7) News 1:55 (4hNews
2:00 (2) Password:	Celebrity
guests are Eydie Gorme, Peter Lawford. tl_-:
(4) Loretta Young (Re-
DETROlT (API - The 1965. models began rolling on as$em- j bly lines in U. S. auto plapts today.
First into new line production were Ford’s Lincoln-Thunder-bird plant .at Wixom, Mich., | and its Falcon-Comet plants at Lorain, Ohio,
N. Jr
The 1965s moved in behind a 112 Reluctapt record output of an estimated j 13 Raise a nap 7,891,200 1964s, of which more1 Ug Beverage than 5.000,000 were , built this j i6 Walk on calendar year.	’ ■ 111 Note in Guido’s scale
The .one millionth truck to be: 19 Troops (abj built since Jan. 1 is scheduled 29 Sphere to be produced today, according ( jj to Ward's Automotive Reports, ] ^Employers	,
which said that “on all counts, fj*; Crafty ‘	*
the- auto industry • is ’apace all j 27 Ho,y Roman Church (ab other periods in history- ■>»
A 7.4 per cent increase in^Se 11964 models over the old record 32 Number James Cag-[set by 1963s came despite an;
earlier shutdown generally this! year for model ohang Avers. ,	,
At week's end, only Ford Mustangs, which aren't, chang-!
* "S*. w,r, Mag pro-	*
duced. The industry’s total out-j JJ^ put for- the- week ^ LlSffir 61,554, compared with 115il27»cottl8n ailler the previous,week.
161 Fixed looks 53 Effervesce'
55	Short jackets
56	School gadget
57	City In Nevada
58	Malign look
DOWN
UAW Proposal Still No. 1 topic
About one out of 10 cars stolen in this country, is itover recovered according to the secretory of.the National Automobile Theft Bureau.
it)
(7) Queen for a Day 2:36 (2) Hennesev: Ruffians . make-off with Chick’s hat. »• (Repeat)
, (4) Doctors: :Brock urges. Maggie to quit at hospital.
(Wanderers,
2	Oxidizing enzyme
3	Weight of India .
4	— of Sue* .
5	Recompense
6	Brazilian macaw .
7	Parts of stairs ‘ •
8	Shouter
10	Roman emperor*
11	Put in a barn
12	Aleutian island 14 Comfort
17 Bitter vetch
23	Greek letter
24	Warbled ...
26 Scotland —
29*Female soothsayer 31 Kind of bread
34	Exclamation
35	Freshwater fish ,
36	Embellished 38 Extinct bird
40	Spotted:	_
41	Usher, for instance
42	Marine flyer
45 Gershwin and others
48	Cotton fabric
49	Feihininenickname* 52 Masculine nickname 54 Scottish sailyard
- DETROIT (AP) — New contract ^bargaining to the auto in* j dustty centered today, as it has ia most of 23 past sessions, on an estimated 200 changes pro-j posed in' current pacts by the: United Auto Workers union. '
present contracts between the UAW and the Big Three —General Motors Corp., Ford Motor ■ Co. and Chrysler Corp. — were written- in 1961 and expire Aug.
: lii.
The companies have yet to make counteroffers to u n i 0 n demands that include higher wages, -bigger pensions, earlier retirement and more rtst I breaks.
NEED CASH
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Repay 516.57 e Meath
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«j Union proposals were debated! in 1961 until the companies laid their-first offer on the table on j Aug.’22.	»•	.	1
Rosamond Williams t S0N0T0NE )
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General Motors' ported producing a record 4,256,750 passenger cars in the 1964 model run. Ford also claimed a new model record with 2,068,840.
Ward's Reports, an industry statistical age n c y, reported Chrysler>• outRut of 1964s totaled 1,129,600 cars, with Amer-
(7) Day in Court: Teen is I lean Motors Corp building
accused of stealing from -.' own uncle.
2:55 (7) News
*•06 (2) To Tell , the Truth: Phyllis Newman,. Marty Ingels, Skitch Henderson,
. Gretchen Wyler join hbst Bud Collyerx (4) Another .World ,	(7) General Hoipital ,
3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News	> .,
3:36 (2) Edge of Night* *
(4) (Color) Y o u Don’t Say! Mary'Tyler Moore, Michael L a n d o n head teams.
(7) Queen for a Day (9) Vacation Time—Children ‘	.
4:90 (2) Secret Storm *	(4) Match Game: Betty
White, Pat P’Brien head teams.
(7) Trailmaster: Wagon-master saves life of Indian chief’s son.(Repeat)
4:25 (4) News
4:36 (2) Movie: “Bekt of the Badmen.” (1951) ‘Robert ’ Ryan, Claire Trevor, Jack Buetel, Robert Preston. Union, officer joins outlaw activities of his Confederate guerrilla prisoners.
(4) Mickey Mouse Club (Repeat)
(0) Hercules — Children 5:16 (4) (Color) George Pier-rot. “Hong Kong to HA* wall,"
’ (7) Movie: “Life .Begins at 17.” (1958) Mark Damon, Edward Byrnes. Student tries to get college beauty to be' bis fratern-" ~ Ify’s queen:
(9 ) Captain Jolly and Pop-\ • eye
5:11 (56) Friendly Giant 1:99 (56) What’s New r- Chil-V \bren 5:55 (2) Weather
Carol Duyall
393,859, and Sfodebaker 33,150 before'closing down its “U. S.' assembly plant and moving all auto production to Canada.'
Automotive News estimated July’s passenger car production j at-587,717.
Girl Dies in Crash
LEXINGTON (AP) - Lyne Kinsley, 13, of Lexingtop, died Monday of injuries suffered Sunday night when she was struck by a car on‘U S. 25 three miiel portRqf this Sanilac County fowh. \
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Restaurant Door Stops a Show Stopper's Pet
Writer Expires
Cron kite Has No Plans to Leave CBS
By EARL WILSON
NEW YORK (AP) - Walter Cronkite says his contract'toitirj~’8 the Columbia Broadcasting Sys-
ROME—Ifi the back seat, Rex Harrison was holding his faced, worshipful Bassett hound, Homer, by his long ears
And at Hostario dell Or so restaurant, Sexy Roxy popped Out ofj'tomhns nine years to go and he the car.	’ ‘	haslio plans to resign.
How do you feel about dogs here?” Barrison asked the ‘‘CBSNa telling/me, ‘YOu' doorman.	still No. n^pund here’;’, Cron-
"Cbeek him in the .checkftom,” said the | Aite told a news-conference yes-doorman, not recognizing Prqfessor ‘Iggins of “My" Fair Lady," Caesar of “Cleopatra,”, and I now Pope Julius. II of “The Agony and the 1 Ecstasy.”
'Oh, Hoiner caba’t suffer that!” frowned Harrison. “Better with the chauf-
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understanding farewell and we started for the dining room with Homer grieving softly. But Harrison had gone off to phone his wife, WILSON Rachel Roberts, who# ftown that afternoon to London, and about whom he seemed worried,
terday
"I wouldn’t expecithem to say anything else," he.added.
Last week, ,CBS announced its would replace Cronkite as anchor* man Tor its coverage of the Democratic national convert tion with a new television team? Robert Trout and Roger Mudd.
ALUMINUM
At the time, Cronkitesaid CBS |. “took a clobbering” in ihe\rat-j tags from the National Broad-4 L	| casing Company’s coverage 014
. Ilarrlsonr to me one of the most charming personalities the. Republican national conven-J living, is demonstrating tender qualities such As these while play- tion. tag the Pope who nudged Michelangelo (Charlton Heston | oiiFSTlONiFn Michigan and Illinois!) to execute the Sistine Chapel ’way back	.	‘
in 1500-plus AD.	"	^Asked yesterday why NBC got |
Hair curling long at his.neck, he-’d been sitting at’a.desk in the hipier rating, Cronkite said: | his suite At the Grand, phoning his director, Sir Carol Reed, “ ,s a great muit to the op- j about a scene the next day,	•
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MILLEDGEVIIXE, Ga, (AP) — Flannery (FConnor, short-story writer and novelist who suffered from a chronic crippling illness, died Monday at the age bara Bel Getoies, Robert 0f 39. In. 1959, Miss O’COnnor | P.yan. Young girl finds she ; was one of 11 American writers is married to sadist jto receive a Ford Foundation! (9) Movie:. “Here Conies'! grant:
*. but I don’t I play it very
"Yes, yes, yies . . . Very good -,,,'absolutely think I rise . .. He rises . . . He gets excited.. .
:C0pl . .	* •’ -	4	*•
And now*at dinner he ordered the minestrone and no spaghetti, and»had barely a sip of wipe, as he spoke of the night of triumph that approaches . . . Oct. 21 .. . world premiere of “My Fair Lady," on Broadway.	« .
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THE MIDNIGHT EARL
N. Y., City Hall rumor^nongers claim Robert Moles will resign as World’s Fair president this fall .	. A secretary we
know just became a ’drunk: she was-replaced by a computer. Wanted to write her story, “I Was" Replaced By . a Computer,” but found it had already been written, by a computer.
Hairy Leeb’s J»rty at Chyanagh’s this week, when he and 20 wedding guests return from Europe, won’t include Zsa Zsa Gabor. She had her . feelings hurt when-Leeb’s bride. Maxine,
position reporters —"(Chet Huntley and 4 p«vid) Brinkley. I Huntley and Brinkley have entertainment value, something that we have not directly eschewed and something that we ' must be seeking."
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A 20.000-tpn automobile ferry j ship to rup between Europe ami j. New York to being planned. It would carry 1,000 passengers ! and 250 cars.
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more attention in Monte Carlo than she did. Zta Zsa said her husband ducked out oh her “ ’cause I was so nice to everybody," but that he ruslwd back.
REMBERED QUOTE: “I respect faith, but poubt is what C(ut i gets you gn education.” '	.	' -
EARL’S PEARLS:, A hunch to what tells a man he shouldn't try to argue, wife a woman's totuitipa. • " '* ■
Comic Jackie Kahane, a funny fellow, at the Latin Quarter, tells of the-Lower East Side shopkeeper Whq has »..sign: “Five Languages Spoken Here?’ “Not by^ime," hd explains;— 'by thy customers." . . . That’s eari, brother. . m- ■
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THE PONTI AC 1’KKSS, TU&SDAYl AUGUST. 4, 1664

ONE COLOR
Humphrey Said Wooing Businessmen, Bankers
NEW YORK tft-sen. Hubert H, Humphrey of Minnesota has' been meeting with businessmen and bankers, picturing himself as a moderate who regards the government’s role in business as that of an umpire, the, New York Times said today.
. . . -’.*•• * *
The Times, which reported the meetings ih a story from Minneapolis, gave this analysis: -
civil rights, he has many friends among Southern .politicians, especially his colleagues in the Senate.”
The Times said the meetings in Chisago, New York and Washington — were dis- . dosed yesterday by associates of Hamphrey.
“The associates insisted the four meetings were called without President Johnson’s knowledge; but they said the President had gotten ajilot of favor-
able feedback by telephone and ‘ phrey about the subject, the personal visits."	newspaper reported. .
. *■	' ★ ,	One source said Humphrey
Among audiences at the New York and Washington meetings were many representatives of what Sen. Barry Gddwata's backers call the “Eastern Establishment,” the Times said.'
DISTRESSING VIEWS They were distressed by the Republican nomination of Gold-water for president, especially because of ids views on foreign affairs,, and questioned Hum-
ing of an important sector of-the business community, he will be in a formidable position for a vice presidential bid.
“He is already heir to much of the support that Intellectuals, gave Adlai E. Stevenson. .
with his grasp of diplomacy and
nnn i/inn
ls~| glib radical.
Regular
■ Boy, 1, Killed by Car ' ATLANTIC MINE. (AP)—One-year-old Richard Kuru of Atlantic Mine was killed Monday when struck by a car backing out of a driveway near his home.
. “He to a trusted friend of the farmers and labor, and even before he steered the civil ..righto bill through the Senate he was a champion of minorities.
“Further, despite his role in
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THE PONTIAC PRHflCBOVER PAGES
The Weather
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1M4—40 PAGES
Salinger Appears Certain to Get Senate Seat Today
CHECK TRACKS—Police are shown studying tire tracks where a boat may have been removed from Cass Lake while they were searching for a hit-and-run craft that killed a Keego Harbor youth last night. Residents
Craft With Spotlight Rams Into Swimmor in Marked-Off Area
in the area of Oregon and Chlpman, Waterford Township, skid they heard noises, at the landing about'2 a.m. today. The launching area is on Gerundegut Bay.
ala primary « the last posit- WASHINGTON Uft-Jn the wake of President Ik.	mrnm S» Jo»uison’« order beefing up na,.l lore o«:
Francisco newspaper reporter Communist North Viet Nam, the giant U. S. aircraft toppled *state Controller Alan carrier Constellation and three other American war-Cranston to win s bitterly con- s^jps set sail from Hong Kong today, tested Democratic nomination	TI * v \	.. ..	*
for Engle’s seat.	. A U.~S. spokesman m Hong Kong said the four
V ■	*	* ’ * , ships left according to
Salinger’s Republican foe in schedule.
November, former movie actor He d#cUned to give ^
George Murphy, W* Brown tination or to My jf the Monday night to appoint some- was ^n^cted with John •one other than the former press .	- ■
secretary to Presidents Kennedy	...I)
and Johnson. t	See Analysis,
LEGAL RIGHTS	L
Murphy contended Salinger	Page D- 7
isn’t legally qualified to serve .
Police and Firemen *or an interim appointment. announcement tka I foll(
It took a battle that went to Sunday’s attack on. the Aim for Higher Pay the U. S. Supreme Conrt to get destroyer Maddox jby 1 Salinger onto the primary North Vietnamese torpedo b Pontiac policemen and fire-	In advance of the depar
men are planning a mass dem- Republican Secretary pf Stqte of the_ four vessels, si olistration in front of City Hall Frank M. Jordan says he’s still leave whs canceled for offi this evening, according to Pa- not sure Salinger is eligible to and crew, and the ships troiman James Batchelor, presi- take Engle's position.	* parently were placed on a
dent of the Pontiac Police Offi- _ •. , *	*	*	Beside* ^ constelli
cers A^tatfon (PPOA)..	But other observers are con- they included the guided m
Patrolman .Batchelor said the* vinced Salinger is eligible, will frigate Gridley, and the de! demonstration, aimed at getting overcome any court test? and ers Preston and Fechteler. higher pay for dty employes, will begin'at 4 p.m. and last through tonight’s City Commission meeting, which begins at S o’clock.	T
The commission meeting will be the first for Pontiac’s new city manager, Joseph A.
Warren.
Various sources estimated between SO and 100 employes — most of them policemen and firemen—would participate.
Batchelor said that placards had been prepared for use by the employes, and the demonstration mid the backing of both the PPOA and Pontiac Firefighters Association.
Killed while swimming in the marked-off “safety” area at Dedge State Park No. 4 was Aina Louis Akerly, 2184 P«rk Circle. He would have celebrated his list birthday Aug. 14.
Lt. Donald Kratt, director of the Sheriff's Water Safety Division, was told by Akerly’s companion, Sheila Bjennen of 125 Chewton, ^loomfield Township, that he yelled “watch out,” and shoyed her underwater just as the craft was about to hit them.
PIERRE SALINGER
Newsman Helps Ease Cuba Crisis
drill suddenly dropped several yards.
It had been inching slowly, downward in final stages of the rescue effort to avoid collapsing
P______ | ..	. r .. „	,,. MHII Township board members last
the ceiling of the mine chamber. Mott Foundation to aid estab- ni«ht unanimously approved an > ,*	*	*	, lishment ot a community school appropriation of $3,750 for the
Immediately after the break- program in Waterford Township »eond of 1964. through, rescue workers began wa^ announced yesterday by TOPS AGENDAS setting up, a hoisting rig .to be supt. of Waterford Schools Don rPf>reatinn hoard in&ta used to bring the' men to the o. Tatroe.	* ™ recr®a“°n
surface one at a time in a spe- »»	.. .	...	tomorrow night and Uie school
cial metal eansule	' The grant, which will span a board convenes Thursday' night.
„ "	four-year period, was appropri- The Mott proposal tops each
DOCTOR STANDS BY	ated on a matching fund basis, -agenda.
Under an earlier agreement by representatives of the three focal boards, the school system and township each would contribute $7,560 annually and the recreation department $5,-000. This assumed help from an outside source.
An alternate plan assumes no help.
The Mott Foundation will contribute $20,000 the first year, $15,000 the second, $10,000 the third and $5,000 the fourth year.
theta* eyes to protect them froufr' the light after being trapped in the dark .chamber for eight days.
M$or Andre Socle reported that electronic soundings taken last night raised the chance >that three of the five men trapped in other pacts of the	Purpose of a community
mine might still be alive.	The UfS. Weather Bureau pre- school program is to more ex-
*	*	*	- diets temperatures will con- tensively utilize school facilities
Earlier soundings had pro- tinue in tbe high 80s for the by providing activities for duced no results.	next five days with skies mostly everyone in the community.
PARTICULAR CARE	sunny. Lows will be in the 60s. Waterford’s program will be
Sode advised “oarticular oru-	J? ?recast mtSi ** P*#*™*1 after one FUnt,
six-mile-an-hour
soundings, but he said they.pro- wiXeSito^“.1^11^- NATIONWIDE RECOGNITION vided sufficient grounds for a	r	Flint’s community school
“gigantic new effort” in drilling Seventy-one was today’s low program, also aided financially toward another cavity.	recording in downtown Pontiac the Mott Ffaundatiop, has
able to obtain several of the numbers of the boat’s registration .after questioning witnesses, according to Kratt. , These have been sent to Lansing bj» teletype so owner records can be checked’, Kratt said.
Jersey City Negroes Riot Again
Miss Brennen told police that the boat made “several passes’’ through the shimming area, shinihg a large spotlight on a handful of bathers, before it hit Akerly.
If Similar Red assaults are Columbia Unlversity.reported: LIGHT SHINING launched bolted African	Friday, Oct., 26, of the She said the light was shining
naval units in the Golf of Ton- f4teful week> *•" nuc,ear anta«- directly on her and Akerly when kin were prepared to carry ontets were eyeball-to^yeball. out President Johnson’s orders President Kennedy had de-
to destroy any attacking force.	of
missiles from Cuba and ordered The President announced to rnaval blockade. The Knsnlin itewamen yesterday his shoot-to- had publicly rejected Kennedy’s kill brders to the Navy. Pre- proclamation. Some Soviet ships Viously orders had been for the at sea had altered course, but naval units to' defend them-* the missile site building in Cuba selves but not necessarily to was continuing full speed, destroy the attacker.	*	*	*	, .
*	*	*	Mr. X, one of Sdali’s' news
In Sunday’s clash, the Navy contacts at the Soviet embassy, disclosed yesterday, the destroy- telephoned the correspondent er Maddox scored a direct hit on asking for an immediate lun-one of the Pt boats with a five- cheon date. Over a luncheon-ta' inch gun. The Communist craft ble in a downtown restaurant he later was strafed fry aircraft quickly got to the point. * from the earner U.S.S. Tfoon- MAKES PROPOSAL
The Russian asked Seal! -to find out at once from his friends in the State Department whether the U.S. government would be interested i(i a solution to the crisis In which the Soviets removed the npssiies; they allowed U.N. inspectors to' supervise the pullout; they pledged not to reintroduce the missiles and America publicly pledged not to invade Cuba-.
Scali promptly reported this to Hilsmao and Secretary of State Dean Rusk. Rusk said this was the first direct word that the Soviets might be thinking of a deal.
Rusk asked Scali to tell Mr. X that the U.S. government “sees, real possibilities" in the proposition hod to suggest that government representatives could work the matter out .at the Unit-(Continued on Rage 2, Col. 1)
The township board last night also accepted a recommended first-year expenditure of $40,-000, which would match income. FISCAL YEAR
Ibis would cover the fiscal year of July 1,1664 to June 30, 1965. Both the school system and recreation department operate on this fiscal year and will consider a full year’s appropriation to the program at their meetings this week.
Pay Hike
Federal, servicemen increases assured PAGE A-8.
Space
New craft to ‘ survey’ moon PAGE B-3.
At a midnight press conference more than three hours after the riot began, Mayor Thomas J. Whelan said he believed the violence had “passed its peak.’’
REPEATED WARNING But he reiterated his warning: “We will use all the force and power at our disposal to see that law and order is maintained.” ye said he was prepared to sit down with civil rights lead-. ers “anytime, anywhere” bat the first problem was maintaining order;
He continued the eptiee 900-nvur'-pbtf$Kdepariment on, standby alert but said help from the state would not be needed.
BETTER HURRY!
' Ruins ' London workers find Roman remains — PAGE B-5.
The township board made only a half year appropriation because the township functions on a calendar yepr. Added funds for the program would have UP* be incorporated in the 1965 budg-
Area News ....__ ....C4
Astrology .............D4
Bridge ... ..........'D-3
Comics .............  D-3
Editorials	A-4
Markets ..............D-4
Obituaries ...........D-5
Short Story . ..... U4i
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Wilson, Earl	D-ll
Woniea’s Pages	B-S^B11
CALL FE ^-8181 Ext* 273 or 274 And Have The PONTIAC PRESS Delivered to Your Vacation Address
DRAIN WORK STOPS - A walkout by members of Reinforced Steel Workers Local 42$ has delayed completion of this section of the Clinton River drain tunnel under South Peny., Only one pouring of concrete, in the network of steel rods at lower left, was needed
to complete this section when the strike halted work yesterday. Only eight additional pourings in a section south of Orchard Lake Avenue remain to complete construction of the entire structure. (See story on Page 2K
	,THE PONTIAC PRESS. 1
\ Morse Leading fight for Reduction •	^ Jpr ■ M,': U.s. Purchases
TUESDAY. AUGUST 14, 10fl4

Senate May Vole on Aid Cuts Today
WASHINGTON 4AP) - Sen. Wayne Morse said the Senate may begin voting today on his proposals to cut over $500 million from the	400,700,000 for-
eign aid authorization bill.
The Oregon Democrat, leading off the fight1 against the House-passed measure, called the foreign aid program “a colossal failure as a deterrent to Communism” in a 2% hour speech Monday.
He told newsmen he planned a batch of other amendments aimed at • “reforming” foreign aid policies and would seek roll call votes on them later in the week. But he said he was ready for voting on his money-cutting proposals this afternoon.
Whether voting could start ap- The Senate Foreign delations mmU ‘ Committee recommended
patently depends on the speed with which the Senate acts on an interest equalization tax measure that temporarily sidetracked the foreign aid bill Monday.
The tax measure would levy an excise on purchases of foreign securities by Americans. It is designed to reduce the drain of U.S. funds to overseas countries.
Morse condemned “handing out money and weapons with the idea they will promote political stability, or keep friendly governments in power, or prop up a bloated military establishment In a foreign country.”

By OSWALD JACOBY Experts are much luck i£r than average players, If yOu don’t think so, look how unlucky South was.
He ruffed the opening club.
One trump
.OAGQp
drawn, South could play ace and queen of diamonds from dum-j+hiy - '	‘ -
East whould cover with the king, whereupon South would ruff and enter dummy with a trump in order to get rid of one losing heart
would lose two hearts later on, but two hearts and one other trick aren’t enough to set a four spade contract.
In case West held the diamond king, expert South would still make the hand. He would discard one heart on the diamond West would take the dia-
..,518,700,000 authorization quested by President. Johnson be reduced by only $50 million. The House has approved the authorization by the full amount asked for but in acting on the follow-up appropriations bill — which provides the funds for the program while the authorizations sets only the ceiling -cut foreign aid to $3,316,572,400.
The chances of an adjournment of Congress before the Democratic national convention in Atlantic City, N.J., opening Aug. 24, may rest on how fast it clears foreign aid.
Teen Crushed to Death
MOUNT PLEASANT (AP)-Charles Verdon. 17. Of Farwell,
was riding with his father, Harry Verdon, overturned on an embankment about 10 miles north of here. The father was hot injured.
630J0O0 Cdies of Pitted Cherries
WASHINGTON (AP) The Agriculture Department said Monday it bought 630,000 cases of canned red tart pitted cherries—many of them in Mlchi-
m-'	* s ...
The purchase is 1 to bolster producer prices of this year’s record cherry crop and to supply the national school lunch program, the department said.
The largest purchase from a single bidder was 82,000 cases from the F and M Packing Co. of Traverse City.
Purchases were made from
I bidders at prices ranging from $3.91 to $4.65 a case. Lowest prices were paid in .big producing and processing centers in Michigan and highest prices in areas of smaller production.
The department said the purchase represents about 5.5 servings per child taking part,in
had to Jose three heart tricks and his contract.
A really expert South would not have, run into all that bad hick. He could have done nothing against a diamond opening, but West had made a normal king of clubs lead.
This gave South a dunce to insure his contract by means of an avoidance play. S o a t h should have discarded a dia-‘ mond on the king of clubs.
Then, after trurnps were
NORTH	4
AAlt ¥976 ♦ AQJ2 *Q«7
WEST	EAST
4k 7	AS
¥AQ93	VJ104
♦	965	♦ K 8 7 4
♦	AK654	«♦ J 10 9 3 2
SOUTH (D) 4kKQ J109643 7X41.
44 Pass Fast Opening lead—gK
* : f ’ J*
Astrological,
*■<	i~
Forecast *
!7Sf’ Sw MMwmure trick* for the same total of three.

Q—The bidding has been: North	East	Booth	West
14	Pass T
A You, South, hold:
IaH VAQJ1098 4K«1 4> What do you do?
A—Bid two heart*. Yen have 1$ high-card points and aa al-
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