VtrjrWinh “ PONTIAC PRESS Vph. 124 — NO. Ids # ★ ★ ★ Home Edition 1 ?. • '*■ * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JULY 18, 1966 —44 PAGES "'‘'^'SsJSc'.atm To See Suspect in $ Deaths Astronauts Ready for Today's Trip CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) — Two launch pads buzzed with activity today as the Gemini 10 astronauts, relaxed and ready, prepared to ride into space late today on a daring dual-rendezvous and space-walk adventure that could take them deeper into space than any man has ventured. While Navy Cmdr. John W. Young and Air Force Maj. Michael Collins slept late, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration reported every-„ thing was progressing smoothly for the double launching. The countdown on an Atlas rocket started right on hme at 8:31 a.m. EST. The Atlas is to make a fiery departure from its pad at 3:30 p.m. to hurl an Agena space vehicle into orbit as a chase target for the astronauts. ★ ★ * On another launch pad 6.000 feet away, crews began pouring tons of fuel into a Titan 2 that is to hurl Young and Collins into space at 6:21 p.m. to start the dranutic chase across the skies. MANY CLOUDS Numerous clouds hovered in the Cape Kennedy area this morning, but weathermen predicted favorable conditions at launch time. The forecast called for partly cloudy skies, surface winds of 10 knots, gentle seas offshore, and less than IS per cent possibility of thunderstorms. With all preparations proceeding smoothly. Young and Collins took a day off yesterday and went fishing in the Atlantic off Cape Kennedy. ★ ★ * Adjusting to a sleep schedule that will keep then) up late each night in space, they retired about 3 a.m. this morning, and space officials hoped they’d sleep until after noon. LEFT IN SPACE The late afternoon launch times were dictated by the position of another Agena l^ft in space last March by the Gemini 8 pilots. After catching and linking np with their Agena late tonight, Yonng and Collins plan to fire the target satellite’s powerful engine to shoot to a record altitude of perhaps 418 miles to position themselves for a tricky rendezvous with the Gemini 8 Agena Wednesday. Collins is to take a space walk over to the old Agena which he has dubbed a “dead bird” because it has no battery power. In Today's Press British Pound Value drops on world market — PAGE A-3. Bobby Baker Enjoying new life as a, motel operator — PAGE' C#. Sojapy-Jerry Cavana^’s pleasvfor a debate are ignored PAGE B-IL Area News ...........A-4 Astrology . D4 Bridge ............. D-3 Crossword Punk . . D-11 Comics ...............D4 Editoriak ........K.k4 Markets ........... D-2 Oliitiiaries .........D4 Sparts ....... Theaters ............ C# TV-Radio Programs D-11 Veterans’ Series ....B-6 Wilson, Earl .'....D-ll PRESS WINS AWARD - The Pontiac Press ' was awarded second place in excellence in typography, ^unlimited daily newspaper division, at the 81st annual meeting of the National Newspaper Association meeting in Boston Saturday night. John Riley (right), advertising director of The Press, is accepting the award from Roswell S. Bosworth Jr., publisher of the Phoenix Times Newspapers, Bristol, R.I. First place went to the St. Petersburg (Fla.) Evening Independent. There were more than 2,600 entries in both daily and weekly classifications. Norfh Viets Ask for Help From Red Allies, Others TOKYO (AP) - North Viet Nam made an unusual appeal today for more material and moral support from its Communist ^ilies and other nations, describing its war situation as “extremely serious.” But Red China indicated it is hot ready to send its soldiers into the fight. Area Mishaps Claim 2 Lives Avon Twp. Man Is Troy Hit-Run Victim A 30-year-oW Avon Township man and an 18-year-old Dearborn youth were killed in separate area ac- OaklWWfT The plea came from North Viet Nam’s Fatherland Front and was addressed even to the American people in an effort to weaken the Johnson administration’s political flank at home. It followed President Ho Chi Minh’s decree of partial mobilization of North Vietnamese reserves yesterday. The mobilization decree touched off speculation that North Viet Nam planned to send more regular troops into the south in reply to the intensified American air war, using the reserves to fill gaps at home. Military action in §outh Viet Nam suggested infiltration might be increasing already. Highway Toll in ’66 79 po- 82. day. Blake A. Foster of 2478 Frankson, Avon Township, was killed when his motorcycle was struck from behind by an unidentified vehicle. Troy police said he was thrown into the street where he was run over by a second vehicle driven by Nancy J. Miller, 23, of 5570 John R, Troy. The Miller lice she and William Goley, 24, of Trenton, “saw somethfa^ in the road” and she tried to avoid it Foster was dead on arrival at St. Josieph Mercy Hoepital. The accident occurred at 10:18 r .|i.m. on John R between Wattles afid Long Lake. Troy Police Chief Forrest 0. Fisher Jr. said there were apparently no witnesses to the hit-and-nm accident. He said it is still und4f investigation. NOVIFAtAL Eighteen-year-old Christopher R. Wimsatt of Dearborn was killed at 12:01 a.n\. yesterday jtt i» was walking on 1-96 near . $edt In Novi. OfReers from the Redford State Police Post said he had stopped to remove a lawn chair from the highway and was returning tb his car when he was struck by a car driven by Mary L. Kuknr, 38, of Taylor Township. Evening Rain a Possibility for Pontiac Today’s thermometer reading could rise even higher than that of last weekend. Today’s predicted highs are from 86 to 92. Th?re is a possibility of scattered thundershowers this evening and tonight. Yesterday’s skies were clear as the thermometer rose to 89 degrees. . While Saturday’s skies were often cloudy, the high was only Three thousand U.S. Marines and South Vietnamese troops swept an area just below the 17th Parallel frontier where a North Vietnamese division of 3,-000 to 4,000 men had been reported. Fighting tapered off today, but the allied force was reported to have killed 160 Reds since the operation began Friday. Red China reacted to the mobilizaton decree by offering again “to take i^I necessary action” in support of the North Vietnamese but implied it thought they could win with their own forces. An editorial in the official Peking People’s Daily said the decree showed “the unsbakeable confidence of the Vietnamese people in their resolve to fight and win.” ★ ★ ★ The editorial dangled the threat of Chinese intervention, declaring “we will take action any time we consider it necessary.” But it emphasized that China regarded its role now as a Supporting one — “The vast expanse of our country is the rear area of the Vietnamese people.” Speck Treated After Attempt to Kill Himself Ruled Not Yet Able to Appear in Court on Murder Charge CHICAGO (^A nurse who survived the massacre of eight of her dormitory mates visited a jail hospital today to view the man charged with murdering one of them. Authorities said that Richard Speck, 24, accused in the mass slaying, was ruled unfit to appear in court to hear the murder charge against him because of his physical condition. He is under treatment for self-inflicted wounds. State’s Atty. Daniel Ward told reporters, “there will be no court appearance today upon the medical advice of the doctors.” He said that Dr. William No r c r 0 s s, associate medical director of the city jail hospital, asserted that Speck still is substantially under the effects of sedation. ★ ★ * Ward was asked whether Miss Corazon Amurao, 23, the only survivor of Thursday’s killing orgy, who was brought to the jail, had identified Speck as the killer. NO COMMENT “1 can’t make any comment on that,” he said. Miss Amurao spent IVt hours in the House of Correction, from 9:15 to 11:45 a.m. Police have guarded her as closely as they have Speck, and kept her secluded from A cordon of police kept sightseers away from the grounds of the House of Correction today as unusual security measures were enforced to guard Speck. -----------k k it Ward said, “We are cognizant of the situation in Dallas after President Kennedy’s death, and we are anxious to prevent sny such occurrence.” SHOT KENNEDY He referred to the Slaying of Harvey Lee Oswald, named by the Warren Commission as the assassin who shot Kennedy. Oswald was killed while he was in custody of Dallas police in a basement passage of the Dallas courthouse. Jack Ruby, convicted of (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) KNIFE RECOVERED — Chicago police analyst Sgt. Louis R. Vitullo holds a knife at police headquarters today. The knife, once owned by Richard Speck, was recovered by police in the inquiry following slaying of >eighl student nurses. Police (jl^lined to say what specific evidence was involved with this knife. State Nurse Dated Speck, Tells of Knife HANCOCK — Suspected mass-slayer Richard B. Speck, while recovering from an emergency appendectomy in May, pulled a knife on a patron of an area bar, the woman he dated said yesterday. Judy Laakaniemi, 28, a nurse at St. Joseph’s Hospital in neighboring Houghton, said that was the only unpleasant incident during Her dates with Speck, whose life had been saved earlier by a surgeon at the hospital. The nurse said Speck drew his knife during an argument with another patron of the bar, but put it away when she hsked him to. Doctors at St. Joseph’s described yesterday their operation on Speck’s appendix after the accused slayer w a s removed from an Inland Steamship Co. ore carrier May 3. Lansing City Workers Strike Union Members Claim Unethical Practices “It was a red hot appendix, ready to burst,” said Dr. Paul Goodreau, who assisted Dr. A.D. Aldrich in the surgery. Following the operation, doctors said. Speck spent a week in the hospital and then then another week convalescing in Hancock. During that time he dated Miss Laak-ememi, whom he met ip the hospital. Speck reportedly returned to Hancock June 23-27 and saw the nurse again. k k k Miss Laakaniemi, a divorcee, told State Police Trooper Richard Carstens that Speck was always polite to her and she never saw him angry except for the barroom incident. Carstens said she told . him Speck described himself as a former narcotics addict and said there were “a couple of people in TekSs” he would kill if he got a chance. LANSING m - Some 250 unionized city employes went out on strike today after contract negotiations ended abruptly with union representatives accusing the city of unethical labor practices. " Members of Local 1390 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees AFL-CIO set up picket lines at city hall and other municipal offices at midnight. Bargaining ended last night after Jerry Wurf, international president of the AFSOdE, claimed he had been assaulted by an attorney for the city and accused the city of using clothes policemen to harass the union. “TTiere 'is some strange conspiracy going on here to evade dealing with us, hoping that wo would saiy something somehow that would discredit the union, and the city could escape its responsibility,” Wurf said, as he walked out of negotiations at city hall. Mine Search Continues. The low tonight will be 66 to 70. CLEAR, COOL Tomorrow will be clearer but cooly with highs of 80 to 86. Southwesterly winds of 10 to 20-miles-per-hoiur will diminish tonight. Wednesday will be partly cloudy and cooler. LI'L ONES “I want you to meet Albert. He’s the tiger in my tank.” CALUMET (UPI) - Although hope for the survival of 7-year-old Ruth Ann Miller Was lacking, wouldbe rescuers pourdd over mine records in an Effort to find a new route into a murky, mile-deep copper mine shaft. Search operations were held dp yesterday by a jam-up of tiinter, concrete and iron pilings wMch had closed the shaft at the . 400-foot level, keeping the search crews from peering into the dark depths. The child tumbled into the abandoned s h a f t Saturday while, according to her 16-year-old brother Gary, they were picking berries. The shaft had been partially closed by a concrete slab for 35 years but was reopened Satr urday in a feverish effort to find the girl k k k After making very little headway past the jam-up yesterday officials of Calumet and Hecia Mining Co. began a search of old records In the hope they would reveal another entrance to the shaft below the 400-foot level. NO HOLE A State Police spokesman isaid at that time there was not a hole big enough “even to see through.” He added, however, that'it was not known how much debris had collected at. that point since the girl fell in. He said, “There nuy have been a large hole there when she feU down.” Below the jam-up the searchers expected to find 2,000 feet of wateri which has seeped into the mine since its closing. A ★ ★ Because of the water, the depth of the shaft estimated at more than a mile — and the length of time since the girl fell in Saturday noon, there was vei-y little hope, even on the part of her stepfather, Eugene Taylor, that little Ruth Aon would be aliv^. , AROUND CLOCK around-the-clock shifts, continued their rescue efforts, descending time after time in a large basket lowered by a crane. The shaft is rectangularshaped, about 12 by 18 feet, and drops straight down. The girl apparently fell (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Despite searchers. the pessimism working in thi Probe Demanded Into Character of High Justice WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. George- W. Andrews, D-Ala., called today for a congressional investigation of the character of Justice William 0. Douglas of the Supreme Court. Douglas, 67, was married for the fourth time Friday. His bride was Cathleen Heffeman, 23. Several members commented caustically in the House today. Douglas, honeymooning in the Far West, was not immediately available for con-ment. Andrews told the House “other wives said this man was guilty of cruelty and one went so far as to say he was gulltv of personal indignities — what does that mean?” Saying he ist preparing 6 resolution calling for an inquiry, Andrews said “I think a committee should investigate and if this man is of bad character snd I have always considered .a man who was cruel to Us wtte to be of bad character — he should be removed.” RUTH ANN MILLER PUOOATa JUDOI “iV" ‘‘-It- ryri- •A-•''''V''\ >vVo|\ >, ;.nA\ . V. THE PONTlAt yitBSS, MONDAY. JULY lA Mtflg . 1(M6 . ____L > Wcives Air Strike to Last at Least A nother Week—Negotiators . I ■ I .. * ' , n a*day^ L revenuL lossM. WASHINGTON (AP) - Pessimistic negotiators predicted today the strike against five majrn* airlines probaWy would last for at least another week. Now in its 11th day, the strike has shut down alt but. national defense operations o( the five lines and has inconvenienced travelers throughout the country who have besieged other airlines as well as railroads and , bus lines in an effort to carry out summer travel plans. blamed the airlines for the slow pace of the talks. “They keep their feet planted in the concrete,’’ said Vice President Joseph Ramsey of the AFL-CIO International Association of Machinists. EXTENDED PERIOD Ramsey said extensive layoffs and closing of ticket offices indicated the strike could go on “for 1 extended |>eriod of time. “we are a long way apart” as the negotiators walked into a meeting with Asst. Secretary of Labor James J. Reynolds. million a Ramsey said of the ^timated strike iosses; “That’s their funeral, not ours.” The chief union negotiator The chief airline negotiator, William Curtin, commented that Reynolds, who Sunday compared the pace of the negotiations with the speed of two turtles, had no comment today. Curtin said he saw no reason to expect an early settlement. HUGE COST He also said he could not dispute estimates that the strike was costing the five airlines |7 Ramsey accused the airline negotiators of taking the atti-' tude of “the public be damned.” He added, „“We are not attempting to drag our feet.” Ramsey said there had been no progress on one key point, the union’s demand for a 36-month contract. The airlines want a 42-month agreement. Chicago's West Side Calm as National Guard Leaves CHICAGO (AP) — Twenty- they went to armories In the seven hundred Illinois National city, on standby duty. Guardsmen were removed early! Kane said “at the present today from Chicago’s West Side'time, we plan to put troops on where they had spent three the street again Monday night.” nights in a Negro district fewER INCIDENTS icarred by i;ioting. Some 1,236 administrative and supply personnel got the first word from their commander, Maj. Gen. Francis P. Kane of the 33rd Infantry Division of ihe Illinois National Guard, at midnight and went home. Three hours later, 1,465 other gardsmen left the streets; but Balloon Launch Kane said that after hour tour of the West Side area he had noted there were fewer incidents and that the district appears to be returning to normal. Policp — operating under an emergency plan since the looting, shooting and burning reached a peak last Thursday said morning patrols would be normal. The outburst began last Tuesday when Negroes reacted with rock throwing after a patrolman Today Is Prelude^^^”'^ ® hydrant where kids f were cooling off in mid-90s tem- peratures. It claimed to Mars Tests ALAMOGORDO, N.M. (AP)-An 815-foot tall balloon soared away from a southern New Mexico desert ^e today in a prelude to teait/involving the Voyager spacecraft, for unmann^ landings on Mars. Billed by the Air Force as the largest balloon ever built, with a hehum capacity of 26 million cubic feet, it was designed to reach an altitude of 130,000 feet before descending in the ’Tucson-Phoenix area of Arizona. SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) - Fiftfeen waves of Amw-ican bombers pounded a major oil depot in North Viet Nam Sunday and touched off 35 fires and 51 explosions in the big storage complex, the U.S. military command reported today. U.S. Air Force jets struck the Badon fuel depot 20 miles northwest of Dong Hoi while other Air Force planes hit another oil storage area, one mile east of Badon. In South Viet Nam, fighting died down in the combined U.S. Marine-South Vietnamese drive against an estimated 2,000 North Vietnamese army regulars eight miles south of the demilitarized zone separating North and South Viet Nam. U.S. headquarters reported U.O, licduuuai ici s two small-scale probing attacks j (Continued From Page One). by the Nwth Vietnamese today. ’The l^th Vietnamese said their force had no contact with the enemy. Earlier hi. the operation, which began Friday, 160 Reds were reported killed. LIGHT CASUALTIES Allied casualties were reported light, but 13 Marines were killed when the Communists shot down a Marine CH46 troopcarrying helicopter at the start of the operation. Enemy fire also brought down an F4 Phan- deaths, scores of injuries and' untold damage before Guards-1 men moved in with weapons at the ready Friday night. Gov. Otto Kemer, after a surprise tour of the West Side area Sunday said; “We are hopeful that law and order have ‘ restored.” Test director James C. Payne of the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories said the balloon, launched ffom Holloman Air Force Base about 8 a.m.'(EST) was programmed for a 6-7 h o n r flight. In later flights, the balloon is to carry 1,700-pound Voyager vehicles in tests of the spacecraft’s deceleration and parachute systems for s o f t, unmanned landings on Mars. SHOT MISSED There have -been scattered incidents nightly. In one, early today, a guardsman reported that a Negro had fired at him and fled. Police said the shot, which missed, came from an alley that was the scene of the shooting of a police officer, the killing of a Negro and the wounding of another at the riot’s height. Taverns and pool halls in the area, closed by the disturbance, were allowed to reopen Sunday. Tlie city park superintendent, responding to residents’ complaints that there ^ weren’t enough swimming pools for summer recreation, announced that 10 will be installed in parks and playgrounds. The first went in Sunday. The Weather RUNS FROM COPTER - A Yank pilot runs from his crashed helicopter during U.S. Marine landings south of the demilitarized zone between South and Nwlh Viet Nam in the Song Ngan valley. Other Marines (left) work to free a Marine trapped under the *P Wlrtplwlt collapsed tail. He was recovered with cuts and bruises. The Marines started a multibattalion assault on the area, believed hiding part of the 10,000-man 324th North Vietnamese Division. Mother Doubts Son Is Guilty Mopes Arrest of Speck Mistaken Identity CA MAU, South Viet Nam (UPl) | Sea Swallows have given as well — One of the government’s 18s they received, costlier defeats in the war took j PRIVATE ARMY Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy and very warm today. High 86-92. Scattered thundershowers tonight, possibly beginning this evening. Low tonight 66-70. Clearing and not as warm Wednesday. Tuesday high 80-86. Southwesterly winds 10-20 miles this afternoon, diminishing tonight. Wednesday partly cloudy and seasonably cool. DALLAS (UPI) - The mother of Richard Speck, accused of slaying eight C3iicago student nurses, doubts her son could have committed the murders. The Rev. A. E. O’Connor, a neighbor, talked with Mrs. Margaret Speck Lindberg before she went into seclusion. He quoted her as saying she hopes it is a case of mistaken identity. “I went to them in the capacity of a minister and neighbor,” O’Connor said. “They werpinastateof shock. They told me they were going away to the home I friends. Story of S. Viet Loss Kept Secret 2 Weeks place two weeks ago in the southernmost province of Viet Nam and has been kept a close secret since. A multicompany government force suffered heavy casualties when ambushed by a Viet Cong force of about the same strength. Three of the four American Special Forces advisers were Irilled and the other wounded, American military sources in the province capital reported today. The engagement took place four miles south of Hal Yen.jJl Xuyen Province while government forces carried out a two- In the days of the late President Ngo Dinh Diem, the Sea Swallows were a private army raised and led by a Catholic priest of Chinese extraction. Father Nguyen Lac Hoa. Despite constant harassment by the Viet Cong, Father Hoa and his Chinese refugees hung on in their tiny enclave in this most inhospitable part of Viet Nam. ‘I didn’t ask where they were | pronged sweep and destroy opgoing or how long they planned!eration. The Viet Cong attacked to stay,” he said. “I'm feeding, one government unit from well their cat ond dog. concealed ambush positions. MOTHER HOPES ■ction; We»t-Northw«st in wt> Monday at 1:06 p.m. in rises Tuesday at 5:13 a.m. rises Tuesday a IS Houghton The mother hopes it is a case of mistaken identity,” O’Connor said. “She doesn’t believe her boy, was capable” of the crime. “I told the family all we could do was |»‘ay it was a<^ mistaken identity. I told them it was better for Speck to he in custody than to be a fugitive.” Navy to Launch 41st N-Powered Missile Sub WASHINGTON (AP5 - The Navy will launch the 41st nuclear powered fleet ballistic missile submarine U.S;S. WiU Rogers- ’Thursday at 'Groton, Conn. ’The launching of the last ship in the scheduled series will be one of the final steps in the development of the nation’s undersea fleet of missile-equipped vessels that can direct atomic warheads against enemy tar- Highest Temperptur* Muskpgon It Albuqutrqu* M Chicago S 73.5 CincinnptI In a short, brutal fire fight, the government troops were routed and radio contact was lost with the unit. The VieKJong moved quickly gathering up hats, shirts and other means of identification from the dead. Thus disguised, they moved tojgets anywhere in the world, intercept the second column. -TROOPS WARY j 86 74 Jockponvill. 18 73 ITocf nol 1 ^h® SCCOnd, V M II 44' ^ I column were wary, having 15 » r:*o?r.q.“ nlas Congregational Methodist^h^ « ll i?t Jt church, said We wouldn t ran toward them ♦6 54 sairLikTc 98 better neighw^ waving to give the impression •X Cl « Cl « 'that they were friendly forces. “Speck wa^ a veiry restless, Big Oil Depot Hit, Set Afire Ground War Slows Near Neutral Zone Birmingham Area Newf Wing Lake SchooJ Bell on Agenda for Board BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Old school bells never die, nor fide away. Instead, they slide into oblivion in the dusty comer ol an old w a r e h 0 u 8 e,iewBiting eventual delivery to the scrap dealer and subsM|uent' reincar-, nation into a. car door or bridge girder. Not so with the school bell on the old Wing Lake school budd-ing. The old bell was placed in the then new school’s belfrey in 1859 aud remained there as the buildiug’s trademark for 106 years. In 1958 the old one - room schoolhouse was abandoned as a classroom buildii)g in favor of a newer school building which shares the schoolyard. Renovation began on the ol^ school in 1959 in prep^tlon for its being turned Into a library. The bell was removed at that time becauK its weght could noLbe supported by the building during the latter’s restoration. IN STORAGE Since 1959 the bell has been in storage. Girl Survivor at Hospital to See Suspect Tewnorrow the board of education will consider request8*from school principal Mrs. Geneva Forslund and area parents that the bell be preserved and displayed as a historical marker and reminder of the area’s early years. killing Oswald, is awaiting the outcome of an appeal. John Stamos, first assistant state’s attorney, indicated earlier that Speck’s appearance might be held in a court session in the jail. since early yesterday after his arrest. He had been taken to the hospital from a cheap hotel where he tried to end his life. Speck had been the most-wanted man In the country also brought down an i-4 t'nan- ^ ,,im Satur- tom jet, but the two crewmen|^^y ^suspected prowler bailed out safely Four other strangled his helicopters were destroyed or, g^uth Side The school system’s summer Campette program for preschoolers will be climaxed tomorrow morning with a puppet show to be attended by an estimated 100 youngsters who are participating in summer p r 0-grams a^aughan School. The show, which is being put n with the help of Mrs. Mildred Berry, will feature a presentation of the play “Rumpeistilt-skin. Red Cross Told of Viet Danger U. S. Warns of Action if Prisoners Killed damaged. U.S. Air Force B52s softened up the area three times last week, and the big bombers struck again Sunday while a thousand Marines landed on the beaches just south of the border as a blociung force. “We’ll just have to stay up here ugUl we find them,” said Maj. Gen. Wood B. Kyle, commander of the 3rd Marine Division. “That could take days or weeks. No fighting of any size was Town House dormitory Thurs-I day. Police brought him from a skid row hotel room to the Cook County Hospital after midnight tetnrday, without recognizing him, after Speck had slashed a vein far his left arm and cut his right wrist A doctor recognized him in the hospital emergency room. Speck was held in a private room of the jail hospital only a block away from the Criminal reported elsewhere in S out hi courts building. Many persons clustered in the courtrwm of Circuit Court GENEVA (AP) - The United States told the International Red Cross Committee today there will be “disastrous consequences” if North Viet Nam carries out threats to put captive American airmen on trial. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg, permanent U.S. representative to the United Nations, delivered the warning from the United States in a 35-minute meeting with Roger Gallopin, executive director of the neutral, all-Swiss pommittee. Viet Nam. MORE TERRORISM However, Vietnamese headquarters reported an upsurge in Viet Cong terrorism and harassment, including one attack three miles south of Saigon and another 18 miles east of the capital. -aeJn the first, the Viet Cong am- Judge Daniel Ryan where defendants in criminal cases based upon police complaints' bushed a police team onj and Inflicted several casdaltles, a Vietnamese spokesman said. In the second incident, a Viet Cong squad ambushed a regional force patrol and killed and wounded several men. The raid on the Badon oil storage depot was one of the biggest in the sustained American drive to wipe out North Viet Nam’s fuel supplies. The Badon depot is a former North Vietnamese army camp which had been converted into a storage area. Pilots said the fuel was stored in drums rather than in tanks, which probably accounted for the large number of explosions and {ires. ’ 17 Killed in the Rush LUCKNOW, India (AP) Seventeen persons, including five women and two children, were killed today in a stampede caused by religious pilgrims running for sheltv during a rainstorm at a country fair. Goldberg told reporters after the meeting: “I informed the Red Cross that in the view of the U.S. government there can are brought for their first court appearances. CAMERAS BARRED Judge Ryan signed an order barring cameras. It was the first time that photographers had been barred from that court. Photographing is banned in other courtrooms when trials are in session. Prosecutors toW newsmen that Judge Ryan’s decision Cs based in upon a ml- by the U.S. Supreme Court voiding the murder conviction of Dr. Sam Shepherd because of prejudice stirred by lax courtroom decorum. be no doubt that the Geneva conventions on the treatment of prisoners of war fully apply to the Viet Nam conflict.” North Viet Nam’s position is that the conventions do not apply since there has been no declaration of war. Stamps, State’s Atty. Daniel Ward, and other members of -his staff conferred on procedure against Speck. Ward said the charge awaiting to be heard is murder of Gloria Jean Davy, 22, one lOf the eight women slain. Stamos told newsmen that he had been informed earlier in the morning that Speck still is under the effects of sedation. As soon as Speck is pronounced sufficiently clear of sedative effects, Stamos said, he will be given a court appearance, even if a judge must convene court at his bedside. NO STATEMENT After today’s meeting, Gallopin shook hands with Goldberg and tersely told newsmen: ‘There will be no statement from the Red Cross.” He then asked Goldberg to make his statement to the press outside the building. This was to avoid any Communist charges that the committee is in any way favoring the American side in tb« dispute over prisoners. A committee official stressed I newsmen; “We are deeply concerned with all prisoners in Viet Nam,” with emphasis on the word “all.” Goldberg said the Red Cross has agreed to a second meeting Wednesday with the committee, which will this time be represented by its chairman, Samuel Gonard. 67 SMHI. 75 55. ------'' --------- At polut Wank range they 96 68 w»6hington 87 48 type, he saifl. •• ^ ^ ^ opened up, mowing down the goVfernmerit troops. He generally had ond of his Hot rod cars and thei^ was al-!wavs the danger of running over a child. This was a most shocking thing for me," O’Connor said. “Almost like when the president was assassinated.” AP Wirwiwi* NATIONAL WEATHER A cold front in tonight’s forecast Will bring cooler temperatures to the Northeast and northern Midwest. The possibility of showers and thunderstorms exists along the front from the upper Mississippi Valley to ttie north Atlantic states. The southern Plateau and south Atlantic region continue to be warm. Festival .Attendance Hits a Reeprd 32,300 Pilots flying over the area after radio remmunlcations lost reported bodies scattered over a large area. Groups of ten to. fifteen bodies lay close in death in the brilliant green paddies, The body of one U.S. ‘SpecIal Forces adviser,was recovered-Another was brought in later by a villager for the price of $45. The body of the third adviser killed has not been re-A total of 32,300 people wentj covert, the Meadow Brook Music Fes- tival last week to hear pianist Van Cliburn ahd the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. ’This is the largest crowd to hear any gpest artist since the festival began two years ago. On.Sntuitlay night there were 9,300 in attendance. The government troops (known as Sea Swallows), have sallied out many times in the past six ye^rs to do battle with the ubiquitous Viet Cong but this must rank as one of tbleir bloodiest defeats. It has hot always been this way and tt^ HOW THEY COMit>ARE-At right is a drawing made by'a Chicago Police Department artist of the slayer of eight student nurses. Left is a police photo of a man identified as Richard Speck, 24, who has been charged with murder In 4be Case, r . LITTLE IT COULD DO Last May the International Red Cross told roving Ambassador W. Averell Harriman there was little it could do to protect American prisoners in the Viet Nam war. Harriman was sent by President Johnson because North Viet Nam refused to give any details about American prisoners and there was no guarantee that'ssail or packages were regularly getting through to them. Mine Search^' for U.P. Girl , Is Continuing (C^tinued From Page One) through ■ three-foot wide opeu-iug between the concrete gap and theOground. A mine spokesman said sT federal mine inspector had just been to the site in 'May and found everything in order, w ★ * Taylor said Saturday, after visiting the scene, “There’s no hdpe. It’s a strait shaft — straight down.” THIB PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, Ju£y 18, 1966 Soviet Bloc Ready to Send! More Missiles to N. Viet LONDON (UPI)—Authoritative sources said here today the Soviet bloc was readying major consignments of missiles for Nortii Viet Nam and of experts to install or possibly even I avary 6-pack of NuGRAPE you'll find diracKons on how to gat top LP Albums for as low as 60c apieca for 5. Vakias up to $3.98. Select from a list of 200 great albums —-Starao or Hi-R. EARLY MORNING MUSTER - Airman 3.C. Patrick J. Nugent (second from left) stands formation with other members of the 113th Ctombat Support ^uadron of the Air National Guard-at Travis Field at Savannah, Ga., ynterday. Nugent wiU widergo two weeks' of summer training before marrying President Johnson’s younger daughter, Luci, on Aug. 6. . * Devaluation Nearer British Money Takes Pounding RENT A TRUCK a HOUR, DAY, WEEK a LOCAL-LONQ-DISTANCE • POWER OATES • INSURANCE STEVENS MOVING and STORAGE 3565 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Call 336-6131 BUY, SELL, TRADE---USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! LONDON (AP) — Britain’s shaky pound sterling came under renewed pressure on the monay market today, and heavy selling on the London stock market caused prices there to fall also. The fate of the pound is at stake. The reaction of the world’s markets to the British government’s squeeze on the nation’s economy was being closely watched. The pound began moving downward half an hour after the foreign exchange market opened. It slid to 12.7867, lower than the Friday night close. Forward market rates also moved against the pound, and the Bank of England was reported givpig support to the pound there. This seemed to steady the market a little. In the first hour of business on| the stock market, the Financial Times index dropped another 5.7 points to 332.1. Stores, electrical and entertainment shares were particularly hit. Within 48 to 72 hours the Labor government may know whether its plans to raise taxes, increase export production at the expense of the home market and cut government spending at home and abroad have restored sufficient international confidence to steady the pound. 11 Last ’Thursday thR government boosted the Bank of England interest rate to 7 per cent and ordered Britain’s banks to ai^ly another turn of the screw to their already squeezed borrowers. But that wasn’t enough. On Friday the pound sank again and was traded almost two cents lower than its par value of $2.80. Hie missiles are the first fresh supplies under the terms of last week’s Warsaw Pact decision to step up aid to Hanoi, including "volunteers” if Ho Chi Minh asks for them. The reliable soorcet said the experts will primarily instract the Oommimist North Vietnamese in the use of the missiles but they ,may — for the first time — also help to operate them. ’This move, if carried out, could bring the United States and Russia into direct military confrontation. ★ w ★ There was, however, no firm indication sq far of the future role of these experts. To date, Russians have not actively participated in Viet Nam military operations. Soviet experts have been confined to training the North Vietnamese in the use of weapons the Russians have been supplying. The Soviet bloc agreed in Bucharest a week ago on a .major joint arms aid program to Hanoi. Reports .from the authoritative sources said Communist aid, which has been going to Hanoi for some time, is now ostensibly being coordinated and the signs are that it is being considerably stepped up. ^11 This Week at Simins I Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Tonite 11110 KKi ^Tuof. and Wads. 9 a.m. to 9 pjn. Stop and Shop These Early In The Week Bigger Bargains ^ Thstt priced good Men., Tues. and Weds. / 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Bungalow Drikote white outside House Paint Apply with brwh or roller, imoolh, long lasting whit, outside point for houMS, garogel, etc |88 ■ «•! For Cement and Wood Floors Bungalow Drikote Floor Enamel 199 Choice of gray and colors for wood ond concrete floors. Quick drying, easy to apply with brush or roller. 10-lb. ‘ADDROC’ Masonry Paint - 299 Mixes with water fo protect and decorate concrete walls. Protects from inside or outside leakage. 60-lb. Addroo natoAry paint.. Paint In Rain or Shine Formula ‘99’ Paint If You Don't Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! wi- THE POytlAC l^BBSft MOWDAT, JXAY Township Will Sue Farmington on Land FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP— just' simple adjacence, however, Faced with a second alleged claimed Brennan. • land grab” attempt by the City mENTITY* of Farmington, t o w n s h i p of- , ... * . ,, . ficials have decided to take the A city histoncaUy is an area / city to court in an effort toJhoW having some identity of loca-\ their community intact. tion and community of interest. With the unanimous support ^ not Just a cluster of of the Township Board ^hind^^j^j^j him. Township Attorney Joseph T Brennan will lake the town- “The land the City of Far-ship’s case to Oakland County ipmgton is seeking is logically Circuit Court seeking to have' practfcally a part of Far-the citvs annexation petition! mington Township. It is an voided. ‘ ! *®‘®**y unrelated to the j city,” esi. auon superv ^^g a: BT. more Tile petition to be contested Is one of two the city has filed with the Oakland County Board of Supervisors since township residents rejected n proposal which would have incorporated the community into a home rule city. The court suit will be broi against the petition filed Ji nity ! He cit^ sewage and water systems, as examples of the area’s community with the rest of the’’township. The city has nothing to offer the area, he said, and only wants it for its tax revenue. Farmington City Manager 20 which seeks to attach to tiie John Dinan has said the city city 1,828 acres of town-! needs the annexation since Far-ship land. mington is now 95 per cent de- veloped and needs to expand. gbrty on the west, 11 Mile on the north and the, western border of Quakertown on the east. SOUTHERN mark "The southern boundary runs from Gill west along Grand River to Halstead. It follows Halstead and the curve of the I-% Expressway south to 9'/^ Mile which it takes west to Haggerty. According to Brennan, the land involved Is a prime in- TURNED DOWN The incorporation election held in the township on June 6 was designed to prevent such “land grab” attempts but the township residents, feaing high-'Fr'^^xes, turned down the pro-pos^A township officials have Brennsan said the v o t e/ s outsmarted themselves ^ince the loss of die land and its taxes may force tax levey increases in the township anyway. Area residents, as well as Farmington city officials, must get over the idea that Farming-ton Township is wide open farm country said Brennan. 1 park 'area which, when fully developed, would yield nearly $500.MO to the township in annual tax reve- and other services provided," he explained. 2NDPETmON Meanwhile, the City of Farmington'filed a siecond annexation petition with the county supervisors on July 1, jeq an election to bring 457 acres of the township un der city jurisdiction. This second area, which involves the Woodcroft subdivision, is bounded by Gill on the east, i'k MUe and the curve of the I-N Expressway on the south, Halstead on the west and Grand River on the^ north. It Was approximately thii area that the city tried to annex last November. City residents of the sections to be annexed voted it down. order for an annexation proposal to pass, a majority consenting vote of both city voters and township voters (in the area to be annexed), counted separately is necessary. ‘STRONGER CASE’ Brennan said that no suit is plaimed against the second pe-titon at this time since the city has a stronger contiguity case th«-e. If Woodcroft residents should vote to join the city, however, the suit against the first petition would be seriously weakened since the city would then touch the 1,800-acre portion hlong a much longer border, he indicated. Brennan believes that a decision made by the Michigan Supreme Court several years “It is an urban community!ago in a similar case will serve whch has been planned, zoned las a lo^cal precedent for the and has had necessary utilities I current litigation. The township's two largest taxpayer would be lost as wellj as 10 per' cent of the township's! total land area, he said. Lake Levels Fluctuate but Remain Above 1965 Brennan is holding off op filing his 8uit« pending approval of ; the city’s petition by the coun-| ty'supervisors. TO BE CONTESTED I The annexation will be con-! tested, said the attorney, on the grounds that the land in question is not properly contiguous to the City of Farmington. He maiata at that two pieces of land “most be logically as well as technkaUy coatignups” in order for an-nexatioa to be justified. The technical contiguity claim of the city is not at issue since | the land the city is seeking to annex shares about 1,000 feet of common border with the city at the section’s extreme southeast comer. Contiguity involves more than! DETROIT (UPI) - Water levels in the Great Lakes fluctuated slightly during the past month but remain substantially higher than July fOK, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reported today. The corps measured the level of lakes Erie and St. Clair as one inch below the June reading but 10 inches above that recorded a year ago. A further drop of two ftiches was expected during the next month in Lake Erie while a one-inch drop probably will be measured in Lake St. Clair, the report said. Lake Superior waters deepened one inch during the past month to hit a level three inches above that recorded in July 1965. The corps said the level on Aug. 15 probably will be one inch above today’s reading. ★ ★ ★ ' The level of lakes Michigan and Huron remained constant during the past 30 days, maintaining their 11-inch hike over last year. No change in the level of either lake, is expected before late August. lXke deeper Lake Ontario remained eight inches deeper than the reading taken in July 1965. The level, which has not changed since the Juno reading, is expected to drop two inches during the past month. Some Dry Fields Missed By UalMI PruM latamthwal At leaat 13 puraaos lost tfaeii lives lo traffic accidents on roads during the Blake Foster, 30, Rochester, iterday when his motore^ycle' was abgick by a car on a Troy street. .During Weekend Sfafe Traffic Kills 13 Leoni Township, Jacksoii tkxin-ty, when the car in which he was riding rolled over and he was thrown out. George Stroph, 22, McBain, was killed Saturday aftefiidon when his car ran off an Osceola County road in Hi^Iand Township and struck a tree. Two Montague youths were killed late Saturday when their motorcycle was struek from behiad by a»car. Daniel Vincent, 1C, and Wil-liam.Wiegand, 15, both of Montague, were killed on a Muskegon County road near Dalton Township. Christopher Wimsatt, 18, of Dearborn, died yesterday afternoon when he was struck by a car as he walked on the 1-96 freeway in Novi. HITS POST David Houbolt, 34, Laingsbu;g Ronald Barkley, 25y« Boyne City, was killed Saturday morning on M75 in ChafleVoix County when the qar in which he was a pass^er left the road and hit a dtility pole. was killed early yesterd^ 1-96 nine miles west of Howell HALF A COUNTRY - Only 26 states can be counted on this pre-Civil War map found map in the attic while making repairs at his in an Avon Township home recently. Mathew home. The map was published in 1845 when Fotberingh^m of 626 E. Auburn found the Pontiac had been a village for some 30 years.- Land Banks Help Farmers Act OK'd in '16 Paved Way for Productivity School Vacancy fo Be Aired when his car ran off the road and struck a sign post. WilUam Rudduqk, 25, Royal Oak, died when the car in which was riding struck a tree on Pleasant Wdge street early yesterday. The son of the sports editor of the Jackson Citizen Patriot was killed Saturday night on a Lenawee County road near Media Township when the car in which he was riding collided headon with another The Avondale Board of Edu-| igion after the board of educa-cation tonight will consider the; tion denied his request for a appointment of a high school! two-year leave of absence, principal to replace R. V. Cro-| ai«, to be considered iit, the ■ ,, . . ,^-2. 'naming of a new junior high Crowell, who has held we po-jgggjjjapt principal to replace sition for 18 years, is leaving |GeraW V. Hanley who was ap-to b^me secondary principal, inted AW,um of the International School in|........ -• - - - WASHINGTON Ufl - The test tube, the inventor’s shop and the scientific mind all' Bangkok, Thailand. Heights Elementary School. credited, justifiably, with great roles in creating America’s amazingly efficient qnd productive agriculture. But little note is taken of an event of 50 years ago and the seemingly unspectacular role it played in helping to make it possible for one man in agriculture today to increase his productivity nearly 400 per cent in half a century. That event was the signing by President Woodrow Wilson on July 17, 1916, of an act of Congress establishing a system of land banks to provide the farmer with credit for purchase of farms. Out of that act have grow federal land banks which now are providing farmers with more than $4 billion in loans on fanning units they are buying and operating. II2.5 BILLION During the ensuing 50 years, these bmiks have extended loans totaling mwe than $12.5 billion in loans on fanning units they are buying and operating. These banks, perhaps more than aayttiing else, gave character and respectahility to farm lending. Rains Helped Lower Michigan Crops LANSING (UP) — Rains joyer; much of lower Michigan helped; the state's-farm crops last week, but they passed over panned Northern Lower Mirih-igan fields. Inches, says Ceel Vanden-Brink of the West Michigan Weather Service. The area has had less than one inch rainfall In the last four weeks. ^Missaukee County, for example, has had only 3.49 inches, of rain since April 1, only 0.52 inches in the last four weeks • and no rainfa]J[,^last week. Nfsongl rainfall would be about 9 inches since April 1. Meanwhile, the Federal-State Crop Reporting Service said severe frost damage in May, to | cherries and peaches would cut' Michigan's fruit tonnage this; year by about 20 per cent from' 1965. Lansing’s condition has been better, VandenBrink said. It has had 1.68 inched in the last four weeks, and 9.05 inches since April 1, about 2 inches less than normal. ■ It said cold and wet weather earh^r this year ahi) resulted! in a smaller acreage of field! crops. MISS average They will be 2 pw^cent higher than in 1965, but 4 per cent lower thaatte 1960-64 ayertige. Most of Michigan is well behind on total rainfall for' the growing season, the service said. . , . The Traverse City area has had fewer than 4 inches since April 1, while the norlnal l.wanld be about 9 ABOUT NORMAL Grand Rapids’ total of 10.79; inches since April 1 is about; normal and southwestern coun-| ties are reporting between 121 and 13 inches. I The crop reporting service 1 said for field crops, smaller I acreages of com, wheat, barley,! fall potatoes, dry beans and| I hay more than offset expected! increases for oats, rye, sugar beets, late summer potatoes' and soybeans. Total harvested acreage for the crops is expected to be 5,899,OM this year, compared ; to I,Oil,009 last year. Tonnage forecast for the crops, excluding soybeans and potatoes, is 8,953,352.' and fnfit crops is expected to be about one per cent higher than in 1965, but 4 per cent below the 1960-64 average. | FIELD CROPS I Field crop forecasts; Grain—Winter wheat, 31,440,-000 bushels, up 14 per cent from 1965; corn for grain, 93,806,000 bushels, down 5 per cent yield per acre, 40 bushels, up 7 bushels; oats, 27,744,000 bushels, up! 6 per cent. Beans —Dry beans, 619,000 | acres for harvest, down.2 per cent; soybeans, 474,000 acres, | up 3 per chnt. | Sugar beets—1,168,000 tons, up 13 per cent. The banks are located at Springfield, Mass.; Baltinrore, Md.; Columbia, S.C.; Louisville, Ky.; New Orleans, La.; St. Louis, Mo.; St. Paul, Minn.; Omaha, Neb.; Wichita, Kan.; Houston. Tex.; Berkeley, Calif., and Spokane, Wash. In signing the act, Wilson look note of the “singular position I960 WIDE TRACK DRIVE, WEST JEROME MOTOR SALES CO. ^ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN THE PONTiAc gR^SS, MONDAY, JULY 18, me Heavy'Thuhd^rsforms, Hig/) Wjnds/ Tornado Buffef M/nnesofa By tki AntciiilMl Pmi ^ Hiavy thunderstomu rumbled across northern Hfinnesota eariy ^y. N^Iy an inch of rain fell in DuHSth in one hour, and winds of X miles an hour buffeted the /area. A vessel on tAke ^perior. reported that winds dtuting a height of 80 miles an hour., A tornado reportedly touched ground in the Hibbing, >Hnn., area ahortly before ifi^^ht, causing some property damage. ROCKY MOUNTAINS Showers and thundershowers feH also in the Rocky Mountain aresu- daily today, Relieving aetfie of the, warm temperatures. There was little relief in the desert Southwest and in sections of the Plains states. At Needles, Calif., the nddnight reading waa 98 dopees. Early nwming tem-pei^n^ frotn Texas into the Dal^btia w^ mostly in the 80b. Oklahoma City, Okla., wMch"’ has had 17 strai^t days of, 100 degrees and hitter would extend this string to 18 today, the Weather Bureau reported. Oklahoma City had a high of 101 Sunday. At Pueblo, Coto., Sunday’s high of 101 set a record for Um date by two degrees. ' The day’s highest reported reading was at Buckeye, Ariz., which had 115 degrees. An inch of rain fell in one hour in northern New Mexico Sunday and streams ran bank-fOll, some rock slides were started and communications were disruptted. ATTENTION! 0 MEDICAL CLINICS • DEKTflL CLINICS 0 OPTCMETRY CLjNlCS « BARBER SHOPS 0 BEAUTY SHOPS « LOAN OFFICES 1 HARDWARE or RETAIL STORES Spaofl in TOWER SHOmNO CENTER laeatei at IMO (NlgMan*,.^ Rd.) and Airpart Rd. for laasa. Ml tq. ft. ar 12M sq. ft. Contact Tpwer Center Owner BR 3-4100 BE HERE WHEN DOORS OPEH AT 5 P.M. Just 4 Value-Packed Hours to REALLY Save! Don’t Miss Out! Because well be taking our store-wide inventory and preparing for this great event! Waite's will be CLOSED TOMORROW TIL 5 P.M. OPEN TOMORROW 5 'Hi 9 P.M. Sorry—No Moil, No Phone> No C.O.D.'s, No Holds, No Returns-ALL SALES WILL BE FINAL! ^ On Some Items Intermediate Morlc-DowilS Hove Been Token Closed Tuesday ’til 5 P.M. PreparingTor Thir Great Event - Shop 5 to 9 P.M. ’ Limited Quantities • Hundreds of Mark-Downs • Tremendous LADIES’ SPORTSWEAR - Third Floor Junior White Slacks, Sizes 7-11, Were 8.99-9.99................6.99 Matching Boating Tops, Were 9.99...:....................... 4.99 Knit T-Tops, junior Size, Were 4.99 . ?........................2.99 Junior Cotton and Dacron Skirts, 5-15, Were 7.99............• • 5.99 Junior Cotton and Dacron Skirts, Were 9.99-10.99............• • 6.99 Junior Cotton and Dacron Skirts, Were 6.99............... «• 4.99 Famous Make Misses' Skirts, 6-18, Were 7.99-8.99.................5.99 Famous Make Misses' Skirts, 8^18, Were 9.99......................6.99 Famous Make Misses' Skirts, Were 11.99.......................... 7.99 Misses' Nylon Jersey Skirts, Were 7.99......................... 5.99 Dyed to Match Blouses, 32-38, Were 6.00-6.99....................3.99 Dyed fo Match Jackets, 10-18, Were 10.99-12.99 .................6,99 Famous Make Knit Tops, S-M-L, Were 4.00-4.99................... Famous Make Knit Tops, S-M-L, Were 3.00..........................1 -99 Arne! Pleated 2-Pc. Dress, 8-16, Were 8.99........................4.99 Famous Beach Coverups, Were 10.99 to 14.99........................7.99 Famous Make Stretch Slacks, Were 12.99 to 14.99..................4.99 Famous Make Swim Suits, Were 14.99 to 26.00......................9.99 Famous Make Swim Suits, Were 11.99 to 17.99..................... 4.99 Sleeveless Blouses, Sizes 32-38...........................2 for 3.00 Misses' Wool Toppers, Were 29.99 to 39.99.....................18.00 Maternity Blouses, Skirts, Slacks, Shbrts, 3.99-7.99..........V» Off FASHION ACCESSORIES - Straet Floor Women's .Nylon Gloves, Were 2.50 and 3.00..................49c Wothen's Nylon Gloves, Were 2.00 and 3.50.......-.........1.31 Women's Summer Hbiters, Were 2.00.........................1-31 Terry Cover Ups, Were 4.00....................*...........2.66 Terry Cover Ups, Were 7.00................................4.77 Leather Handbags, Were 16.00....................... ......9.00 Leather Handbags, Were 12.99..............................6.66 Leather Clutch Handbags, Were 6.00.........................3.00 Leather Handbags, Were 22.00............................. Leather Handbags, Were 19.00..............................9.77 Tote Bags, Were 11.00....!................................6.00 Straw Handbags, Were 3.00 to 5.00.........................2.00 Assorted Beach Bags, Were 3.00.............t..............2.00 Slightly Irregular Nylon Hosiery, If Perfect 1.50 Millay Textured Nyfdn Hosiery, Were.4^0^ ... SHOES 41c .19 83c Women'! Group Town Squares 3. to $Q88 1.00 Z colon iti-cludilig block and whHa. Most Vzes ovoilobla. USE YOUR CONVENIENT WAITE'S CHARGA-PLATE ’ On All 6 Big Floors • No Need to Carry Cash .. Charge Yours Reg. 7.99 to 9.99 Misses' and Juniors' DRESSES Reg. Reg. 12.99$^ 6.99 to 17.99 Reg. 11.99 $Q Reg. 14.99 and 12.99 U to 30.00 Choose from .this wide assortment of better dresses in street and daytime styles. Juniors, misses and half sizes. Charge If. Drej(5ej ... Third floor LINGERIE and CHILDREN’S - 2nd Floor Famous Make Ladies' Slips Were 8.95 ................6.66. Print Granny Shift Gowns Were 8:00..................6.66 Summer Playwear, Were 3.99..........................3.44 Tots Summer Playwear ............................... 4.22 Infants Terry Topper Sets Were 5.00 ................4.44 Assorted Girls' Dresses, 7-14, Were 4.99 ...........3.88 Boys' Velour S.S. Sport Shirt Were 6.00.............4.66 Girls' Knit Tops Were 2.99 .........................2.44 LADIES' SLIPS If Perfect $1 100% cotton ilips, lizes 44 to 50. Slight irregular!. Charge Yours. LADIES'PANTIES- If Perfect O / $1 1.00 Pr. Z. foi' 1 Ladies nylon tricot ^nlies. Slight irregulars. Charge it. / GIRLS' SWIMWEAR 'i'S' DRESSED «$73? 2 for^3.50 Choose from a wide ossortment of styles, broken sizes. Charge H. choose from on assortment of styles, fobrics, colors. TOTS' DRESSES and BUTCHER BOYS vT, 2 tort3.50 Choose from butcher boys end tots' dresses. Sizes 2 to 4.. BOYS' BRIEFS . and SHIRTS 2 for 87'= , Slight irregulars in boys' 100% cotton T-shirts and briefs. 6-14. Boys' Sport Shirts BOYS' SLACKS , Value 2 ^3 r. ^2.09 Choose from woven cotton or cotton knits in o wide assortment of celort. 100% cotton slocks ore completely washable. Assorted colors. 6-18. ' , Assarted Graup of Women's Loafers, Were 8.00..............2.88 Assorted Group of Women's Wedgies and Casuals, Were 9.00 ... 3.88 Assorted Straw and Leather Sandals, Were 6.00.............2.88 Assorted Children's Shoes, Were to 9.00...................3.88 Assorted Children's Barefoot Sandals, Were to 4,00 .......1.88 NOTIONS and COSMETICS - Straat Flaor Summer Colognes and Dusting Powder?; Were 1.00.............66c Bath Salts Tablets, Were 2.00......................... 1.22 Castile Shampoo, Were 59c............... • ................24c Hand Lotion, Were 79c...... ,,, - • ................31c Tufted Corduroy Rocker Pods, Were 2.Q0....................1-00 Swim Caps, Were 3.00 ond 4.00................. ....... • • • • 2.00 Swim Caps, Were 5.00 and 6.00 ............................3,33 MEN’S WEAR VALUES - Straat Floor Men's Shortie Pajamas, Were 4.00-----.................... — 2.88 Aden's Shortie Pajamas, Were 2.99 and^39 J...................2.44 Men's Rayon Dressing Robes, Were 20:00......................6.81 Men's Rayon Dressing Robes, Were 2u:uU............................O.o i Men's Short Sleeve White and Cotored Dress Shirts, Were 4.00.. 1.22 Men's Leather Belts, Were 2.50 to 5.00.............................1.66 . Famous Make Long Sleeve Dresi Shirts, Were 4.25......................1.41 Famous Make Long Sleeve Dress Shirts, \^ere 5.00.....................1.72 Size Large Men's Athletic Shirts, Were 79c.........................12c Short Sleeve Sweat Shirts, Were 6.00..............................1.96 Men's Sweat Pants, Were 6.00......................................1*^^ Men's Walk Shorts and Jams, Were 4.00 and 6.00.......................2.96 Men's Swim Trunks and Walk Shorts, Were 7.00.........................4.96 Men's Casual Slacks, Were 6.00 and 8.00...........................2.00 Men's Short Sleeve Sport Shirts, Were 5.00........................3.77 Men's Henley Collar Knit Shirts, Wefe 3.00........................ 2.21 Men's Short Sleeve‘Sport Shirts, Were 4.00..................... 1.41 Men's Unlined Jackets, Were 10.00.............................. • • • 3.71 Men's Unlined Jackets, Were 8.99......................... 4.71 Men's Unlined Jackets, Were 12.00 V...............................5.71 Men's Unlined Jackets, Were 6.99. ..........3.71 Men's Short Sleeve Velout Shirts, Were 9.00.................. 3.96 Men's Short Sleeve Sjx>rt Shirts, Were 6.00 and 7.00.............. .4.80 Men's Short Sleeve Sport Shirts, Were 8.00 and 10.00.............6.40 1 DOMESTICS, DRAPERIES - Fourth Flo6r White linen Weave Fabric, Was 2.99 Pink Cosheen Solid Color Fabric, Was 1.99 Plisse Print Fabrics, Were 59c Dacron and CottonT)otted Swiss, Were 1.69 Cotton Eyelet Fabrics, Were 1.99 Denim Fabrics, Were 69c Ship Ahoy Print Fabrics, Wer? 1.19 Soiled Mattress Pads and Toppers Velvet Bound Blankets, Were 8.99 Summer Chair Replacement Pads, Were 2.49 Summer Chaise Replacement Pads, Were 4.49 Summer Chajse Replacement Pads/ Were 7.99 Summer Glider Sets Replacement Pads, VVere L9.99 Drapery Fabrics, Were 1.99 to 2.39 Group of .Draperies, Were 4.99 to 29.99 ...............\ ^ Off Assorted Decorator Pillows, Were 2.99.........................1.07 Nylon and Rayon Rugs, 21x36, 27" Round Contour 5.99'...........2.08 t^ylon and Rayon Rugs, 24x42-inch, Were 7.99....................3.08 Nylon and Rayon Rugs, 27x48-inch, Were 8.99....................4.08 Nylon and Rayon Lid Covers, Were 2.99...;.......................1.08 Carved Rugs, 21x36", 24" Rd. Contour, Were 3.99 ...............88c Carved Rugs, 24x42-inch; Were 5..9^ ..........................1.88 Carved Rugs, 27x48-inch, Were 8.99............................2.88 Print Linfen Tablecloths, 52x52-inch, Were 3.99 .....■.........88c Print Linen Tablecloths, 52x70-inch, Were 4.99 .. ............1 .'88 Terry Toaster Covers, Were 1.00 ...............................1 Oc lrregu[ar’Dish Cloths, Were 35c.................................5c Irregular Dish Towels, Were 79c................................25c Quilted Bedspreads, Were 19,99 to 49.99.....................Vi Off Bamboo Valances, Were 1,19'....................................5c Jacquard Hand Towels, Were 1.79 ...............................58? Jacquard Washcloths,’Were 69c..................................28c Assorted Soiled Rugs, Were 5.99 to 10.00......................2.00 50% Down pillows. Were 10.'99...........................’.....4.22 NODSEWARES-GIFTWARE-, Lower Level 36-Inch Dark Blend Nautilus Range Hood, Was 39.98.........31.88 7-Pc. Fireplace Set, Was 29 *95 ..........................24.88 7-Pc. Dinette Sets, 2 Patterns, VVere 119.95..............94.00 Service for 8 English Staffordshtre^VVere 19.95...........12.88 Service for 8 47-Pc. Pottery Dishes, Were29.95............ 1 7.88’ Round Imported Gold Colored Trays, Were 3.98 ...............2.22 Early American Stand/with Salt & Pepp^s, Were 2.25..........1.66 West Bend Teflon Muffin Pans, Werejj^?......................1.22 West Bend Roasting Pans, Were 3.^R. ............2.77 Early American Coffee Grinder, Were 9.^.....................5.44 Habachi Round Grills, Were 5.98 ...**.......................3.77 Imported Wooden Pepper Grinders, Were 1.98 .................1.18 ’Wooden Letter Holders, Were 3.98 ....;..................2.77 Imported 3-Pc. Carving Set, Were 9.98 —........ 8.22 6-Pc. Steak Knife Set, Was 7.98 .. .........................5.88 3-Pc. Corving Set, Stag Handles, Were 12.98.................9.44 IRobson Cutlery, 2-Pc. Knife Set, VVqs 3.95.................2.80 Serv'tce fpr 8 Stainless Silverware,' Were 19.95..........1 7.44 Kitchen Tool Set 7-Pc., Were 3.98 ;......................... 2.88 Early American Wooden Napkin Holder, Was 1.98 1.18 Decro-Tile Plastic Wall Tile, Was 3.98, ....................2.98 6-Speaker AM/FM Stereo Console, Was 17^95............ 149.00 FIFTH FLOOR VALUES 9x12 Room Size Cotton Rugs, Were 24.95........ .. ..........15.88 6x9 Oval Braid Rugs, Green, Were 19.95 ...».................15.88 9x14 Hettrick Duplex Tents, Were 77.00......................54.00 Deluxe Exercise Bicycle, Was 39.95 .........................34.00 27x48" Cotton Rugs, Were 4.98 ....'................... 3.22 Girls' Reol Electric Cookie Factory, Wetist l 1.88...........7.88 7-Web Aluminum Chaise Lounge, Were 8.98 ....................I 7.77 6-Web Aluminum Choir, Were 5,98 . i..........................31.99 Barbie Type Dolls or Clothes, Were 98c ........................ 57c Playschool Tyke Bike..........................................3.57 Riding Stuffed Tiger on Wheels, Were 8.88................. 5.77 Large Size Stuffed^ear with Baby Cub, Were 8.88.............. 5.77 20-10^ Lawn Fg(m and Fertilizer, 3.99 Value 1.84 J2-Way Walkie T^ Sets', Were 21,88.:. . : . . . 15.88 Toro 19" Flymo Rotary Mower, Reg. 79.95 ........... 54.00 ■ J.., t^>!vvv THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAYi JULY II, 1 UAMUD A. Y Bowiu H. Fnwiuu n • PrwIdMI kad Tie* P Jomt A. tauT Seemiery and AdTutlatec -Ob It Seems to Me... Commies Gaining in U.S.A. Larger Number Is Voting They’re getting bolder. Those blasted Reds, I mean. Dorothy Ray Healey ran for the Assessor’s Office in Los Angeles County and received 86,000 votes. Two opponents polled 1.4 million which sounds as though Dorotity had been knocked for a loop. But listen to this: She ran as the chairman of the Southern California Communist party! ★ ★ ★ That’s tragic enough but it sounds worse when you learn that a few years ago the Communists claimed only a scant 14,000 hard-core members-^mis-guided mugwumps who openly confessed their defection as full-fledged Reds. That covered the -whole United States. They claimed an additional 100,000 who “leaned that way in part.” And now this Dorothy person gets 86,000 votes in one county. Her bold step was made possible when Mr. warren’s “Supreme” court ruled Commies didn’t hsve to register any longer under the Subversive Activities Control Act which was primarily aimed at making our enemies declare themselves. No blasted Red would have dared run so openly a year ago. But their path has been smoothed once again “by law.” ★ ★ ★ What would Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson and a host of other great Americans think of sickening surrender and capitulation like this? This floozy didn’t “expect to win.” She said she just ran “to establish the party more firmly.” Success crowned her effort. No Bluff . . The “rightdous Indignation” of our enemies over the stepped-up bombing seems to have spent itself. The Initial “fury” has abated since messages assured the foe that the new move wasn’t accidental- or tentative. . It’s part of the hew deal. We mean business. ★ ★ ★ Secretary McNamara assures everyone that we have definite and immediate designs on a rather extensive list of strategic fuel depots. Former President Eisenhower approved. The late Sir Winston Churchill’s son-in-law flayed Prime Minister Wilson for his early wail of agony. What business is it of Wilson’s, anyway? He isn’t helping us with troops, money or even meaningful applause. Our stuffed shirt friends can fold up or fade away. ★ ★ ★ This nation has grown weary of. the never-ending casualty lists sent home to America. Sideline critics who not only fail to help us but furnish supplies for the foe can all go jiunp In the ocean—the part where it’s de^st.x Barryfs One of the Interesting developments in the next Presidential possibilities lies in the unique position occupied by Barry Goldwater. When the dismal Repu^l^an totals were established in IW, Barry Goldwater seemed to be out of it as a future caijcildate for any national office. The voters had shouted “no.” It seemed unmistakable. ★ ★ ★ And yet the rock-ribbed Gold-water fans haven’t died or even “faded away.” They’ve never lost faith or hope in the Arizona man. Barry’s their boy today. They accept no other. ★ ★ ★ F,ew candidates have lost more ground during a campaign than Goldwater did in 1964. Ha4 the nation ^ted^the^ight afiter his nomination, 1^ chances would have been excellent. The GOP was jubilant. But he slipped, stumbled and steadily lost ground luitll on election eve, all but the extremists had quietly surrendered. And the extremists still hope. And in Conclusion . . '• Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of • your peripatetic reporter: Demands on travel set world records, everywhere,............Over- heard : “Despite the startling progress of science, the percentage of deaths still runs 100'.;.” . . ..... . . . Annette Manicotti is the new: est film sensation. Annette stands just one inch above seven feet. . . . ........Within 20 years there will be no garbagecollections. High powered beams wjll cause everything to disintegrate...........Overheard: “It isn’t the heat — it’s the stupidity.” Trusted scouts ■advise me iLinda Lucking Ideserves mention las one of the ■area’s attractive |young ladies .... . . ABC-TV l^ill spend a mil-|lion bucks presenting Milton LINDA Berle in. his new dhow ..; 1......Sign in the Do- ■tlBican Republic: “Yank — Go H o m e — And Take Me With You.” ^ ....... . It’s almost incomprehensible that no oiie anywhere imposes any restrictions on thd^savage dialogue in “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf.”............Overheard: “I’ve reached the age where it’s harder to find temptation than it is to resist it.” ★ ★ ★ Each year this nation is blessed with between 400 ahd 500 new golf courses..............Los Angeles’ Rick Reichardt Is secretly held as a candidate for ultimate recognition as one of the great stars of the future. Some regard him as the most intellectual young man in any sport anywhere...............Textbooks and reference volumes are having the greatest upswing of all time. A further increaw of 50% is, expected by 1970.'...... Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: The C’s—Marion Kraft for selling $212 million in Savings Bonds; the J’s—the mercUry i (bo-o-0-0-0.) —Harold A. Fttzokrald Voice of the Peppier ’A81aF^l^€oopel^ion to Refurbish/lity Park It is pathetic to see a ^Uc recreation area deteriorate to the depre^ng ugliness of Beattdette Park; to see people fisliing in foul-smelling waters; tennis courts neglected and people drinking, carousing and littering the pirk with beer and wine bottles. Citizens of Pontiac, let’s work together to rid the icity of this public cesspool. ARNOLD McCONNER AVANT GARDE GUILD OF FREE AFRO AMERICANS 468 NEVADA Brief History of Sewage Disposal Methods Shame on the someone who told Mr. Grogan that our forefathers used septic tanks. A “bath Rrtth a path” was modm for those days. Its mechanics were simple because vdien the Immediate area became unbearable, they just moved it to another ^ Septic fainlf came along and were wonderful thin because they moved this convenience right Into the how but eventnaUy they saturated the immedtate urea also. The old-fashioned septic tank is being replaced by sanity sewers which remove the sewage to a treatment plant fof sing via watertight pipes. It’s a real bargain and w? shwld happy to advance with progress, when we can split the cost CONCERNED That or Yankee Know-How!" ‘Empty Promises Weaken Faith in Leaders’ David Lawrence Says: For what reason did we enter the war in South Viet Nam? On several occasions, the President ^id people,” and the inference seemed to lead to Viet Nam. Why should our American boys be pushed into such a conflict. Population Growth Alters U.S. WASHINGTON - ’Ibe biggest single cause of i^st of America’s domestic troubles is population growth. And the most significant piece of information that could be conveyed to the American people today is the effect of pop ulation change on the! future of ourl existing sys-| tern of govern-* ment. LAWRENCE . Within the last few days, three noteworthy reports have been issued which give the results of research on the need for a sweeping reorganization of federal, state and city governments. The purpose is to adapt the Oonstitution of the United States to meet rapidly changing conditions that will vitally affect the welfare of all the people and their children. The first of the three reports just issued was produced after considerable research and is sponsored by the Committee for. E c o-nomic Development — a nonpartisan organization composed of prominent citizens from different parts of the country. ’The Inquiry was headed up by Marion B. Folsom, secretary of Health, Education and Welfare in the Eisenhower administration. It calls for a reduction in the number of local governmental units from 80,000 to 16,000 and would confine popular election to members of policy-making bodies only. Hie second of these, studies was prepared by the R^blican Policy Committee of the Senate under the chairmanship of Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper of Iowa. It discusses the effect on politics that has come from the expansion and redistribution of population dnd points out that voters are confronted by urgent problems in metropolitan centers. Bbphasis is placed on the headaches arising from traffic congestion and increased taxes, as well as water, sewage and public-transportation problems. The study notes that there has been a mass migration of middle- and upper-income people from the big cities to the suburbs and analyzes the effect on the makeup of political parties. ■Rie third report — Issued by the Republican Coordinat- ing Committee after an intensive study by a staff of experts — points out in un-equivocal language the dangers of complacency and indifference in the face of the population revolution. It speaks of the erosion of representative government as responsibility “rests in the hands ot administrators who cannot be brought to a c c 0 u n t by the oonsti-tnency they may be serving hundreds and thousands of miles away.” The conclusion reached is that regional planning and, in some instances, “a total mo'g-er of governmental units into a new or existing area-wide^ ^vemment may be the required answer.” Plainly there will be, as the study reveals, a big need for the sharing of federal income tax receipts with the local govwnments, as they obviously cannot today collect enough money to handle thi huge problems they face. All this is not a political or partisan question but an urgent problem of human welfare in tt)e wealthiest country in the world whose system of constitutional government needs to be adjusted to the stahling facts of population change. IIU OUl /IUJCHV.011 ——----- F.D.R., fitong to the mothers M America, said “yonr sons will never again have to fight on foreign sofl.” Since that statement was made, our boys have done a lot^ fwelp war fighting. Such promises, never kept, cannot help but weaken flie faith of our boys in the leaders of our Nation. Democracy is being stepped upon and Imperialism is taking UROY DEAN HIGHLAND Economics Involved in Animal Welfare Veterinarians have promoted a hardened attitute toward animals with their exorbitant fees. The charge f«r spaying a cat is $30.00, triple what it was teir years ago. This is a prime factOT in the discarding of pregnant cats and kittens. On a recent visit to the Animal Shelter, we found the dog pens to be fairly adequate but there should bo moro cages for the felines. There is ample room for moi% cages and the cost cannot be prohlUtive. Why is there not an attendant on Sundays and holidays? BERNICE McNAMARA ROCHESTER Bob Considine Says: Questions and Answers Study Made at MSJJ Used in Dixie Program What’s the idea of a truckload of dead dop being drivm on Sarasota without a canvas w something over the back? The tailpte was also down. This is disgusting, especially srlth so many little children playing oatside. Who is responsible for snch poor conduct? CANNOT UNDERSTAND NEW YORK - In 1959 the determined segregationists of Prince Edward County, Va., shut down their public schools in defiance of a federal order to integrate them. From that time until reason prevailed during the school year of 1963-64, the education of some 1,700 Negro children was left to hit-or-miss emergency care. Mostly miss. ■nie Southern Education Report, the journal of a contin-' uing study partly supported by .the Fwd Foundation, now examines the fallout of that tragedy of human misunderstanding. About $1,350;000 has been spent on the children since they returned to school. It has paid for a study by a Michigan State Univorsity team on the damage done by the years wifliont formal school; tile establishment of special “crash” programs and other argent efforts to undo the harm. turning up nuggets in the mel-anchdy mire. Smith notes: “Eunice Dove, a slim, attractive girl of 17 who missed education during all four years of the school closing, is one who has since taken the fullest possible advantage of the recovery. programs. “She progress^ so well in Operation Catch-Up that she became an instructor. “Ambitious to go on to college, she is still only a 10th-grader. She will be 20 before she can go, 24 before she is through. Tm not kidding myself,’ she says. Tt’s a long, hard road.’" REPLY Dri Bates of the Oakland County Animal Shelter is most sympathetic to your feelings about this matter. He im’t sure it was one of their trucks, but if so, he is very sorry it happened. Picking up and disposing of dead animals is one of the shelter’s worst problems, and th^ try to do it in the best possible manner, but on rare occasions there are problems which make it hard to accomplish. He says they’ve tried several ways of covering the dead animals. Canvases proved unsatisfactory becau^^ey wouldn’t stay fastened. Usually animats are put in dark plastic bags, but deterioration in summer sometimes makes this almost impossible. When it can be done, the animals are buried out in the country so they won’t have to be transported through the city. Dr. Bates doesn’t know why this wasn’t done with the dogs you saw, but he assures us everything possible will be done to prevent it haj^en-itig^.ttgmn----------------...- Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Bending fo Left The Calgary (Can.) Herald But in the case of many of the children, according to Dr. Robert Lee Green, a Negro educator associated with MSU, full recovery is doubtful. ★ ■ ‘‘Early school deprivation may have irreversible effects,” Dr. Green states. “Terminal skill development of these children would never attain a normal level.” Verbal Orchids Mrs. Sarah Smith of 1235 Silver Bell; 95th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Walton of 2115 Snellbrook; 60th wedding anniversary. Mrs. F. W. Etter of Riverside, Calif., formerly of ^ntiac; 8lst Urthday. Some of the children had lost die abIliUr to manipulate a pencil. By March, 1965, Rev. L. Francis Griffin, who had courageously fought the closing of the schools, reported; “■niere is still a group of children too disadvantaged from their educationally deprived years to even make a beginning. The principal has predicted that at least 75 per cent will drop out, a neariy George B. Firiqr of 315 E. Pike; 81st birthday. lost generation iavduntarfly .........1 ilUterate.’ But Operation Late Start is Britain may be prepared to stand in the United States’ (HRura* and give it moral sup-' port, but it is unfRepared to go into the ring and assist the Americans in South Viet litorn, The latest evidence of Britain's smnevdiat ambivalent diplomatic position on the Viet Nam problem materialized in the House of Commons in London the other day when the drfense minister, Hon. Denis Healey, npiterat-ed his government’s pAUcy of refusing to sell arms fw use either directly «■ indirectly in the Viet Nm war. Washington must be rather baffled by London’s reluctance to eiix«u her sui^XRt in more demonstrative tifrms. FurtheniKH^, Britain’s balance of payments problem Is sufficiently grave that it cannot easily afford to reject any (^pcRiunities to sell more goods abroad. To justify the govemm^t’s position, Mr. Healey has brandished a legalistic argument: supplying arms for use in Viet Nam would be inconsistent with Britain’s position as CDchairman with tiie So; " Viet Union of the Geneva Commission that ended the IndoCblna war in 1954. But Isn’t this cortimlsilqo a dead issue? The events now taking place in that area suggest that its efforts 12 years ago were a failure. But what has probably influenced the Labor government’s policy to a greater degree is the opposition of its extreme, left-wing support to the U.S. Viet Nam involvement. Perhaps a commitment not to sell arms is intended to be a pacifier to the antitrust militants within the Labor party. absorb all who come its way, but there has got to be a limit. The Pacific will not recede, the mountains won’t melt, nor will Mexico go away to make room for more Californians. There They Go! Grand Rapids Press How many people can California hold? Hut question is implied in the statistics recoitty compiled by the P^wlatioo Reference Bureau. CahfiNiiia is growing at tiie rate of 1,500 persons a day. In the 100 years from 1860 to 1960 its pof^tkm increased forty-fold w^e that of the country as a whole was increasing only four and a half times. There Is plenty of room for Industrial development in other parts of the country. Thhy may not he so liberally endowed with California’s much vauntea sunshine, but they have meir share, and nu-meroiH other advantages, such as wafer supply, central locations, acce^ility, industrial know-how and staUe populations to offer. We are thinking principally of the Middle West, although not exclushre-ly? At present it isn’t a population explosion but a maldistribution of population that gives cause for worry in tills country. Nationally we ought to start doing something to correct it now. By 20H California will have U bilUon rnidents if it keeps on growing at the present rate. That is about half as many persons as to- day. Obviously it c^’t ^ai^. LCaUfdrnia may seem able to AnocMM OiWm k OTMflM tKclmlvtte to «)• an kr Mko of oil kcol now* prk -XaV- ' V\\. . V' ■*. , THB t>OyTXAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY Foreign News Comminfery u^/ 00^ war while lodiail^resldeot Ferdtond E. Miffodc ^ The adieduM vlait ol French President Charles de GauUe to West Germany later this week is likely to be a perfunctory affair. | The routine visit is one of the regular half-yearly meetings between French and West German leaders provided for in the 1963 alliance between the two countries. In Bonn, de Gaulle is expected to give West German Chaneellor Ludwig Erhard a report on his recent talks with Soviet leaders. The status of French troops In Germany sinc6 their withdrawal ffom NATO command July 1 may also be a topic of conversation. of the former princely ftate in the Himalayas has erupted hito open warfare between India and Pakistan since 1947. Is almost certain to vh# tot United States soon. Marcos, who recent^ ^ Stock Op ON all your baby needs and save: Kashmir Talks: India may accept an offer by Pakistan to discuss w|ys of reaching a peaceful solution in the Kashmir dispute. Powerful elements in the Indian government maintain that Prime Minister Mrs. Indira Gandhi, who is actively seeking to promote peace in Viet Nam, can hardly ask the United States to find a peaceful solu- proved the dispatch of 1,019 Filipino, troops to Viet Nath, feeb the time could hardly be more auspicious. But he badly wants to ad-American Visit: Philippine dress a jobit session of Com gress In Washington and do far no date has been set. Dead Listed by US. in Viet Action HI Will: Relations between Belgium and its former colony the Congo are not so bad they can’t get worse. The two countries are scribed as bdng like a divorced couple who cannot agree on the alimony. This wedc the Congo seised the prop^ of Belgian’s Sa-bena Airlines. Coast Guardmen With Helicopter Save Fishermen fear they may be natisaalind despite President Joseph Mo-bnta’s statements to the coa-trary. Belgium may reduce its -technical ' assistance to the Congo by an amount equivalent to the “YOUR HEALTH’ “NERVES” DETROIT (AP> - Three fishermen whose Boat capsized Saturday said they spent nearly 10 hours bobbing in Lake Erie before being spotted by a Coast Guard helicopter shwtly fore dark. Lt. Lonnie Mixon, flying a routine “bay patrol’’ over the northwest comer of the lake, spotted the three—Ronald Bell, 29, and Gary Buchanan, 24, both of Detroit, and Dennis Foust, 22, of Dearborn. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defense Department has identified nine Army men killed in action in Viet Nam. They were: California — Pfc. David E. Nance, Marysville. Connecticut — Staff Sgt. Fred A. Lind, New Canaan; Spec. 4 Angelo J. Sferrazza, Thompson-ville. ^ _ Indiana — WO l.C. Jackie D.Ljrijne' assets seized. Jones, Indianapolis. i —------ New Hampshire — Pfc. Rob-j ert B. Mann, Salem. | New York — Pfc. Lawrence C. Harrigan, the Bronx. Ohio - 1st Lt. James Q. Ayd-lett, Akron. Pennsylvania — Staff Sgt. Robert F. Ferguson, Philadelphia. Virginia — Spec. 4 Daimy G. Keaton, Danville. The army also said that Pfc. James D. Benway, kfilwaukee, Wis., had died of wounds. Dead from other than hostile causes were: ARMY Missouri - Spec. 5 Eugne Jolly, Kansas City. Penpsylvania — Pfc. Willie Harper Jr., Pittsburgh. AIR FORCE New York—Airman l.C. Hans P. Lutz, Oopiague. The three said they launched a 12-foot aluminum boat near Grosse He Saturday morning The Army shifted from odss-ling to d e a d from nonhostile causes Staff Sgt. Donald J. Fawcett, Monongahela, Pa. morning and it overturned and| Missing in action are Air Force sank shortly afterward. {Maj. James F. Young, Air Force The Coast Guard flies pre- 1st Lt. Ralph* T. Browning and dusk patrols regularly over the ] Army Pfc. Iannis L. 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Israel Looks io U.N. to Soothe Arab Strife JERUSALKM (UPI) > mier Lsvi Bslibi I Sol iiu .lwiMd • formal call to the UnRad Nations to take actkm to secure a permanent peace between Israel and Hs Arab neighbors' h against brad. Natieita to take whatever action necessary to secure « permanent peace hi tke Middle East by repbciag general, ar- Eshkol, reporting yesterday to| mistice agreements bow hi ef- the cabinet on Thursday’s air strike against Syrians wprking on the Jordan River diversion project, also urged the Arabs to cease their acts of terrorism feet between Israel and the Arab states with stronger peace pacts. Syrian planes buzzed the border yesterday but did not cross into Israeli t^tcry. hraeU ol-ficlab'recalled that the. Damascus government had vowed to "teach Israel a lesson’’ and did not rule out the possibllty of more border incidents. Thursday’s pttack was in “retaliation" Ifor earlier ' Syrian raids and terrorist actions, Israel claimed. Eshkd said the Israeli goveni-tent had hoped the new Syrian regime would observe a ptodga it gave to the U.N. truce supervision chief Lt. Gen. Odd Bull of Norway, last June to refrain from opening fire under any conditions. However, after sabotage acb against IsraeM territory Wednef-day in which one Israeli wi killed and two wounded, it became imperative to take deterrent action, Eshkol said. Now at All HITE PHOTO DEALERS ^13® Instant PHOTO ALBUM This Week Only JULY UtK THROUGH JULY 21tt WITH EVERY ROLL OF KODACOLOR FILM PRINTER AND DEVELOPED WHY THIS AMAZING OFFER? Holds 40 Pages Each page halds a whole roll of snopihots. To »how you wh*t wonderful color pictures we m»ke, Hite Photo Dealers invife you to try their KOdacolor processing service. Once you see your pictures and get your free instant album, we know you will get more fun from your pictures, and become a repeat customer. You’ll find Hite Photo processing at leading drug, department'itore and photo counters. 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Sefinaw at Lawrence PONTIAC PONTIAC MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. Telegraph & Elizabeth Lakt Rd. Pontiac Mall 1 ELIZABETH LK. PHARMACY i 3801 Elizabeth Lake Rd. nr. Winding AUBURN HEIGHTS MIRACLE CAMERA SHOP 2205 S. Telegraph Miracle Mile Shopping Center BERKLEY BLOOMFIELD HILLS ARNOLD PHARMACIES INC. I 2540 N. Woodward BRIGHTON BIRMINGHAM AREA AbAMS PHARMACY I95S S. Woodward nr. 14 Mile BEVERLY HILLS DRUG 1998 Southfield at 14 Mile Rd. BI-LO DISCOUNT PHARMACY 6565 N. Telagraph nr. Maple BIRMINGHAM DRUGS 1220 S. Woodward CLARKSTON O'DELL DRUG 10 S. Maine THRIFTY DRUG 140 N. Saginaw THRIFY DRUG #2 6 South Telegraph cr. YANKEE STORE #56 2135 S. Telegraph ORCHARD LAKE FENTON OXFORD HOLLY lACK'S CAMERA SHOP 40 S. Wazhingten MITCHELL’S DRUG STORI 2 N. Washington HOWELL ROCHESTER KEEGO HARBOR PAYLESS DISCOUNT 511 Main St. : ROCHESTER CAMERA SHOP 505 N. Main St. I troy CRANBROOK DRUG 2SII W. MapU at Cranbrook DANDY BEVERLY DRUG 31215 SoutliNeld nr. 13 Mile COMMERCE HARRY C. HAYES DRUG 111 Commerce Rd. cor. S. Commerco Rd. LAKE ORION DRAYTON PLAINS MILFORD ETON PHARMACY 221 N. Eton nr. Mepio WESLEY DRUG #1 100 W. 14 Mile Rd. nr. Pi THRIFTY DRUG #3 4985 Dizie Highwey nr. Williams Lake Rd. NOVI LEE DRUGS i 4390 Dizie Hwy. i UTICA- ARNOLD PHARMACIES INC 39040 Van Dyke at 17 DANDY DRUG 45580 Van Dyke UTICA HOBBY SHOP 46231 Van Oyka> ,pt Carpenh WALLED LAKf World Court Will Rule Today on SW Africa Control VulB Ppy fjAC PkESS. MONDAY, JULY 18, 1966 TVS HAGUE. (AP) After >ti yflwi of UUgft. thi loterootiDiiol Court ct I Am Jtut ______________ Bomieed l>r KUfiifi. A tra*> [life, aetsd dw npUea cf Um %BidIa«| SkflMH* ere^ nude will be givaa abeblntely frtt in addition to a free bearing test to anyone answering this advertisement. Wear-test U .withoat cost of obligatioa of any kind. It’s yoars to keep free. The siae of this Electone it only one of its many fea-tares. It weighs less than a third of an ounce and it’s all' at ear level, in one unit No ifirM lead front Imdy. to head. (Hera is tmly nor hope for the hard of heariiig-These models are free while the limited anpply lasts, so we snggeat yon call or wiiu for yonrs now. Again, we ro peat, there ia no eost and eettainly no obligation. Bettar Hearing Service in I. isghMw-n. FI i-nn WEATHER OUTLOOK-The U.S. Weather Bureau has released its forecast for precipitation and temperatures over the nation for the next 30 days. For the Oakland County area, precipitation is expected to be above normal, the temperatures similarly above normal. Justice ^kle» todi. South Africa’s mite rulers have Hie right to cootinue running thg affairs of South-West Africa. Judgmeht the 14 Justices rebder on the/ futurh of the mineridH’ich desert territory, a scdutioo to the compleg case appears a ioug way off. SouUi Africa was expected to defy any adverse ruling in the case brought before the World Court by Ethiopia and Uberta. The 36-nation Organization of African Unity then is expected to ask the Security Council to ttiforce the court’s ruling, probably with punitive sanctions. The World Court’s decbion hinged on two main issues: Whether the League of Na-s mandate assigning South-West Africa to the South African government in 1920 is still valid and transferrable to the United Nations as the league’s successor. —Whether the extension of South Africa’s apartheid policy of racial segregation to the territory violates South Africa’s obligation under the mandate to .'•yi*.. ‘promote to the utmost the ma-iAfricm nations, Ethiopia andlthat South Africa was bound to terial a^ moral well-being and Lttieria brought the case before submit to U.N. supervision, tiw social pragroas of the inbab-the World Court tai 1900. Tbey They accused South Africa of ' ants.** jclalmed the United Nations in- violating its obligations by prac- Act^ on behalf of the newlherited the league mandate anditictng apartheid in the territory. South Africa Insistod tiMt the mandate dlM with the league and declared it would not be accountable to the United Nations as the league’s successor. 'THE WORLD'^ FINEST PIANO TRIO . . EU6ESE ISTOMIN - ISUC STERN and lEOmilD ROSE Apptaring in tha BALDWIN PAVILIAN, OAKUND UNIVERSITY Tuas., July 19 BEETHOVEN OP. 11, BRAHMS OP. 8, 8:30 P.M. SCHUBERT OP. 99 Tuas.,July26 BEETHOVEN OP. 1, BRAHMS OP. 8,^ 8:30 P.M. MENDELSSOHN OP. 49 Tuat., August 2 BEETHOVEN "KAKADU", BRAHMS OP. 101, 8:30 P.M. 'BEETHOVEN "ARCHDUKE" OP. 97 Artists also appear with Detroit Syifiphony Orchestra as soloists in the Meadow Brook Festival Concerts July 21 through August 7. Tiokatt All Parformances: $3 Pavilion, $1.50 Grounds, Festival Office, Oakland University, Rochester, Mich. - 338-7211, or QrlnnelPs *Speniora y,.*".'- y ;■ ^vr x:r:/.-;.^:J. npij i.jiriWH ,y.r: .. --;;7-jt. ■'■ ;iW.^.:' MONTGOMERY WARDS IS THE NUMBER ONE APPLIANCE HEADOUARTERS IN THE PCNITAC AREA Save *30! Deluxe 2-debr refrigerator wrtH AUTOiumc la maker REQ. 219 e Supplies all the Ice you will ever-need e FulNWidth 6*po$ition adjustable shelf e Covered butter keeper; lift-out egg rack e Bonus door storage; full-width aisper • liorge freezer area with bonus door shelf Sjale Ends Wed., July 20—9 PM. Big deluxe refrigerator 14-CU. FT. SIGNATURI WITH 123-LB. FRIIZER *269 O Loads of storage space include ing 4 fully-adjustal^o shelyos e Covered butter it—pTf lift-cut egg rack/ 2 porcelain crispers • Roomy storage door for tall bottles, even H-gallon milk cartons • Big 123-pound freezerwHh bonus sh^ space in storage door • Easy-io-clean pdrcelain inside/ baked enamel finish won't stain AviUtaM. wirfc Im mmkir, .xM Huge 2-deer refrigerator 16.1 CU. FT. OF STORAGI BUT ONLY 30 IN. WIDE 299 Quantities Limited • 4 com/detdy adfustaUe-sh^sp/ spacious fruH/vegekdJc crisper^ • 7-day meal keeper/earned bsd- • ter keeper/tHsarialde egg rack • Roomystorc/gedebrfertalllMh ties, eyen JLge/bii jnillk oarfons • Big 154-lb. freexdf with ssnng-out basket and ghde-out sheff • Foot pedal opens Zshelffreedw door/ easy-core porcelain indde STORE MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. HOURSi SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. Pontiac Mall PHONE 682-4940 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. i.,-' ■ ' 'Av\n''.-df additional lCnianiBAtt.21ioBtha KENDALE. • Photographers W«d.s>dFii.9-SiSa Phone for Appointment, FE 5-3260, FE 5-0322 THIS OFFER ENDS IN 15 DAYS iirrrrm I ixm'tTrrA'OTiTmTTrnTrrnTBT; Don’t Forget Your WARDROBE! Summer means lots of fun and (alaxo-tion ... but it's Important also to pivn thought to your oppaoronca. Good grooming counts «vnrywhar#you ora and lummar casuals s Now it your chance to pick a pair of little, mid and high heels ... sports and flats in the season's latest fashion colors . . . styled from the finest materials in all the new looks. Hurry! These won't lost long! f SAVE 30S to 40% ON EACH PAIR! JACQUELINE • CORELLI NATURALIZER R«gularlytoS17........ LARKS SPORTS i HATS $C33 Rsaulatly to S10...... w DELISO DEBS $1^39 Regularly to $24....... / «/ MAROUISE Sffgg Regularly to $20...... / f ,. SHOES... 48 N. Saginaw Street TUB PONTIAC PRBS&rMQirjDAY; JULy I$> : Vows Unite Arel'Cou MRS. ERIC J. KOCHENDERFER Reception in Church After Saturday Vows First Baptist Church of Holly was the setting for the Saturday wedding of Constance Faith Fry and Eric Jan Koch- enderfer, son of the Donald Kochenderfers of Davisburg. Reception in the church parlors followed the rites performed by Rev. Robert Mc-Quaid. Honeymooning in UP Off on a Northern Michigan honeymoon are Ben William North of Highland and his bride, the former Linda Ann Mcllrath. The couple was married Saturday in First Baptist Church. Parents of the pair are the James Mcllraths of North Shirley Street and the Eugene Norths, Foster Road, Independence Township. NYLON GOWN The bride chose a gown of white nylon over taffeta widi modified Sabrina neckline for the rited performed by Rev. Robert ^Iton. A Watteau train with lace trim was attached to her bell shaped floor-length skirt. A butterfly veil fell from her seed pearl headpiece. She carried a cascade bouquet of carnations and Steph-anotis encircling a corsage of pink Sweetheart roses. bridegn^m's brother, was best man. Ushering were Robert Hennecke, Emmett Morris, Jan North, Jerry North and Ted Taylor. . A reception in the church parlors followed the ceremony. Maid of honor was Rosemarie Sprague with bridesmaids Mrs. Sam Bearden, Donna Knisely, and Sue North, the bridegroom’s sister. Staff Sgt. Tom North, t h e MRS. BEN NORTH Miss Haynes Is Married toD. J.Ock6 Forty white carnations around a white orchid corsage were carried by the former Marie Ann Haynes of Ontario, N Y. for 'her Saturday wedding to Dennis John Ocke. Rev. Lawrence Dickens performed the afternoon ceremony in Stone Baptist Church, Auburn Heights. Maid of honor for the bride, daughter of the Gordon M. Haynes of Clifford Street, was Shirley Ann Evilsizer. Rosemary Ocke, Victoria Depappa and Laura Raetz were brideshiaids. Duane Ocke acted as best man for his brother. They are the sons of the John Ockes of Ontario, N.Y. MRS. DENNIS OCKE Stanley Sonneville, Edward Haynes and Robert Depappa were ushers. The newlyweds are honeymooning in Upper Michigan. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Percy Fry of Houser Road, Rose Township, the bride carried a bouquet of white orchids surrounded by white roses and Stephanotis. The Seating of Guests Discussed Travel to California After Milford Rifes Carol Gleason., was honor maid with bridesmaids Su-zan Wisner, Mrs. Jerry Welch and Gail Fry. Karen Kay Fry was flower girl. Performing the duties of best man was Robert Von-Oeyen, Jr. Bruce Kochender-fer and Robert Fry ushered. Ringbearer was Steven Sears. The newlyweds are honeymooning on Lake Michigan in the Traverse City area. By ELIZABETH L. POST I How much do you know about I seating people correctly? Most of us, at some time, have to make a seating arrangement, and we should know how to do it properly. Test your knowledge by checking true or false after each statement, and study the answers below, so that the next time you’re faced with the problem, you’ll know just how to solve it. The Theodore Robert Gibsons (Victwia Susan Frem-lin) left for their future home In San Francisco followii^ their marriage, Saturday, in the Milford Presbyterian Church. Rev. Frank C. Williams performed the double-ring candlelight ceremony for the couple whose parents are the John C. Fremlins and Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Gibson all of Milford. ' BIANCHT GOWN The bride appeared in a Bianchi-styled Empire coat dress ttf veiled silk organza over white peau de sole appli- • At a dinner party in your qued in Chantilly lace, home, the hostess always sits A lace pillbox held a bouf- fant veil with detachable cathedral-length panel of French illusion. Three orchids with ivy rested on the bride’s prayer book. MATERNITIES • UNIFORMS MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER OPW eVENINGS UNTIt N at the end of the table. True Fales • At a sit-down wedding reception, there is a special table for the bride’s family, and an-•other for the groom’s. True False When two couples dine together in a restaurant with banquettes, or benches, along the wall, the women sit on the ^nch with the men seated opposite them. True False • In a restaurant with booths, both men sit on one bench and the women opposite them. Ti-ue‘ ring-beartr, respectively. False ★ ★ ★ • 'The bride and groom sit With James Gibson, his at opposite ends of the bridal brother’s best man were the table as host and Iwstess. True ushers Michael J. Fremlin of False ‘ • j Pontiac, Donald Hancock and • At a dinner party, the lady Gary Newcomb, Milford; guest of honor always sits on John L. Martin, and Edward MRS. T. R. GIBSON Honor matron was Mrs. James R. Root, with bijdes-maids Cheryl Fremlin, Kathryn and Alexis Gibson and Cynthia Bohr, wll of Milford, and Sharon Otis of Charlevoix. Tamera Eis and Peter W. Fremlin were flower girl and ALL PERMANENTS NONE HIGHER 1 — New Lustre Shpmpoo 2 —Flattering Haircut 3 —Lanolin Neutralizing 4 —Smart Style Setting HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY Open Mornings at 8 .\.M. .78 N. Saginaw Over Bazley Mkt. 333-9660 the right of the host. True False • When a couple goes to the theater, the man always sits on the aisle. TVue False • At a buffet supper, you must always return to the same seat where you were before you went to serve your dinner. TYue False i D. Wojtowicz. Reception in the American Legion Hall followed the evening rite. Mr. Gibson holds an associate degree from Northwood Institute and will attend the City College of San Francisco. Shorty Half-Slips for Short Dresses ANSWERS TO QUIZ | • False. If there are eight! or 16 people, the hostess moves' one seat to the left of her usual} “Is my slip showing?" is place and seals the male guest' ® frequent question prompted of honor in her chair on the end.I by fashion’s current short, • False. The families of the! short skirts. Lingerie manu- bride and groom are seated at facturers have answered by the same table. i making even shorter drip-dry • True. i half-slips that are scarcely • False. One man and one than two kerchiefs, woman sit on either side of thg] It is no effort to "suds out’’ table with the men on the out^^ of tlfese every evening, side. : together with stpekmgs. Long i • Falsf. The bride and groomi before morning, ’your new I sit together at the> center, the! bttle slip will be dry and bride on his right. kmooth. • True. • True. B FREE Area-Wide DRIVERY SERVICE • False. Part of the fun ofj a-buffet is that seating is flexible, and you may sit wherever you choose. What is your most puzzling etiquette problem? To the sender of the most interesting question that we receive each week, we’ll send a free copy of Emily Post’s ‘‘Etiquette,’’ revised by Elizabeth L. Post. Boil Off Residue If a pan with non-stick coating has bec(»ne discolored through a build-up of food residue, boil a solution of water, bleach, and baking soda in it. Then keep it clean by rubbing at dishwashing time with a rough dishcloth and hot soap or detergent suds. Man Can Make More Money Through Clothes A news magazine says: “Clothes Make the Man — More Money.” Maintaining a well-dressed appearance is not just an expense, it’s an investment. Like any other investment, it takes judgement, time and money. All too frequently, men make a considerable investment in their wardrobes; and then forget to consider the cost of upkeep and carq, says the National Institute of Diy-dleaning. Silver Spring, Md.. T^e best-looking suit looses its value if: •The shoulders are covered with dandruff. •The collar is greasy from perspiration. •Spots occur on neck tie or suit jacket. •The seat is baggy and wrinkled. • Bagginess occurs at the knee or cuffline. Keep your suits, slacks; jackets spotlessly clean and pressed correctly. There are professional drycleaners in every neighborhood to keep clothes in proper shape so they can "make the man-more money.” Roods Wed Saturday in Pointe Vows Black, White and Large ly this lumpier. t MM Iwe Any color gow--io kM ‘ * “ ^ ---------». Riche- n is black aUd white. Uea-dasigdcr Dorothy Adams says so. The siM message aiso is kMid and clear. Bandogs must be enormous. Whether they’re dangling pliyfulfy in a pagod*,, shaped chandelier made up of swing- Uack or adiite discs, or ing likaKa geometric trapeze, ear trappings definitely aren’t for the timid. Suds Crumb Tray It’s a good after-breakfast habit to remove the toaster crumb tray and suds it off along with the dishes. One of Miss Adams’ mofit success&il designs is f hal^ dollar shaped drop banging from a otHitrasting button which features a aquara of black on a white ground — or white on a black ground. Reception at Hucks of Lake Shore followed the Saturday wedding of Mary Ann Duliss and Gerald Rood in Grosse Pointe Congregational Church. The rites were solemnized by ®ev. John W. Estes Jr. Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Nick Duliss of Grosse Pointe Woods and the Harold Roods of Otsego Road. Attending the couple honeymooning in New England were Mr. and Mrs. William Atkinson. Robert Rood and Richard Fumier ushered. A home in the Embassy West on Highland Road awaits the couple. SENSATIONAL SPECIALS ON PERMANENTS pinMAi .6/ luscious wave with Vivi-Oil *10 CUSTOM Vitalizing Permanent Reg. $15.00 for Tinted and Bleached 12 50 Think of |tl 'Hie Inx^ $25.00 Salon Custom Wave Sale- NOW No Appointment Needed! Bean^ Salon 11 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-9257 Portraits df Thread LEXINGTON, Ky. WA -Miss Ellen Duffy is a portrait artist, but instead of paints she uses ordinary sewing thread of various colors and a treadle sewing machine to produce her pictures. ★ ★ ★ She draws an outline on linen and then starts “painting” with tens of thousands of long stitches criss-crossing for the background and other types of stitches for details. Her latest work, a portrait of the Duchess of Windsor as she appeared when Edward VIII abdicated the throne of England to marry her, measures nearly 3 by 4 feet. It took two months and 30 large spools of thread to complete. And it Is all done on a second-hand sewing machine she bought 25 years ago for 113. • STAYLOVEUIR, WfARMTm WHIN YOU WE TAKE DOWN AND REHANG YOUR DRAPES. Pick-Up and Delivery Service Anywhere HAVE YOUR DRAPERIES CLEANED and DECORATED FOLDS We steam-in DECOXA-TOR FOLDS with. tpKial-ized machineryl This process assures you that the folds ore steamed In at the <|eslred length — assures even hems and no shrinkagel Our Years ofExperience Is Your Assurance of Quality AAAIN CLEANERS 4480 Elizabtth Lake Road CALL 682-4880 ENROLL NOW! MID.«UMMER TERM STARTING July ' 25 DAY and EVENING DIVISIONS Review classes in Grejgg Shorthand. New classes in Speed- Office writing Shorthand, Typewriting, Accounting, and Machines. Pontiac Business Institute 18-24 W. Lawrence St. Pontiac, Michigan — Phone F£ 3-7028 VETERAN APPROVED! Keep hie experience Circuit pi'*"'' s. jeaoMB PHARMACY, IMG. 880 WQODWARD-Medioal Building I FE 2-8383 FE 4-991B |i inMSSMaaMaaaBamaMBniaaail BRONSON PAUU’S Semi Annual SUMIUER Still In Progress RED CROSS DISCONTINUED Values to $17 SHOES Pauli STORE ^ 35 Na Saginaw St. We Accept Miehigaw Bankard Charge Flatea T '.£l‘ ■■I'' THE POI^TIAC PRESS, AfONf)AY, JULY 18, EliiMte iditprs Quii oii-> BASEBALL QUESTim: Did baseball originate in England or America? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: Batting a ball and running comes from , English 'cricket. In rounds, another English game, you / threw a soft ball at the runner to put him out. / Years ago, in America, boys played “town hall,” similar to the English games. In 184S, a group organized. by Alexander J. Cartwright adopted a set of rules in which a runner was put out by touching him with the ball instead of throwing it at him. This led to the use of a hard ball and the development of our fast nnodern game. At Cobperstown, N. Y., in 1839, Abner Doubleday laid out a baseball field which can still be seen today. The Baseball Museum and Hall of Fame were established in Cooperstown 100 years later. Brilliant players, such as those in the picture, helped noudce the game enormously popular. It is certainly true that baseball’s nncestoi;s came from England. But the game that we call baseball today, with ail its speed, thrills and excitement, is a new development which originated in America. ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: Make your own selection of three present-day players whom you believe will some day be represented in Cooperstown’s Hall of Fame. Forest Fire Fought in Newberry Area NEWBERRY (AP) - A forest fire raged out of control early today about 12 miles southeast of Newberry. A Oonservatkm Department officer said at least 200 acres of timber had been destroyed and more would be lost before the blaze was conta^. for the department’s district four, said constantly shifting winds hampered fire-fighting efforts Sunday night. Hill said blueberry pickers seen in the area shortty before the blaze was reported are Ransom Hill, fire supervisor thought to have started it. mmv. ONLY 3 WEEKS LEFTI LUNCHEON SET Yowchoicsiif|itat8,cupor UNCir whai you buy 7 gahnt of ASHLAND VITAUZED6A80UNE ThUM sparkling luncheon iats In an Early American crystal design are Meal for use Indoors and outdoors... at lunch tima... snack time.. ^nd party time. YouTI waht savaral place settings, so start oollaotingyour plates, cups and saucers now. You gat your choica FREE each tIma you buy seven gallons of Ashland Vitalized Gasoline. This offer is Bmited and available only at your Ashland OH Dealer displaying the “FREE LUNCH-^ EON SIT' sign! Offer sKpins August 7, ms ASHLAND OIL a REFIMN6 COMPANY /wVoNTGOMERV WARD New! Vinyl flooring wilii inner foam core New foam core ftooring is extra resilient, and quieter ... it insuidtes your floorl 9'wide, many styles, colors, width reg. 3.72 r.f. 2.64 1 99 20% off! Owr Oxr vinyl nsbesfos tile Smart pebble pattern is embossed for long, beautiful wear. For ony grade floor. Rich, dark tones, ea.... 6c Decorator styles........10c 8! Room-size plastic rug-save $2 499 9x12' plastic reinforced Tug is long wearing and easy to clean. Lies flat without pasting. Save nowl Nova now oanyloii yiio haH carpoti 229 24x66» tweed pattern in nylon loop pile. Better tweed carpet, 24x70 ... 2.88 NO MONEY DOWN ON ANY -CREDIT PURCHASE JUST SAY "Cfcmelt" Save on Wards broadleom installed with sponge pad 501* NYION, ACRIUN* OR WOOL PILE IM 7 PATTERNS ANDORA ACRYUC •fl* 049 Rfff* 10-08 y4* W installed NYALUSOrNYiON » 9*^ Rag. 11.08 installed CHOKI Of 3 rpiRS 049 12.08 yd. W installed Our attractive hi-lo loop pile 501* continuous filament ny- Styintwood wool-nylon, in 5 decorator colors to dra- Ion pile in scroli, cobblestone or Avalon Acrilon* acrylic pile. maKze every roomi tweed pattern, 23 smart hues. Super Nyollo 5Q1 • nylon. NO MONIY DOWN YOU SHOP AT WARDS Big savings on room-size nyion rug wiffh Wards Tuf-TrecHMick! 9x12' continuous filament nylon rug in a loop pile. Choice of 6 solid hues. Mesh covered foam backing. Reg. 59.99 better quality dense continuous filament nyion pile 9x12' rug, hi-lo loop sculptured design, 6 colors. Tuf-Tred bock-------............................49.99 OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. Pontiac Mall 3999 ^0 JW REO.49.99 . TELEGRAPH ROAD CORNER ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD TELEPHONE 682-4940 Time Running Out on Vote Issue f^S8: M(nmAY, JULY 18,1996 t By LYLE WILSON Lilted PI Time luis run out on ^ any chance the Republicans may have had to compel a fair man. one vote count in the electoral college I in the 1968 presidential electiM of 1912. You might say that the time is running out on the Republican party and not be far wrong. Republicans and Conserva-tves of all party allegiances have been unable or unwilling I to take advantage ofThe oppor-ll tunity offered to them hy. of persons, Chief Justice Bari Warren ami his court. The court shook up the American political system with an order for reapportloD-meat of representation in state legi^latares so that both houses in each state would be representative only of people by the numbers. It had been the American way in theory generally to apportion seats in a lower house on the basis of people and to apportion Police in San Francisco Nip RiotrNegro Is Slain later Into the Afro-American Cultural Center as white and black youths left a dance. Police said they were ^t certain the •nnec SAN FRANaSCO (AP>-Cries of “Down with whiteys, kill whiteys!”. touched off a brief disturbance in San Francisco’s main Negro district after bombing was connected with the a patrolman shot a young Negro arrest two blocks away, and stopped a robbery, police Police Sgt. James Glafkides gaid, reported that bands of Negro The patrolman also was a Ne-1 juveniles roamed through the ero. The robbery victims are streets “in a riotous white. ★ ★ ★ "A few troublemakers, roaming through the area, shouted ‘Down with whiteys, kill whiteys!’” said James Pigott, a San Francisco patrolman. “They tried unsuccessfully to Incite a real riot. “When they couldn’t get something going, they abandoned it.” SHOT IN CHEST ’The Fillmore district disturbance Sunday began when an off-duty officer, Herman George, shot Frank Lee Jackson, 21, in the chest. A crowd of 200 to 250 persons gathered, some shouting “Uncle Tom must die!’* and “We won’t let whitey get away with this!”l the upper house otherwiae necessities of a ..given situation in any state might rettuire. ★ ★ A. This is the federal system too, members of the House of Representatives being the representatives of people and U.S. |S^-tors each being a representative of a state. PROVED BEST On the record, that has proved to be the best and most durable political system. The chief justice and his associates discovered in the U.S. .Constitution authority and necessity to impose on the states the theory of one man, one vote. Many citizens dislike and resent this action. Most of all do Conservatives in and out the Republican Party deplore it. Quicker minds would substitute positive action for wailing at the wall. Simple arithmetic would reveal that the one one man, one vote rule proclaimed the current method of choosing the electoral college to be In absolute violation of the U.S. Constitution. ★ A A That proclamation was only by implication, however, it re- assaulting citizens walking and | j^es formal affirmation, fighting amongst themselves.” | ^ t^at the „ 'court did not intend the one Police blocked off seven, ^ule to undercut blocks of Fillmore Street and controlld the unrest quickly. Five more Negro youths were held for investigation. Seven ga-held for investigation. Seven gasoline bombs were thrown but all fires were quickly put out. A number of windojvs were broken but police reported no looting. I the electoral college. NEW METAL POUSH nSSOLVES TARNISH Accused Gambler's Son Found Hanged DETROIT (AP) - The 21 year old son of accused gambler Crf!orge called for an ambu-i Costas Colacasides was found lance and police, issuing a riot call, sent 30 patrol cars. A Negro youth, Clifford Simmons, alias Jarron Scott, 18, was charged' with interfering ^ith an officer. George said Simmons threatened him. BOMB THROWN A gasoline bomb was thrown White Motorist Fatally Shoots Negro Officer ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - / white motorist — who an officer! quoted as saying he was “tired of nigger police running over everybody” — shot and killed an East Point Negro policeman Sunday night. Officers said the man escaped after fatally wounding George Burnett, 26, who had been on the suburban city’s police force about nine months. He was the second police officer killed this weekend in the Atlanta area. A statewide alert was issued for the assailant. dead Sunday, hanging from clothesline in his apartment. Police Sgt. John Domm said the death of George Ck>lacasides| was self-inflicted. I Hie victim’s father, owner ofi Detroit’s Gredan Gardens restaurant, is awaiting trial on bribery charges brought by. Judge Edward Piggins, Wayne County’s grand juror. Colaca-j sides was accused of bribing a policeman to conceal gambling I at the restaurant. Japan r;,anks first as a fishing nation, followed in order b y| Peru, Communist China, Soviet Russia and the United States. 1 TflRNITE Instant Acting METAL POLISH Tkt mw, (uy wty to clraa Mttoto Ikmite Uka the drudgery out of metal polishing. Stains and corrosion begin to disappear the instant Tamite comes in contact with Umished surfMCS. No heavy rubbing heeded. • SUrts working on contact (PsUtksI Aevsrtissmsnt) IRONSON WHICH do you PREFER? CUSSES? Hero your lenses ore ground exactly to your prescription requirements. 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Shah Mohammed Roza Pahle-yl la rqiorted to (tave aidted the tJnltied Statea for a better deal on advanctd amapona he wants to build up Iran’s F'ersian GuU defenses — and to have indicated that if this is not forthcoming, be will turn to the Soviet Union for antiaircraft |uns and missiles. the United SUt a is said to btv Iran with the arniil on the easy terms it seeks — and also opposed to Moscow becoming a weapons source for tt|e U. S. ally which prevtouSly has de- ! pe^ed mai^ on the United States for Ha armaments. < Dipionmtic Aources said tafts I on this issue have been under way between the abah and tlw U. S.. ambassador at Tehran, Annin H. Meyer, without a successful conclusion ao far. A basic difference underlfoe the viefia of the two sides. , ' - iYom Washington’s viewpoint, : the Soviet Unien poses the main threat to the area. Rains Lash S. Korea; Thousands Homeless jpo the shah, current oon-oerh is the eipanshre ambition of Egypt’s President Gamal Abf'-' del Nasser. ’Ihe shah fears that Brittab puU out of South Wia in 1168' Nasser SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -National police rqiorted today that at least H persona were dead or missing aial 26,302 wSe driven from thehr homes by heavy rains foat hit central Ko-, reaover the weekend. Up to IS inchaa of rain lashed Seoul, will move in and Menace Iran’s oil-rieh Persian Gulf facilities, w. ★ a,. ^ U. S. autboriflaa rate the shah as fundamentally pro-West and Iran as a major link in the Central Treaty Organiutlon set up 11 years ago to guard against Soviet moves southward. YANKEE IREGISTER NOW FOR YANKEES 8.500 HOLE-IN-ONE CONTEST HEUl IN GONJUNGTION WITH YilKEES »0,QO0 WDMEHS OPEN ‘2,500 N COLO COLD CASH *8,500.00 COHTEST i 3K$PflKIE BAIHSn' hMmt r I r I 28 1 GAL. GARBONA RUG CLEANING KIT SPONGE WAX APPLICATOR 69< I GAL GARBONA RUG & UPHOLSTERY SHAMPOO TWbM»-yyf«r^% I C-n*kwi*kn»l. ^ i Um. 97 FAMOUS O’CEDAR CREST BROOM ■f «e«i— (Mcb wp •a Am AM wfcw,- 1 49 CREASEFORM WIRE TROUSER GREASERS OtM liM adiu^ to •I UM trwMM. Dry «MM pMtl •• 39 SPONGE MOP efa«a»rt v«y to nop deati. S” Dr. Russell S. Boles of Wellesley, Kennedy’s personal physician, remained at the Kennedy compound dvemight. He said the former ambassador to Great Britain “is doing very well.” The Rev. William D. ITiom-aon, pastor of St. Francis Xavier Roman Catholic Church in Hyannis, administered condi-tiwial last rites to Kennedy Sunday nig^t. BASEBALL GAME- It was believed that the left, the one removed from the patient, controlled not only spereh and verbal comprehension, but visual color discrimination, purposeful movement of both arms and the ability to acconq>lish certain higher intellectual tasks. Red Chinese Visitors Say Storm Killed 60 HONG KONG (AP)-Tropicalj storm Lola killed at least 40 persons in Canton, South Chi- Five of Kennedy’s children were at the compound wh^n the ambassador suffered the attack while watching a baseball game on television. His sons. Sens. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass„ ahd Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., were sailing. They hurried to their father’s side. Also visiting were three of his dauj^ters, Mrs. Sargent Shriv* er, Mrs. Stephen Smith and Mrs. Pat Lawford, divorced' wife of actor Peter Lawfwd. na’s largest city, last week and injured many others, visitors from Commutdst China reported today. The sources said the storm hit Canton late Wednesday ni^ and there had been no wArning from Cmnmunist weather authorities. Three Firemen Injured During $250,000 Blaze ^when Arwell checks in Pgn CHH»[ GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-Fire Chief Adrian Meyers Sunday estimated the loss at $250,000 in a blaze that ripped through the Grand Rapids Lumber Co., injuring three firemen. Firemen continued to search for the cause of the fire that ruined a lumber shed, a prefabricated structure, a t^xcar and lumber supplies Saturday night. // Call for From Intpmtfionl 78 NORTH SAGINAW STREET SPECIAL TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY Dotentoten Pontiac Store Only! Kosher Style FANCY CUT UUlb. MICHIGAN’S LARGEST FURNITURE CHAIN ... HAS A HUGE SWIMMING POOL, STEREO OR PORTABLE TELEVISION WAITING FOR YOU ABSOLUTELY FREE WHEN YOU BUY A LDTNG ROOM, BEDROOM, DINING ROOM OR MOST MAJOR PURCHASES. group It inddt with long lotting Nylon. To compitto this •nnmblo, two and tobitt ond ont coffto toblo In wolnut finish, ondhralompt. PER WEEK WORLD WIDE HAS HUNDREDS OF BOOM GROUPINGS TO SELECT FROM bedroom stylish modern 4-piece SECnOMl *onIr” O'**** .u.hhH„.wi2rx;o™r,^^ SsSSB-'--s; COLONlAL*MDROOM w«rm colonial bedroom *n mapio I* WORUWiDPS LOWPRiec --"'row backt and PLUg F||EE OPEN TONITE til 9 P.M. SONDAI^lioON mi 0 P.M. MiGHieAN’S LARGEST HnNITUkE CHAIN DISCOUNT PRICES 3 PONTIAC STORES 5219 with attached rn.m>r, chest and full Size bed. WORLDWIDE lfWP«« $169 iV.STliEOORPOOL DIXIE and TELE6HAPH North Side MIRACLE MILE Wait Side NEXT to Knuirt East Side Opt* Mtndty, Tittdty, WiltUty tmi ftmt IN V pjn—Tlwrt«ty wC IMurday tS t pjn.^-CMidar It 1 YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE AT A WORLD WIDE STORE ^ i-'i tai >MTOAC PRESS. M03^AY, JOIY Vtituraps' B»tmfH$-r-12 . ^ i :i‘i Facts on Disability Pensions (EDITOR’S NOTE: ThU it the 12th of 17 artlclet on veterant' benefits.) I By RAY CROMLEY Newspaper Eoterprlse Assn. WASHINGTON - If you are a totaHjr and permanently dis-atled veteran, you may be entitled to a pension even though your disability is in no way connected with your military service. To be eligible, you must have had 90 days of s«vice in World Wars I or n, or Korea. Yoa’ra excused from the IMay requirement if you were dlaek^ed because of diMbfllty. Your discharge cannot have been dishonorable. greater than $1,000 a year. A vetaran with dependents Iobm his eligibility if his income exceeds $3,000 a year. MORE PENSION Under the current system, the less income the veteran has, the more pension be will draw. A veteran with no dependents may receive (benefits per month) Income not in excess of per year — $100; Income between $000 and $1,200 per year — $75; Income between $1,200 and $i:000 per year -$43; Over $1,800 per year — $0. A veteran with no dependents is not eligible if his income is 000 per year, any number of de-lento - $48; More ' $3,000 per year, eny number of ndnts — $0. ADOmONAL Vetmans eligible to receive the pension (and whose income meets one of the criteria above) may receive edditkmal payments If they are in need of regular aid and attendance. Rat regardliNs of year hi-ceme, if you have a “sisaMe estate" yea wU net be entitled to A veteran with dependents may rec^e — Income not in excess of $1,000 per year—$105; and 1 dependent — $110; and 2 dq>endents — $115; Income between $1,000- and $2,000, any number of dependents — $80; Income between $2,000 and $3,- 'Vatarons Benafits" I c/o Pontiac (Mi^h.) Prasti I Bex 489, I Radio City Station I NawYodc, NawYorkl0019 I Plaasa send me...copies of Roy Cromle/s new But if part is in dividends, rents or other income the Veterans Administration classes as id,” then some will count as your income — but only if your wife’s total Income (earned and unlearned) is greater than $1,200 a year. Under the i»«aent system, if you have a s^e or child, your pension usually will not .be reduced if you are put in a vet- (Your home and such personal effects as you use in dinary living will not be counted in figuring your estate.) The Veterans Administration says that each case “will be Jd^ed on its individual merits and consideration (will be) given to the type of property owned by the veteran, the amount of his income, the number of his dependents, his age and state of health.” WIFE’S INCOME Part of your wife’s income will be counted in figuring your income under some circumstances. book, "What You've Got Coming in—Benefits for U.S. I ■ Veterans," at $1 per copy. I encioise $............. | I (PIsoM print cisariy-thit it your mailing labal) i If all (rf your wife’s incmne is “earned” by her, then none of it counts as your income. If you have neither mfe nor child, your pension will be reduced- $30 a month after two fidl months of hoqrilal care. Whee released from the hos- drawing your fnO pension. Some veterans have been drawing pensions under a previous law. These veterans Imve the right to continue under th^ old system or shift to the new. There are advantages and disadvantages to the new law which depend upon individual circumstances. If you are receiving a pension under the old law, consult your local VA office to see if you should shift to coverage under the new legislation. Once the shift is made, you cannot change back. -I S«Mm« tar DIubtaS VMi.) Free Home fiiemonstratien - OR 4-1101 Within 28 Milt R»Siut CURT’S APPLIANCES Frntfry 4mtlmri—d Wktu Dtmhr ______6484 WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD (Poinicai AdvartiMmMt) LITTLE CHARMER — With the help of a diaper turban and a toy horn, 2-year-old Dwight McPherson of East Water-boro, Me. recently charmed a mailbox at his home. Actually, the «hain has been welded but stUl lends the “Mystic East” touch. Vote Aug. 2nd... Elect Philip L ROWSTON Oakland County CIRCUITJUDCE Mayor of Pontiac 1958-62 Pontiae Dirtctor of Law Prtftrrtd by Oaldand County Bar Attociation “Bnt hyjudieial Tort- NAME. I ADDRESS. CITY.................STATE............ZIP....... I Moita Clwckf poyofal# to *VotaMM Bontflta.- Allow 3 whb. far Mtawy. BIG BIG SAVINGS Gigmorous FOLPINO AIgminuin AWNINGS Themis a difference! Come in, let us show you why custom-fitted Sun Control Siding and Trim Is by far your BEST BUY. CALL 335-9482 26400 W. EilM Mill M. 'WMiltWtitofTeltfriph EistSide iPonthc . lOoumriyer I BirminghiBi-Southfield V PR.14i|0l|i 5-t452Uv.545fSliM OikB. 7-2700 oraiSIM.1»4PJL I T B4rl4PJL I IfaiMlp-WelfciiBiBrtew’WBhildl w-rni lai 142*1 Pontiac Otialina has tiie best resale value ofaiQ^carinitsclasst Mrqbe tiiat’srdiy welre selling morcPontiacs tiian ever before in history. Pontiac Catalina has the best resale value of any car in its class, and that includes the top lines of the so-called low-prjced three. And your Pontiac dealer will be glad to prove it to you. You see, we not only have great resale—we're making fantastic deals at the same timel So, whereas our Catalinas, Bonnevilles, Executives or Overhead (>im Six Tempests and le Mans are sensational buys anytime, right how they're beyond belief. The styling you've doubtless admired for a long time. But did you know all Pontiacs come with the road-hugging security of WiderTrack? And with a standard safety package that includes things like seat belts front and rear, padded dash and sun visofs? Well now you do. Is.it any wonder they're selling so fast? ru '« V4 4-door SodOM wi Wide-Track Pontiac ITS SUMMER BONUS DAYS AT YOUR PONTIAC DEALERS. SEE HIM FOR A GREAT DEAL ON A NEW WIOE-TRACK. PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RITAIL STORE OINIIUL MOTORS CORPORATION S5 MT. CUMINS, PONTIAC IS. MICH. RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR ULIS St (M^l -LAKE ORION, MICN. JACK W. HAUPT PONTIfC SALES, INip. N. MAIN STRUT. CLARKSTON, MICH; HOMER HIGHT A40TORS, INC. 140 S. WASHINOTON. OXPORD. MICH. \ KEEGO SALES and SERVICE, INC. SOSO ORCHARD lAKI RO. HUGO HARBOR. MICH. V SHELTON PONTIAC-RUICKf INC 155 S. ROCHBTIR RO.. ROCNISm MICH. pill THE PejfTIAC PRESS, MC6a)AX rjt»iyg6 Wilson^ Kosygin Huddle pn Viet; No Word on Specifics in Talk MOSCOW (H ^ IVimii Minister HaroU WUaoB of Britain diaciuMd Vi«t Nam iritfi Premier Alexei N. Kosygin for IVfc hours in the Kremlin today. A British spokesman said the morning meeting Opened with Wilson outlining British thinking on Viet Nam. It had been under-I earlier that Wilson was ' |StOO(| ( not going to offer any new peace plan. ★ ■ ^r Kosygin replied with a statement of the Soviet position and then the discussions moved into specific, elements of the Viet Nam p^lem. The spokesman declin^ to tell reporters just what was said. Soviet trade experts attended the morning talks in Kosygin’s, Kremlin office. But from the beginning, Viet Nam was the only topic. BALCONY TALKS At the lunch at the British Embassy, Wilson was seen on a baldony talking with Kosygin. They stood, glasses ia hand, looking across the Moscow River at me Kremlin. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko attended both the nxuning talks and the kinch. He spoke occasionally at the talks but.Kosygin did most of the Soviet' talking. Information available'earlier Indicated the British did not have much hope of significant results. The partisl mobilization ordered by North Viet Nam gave liTgency to ti*e Kremlin talks,which were iuranged two weeks ago. But it also emphasized that Hanoi is not interested in peace negotiations now. A HAPPY GIRL—Margarets Arvidsson of Gothenburg, Sweden, wears the crown of Miss Universe after winning the annual contest Saturday in Miami Beach. She has brown, hair and blue-gray eyes, is 18 years old and measures 35-25-34. At 5-foot-8, she weighs 121 pounds. Can't Go Home Again, Says Sweden's New Miss Universe MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) —[queen said. “It’s Just impor-The new Miss Universe, who tant.’’ wjll be offered the keys to Miss Sweden, who will be 19 countless cities around the Aug. 12, is already hcanesick for world during her year’s reign,{her parents, her four sisters, said today she can never retum|her country and her horse, Dra-to her home town of Gothen-{**■"*• burg, Sweden. I™® ‘SWEETEST ♦ ♦ ★ I "He’s dark brown and just the “Tie people there will all say sweetest horse in the world, how can she be Miss Universe,’’ she said. explained Margarets Arvidsson.^ Tie 35-25-34 Nordic beatity ★ ★ * was crowned by Miss Universe ‘TU never go home to thatiThailand, Saturday night. Miss town again so they can see me. | Finland, 'Satu Ostring of Tam-It is a small town and they willipere, was first runner-up. ail think I’m very stuck on my- self,” said the professional model who was also voted most photogenic of the 58 contestants. Miss Arvidsson, who has already traveled to Canada, South America, all the European ' countries and the United States, -said she is looking ftMrward to visiting Argentina, Australia, Japan, India and the Soviet Union. HAS DOUBTS “But I don’t know if they will let me come to Russia,” said the daughter of a sea captain. WWW Mias Sweden, who wants to marry and raise lots of children on a ranch, said humor is the most impoi^t quality she is looking for in a husband. “I don’t know why,” the Copper Wire Thieves Cut 4 Poles, Service STOCKTON, Mo. (AP) - Copper thieves cut down four telephone poles and cut up about 1,-^ feet M o^r wiiw about 10 i^es east of Stockton over the weekoid, disrupting telephone service. Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. repairmen said the thieves apparently had been fri^tened away before tiley could load the wire, wMch was left on the ground./ Second runner-up was Chera-nand Savetanand of Bangkok, Thailand; third was India’s entry, Yasmin Daji of Kanpur, and fourth was Aviva Irsaeli of Tel Aviv, Israel. MAKE IT CONGRESSMAN DICK KUHN REPUBLICAN COUNTRY CLUB SERVE W SAVE CORNED BEEF SLICED BACON Pomr Ktt cvV Pliit SO Extra T.Y. Slmm^t Wlik Caapaa Safew =79 $1000? Beneficial Just call up or come In. Get the cash yflu want fast to do your shopping, to pay your bills, to fnjoy the holidays. You pick the terms... you pick the payn^nts... at Beneficial, where you get that BIG O.K. for cash! 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Mfdb. Q iohI InmanamJaiaipiaiaiaNiaiHi EHaoiaiHiaaiaaoiaimmm.RiB iMmoaaiaaaaiamamaKl "i'.‘ .■< “""v ," ____ imt PONTIACPEBSg, MOmX^Y; mY ia, IW Cavanagh Keeps Puling for Debate; Williams Ignores Hhfi ■'^.; >.v 'V "s' BjrtheAiNeMPNM Jerome P. Cavana^ b puab- ing harder (or a debate adtb a pditical ( 1 foe who botwaidlir de> cUnee to admowledn the Detroit nwyor’s aenaloHal candi- Oavanagh Sunday Megraphed a challenge to O. l^en Wil-liams to debate Viet Nam, the main iiaw of tteir campaign for Demheratlc U^. Senate wniiami 80 far has reftised-or ignored— all of Cmanagh’s offers to debate. The Detroit mayor said he would send more such cbel* lenges to Williams b the two wedrn remablng before the Aug. 2 primary ebetko. COTER CHANCE “I am aware that the es'gor-emor, at this time, does not want to debate aQ the Issues of dds campaign,” Cavanagh said Sundey. “Therefore I offer him the oppmiunity to debate On the war b Viet Nam, to the exchh skm of all other issues.” Cavanagh told Williams “you have, wimut reservation, com- Johnsoo’s ooaduct of the war. I haveiM. na * “You aapportod ftirti btloB of the war. Usar that Cavanagh, who has said a land war b Asb would be b-hvitable if military escalation continues, oalled Sunday for ( BookArHitliDrod He asked the former sb4erm governor of Mldiigan If be supports the Ky regime and idietb-er the United States should sedc “a military cease-fire Him the one which ended the Korean UORANGE, Ky. (AP) -Mary Gardner Johnston, S3, illustrator of the “Uttle Cobnel” books written hy'her stepmother, Ame FeUows Jriinston, for young girb, died Saturday. She was a native of Indiana and had lived b Kentucky’s Peewee VaL ley sinoe the age of 10. more emphasis on priitical and social, rather than military, strategy to Viet Nam. Williama told picnickers at a United Auto Workers outing in BeUeville that, if elected to the Senate, be would strive to improve benefito for retired, elderly persons. He said Social Security benefits should bclude an automatic cost of living adjustment or an automatic adjustment based on increased nStional earnings. “This would avoid repeat performances of the problem we ara facing now where Social Security Mymsnb li kept up wito bereases b the kept up with ha cost of living as far behbd WBUaiu tmtoy W« to spto|>^) to HAW wottoa and shoMfoto) / increases to tim average take-home pay of our dtbra,” be said. LOW INCOME He said nearly 5,8 mflUon U.S.. citizens older than 65 live on incomes below MjOOO a year. He added: “Our older people have a right to bok forward to a golden age of comtort and leisure activities after they have flnlsbed their working years." oonventhms of paralynd war veterane and motton picture machtoe operators b DetrolL Noted Invwnlor D!m BOSTON (AP) - Arthur W. Kimball, 76, toventor of fastening devices and mechanical spe-dalties and boDorary board chairman of United Cu Inc., died Saturday after a brief ID- 1HE IM TO JIMSE IWBT L TnPUN JUDGE TEMPLIN ON: • HIS PROVEN INTEGRITY • HIS STATUS IN THE LEGAL PROFESSION • HIS KNOWLEDGE OF THE LAW • HIS TRIAL EXPERIENCE • HIS EXTENSIVE PUBLIC SERVICE TempHn is rite former Spnior Assistant Prosocuting Attorney ~ Templin is o seasoned triol end appellate ottomey Templin is preferred by lowyers end citizens groups VOTE AUG. 2 FOR ROBERT L TEMPUN CIRCUIT JUDGE (6-YEAR TERM) OAKLAND COUNTY WA^OTON ^ With an OK from tbs OGLVTC, the STC end the SPCFT, GT-6 win let out after the OAAiy. Space Jargon Alphabet Soup A can of alphabet soup would be hard-pressed to come up wlffi the abtoevtotions and acronyms that cbtter the U.S. space {Ro-gram like scribbles b the mar-gb of a mathematics throis. What the opening sentence says is that after approval from the Chief Gemini Latmeh Vehicle Test Conductor, the SLV (Standaid Launch VeU-cle) Test Conductor and toe CUef Spacecraft Test Condoe-tor, the nbto Gemini spacecraft win be bunched by an Adas rocket to rendezvous with a Gemini Atlas Agena Target Vehicle. An entire single-spaced page of the National Aeronautics and l^ace Administration’s (NASA) GT-9 press release is devoted to nothing but the dozens of AA& (Abbrevbti(Hu and Qrmbria) that fill the other 59 pages. And the list is by no m comidete. Such terms as TPI (Terminal Phaze Initial .. ATM (Automatb Tape Memory) and SPANDAR (SPace rANge raDAR) are explained as th^ occur, instead of being piled on at the end. End of Era; It's a Girl GREENVftJJI, S.C. (AP) — Twelve-day-old Elizabeth lOgreeda Go^^ (d Greenville has broken a family tradition that goes back 94 years. On July 6 she became the first girl bmn ta her father’s family since 1872. Elizabeth b the daughter oi Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Gowan. Ihey also have a son, Glenn Jr., 8. ISYOVR INSURANCE COST TOO EttGB? the broader coveragel the lower cost! YOUR HOME I0A99 18AN IMN . 1IAN 21,9N YOUROAMOE 1A99 IAN IAN 2,NI YOUROONTEim 4.0M 4JN 6AN SAN •AN OFPniEMISE CONTEMneOVERAOB IAN IAN IAN IAN ADOmORAL LmMLEXPEMSft UN 2AN I.TN SAN MN FAMILY LURIUTY ituHi NJN iMM IMil nm MEOieALCXFERSE lAM IAN MMtYbAkjS' 2N . IN . m IN m AIUIUAL PREMIUM tui STA9 NN 41 AS 4IA6 tatniPm FNMlAKtt FE 44333 FOR A PROPOSAL BASED ON YOUR NEEDS ■n / ;;; Y05 GET FBg DEUVEBY, WSTALUTIOII and SKVICE WITI^THESE WASHERS!... 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V t,. » THK PONTIAC PKBSS, MONDAY, JULY 18, 1966 C-1 MOVING UP — Kansas freshmail Jim Ryun moves up behind Richard Romo (3) of Texas as they start their second lap of the mile run Sunday in the AU-America track meet at Berkeley, Calif. Oregon’fc Wade Bell (10) Oklahoma State’s Tom Von Ruden (4) are closely bunched at this point. Ryun took over in the third lap and broke the tape with a new world’s record of 3 minutes 51.3 seconds for the mile. Mackinac Race Won by Flying Buffalo MAdONAC ISLAND (AP) -Flying Buffalo, a 35-foot Class C sl^from Detroit, was the apparent over-all winner today in the annual Port Huron to Mackinac sailing race. betroiter Maury DeClercq’s skx)p was the 20th boat to cross the finish line, coming in at 1:05 a.m. with an elapsed time of 36 hours, 0ve minutes and 20 seconds. Hot corrected time was 26.44:56. ★ ★ ★ Harvey Nedeau’s 42-foot Muskegon sloop, Romahajo III, appeared to the Class A winner and the runner-up in over-all Jim Ryun Blazes to 3:51.3 Mile Run totals with an elapsed time of 33.19:42 and a corrected time of 27.06:37. FINISHES 1ST Charles Kotovic’s Gypsy finished first but gained only second place in class A and third over-all on the basis of corrected time. ★ ★ * The 32-foot Gypsy crossed the line first for th^ third straight year with an elapsed time of 30.45:57 and a corrected time of 27.08:12. ★ A ★ Hank Burkard’s Meteor III finished 16th and took class B honors. The 39-foot cutter finished ahead of Randy Wood’ Kansas Frosh Clips Record Distance^Ace Adds to Half-Mile AAark BERKELEY, Calif, - Kansas teen-ager Jim Ryun handed the Iron Chulain countries an unexpected return blow to their slap at his nation when his flying feet returned the world record in the classic mile to the United States after a 29-year absence. For if Poland hadn’t followed the lead of Russia and pulled out of dual meets against the USA track and field forces in political move against U.;S. activities in Viet Nam, the 19-year-old Ryun wouldn’t have run the mile Sunday. * ★ ★ He wouldn’t have had the chance to blaze four laps in minutes 51.3 seconds, clipping a remarkable 2.3 off the record held by Frenchman Michel Jazy. Instead, he would have been running a l,500^neter race, the metric mile, against the Poles. Ryun, a University of Kansas freshman, now adds this mile mark to the world record of 1:44.9 in Uie_half mile he has pending recognition. His 880 mark came at Terre Haute, Ind., on June 10. The previous month in Los Angeles, the youngster from East Wichita bettered the American two-mile record at 8:25.2. Not since BriUin’s Sydney Wooderson broke the record of another Kansan, Glenn Cunningham, with a 4:06.4 in 1937, hJ« an American owned the mile record. Cunningham ran a 4:06.8 in 1934. SECOND FASTEST En route to the mile, Ryun |ilso was docked with the second fastest 1,500 meters of all time — 3:38.1, an American record* topped only by the 3:35.6 by Herb Elliott (rf Australia in the 1960 Olympics. Standing 6-foot-2 and weighing 155, Ryun says, “I like any distance—a half mile, 1,500 meters, mile or two miles.” A ★ ★ He plans to compete in the half mile next weekend at L«s Angeles n*ere runners from Australia, New Zealand and Britain substitute for the Russians. Then he’ll take a vacation from track until fall when he joins the Kansas crosscountry varsity. A A A When Poland withdrew fipm the scheduled dual i^eet a week ago, the All American hsvita-tional Was substituted, keeping the same events as on the nal sdiedule but substituting the mile for 1,500 meters and the mile relay for the 1,600-meter baton passing event. BERKELEY, Calif. MP) - Jl ran ttia following timai Sunday di world rotord 3:51.3 mlla run affc MO yards - 3».l 440 yards - 57.7 tU yards — 1:25.1 ISO yards - 1:55.4 1100 yards - 2:25.1 1320 yards - 2:55.0 1540 yards - 3:21.1. Farmington Legion Holds Loop Lead in District 18 AMIRICAM^LMION SAIEBALL^ ^ Krumm relieved in both mington ..II 4 Troy ...»111 games and saved Jerry Turner’s win in the nightcap. Viane cracked a two-run triple to spark the second-game comeback. Waterford’s hGceli didn’t allow a hit over the final five Farmington survived a scare from Walled Lake Sunday to take a one-game lead into the final week of the District 18 American Legion baseball season. Down 3-0 after two homers by Steve Fogle, Farmington rallied for a 6-4 second-game conquest and a sweep of the twinbiil from WaHed Lake for its 16th victory in the last 17 starts. MeaawhOe, Waterford kept the pressure on by trimming Troy twice, 3-1 and 4-1, on the strong pitching of Dick Mi-celi aod Jack McCloud. Southfield Increased its hold on third place by dumping Berkley, 9-0 and 7-2. Clarks'ton crept into fourth by beating Milford, 9-4, after losing the opener, 5-3. Chuck Viane and Rick Krumm again were the strong points for Farmington. Viane was the winning pitcher in the 1^3 first game as Wayne Johnston and Mike Snearly combined for seven safeties. innings and had a triple and Yacht Victory Closer HANKOE, Norway (AP) -Ernest Fay of Houston needed only one more yachting victory to win the Scandinaviaa Gold Cup after scoring his second triumidi Sunday. Report Wrong Widgite In a Widget League B game inee were U4 winners and -iot the Optimists. E^iritu II and Doug Wake’i Cal-36 Velero H in class B. Gerhard Lorenz’ Kismet finished second to flying Buffalo in class C while Gene Mondry’i Seaskall took third. AAA Prester John, George Brewer’s 32-foot sK)^, was the first to finish among class D boats and the apparent winner in that class with an elapsed time of 39.12:43 and a corrected time of 29.26:11. A A A DeClercq, the winning skipper, learned his sailing at the St. Glair Sail Club and this year was commodore of the Bayview Yacht Club. Hl designed and built Flying Buffalo himself. • ^ 'A Mexican, Yank Capture Crowns in Keg Tourney MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - John Wilcox of the United States, and | Irma Urrea of Mexico, emerged as the men’s and women's singles champions in the fourth annual Bowling Tournament of the Americas. Wilcox, a 19-year-old student from Williamsport, Pa., ihain-tained a iead he had established at the beginning of the tournament for a 99pin victory over Ramiro Munoz of Juarez, Mexico. The young American bowled a final set of 164-220-194-578 for a 15-game total of 3040. AAA Miss Urrea, of Mexico City, survived a cliff-hanger for a 26-pin victory over Dorothy Whit-sell of Belleville, 111. Miss Urrea, who had enjoyed a comfortable 44-pin lead going into the last ganne, and Mrs. Whitsell battled down to the 10th frame. single In the opener at Troy. McCHoud whiffed 17 and spaced two hits, plus ripping a solo homer in the first inning (rf the nightcap. Steve Steinman and Don McClain were the winning hurlers for Southfield and Steve Hubbard provided plate punch in both tilts. BUI Davidson drove in three runs during the opener. Bill Spietz hurled Milford to 'its first-game triumph and had two hits; while Clarkston’s Terry Gilmore salvaged the split backed by Paill Thomas’ three hits and FredJOgg’s two. French, Austrian Skiers on Worid Aipine Scene SPARKS ON SWIMMING (EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the first in a series of 20 articles in which author and swimming coach Christian B. Sparks offers tips on swimming for beginners and experts.) By CHRISTIAN B. SPARKS Tired of sitting alone on the beach or by the pool while your friends “have a ball” in the water? A Today’s Americans are a water-conscious people, anxious to try their hahds at ^e fascinating world of water sports: swimming, diving, fishing, boating, saili^, canoieing, water polo and scuba diving. Yet are millioas for whom these sports are “off limits” became they lack the miia isimdieBt - they eaa’t swinsu Aiinahy as H cent of taddys Anerioans can’t swim weB enough to stay alive in de^ wafer. Don*;^!^ the idea thpt because -yqu’W papsed your teens youTI niver lie able to swim. I’ve tmgM dosens of men hiid women teiwim, manj ' . ' the half entury math, soma of rem afraid to go near aagr waiter not in a glass or a In 20 columns, we’ll take you from the first introduction to the water to advanced techniques in stroke and physical conditioning — and there’ll be tips for advanced swimmers too. SOMETHING HELPFUL Somewhere you’ll find something you need to know. Maybe you didn’t learn the proper way to swim, or techniques have been improved since you learned. AAA Fundamentals are important. That’s why you’ll see coaches standing by as competivie swimmers practice-or swim in a neeL la the press of trying to beat the clock or an opponent, strokes or breathing-fundamentals may vary from day to day — a lapse that could cost precious time. One question that almost everyone asks me is: “Should 1 try to teach my youngster (or wife) to swim?” There’s no rea-you can’t do it, and do it WdL All you need to know is to go about it the right way. The prime consideration is to start — and that is when he is ready to leam. (NEXT: Sajay the water.) KansasGolfer Publinx Champ Monty Kaser Takes Mafch-Play Crown MILWAUKEE, Wis. (JB — If you dig into the records there probably never was a major golf championship that brou^t more smiles to duffers than the National Public Links Tournament. AAA The 41st crown of this grass roots competition was won Saturday by Monty Kaser of Wichita, Kan., a 155-pounder who captured the state amateur title iq Kansas in 1962 and was runner-up this year. He defeated a big, blond blaster, 190-pound Dave Ojala of Two Harbors, Minn., a pharmacy student at the University of Minnesota 6 and 5 over the scheduled 36-hole route Saturday. NINE OVER The Brown Deer municipal course is a fine test of golf, stretching 6,765 yards with par 35-36-71. Kaser was nine over par in defeating Ojala, who was 17 over. Kaser was 4-up after the morning round by shooting a 75. He moved 5-up after 27 holes and closed out the match on the 31st, with a regulation 4 as Ojala bogeyed. My goal MOW is to try to qualify for thh national amateur this year,” said Kaser. Berkley Captures Babe Ruth Crown Baltimori I, Detroit 2 Boiton 7, Cilltomla 1 New York t, Kentos City, 5, 10 Mlimeeote 4, WeiMngton 2 Chlcogo 7, ClevelAM 2 SinMy'i Reuiltf Chlcogo 5-2, Boltimore 1-3 Clevelond 7-15, Detroit 3-2 Kansai City 3-2,'Boston 2-3 California 5-1, Washington 0-3 WtUilng 4 Baltinwra (Miller 1-5) at Chicago (PI- Chicago _. _ Minnesota at Detroit at B< Kansas City imes scMuled, TaaalVi • PIHsburgh San Francisco Waa Last Pet. BaMaO Chicago . "'Slcago 4, Pittsburgh 1 ■■ ■ ■ Atlanta L S'/i 5, St. Louis 3 San Francisco 5, 15 FARRELLONE, Chile (AP) — The French and Austrian teams—the two best in world skiing—are on the scene for World Alpine Championships, with the French causing quite a disturbance before they even strapped on their skis. Guy Perillat, one of the finest slalom racers, upon arrival Sunday stepped on to the course orithout skis on and was barred by a Chilean army major, who explained the course was closed. Perillat, authorities said, grabbed a ski pole fr<»n the officer’s hand and ran down the slop laughing to the cheers of otho’ French team members. When military police caught Perillat, other members of the French team, who were not wearing competitors armbands, jumped into the fray, led by Jean-Claude Killy, considered by many the world's greatest all-around racer. SHOOK HANDS Later C^ch Henri Bonnet shook hands with top-ranking army officers and posed for photographs. “It’s all over,” he said. “These things happen, re- Plttsburgh 7-7, Sin Frinclico 4-1 Phllideipnii 3-1, Lot AngilM b-3 New York 4-7, Houiton 2-5 St. Loult 4-2, Chlcigo 3-7, 1ft giine inings Atlanti f, Cincinnati 6 Houston (Cue!tfr'^7-1*an?*Bruca 2-4) law York (Shaw 44 and Heplar 1-2), 2 Los Angdet (Koufax 144) at Phlladi hla (Jackson 47), night San Francitco (Parry 12-2) at Pit urgh (Vaala 11-5), night Cincinnati (Pippat 1-7) at Atlan (Schwall 42) Chicago (Ellsworth 413) at St. Lot (Jastar 42), night Taasday's Oamas Cincinnati at Chicago Phllidalphia at Houston, night Atlanta at St. Louis, night p-ettable, due to youth and the anguage barrier.” The Austrians took part in a special slalom for men Sunday and finished second through sixth. Their ace Karl Schranz, nursing a separated shoulder, did not compete. AAA Bengt-Erik Grahn of Switzerland won the special slalom with a combined time of 1 minute, 10.45 seconds. Billy Kidd, a University of Colorado s(^omore from Stowe, Vt. was 15th in 1:14.8 and Jim Heuga of Tahoe Qty, Calif., 18th in 1:15.8. Southern Miss Sets Leap Mark on Wafer Skis Sf. Paul Title to Nichols at 14-Under ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - , That putter Bobby Nichols | swears by wdh the $20,000 first-place money for him Sunday in the Minnesotata Golf Classic and may have the manufacturer doing a land office business soon. Nichols, who shot a one-under-par 70 Sunday for a 72-hole total of 14-under par 270 that gave him the Minnesota title by one Stroke, doesn’t even know who makes the putttr. But he plans to find out. ^ AAA The $20,000 prize here is Bobby’s biggest purse since he won $35,000 in the 1964 CarUng World Tournament. Bobby Nicinis, $2t,0W ... 47-47-447B-270 John Schloo, S12JIM . 44744744-271 Jock Cup«, 14,230 . 4t4471.70_»72 Torry Dill, Will Honor Dempsey MANASSA, Oolo. (AP) - One of boxing’s greatest figures, former heavyweight champion Jack Dempsey wjll be honored at a giant two-day celebration at his birthplace in this southern Colorado town this weekend. Dempsey, who reached his peak in the 20s as the fpmed Manassa Mauler, will head a delegation that will join local folk in the events. PINE MOUNTAIN, Ga. (AP) ■ Elizabeth Allan, a IS-year-old stylist from Winter Park, Fla. set a women’s world jumping record Sunday with a leap of 106 feet as she, won the women’ division of the eighth annual Master’s Water Ski Tournament. Tbe jump surpassed her mark of 103 feet which she set last Friday. Roland Hillier of Cypress Gardens, Fla., won the men’ division with a total of 2,62 points by taking third in the slalom, fifth in trick riding and seventh in jumping. Jimmy Jackson, Cypress Gardens, Fla., won the jumping event, Leroy Burnett of Bethel Islanil, Calif., finished first in the slalom and Ricky McCim"-mick of Independence, Mo., won the trick riding competition. Bullpen Relief Lacking During Indian Attack 7-3, 15-2 Scalpings Finish Home Stand for Weary Bengals DETROIT (AP) - “When you’re concerned about your bullpen in the first place, it’s a little harder to make the moves you’d like to,” said acting manager Frank Skaff Sunday after the Detroit Tigers todk a double drubbing from Cleveland. Die Indians, losing 11 of their last 12 games, and carrying a five-game losing streak into the opening game, collected 34 hits in scoring 7-3 and 15-2 victories. Skaff’s hopes of getting complete games out of Hank Aguirre and Joe Sparma failed miserably, with neither lasting more than six innings. Sparma was routed in the third inning of the second game when the Indians hit three of their seven homers and took a 64) lead. “I’lLtake all the runs we got and say thank you,” said Indians Manager Birdie Tebbetts. “I am happy, though, that the Dgers stuck with it and didn’t get mad. Some other teams might have started to throw at our hitters.” Skaff shrugged off the losses by saying it was just one of those days when everything the opposition was hittii^ was a shot. TIRED PITCHERS I know our pitchers are tired,” Skaff said. “I waa trying to go with the starters as long as possible. “Take that first game, ftM* instance,” Skaff continued. “I start to get a pitcher warmed up as soon as Aguirre hits Fred WhitRekl. But b^ore I can get him in —bang - they’ve got four runs.” Joe Azeue batted in four runs three of them with a home run in a five-run sixth inning— to lead the Cleveland assault in the opener. Berkley whipped Utica, 10-1, to win the Mi^igan Babe Ruth baseball championship Sunday at Detroit’s Butzel Field. Mike Nelson was named the Most Valuable Player of the tournament after {{itching a one-hitter and also helping at the plate in Berkley’s win. Utici eliminated Northwest Detroit on Saturday, 6«, shortsh)|> Didc Dieters hit baaes4o«M triple. Berkley now moved to the regionals Aug. 5 at Newark, 0. Doug SaniMri, 544N .. $«ev* Sprty, 43.433 ... Billy C^Mper, $3433 ... Dan Slkei, $3433 ........ Bab* Hltkay, I3,7N 447IL447B-274 . 4445-7347-274 . 41444471-274 . 44734747—275 Chuck Hinton, who hit a solo homer in the opener, and Rocky Colavito each had a pair of round-trippers in the nightcap as the Indians got 21 hits. It was the most given up by Detroit pitchers in ei^t years. Buddy Booker, Max Alvls and Leon Wagner hit the other homers for Cleveland in the second game as the Indians fell one short of tying the league record. Skaff will have more than his pitching staff to worry about when the Tigers open a lengthy road trip in Baltimore Tuesday night. AAA A1 Kaline complained of stomach troubles, in nation to his sprained back muscle, and Dick McAuliffe was sent home during the second game because of dizzy spells. Neither appeared in Sunday’s games and Skaff said he did not know when either would be available. McAuliffe hasn’t played since the All-Star game. The Tigers play an exhibition game in Syracuse tonight, while the Indians play host to the California Angeles in a make-up game. ‘BRANDING IRON’-It looks a little like a branding iron but that weapon Bobby Nichols-is looking-evania his bent F^anm. 4an*y mm wid battered puttcr wWch ha used iq putting his brand on D,m MarX'ijp^ ... ..... first place in the Minnesota GoM Classic yesterday In St RaSy: 44747471-ct Psul, hfflnn. Robby closed with a TWiole score of 276 to claim the |20,600 first pUce money. It was his first touroa-meat win since the Houston Golf Classic in 1965. CLEVELAND 15 0 10 Wert 3b 0 Monbquct a 0 0 0 0 I I 0 0 5 $00- (elley (V lEdatz ibouquvt .2 2 1 1 • 3 Wagnar » ____ ______ LBrown i* 2 0 0 0 Caih .. Hinton cf 5 3 3 4 Pana p ColavHo rf 5 2 3 2 Padraa p “---------■ 0 1 0 0 WHortan ----0 NoilBnig fisr - Alvls' 3b” 5 2 2 1 Stanin Cf 4 12 0 Boekar c 5 12 3 Oylar u 4 0 2 1 ?55$3l$b]j!: 5 ratal 3120 2 004 1 30 303-otl 000000101-3 OP-CtoVOtgj^ *yi*2B- ______is, r. 1 Ciiinil THE PONTIAC jpEBSS, M6yPAY> JULY Ml " Ex^mps Back in City Golf Title GircTe RICHEY TITLES—It was an all-Richey sweep in the National Gay Ctourt tennis championships when Cliff Richey won the men's singles title and his sister Nancy took the women's crown. Both are from San Angelo, Tex. Cliff won over Frank Froehling, 13-11, 6-1 and 6-3 and Nancy defeated Stephanie De Fina, 6-2, 6-2. Cliff, Nancy Richey Clay Court Champs MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) -When H was over Cliff Richey, 19, ignored the pain in his legs and tossed his recket high in the dir. The Texas teen-ager had woh a major prize — the National thur Ashe for top recognition anwng U.S. amateur players. “It’s the second biggest, next to Forest Hills, in the United tates,” he said. Ralston, ranked No. 1, was eliminated in the quarter-flnals. Slovak Takes Hydro Victory KELOWNA, B. C. UR - Seattle’s Bill Muncey, the most decorated driver in unlimited hydroplane racing history, won the final heat but lost the first British Columbia Cup to Mira Slovak of Los Angeles Sunday. Muncey won two of Sunday’s first heats, but finished last in the first heat of the day, collecting a total of 895 points for the day. Slovak, driving Tahoe Miss, amassed 969 points in his heats to take the B.C. Cup. ★ ★ * The race was the first this year not marred by accidents. Four drivers, Rex Manchester, Chuck Thompson, Ron Musson and Don Wilson were killed In Detroit and the President’s Cup in Washington earlier this year. Sunday’s action was halt^ for several hours when a northwest wind whipped up a chop on the 2Vi-miIe Okanagan Lake Find Success in Dad's Sport Schneider Offspring Flint Mat Victors course. Drivers said the water was dangerous. SLOW’HMES As a result, the times registered by the hydroplanes Sunday were slower than on most hydroplane courses. w ★ ★ Hiree boats, TahM Miss driven by Slovak, Miss Budweiser, driven by Bili Brow of SeatUe, and Wayfarer’s Club Lady piloted by Bob Fendler of Long Beach, Calif., jumped the starting gun in the final heat and had to run an extra lap. Eyen so, Slovak amassed 168 points for his fourth place finish to win the cup. Muncey posted the fastest lap, 105.386, and thp fastest heat time 9:04, of the day. But on his first run Sunday a washed-down engine which had gone under the rooster tail of another hydroplane, gave him a sixth place finish in a six-boat race. it -k h Slovak drove with calm precision throughout the day. Eleven boats competed in this first-ever unlimited hydroplane race In western Canada. Slovak collected $4,500 for the win and Mupcey took in $1,200 for finishing second. Clay Courts men’s singles — and He said he plans to quit the he knew what it meant. “’This was a big tournament,’ said Richey, wtra could soon be pressing Dennis Ralton and Ar- Miss Creed Wins Tourney Playoff COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gifford Ann Greed defeated Sue Maxwell on the first hole here yesterday to win the Lady Garling Women’s golf tournament. They had tied with 221 after 54 holes. UTe tour now moves to Atlas Valley for the Yankee Best-Ball Open, Thursday through Sunday. xCllftbrd Ann Creed, t2,«I5 77-H-7i-V\ Sue Maxwell, t2,0(0 ~ Betiy Rewli, tI.eSO Merllynn Smitti, t1,45D Sendre Heynnle, $1,012.50 Judy Torluemke, $1,012.30 Cerol Menn, $725 Judy KImbell, $600 Shirley Englehorn, S Penny Zevlchet. $275 Merleiic Hegoe, $275 Glorie Ehref, $200 Petty Berg, $200 CynttUe Sulllven, $200 Beti^^Cullen^^^M Sheron Miller, $136 Jo Ann Prentice, $136 Ann Jehnetene, $136 Peggy Wilton, $136 Candy Phillips, $115 Jan Perrarli, $107.50 Oonna CaponI, $107.50 Gloria Armstrong. $100 74 75-74-223 75- 72-76-223 73-77-75-223 76- 74-75-225 75-77-74-226 77- 74-75-226 77-60-71-22$ amateur tour at the end of the current season. His defection would leave only Ashe, who did not enter the Clay Courts, ahead of the improving Richey. ’The 5-foot-9 dynamo from Dallas defeated part-time player Frank Froehling, New York City, 13-11, 6-1, 6-3 In a gruelling match that ended with Richey no longer able to maneuver on his muscle-cramped legs. FOURTH STRAIGHT Richey’s older sister, Nancy, won the women’s singles for the fourth consecutive year. She defeated Stephanie De Fina, Hollywood, Fla. 6-2, 6-2. Ralston, defending singles champion, salvaged something from the tournament. The Bakersfield, Calif., star teamed with Clark Graebner, Beech-wood, Ohio, to defeat Froehling and Charles Pasarell, Santurce, Puerto Rico, in the doubles, 6-1, 8-10, 64, 64, 6-4. Miss Richey had an e a s i e r time disposing of Miss De Fina. Both sets were decided in the third game when Miss Richey broke through the Florida girl’s service with her strong, long groundstrekes. I Four straight championships i in the Clay Courts is unprece-j dented. Mrs. Dorothy Headj Kflod? also won the Clay Courts four times, but not in succes- It’s like father, like son for a couple of Walled Lake lers. Rick Schneider, an outstanding wrestler in college and now mat coach at Walled Lake High School, took his two' sons to Flint Friday and Saturday for the Fifth Annual Flint AAU Invitational and they performed just like dad used to. ★ ★ ★ Grappling in the elementary division. Tod, 10, took first place in the 55-pound division, and David, 12, captured the 82-pound title. „ * ★ ★ Other Walled Lake wrestlers scoring in the tourney were Denis Fitzgerald, winner of the 147-pound title; Bob Heilner, second in the 130 class; Ray Buff-myer, third in the 103; and Tim Russell, fourth in the 95-pound ciass. Australian Hotter Captures Singles in ProTourney BROOKLINE, Mass. (AP) -Rod Laver defeated fellow Australian Ken Rosewall for the singles title and then teamed with Butch Buchholz of St. Louis to win the double titlb and make a clean sweep of the U.S. Pro Tennis Championships at Long-wood Cricket Club. w ★ ★ Laver defeated defending champion Rosewall Sunday 6-4, 4-6, 6-2, 8-10 and 6-3 for the singles title. He and Buccholz defeated Rosewall and Australian Lew Hoad 6-4, 2-6, 6-4 in the doubles. The double win gave Laver a total of $4,170 for the tournament and raised his earnings for the current pro tour to $22,-314 in seven tournament. Tiger Averages McAullfft Wood W«rt Ctth Lumps . Seeking 3rd Golf Crown CHICAGO (AP) - Barbara If Fay White will aim to become I® the first to win three successive « championships when the Wom-.’liien’s Western Golf Assoclbtion Amateur Tournament opens •“’today. Some 140 entries will tackle Pontiac Prssf Holo-in-Onm Club ..Bo6/se/>est........... is hereby admitted to Tlie Pontiac Press Hole-In-One Chib on this day .. Ua/iy. /S..for haviitt a^ his./dlkkk/.shot on hole at. M/CkOruM/s de.... on the day score was attested as.^!^....for the..,^...holes. Joe Burgdorf, Miss Chandler 2-Ball Champs Holders of '61 Crown Fire 77 at Municipal Course Saturday A pair of ex-champs moved back into the winner’s circle In the City Mixed Two-Ball Muma-ment Saturday at Pontiac Municipal Course. Joe Burgdorf of Pontiac and Phyllis Chandler of Hamtramck, who teamed to take the 1961 crown, fired a steady 39-36-77 over the S,689-yaid, par-69 course to earn a one-stroke victory. Coming in with a were Glenn Vallance of Pontiac and Feather Frechette of Clarkston. Defending champions Charles and-Helen Barker carded an 88 to finish well back in the field of 28 teams. The Burgdorf-Chandler combination, after taking their first title in ’61, came back to finish in the runner-up spot in 1963. Burgdorf was runner - up on another occasion, in 1956 when he teamed with Sybil Zahm. FOURTH PLACE Bobbi Miller of Novi, Women’s City Champion, joined her husband, Jim, to fire an 80, stroke back of third-place Wally Smith and Gloria LuUier. Another pair of ex-chaippions, Stan Savage and Zadah DeBolt, carded an 82 to share fifth place with Tom Balliet and' Mrs. Zahm. Burgdorf-etiyllli Chindltr . 77 Glenn Vallance - Faaihe- ■■—■“ Wally Smith-Gloria Lul Charlej Hamjllon-Belly Pierce ...... >nd Phylllt Boyer ............. .... Bridgei-Toby MIndel .............. . Clyde Sklnnor-Chrls Tate .............. $7 Oave $ebring-R. Laughlln - Baynei-Agnet Larion and Debbie Condon .. and Bobbie Rothbarih Dick,Ackei ____ Tom Bari'Luahman Sharon Leach Bobby Kinney Lloyd and Batty Wain TITLE IN OVER’nME - Veteran club invitational golfer Chuck Byrne (left) of Birmingham and Joe Brisson of Indianwood won the 21st Birmingham CC Invitational by defeating Chuck Granader and Jim Smith, 1-up on the 20th hole. Byrne-Brisson Gain Title at Birmingham Chuck Byrne and Joe Brisson got by with a few bogeys without losing a hole, and Brisson then dropped an eight-foot putt on the 20th hole to win the 21st armual Birmingham (fountry Club Invitational golf tourney. it k k It was a tough loss for C3iuck Granader and Jim Smith who had gone 21 holes in the semifinals to defeat Chuck Kocsis Soccer Series Has Revealed More Stars LONDON (AP) - The outcome is uncertain, but one thing sure in the World Cup soccer tournament — some of the play- _ ^________ ers competing have the ability Doug’'wh*«ier-B.' Emery fijto reach greatness. lAhn Mfw4 i Ilia r SMIllar p Total » 4 4 4 Total •wYait .....Ill Sit •••-4 1-1--- .. itl i-^lar*^ pe-Naw 4, Ml> :ilnhm -TaHm. ._ ----------- ■ALTIMOna , CMKAM 4SlJCauiay tb 4 1 1 i Sufard lb 4*11 rl toot MeCraw 1b Ll 0 0 1 Adair u otto Martin c 4ttiw«ji.W . lilt i S IS ImSmwl c/ 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 Orota c f 1 0 0 0 toot McMIlIn td Slit Arrigo p 10 13 RIbant p toot Horlan p tool 1 T—1;15. MINNRSOTA *110 Vartallaa u 5J l'l ______ 111 Ollvart 5011 -arkar 1b foil JHall II ifnCnV - * ' * ------- ^k.r p 0 0 0 0 R^ER SB to! 0 i tttoti»ti-i i^tdord. XOB-Baltlmora 4, Chicajo 4. IB-B.Rotdfcaon (1), ' SB—Snyder. $—Bliihardf. $F— IP H R ER BB SO (W, 10-4) * M 5 ■ ■ ' 5. Miiiar Iceberg's 10 Top Large MPGA Field li4*J?i!2;! p loot Parry i r fo*i?R* lo'jo* loot Ult III ISIS ies on each side, but three bogies kept him from running away from the field. The president is a fellow who leads and the top nuui in the Michigan Publinx Golf Associa-I tion did just that in the group’s ,» » » I handicap tournament yesterday Deadlocked for second place at Hickory Hollow near Mount with one-under-par 72s were Clemens. Bob Armstrong, Bob McCam- Roy Iceberg, president of the MPGA, fired a three-under-par Tom Stevens and EarliMSUlJ!^ Krueger. Coming up on the MPGAjoiii^ schedule is the Publinx Match |uhl5Sn< Play championship, set for Au-,Boutan gust 3-8 at Portland Golf Club'R;;;^!r 34-36—70 to earn a two-stroke victory over the rest of the 270-man field. It was the first victory of the season in the MPGA for the 44-year-old Iceberg, was one of players participating in the National Public Links tourney last week in Milwaukee. Iceberg picked up three , bird- ELECTRONICS DAY ond EVENING CLASSES Now Forming Send coupon, cell or visit Registrar's office today, start a new career tomorrow. Cowboys' End Felled During Grid Workout Bob McCamont Tom Stevens Earl Krueger THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. UB — Pettis Norman, veteran end for the Dallas Cowboys, suffered a “chemical imbalance in his system" Sunday during a team workout, a spokesman for the National Football League team said. Allan ThompaN Jay Law Gaorga Wllllarr Charlei Barker Gaorga Catto Norman told Dr. Joe Bailey, team cardiologist, he became paralyzed from the waist down after running the mile. An electrocardiogram was taken, and for hours, the doctor said he had a fast heart beat and low blood pressure. The doctor said he didn’t know what caused the chemical imbalance. ’The incideiJt*^^ occurred during a morning workout. In the afternoon, Norman went through a light wwkout and Dr. Bailey said he’d recovered sufficiently to go at full speed today. KllpMln P BOB! iBIi; Total 33 4114 ... B14 IBB t3B-t ggj * ^lawYark 11 Ml lyar (3). PMitont. (tr. HR-Klltabr* RI 5 ! Davidson p o o o o Quean p 0 0 0 0' Cektr ph 10 0 0 Tpfpl 37 4 1 25 34 2 7 2 Total 34 3 10 •^•bS 2;G.Smlth, Stahl, 0 0 ro f 1 0 0 0 t- 2 Off too 1 BSl-B KoniaiCHy 1. LdB-Clty I. 2B-Roof. 3B-Harshbtrger. HR— SB-G.$mlth, CompanoHs ttanta ...... o S t I 0 0 2 2 x- E—Pinson, Mathews. DP—Atlanta LOB—Cincinnati S, Atlanta 0. 2B-F.AIO Roaa, Parti LamaHer, Cardenas. HR Rosa 2 (I), PavlatTch (7), Aaron (27 Matches Rained Out .aWss’' Brinkmn is Valentina ct MUNICH, Germany (AP) -The final games in South Africa’s final group Class B European zone Davis Cup match against West Germany were rained out Sunday and rescheduled for Monday. WEBKEND FIGHTS 1 0 0 Cardenal cf 13 0 KIrkptrek r 0 0 0 Lea p 1 1 1 Fragosl ss 0 2 1 WSmlth If 0 0 0 Slabarn 1b Mngton farnli , 32 3 4 3 Total n. DP-Washingt Calllornia f. King, Sltbwn.__SB—King, Valtntlna. SF- Valentina, McMullen. ANY SIZE one low price! Power Cushion Original Equipment “Now Car” Tires, Slightly Used, Expertly Reconditioned! 75% or more original tread depth remaining ...is for INVESTMENT IP H R ERBBSI} .. 71-3 I 2 2 14 SSi .....» f H i i tnders (W, 5-7) 1 ' ® ® WP—Sheldan. PB—Ryan. T-7J7. BOSTON KANSAS CITY ab r h bl ab r n Petroclll ss 5 111 Chavarla i I cf 4 0 1 4 0 1 0 H 2 0 1 0 R< ^aTr's; friTm?n c 14 2 7 ____ 2 0 1- KansasCIty 1 00 1 0 0 0 0 00- E-Tartabull. DP-Boslon 1 Kansas City * • — - Kansas City .,. ——.............. (10). SB—Chavarria, Stahl (2), Roof. Stafford, Cenlgllaro. HR-Foy IP H RERBBSO Wyatt ?W, 1-4) Stafford 'anders (L, 44) T-2:37. A-17,241. 5 2 2 2 0 0 LOS ANGELES 0 0 0 T . . raylor 2b 0 Calllsen rl _________________ - 0 Allen 3b TOevIs If 3 0 0 0 White 1b Stuart )b 3 0 0 0 Gonulei If Lofebvre 3b 3 0 0 0 Dairmple c Kennedy ss 3 0 0 0 Roles cf Torborg c 3 0 10 Grost ss AAoeller p 1 0 0 0 Short p Perrnoski p 0 0 0 0 GMIIom ph 10 0 0 Total Total . 314 3 3 3 WP-Lamastar. T-2;5I. A-34,S22. CHICAGO ST. LOUIS ab r h bl ab r h Phillips cf 3 10 0 Brock If _ . 1 0 0 Javier 2b 4 5 0 2 0 Francone ph 1 1 4 0 2 2 Dannis p 0 3 0 0 0 Woodschk p 0 LThomas 1b 2 0 0 0 Shan Hundley c 4 0)0 Smith 3b Browne II 4 110 Maxvill ss Kassinger ss 4 0 0 1 Tolan p 0 0 0 0 Gegllano 2b 0 0 0 0 0 0 Briles p 0 0 0 0 Hoerner p Bryant ph 1 0 0 0 MCsrvar e Total Nona oul Chfeaga DP-ChIcago .. ----------—■ .t.Louls 5. 2B—Corralas, Banks. 38— Browna. HR.^avlar (3), Plood (5). SB— Phillips. S—Hundlay, Gagllano. SF— B.Williams, Kassingar. ^P H R ER BB SO Simmons .......... f f 3 3 3 2 Jenkins ............ 14 0 0 0 0 0 Hoeft ............. 1-1 ll 0 0 0 0 Koonce ............. 14 8 0 0 0 0 ■■ ■• (L,l-1) . * • - • - » an winning run scored. ..iitggggBBii . ggi goi bbbii-4 3 2 2-2 1 1 2 New Yorker Triumphs STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. (AP) ___13|— ’Hi* National Senior AAU 50- os Angeles mile championship was won e'r'bb soligunday by Jim McDonough of ? 2 21 New York in five hours, 50 ® ® *1 minutes, 27.6 seconds. WHITEWALLS ..ly »i»« MORE NO MONEY DOWN-NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED Buy < for •• little a* tl,25 weekly GUARANTEED Your General Motors car is a wise investment. And it’s up to you to protect it. How? Through regular Guardian Maintenance service at your GM Dealer. His credentials? j Skilled technicians. Special tools. Genuine GM Parts. For long-term protection of your GM car or truckg see your GM Dealer regularly. H any uaod pataanger tiro, IdonUlM on our i failB as a rasult of any normtl road hazard w daU, than a pro raU allowonco par month bi . mada by tha aailar toward tha purchaaa of ai n 71 montha of purehaao 40 W. NKE ST. Odmi Mon. Hiiw Fri.p 8:30 lo 8; Sot. W 2:30 ............... FE 5-8123^ ■I SAM 1 . . M aURI... ■! •ATISBIlO % WITH ON OiALIR OUALITV •IRVIOI ^ MAJOR BRAND . TIRE BUY BONANZA Whiiewall - First Ubb OrigiRal Equipment Tint A BIG ^4 TO ^5 UNDER OUR REGULAR LOW PRICES 7.75x14 FIRESTOHE DELUXE CHAMPIONS OR GOODYEAR POWER CUSNIOHS *Priem$ Quoted Aru Exchange 825x14 a \* m $2295® GuAFIDI AN f\/| A I NTE A NC E ^ plus $2.17 ^ ■ Budgtt Terms-Fra^ Mounting-Fast Service 2 CARTER TIRE CO. [ -V 370 South Saginaw a At South Extt of ■ I WldaTnekUriva B __ Pontiac FE ilBnBBBSBBBSBBBBBBSBBBBSBMBBlB . V-, , T|lii»ONTlAC niKSS, MONDAY, JULY 18,> 1966 for City A Leaders CLAil * IMItALL «.T. Clipptrt U 1 CrMbrook Ttamticrt (14 lo 4 cio SM M.a. Colliilan 1( ( TilboH Lu'lxr 3 13 Boolh Homtt t 4 Evwii Equip. 0 II safety. Ed Sparkman saved the win (or Dan Fife. The Class A Baseball League race tightened considerably Sunday during a foui^ame Jay-see Park slate that was marked by generally ineffective pitching backed by bad fielding. Both top teams, the R. T. Clippers and Teamsters 614, were beaten as t,heir pitchihg had a rough time and their defenses were even worse. Ed Bishop of M. G. outdueled the Teamsters’ Don Picmann over the final three innings after the two teams had scored 17 runs in the first four frames. Bish(^ retired the final two hitters with two runners on base to preserve his second win. Willie Heliiman cracked a game-tying triple and scored the deciding run on Ron Xind’i single in the fourth. Booth Homes clobbered the Clippers, 114, with n ll4it attack that was angmented by seven errors on the part of the loop leaders. M. G. Collision held onto third place with a wild 94 win over the hinner-up Tearnglcrs who threw in five walks an^ six errors along with the winners’ nine hits. SHORT TILT Cranbrook stayed tied with Booth for fourth with a five-inning, 134 victory over winless Evans Equipment. Steve Han-way allowed onty two hits and struck out seven. Evans had six errors. CIO S94 outscored, outhit and onterrored Talbott Lumber in a 6-2 conquest that featured Steve Kendrick’s strong hurling. He fanned nine and scattered six hits. Neil Roberts stroked three singles and drove in four runs to pace Booth’s victory over the Clippers. He capped a decisive five-run fourth with a two-run Guy Bramble drove in three runs for Cranbrook, while CIO’s Rich Toles and Ray Heaton each had two rbi’s in winning causes. Heaton rapped two doubles off Talbott pitchers. Tom . Hummel’s double began the scoring against Evans and Chuck Heav-enrich added a triple latef. Talbott meets Booth under the lights tonight as the home builders bid for a share of third Rqlly Gains Californian Trans-Miss MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Jim Wiechers of Atherton, Calif., one down after 18 holes, rallied in the afternoon round Sunday and won the ’Trans-Mississippi Golf Championship 3 and 2. Wiechers ousted fellow Calt-j fornian Bob Smith. Sacramento, on the Edina Country Club course to win on the 34th hole of their scheduled 36-hoIe match. ■ IJliM 4% 1JW14 M /ma MW14 “ L5 Mtall t ME ^1 UEITUME SUAUANTBE Tikalcn M«lra*4 r«(. Tn II* !• 4I« OM Tr*aMaa» TIr* OTEilMILY M--iAT. M j The husky former football player displayed a deft touch i with his irons as he consistently! put his second shots within 15 to! 20 feet of the pin. He was even! par for the match with sixj birdies, four bogeys and a dou-J ble bogey. j| Wiechers took his first lead on the 23rd hole when Smith hit into the rough behind some trees and had to settle for.a bo-gey. ’ UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. I Mm. From Downtown Sonliac Wiechers went 2-up on the 27th with a birdie. . Wiechers made it 3-up on the 33rd when Smith bogeyed and won the match on No. 16 when each took par. 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Then stop in at Wards today and arrange for installation. Or, better yet, phone us right now! 469 REGUURLY 2D9.99 Save ^40 on our supreme auto air conditioner Removes moisture, pollen, dust from your car. Exclusive "comfort control" keeps "you cool all summer, even in the hottest weather. Have one installed now! 499 REG. 239.99 Installation Extra OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. Pontiac Moll TELEGRAPH ROAD CORNER ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD TELEPHONE 682-4940 W-\ TgE PONTtAC l»RESg, MONDAY. 'Jim ,Yii im^'\ AF, T ranspori’Crashe^ i ■'•rt .'‘'5 dLi3j. iO.^QZ yEQUlTl i r ir. -/ c- 'f': it- ■« REPEAT PERFORMANCE-Three-year-old Michael Lango (left) and his brother, David, 6, appear proud their mother, Mrs. Joseph Lango Jr. of Lackawanna, N. Y., gave birth to her third son, but it’s no secret their father wanted a girl. Lango told neighbors “If it’s a girl. I’ll paint a sign on my house.’’ When it was ancAher boy, his neighbors decided to paint the birth announcement on the house anyway. If Spots Show, You Got 'Em Ephelides Sweeping Notion > By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP)-niings columnist mi^t never know if he didn’t open his mail: The medical profession is unworried by seasonal e p i-demic of ephel-i Ides affecting! millions of U.S. teen-agoi. Eph-clides are caused by the sun —and most pe<¥le call them fre^es. You’re probably safer in your car than in your home. Nearly three times as many insurance claims are made for accidents in the home as for autbmobile accidents. BOYLE peanuts.” — actor Orson WeUes. Crows, widely regarded as pests, are also among a farmer’s best friends. One crow, ac-i;ording to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, eats up to 19 bushels of grubs, cutworms and other crop-damaging insects each year. NEW TERM Members of the feminine crews who polish up Manhattan’s skyscraper offlces after everyone else goes home are no longer called charwwnen. In the industry they are referred to as Ever wonder how much you can get for damaged paper currency? Well, if three^ifths of a bill survives, you can redeem it for its full face value. If less than three-fifths but more than two-fifths, it’s’’worth half its face value. If less than two-fifths renudns, it is worthless except as a souvenir. HEART DISEASE If all heart disease could be wiped out, it would increase life expectancy at birth by only six years. There is still no medical miracle on the horizon that would enable the average man to live to be 100 years old. A majority of people publicly j^r at the idea that the stars foretell their fate, but — some 10 million Americans do have some faith in astrology. ible notables: “I hate ision. I hate it as much as p^uts. But 1 can’t stop eating “cleaning ladies” or “building| matrons.” ★ ★ ^ _ Air Force psychiatrists say| their studies disclose that witty people are more likely to be creative. And that the person with a lively sense of humor is more stable emotionally and better able to withstand stress than the sourpuss. If you hate making better let your wife do the eery shopping. Supermarkets which stocked only 1,600 items before World War II, now average 8,000. U.S. Aide Says N. Viet Call-Up Has Little Real Significance WASHINGTON (UPI) — Deputy Defense Secretary Cyrus R. Vance said yesterday Hanoi’s partial reserve mobilization may be mo-ely a formal call-up of the hundred^ ol thousands of Nmffi Vietnamese already woridng to repair U. S. txMnb damage. North Vietnamese President Ho Chi Minh, in a radio broadcast monitored in Tolqro during the weekend announced the mobilization, rejected peace talks, and declared his country would “never surrender.” In an interview yesterday, Vance speculated mat Hanoi might simply have been calling “into mobilized service” the estimated 200,000 men now working fulltime and the 100,000 to 150,000 working part-time to repair the damage to the lines of commnnications between North and South Viet Nam. But, said Vance, no amount of North Vietnamese mobilization will prevent the United States from seeking to chdee off the infiltration into the South. ★ ★ ★ If the Cconmunists carry out their intention of mobilizing he said U.S. air strikes can still “impose a ceiling which will limit the number of men and the amount of supplies which they could move into South Viet Nam.” Bloomfield Wraelo Milo Only Shirt Service _ ncHouR ______ Up to a 50% Saving Professional Work .Dry Cleaning Special. Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday, July 18,19, 20 ANY THREE GARMENTS 229 Suits, Coa'ts or Dretset Count As One Wsomfiold Miraelo Milo Only Dialll2-lt» ANCHORAGE, Alaska W -1 died Saturday when an Ah* Force transport plane on a sun>ly run fran Nome crashed and sank in tte Arctic Ocean off Cape Us-bume. Among the four passengers on the propeller-driven C123 were Hugh H. and Elh:or , Yancey, USO entei^tainers froniiLos Angeles, being flown to Cape lisbume to perform at ’ an early warning radar station. Iliere was a heavy overcut, and the wind wu Mowing hi gusts np to 28 faiote when the plane crashed while approach- ing a mnwaf at the radar statioa lH mllM north of Naau. Capt. Leo J. Ab^t, Dorefaestor Man., eommanded the plane, and bis copilot wu Capt. Richard A. Smith, HoKiroA, Idaho. The other crewmen were S. Virgil H. Perkins, Denver, loadmaster; S. Sgt. Dwight E. Goff, Manhattan, Kan., mechanic, and Airman W. C. Floyd Marcum, Ypsilanti, Mich. The other pusengers were Cs^. Anthony John Lanzella of New Oricau, and Army 2nd Lt. Everett'A. Groves of Ft. Richardson. JUNK CARS ^ and trucks WANTED - highest PRICES PAID - j We Pick Up FE 2-0200 \\ Wrigle^ m mu mm mmrs. /pm, m. s mi tH9eth$ ffcrs Wsdaudey, Jwly 20,19M. Mfs rstsrvs ffct rl§kt ft IlmH feeatifin. Laan, Sugcr Cured Meadowdric siieB bacon Steaks Steaks All Center Slices—U.S.D.A. Choice All Center SUeoo—U.S.D.A. Choke Tru* Tomoto Flovof Chickefi-of-the-SeaTuna 4 ^1^ Meadowdale Catsup Tost* Tempting, Tender, Sweet Ideal for Cosseroles—^Whole Stockton Tomatoes 4 wt Meadowdale Peas 614-oz. $100 FI. Btls. I 7 1-pt. $100 Cans I Special Label - Laundry Detergent 6iant XllK yoMllAC 1-UfcSii. MUNOAV. JUfcy 16> 1»6« jLasf U.S. Town Somo Will £ver Sm 'fr' Bias in Dixie Hurts GIs By TOM TIEDE LEESVILLE, (NEA) -This small lo^ng'community, snliggled on- the fringe of the Fort Polk Army inst^tion, is a temporary home town for some 1,600 sddiers a month who train to wage the war is Southeast Asia. There Is a municipal golf course here, a skating rink, a lovely lake nearby, public gardens, three movie theaters and a 29,000 volume library. A pleasant enoagh place for servicenien, really. Except Negro servicemen. Leesvine is segregated. it h -k Color is color here, uniformed . or not, iSome eateries will not serve the black man and some theaters will not welcome his ticket. FEELS IGNORED Some barkeeps ignore his orders and some shopkeepers are not interested in hb money. He feels uncomfortable swimming at the lake, drinking at the public fountains and walking in the nicer parts of town. It hurts, of course. Especially now. Socially training for Viet Nam. "I don’t mind going to war,” one Negro recruit explains. “But I don’t dislike going tiiere by way of Leesville; Soldier Not Happy With Leesville This feeling is widespread throughout Fort. Polk’s colored populatkm. TIfose who havd come here from othn* southern cities are generally used to it but expect something better so near a government compound. ■a * w And those who have come here from the North are, in the words of one, “simply shocked. NEVER BEFORE Says he: “I’ve never been treated like "this before. “Where are you from?” he is asked. , “New Jersey, originally.” “And you never experienced this before?” “Oh, sure,, but nothing so open.” “How do you mean?” “Nigger, for instance, Tiny Animals Could Cause Plague in U.S. 2 Wars Up for Congressional Debate Say U. S. qiKl fra^.. War Pact It Poulbit PARIS (UPI) She ilnttad States may seek an agreement with France to allow U.S. foTces By Science Service LOUISVILLE, Ky. hordes of rfts I 13th century Europe as carriers of bubonic plague have been replaced today by. such “harmless” creatures as prairie dogs, chipmunks and rabbits. • . I Relatively few cases of plague have appeared in the United States since 1900, but these have been enough to almost panic public health officials. The increasing crowds of peo^ pie visiting recreational areas that contain animal carriers of the plague are improving the chances for another epidemic, the American Veterinary Medi-Association has been warned. By JOHN BECKLer i Adding to the proUemi facing i charge of its scheduling but a WASHINGTON (AP) —= Two the bill is a itruggle between special procedure has been S widely different wars — the war Speaker John W. McCormack worked out with McCormack to ,........................ ^ ______________ in Viet Nam and the war on who wants it brought up, and'bypass him. A vote on this issue rBtnm'fn in poverty — keep the House busy Rep. Adam Clayton Powell„D-could sidetrack the bill. i ' - , j, , _ xhp 1*’“ week while the Senate tack-lN.Y., who would like it post- * * ★ time of war, responsible dlplo- ‘thi^t7errnri7i!rfles the controversial foreign aid I poned a week. I The big defense bill, which matic sources said today. I program. | Powell, as chairman of ^e accounts for more than half the. * * * The busy congressional n^^k|(®anying buildings near it.” There would be no smoke or noise such as and a broad checked sport shirt. He might have been mistaken for one of the workmen building the outdoor bar and patk) which he had just left and now watched through the windows of the plush dining room. A ‘BUILDER’ homes at another location on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. Baker says he now finds himself an accepted member of the community by most people he meets and he has even been urged publicly to run for mayor I of Ocean City. PITCHES-.^—Bobby Baker, former .secretary to the U.S. Senate majority, mi^t be mistaken for one of the workmen around his Oraan City, Md. motel as he carries two paintings to deew^te a room. Baker, whose business holdings reputedly are worth millions, says he likes to help with chores around the plush 77-unit motel. It also is the first year Baker has taken a direct hand in running the motel, which originally was a three-way partnership. He acquired sole ownership last year. “I was busy last summer with the Senate hearings and other things,” he said. Baker appeared at the hear^ a^ '......... Amendn “I’m a builder and I like to{ “I’m flattered, but I guess I see fhin£« go up,” Baker said, have had enough of politics far The former South Carolinian, mwhile,” Baker said with In an interview, talked with en-|Smile. “I’ve been here three thusiasm of his elaborate ex-1 months as a full time resident pension plans for the motel, and ^ and they don’t need a newcomer about the resort potential of telling them what to do. Maryland’s Eastern Shore near! “But I am interested in good|motel-marina in the Los An-metropolitan areas whose pop- government, and I’m going to geles area, a motel at Charlotte, ulation he believes will quadru- watch those candidates who N.C. and a cemetery business in pie within a few decades. wpnt to stand still and those South Carolina. Of his forthcoming trial on who want to move ahead.” i His five children — Bobby Jr.,: surround an industrial plant. Moreover, there would be little chance of the accelerator’s attracting industries to it, either to serve it or to be serviced by it, as other research projects have donel Norman says the nuclear research that would be performed j - there would be so basic that it He spends an average of five 16, Jimmy, 14, Dorothy, 13, Lin- Amendment would have UtUe inamediate to- days a week here, making occasional visits to his other enterprises. He still has the vending machine business in California. That figured prominently to the Senate hearings. He'^also owns a da, 6, and Lyndon John, 4 — are with him at the Carousel and his wife, Dorothy, joins them each weekend from Washington where she works as a secretary to the Senate Internal Security subcommittee. The two older boys work as bellboys and young Dorothy operates the beach umbrella stand. on advice of counsel The Senate Rules Committee held that Baker, a former protege of President Johnson, committed “gross improprieties” but violated no law in his pri- dustrial applicatim. Servicing for the machine would be *' j ly provided by its own staff, except for locally purchased electric power. No decision is expected on the vate business dealings while location of the machine until majority secretary. ilate this year. Northfield Town- Baker claims his later indict- ship is one of six sites still being ment by a federal grand jury in considered by the AEC for the Washington was politically mo- 200 - billion electron volt toa-tivated. chine. COtUMSIA PICIURiS piisentt (SECORfFECK-IMVIDm JWimirOIIINN.oBRnMS TIKOUMSOfNAYAROiK THE BIRMINGHAM- Blt thropgfr part of a house and three garages on Pontiac’s aoutti side early yesterday, caiuing an estimated |6,500 damage. Hardest hit by the blaze was the residence of Frank Car-ruthers, a local undertaker, who lives at 185 Prospect. Damage to the rear of Car-rutbers’ home and garage was estimated by Fire Marshal Charies Metz at |2,66l, with an additioBal |3,N9 damage to a BtatioB wagon and fnneral hearse pariied in the garage. An adjacent garage owned by Mrs. Herbert Smith at 179 Prospect suffered |1,000 damage and one owned by Ela Colbert at 180 Prospect was set at 3500. Two engines and an aerial unit under the direction of Assistant Fire Chief J. Lee Nye brought the flames under control shortly after 1a.m., some two hours after the fire was reported. Paisley held a prayer meeting at his church and then led a parade toward the courthouse. HALT PROCESSION Police ordered him to halt the procession at the entrance of the street where the court is located. ‘As far as we are concerned,” Pairi^ told the crowd, “we are going to have a abort prayer and sing the national anthem and this procession is then officially over. After that, we will go as individuals to vdiere you want to go.” Starch, well known for its role in foods and clothing, has many other . less-well-known uses. It is used extensively in candy, textile, pharmaceutical, paper making, foundry, ceramics, oil-well drilling and char-' manufacturing industries. WANTED TRAINEES \ Men women we nrfenriy needed te train os IBM Ceniptrttr Prognnniiiiiig and MocMiit TnMng Perieni Minted will be trained in /a pregnm which need not interfere with pre*ent job. If you qualify, training can be flnonced. Write todoy. Pleaie include home phone number end age. IBM MACHINE TRAINING Ih 34 c/e The Poetie* Prew ttnien Lake and ■wa- COMIIEBCE MsNsIliM OMUrae Bader II Free BOX OFFICfcpPtR AT 7i30 PM. "BLOWS THE UD OFF ASMAUWOF EYIU" ? ^ •.Time JliwinelNf, Bim UKE ^ IS ^ MlSSit^;; Charlie Chaplin, 58; married the dau^ter of i^ywr^ Eugene O'Neill when she was 18. They have reared a massive Hie group prayed and sang a hymn and the national anthem. Then Paisley forced his way through the cheering crowd fy the courthMise. Hie 40-year-old clergyman broke with the Irish Presbyterian Church, which claims to represent most Northern Irish Proestants, to set up his own Free Presbyterian Church. Censor Afraid of 'Virginia' NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) A police sergeant wiio once gave tickets to two meter maids for illegal parking has shut down the movie “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” in I ville. “I represent the thinking of the good people of this town," said Sgt. Fred (}obb, a soft-spoken Baptist deacon and Sunday School teacher. “I just don’t feel like they would approve of this type of film for young people to see.” After sitting through the film Saturday night, Cobb returned Sunday night with a warrant for the arrest of theater manager Lawrence Martin Kerrigan, 55. Kerrigan later was released on $50 bond to appear today in city court. Cobb confiscated one reel of the film, end then mounted the stage to tell some 700 moviegoers why the picture had been stopped. They got their money back. CITY ORDINANCE Cobb’s warrant said the film, which stars Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, violated a cify ordinance >u»miwg profani-fy on the screen. I I had if : ffOOd.'m s, AWFT RMS. LAKE RO. AT AIRFORT RD. -MILE WEST OF DIXIE HCWT. 01.1 10) ------------------ II Fail I WNRY FONDA = ROBERT SHAW S SiS! hejOuHEAGC I turns Cl/r&^ it_____________________________ AwuUMMMMJMIIIIIIIIIIlljilllllllllinMinilllllllHIIlT FRETTER TAKES THE WORRY OUT OF DISCOUNT BUYINC! • ' -I . ‘ - • . '^■y- ■'■■ • .K > ; • ■ THB'PO|mA-*^} r>',i Oar PMliflc NMI Start 0pm Inry Ewataf taf 309 N. Ttltfr^rfi II, pMrttac Mdl ;-■:/;' 'tf L .1, :iv>v-:Sf.:k;'A\ :i:. ; , 1 ./■ f ’■ THE PONTIAC jIIESS. MONDAT^, JULY 1^, 1066 M D--1 PAW PAW PURE ■ A GRAPE JUICE |l|v 24-ounoi bettit | hart N N^ APPLESAUCE IIV 1-Pound 1-ouneooan | | NAPKINS in( lO-eount Pkf. | OUR FAVORITE I IA SWEET PEAS 11^ 1-Pound Can H | /i'- FRE$K mm» nsaim GilMfS^ MEADOWDALE CAKE MIXES CHOCOLATE-SPICE 1-Pound 3-01. Pkg. ' • ' 1 THE PONTIAC PEES8, MONDAY/JULY 1$, '• T /y-i^ . .' . • llw following are top prjcei covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package tots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Tuesday. Produce FKUin Aopla. Dallclous, Red. bu...........U.W Applet. Norther" Spy. bu — 4.00 Apoles, Northem Spy, C.A., bU. ... 4J0 Applet, Steel Red, C.A., bw........5.S0 Cherries, Sweet. W «.R. Crt.....,.0.00 Strawberries, IS qt.. crt..........(.00 vearrABLBs Aspereous, di. bch..................}J0 Beett, dz. bch. .•................ 1.25 Beets, topped bu.................. 3.50 Broccoli, dz. bu....................3J0 Cabbege, bu....................... 2.50 Cabbage, Rod, bu....................4JS '-"■--ge, St. bo.................... •“ e*Kal,' dz. iilfcs. .." Cucumber, slices bu......... Chives, dz. bch............. Kohlrabi, dz." bch. ........ Onions, green, dz. bch...... Parsley, Curly, dz. bch..... Peas, green, bu............. Potatoes, 50 lbs............ Radishes, Red, I dz. bch. .. Radishes, White, dz. bch. . Rhubarb, outdoor, dz. bch- ,Squash, Italian, >,5 bu..... Squash, Summer, IS bu. ORIENS Cabbage, bu. ............. - Collard, greens, bu.............. Mustard, bo....................... Sorrel, bu........................ Spinach, bu....................... Turnips, bo....................... LBTTUCI AND ORHNS Endive, pk. bskt.................. Endive, bleached ................... 3J0 Etcarole, pk. bskt. '............... 2.00 Etcerde, bleached, bu............. - “ Lettuce, Bibb, p. bskt............ Lettuce, Boston, dz............... Lettuce, head, bu................. Lettuce, head, di. ............... Rematch Due Car Stocks Up, l^ubbers Down for D.C. Foes NEW YORK (AP) - Although auto stocks perked up, rubbers declined and the stock market took a mild loss early this afternoon. Trading was moderate. Airlines were fairly sharp losers as the strike continued. The trend was iQwer, too, among electronics, aerospace issues, electrical equipments and chemicals. ★ ★ ★ Brokers saw the market as fluctuating in the narrow range which has confined it since it reached a 1866 low on May 17. The tight money-high Interest rate situation wAs still the major concern in Wall Street but analysts said the market had been acting quite well in spite the strong competition from debt securities. Hie mixed economic background included the record high for industrial production in June and the drop in consumer spending in the second quarts-. ★ ★ ★ Ihe Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was off .3 at 320.5 with industrials off .7, rails off .1 and utilities unchanged. After a sloppy start. General Motors, Ford and Chrysler all showed fractional gains. WWW The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was off 1.^4 at Prices on the American Stock Exchange were a bit lower on balance. Trading was moderate. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (API - Following li p list 4 irltctMl jfock tronuctloos on Ih* Npw 'ork Slock Exchtngt with noon prICM: FrvopI *. FruohCp Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP-)Prlces paid par pound for Kb. I llvt poultry: roaitars, heavy type 2SW2(’/^i broilers and fryers 3 whllH 21-23. I Grade A jumbo 4l-43',y. CMICAOO BUTTER, BOOS CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Merc Exchange: Butler steady to firm; v aale buylM prices unchengad; *2 AA TOW; n A TOVbt N B WVbJ It C (I'A; cars M B HM; M acera C . Eggs sfaaayi wholesale buying prices unchanged) 30 per cenf or batter --------- Grade A whiles 41; large mixi mediums 31; standards 32; chac Amerada 2.10 AmAIrlln 1.2$ AmFPw 1.U AmNGas t.tO ■ “ntic 1.25b Photocpy Livestock DETROIT LIVEtTOCK DETROIT (AP)-(USDAl-Cattla 2,500. Steers and heifers moderately active, 25 cants lower, cows steady to SO cents lower, several leads 1000-1200 lbs. high choice and prime steers 25.35-2(.00, one load at 26.00. Choice tOO-ltOO lb. steer 34.;$-25.75; mixed good and chaica 24.2 25.75, dbod 23.00.2^; standard and le 21.50-23.00; choice 750050 lb. halfars 23.01. 23.75; good and low choice 21JO-23.00; utility cows It.OO-M.OO; canner and cutter 14.00-lt.og. Anaconda 2a Armour 1.M ArmsCk 1J0 Ashland on 1 AssdDG 1.40 Atchison 1.(0 AtICLIne 3a AIIRIch 2.60 Atlas Cp Avco Corp 1 Avnet .sob Avon Pd 1.20 >fogs 4 steady tt _____/ to 25 cants lower than Woi days closa. U.|.' 1 and 2 105-200 lb. rows and gilts 2SJ0; 1, 2 and 3 220-250 lbs U5O-2f!00; 2 and 3 240-270 lbs. 23.00-24.75; 1, 2 and 3 300-400 lb. aows 10.00-1025; 2 and 3 400400 lb. tosys 14AO CHKAOO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP-(USDA-Hogs 5,00))0; butchars mostly steady; 1-2 200-225 "■ butchers 25.50-25.40; mixed 1-3 ltO-230 25.00-25.50; I oad 2-3 200 lbs. 22.50; irs strong 1,25t-1,37t 2sT choice and brlme 1,150-1,375 — ----------------- 34.50; choice tOO-1,350 lbs. 25.00-25.75; 23.00-24.25; part load mostly prime good 33.00-24.: 1,100 lb. slai spring slaughter 1 cows 17.25-1t.00; bulls 21.50-34.50. lambs steady; prime 45-105 lb. 24.50-25.00; cull American Stock Exch. Aeroitt .50a 2 36H 36H+ Aiax Magn .10g 6 W/* T' ArkLa Gas 1.S0 2 44'/) * Asamera 5U5-U3 12 15-14 27x 2 15:14-1-1-14 Gen Oevel Gen Plywd Giant Yel .4 Goldfield Gt Bas Pel n Gulf Am Ld 15 Hoemer Wald .13 3 Hycoh Mfg I Imp on 1.10a I 37 2’x 2'/S X73 Hljjli lm Last CH 3414 24',k 2414 + 1 7 52 51W 5114 ... 10 171k 14'/i 1444 + 1 74 4('/k 47'/. 59 44H 43H 43H -f .) 51 »H 3414 3414 - 71 12H 1214 13H ... 20 49 47H MH-1 04 57 541* 54H — 30 47H 47<* 471* ... 13 22H 32H 22H - 9 27H 27 27H ■t- 30 29H 291* 29H-1- Halllburt 1.70 HeclaMn .SSe Holly Sugar 2 12 40 STiis: Boeing 130 BoisaCaK .25 Bordan 130 BargWaf 2.20 Briggs Str 2a BrlsIMy 1.20e Brunswick Bucy Er 1.40 Budd Co .00 CampRL .45a '-■np Soup 1 „.iPac 2.05a :anteen .(0 134 3H 31* 3H .. 51 341* 2414 24H- 14 15 (4* 44 44 24 ttl* tl'4 99 I 22'* 22 22 -1 ( 1l'/4 10 10-1 1 39 3114 3C74 - ' ( 0014 7C/4 (OH - 1 ( 3H 3H 3H . .. 42 54 4 2414 - . „ z 5# -H'4 30 241* 23H 24'* -I- ' 14 301* 30'A 30H -t- ' I 59 5('4 50V4 -I 59 2IH 2>H 20 - ' 13 42H 42'4 424* — ' a 74'/4 7(14 74'* -I- ' 19 1514 15H 15H - ' 210 30'* 29 291* -F ' 147 3IH 37H 3('/4 + ' 21 73'/4 73'* 73H -F ' 15 4114 41'* 41H —' 9 42'* 41H 41H — ' 44 44H 45H 45H — ' 7 14H 1414 1414 - ' 12 49'* 49'* 49'* - ' 12 42'* 411* 42'* - ' 4 73 7214 73 + ' I 511* 51H 51H — ' 3 34 34 34 4( 2314 23 23 - ' 143 40'* 391* 3914 + ' M 27H 37'* 27'* .- ' 314 53'4 511* 51'* + ' 4 40H 39'* 40H -I- ' iolg P« lollinRa 4 171* 17'* 17'* — ' 10 *3'* 43'* 43'/4 — 1 74 341* 34'* 34'/j - 1 iCrowr I 5114 51 51'* -F 72 (H ('* 41* - 1 3 31H 31'* 3IH + 1 212 17 14H 14H — 1 4 79 7114 79 - 1 103 51* 5H 5H . . 24 43H 43'* 431* + 1 20 3(H 34'* 34'* .... 2 71H 711* 7m .... 7 34 33H 34 F 1 31 3(11* 359 259 +1 47 44'* 44 44 —1 M 70'* 49H 491* + 1 27 91’* 91 91 ... 0 lOH 10H lOH + ' 29 20H 27H 20'* - 1 32 771* 74H TTH — ' 3 43 421* 421* - 1 34 SOH 57H 57H-1'* 9 33 33H 32'* - " ~K— LOFGIS 3.(04 LibbMcN 27t !;1« ‘ LIvingsO .431 1 11H 11H IIH- ay ; 14 20H 20'* 281* - ' 24 1514 15V* 15'* - ' 27 22H 21H 22'* + ' I 0 27'* 27'* 27'* - ' I 4 44'* 45H 44'/4 + 1 , 2 45'/J 45'* 45'* - ' 20 ' 4214 42'* 42H - H —M— ...jrouar .2! MartlnMar MayDStr l.( Maytag 1.4(1 McCall .40b 5’* 51* . 50) 4- '/; Copyrlghtad by The A I 42H - H Cudahy Co 4 I2H Cunis Pub 4 3'9-l- '* Clirt Wr I I 24HF 1i vOanRlv 1.20b iDaycoCp .50b Deere 1.40a 33 201* 28'* 2(H •J,'', 34 26H 26 '26'*- penRGW 1 10 5 30'* 30H M'*— '*petEdis 1.40 -6 9'* 9’i 9’*- 'k'Oet Steel 40 7 4114 41'4 41'* + HjOtamAlk 1.10 44 (41* M' s (('*— <* I Disney .40b Si/,_ i/,tOomeMn .(Oa d Press |944|OouoAi Am Hospital Sup 1st Dividends Dekisred Pe- Stk. of Pay Rile nod Recerdeble REGULAR (-15 DynamCp . . Fgn. L.Vd Noon Mon. 75.2 Prev. Oey 752 Week Ago 75.3 Month Ago 75.5 Year Ago (2 2 1 19(4 High 79,5 1 1944 Low 75 1 1945 High (3 7 1 EastAIrL .30a E Kodak 1.40a EatonYale wl EatonYa 2.50 d EGAG .20 . ElBondS 1.72 92.7 (7.3 EIPaaoNG I 92 7 l7.3EmarEI 1.32 92A I7.( End John •5 1 '((.0 ErieLack RR 93.3 EthylCorp .40 2 31'* 3114 31H -t 15 37H 37 37H - H 3 53H 53'* 53'* + '* 14 30'* 29H 29H - H 41 4(H 4714 48'* ------- 31 44H 43H 431* 14 49'* 49 49'* — H . 24 25H 25'* 25'* . 4 N EngEI 20 29'* 29'* 29H - '* — 1 3(1* 3(14 3(1* 15 195 192 194'* — 18 30H 30'* 30H — 18 13T* 13H 13H- —E— 57 10414 IDS'* 105'* -a 27 134'* 133',4 1331* -1 29'* 29'* 29'* 1 58 58 58 31 2C* 25H 24'* +1 3 39H 39H 39'* —,,'* 45 18H 1C* KH 24 33'* 32H 33'* + (2 79 27 29 +1H 2 25'* 25'* 2T* ' 24 27H 27'* 27H 9 251* 25H 25'* 5 31H 31'* 31'* - H 31 (2'* (11* 82 + '■ I 9'* 9'* 9'* . . Iso 43H 42H 431* + ' 9 23'* 23H 23',4 - ' 43 47H 47H *71* — ' 3 35 341* 341* - ' 4 32H 32H 32'* - ' 23 3C* 38'* 38H -F 13 24'* 24'* 24'* + '* 9 174 172'* 122H -2H 4 22H 22H ................ 24 3IH 31'* 311* F 92 157H 155H 157'* -7 451* 45 45V* F 3 71* 71* 71* .. 15 471* 47 47V* F t 37 34'* 35H 35H-I 34 45H aC* 45H-1 3 27H 27<* 2r* .... 14 14H 14H 14H — 1 27 37H 371* 371* - I 1*4 M 4IH 49H FI I 351* 34V* FlVt McCormack, Powell Are Again at Odds WASHINGTON (UPD-House Speaker John W. McCormack and Rep. Adam Gayton Powell are eyeball to eyeball i^ain. And this time, it may be the Harlan Denutcrat who blinks. ■k * * Earlier in the session, Powell, dylm^an of the House Education and Labw Committee, publicly and successfully defied the Speaker’s desire to call up a bill to ease construction site picketing rules for building trades unions. In the power-conscioas Capitol, Powell was regarded as the clear winner in his confrontation with the Speaker. This opinion got Into print, and it didn’t make McCormack look good. Now, the -Speaker appears ready to settle accounts with Powell. ’The Instrument of retribution will be the bill approved by Powell’s committee to extend President Johnson’s “war on poverty” for a third year of operation. 9 .75 so 55H J [oyCCola .40 .toy Dut .(9e RyderSyi .40 Safeway St 1 StJoeLd 2.40 SLSanFrin 2 StRegP 1.40b tandan 30b Stanley 1.40 Sfdiering 1 Schick SCM Cp .40b Scott Paper 1 Sinclair 2.40 SingtrCo 2.20 SmlthK 1.80a SouPR Sugar SouCalE 1.25 South Co .94 SouNGat 1.30 SouthPac 1J0 South Ry 2.00 Sperry Rand sSndMS Std Kallsman Stoll Cal 2.50 SfOIIInd 1.70 SfOIINJ 1.40a StdOllOh 2.20 St Packaging SfanWar I.SO TtauffCh 1.40 IterlOrug .00 itevanaJP 2 I 221* 22'* - '* I jm 37V* - H 25 30'* 291* 30 - ' 5 35'* 35 35H F 14 44H 44H 44H-2 7'* , 7'* 2'* F I 51'* 51'* 51'* — ' t 20'* 20'* 20'* - 1 13 471* 47Vx 47H- 321 271* 27'* 27H — H 19 23'* 22H 321* .. 19 30'* SOH (OHIO 45 44H 44H F 77 47H 47'* 47H F M 7IH 71 21<* - 7 44H 42H 43H- 2 lOH iOH 10H - 25 541* 54'* 5414 F - 23 43H 43 42 - V* 27 35H 251*.......... s 21 n » -......... 30 29'* 38H 29H F 1* 2 511* 51'* 511* - 1* —T— • 24 20'* 27'* 14 121 119'* SO 123H 131 123H - I ’18'* 17'* 18 - 1 Elec 1.12 34 25H 25'* 25'* ( 29V* 29'* 29'* -9 1 52’* 51’* 52 US Rub 1.20 72 I USSmelt .75e 34 ! - ->teel 2 53 4 ..... Whelan 8 1 UnIvOPd 1.40 25 1 Upjohn 1.41 10 1 !:a*Pw""i —w— 20 ISJ* 151* 15H F 0 MH 30'* 3IH F I 13 BH BH 22'* F Weyarhr 1.40 Whirl Cp 1.40 Whho M 1.40 Wllion Co 2 WInnOtx 1.44 I SOH 301* - H 45'* 4514 — ' -----Corp 1 YngitShl 1.00 Zenith Rad 1 Copyrighted NEW HEADQUAR’TERS-Stachler Auto and Mobile Sales has moved into a newly constructed building at 3771 Highland, Water- ford Township. The firm, dealing in both new and used travel trailers, was formerly^ located at 3M1 W. Huron. Gas vSe Electricity / Cooling Industry 'Hof By SAM DAWSON I ago the 72 gas companies start-IMldi., on a new air cooling and AP Business News Analyst «d a project called Utilities for]heating system, which hopefully Nirw vnRv Th* innzv hp«» AircondlUoulng Will hit the market in 1968. The NEW YOM ™ 1^ heat Research and Development. I first two prototypes already wave and foe ruM to wy cwl- American Gas Associa-have been delivered, and four ers has built Pitre under the gas industry’s ^ive to get a sizable share of air conditioning business. Gas and electricity are In-crea^ly in] competitioa In two fields. ’Die electric utilities have beenchip-l ^ ping away some uawowni of gas and oil’s market for heat- ton also is sponsoring research and development with the Institute of Gas Technology a part of the Iliinois InsUtute of Technology, Chicago. Its four-part project includes a computer model for studyhig behavior of absorption systems, a new refrigerant for absorption cooling, a compressor actuated by a gas flame, and a new salt combination for air drying by the use of solids. Cormack was caught short. ’The applicable House rules made it Impossible for him to have anyone but Powell call up the bill. Besides that, a large number of members didn’t want to vote on the picketing bill and deli^ed that Powell has taken them off the hook. ’This time,’McCormack made sure the way was clear to bypass Powell if the chairman refused to back down. The Speaker got the rules committee to make special provision for any Democratic member of the education and labor committee to handle the bill. ONLY’TOO GLAD ’The rules committee, already piqued at Powell for failing to show up to testify on the poverty bill, was only too glad to oblige. That done, McCormack tapped Rep. Sam Gibbons, D-Fla., a relatively junior member of the education and labor committee who floor-managed the legislation last year, to stand in for Powell is the chairman fails^to^hw|^___ Polls Shows Romney 3-1 Over Ferency DETROIT (AP)-Rdpublican Gov. George Romney leads his Deftiocratic challenger, ZoUon Ferency, by an almost 8-1 margin, a, Etotroit News election trends poll indicated today. + ★ ★ ’^e poll indicated that if the November election were held Romney would sweep ijor votCT group, ex-ie who identify them- 1 44'* 451* 27 27 NalGypt 2b t ii'M - y I 26^ + ' 93.1 •nsPd i .3 m.\ 150.7 320!s ^ -u.......... IS. A" '. . #7i l75i ISOiT 3»i 50p FedDSIr 1.70 Ferro Cp 1.2( FIHrol 2.00 Fireetne 1.20 FllChrt 1.171 4 411* 41H 41H -f 10 1014 I8H lO'i + _F— 90 1^1|* 189 dliburiementt 29'* 29'* - ' .. .. 9’* 10 F : 12 31’* 311* 31’* F ' .... Tee .10 NevadeP 84 Newberv .6(1 EngEI 1.20 ’'|YCent_2,«o Vio NorNCu 2.20 - 2.40 .504 15 40'* 59H 4 4 37'* 341* 34H— 9 20'* 20 2014 :. 13 25’* 25H 25H F 18 70H 2# 70 F 49 2314 22H 23H - H 9 1131* 113 113'* FI 30 50'* 50 50'*-H ' 32'* 32 32 24 27 261* 24’* F 122 117 US'* 11414 - 3 42'* 42H 42H - d%d or ex-dbtrlbuMon dale, g—Paid • —h—Declared or mM etter elock i t or tpllt up. k-Decler«l er paid an accumulative Itsue with L... li In erreen. n—New luue. p—Pild W, i I 221* 22H - H I 30'* 39H 20 F 3 541* 53H S2H - 17 SO 491* 40H — " !•- lUS 20 11H IOH 1) , I 23'* 23 23H 137 70'* 40H 49'* — “ BH 32H liiifip ) 33V* 33H 23'* - H 13 32H 31'* 32H F '* 55 23'* 23 23 - H 10 34'* 35H 34'* ' " -X-Y-Z— 95 243 240H 242H . 2 “I* ^ 70HI2H “IveK^as Democrats, vrith The AsMcieted Prei. 1964 percentage ‘ of 62-21. In their forays into the other’s ^1. x I^ ^'m ^ McCormack has tentatively scheduled the $1.7&-billlon measure for debate starting Wednes- qi gag ana oii s marxei lor neav- n«. •» <-.41 day. Powell, who has an en- i„g homes and office buildings. ^J?™* gagement in New York City that More gas companies are now^‘“ day, wants the bill delayed. striving to break electricity’s ductron Corp., Ann Arbor, CAUGHT SHORT | dght monopoly i When the same situation ^ business, arose on the picketing bill, Mc- territory both have been plagued greatly by the same thing: high costs. The electric utilities are slowly bringing down the costs of electric heating. The gas industry is pushing a long-term research and development campaign to boost the efficiency and lower the costs of cooling by gas. ’The goal envi-'sions gas-operated window coolers as well as central air conditioning units in which gas is now preproduction models are expected by December. The whole research and development project’will cost $2 millioo. ’Ihe gas companies hope for systems that will provide complete climate conM for single family re^ences, apartments and commercial buildings — and at a price competitive with electric units. Even some electric utilities, swamped with demand for current during the long heat wave, mi^t have wished such gas units were in operation now rather than in 1968. About 90,000 single family homes installed central gas air conditioners in 1905, bringing the total to around three million. I SMALL SHARE But this is a small share of the market. So 72 gas utilities of 2-to 16-ton range equi^ent to be competitively priced with electrically power^ air conditioners. One maker of gas units expects a lower priced model late in 1967. The industry as a whole talks of full-scale production in 1968 of radically new year-round air conditioning systems. They would range from window types to central home heating and cooling units. They would be designed around a gas-fired compressor, such as first perfect^ for use in sophisticated space vehicles. + Among firms already in the field are: Bryant Manufacturing,. Indianapolis; Whirlpool, St. Joseph, Mich.; and Arkla Air-conditioning, Evansville, Ind., a division of the Arkansas Louisiana Gas Company, Shreveport, 'a. Bryant says this fall it expects to put on the market chilling units in the 3-to 10-ton capacity range. Its goal a bit later on is a 3-ton unit costing $475. Whirlpool is field testing 2,000 units this year, and plans 12,000 production units in 1967. Arkla has an improved model to offer By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “We live on a pension and Social SecnrKy. Five years ago we were advised to bay 8M British American CoDStmction; 200 Floyd Bennett Stores and 100 Everiharp. We have lost a lot money on these. Should we continne to hold?” K. S. A) You should have been put into high-grade income sto^s with moderate growth potential. Instead you were loaded down with speoilative issues which— with the sole exception of Ever-sharp — have little to commend them. British American does heavy ixHistruction in Western Canada. Its shares sell to yield about seven per cent, indicating that they are largely speculative. Earnings have been erratic and ' would sell this holding. Ftoyd Bennett Stores is quoted $1 bid. At this price you might as well bold. Eversharp has strongmanagement and control, but earnings have slipped. Switch this to a higher-grade issue. For reinvestment of the funds from these Bales, I suggeet Pacific Power & Light and Du-quesne Light — both yielding a secure five per cent. ★ ★ ★ Q) “We are interested in bonds, about which yon wrote recently. We have enough to get along bnt nofiiiag extra. We get iVt per cent en sav-ings. With part of this in bonds we could live better. Please ndvls^” D. M. AfT'Bohds are now selling to yield more than at any time for many years.,There is no assurance, though, that if money rates continue to harden, they may not sell lower. If you un- unoHiciti. I Four per cent of those polled' the News said they would BIG HOPE ■ (ongoing toblo ■t quorttrly --------- ------------- Sptciil or dlvldondi or paymcnti not dotlg- I foSnOtot. > extro 0 > stock dh . d—Dicisr w ocdon tikon •( lost dividend mfoting. r—Declared or paid In 1944 plus slock dividend. t^Pald In stock during 1944, estimated cash valua on ex-dIvIdend or ex-distribution dete. -Celled. x-’Sx dividend. y-Ex dlvl-and salts In fgll. x-d1t-ex distrlbu-xr-Ex rights. xw-WIthout wtr- \r. l5a**! baing reorganIzM under, th Act, or lecurltin assumed RKSr-s vote for neither candidate and 13 per cent were undecided. •k k k The poll indicated that Ferency, slate Democratic party diaiman, is trailing Romney by a 59 to 24 per cent margin in Wayne County, which is normally carried by a Democratic candidate. Ihe oqtstate margin is 62 per cent for Romney and 20 per cent for Ferency. 300 Attend Rights-Latin Confab in City A meeting cosponsored by the Michigan Civil Rights Commission and the Latin Americans United for Political Action (LAUPA) drew an estimated 300 persons to Pontike yesterday afternoon. Conferees from throughout southeastern Michigan crowded the Fisher Body Local 506 hall at 821 Baldwin for the program, ndiich started at 1:30 p.m. and lasted about three hours. Msgr. Gement Kem, putor of Holy ’Trinity Church in Detroit, spoke on the importance of civil rights legislation to Spanish-speaking peoples. year and talks o' a lower An explanaUon of the civil priced one late in 1967. rjgbtg commission and its func- tions was presented by Father Theodore E. LaMarre, a Bay Gty putor and member of the commission. Following the speeches, members of the commission’s field staff conducted workshops in housing, education, law enforcement, and onployment. derstand this, I believe you can entrust part of your savings to the bond market and for a much higher return than you now receive. suggest Georgia Power 1st 5%s of 1996 at par to yield 5% per cent. I also like Public Service Electric & Gas 1st 5^ of 1991 at 101V4 to yield 5.65 per cent. (Copyright, 1966) The big hope of cracking the market seems to lie in the development field. ’Three years Birmingham Paper Receives Awards The weekly Birmingham Eccentric newspaper won awards Saturday in the “Better News- Traaciini DncitiAn |TC” ireasury rOSIIIOn National Newspaper as-control Mission for seil- 'ing alcoholic beverages to News in Brief Robert Tasti, owner of Bob Tassi’s Sandbar, 3270 W. Huron, Waterford Toipriship, has been MW^NSt AVSSAOSt I£§e= sociatkm. Awards were received for gen-j^ jerai excellence, t^graphy, use ‘ jOf photographs, classified and p*.}*'^'**^**-^ I editorial pages, promotion and advertising ideas. e Tr««>ury comp4ii|d '■’(STii iwr a iw! mi- Gersld and Joseph CeccardU, proprieton of the J & J General Party Store, 870 S. Telegraph, have been fined $150 foe Middgan Liquor Contnd Oem-{ Hw East Ltnalng Ttowne Oourfor raoelved font twwds ndiskm for sdUng aldi^ bav-' in foe national contest erages to a miiior. Business Notes Ralph D. Wallin of 3236 Myd-dleton Lane, Troy, has been appointed manager of automotive sales of the Parker Rust Proof Division, Hooker Chemical Corp. Wallin was formerly manager of ai^liance sales at Parker. G. Richard EWred, 117 Riviera, is attending the C U N A School for Gedlt Union Personnel at the University of Wiscon- in. Eldred is supervisor of the loan department for the GMTC Employes Federal C r e d i t Union. Stocks of Local Intensf ♦ THB\P0^TIAC PRK^S, MONDAY, JULY 18, 1966 JACOBY 9rJA^YA80N Newipipcr EaterpriM Am. The (todc play it usually made In an effort to break up the enemy's lines of communication. Sometimes it is so important to do this that you can afford to ucrifice a trick when you duck. North’s raise to two no-trump was based' largely on his --------- five-card dianumd suit. South’s rebid to game was based on his three ten spots, his great strength in clubs and a general allergy to missini; a game. West opened Ok four ^of spades. East played the king and South shqiped to apply the code word “ARCH.” Analysis of the lead indicated fourth best of a five-card suit. Review of the bidding marked East with both minor suit aces. Count of winners and Igsers ahowed South had lots of winners given time. How can I make this hand? If I can bring in both dummy’s' diamond suit and my own club suit. After this toought South let NORTH M 4S2 OK lot ♦ KJ8I4 ♦ J7J / EAST (D) OQ0749 AKSa OJ765 H0B4 ♦752 OAS *2 AA9I05 soOth AAJIO H A32 ♦ Q 10 6 AKQ104, North-South ^Inerable West North 1A 1 N.T. 2 N.T. Pass S N.T. Pms Pan Pass Opening lea iMMw aMH Sena; Mm -eeetoef i____________ —Jrmt It ItcItM mmWNm ky mr- «»MiMClitii «r Hr «w tS5r MM M am- amW. Hr Ha pa-------—‘ htoMjaar^^tjjf^ ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE SmM bidt for a Paving Contract for paving tDa HIghlaM take* Campu* parking lot of the Oakland Community College, win be received by ti the office of the Vlca-Pi-------- Treasurer, Oakland Community Colitgt o< until 2:00 p.m., Wednesday, July 27, IMt, » and then at uid office publicly opened ^ Ud-AidherNy to contiruci aad equip — ..» alfa dtacribad la the Latta. an EajM^ addINon lo the Oakland County BulMlnp lor lauM h> a— — —- County tbo pla _ _ __ Odell, Hewlett I Luckenbach, Ha afcW-lacti engaged for luch purpota by the Authority and the County, whidi plant are now on flic wHh the Secretary of Mw the County Clark ognition by the hospital doctor logued. treating Speck’s slash wounds. The trackdown began when Corazon Amurao, the only survivor of the massacre, gasped her first hysterical description of the killer to a patrolman at dawn Thursday, moments after he fled the blood-splattered . house. Monday night he had stayed The information h Bid, Form of Confri Teams of detectives fanned out through the South Side neighborhood. I One stop was a filling station. A stranger fitting the description had been there, the attendant said. He had left two suitcases there Tuesday morning i_^ while he went to look for a 'Self-Defense' in Radio Killing Police took the knife to the near Chicago’s Loop. —ime lab. ★ * ★ * * * ' : The hotel clerk told the inves- Lab technicians were already jtigators Speck had checked out busy with other evidence. | about a half hour ago. Detec-! They had dusted the town-iHves staked out the hotel. I house for fingerprints and by ★ ★ ★ ________ _ ^ ■ The next afterpoon, Saturday,! ai^and Intoraot on all ton* th* p^auo from Ha rovonuao of Ho doficlency ..., „t atlda, t deficiency Hall be added ■ Bment. The remr'- ' Receiving Fund -----Hi aaH Auc ..... .....mSafS^ ...... of Ha SttH S MiMHm (ai^ ad. and Act. No. *4. MIMyil FuHIc Acta anm aa amandad). and OrdHanca No. 1 duly adopM to Ha CoiiimMlon I (BaralnaWor raHrrad lo r « He "prolacl") ter laaao JO to Ha County of Oakland hi ....j of Michigan, In accordance h He forma of a —‘------------ - ■ ■ - --wa« ________ _________ County, aa of the pfinelpei'der dit^ June 1* .jtot „ III Thia bond Is e aoH-llquMat^ revenue ■ • ---------------- .. .. ____ CoiNity, giM does constitutf «n Indebtedness of sold tation. The prlnc^l of a— ------- working round the clock quickly managed to isolate 32 prints that didn’t match those of the girls who lived there. FBI and police files in other VA/... u.. /B- X / •i*** provided a dos- War Hero: 'Pirate'Sier of information. Was Out to Get Mewrong view , Speck had been in and out of . moment speculation bidder must deposit jail in Texas, was wanted for J," poUce «cuHtyj^n» .mount, form a slaying ini of $25.„ ... ____ _. _________..... nounced that a murder warrant -**<*"*“**''- ■’“'v ism. These checks had been issued naming Speck, ioak^end'"cOTmunto'*co!?ege!* and broadcast his description r the nation. - —- --------- ypi — Maj. tlliver Smedley, , inomin, nd picked Uicm up. 2ND STOP the chief of a pirate pop radio; Next stop was the Maritime sHition in selMefense. ^ hall across the street smedley, who had intereste from the nurses toynhouse. in pirate stations operating Yes, such a man had been pf, ||,e British coast, is there Monday moi^gkwkingU charged with murder in the for a job on a New Orleaps-] slayiag of Reg Calvert. Cal-~~ I vert, 37, was found dead in I Smedley’s borne only hours af-' ter a raiding party had boarded and took control of Calvert’s offshore station “Radio City’’ in mid-June. ! Prosecutor Peter Palmes, presenting the government’ case at a preliminary court hearing, said Smedley told police: “I shot him.’’ Monmouth lU. He was a drifter,; iJ,e cTue^; Fra7a|an“‘haG^tosisT-il was quoted today by a prosecu- ® were pitifully few. chance of getting one because 1^,*^"','". tions of But now the police were wor-i, ried; Speck’s trail had gone o"penin^*ih.rJof*' wt? -is,oo _______ from cold Dated: July 12, l»M ^ _ Washington with Speck’s finger. * * * j- IT* An FBI courier i axecnUtesI Over ZS.OOQ-'mcutivM (at well at munug^ mHu. technlcel and ptetgwioiiBl fiwn) have found tha uMwar to ttibir caruer problema in "big Chutid Carqqr Advancemant Program. For a eonfidemial inter-viaw, without oott or obligation, to laam how we can help you. FREDERICK CHUSID Club's Cammunity Praject 'far the Birds' LINCOLN, lU. OP - ’The Ro- Unknown to the detectives | manning the stakeout. Speck •epienished .....- ---- emouni, incn any revenue, remaining Ili'SIln uId Receiving Fund at He end ot fiscal year, after ell periodical trans- __ . _ have been made therefrom " 'irSi I required. Hell be trensferra-Bond end Interest Redemption Hell not be tub-1 no ditWsem ' • .......................^ - r -- to maturity. The said Receiving Oakland Community College I tonds of saM Issue sfMlI have ceupantlclal funds July U end U, i»M etiechedHerefo evidencing " ^ itTk' Tk'nn* !•«' ileJ' Im'S'Receiving' Fund at tl !«■ IS' S'JS IS' S'lSlen'' '!«•' v»«r- »«»r •" i»74- 10,000 teat- uo.ooo twa- lasjloo!,,, 1977- 15,000 1W- 135,000 1997- 195,000!™ to affactad by reglstra-Is hereby certified, raclled a had gone to another hotel about two miles away — where he had a room under the name B. Brian. His police file showed NOTICE TO BIDDERS The service club is obtaining Martin houses so that they may be made available to the public in the interests of cutting down on the insect population. Purple martins are well known for , . „ j Iheir “appetite” for mosquitos Later Smedley was quoted as and other insects, telling police: CAME TO KILL “I know he came here to kill White Lake TownHIp Hall, 7525 I Road, Milford, Michigan 48042, p.m., E.S.T., July 28, 19M, lor ( lion of an addition to He Township a string of aliases, bu, that was irr^rHiHtp'SjlJF'tfi^^^^ tary club is “for the birds” in 3 new one. -address. w fk W I The White Lake TownHIp Bm ,, „ „ , I serves the right fo accept or relect any It was as B. Brian, a skid row <*■ *" >>’<*» »'«* "'v irreguierities' drifter, that Speck was admitted ”” **“ . to the_county _hospital at 12:30; ferdinand c^ vetter Palmes said so far as the proseention is concerned it was “a deliberate shooting.” He then offered as evidence i what looked like a pocket pen-^ cil which he said was found on, Calvert’s body and asserted: “It is a little gas gun which throws, one assumes, a small jet of tear gas.” The earliest published report on the possibility of nicotine being harmful to humans was in 1762. „ a.m. Sunday his arm spurting blood from a slash wound police ' said he inflicted himself. DOCTOR AS’TONISHED The doctor was astonished «" NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Ar required by lew, the Welled Laf Board of Education will hold Its ennui hearing on the 19M-47 school budget c Monday. July 25, I9M. at 1:15 p.m. i ___________the Board of Education offices loceti When he saw Speck’s widely!*’ publicized tattoos and looked | in the Board ol*’'^ucatlon offices f< into the face he had just seen in the newspaper. ' dwight l. wiseman “Call the police,” he said to' .... _ _ _ e Secretary-Treasurer ol Commission shall execute said bond: !and on behalf of the Authority end I Secretary-Treasurer of the Commi ' Hell affix He seal of the Auth I! Hereto. The Secrefery-Treesurer ot - Commission shell execute the Int ' coupons to be etteched to said bond ■fixed Hereto f separate depository account, me several funds of the sys- .......be Invested In United States! ($esi) Government obligations or In certificates lot deposit of the depo vestment of money In . . --------- — Redemption < Fund being accumu-for the payment —* ng principel end 1--------- - _____ shall be limited to United States Government obligations bearing maturity his nurse. World News Briefs laser thereof as hereeffer determined r the Commission upon receipt of " jrchese price therefor. _ , _______ ____ Section 7. The bonds herein euthorlied Board of Education Hell be sold in He manner provided ' July II, 1944 seefton 12 of Act No. 94, Michlgen Public --------------------1 Acts of 1933, as emended. Section I. The said bonds end attached generel obligation ' County -- I of the Authority or of Hell not be an Inde ] Authority or of the County wlHIn any 1 stele constitutiofial provision or statutory ' The principal ------ 3 Soviet Fugitives Jailed PROTECT YOUR FAMILY AND NOME............ with Modern Woodmen's tow" ^heir way to J determine whether Smedley attend a law and order confer-should be ordered to stand trial, ence with President Ferdinand E. .Marcos were slain by Huk insurgents today, the Philippine constabulary reported. I Troops were rushed to the pursuit of the attackers. Although the Communist-led re- 'KUota,~^>iucn *)kc. Call 334-7774I AHENTION FLEET OWNERS! A clean truck makes good advertising. Kleen-A-Truck will go to you, clean and rebrighten your truck. HEAVY EQUIPMENT IS OUR SPECIALTY. | • Aircraft --- • Heavy Equipment e Mobile Homee e Heme» SPECIAL PRICES ON Th* Authority furthtr Ht gfortmcntloncd Lmm i slwll each to deemed to comtltute pert ot the bond contract and Hat, i OAKLAND COUNTY BUILDING AUTHORITY ORDINANCE NO. I Adopted June 28, 1944 An Ordinance fo Provide tor the Constructing end Equipping by the Oakland County Bunlding Authority of an East Wing Addition to the Oakland County Building for use by the County of Oakland as Part of tha Oakland County Building; to Provide tor He Issuence and Salt ot Revenue Bonds to Defray tha Cost Thereof; to Provide tor the Retirement and Security of Said Bonds; and to Provide for Other Matters Relative to Said Prelect and Said Bonds. WHEREAS, the Oakland County Building Authority has been Incorporated to the County of Oakland pursuant to Act No. 31, Michigan Public Acts ot — (First Extra Session), at amended, tor,ginning on JenPery 1 the purpose ot acquiring, furnIHIng, ending on December 31 “orangrato 'S:''”;iS;Sar*y c•S^.t^’"uc^'I;rSS?^ ______________- sifft therefor tor the use ot the County,,Issued which shall have Of oekiend a. provided ArticH. i ir^T’or'^I^ch ’L.. ... subleci to Its con.rol. After comolefion,I^ ---— of the prelect herein and particularly , __________ Michlgen Public Acts ot 193X ____________ ' the collection and antorcament of said celver appointad tor Ha prolact Ir of default on tha part of Ha Ai the performance of Ha terms . ' Beck or any modification ol either which [■ would Impair He obligation or sa ■^ ^ of any ot said tonds. r I Section 17. While tny of the herein authorlted fo be Issued thi * I outstanding, no additional bonds pi 'WHEREAS, th ty have entere terms of which erty f t County and t supervision and control of thp Commission or such Kitticer as shall to desig-' nated or creatsd bv Ha Cofhnllsslon andj subleci to Its control. After completion, the operation, maintenance and management of the East Wing addition Hall to carried out by the County nravMMi by the Lease Back or by ’* tha County shall O n of Two tt thereon and to least to the “IL'T, ViL*" NOTIGE OF PUBLIC HEARING County a building tor use by tha County ™ otica it hsreby given Hal a public •’ •" '^'"9 MHItion to tha existing Sectioo I ring will be held by the Pontiac City Coon'y Building, such building to be [rn'»l tor hp]^ wprp rniQhpH equipped In eccordenct Ti ----------- — Deis were crusneo milliariiy^ Track Orl^, East specifications pre- Dollars (8236,500) per year, payable during the 1950s, scattered on Tuesday, August 9, 1944 at 8 o'clock I5^ OP*"' «*«•**♦ *■ Luckenbach,j*nni^ly on June 1, 1W and bands stili roam the provinces M*p”rt‘"ordhSi,2a*'Jto"’’92 ----------------------------------------krtown tt the Building Zone Ordinance '"* County has tgread to toast back i **P*nset ot » to reione to Parking Olafrict Ha tollowinq!***" building and site from Ha Authority . 8nd described property: 'fora period ofssyeqjs and to pay rental Provided In Hl------------------- tncluslva Lot. im . "»T*'OT H the amount of S234JM par Section 11 Tha rentals to paytMa by Lott 103 oavable annually.on June 1, ot each the County, plus Ha obllgatlona auumad .. . ^ County In raspact to oparatton. $1500 Blaze Strikes Home ia» both Inclutive, CIvIe Improvement City of Pontiac, Michigan. (y order ot the City County, II -expenaet In respect tc d operktion of Ha Fire broke out at a Waterford notice of public sale i Township home Saturday mom- iftg, causing an estimated $1,500 •' ten e-cleck a m at Byers Shell Ser- • J_____® 9'ce 205 Main Street, Rochester, Oakland in damages. county, Michigan, public tale of the Township fire fighters esti- for can al* DoOge*'^'^on BuiL"DiNG'AUTHdilTY 'ORDAINS; mated damages to the Betty,®***[ff■ ^j*',*?■ ■7,'* i«"on Tester home, 3336 Curwood, at mtSect “n ”hir.S! mJy to m!^ .t M5l"4C^r‘” .«aiS $1,000 to the contents and $500 to the building. National Bank of Detroit coMtruad to 'meen tito ’Oakland” ciunly I Attri^ted to a lighW cig- RoctSteJ^lMkHtoH *“bf'Tho‘tB?n*’’';CommltiIon'' than to jaret, the fire originated in a bediWt mattress. a nacestary to prasarvt tl d inttratt as requlrad by tt County for He prolect shall be Incraated by amounts exceeding He annual raqulra- mants tor principal and In'------- - -- additional bonds. NoHIng nance contained, however, the Issuanca ot revenue __________ . .. finance In wtole or In part, Indapandantly of tha preaant prolact i.................. sB?' or prtven- WHEREAS, the ettaettveneaa of tald mi Lease Back Is contingent upon tha It-jin suance of revenue bonds by the Authority !*-, )o finance the construction an ping ot said building, said bone secured by end payable from H_ ________v> to be paid by He County, and Ha Au- creation ot thority dasiras to make naesaaary pro-,principal ar visions tor the issuance of saM bonds'ordinance; at hereinafter set torfh; expenditures and funds as art rtqulrtd! therefore, THE OAKLAND COONTYiby His ordinance. Rentals charged ' imi niMn xiituoditv nDisxiuc. County .nan n* tivM. mo r.wu On tha first day of ...................... , A.D. 19. , the Oakland County Building Authority, Oakland County, r'~"----------- pay ' ___________ 1944, No_____ __________ I, t944. This coupon It not a general obligation ol s4id Authority or of said County and Is payable solely from certain revenues as set forth In the bond to which this coupon pertains. ---FACSIMILE------ Secretary-Traaturtr REGISTRY In Whose Nam# Registered portion of S4 disbursement may be invested In United States Government obligations or In cer-tlllcatss of deposit of said bank upon authorization by He Commission. From said moneys there Hall first to transferred to the Bond and Interest Rtdemp-tion Fund any premium and accruad Interest paid to tha Authority by tha purchaser end such sdditlonsi amount 1947. Tha b m Ha said bonds on January l. I|4l prolact htreinbefere described end any architectural, engineering, legal and other expanses incidant Hereto, end Hall be paid out only upon authorization of Ihe Commission: provided. Hat said Commission Hall not authorize the payment ot any such moneys ter conalruction work until Here Hall have been first It by He architects In charge a contract ob- I of construction asti- - amount ol tha balance which will be required lor Ha complalton ot the prolect. Section 20.'Tha said bonds shall not be Issued until the Municipal PInancs Commission of Ha State of Michigan has aproved such Issuance, and Ha Secretary ot the Commission Is hereby eu-Horlzsd end directed to meke application for such approval. Section 21. Any unexpended balance In He Construction Fund, rcmalnInE after the completion ol Ha prolect and pay-—* -.............. to paid il Including He Reserve Harain, or Section 22. This ordinanca Hall to recorded In Ha mlmitas of Ha mealing pf the Commiuton at which It wet adopted, as soon at praettoabto attor Its pastaga. which records Hall to auttian-flcatad by tha algnaturoa of tha Chairman and Ha tacratary-Traaaurar of taM Com- mlssloo, and Hall br —■----------------•- Tha Pontiac Press, e UNITED STATES OF AMERICA STATE OF MICHIGAN COUNTY OF OAKLAND OAKLAND COUNTY BUILDING AUTHORITY OAKLAND COUNTY BUILDING REVENUE BOND, SERIES 1944 KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, Hat Ha Oakland County BuiMing Authority. Oakland County, MkMBin, a body cerperata (harekiattar semattmas refarrad to m Ha "AuHortly**), haraby tofcnowtodgM Hat It la BtdibNd ahd tor tolut raeatuad pramlaaa M pay to Ha baarer haraof (or It His bond to rtg- I STATE OF MICHIGAN ) I COUNTY OF CHKULND > 1, HARRY LAPHAAA, Ha il Secretary-Treasuror of He C_....... ol the Oekiend County BuiMing AuHer-itv. harabv certify that tha laregoing <0. 1 bt saM Auttartty, aM Caminisslan on Juna ll, an sot lorH In fall In th# la maatlmg at Ha aaip Com-on aaM d^ and Hat taM s. I In taM mkiuMi Is tx-'rman and by mt. tt _______,-#» odM Co— Jute IS, 1N8. HARRY LAPHAM tHE gpyttAC Pli&ss> MOkPAY, JUEY 18, 1M0 ■ -V' New Horizons Names Exec Gtai a SmHh o( 1^ Winitoi Mr. Hetar,’. fonoer employr ST-*SK:i,“rSX.SS'"‘ «“1 lx 1« «.I'llX' B«i, Ptat dW at Estates Cemetery, ^Avon Township. tor of New Horizons ofM^akimd County, according to J. Lyie Winslow, president of the organization, odiich provides vocational training and employ-met){ to mentally bandicapp^ young people. Smith replaces Charles Nelson, who resigned to become execuUve secretary of the State Oregon’s retardation program. Smith formerly was teacher-vocational coordinator for the mentally handicapped at Farmington High SdMol three years and taught one year at Ypsilan-ti. A graduate of Eastern Michigan University where he earned a master’s degree in special education, he is vice president of the Farmington Association for Handicapped Children and a member of Michigan Teachers of the Mentally Handicapped. Wednesday at the J/ H. Finefrock t So^ Funeral lio|ne in Btensfield mth burial in Whltii Chapel Memorial Ceme-toy, Troy. / . Marquis Lodge No. 680, F&AM, wiU conduct a memorial service tomorrow at 8 p.m. at the foneraUiome. Mr. Blaidier, a retired employe of General Motors Corp. died today after a limg illness. Surviving are three sons, Del-mer R. of Birmingham, Harry R. of Berkley and Robert W. of Mansfield, Ohio, and a daughter, Mrs. E. B. Bennett of Lansing. Also surviving are two grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Car Hits Pole; Youth Hurt urday. He was a member of St. Paul Lutheran Church./ « Surviving are his wife, Mae; his mother, Mry. Goldie Horvath of Pontiac; and two sons, Mi-1 chad K. and Patrick G. at home. Also surviving are two brothers, Paul E. of Pontiac, and Carl C. of Waterford Township. MRS. KARL ELY Service for Mrs. Karl (Louise P.) Ely, 84, of 42 Summit will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial (Cemetery, ’Troy. LAWRENCE J. LAFAY Service for Lawrence J. La-Fay, 50, of Pontiac will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Huntoon Funo’al Home with burial at Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. LaFay, a former employe of GMC Truck & Coach Division, died Saturday following a long illness. Surviving are two daughters, Sharon and Lauren of Pontiac, and two sisters, Mrs. Evelyn McKerrow of Pontiac and Mrs. Leona Shore of Auburn Heights. HARVEY E. SANDBERG Service for Harvey E. Sand- Order of the Eastern Star me-j berg, 69, of 18 Spokane Villa morial service will be held at I will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at 7:30 tonight i Donelson-Johns Funeral Home An 18-year-old Commerce Township youth is in serious condition at Pontiac General Hospital today after the sports car in which he was riding ran off Dixie and slammed into a utility pole. David Johnson of 2876 Pinto suffered head injuries in the accident, vrtiich occurred early yesterday just north of E. Holly In Sprin^ield Township. Oakland Oounty Sheriff’s deputies identified the driver of the car as UTiUiam E. Siess, 18, of 2757 Pinto, Commerce Township. He was treated for injuries at Pontiac General and released. Mrs. Ely died Friday after a long illness. A member of Central Methodist Church, she was a charter member bf the Order of the Amaranth, a member of Pontiac White Shrine No. 22; a member of the Dames of Malta; a past matron of the Order of the Eastern Star, Fayette, Ohio; and a past noble grand of the Rebekah Lodge in Fayette. Surviving are a son, Donald K. of Waterford Township; two daughters, Mrs. Kathryn Quick of Rochester and Mrs. Lucille I with burial in Ottawa Park Cenetery. Mr, Sandberg, a retired ac^ countant with GMC Truck & Coach Division, died Saturday following a long illness. He was a manber of the Bethany Baptist CSiurch. Surviving are his wife. Fay; one son, J^n V. of Livonia; and one granddaughter. GEORGE R. LINDSEY ROCHESTER — Service for George R. Lindsey, 86, of 130 E. University will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Pixley Memorial The FBI reported that in a study of 92,869 offenders in crime for the years 1963 and 1964, 76 per cent were repeaters. Orr of Omaha, Neb.; and one Chapel, with burial in Mt. Avon great-granddaughter. | Cemetery. EDWIN C. HEFNER , ^turday af- „ . ^ , ter a long illness.: He was re- Service fw Edwin C. Hefner, Oakland County 1 7617 Tki«U will Ka 7 n m ^ ^ 41, of 757 Third will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the C. J. God-hardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor, with burial at Christian For Non-College-Bound Math Study Bid OK'd A four-year high school mathematics program for non-college-bound students i planned, by Oakland Schools under a federal grant. The U.S. Office of Education has approved the planning proposal, according to Rep. Billie S. Farnum, D-19th Distritt. first year of a proposed five-year study, according to Dr. David W. Wells, instruction and mathematics director for Oakland Schools. Fanmm said the amount of the grant is not yet Arm. “It is likely it will be in the neighborhood of $37,290 as requested by Oakli^id Schools,’’* he said. ’The grant would cover thei CONSULTANTS Weils said county consultants would meet with representatives of industry, labor and the armed forces “to determine what kin^ of mathematical skills are r^ quired for successful compete tion in these fields.’’ A curriculum then would be designed to meet these needs, possible, and would be tested I in Oakland County schools. ENDURING MEMORIAL «re ipecialistf in fully Kuaranteed monuments sculptured from Select Barre Granite. Monuments Monuments ...From $195 Markers .....From $35 INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Perry 335-( Bronze Plates for Memorial Park Cemeteries at Below Cemetery Prices Road (fommission. Surviving besides his «(ife, Sara, are a son, Roscoe E. of White Hall; a daughter, Mrs. Floyd Harp of Pontiac; t h r e brothers, five sisters; thre grandchildren; and six greatgrandchildren. POUCE CHIEF DIES -Police Chief WilUam H. Parker, 64, of Los Angeles died Saturday after collapsing at a testimonial dinner for hiin, actress Betty Hutton and comedian Joe E. Lewis. He had just received his plaque and was walking back to his table when stricken. Cause of death was not immediately known, but he had been recuperating from a heart ailment. Death Notices ■LY, JULY IS, m LOUIS! P., « Sum— -—*• -- -- -ImM •r 1 • Karl f hr; dMT nwitt-Kattirni Owldc, Mn. and OonaW K. flyi atM wrvivad by ana graat-grand-dadohtar. Tba Oriir a Ilia latt- tarvlca laday at 7;M p.m. at ttw funaral homa. Funaral larvlca will be htM Tuatday at 11 a.m. at ttw Sparks - Orlflln Fwnaral Honw. Inlarmant In WMta Oiapal Cema-tary. Mrs. Bly will lla In stata at tha funaral homa. Suggaslad vlsttlng hours 1 to S and 7 to HEFNER, JULY U, ISM, EDWIN C., ----“—■ aga r ---------- J. H 1 p.m. at tha C. J. '-----■ •*—w, Kaago . ____________ Christian Mamarlal Camatary, Rochastar, Michigan. Mr. Hatnar will lla In stala at tha funaral homa. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to S and LaFAY, JULY IS. 17M, LAWRENCE J., Pontiac; age SO; dear father of Sharon and Lauren Jane LaFay; dear brother of Mrs. Evelyn McKerrow and Mrs. Leona Shore. Funaral service will be held Tues- SANDBERG. JULY 1«, 17M, HARVEY E., 11 Spokane Villa; age S«; belovad husband of Fay Sandberg; dear father ot John V. Sandberg; also survived by one granddaughter. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, July It, at 1:30 p,m. at the Donelson - Johns Funeral Home. Cape Strikers Back to Work at the funera/* home. (Sug-I visiting hours 3 to S and CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -About 1,100 moonport machinists were expected back at their jobs today after agreement was reached yesterday on local issues in a dispute against Trans World Airlines. The workers, members of the International Association of Machinists (1AM), walked off their jobs July 8 when the lAM called' nationwide strike against TWA and four other airlines. The agreement, ratified only TWA’s “housekeeping’’ support loperations for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration at the Kennedy Space Cen- ter. LOUICA JILL LANGE OXFORD ’TOWNSHIP - Service for Louica Jill Lange, newborn daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy H. Lange of 1540 Lapeer, was held Saturday at Allen’s Funeral Home in Lake Orion. Burial was in East Lawn Cemetery, Lake Orion. Baby Lange died Friday. Surviving besides her parents are grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.' Delmar Lange and Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Mescher, all of Metro-^lis. 111. MRS. MAX WELCOME TROY - Mrs. Max (Nancy) Welcome, 29, of 1676 W. Square] Lake died yesterday after a long illness. Her body is at the Price Funeral Home. A TWA spokesman said the strike at the Cape slowed the company’s operations at the Merritt Island moonport, but that essential work continued. It did not affect preparations for today’s Gemini 10 launching. Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS AM RECEIVED BY S F.M. WILL BE PUBLISHED THE FOLLOWINO DAY. 2.00 3.M S.S0 *.V 7.50 11.70 7 t.Tl IS.11 0 1MB 10J0 ______I chorgo ot 50 II b* iMdb for VM ol Meeting Called for Pontiac State Hospital Workers Women Firm's Strike Is Over All Pontiac State Hospital em-l^iloyes have been summoned to ! an open meeting tomorrow night by Local 49 of the American Federation of State, County and [Municipal Employees. A local tepresentation election and “important developments (that) are taking place throughout the state’’ will be discussi ' at the meeting, according to circular distributed to employes today. The 7 p.m. program will be held in the hospital andito- WARREN (UPI) - A week-long strike at the Cadillac Gauge Co. was over today as employes reported back to work with a newly ratified contract agreement. The -three-year agreement, ratified yester^y, provided for a 57 cent an hour across the board salAry hike. Richard Leuhmann, hospital personnel officer, labeled the proposed balloting “a mock election.” ■way July IS, 1753. Till memory ftdn sr You'll llva forever In Sadly mitsed by br< AW, Inc. to ear munity. OF DEBT - ; AND HARASSMENT. We have helped an tandi of people « “Under Michigan law, the Department of Civil Service does not have to recognizeV any specific employes’ organization as the sole bargaining unit,” he said. Gar/ Oy. J)onelioi Q)oiud) 'Jloltnt Cadillac Gauge produces nail military arms, parts for armored cars and tanks, as well as aerospace and missile parts. Beauty - And Our Memories.. We Appreciate the beauty of the sacred music of the funeral service; We are thankful for the remembrances of flowers. They each are here for a definite purpose, bringing solace to the family In grief. They make the last rites for a loved one a thing of beauty—and provide kind memories for the future. (Phone federal 4-4511 Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin, a retired German cavalry general, developed me first practical rigid airship in 1900. Independence Man Is Stabbed; Seven Area Men Being Held Seven area men were heU for fense occurred and by the hos- pital where Risinger had been taken by friends. IN BAR Five of the men were apprehended in a Dixie IRghway bar by township police, assisted questioning by Waterford Township police today in connection with the midnight stabbing of 31-year-old Harold Risinger of 4980 aintonville. Independence Township. Knifed in the stomach and by S t a t e Police and sheriffs face in a skirmish in the park-1 deputies. The others were ca^ 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC gooC}=>o^o<^^ Elizabeth Lake, Risinger re-lgation. quired more than 20 stitches to Police, who did not witness the repair his wounds. i fight, converged on the Dixie He w« .1 P«Hl.e ^______ ...,1 fonoation from a Huron Bowl Genend Hospital and released. overhe'brd the sus- An arrest warrant was fo pec^ say they were heading have been sought agginst tlie th^e. seven men today. ' ■ ,1110 seven men apparently * * * jwere engaged in a fight with Township police were s u m- Ristager and three friends, ac-iDoned twice following the siab-jeording to township police who, Ung, by a woman whd lives gt fiM, were uncertain what in the vicinity where the of-lprovoked the knifing. HORSEBACK RIDING Is Great at NEW' HILLSIDE RANCH A <-5511 or MA 5-3732 fo rREpSES^^ At 19 a.m. today there | !were replies at Thej Press Office i^ the fol-| Dwing boxes; 3, 4, 17, 20, M, 43, SO, 57, 59, 60, 61, 63, 65, 69, I 71, 118 COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS_____ Huntoon Comalyy BAI7ITY MAID SUFRUIS 7 Manimlw* Ft S-7SC •Wt UUT OF DEBT ON A FLANNED BUDGET FROORAM TAILORED TO YOUR IHTOMS MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 753 Pontiac SUIo Bank Bldg. FE IMN55 "HOUSE OF WIGS" Y T() OVERCOME YOUR SUBCO Ladurn tvtn pjn., Ppntlac __ MO comof Huron. .... 'POWER OF ISCIOUS MIND" 1 tvory Wod. ---------' DUS MIND" ^ UPUND HILLS FARM II LAKE GEORGE RO. BARBER, MASTiR OR APPRBN-liotil LaiyRdrmw!!! FB *7^ CAkiEk OPPORTUNITY Ftrmor's Hiiuranco group, ono Amorico's leading mullipla I rllSnty'fc pwymvm. We'll It^nse, train and finance you. Confect Ray Carnes, (fiatrlct menaner at 1810 South Woodwards Birmingham^ or call 644-3010 or 5434151. CARPENTERS OUOH — FOR apartments,-krt» of I ■ --- >f work. FE S- CLERK TYPIST Gtnerol offlea. shipping o Ino Clark exp. -- typist. Lest ond FoHad _5 LOST; STRAYED FROM Rosie. In vicinity of L LOST: FAMILY DOG. V Lake and Decker Rd. i pointer. Short v " k spots on back. Long WHITE AND BLACK Kl Wirt haired puppy, 4 nx>s. ins. to "Whiskers," vicinity of n ond Beverly. Reward. FE 1 or FE 1-7782,___ Draftsman Trainee Age 17-30, High school or College, Drafting. S4S0. See Mr. Richard. International Personnel, 1880 Wood------------4 mile, 643-8268. DRUG, STOCK OR TOBACCO clerk, full or part time, experience not necessary but desirable. Full fringe benetits. Top wages for top men. Perry Pharmacy. 687 E. Blvd. FE 3-7153._________ DRIVER NEEDED. EXPERIENCED THE 17*4 CIVIL RIGHTS X :•: LAW PROHIBITS, WITH :v certain exceptions. v DISCRIMINATION BE-:•;■ %•: CAUSE OF SEX. SINCE v: SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE v: CONSIDERED MORE AT-v! tractive to persons OF ONE SEX THAN THE OTHER, ADVERTISE-;:-M E N T S ARE PLACED v: UNDER THE (MALE OR -y. <:■ FEMALE COLUMNS FOR :;;; CONVENIENCE OF READ-BRS. SUCH listinos are :v NOT INTENDED TO EX-CLUDB PERSONS OF X EITHER SEX. Draftsman Help Wonted Male AMBITIOUS YOUNG MAN 21 TO 34 WITH MECHANICAL DRAFTING EXPERIENCE FOR DETAILING AND MINOR LAYOUTS. SEND RESUME OR APPLY TO C0NDEC0-’ AUTOMATION INC, 25820 NOVI RD., NOVI, MICHIGAN. ATTENTION: MR. D. KAPSON. . For Interview c EXPERIENCED AUTO RECON-dltlonlng man wanted, tor used car clean-up. Year round work. Top wages. Benefits. Apply In PERSON. John McAulllle, Ford. *30 Oakland Ave., Ask for Tom ___Norton._____________ 1137 WEEKLY SALARY GUARAN-tee, life Insurance, "--- — 0 Mecca, 3143 Collldge, ELECTRONIC TECHNICIAN Trainee. 31-38. High School, Elec. ----------, background. See MONTHLY guaranteed SALARY PLUS BONUS AND CO. CAR For Right Man sent for Information to deliver the Information yc BUT WE ARE TRYING-Representatives urpenti 1. Age no Factor 3. We will train at ou 3. We give monthly t------------ 4. No door to door soliciting In Memoriam 2 IN LOVING MEMORY OF EUGENE ANNOUNCING ANOTHER DEBT AID INC. offico, 711 RIktr BuHdlng, branch ot Detroit's known Debt AW — *----- 5 CHARGE. H»rs 7-7 Mon. thru Frl., Set. 7-5 FE 341111 (BONDED AND LICENSED) ESCORT SERVICE OF THE BIRMINGHAM-BLOOMFIELO COMMITTEE ON OPEN OCCUPANCY WILL PROVIDE ESCORTS FOR MINORITY GROUPS SEEKING HOMES IN THE AREA. PHONE MRS. RICHARD SCHWING. *44-3377. ENDORSED BY PONTIAC NAACP, PONTIAC AREA URBAN. LEAGUE, THE NEGRO BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL WOMEN'S CLUB& BIRMINGHAM HUMAN RELATIONS COUNCIL, B I R- LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY WITH Oex-A-OM Tabtol*. Only 71 cants «t Simms Brea. Drugs._____ ...... .. ‘thi'^’l )n, Pontiac Mall several oer ore managers television, pianos. ALUMINUM SIDING SALESMAN, exporlonced, unusual opportunity, unusual deal for right man. Call FE 3-7133 asK tor Jarry._____________ ATTENTION $50 TO $90 Part Time Hare I am with a lest growing business and not enough help. For appointment call OR 4-3331. EXPERIENCED REAL A PART TIME JOB $200 PER MONTH ASSISTANT CONTROLLER expanding company c ploying aprox. 450 main office North Pontiac iroa. Cost accou Ing experience desired. Salary co mansurate with txperltnce a i ability. Write only. POLLOCK AND RICHARD MANAGEMENT CONSULTANTS 17*00 Schoolcraft Detroit 48233 $150 PER WEEK Salary Guaranteed This fast - growing Pm men from this port of w gan to toko care of the monyl IfM leads coming In througn (Life, Look, Saturday Evening T>< Better Homes and Gardens, i TV Guide). Men to be cansldei must have the tollowli$: OualificatioVis Service" ■FE <77*7 Voophfees-Siple CHRISTIAN MEMORIAL ESTATES. Gordon of Mt DWIy, Estoto num-bOf 070. FE M43S.____________ ANY «IRi. OR WOMAN NEEDiNG 0 Irltndly adviotr. phone Ft ^5HI before 5 p.m., " - twor, call FE M734. It accepted you _________________ plate training on full salary from first day. For moro dotolls Barry Willoughby at the Holiday Inn Motel 1101 S. Telegraph In Pontiac, Tuesday, July 17, 17** from 11:30 A WATER SOFTENER INSTALLA-Hon man, on the lob training, (W-iaarf sr« 3-3Mt CoNoct l;3M;30 p.m. 7.70<*. 13311 FoWy Rd. INSURANCE inspector, M I L-tord-Union Lake area, else Brigh-ton-WhItmore Lake area. Clarkt-ton-Lake Orlon-Ortonville area. Full ithlog. Job pays n iKoer Social $e MANAGER TRAINEES tlM repair. Must ba txperler G4od pay, year around, ch V J IMg Wtiihd lUk i maintenance requln lerlence In aerospace, pneumatic hydraulic ------------- ------- FULL TIME ORCHARD HELP. GAS STATION ATTENDANT. Experienced, mechanically Inclined lo-. .. ^ HELPER WANTED FOR SMALL glass shop 3*3-4127 evening. 1-3071. Man - - *' ................. .... Greater part ot work must be done after 5 p.m. Apply , in person only. Phone FE 4-5215 tor appointment. KENNETH G. HEMPSTEAD 185 Elliabeth Lake Road, Pontiac JANITORS, PART TIME, MORN-I N G S 7-7 A.M. GOOD PA.Y, FRINGES, APPLY KMART, SEE MR. SMITH, MON. THROUGH WED. 8 A.M. MECHANICS. MG, AUSTIN HEA-ley, English Ford end other Imports. 45 hour week guorenlae. Miliwrt^tf Eloctrkiom Pipt Fitters MaintenancB Weldors Painters & Glaziers Die Makers Toolmakers Pattern Makers Machine Repair Inspector-Tool & Die Applicants [nust be iourneymen PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION GENERAL MOTORS CORP. PONTIAC, MICH. ortunity employer Mechanics UNITED PARCEL SERVICE are Interested In a sc ■ future with good wages I benkdts, apply dally li 2010 PONTIAC DRIVE PONTIAC___1 MEN FOR STEP INSTALLERSAND < laborers, must be reliable. Apply Concrete Step Co., 4497 Highland in Sales end Service. FE 3-7103. _ N FOR ALL AROUND WORK, tt have drivers license. Over II. E 5-7781 or 103 E. Howard. . See Mr. McOonaW 8 >. Send resume to Pontiac Press NEW CAR SALESMAN Good pay, trtngo benetits. Sea Sam Rotunda, Spartan Dodge, S55 Oak-.... .—... ■- person only. NIGHT COOK WITH BROILER, EX-perlenced. Call for an appointment. Rotunda CocTntry Inn. *82- O’NEIL REALTY HAS lor *xporlencfd salcsme pact 1748 lain to surps vlous^racordi ' Proksdv MNs managti sonal Iniorviow. t only, tap wages, year around . Mazurek AAolor 8. Marina . 345 South Blvd. East. FE PORTER WANTED. JANET DAVIS Cleaners. 847-3807.____ PART TIME-FULL TIME. EXPER- „ ______ .J closa degis. WATER- FORD MOBILE HOMES SALES 6333 W. Highland Rd. Across from POT WASHER, •^'TCHEN CLEAN- (3<)ad wagts, meal's and uniforms furnished. Other tringn. Apply In person. Orchard Lake Country PORTER mVn'rl'^h;! hospltolli catlm I :. Comer of Ellnboth L PARTS MANAGER ?"ta’^'i!r tiac, Clarkston. PROCESS ENGINEER TOOL DESIGNER AND DETAILER Experience In pneumatic and nye ....... -------------hIghlyV 4. C. MFG. CO. LAKE ORION MY 3-2711 ,n Equal Opportunity Employer PORTERS. CONTACT HOLIDAY Inn 1701 S. Telograph, PontiK. Apply gi person. Real Estate Trainees Guar. Training Soiary t between 35-45, hove si classroom ond o u to become itate li- 810,000 yearly. For confidential In terview call Bob Davis or Dick Valuet at Val-U-Woy Real Estate. FE 4-1531 or oHer 7 p.m. FE REAL ESTATE SALESME warned at ttw Mall. Inquire abo our generous: commission prograi VON REALTY Georg^Vonderherr, Rllr. -MLS ROUGH CARPENTERS CONTRAC-tars tor new houses, 4 lobs reedy to go. Lake Orion, Villa Homes, 628-1430. ary and commission position that otters financial security, fringe benefits, pqid vacellon, company <1 TO DELIVER, INSTALL AND . MECHANICAL ENGINEER Designing experience with tools and machines. Knowledge of plant maintenance and tool room. Capable of trouble shooting r -- •rvising, building and Installa-I of prolect. Dograo or equiv-“ 'T axparlonce. Apply Avon MEN FOR 6uCT WORK, PIPE fitting, ganaral hotting and air conditioning work also gtnardi helpers. 3101 Orchard Lakt Rd. Salesihen Due to our planned expansion we need ^0 train more salesmen; to grow with us in the following high-volume departments: MAJOR APPLIANCES BUILDING MATERIALS Good compensation, excellent employee benefits including profit-sharing. Come in and let's tolk about more money in your future. Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL S1} R F ACE mTndOr, OtlAbV SERVICE STATION ATTOMlANt, . - ________ AIR-CONOI TIONCD. ftentffts. Pl««&anf con-.------- Stoody. SI hours. Bur- VelEVISION technician - GE COw REQUIRES MEN FOR TV SERVICES, FULLY QUALIFIED OR TRAINEES FOR ON THE JOB TRAINING. CAREER POSITION WITH TOP PAY AND BEN- . EFIT5. PHONE MR. BARBE -DETROIT TW ^7«^0 - EXT. 132 FOR INTERVIEW AFFOINT- , ME_NT. _____ ^bOL CRIB MAN WANTED. SEMl-Vlth shop background. Aanulacturars, Inc. Troy, TOOL DESIGNERS DETAILERS ^ CHECKERS^ ! oprAlngs. •rj neM (^yTlFrm t 'to i Ttm O'Shanter Country Club, "BEAUTY OPERATOR, 6XPERI CYTOLOGY TECHNICIAN 'me. Apply; Cerfitied or eligible. Excellent tel_______________________ ^__________________fC_±M7l.j ery end liberal banotit program. HELP POLIO PATIENT. LIVE LAPY OVER M — OPENING *PP*V employment office. Interviaw lady or coupir — ------ .------,y„ ,x)urs »-IJ noon. H p.m. WIL- come. WAieTT. .............. BEAUMONT HOSPITAL,---------------- f. U Mile, Royal Oak. _ CAR DEALERSHIP, HIGH II children wel- clTtL'’^ il meal. Call t»5-U74 bi _ I-; BEAUTY OPERATOR WITH F lowing for new ttiop. Acrou fi Sky Drive-ln Theatre, r land Un'--- E Ml». 3k«EPE [BOOkI^EPER, EXPERIENCE 1 preferred, permanent position. Fer-‘ Highland I min. from |.75 Big_Beaver exit.' Trim CARPENTERS FOR NEW housas. lots of work, Laka Orion. \^ia Homas. ____ fv SERVICEMAN-DEPENDABLE, _Saglnew. FE J^57.__________ steady work-Birmingham area BOOKKEEPER READY TO WEAR MA 4^710_________________ K-Mart, Expi ' ' ' Wanted" . Rochester Rd., . ASSISTANT. PRE"FER someone with exp. In business ol-llce dealing with public. Dental, exp. not necessary. Will train.; Write stating quallticatlons, school-! Ing. age and salary expected to Pontiac Press Box No. 30.____ ^^DESK CLERKS j Over 15. Applicants must have a! Dept., Pontiac G • shifts, weekends,; 3I1.M per mo. Shift, eVenIng and night s person. Personnel I. Andre B Y Salon. 1 ' MEN, Dining Room Supervisor with school newspaper experience for news gathering and writing position on area paper. Must have cor, be able to write cleorly ond quickly, meet the public. Replies to Box 20. BIG BOY RESTAURANT Talagraph A Huron or Dixie Hwy > SNver Lake Rd WATERFORD ORIVE-IN THEAT#R, 3520 Airport Rd. Box and o—" Sion help. II or c— WOMEN TO CARE FOR CHILD, '' Light housakaeping. _____,.. ,.ne. Call33HSM. WOMAN F^OR GRILL AND KITCH- WOMAN FOR HOUSEKEEPING IN nnothtrlass home. Ilva li}, 2 BOB'S VAN SERVICE MOVING ANI ‘REE ESI ROBERT TOMPKII Pwlitliig wNTI A LADY INTERIOR OSCORATOR. Pap^mg, FE MTU.__________ . EXPERT PAINTING AND OfC-oralltig. OR 3-7354.__________ ygt tS14. BULLDOZING! WATiR, GAS and sprinkler systems. E. George Hubarth. FE 5-3400 WALT SEIBER ASPHALT P... Inc. FE 5-7S43or FE MSS2. trick a Ik^ SwricE BRICK. BLOCK AND FIREPLACE Septic Tcnk Bldg. SEPTIC ' TANKS. DRAIN AND FcncJlig I tlak) vrerk. 42S-ISS0. PONTIAC FENCE CO. | frE* Trimming Service 5932 DIxIa Hwy.__________OH 34)9)' IF YOU HAVE ANY OF THE FOL- e-___i- . a LOWING QUALIFICATION. WE Siws Help, Mnw-remEM 8-A HAVE AN'OUTSTANDING OPPOR- ' TUNITY WHICH WILL INTEREST.3 HOURS A DAY, 3 DAYS 1-CAR GARAGES, 30'X20', 1)75. WE ^ size. Cement work. Free esilmeles. Pedy-Bullt Garage Co.^OR 3-5419. 3-CAR GARAGE, SS99 ADDITIONS All Types of Remodeling Kitchen cupboards, additions, all roomsr recreation rooms, garage eiuminurrf.siding, rooting. Free ei No down payment. G & M Construction Co. ' 14 N. Saginaw FE 3-1211 ~ •RICK, BLOCK, fireplace BAL TREE TRIMMING, REMOV -I ......... ... ...' I"k« Tr« Co., Trimmirg Moor sending. FE 2-5719. Slump and Tree Removals encE AND ABILITY . SNYDER, FLOOR LAYINo|^5il“-----------------42SJ^4 -- ... - . Complete Resume To PONTIAC PRESS BOX 73 REGIStlRlD PROFESSIONAL NURSES LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES RN's, FULL TIME MINIMUM $525 PER MO. PART TIME, t2.l2 PER HR. SUPERVISING NURSE SSI3 PER MO. SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL EVENING AND NIGHT DUTY, • fl PER SHIFT Detroit I3M70I or 33A523I. SALES PERSONNEL NEEDED! Immediate placement due to our large expansion program, cam ttOO par month. Continual trahv JOHN TAYLOR, FLOOR LAYING. removed, trimming, feeding. Reas.i rates. Fully insured. 363*5307. I LEONARD'S FLOOR SERVICE Old lloors made like new 1 Floor Laying 25 yrs. experience 427 3775 Colled Reeioneble. 335O0M. 1 TREES Dave's Tree Service, removal, trimming, cabaling, land clearing, landscaping, cavity tilling. 403-079$. Janitor Service __ Trvckiiig . LIGHT HAULING OF i Lake Weed Cutting CARPENtRV AND REMODELING (professional MACHINE CUT-1 LIGHT HAULING OF ANY KIND, ___________________________ ling, raking. 474-M54 moving, trash, ate. FE 57443. CONCRETE POURED BASEMENTS----------------------- and footings, garages, breeze-ways, mi»c. Carpentry work. FE 4-6U2. CoWnetllioking * Lnndscoping MARIEN BLUE SOD. soil, send, gravel. Del. 33M201. LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING. rr£I?k FORMI- ATl-vWloWCUE-SOOTroDDr^^^^^ il^e'^,l?tr»t.2i3'lSIdl!!S"F*^ ce v«rk^E M44I. seeding end grading. No monay'-*!?!?? -V”!*--*™ »n Breeca Landscaping. FE LIGHT HAULING AND MOVING 141 or FE 53302. ass.ni^ LANDSCAPING. d bathrooms my specialty S CARPENTEr^REPAmr-NO-JOB toe^ small, free estimates^ 33$-H5d. nings^”^ ^ L YORK „E BUY WE TRADE OR 4-0343 OR 4-0304 4713 DIxIa Hwy., Drayton Plains KITCHENS. Lawn Mewing Cement Werk ANDE^^N CEMENT^ COiMPANY BLlrc"k'AND~CE"MENT WORK wanted. Licensed contreclor. FE TAIBOIT LUMBER Mr''ICf- wood pr alurr BLOCK FOOTINGS AND CEMENt! Hardwara TRUCK HAULING, LAWN, (,«-rape, basement cleaning. UL 2-5041 ^ Truck Rantnl______ Trucks to Rent ^”’t^RI?CKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks ~ Semi Trailers Pontioc Fornl and Industrial Tractor Co. 12s S. WOODWARD FE 4-0461 ^ FE 4-1. ___Open Ditty Including Sunday 1^ ^ Well Cleonm___________ Jbloomfield wall cleaners Walls cleande. Reas. Satisfaction Insured. FE PN's, FULL TIME minimum. 1332.14. PER MO. SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL EVENING AND NIGHT DUTY, $2 00 PER SHIFT. WEEKEND DIFFERENTIAL $5 00 PER WEEKEND PONTIAC GENERAL HOSPITAL I INVITES YOU TO VISIT OUR i MODERN 401 BED HOSPITAL. APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT., I SEMINOLE AT W. HURON. Pontiac Press Bex 42. Wonted Reol Estate 1 TO 50 DMES, LDTS, CELS, FAR^, ERTIES, 4 - NOW RENTING j looking beautiful 1 AND BOARD. For ratirad; f.'Rf!!**®" ■ .able. Licensed home. 'Ll "r Kind, intemgent sup-^ Pl»«- $37.500. 425044S._____________ ....... ........ BY OWNER, 2 BEDROOM, NEARi Columble, BiMwIn. $11,400, terms. OR 3-2721 Inetructiews^cheek DEARBORN SEMI-TRUCK DRIVING SCHOOL 51433 Wyendottt, Micb. learn shoe repair or ELEC- ‘-'c shaver repair. 121 W. Fourth, ELWOOD REALTY MEN NEEDED NOW $280,000,000 PAID WEEKLY FOR ACCIDENT CLAIMS 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS - HOMES WRIGHT 302 Oeklend Ave. FE 2-91 HAVE CASH BUYERS FOR FARMS Trained Claim 1 Ad^ors^tehwlt Suite S, 404 vilesl 34lh Sli Kansas City, Missouri 44 NAME -----^------------- S"ECREfARY. GENERAL OFFICE; ■ ling, go^ typist, Ihbr1-1. ired. Immediate opening.* SECRETARY HELP: Cement ond Block Work -. painting and PAPpR HANGING j THOMPSON „ mates. OR 4-1409_______________PAINTING, PAPERING, CAULKINGi FRED FRYE. FE 533t9. CEMENT raes. rites. Tom 3454440 er Roy, Contr^or, bloc^work. _ _Novi_3«j0022 _____________________ _____ PATIOS. DRIVES, GARAGE SLABS, ' QUALITY PAINTING 40c sq. ft FE 4 2174, d4ys. Reasonable 420-1470 Well Drilling Use Press Wont Ads Press Wont Ads Work STENOS - TYPISTS V^kJVa^Jtale 1-1 CARPENTER WORK ING WOMEN NEEDED _ . PROFITABLE TEMPORARY WORK - PONTIAC AREA. CALL MANPOWER—FE 2 "ECRETARY - RECEPTIONSIT wanted. Pert 3359559._______ ________________ SHORT OR'DER cook FOR EVE-nlng shift, 513 e.m., ex—--------- Rllei'i *DHve.1n^’ Or'Tt SPIEGEL'S Hes ooenlngs tor salcsl-------- neq. shopping cantor.. Somo sales experience preferred, but not nec-essory. Apply at Center 39 S. Glen-wood, Glen wood Plaza Shopping Center, Pontiac, Mich. “ SEE MR^ PARKER _ ‘ TYPISf-RECEPTIONrST Full time lor CPA offlc*. havo statistical typing--- Call Mr. Oooling af At_____ arts CPAs, Roctioator. MI-BSIA iT LARGE 1 PICKUP. I i^t$,_garagai. cl 2-5137.____________ CHIMNEYS, $3 A FOOt, ALSO l^t trucking. Call aft. ' "* CARPENTER WANTS REMOOEL-— addltkmi and rtpairt, frama imian, UL 52343.________ CHIMNEY AND FIREPLACE RE-palrs. 40550SI. LIGHT HAULING, PAINTlUd" _________Raas. 3353571___ WAITRESSES WANTED f6r 6aY shift, apply In paraon only. BkM Star Drive-ln. Corner el Opdyko ond Pontiac Rds. PATCH PLASTERING, ALL KINDS. H. Meyers. OR 5134).____ YOUNG MAN DESIRES WORK OF any kind - FE 51KB._________ Work WaaHd Feili 12 1 DAY IRONine SERVICE. REP. --------------- ft 51471. iiEoSiRSr Crofdof ■ wAmYeoT wtarftt- -1. FE 57311. Dally 'til I MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE BEDROOM, CLOSE TO WATEI ford-Drayton-l-7S area. Must L. raaaonable. Reply to Pontiac Prau . ., - , ***.,.^^ ^_,^®!BY owner, 7-ro6m home, must WAITING FOR THAT NEW HOUSE?! TOnt!"mlMd arME*773m'.' Cfflv ^II.c“*lViI': ICLARKSTON-ARTaT3"“BEDROOM ; _ig....g.Hign.and%d. f„T^ise«.ri Sn^c^rilfk Rtnt Store* 441 v.rd cover.d ALL CASH 10 MINUTES fan II behind In paymanti or i tr teraclosure. Agant. S37-4400. ____Appleland. MA 57041._______ DOWNTOWN LOCATION, l$x40'7 East Lawrence oornar Parry. Jot Laa, FE 50421. Rent Office Space CASH 1200 SQUARE FEET OF OFFICE ---e in nawly ramodtlad bulM- Alr condltkmad, ample park- I Pontiac. I Roy O'Neil, Realtor 3530 Pontiac Lk. d. ---- gM » Root Basiaen Property 47-A STORE BUILDING AT 33 BALD-wln with living quarters i' large parking lot. Sat Mr. LOTS-WANTED IN PONTlAC Immediate doting. REAL VALUE REALTY, 4250577.___ MAN WITH $15,000 IS LOOKING FOR A HOME IN THE WATERFORD AREA, CALL HIS AGENT, York, OR 44*343. NEWLY MARRIED COUPLE NEED STARTER HOME, PONTIAC AREA. SIJOO DOWN. GOOD CREDIT. CALL THEIR AGENT AT 474-149$, York RIty.______ RETIREE WANTS 3 BEDROOM WITH LARGE LOT. CLARKSTON AREA, ALL CASH. CALL HIS AGENT AT 4751449, York RIty. FOR YOUR*'eOOIT^ VA, FHA, OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION C^L NOW. HAOJTROM REALTOR, OR 4-0350 OR EVENINGS WANTED 3 BEDROOM WITH BASEMENT NEAR DRAYTON PLAINS. S2,50B DOWN MLL BUYERS AGENT ANYTIME, 4751449, York ROalty properly. Call ut tor a ai^r7y LMe'. Immediate Possession IS, living room 2 bedroom. Aluminum siding, oom with firai Glossed front porch. Full base mopt. New gas fumeco. Good Koo-go location. JACK LOVELAND 2100 Cass Lake Rd. M2-1M5_ _ _ IN OXFORD LAKE AR^A Just completed 3 bedroom brick ranch style home with full basement, attached 2-cer gerige, lot privileges. $2$,750. C. A. WEBSTER, REALTOR BOOTH IN WELL ESTABLISHED west side beauty - "■ 57434. ZONE M-t WATERFORD, LOT ZOOx-400; Bktg. 40x91. Imm - ■ satalon. 1300 Crttcant Good laasa, i FE 57079. ;42$-25IS 492-2291 ;n?rsed“;^t‘’ bidr'iin°i'!ik* ■ "pplng r— - “■‘•n —• I lof. 1 FE 57141 EvES. FE 3-7302 CHOICE LOCATION In Ottawa Hills - large 3 bedroom bungalow, dost to bus end schools. Owner transferred. F u I price only 114,500. Savo doling cost, assume present owners lend , 3 AND 4 BEDROOMS, SOME with option to buy. Aik ' our no devm poymont plan, up Hat at Art Danlato Really. 31000 Ford. Garden City. GA l-TItO 3-BEDROOM RANCH CLARKSTON CROWDED irt room? A thorp ) b YORK WE BUY WE TRADE » 44*343 OR 503 4713 Dixit Hwy.. Drayton Plains “DISTINCTIVE ROSS HOMES Panoramic View ' Eagit Lake from tti LAZENBY WATERFORD TWP. 3 bedroom brkk and frama home, large carpeted living room, 20x14’ ^mlly room. This home Is only 7/7 years old ond 15 In excellent attached garage. ROY LAZENBY, Reoltor 4393 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-0301 Multiple Listing, Service A. Johnson & Son, Realtors 1704 S. Telegroph FE 4 2533 iake.'s,______ •emily room, bri (lining poKh i overlookTng lake, pancy. S31,990. 10% Down or Conventionol We Take House Trades I LAKELAND ESTATES (U mile N. of Walton BlVd. Off DIxIa Highway) FE^^591__________OR 3-8021 E. E. SHINN, REALTOR YORK iXPANDINO COMPANY NEEDS PROPERTY NOW IN DRAYTON PLAINS, WATERFOOO, AND SURROUNDING AREAS. PROMPT, NO OBLIGATION APPRAISERS. WE BUY OUTRIGHT, NO FEES, WAITING. FOR FURTHER ---“F OUR UNlOr- SALES OR 4^363 Wliiom. MA 53S55. YORK WE BUY WE trade 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayten Plains Mixed Neighborhood MODEL OPEN AFTERNOONS 1-S AND SUNDAY WESTOWN REALTY MERCURY CONTROL HA6STR0M, Reoltor multiple listing service >00 W. Huron OR 3^ Evet. 4H-e43S SPECIAL 'US — — r»S5?tftJ2S8 tfwfiy wwwTm %a 0«lllnd Avt. ft »MH Model « tatiu, f»n I -..." Mding, larg* g arta. attactiad I car Si >ii howa ^ ba bum on ^ LX.>*Jr.^v*iZ,n GLENN M. WARD NEW BRICK RANCH ON 3 AND % acras. All largo roeim, cargating, basamant wHti firaplaca, bulK-lna, ovartizad garaga. Sacrifica g3t,or* City anU Country Raalty, 3354511, $17,S LAKE PRIVILEGEL ONLY $100 DOWN LOW AS tm A MONTH Includos taxaa and Iniurance Taka Commarca Rd. to S. Can merca, laft to Glaimry, (2 mllaa). FAMILY TAILORED HOMES OPEN NEW MODEL SAT. B SUN. 24 MON. THRU FRI. 3-7 Anytlmo by apgolntmant WEST WIND MANOR 1340 S. WILLIAMS LK. RO. NEAR UNION LAKE VILLAGE BRICK WITH ALUM. FAMILY ROOM 3 BEDROOMS IW BATHS 2 CAR ATTACHED GARAGE $17,400 SEE PLANS FOR OTHER MODELS STARTING AT S12.M0. WILL BUILD ON YOUR LOT OR OURS J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 3$3-$404 10735 Highland Rd. S YORK WE BUY WE TRADI OR 44US3 OR A03« 4713 DUIa Hwy., Drayton Plalni Personalized Homes By Palmer Are Now Reody In Jayno Heights Open every night 4 to 8 p.m. 2 Custom Homes reody for immediate occupancy. Colonial or Ranch Both carpeted and landscaped. Large Lake Privilege Lots Located between Silver, Loon and School House Lakes FE 8-2209 SHARP HOME ON NORTH SIDE, 3 bedrooms with finished basement for bedroom or recreation room, new carpet, gas forced air furnace, paved drive, fenced lot nicely landscaped. Cast) to 5 per —It mortgage. 33S-S470. SPECIAL This 3 bedroom hon easy walking distanca Has bean recently _________________ . Oak floors, gas heat, •------m, full price - escept for furnaces. Only $12,000 lor both, to close estate. ICt-L. TEMPLETON, REALTOR J33» Orrtard Lake Rd. U2-0900' WATERFORD I A neat and clean 2 bedroom house WILLI; “'sIS'Ser YORK i:- rayt^ PI WE BUY 4713 Dixie Hwv., Dn Waterford 4-BEDROOM BRICK RANCH Exc. location In Waterlord Two Largejo'xiy carpeted IMi? |. Full price, 02A7S0. Term! trade.' “ UNION LAKE AREA 3-bedroom brick ronch. Large ner lot. Carpeted living room. 2 baths. Attadiad garage. Loci Un|pn_Lrto village - Frh S21,0M BASEMENT AND LOT 30'x40' besemonl on comer K. Crescont Loto Estates. Lake prlvl- legos. Sacrifload i WATERFORD REALTY Bnfson, Raaltor , OR H273 10 Dixie Hwy. Van------ TAYLOR “WE TRADE" 5 Bedrooms 2i Baths Ml Nmm MONDAY, J0iY I8a iflW ■ V \V W ' D— 441 REAL. iSTAH WEST SUBURBAN - ■Stawwiad hi mo DRAYTON WOODS - FIng 3 bl —FSlTbBi t. 2 cargaragarSniv OtOAOO. O^R 1 ACRE.- High n elIzabeth lake Tharmaeana pl^r dIant fioer beat, for^t nt,^wtti Warden Realty FE 5-8183 t. About SN0.00 on FHA terms. WEST SUBURBAN Throe - bedroom bungolow. Living room. Kitchen end dining aroo. Utility. Automatic HA hoot. Vacant. PONTIAC MALL AREA KENT Floyd Ksiit InCf, Raoltor 2001 .Olxto .^wy. j|j^*R** CLARK but^ion t 0 WESTSIDE W Stito Street, Ml Nmmii KINZLER t booPmant aat. ib^ LAKE FRONT paflf^l 3 badrtom ra in Watortord. Walk-oirt tgcraatlen roam. Gat Iw >ir wtda tot to sand baa<--- tg^wwilaii, SIOAOO on land contract ^OUSE OF PLENTY lo Bits nawar bri** *~f cheery ro l-lns, m l_. _ room. Cloao to sand ' right lor ontorloln- r BUSiNEsTcORNER On main road, 300x300 (o acreiL Aloe gonad rnumplo Ing. OOidS hootpd and win HAROLD R. FRANKS. RtoHy COTTAGE TO ROLAX . Il$0Sdyytond|ggt^. SiSSs’irtlSTfSKT'ij^, KVsetioSlf*only'oftjoo.' No elS !3'.£8i*'.t*JSrSr'W. Evarett Cummings, Reoltor UNION LAKE ROAD IBM 3-3300______;______303-7101 ^ ijW^jW -rWpjifWy KAMPSEN JOHN KINZLER, Realtor S2I7 Dixie Hwy. 474-223S Across from Packers Store Multiple Listing Service NEAR FISHER PLANT. Viceni, 2 bedroom bungolow, large rooms, lull basement, nice lot, brick tireploco, hardwood floors, plastered walls, only SI1,M0. Terms. CLARK REAL ESTATE TO BUY, SELL B TRADE 1342 W. Huron. FE 3-7000 or FE S-3000 - FE 5-5144 Multipio Listing Sorvice SCHRAM Northern High Area basement. Gtrai •sSf Evet. call MR. ALTON EE Iving on'V- Autcinatic HA 3-Bedroom Brick Large living This levely I 0 tq. ft. of II 3 Bedroom Ranc^h IRWIN 53 E. PRINCETON. kltctSm**Iin8*°bi floor. Nr - of cupboard tpaca, dining panaled family ream with .... place, 2-car attachad gorago In-cludas over Vb-acro at land — J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY Root Etlato—Building—Inturonce ............ IMM) OR $41 2 Htohlar Evan John K. Irwin List With Schram and Call the Van I JOSLYN________ FE 54471, meler AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR WEST SUBURBAN BRICK Ronch. VON ’ogo. Anchor toncad yard. I do but move In. tOMO if?. Brown r tlOO a month b and 120 FT. ON LONG LAKE BEAUTIFUL BUILDING SITE ... ---------Yt ttoltly CUSTOM BUILDERS. Wo Will I ' ' distinctively dotlijm^i ..... ............•%'S „ *-b'b th ' mo^7 11*%!'^' Ino colored fixtures, ceramic till and o built techad goro|0, otj. Les lirown. Realtor 5W Elizabeth Lake Rd. (Across from the Mall) __ FE 2-4$)$ or FE 4-35*4 IRWIN dining r n haoT. I BRICK CAPE COD. Dream settlng| Beautiful maple trees shade this 40x150 lot. City water and sewc' Full price $I0,M0 with $2450 daw GI-NOTHING DOWN Crescent Lake Privileges 3-bcdroom ronch — overlooking Croscant Lake. 2 Fireplacps. Full basement. Ctment black construc--ttacMod gore— VON REALTY GEORGE VONDERHARR, Realtor n the Mall MLS Room 1.. I* buay, $12-5000 GLES It. Housa has 3 bedrooms, I, gas hoot In both r " a living quarters hi If desired. Mora has $10,000. Terms. WEST MANSFIELD - RANCH $2000 dc YORK WE TRADE OR 4-0343 ., Drayton Plains S. E. SIDE 2 bedriMm bungolow with full basement. Cm be bought on Gl with no money down. Just pay the mortgage coats. Monthly payments lest then rent. 3 BEDROOMS Is the arrangement. Newly painted :e only $5,500. GILES REALTY CO. Baldwin Ave. FE .... MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE jVal-U-Way NEAR LINCOLN JR. HIGH t full b Gleaming ^ H Gat heat. Largo $450 down and $ko per monr WYOMING ST. y of tho A wm, full batmf., 2 lets. I urnoce. Large bedrooms. . > on land contract. FE 2-0262 '. HURON OPEN ♦ T( EQUITY TRADE Let US build YOUR new horns on YOUR lot or oursi! Wb have exciting models to show YOU NEARING COMPLETION srisy'pSHkss.'Sttd.' itHi> Atiim " ■ n SH'JM DUCK LAKB FRONT — 75x300' - ELIZABETH SHORES - BUSINESSMEN WANTED Full I MS MO Or a*^r» FURNISHED MODEL TWO CHOICE BUILDING STTEs' Golfing, li? tf ■ s2'vdi are rttalhto to Awaiting your Inspection It thls| containing 1'/i and 2 acres. One '-•'’ll* dS tor T timo with 4'A S’ " ronolwr with ‘onkart with frjfitag. on Cass Lake (Dow D Mvina rocNTL. ilatw fciVGr. ali for-1 Rldoai anri «Ka mkgp am dih*____ . es. CallTand n explain how to aavt you money. EAST SIDE I Victory Drive, off Mt. Clement, inch with natemem, got heat, I__________ beck yard, walking distance to Ido school, $1500 down and tr oxlstlng mortgogo at 3M $2000 DOWN OR TRADE On land contract. 2 tomlly Income located near Walton and Bar^ leparata entrances. $f7 par moni Full basamant, 2 car garage. McCullough realty 5440 Highland Rd. (M57) .. to .1 q ----------------------------------------DON WHITE INC. . room, elate foyer, ell tor- Ridge) and tha other on Pint mica kitchen with indirect light-1' Lake. Inq, dining area, baaMtItully ban-' td lamliy room with Georgia LESLIE R. TRIPP Sg|g formS time. Work diroctly » . _ _ Michigan's'oldest corporations. No selling. Secured merchandise Investment of SjSOO. Training furnished. For personal Interview with Company Executive, write Presl- NORTHERN HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT Michigan ARRO CASH FOR EQUITY-LAND CONTRACT locatod In vary nka neighbor hood. 514,300, Gl terms. BALb EAGLE. INCOME ( LAKE. Enloy tha lake f Ing your rentors make mcnts. Ploitored walls _...... plastered walls, 3)13.7)15 n.„ ™.„ wnn^bfaulnhli MO^DERn7hoME“ONY new carpet In downstairs, priced cottage. 54,350. 625-2375 •* *'‘'**- . :$o,'i Proptrty SALESPERSON WANTED pontiac - clarkston to round out staff ... It you land area, 50'xl50' lot, r are qualitied and are Interested clear or wooded. 5955, I call Leo or Augia Kampsen lor! Bloch Bros., OR 3-129) a full time position. 4-4509. Suburban Propbrty ■33, PLUS Multiple Listing S4 Springfield Twp. gently rolling le 52" HIGH- ... new kitchens !. Terms. Dodge d . ... and 1963 Ford 350 pickup, ellh'^y'iVr'MlalM”; s. Inquire at 6060 Sterling I, Sterling, Mich, or Kralt _Mij^k plan), PInconnIng Michigan LIQUOR BTr“ Located at Intersection of 2 main h^hways in Oakland County, r n Street FE 4492)! ™es 1495 Sq. FI. of living area In this Clarkston located rench home ottering 4 bedroomt, basement, 1'b baths, I'/b car attachad ga-raoe, partly fenced yard, on )$7'x193' corner lot. Owners moving out of state sale. Call for ar Annett Inc., Realtors E. Huron SI. 330-0466 Open Evenings A Sundays 1 ' beautifully _____ lake privilagas $ak BuiiuBii Property 57 Lots—AcrM|^ 4 ACRES, 14 MILES WEST OF PON- t .,c..i.n.,GINGELLVILLE lal. Storms' bungalow on approx. I 14 VACANT LOTS ir Longfellow school. Will I land contract, house or building In Ihriv-• MV luwii riviin of PontlbC — dOWO-town locttion on corner of Mein St. - brick construction, full basa- Warden Realty • _________________ 333-7157 MOBILE CONCESSION UNIT. S1.5M. Includes i ' ' popcorn, cotton i 3-S957 ro 797-4742. Partridge "IS TME BIRD TO SEE" DORRIS Ted McCullough Sr., Realtor! PHONE 682-2211 I excellent homes. < of our courtcei show you through. ‘i'iSSoS BREWER REAL ESTATE 724 RIker Bldg.______FE 4-5111 57 ACRES "BUZZ" I s),BATEMAN; WE HAVE SE >, carpeted II 2 bedroom dormitory No 27 'taseSS^t four bedrooms tloar, solid cement drive THREE BATHS in a I garaga. $is,sgp. i'»ltl’ 2 cer garage, b................. p.tr. nice Jor large tamily deslr-l "quality-type home.'’ Maln-imlly room, screened porch i RESIDENTIAL SITES. CALL OUR OFFICE AND LET OUR SALES PEOPLE EXPLAIN THEM TO YOU. E MARCH OF TIMES" INCOM^ MINDED? Then Investigate>'no this very nice 4 family apartment house situated on a " -150x255 located In thi area. Never vacant. Times Realty own utilities. BIG SHADED PATIO. 9x15 I num ewnino makes this an you can anloy every hour o day with this cemant block tage with oak lloort on agi I. 19,900 with 1450 (i WOODLAND BEAUTY. Rttira 5 spacious garage. $1,500. DORRIS A SON, REALTORS 536 Dixie Hwy. 67643 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 291 W. Walton FE 3-70031 home. Tiled I V Gas h< O'NEL TRADES lovely 3-badroom brick rench, here's hall tralfic patltrn with tha kitchen li Lake. Natural fireplace, wall-lo-wall Full price t: EVER CONSIDERED m given the beautifully r retirement « s but relected tl ng for. This gorgeous Bedtofd Limestone rancher needs no outside meintenence ever. Inside Is e bpecious living M •,» gorgeous adlolning bedroom, levishly carpeted, the win's ell draped to match. Tile bath. Hot water base ray heat. Two-attached, heeled garage, each with Its own electric doer opener, utiful park-like lawn and trees. Full price 011,900 end we'll trade, or down. #122 INCOME 2-famlly Income, north side. Both ipts. furnished. Fi gas heat. Corntr tot. closa to St. MIka'a. Shesrlng a gi tha Inveatment. 11X950. CASS LAKE AREA Baautlful ytar-raund log cabin homa near Ctta Laka and boat privllegtt. Lovely large carpeted living raoe burning fireplace. Beth bedrooms rIcMy cerptitod, summer porch. Good value et 011.500 with C---------" ..........down peytoent or equitv li MODELS' YOUR CHOICE - RANCH, COLONIAL' or TRI-LEVEL _______ $16,150, plus lot______________ Drivi out M59 (Huron St.) to Airport Rood turn right V/t milss to Modtls. OPEN DAILY 2 to 6 - OPEN SUN. 2 to 8 RAY O'NEIL, REALTOR 3520 PONTIAC LAKE RD. OR 4-2222 MLS OPEN 9 TO 9 EE 4-8576 NEAR BALDWIN let, clean 2 bedroom home. Easy ■Iking distance to Fisher Bo-" Ik floors. Gas furnace. Deep th j4t'l»e$ENT HOWfe OR MUITY ON THIS SOLID 3 mmSom brick west side HO MB. MICEO AT SIS.MO. Wha( h»v# you R>.......... (or Mr. Cltrk, Cloi- -- — tile, PE S-TMS, Rnidenct FE 5 AMIl___________■ Tennessee walker Salt Clothing 64 BARGAIN BOX S Woodward, Birmingham St South of station) w«*ks of Summer ciearan LARGE WiNDOW FAN, Lil 333-M33.______________________ LATE MODEL KiRBV VACUUM cieaner. S59.50. Curt'a --------- MAYTAG WRINGER WASHER - Solo Hwitliald Satdt 65 W WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY $277 THREE ROOM OUTFIT BRAND NEW FURNITURE 74>IECE LIVINO ROOM y-PIECE BEDROOM APIECE DINETTE REPOSSESSED STEREO. S3 PER LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE Ml Baldwin it Waltan. FE I4S42 Pint Trafnc light aoulh of I-7S Acw n* Prw* Parirlivi REPOSSESSED COLORED TELE-vision. SS.2J iMf wtok. GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE Pont lot I BEDROOM SiT 14a 20" STOVE 135, rofrlgiirstor S25, dinatto, *'* Couch m chair SIS, drop ROUND COFFEE TABLE norspring rollaway, „ lamp, tour chain, (plattic), bar i mapla rockar, desk, gas i dressing table. FE .A4WA 1-2V G. E. TV, BLOND CABINET model, pise Slhrsrtone HI-FI AM-FM. Radio combtaatlon bhmd caUnel style, SSO each blond tiepand table, 1 floor lamp, all modem and excellent. Call 573-yS53 after 4 p.m. SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC ZIg lag sewing machine — In modem walnut cabinet — makes i designs, appliques, buttonholes, efr ’ Repossessed. Pay off 354 cash S4 PER MO. payments. UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4^905 1 BIG SALE. USED BARGAINS Utad^wash^ stovea, raW^a^ chests and metal cabinets. Bargain -- ---JOE' il Baldwin at Walton, FE 3aS42, TV SET, S35. REFRIGERATOR, S35. gas stove, S3S, etactrk stove, S35. Harris. _________' WARRANTY ELECTRIC DRYER, 140. Auto, Washer 320.-- 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNITURE 3-ROOM OUTFITS $27B (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly $478 (Best) $4.00 Weekly NEW LIVINO ROOM BARGAINS •----"----------- NvIng room ■ulte, two ste WASHER 325. GAS STOVE, 335. RE- ---tor with top trei— "* S35. TV, 335. Elec Harris. FE A2744. WASHER-DRYER COMBINATION. Repossessed. S3.75 per week. GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE tar Silt. 31JS woskly. PEARSON'S FURNITURE ftO E. Fke FE ATItl Between Paddock and City t— Open then, and Frt. 'tli a p. 1 PAYMENTS OF S12Jt TAKES 9x12 Linoleum Rugs . $3.69 Celling tile TWc “ Vinyl Asbestos tile ....... 7c Inlaid tile *xT‘ 4c Fleer Shop - '4255 Ellubeth Lai “Across From the Moll' 30" PHILCO RANGE Phlko Refrigerator Kenmora 40" alec, range 40" STOVE - DOUBLE OVEN, Deluxe Frigidaire — electric 474-23M- )M4 HOOVER PORTABLE SPRING- 4 USED FURNITURE, STONEY'I ..rking . _____________>. FE 5-2746. _____ AUTOMATIC WASHER ■ KENMORE AUTOMATIC ely walnut csbinel. _ ind sew hems, buttonholes, isting, etc. lO-year guarantee •ssons. Must callecf balance 35.33 monthly, ler, RICHMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER, 335-t2»3. BEDROOM SUIT, CHEST OF drawers, dressers, breakfast set, 2 refrigerator hold articles. 4t3-27a2.____________ BEDROOM SUITE, $45. OFFICE desk, S15. Steam table, $35. Bed and draiser, $2t. Dresser, $20. Chest df drawers, $12. 30" gas range, $3t. Elec. Rad^, $15. Refrigerator, $15. Smith Moving * BED, DRESSER, JBOX SPRING mattress, $40. O^sional cha $5. 2 single headboards. 473-5777. Bookcase bed, spring At ris. FE 5-2744. complete, $41.50 and up. cumlture, 210 E. Pika. HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL to A month buys 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consists of: piece living room outfit With Bpiece living room suite, 2 step tabk cocktail table, 2 table lamps (1) rxir rug Included. ad at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. E. HURON PE 5-1501 W. PIKE _____________FE 2-2150 E C T R I C STOVE, ir repairs, $40. FE 4 range, like $3,4»,_, up. Pearson's Furniture, 210 E. Pike Stw FE 47001. NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC Responsible Party «7|fw/sda ^ M "BIR^ VINYL SIpINO h one at the moaO eawiiier oMI Rma resialantmaterleta ador erg- SSuid 'Mt**a"*LiS^£‘*Ce!em wan'l fdde. Guoranlasd by "Bird" - ddslHy ainca 1701. Ilmeograidi __________ _________ 0. OenerJl elecy-ic portable color TV, $175. Admiral 13" portabla TV, black and white, $7T. 3-M tier, used, $5. Polaroid 104, with' flash, $55. Bov's 3-speed 14" bike, used, $15. FE $4479.________________________ VANITY LAVATORY, COM- for $43.43 cosh or $4.43 ntonthly. 10 year guaranloe with free Ipa sons. Will accept trade In. Call credit department at 343-1421, CERTIFIED SEWING CENTER. I I DIN'S' MOWER, 22" WHEEL boM, good condition. FE 4-7417. SCREENS f6r a 20'XIO''PORCH ________.7 402-45*4__________ SEARS w)nDOW air CONOITION- Uif: .............. RIDING M( It t^bar a A4ALL AIR COMPRESSOR. 110 Volt, SOS. Under coating equipment, no. Coke machine, $20 OR 3-5200. SPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK S^ly.---------------- - SPECIAL: CONCRETE STEPS, SEC- , Netlonal dou- ’ COMMERCIAL 3-SECTlON TOP open cooler case. Reasonable tor sale. 332-4572 or 474-2004. s. $125. 405-2273 after 5. H« m^t el. $00, $2 dn., $2 virk. FRETTER'S WAREHOUSE OUTLET LL BRONZE SUMP PUMPS, SOLO repaired, exchM^^ ranted. I W. Sheffield FE Lakeward Lane FE 2r»344. APARTMENT SIZE PIANO, $75. Mapla dining room sal with 4 chairs, $45. Professional APARTMENT SIZE ELECTRIC . Telephor- s. 'oothlng ladles. 2435 RICNIC TABLIB, FIVI BinnL iSR-SSSr iS . 2470 Orchaid I T.ALB0TT LUMBER $4.75 gal. No. 740, $5.50 gal. By Kite C AGE TRAVELER ^ SEE THE MODEL 20 QUEEN OF THE HIGHWAY fith Us Mlorlar paneling aO, ALCOt ALUMINUM NOW ON DISPLAY AT JOHNSON'S VACATION TRAVEL TRAILERS 517 E. WALTON l ■E 4-H53 or ^ FE »Pll10 APACHE CAMP TRAILERS Factory Demonstrator, never « ------ S3S7. Dpen d- anday 10 ajn. to CDlLeR, ApscM ------r, imila RED SHIELD STORE 110 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to---- Clothing, Fum “If you really want to break up your friendship with her, there’s nothing like a double date ” ? /wHan Sand-Grml^Irt__________76 - 300 YARDS OF CLEAN SAND FRRE for hauling. North east section of Pontiac. FE 54405 or UL 2-2S13 CHESTNUt GELDING, $175, chines. Offset printing presi, uv-, pileator, etc. Forbes Printing and OUlce Supply, 4500 Dixie, Drayton Attention WASHED WIPING RAGS, 17 CENT ' 25 lb. boxes to 300 lb. bales. Blvd. Supply 500 S. Blvd. E. FE 3-7081 RESORT AND YARDMAN 18" REEL MOWER, 850. Simnwns Beauty Rest mattress and box springs, $70. 425-2871. COTTAGE OWNERS WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS AT discount prices. Forbes Printing and Office Supplies, 4500 Dixie HWY. OR 3-7747. YOUR WELDWOOD Now you can clear out weed j Infested lakes, quickly with Jarl Underwater Weed Atower and Weed Rake. Cuts weeds from water! levH, down^tb 42" depth and cuts « SAFE AND SIMPLE OPERATION ONLY $375 COMPLETE EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 4507 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston 425-1711__________ (no motor) $3.00. 474-2304. BEAUTIFUL LIFETIME COUCH ■ Chair. FE 4-7117._________________ WANTED TO BUY Leaded glass lamps or loi glass lamp shades. FE 44074. WYMAN' USED BARGAIN STORE At Our 10 W. Pike Store Only — tables and lamps . . From $. ._ Occasional chairs ..... From $5.75 Walnut dresser with mirror $24.75 . living room suite ....S27.7S size gat stove .........$37.75 _ alec, range . .......S37.75 Guar. elec, refrigerator --------- EASY TERMS S M150 lALNUT SECRETARY. Y-KNOT Antiques. 10345 Oakhlll, Holly. Hi-Fi, TV & Radios 5 YARD DUMP TRUCK. ,J.OW BOY trailer. TD 4 dozer. Combination. Also Dodge tractor. Good condl-tlon. OR 4-0534.___________________ Bottle Gas Installation Two too pound cylinderi and equipment. Prompt and courteous service. Call Grait Plaint Gat Co.. LATE MODEL GRAVEL TRAIN, carries 54 tons; GMC 14-tpeed VS Diesel) 2 -— "— ——' CAM OPERATED Zlg-zagger with Singer In Ca Makes buttonholes, designs .... all practical tewing. Must tacrUIca for S34J4 cash or payments of $4.45 monthly accepted. 5-year guarantee and lessons Included. Call credit manager at 335-72S3. RICHMAN BROS. SEWING CEN- CAST IRON SOIL required to asa $5.t5. Double sta $24.75. G. L MET-t. Good } LEAD CHAIN SAW, $145; ADDING AkA- CLOSING OUT 744 portable TV and ste: models. GE, RCA, and 4 COMPLETE BED OR SPRINGS AND mattress, Flourescent lamp t?iy.— ............. r piano. FE 4-WU, o tools, FE 5-4823.__________ DIVING BOARDS 8'-10'-12' AND 14' FACTORY DEFECTS Vi prices 21-INCH USED TV d 3 speed phonographs . $4.75 ton TV FE 2-M» Open 7-7 Tjl Pool Supply Co. 515 E. Walton, c 1745 SYLVANIA STEREO PHONO,I 7442. FOR DUSTY CONCRETE FLOORS Bolce Builders S COLOR TV BARGAINS, LITTLE Joe's Bargain House, FE 2-4$42. RCA COLORED TV DELUXE. 33141414_________ RECORD PLAYER NEEDLES HARO TO FIND? SEE US - WE HAVE MOST ALL KINDS. . JOHNSON TV — FE 1-4547 45 E. WALTON NEAR BALDWIN. USED TV'S For Salo Miscollantovi 67 k OFF ON ANY HEATING JOB. or at least 10 per cant. Reason; operating from home with little expense. Am licensed with over 30 years experience. A.B.C. Htg. Call early A.M. or eves. 402-5423. /i OFF ON ALL FLOOR MODEL gas furnaces. You or we Install. City and state^llcensed._^ Also con- LIGHT WOOD 4 YEAR CRIB, WITH Can't Wet Mattress. FE 5-4370. A R G E 30" ATTIC FAN, CC plete with outside louvers < celling grills. FE 4-0218.____ AAATERNITY CLOTHES SIZE • • Also 1758 Pontiac. I LIAMS LAKE RD. 474-2411 OR 482-5574._________________. CARLOAD OF GAS FURNACES — CLOSING OUT 744 portable TV and stereo | models. GE, RCa, and Mo- aral 100,000 BTU d registers Ctialr. Fi »47S4; •M. 434^. (Plus S( price ol tion whi or more hot a.. " in call PONTIAC HEATING CO; (State Licensed) .m N. WILLIAMS LAKE RL. 474-2411_____________________rt^5574 PLASTIC PIPE, J344 PER 100'. ' plastic pipe, 85.44 per —' (■" Plastic pipe. 88,51 pet ____ r 100'. SKtar'' " FREE “ 1,000 GALLON OIL TANK GUN-TYPE OIL BURNER GENTLE OR SPIRITED HORSES _____ ule. Double (D) Ranch. 4780 teas to- Barth, tonville Rd. 473-7457.____I talned HORSEBACK RIDING EVERY DAY|1745 14' Tawas Brave Id and gravel. OR 3-5730. FILL SAND loading daily, 7 to 5 ...... — free dump for clean dirt. Brooks Road, 14 ■' Road. EL Hay-SralB-FeBd 84 12 ACRES OF STANDING HAY. GOOD RICH TOP SOIL AND Bl dUt. Del. FE 4d581.__________ M&D trucking. SAND, ORAVEU dirt. 473-21« or 47G4404.__ PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SU ply. Sand, gravel, fill dirt. ( BAILED HAY IN FIELD SATUR-dsy and Monday. 20 cents, 30 cants and 35 cent bales. 2422 able. Phone 48M540. Ptto-HHRtiiig Dogs HAY FDR SALE IN FIELD . ______________FE 40441 TDP QUALITY HAY, CRIMPED. —It and saoend oitUng. Direct n the field. Will deliver. A"— , 2414 34 Mile Rd. 752-3142. 1-A POODLE CLIPPING, I up. 840 Sarasota. FE M547. I-A, AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPS, STUD service. lAAATODDS, 332-7137. 2 WHITE MALE TOY POODLE pups. $-' ■ —• female, yr. m ' OR > 2 TOY POODLES, NO PAPERS, 135 each. 1 reg., $40. 425-2507. -1 DACHSHUND PUPS, $10 DOWN. AKC-Terms. JAHEIMS, FE 8-2538. American Stone. AKC TOY POODLES, MUST SELL. ‘ cui -ix-i-sns 70 AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, ....U ..Kl. ■ tTX anrf im 5 MM BOLEX, 3 LENS TURRET, $225. 14 MM DeVry $50. 14 MM sound prolector $50. Pontiac Laka Motel 8230 Highland Rd. (M57). „ ,AKC POODLE PUP, ALSO AMERI-1, EKO ELECTRIC GUITAR AND ^ case, 1 Sound Amollller with re-1 ------------------------- verb. unit, never t 3 PIECE SET OF ROGERS DRUMS AKC REGISTERED GERM plus cymbal. 482-0780. aW. 5 p.m. “-'V —" •— • ( BEAUTIFUL UPRIGHT, RE-styled, new keys, delivered, 4 mos. guarantee. 8^. Call 338-0108. i BEAUTIFUL GIFT FOR SOME-one dear, Hammond Chord organ, alternate base. 482-3044. BABY GRAND PIANO Beautiful Antiqued Green anc --- --- Delivered MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. Across from Tel-Huron ____________FE 2-0547___________ BALDWIN ORGAN, 2 MANUAL-------- . ---- -------V. 427-38T AKC DACHSHUND PUPS, TERMS, champion stud serylce. ESTEL-HEiyS PET SHOPV 55'WILLIAMS, FE 4-4433. Turtle Doves, and supplies. ALASKAN MALAMUTE PUPPIES.^ 473-4714. 2443 Frembes, Drayton COME AND SEE THE NEW gan. Still have a tew demos '“jacT'hagan music 447 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 332-0500 EXPERT PIANO MOVING PIANOS WANTED Service EM 3-7828 $247. GRAND PIANO. REAL NICE, upright pianos $40-875, Smlth Moving Co. 371 FE 4-4844. .. CASE, ENRICO BOSELLt AC-cordlon, 130 bass. $150. Mayfair tape recorder, $50. Bott ‘ 474-0215._________________ USED Spinet piano Baldwin Consola save Lowery organ USED — 2 manual organ Gallagher's Music 1710 So. Telegraph South ol Orchard Lake Rd. Lots of Parking FE 44)544 Open Oves. 'till 7 COLLIE PUPPIES, REASONABLE. ------ at 163 W. SheUleld FE 2-8842 COON HOUND PUPS, 10 MONTHS Ready to start training. $25 tlf'eliMz^ "" I T T E N S, SAND BOX ________call 334-5477 aWer 5-__ GERMAN SHORTHAIR, ^LE, 10 YEAR OLD REGISTERED MOR-gan gelding, trained Western, 8400. 2 year old reg. mare, brood mare ^oapect, $700. 2020 Noble Rd., Ox- li liiwii lYdiyi ' cAm^erI'aluminum CAMPING SITES res, private lake, saf n facilities, McFeely 115, Ortonville. DISCOUNTED ew and used campers and tri FAMILY CAMPERS, INC. -----Ixle Hwy., p--"- 332^ 8'X30' ROYAL COACH, EXCELLENT. 127 W. Fairmount. yX47', 2 BEDROOAA, ‘ SV DETROITER. AL aluminum and Glass cabana. ' by 24'. For sale real. MY 2-3151, 1743 TROTWOOD 14 FOOT, Fun in the Sun We have a fresh supply of Apache Campers priced to sell. Buffalo Mesa, ful Apache Eagle . Apache Raven . ________ . YEAR BLACK! mare, 14 hands, lumps, $325. | Sharp 1757 Ford pick-up. Equipped OR** 3-8757 0? 777*-4742!”'^“* , _____ ______ $1275 Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie IF YOU ARE A CAMPER COME SEE THE LIVING END AT EVAN'S EQUIPMENT FOR ONLY $245 4507 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston CHERRIES - Picked or pick Bring containers for pick your own. Oakland Orchards. 2205 East Commerce Road ba- SWEETGORN TOMATOES Lettuce, 19c Large Head CALIFORNIA Long white potatoes 10 lbs. 59c WE HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF FRESH FARM PRODUCE THOMPSON'S Garcien Lanci weT^I 11 hole grain drill, John Deere plows. UL_________ HUDSDN'S SPRAYER, 2 CYLINDER, “■ pressure, ' on trailer, el tank, and gun. PE 5-5774. JOHtI DEERE 1^A COMBINE WITH —•or. Good condition. 338-4375. . 44 PTO BALER, USED FARMALL N many other* KING BROS. LBS Plastics at 3345 Auburn Rd. UL 2-3478 or 451-3357 anytime MAKE YOUR CHOICE OF; Streamlines-KenskiHs Franklins-Fans-Crees and Monitors Campmate Truck Campers Franklin Truck Campers Good Used Travel Trailers From $875 to $1275 Sleep up to 4 people WlBjhBjdS., WtYAMgiri VACATION . SPECIAL saarriiS'S'W viwptrg fi cludlnB for warranty ter your protection. Cw new over $4,oSr Full price I f^_itw>^ at IM O^lawl BRIDGESTONE MOTORCYCLES As^iow u^^daSni PAUL* 'mUNG MARINA 0 Dixie h OR 44411 BSA Mark II Special Hottest road bika avallabla =ull rKs angina - racing style rank, alloy wheels, dual Grand >rlx carbs, full ligtrting equip- ’^' buy now and save SERVIL-FE 3-71M ). 28. FE 8- Free well sum . ALSO FREE! I MARLETTE, 12x50, 2 BED- N ULTRA MODERN PARK 1744 Models on Display I Every Price Range kt Winter Discounts FOR SALE OR TRADE. 1745 HON-' 300. Dream. Exc. condition. r 4 p.m., 144 W. Ann Arbor. ATTENTION Immediate Occupancy JUST A VERY FEW CHOICE LOTS LEFT IN RIVER BANK MOBILE VILLAGE. mtlsc's finest mobile home par 5 S. Telegraph PontI AduU Park Only See the large mobile home ALPIN 10x50', GOOD CON- Iscount on all llght-das during Honda's Genuine Buce safety Honda purchased ' ' ANDERSON SALES B SERVICE, Inc. 15 S. Telegraph______FE 3-7102 thing you can wear. CUSTOM COLOR (At West Wide Track) CUSTOM COLOR 238 ){(. Montcalm and 77 W. * iMt MJmm* \A/IHm TrJirIrT Norton 750cc Scrambler RENT-A-CYCLE by the hour, DAY OR WEEK. New Yamata SB 80 ai^--- — Rates cheaper t' NEW LOCATION For Stachlers nlle west of our old address) INSPECT CENTURY - MALLARD SAGE - TAG-A-LONG All self contained. 14' to 28' lour and eight sleepers. SEE THE FAMOUS Canvas Back Camper by Mallard DISPLAY MODEL ON SALE $750 SPECIAL 8' Truck Cemper, Fully equipped, lacks and all. Ideal for n ton pickup truck. $1,395 HOURS: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. SATURDAY 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. CLOSED ALL DAY SUNDAY. TOM STACHLER AUTO AND MOBILE SALES 3771 W. Highland Rd. M-57, FE 2 " DETROITER-PONTIAC CHIEF KROPF King Size Values Lion Size Savings Now OXFORD TRAILER SALES CLEARANCE SALE In one of the finest travel trailers ever built. All seH-contalned bagos. Sleep 4. OSTER CLIPPERS AND BLADES Ext, 280., Call 3324181, JIM'S OUTLET Open-Air Auctions coming watch for our ad. Auction! be held outside In tent'and building. A truckload ol fherchandlse In every week. __________ ceries, sporting goods, hardware 2301 'oixia * t. 74, cl NEW RAILROAD TIES. GUITAR PIANO AND ORGAN Country Music S'-* aonal stationary,__________________ ments, printed napkins, wrappings and gifts. Forbes Printing and OUlce Supplies, 4500 Dixie, Dray-ton, OR 3-7747. btore Equipment 73 COMPLETE RESTAURANT EQUIP- OIL FIRED BOILER ISaOOO BTU with pump. Expansion tank. National oil burner and controls. $150. 482-3100. ONE (5f the finer THINC ■ ■■ ■ ■ e ca^ an ler. Rent, e Hudson's Hdv TSIDE AND INSIDE PAINT, .77 a gallon, all colo * -------- ed, 3440 Dixie Hwy. ............. 1544. Dei PIANO $50, BUFFET, METAL DESK car teetiqg equipment, guitar oUier misc. Items, reason- 424-3814._____________ PLUMBING BARGAINS. F heater. $47.75) 34>laca bath eats $57.75. Laundry tray, trim, $17.75; shower stalls with trim 884.75; 140WI sink. 81.75; Lava------------- threadad. SAVE PLUMBING CO. 841 BaldefIn. PE; 4-1814. ___ powEk moWer service LEAD ELECTRIC GUITAR, 3 Hg, Amplifier. UL 24747. MUSIC FESTIVAL TRADE-IN PIANOS Choose from ujsrlghts, grands c6nS0Le“pTaN0 .... $369 GRINNELL'S (DOWNTOWN) 27 S. SAGINAW REGISTERED TOY FOX TERRIER SIAMESE KITTENS-REGISTERED. _______ 425-2811 SIAMESE KITTENS, BLUEPOIN' $15 ea. FE 54440. TOY COLLIE PUPS, LARGE $E-•|on, grown collie. 4734444. registered toy fox TER- ouDs, $35 ea. MA 5-2177. KC: 8AMOY- Music Leisont 71-A ACCORDION GUIfAH LESSONS. Sporting Goods 45 HETTRICK. 7' BY 18'. OUTSIDE frame. Sleeps 10. $45. FE 4-1773. 1744 HAGUE ULTRA 7 IRONS, woods, putter, black leather bag. 1966 NIMROD CAMPERS CRUISE OUl, INC. ■ FE 84402 BOWS, arrows, SUPPLIES Gene's Archery, 714 w. Huron VING EQUIPMENT, COMPL^T^ F CARTS, $480 VALUE, 81757 -------Its. » $. Blvd. E. WANTED: GUNS OF t TENT. USED TWICE. R 3-3715. POODLES, CHOICE, TOY BLACK, attached. Excellent. $875, M 4-2704.__________________ ny TRAVEL TRAILER, SELF COI -------- ------— "• 2-2123. 27 FOOT YELLOWSTONE, 1742, 5371 Sporting Good! Door Prizs* E> re Buy-5ell-Tra( ContIgnnfMnth utvommu bIb auction FRIDAY, SULY 22 - 7:» A.I Nell Berston Home Estate 1201 Woodslea, Flint Antiques, Imparts, Fine Furnishings PERKINS SALE SERVICE • AUCTIONEERS Swartz Creek Phone 4357400 Auction, 705 1 34141. Plant$-TrBB(-»r^_________81- DAY LILIES 250 varieties. New saedllnos bloom. Nancarrow (Jardens. 415 Lono Lake Rd., between RoehasI Ltvemols. MU 7-2443. lIVBitBCk 8 YEAR OLD GELDING, WELL t^ned, exc. youngsters horse. 428- 8-YEAR-OLD AAARE, 18-MONTH Ol6 MS 11' ALUMINUM trailer, slesps 4, —' $375. MA 4^857. . 1765 Chevy Pickup With Comper Vk ton, fleelside body, 4 cyl. stai -----------whitewalls, wh "$'l895 PIONEER CAMPER SALES PICKUP CAMPERS BY Travel Queen — Overland — Barth — Concord trailers. MERIT FIBERGLAS TRUCK COVERS TRIM LINE CAMPERS BY COLEMAN THE GREATEST NAME IN THE GREAT OUTDOORS ..... HURON__________FE 2-3787 ROCHESTER I DODGE SPORTSMAN ( r. OR 3-7288. i FROLIC. 1966 NIMROD CAMPERS CRUISE OUT, INC. 45 E. Walton, dally 74 FE 8-441 1744 VOLKSWAGEN CAMPER .. Full factory equipment everythteg Including fold bock top --—' Ing room. Icebox, wa sleeps 4, luggage rack. was assembled at the fi—. throughout. Will accept trade. Call Autorama MOTOR SALES 1415 Orchard Laka Rd. 482-441 1 Mila West at Telegraph 1 lightweight $3275 down ti $3875 down to $3375 8, closed Sunday of Lake Orion on M24 PICKUP CAMPERS YEAR-END CLEARANCE SALE ver 30 dIUerent models on display to choose from. Del-Ray, Wild wood, Camp-llte. This stock mus be sold to make room for the n»w 1747 models. Open dally 'tl 8 p.m., Sunday 10 a m. fe 5 p.m BILL COLLER, Camping i Marine supplies. 1 mile eai Lapeer wi AMI.___________ PICKUP COVERS, $245 UP. 10'4" cabcovers, $1,275 and u( T B R CAMPER MFG. CO. 1180 Auburn Rd. 852-3334 ALL-WAYS AT YOUR SERVICE Sun-Air .Mobile Sales, Inc. 401 W. Grand River, Brighton A BONUS VALUE IN MC BILE HOME SHOPPING 30 models by leading ma ufacturers: All open for yoi SUZUKI CYCLES, SOCC-lSOCd. RUPP Mlnibikes as low as $127.75. Take AU7 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Lett and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone MAin 7-2177. SUZUKI BETTER GET 'EM NOW 12 MOS. - 12,00 'L6 WARRANTY TUKO SALES INC. 872 E. AUBURN - ROCHESTER Bicyclei BOYS, GIRLS 2 Ready to be Iiveu in — 111 Ultra new park featuring: Community building, lake with sa“- '—'*• underground uttlltli board, 50'xl00^ many other features. — Open daily 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., Sunday 12 noon to 7 p.m. BETWEEN; HOWELL AND BRIGHTON PHONE: 227-1461 te i^upancy Is kklR ESTATES _______ ... ELECTRIC brakes, $475. 2435 Renfrew, .482- Boots - Accessorbs I wides. Delivered to your -sort area anywhere In Mlch-an. Terms to your satlstec- BOAT TRAILER. $15. 12' ALUMINUM BOA-T, 8185. MO- I, 40 H.P. Johnson diectric, 700 trailer, battery-box $1350. BUCHANAN'S 7447 Highland Rd._______343-2301 12' MOLDED PLYWOOD BOAT K tor and trailer, $150. OR r* after 5 p.m.__________________________ ' Boat, 50 horsepower evin- ruds, trailer, skis, etc. Phone OR 30177._________ FLEETWOOD 1744, 10 X 57, 1 BED- -------- „ HORSEPOWER lohnson and trailer, $275. FE 4-5042 >r ni Sterling. RUNABOUT, 30 HORSEPOWER Johnson motor, A|ax tilt trailer, many, many extras. $375. OL 1- 0752._____________ 4' BOAT, 45 MERCURY, TRAILER^ t. See Ihb newest lettes, Stewarts, ai _ bago travel trailers. reservationi 15' SAILBOAT, NYLON SAIL, VERY good condition. $450. Pontiac Lake Motel. 823 Highland Rd. (MStT. Buddy and t ocaM half t Oxford ^n PICKUP CAMPERS AND TRAVEL trailers, new ann used. Our prices are rIght-Trtple H Colllslon-a-Camper Service. 1434 Auburn R RENTALS - 15 FT. / models of travel trailers. Holly Traval Coach, Inc., 15210 N. Holly Rd., Holly, ME B4771. 0| SEE. THE NEW CORSAIR ON TV 'ou'll find they are everything ou want for a vacation “ rheels. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 7 Dixie Hw Take your FROLIC-BEE LINE DRIFTWOOD - SCAMPER "THE RIO BARN" Jacobson Trailer Sales m williams Lake Rd. OR B57SI We have parking spaces. Open 7 to 7—7 days a week MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie Hwy. 338-0772 •-------~th of T-- ■ Oldsmobile Owners Our staff of expert mechanics and our up-to-the-minute equipment plus— and this is a big one-our desire to try harder r CARVER, 75 HORSEPOWER Evinrude, trailer, fully equipped, exc. condition, best offer. 524-3174. 18' INBOARD CABIN WITH TRAIL- er. 8400. 332-4738.______ 18' CHRIS CRAFT, CADILLAC MO- to serve your cor needs completely and satisfactorily, assure Oldsmobile owners of tK> finest service available. DOWNEY OLDSMOBILE, INC. 550 OAKLAND FE 2-8101 ) HONDA, A-l CONDITION WITH icramble pipes, call before 4 p.m. 138-4752. ______________________ 4ARl£Y 74, 8S0B OR BEST Helmet and leather locket, •2. FE 8-3853 any time.______ kRLEV K MOOEU FOLLY deck. Equipment Includes cc gallon gas tank and newly reconditioned 25 horse Evinrude motor. This boat Is excellent for family cruising, fishing or water skiing. Full price complete Is $425. Can be seen lor demonstration ride Shawnee Lane on I Lake after 4 p.m. all day Saturday $575. UL 2-4243. CRESTLINER, 40 HORSE, EX- 2 anchors, 3 cushions, I ing custom ma< Grey^rlne, ^ 5 HORSEPOWER EVINRUDE, good running cr--* •” 5 p.m. OR 3^15( 18 HORSEPOWER EVINRUDE MO-tor, electric starter and all con-trols, used 5 hours. ir-4S75. « HORSE MERCURY MOTOR WITH 1743 CHRISmP4 or fK 1-7154 1 FORD TRUCK. FlOfc STYLE 'I. *tdnd*rd ihHt, «^lmt Ittlon. Aitumu pcymmtt of «r WMk 4t KING d frdllor. ITWI E. Wditcn. MICHIGAU^ 1CRAFT TURBOCRj SALES, INC. 17 DIxlo Hwy. — PontiK AUTO SALES MS9 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE MOBS IW FO|tp F-350 1-TON frCVLIN- Now Is the Time to Buy Boats-CLEARANCE-Boots .tSiS, 0 ir and MFO In- -GOOD BUYS- Oday Spinf Boot Coot New l7fS NOW ONLY - tUO ---- ... wKI, igy g Contrw H' I win trolk h 40 HP. Jofmoon tots. CLIFF DREYERS ______10 Olvlalon) 15210 Holly Rd. Holly ME 44771 — Open Dolly otid Sundoyo — PINTER'S Iforcroft-MFO-Thompoon JefmMn Boots and Atolors Woeros Pofifoemand Water BIku “DouSa^ Motor Rapair Ratmo" 1370 OpcMo — Open M, Sat. 04 (1-75 at Oakland Unlvmlty Exit) SAILBdAT, so- TRImAraH, ►ivIR 1H5 CHEVROLET i gag”* Clair Shores — (AIL BOAT: 10* ALUMINUM PRAM, compiste - bast offer. Call 425- USED BOATS ”irurff.i.ras.£ a 15^one*’«ar flberglaee. 45 Mai cury, trailer, convertible top, 0075. t5< v^ltehouse fiberglass, 40 hj Johnson electric, trailer. 0005. MANY OTHERS LA;(E & SEA MARINA S. Blvd. at Saginaw FE 44507 wh.V«u!T- lerlng, el FORD LUCKY AUTO TERRIFIC DISCOUNT boats, canoes, pontooi.. -------- motors. 30 years repair cxperlance. Your Johnson's Outboard Mote Tony's Marine Service S405 Orchard Lake Rd. 402-: Wanted Can-Tracks 101 HELP! "*o'l^and*8ul8(s' for*'-^^ la market. Top dollar paM MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 B FE 04020 EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car mwn gvi in« nv«o ai Averill MONEY t, that Is a full city block GALE McANNALLY'S Auto Sales 4 Baldwin FE 04525 STOP HERE LAST I. Corvettes needed. M&M 1150 Oakland at Viaduct S3M261_______________ yOP 0 f6r clean CARS OR ♦rucfcie feconcmy Ct». 1335 0\x\%, FOR 'XLBAN" U9BU (.AR9 GLENN'S OSI West Huron St. _ PAYMENTS TOO HIGH? We buy or Will adluet ments fo lees expansive c DON'S USED CARS CREDIT AUTO SALES 123 Oakland at WMa Track FES4214 -WARTfo^gB^pW C O P P E R 40 CENTS AN6 UPi Braes radlalbrs, battarlaa, generators. C. Dlmn, OR »----- JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS. FREE towing. OR __________________. Used THE POOTIAC ItoSiB, OyPAY, JPLY II, 1066 0-r# 1042 RENAULT 0150 ^E MM1 oftar 4 P.M. t043 DELUXE Vw BLACK (CDAN, 10M FIAT ABARTH, 1500, SPYDER, Rochester's Ford IMPORTED CAR CO. 000 Oakland_________FE 54421 SUmIIEAM tiger, 1045, TAKE OV- 1964 Ford Ranchero Pickup ■ cyl. engine, r--- ler, whitewall $1395 BEATTIE RELIABLE MOTORS 250 Oakland Ave._______FE 0-0742 NO BUICK LeSABRE 2 DOOR Harmop.^AppJe_red, ~ ' up. Big 4 engine and standan drive. Haaw duty throughout. $1, 405 Full price at JEROME FORC FORD 5 .. ________r«, UL 2-1417. __________ 1045 FORD SUPER VAN ,4ood (luye In the < Spartan Dodge BUICK SKY LARK COHVERTI-bio, 1042, powor itoortng - broket, buckofa. iow mileage, tUO. 334- DOWNEY'S New Used Cor Location 1084 Oakland DOWNEY Oldsmobile, Inc. 338-0331 -338-0332 REPOSSESSION 1043 BUICK ELECTRA "225" CONVERTIBLE, FULL POWER AND BUCKETS. ANY OLD CAR DOWN AND PAYMENTS OF JUST S1107 WEEKLY. CALL MR. CASH, 334 4521, SPARTAN. I DOOR HARDTOP, MUST DISPOSE OF 1044 BUICK ttatlon wagon, full powor, bronit. No money down, tlO.17 wookly. Call Mr. Murphy tt FE 54101. McAullfto.___________________________ 1045 BUICK LoSABRE CONVERTI-ble. Automatic, power eteerlng end breket. Red with white top and rod luthtr mtorlor. 15,000 mlitt. Factory warranty. 5105 Down end “SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET 1045 BUICK ILECTRA "215." KX; 4 Autobahn AUTHORIZ '/j mile nort. .. 1765 S. Tologroph 1044 BUICK LoSABRE, 1051 CADILLAC HEARSE C down for camper. Runoi .gi Boat ettor. FE 44424. t SHARP 1010 CADILLAC COUPfc De-Vllle, Clean body, good tiree, 1475. 152-3443.______________________ REPOSSESSION 1041 CADILLAC DeVILLE-STYLED COUPE WITH FOWER,_ TURQUOISE FINISH, FOWER AND REAI3Y FOR YOU. NO S DOWN AND FlOfMENTS OF 1962 Cadillac worldJ' GlBWbM turouelee, wRh $1797 "Atk for The Dodge Goec In the White Hat" Spartan Dodge (JM^ ifllS'l^Oiee Ar kbiLuS^^SMvim.- r«Tjn.r« turner ford, « LLOYD MOTORS 11250 Oakland 333-7863 WILSON Pontiac Cadillac “ "SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET 4-273S - Ml 4-7H0 REPOSSESSION 1042 FORD sedan SPOTLESS BLUE FINISH. V-t STANDARD FULL BALANCE S407 j- ---- MUST SELL It________ MR. CASH, 330^, SPAR IlMf^ TRUDBLL FORD g,!. "-Ag i0^^MUSTAN(» 2 P06r,_ RADIO, 1062 FALdON 2 DOOR WITti AUTO-trenemlealon, radii. Very traneportatlon. S305 at. SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET , Birmingham Ml 6-2735 — Ml 1063 FORD GALAXIE 4-DOOR, 6- 1063 FORD, 2 DOOR SEDAN POWER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, ,*MUtTW CR^DlV MGR. Mr. f HAROLD TURNER Ml 4-7500. 1964 DODGE “880" 'm!o& LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1063 FALCON FUTURA CONVERTI New and Used Cart 106 New and Usad Cart A1 Hanoute Inc. Chevrolet-Buick Lake Orion MY 2-2411 Bargain Minded Used Cor Buyers Attention Our 12th ANNIVERSARY SALE Mvingt aro greater then ever before on all our "OK" USED CARS. Shop tho Big "OK" Used Car Lot el MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES “Chevyland" 431 Oakland .____ TE 4-4547 0 CHEVY BEL AIR, CLEAN, 106 DOWNEY'S New Used Car Location 1084 Oakland 1964 CHEVROLET Impale 24oor hardtop, radio heater, automatic, Dower steering ??3! 1965 DODGE Dirt station wagon wItt itic transmission, new ( ity, radio, heater enc DOWNEY Oldsmobile, Inc. NEW USED CAR DISPLAY AREA 1084 OAKLAND 338-0331 - 338-0332 1961 CORVAIR ton pickup. Full price 1307. I Money Down. We handle end i FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Juet east of Oakland 1041 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE. speed. Taka over payments. l Price SI405. 334-0070.______ 1041 CHEVROLET CLUB COUPE WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, ASSUME weekly payments of $4.05, CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4.7500. AIR 1041 CORVAIR DELUXE 2 Very good through-- * ■ 333-75^. Riggins, Dei AIR CONDITIONED CARS MUST SELL 065 Cadillac convertible, tul ■nuipped, low miltaoe. Cadillac convertible, one ewi 065 Ford convertibla, radio, hooter, —ring, br • ’ordlec Catalina 2 dr. hardtop. ,n,v, „»wer stcoflng and brakes, turquoise, priced ----- Weekly Payments STAR .TO SALES Telegraph_________FE 10661 1060 Chevy convartlMo, radio, stoor-Ing, brakes. ROCHESTER MARATHON II N. Main St. Rochester OL 1-3300 TRUDeLl FORD R. St 14 Mile Rd. 585-4000 ____ Van Dyke Rd. SL 7-0007 1043 CHEVROLET STATION WAG- TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS All in good mechanical condition. Prietd to stil fost. We Need The Room. All cars carry our 1 year used cor Warranty. 1043 CHEVY IMPALA HARDTOP, Cab Finance. I BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH . Woodward_____Ml 7-33 JEROME 1043 Chevy Bel Air ............ 1042 Chevy Impale convertible . 1041 Chevy II wagon ........... 1061 Chevy Impale hardtop ... 1061 Chavy Corvtir Coupe ..... 1061 Pontiac wagon, 0 pass..... 1061 Pontiac Catalina Coupe ... 1060 Pontiac Catalina Coupe ... Buick Spc., convertible ... Buick USsbrs .................. 1066 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD ■---tiam. Every extra.. •7521 Of 47»0ni. . Buick hardtop . 1057 Chevy Coupe 1957 Plymouth 2 doo 1037 CHEVY COUPE, . 1056 CHEVY WAGON GREE ■■■ ■ Full Price S7S. RELIABLE MOTORS 1057 CHEVROLET CONV^VltlBLE. Kiruj Ay.to 6695 Dixit Hwy. (2 biks. S. of Ml5) CLARKSTON MA 5-2671 1057 CHEVROLET, 2-OOOR HAR(t- 1051 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE. PE FE >4454 ___________ Y, IMBALA CONVERT-342" autometic, excep- 1050 BEL Alt, BiST OFFER _____________2-II43_____ 1050 CHEVY IMFALA 2 bOOl 1 at 14 Mile I Van Dyke Rd. CHEVROLET if Kinej Auto 6695 Dixit Hwy. (2 bIks. S. of Ml 5) CLARKSTON MA 5-2671 1050 CHEVY, FAIR CONDITION. SIM. FE 5-377B. ___________ 1050 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON VI, autonwtlc, a KING AUTaSALE$ M59 at Elizobeth loke Rd. H M088 GM (Owner's Initlils) Gale McAnnally's Auto Sale. 14 Chevrolet Impale convertible. Automatic transmittlon an" engine, l-ytqr warranty. BOB BURKE. JIM BARNOWSKY BOB ANDEPSON Many more sharp cars to choosa from. Stop or call todtyl 1304 Baldwin FE 84525 Across from Pontiac State Bank 1964CHCVY ^MALIBUriSPEfeS^ Nice condHIon, 11,2S ter, must sell — " 1064 CHEVY 4 Estate Storage Waterfard Lat tes. Full Price Only $1695 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Bank rePOSSES$ION-1043 FORD ^AST- IMF John McAuliffe Ford 1964 Forci Custom 500 owshM white finleh, Imm r, V8, redio, W '$896 Get a better DEAL" i 1965 MUSTANG 3 DOOR HARDTOP, -- white trim, V8, 380, 81650. 4S3-5405._____ ES, BUT AT SPARTAN DODGE YOU CAN BUY A 1065 DODGE FOR JUST $1,307. 155 OAKLAND AVE. FE 8-4528. ‘___ 1963 Ford k glowing bronze Galaxle sli $347 HAROLD TURNER Spartan Dodge f6RD, INC. 855 Oakland Ave. 163 FORD XL CONVERTIBLE, V8 Crulse-o-motlc, power, radio, er, other extraa, clean at i and twice as sharpi too i 81105. TRUDELL FORD 1965 FORDS fully equipped NEW CAR WARRANTIES /AS AS LOW I $49 DOWN Payments os low as $11.95 HAROLD TURNER DART 1045 GT, BLACK V-8, WHITE jqhn R .. .. ■—20055 Van Dyke Rd. ill 334-S212. KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS d Service OA H400 1057 FORD WAG6n, RUMMiNG r BIRD CONVERTIBLB J III after 6. 45641021. 1050 FORD, too 33A0205 _________ to 4 DOOR SEDAN WITH 3381 Huron (M59) ______ FE 2-3211_____________ 1065 CHEVROLET BEL AIR SEDAN LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 MIKF SAVOIF 6695 Dixie Hwy. (2 biks. of Ml 5) CLARKSTON MA 5-2671 FORD^GA^XIE SN, Art CON- “TRANSPORTAflON SPECIALS 1050 T-BIrd .......... HOC f062 CHEVY BEL AIR, 4-DOOR; ttick, 30JKIO ml., $650. 474-0230. log^ chevy JWNW CONVERTL il deal for or bicycles. (udeLl F $45 down. Full I 11207. LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 Wauld Yau Believelll We Hava What Wo Advtrtlsa And Sell What Wo Have At Bank Rates-No Cash Naaded tat wagon . i Falrlane GET SMART—BUY F OPDYKE MOTORS 2230_Pontloc Rd. it Osd^ke^ 1043 CHEVROLET SUPER SPORT with powor steoring tnd t---- power windows, automatic mission, blue finish with vln 81305 at Autorama MOTOR SALES 2635 Orchard Laka Rd. 682-4410 ............ - ofjtligr - LUCKY AUTO IMF John McAullffa Ford 1963 Chevy Bel-Air 2-Door with twlllflht 1 ItM matdtlng this It a imis .... lady's garage .^only tSO down, tlnanco $977 It only_________ . Get a BETTER DEAL" i CHEVY 4 DOOR 4 CYLINDER it, excollant condition, t1,Qt5.473-I. stranohan. 1084 CHBVY IMPALA CONVERTI- Brand naw tlraa. $1500. FE 5-4543 attar 3 p.m. 1M4 MALIBU SUPBR SPbRT CON- Birminghom'S New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S, Woodward Ml 4-2735 DON'S USED CARS SMALL AD-BIG LOT 70 CARS TO CHCXJSE FROM ,5 CHEVY II stick I ....jr, ra9lo? he---- 1050 T-BIRD Automatic, f “ 1983 IMFALA 677 S. LAPEER F Lake Orkm MY 2-2041 DOWNEY'S New Used Car Location 1084 Oakland 1965 CHEVROLET mpata 4-door hardtop, autometk adlo, heater, whitewall tlres—fui DOWNEY Oldsmobile, Inc. New Used Car Display At*a 1084 OAKLAND 338-0331 - 338-0332 044 CHEVY IMPALA 327-4 SPEED, stick, Ttc-o4nettr othar f----- $2350 naw car warranty. 42 t. 334W5 attar 4. 1044 MONZA.............. 1066 PLYMOUTH Satatllts 1065 FORD IGpaitangar S 1044*8oD(MI' Staica DM'. ROCHESTER DODGE Drivs Away—Sava Mora Pay 65H10I___________ROCHESTER Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Oakland Ava. FE 2-9150 King Auto 1058 Pi 1050 Chijdy ............v........ 4100 1057 Pontiac ........... 1750 Olds ............... NO MONEY DOWN ij 1965 Ford Pretty Ponies 1965 MUSTANGS 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES . HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $49 Down and $49 Per Manth HAROLD TURNER 'Your FORD DEALER SIneo 1030" On Dixie In Waterford at tha doubla atopllght OR 3-1291 1045 ’FORD 4.6061" CUitdM, *. MUST 1963 Ford Bill Smith FORD, 1055 MERCURY, G(?OD transportation. OR 4-1217. REPOSSESSION - 10St> FORD Galaxle Hardtop, autotna^lO. pi No money down, $4.87 weakly. C. Mr, Mason, FE 5UI01, McAullfl TAKE OVER PAYMENTS ON It 1040 FALCON WITH AUTOMATIC, radio, hoator, beautiful rad finish and matching Interior. 15 down and payments ot S3.02---'' KING AUTO SALES M59 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 84088 REPOSSESSION - 1043 FORD CON-vartlbla. rosa balga VI Auto, powor. No money down, $1.17 weakly. Call Mr. Mason at FE 5-4101 A4c-Aulltte.___________ r064 FORD CUSTOM 4 DOOR, ' sring, whitewalls, 81005. FE 3-0407. FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM 1964 FORD XL Hardtop with V-l tngl matic transmission, tul radio,, heater, whitewi King Auto 6695 Dixie Hwy. (2 biks. of Ml 5) CLARKSTON MA 5-2671 »61 FORD 2 DOOA HARDTOP, V8. automatic, radio, heater, 8305. Full Price ------- *■ ------ KING AUTO SALES M59 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 84088 f courae, matchin $1197 "Ask ter Tha Dodge Good Guya McComb Spartan Dodge 85 lust V* ionb CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH IMPERIAL OL 1-0550 1001 N. M ROCHESTER 1055 bESOTO, MOTOR AND TIRES , ----AUTOMATIC, Price 8107. Fstate Storage (Pontiac Lat) 109 S. East Blvd. FE 3-7141 106) STARLINBR, 3H 300 horia, 4-ipaad, 8650. i«Ke new inrougnouii uniy— $895 HOMER RIGHT Matars Inc. On M24 In Oxford OA 8-2528 1043 FALCON STATION WAGON WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION RADIO, heater, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, aasuma weakly payments of 87.85. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-1500. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_________Ml 4-75M :harga Ignition. 4 on the _____ rp. »05. Owner. VE 1-4042, Do-- or 007-5307, White Lake.' 1044 FORD GALAXIE JOO 2 6(30R Hardtop. 0 cylinder, full equipment. Harbor blue matching vinyl interior. In garage kept condition. 140 do»r -Price, 81300, LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Ooklano 333-7863 IMF 1964 T-Bird Landau I leather Intorlor, many itaaring, brakaa, on thia axacut ^beauty l_^_(^r price |uat i ri, finance balance ot $2081 REPOSSESSION - 10M FOr6 CUS- doom, S7.I7 araakly. Call Mr. Mason, PE S^IOI, McAullfto. STICK, NICl toN Galaxie 500 Hardtop 2 door, with the 352 v8 engine, crulse-o-matic, power staerlno, radio, heatyr, Sauterne gold finish. $2095 BEATTIE cylinder, c It. 045 Bmarion. DISPOSE OF - 1065 mOS-3. Baautiful bronze with 4 I FoAD FAIRLANE 4 do^ ----- -------, , $1205 at . 1965 Ford Galaxie 500 4-Door 'Ith the 352 VO angina, cruls tallc, power steoring, radio. In $1995. BEATTIE OR 3-1291 5 MUSTANG, FOREST GllEEtL ..... ---- -----------jjj qd. OR Convertibla t metic fri______ or, whitewall tlraa, naw ranty. Only $40 down oi HAROLD TURNER FORD; INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. , BIRMINGHAM_________Ml 4-7500 1065 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE 10 patsanger atatton wagon. Autc~~‘ k, powor steoring and bri Chrome luggage rock. This li best. Save 8M on thit one. Autorama MOTOR SALES 15 Orchard Lake Rd. 402-4410 1 Mile West of Telegraph Houghten Olds BUY WITH CONFIDENCE These New 1966 Oldsmobiles All Have Factory Air Conditioning 1064 TORONADO with custom Intorlor, radio, whitewall tiros, floor matt, remote control mirror, tinted glass and 6 way power seat. (Choice of 2). Many oxtras. Lural Mlat (Inlah. t46 "00" Luxury Sedan. Sahara Mist and automatic trsnsmiulon, power steering and brakaa, power seat. Low Mllaago Uiad Cars 1066 OLDS Toranodo with Ik air cenditlaninl, cvatemlirta 1966 FLAME RED MUSTANG gylth Mack bycktl ■-------------iMlon, I NOgylth bl tpaSd trai ... J tlraa and irs. $1005. Ask for Lion (Goose) Robertson or Vern Sheffield, Sales Manoger at Houghten Olds THj^POJTflAC PRESiS. MONDAY, JULY iS, im X-’ t ■ \ FORD Rodwtttri Ford OL WII.______ FINE SELECTION IMS4S44^ ContInontoU *t rtdw * thorn ot BOB BORST $1766 1003 MERCURY COLONY PARK $1295 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH IM S. Woodward ___Ml 7-3310 Got « BETTER DEAL" 1906 FORD FALCON, 0 ____ stot^ard frons., SOM miles. I1$», or take over payments. ME... atter 5-________ 1906 FORD GALAXIE"«rn hardtop, VI, auto., radio, low age, perfect condition. Private Arctic White trimmed with Walnut Paneling. 145 down. Full Price, 11095. ILOYD MOTORS 12S0 0okland 333-7863 / MMMK€ BIRMINGHAM TRADES 1965 SKYLARK................................$1988 V-l, Automatic Transmission, Power Steering 1963 SPECIAL................................$1088 I-Door Sedan — Buckal Seats, Automatic, Radio 1965 OLDS ...................................$2188 Dynamic "M" 1-Door Hardtop - Beautiful Blue Finish 1965 SKYURK.............................$2688 9-Passenger Sports Wagon DouWa Power, Chromd Rack, Factory Warranty 1964 SKYLARK ..............................$2088 ADoor Sedan — V-l, Automatic, Power Steering and Brakes 1965 ELECTRA ................................$3288 "as" Convertible - Full Power, Factory Warranty 1964 RENAULT.................... ...........$588 Dauphina ADoor Sedan - Excellent Transportation I 1962 BUICK ................................$1288 l-Door Hardtop - 1-Ownar and Low Mileage - DOUBLE CHECK -- USED CARS - 554 S. Woodward 1963i Mercury $1297 "Ask for Th« Dodo« Good Guyi In Whitt Htt" Spartan Dodge .55 Oakland____ C/4 Mile N. of Cass Ava. _ FE A45M__________ MERCURY 2 DOOR HaIiBI p. Power steering and brakes. BOB BORST 1957 olds 4 DOOR STTATION WAG- REPOSSESSION 19M OLDS SEDAN WITH AUTOMATIC AND POWER. MUST SELL TODAY. NO S DOWN AND JUST S7.I7 WEEKLY. MUST SELL TO- JULY Transportation Specials BUY HERE-PAY HERE No Application Refused 1*10 OLDS hardtop 1*61 FORD 2-door l*M VALIANT, au 1*51 C«VY 2-door 1*« PONTIAC Wagon 1391 1957 CHEVY 2-door .....S39) ^.,. 1962 FORD, stick .......S597 15.95 1941 CHEVY___ 19M PONTIAC 2-dOor 1*61 FORD Scyl. '*'* TEMPEST Adoor CHEVY II ....... 10 MONEY DOWN SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING CALL MR. DAN AT FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM REPOSSESSION 194« OLDS "112" HARDTOP -MUST SELL NOW. NO S DOWN. ^ WEEKLY. CALL MR. CASH, QUALITY Nmt Mi iNi Cm KING AUTO SALES M59 at Elizabeth Loke Rd. FE 84088 OLDS N, * PASSENGER WAG- on, ptrfoct o 30,600 miles. DOWNEY'S New Used Cor Locotion 1084 Oakland 1963 OLDS "^monthly DOWNEY Oldsmobile, Inc. New and Used Cars 162 BONt ^30 1962 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, ' condition, S900. Coll oftor 052-5415.___________________ NEW USED CAR DISPLAY AREA 1084 OAKLAND 338-0331 -338-0332 f963 OLDS~EONVtRTIBLE, POW-blue, whito top, wbitowolls. 1964 Olds Station Wagon VIsto Cruiser, * patsangsr, with vO, standard transmission, rodio, —Now Only- 1962 TEMPEST .. I960 CADILLAC . 1959 PONTIAC . 1957 DODGE $1795 BEAHIE Cleon Up Lot Sole 1*59 Plymouth wagon, '5* N Pickups, long wheal base 17 Plenty other good coi ECONOMY CARS 2335 PI) 1964 Plymouth A Perfect station wagon. I vinyl Interior, Full Price $1497 hr Th« Dodo* Good Guyi in fht Whito Hat" Spartan Dodge YES BUT, AT SPARTAN DODGE you can buy a IW Plymout" ' lust S1,297. 055 Oakland Avi 0-4520. 6695 Dixie Hwy. (2 biks. S-of Ml5) CLARKSTON MA 5-2671 $1995 1*66 BUICK WILDCAT 2-Door Hardtop. Power brakes and steering, sutometic. Reel big savings w condition .. 11195 white JInlih, blue trir 1*63 CHEVROLET. Equippn eutometlc transmission, stsaring and brakes. Sea th 1*44 F-05 CUTLASS 2-top. Power steering a V-0, automatic. W h I Bucket seats 1965 BUICK LeSABRE 4 Door Se-irleg and brakes, finish, new car imiuic, I ory>»ari 1*63 PONTIAC VENTURA 4-Door Hardtop. Radio, heater, automatic transmission, power steering end brakes.................. 11595 1966 TEMPEST convertible. Power steering end brakes, automatic, V-0. Sava''on this one . .. S2695 1944 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Convertible. Power steering, brakes and windows, automatic. 1963 SPECIAL 1*42 FORD FAIRLANE 2-Door Sedan. Standard transmission, V-l engine, beautiful blue finish. 1M3 BUICK ELECTRA Convartibla. Full power, wheal, Dynaflow; you nam ROLET SUPER SPORT Convartibla. , . . ... Itig and brakes, automatic, red tMsh svith white buckets S1995 1*60 BUICK 2-door, big, eutometlc, miles. 1-owner, all 1*66 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2-Doer Hardtop. 7JI00 guaranteed actual mll^ new car factory warranty 123*5 1*64 CHEVELLE 2 transmission, 6«yil 21,010 miles. This li ) PONTIAC Convertible. Auto- matic trensmissio ^64 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-dooi( hardtop. Power steering and Power itaering -w mileage end 1-owner. ................... 01995 1944 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE. 1944 BUICK WILDCAT 4-Dfcor Hardtop. Power steering end brakes, eutomstic, custom leather Interior 11995 AC BONNEVILLE p. Power steering automatic, suntlre 12095 1*62 CORVAIR. Equipped 1 radio end heater. Been tool lor good trensportetlon? 1*65 PONTIAC 2-door hardtop. Radio, heater, automatic, power steering and brakes. Low mileage. Factory warranty 12495 1965 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-Door Herdtop. Power steering and brakes, Hydrematic, new ear warranty .................. *2695 pad *lh^e^b^'^ Sedan.^Equlp- Ask fori John Donl«y-Win Hopp—Lysl< Bosinger—Duoni Brown—Carl Motheny Gory Cecoro—Don Polosek—DewBy Petiprin-Joe Golordr-Tommy Thompson PONTIAC-BUICK 651-9911 855 S. Rochestir Rd., Vk Mila South of Downtown King Auto 1955 PONTIAC, RUNS GOOD 673-5346 ________ 9 PONTIAC 2 DOOR CATALINA. 1961 Pontiac $895 BEATTIE r SPARTAN DODGl a 1961 Pontiac Hardier tor *5*7. FE 1-4520, 1961 Tempest $297 sk for the Dod^ Good Guys Spartan Dodqe NARMAmJKB iliidcnMi uH EiMilNr|ll8w «i IM Om 111 1*66 BONNEVILLE 4 DOOR HJkkO- 1966 GRAND PIlTx; POl__________________ staarlng and brakas, 421 angina, air conditioning, pewtr saat ‘I guess he's afraid of catching your dog’s measles!” Naw ami Usol Cor* 106 SPECIALS OF THE WEEK 1964 Pontiac Catalina 4-door Hardtop ^akas,' radio, haater, red finish! 1954 BUICK ....... 1*60 CHRYSLER ..... 1940 CHRYSLER ..... 1962 DODGE 1959 PONTIAC Wagon 1*5* OLDS 1940 CHE.VY ....... NORTHWOOD AUTO SALES 3 Dlxl4 H 1*62 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE WITH FULL POWER, AUTOMATIC TRANS-MISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN assume YES BUT, AT SPARTAN CiODGE ^ can '|»7^1S?*Oekr^ M2 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-vcrtlblc, blue with Mack top. Good condition, naw tiras and ba^. 44000 actual mllas. 602-2004. S REPOSSESSION 1963 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, POWER AUTOAAATIC AND READY FOR SUA6MER FUN. MUST SELL TODAY. NO t DOWN AND JUST *11.17 WEEKLY. MUST SELL TODAY. CALL MR. CASH, 330-4521. SPARTAN IMF John McAullffa Ford 1963 Pontiac Convertible $1496 0»l*i"BEfT¥R” DEAL" i John McAuliffe Ford 630^aklMd /^e._______FE 5-4 1*63“P0NTIAC GRAND PRIX, M LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1963 CATALINA VENTURA HARD- 1963 Pontiac Arctic whiti hardtop, styla 2 doi ndltlonlng, —-------*' ir stearlng; brakes. Full P $1795 BEATTIE jr FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie In Waterford at the double stoplight OR 3-1291 BOB BORST mission. This I PONTIAC GTO, 2 DOOR HARD-' •"Ith a padded top, silver i-carburetors, 4 spaed trans- Can be purchased with small down payment. Mus* be seen to be appreciated. LUCKY AUTO LUCKY AUTd 1965 Tempest A dlowlhq buraundv sedan, wit iiltomaHc $1697 "Ask for Thi Dodge G Spartan Dodge GM Nmv M IM Cm leu cauuna ^eggyiRmLe, ^ BJit INI 4 ^ 55;ar,"Sw te. eSwefvd, go Hatter. oeCARe 1961 RAMBLER Classic Ststlan Wagon. .4^1"^ 50^^Nke r^le. DoS't miss . ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 34155 Marvel Motors 151 Oakland Ava. glaks, wtiaal iktrfs, 12950. 073-2I7S. 1*02 RAAABLER ">• 000 milt*, *3». OR wan. FE 84079 GO!! HAUPT PONTIAC 1964 PONTIAC Catalina 4 door sa- 1963 ull price only-$139S. BONNEVILLE 2 door h ■ prica *1595. 1964 PONTIAC Grand .......... — tic power steering, brakes, S9 vn. Full price GTO with 4 speed, and rilt - -star. 099 down, full price *2095. 1963 VENTURA 2 door hardtop, lute -- steering, brakes, net II price S1495. On Main Street CLARKSTON Now mi ini Cm Hi BIRMINGHAM TRADES 1965 OLDS Cutlass Hardtop. V-8, automatic, power steering and brokesl, electric windows .......................... 1965 PONTIAC Catalina 2-door hardtop. Full power including 6-woy power seat, elK-tric windows. 6000 mile cor with trons-feroble new cor warranty .....................$2595 1964 PONTIAC Catalina 2-door hordtop, power steering and brakes, tinted gloss, oir conditioned. Like new................. $1995 1965 OLDS 98 Luxury Sedan. Full power. Gold with block vinyl top. Sharp Birminghom new cor trode. ..........................W295 1963 OLDS F85 '6-possenger station wagon. V8, automatic, radio, heater, whitewoll tires. Gold and white ................. —$1395 1966 OLDS Deluxe Toronodo with full power in- cluding 6-woy power seat. Only 3,700 miles. Tronsferoble new cor worronty SAVE 2 YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woociward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET _____Ml 4-2735 __ 1965 RAMBLER Marlin V8 2-door hardtop, automatic transmission, bucket seats, AM-FM radio, power brakes and power steering. Wire wheels. Ex6ellent Birmingham 1-owner new cor trade. Full price $2195 with bonk rotes for 36 months. Village Rambler 660 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 BEEN BANKRUPT? NEED A CAP with IS low as 05 down? Try King Plan Financing. Call Mr. 1965 RAMBLERS DEMOS 4-door sedans. Very low mileage cars. Only 3,000^ and 4.000 mMes. New Cor Warranty. Only $95 down, 36 - month financing ot bonk rotes. Credit no problem. 8 to choose from at Village Rambler. 666 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 DOUBLE CHECKED USED CARS 1962 BUICK Convertible, double power ........$ 895 1964 CHEVY Impolo 2-door hardtop. Power ..$1695 1963 FORD Wogon, outomatic ...................$1095 1963 CADILLAC 4-door hardtop, power ...........$1895 1962 FORD 2-door Goloxie 500, V8, auto.......$ 795 1963 OLDS F85 2-door hardtop. Buckets ........$1150 1963 M0N2A Convertible, automatic ............$ 895 1965 BUICK LeSabre 4-door hardtop, power . .$2295 1963 MERCURY 4-door, automatic ................$1050 1965 BUICK Skylark 2-door auto., warranty .. .$1795 1957 OLDS 4-door hardtop. Special ot . <.......$ 300 OLIVER BUICK 196-210 ORCHARD LAKE FE 2-9165 ,1304 Across from Pontiac Stala Bank 1945 PONTIAC CATALINA CON- :iose GUI price, run power. KEEGO Pontiac-GMC-T empest "Sanne location 50 Years" KEEGO HARBOR GM $1197 "Ask for Tht Dodge Good Guys In th# Whitt Hat" Spartan Dodge IIM PONTrAC CATALINA 4 frAnimlttion. 421 $11f7 fu LUCKY AUTO CHEVROLET OLDSMOBILE Automatic transmission, V4 < 5 BONNEVILLE COUPE, HARD- KEEGO NEW CAR trades 1965 CORVAIR 4-door, 4-speed, radio, dark blue. Stock No. 488A .......................$1495 1965 CORVAIR CORSA 4-speed, 140 h.p. Radio. Stock No. 509A ............................$1595 1965 CORtfAIR hardtop, 4-doar, automatic, red, white interior. Stock No. 587A............$1495 1962 CORVAIR 4-door, stick shift, radio. Stock No. 579A.................. ...........,..$ 695 1963 CORVAIR Convei;tible, 4-speed, radio. Wk No. 292A ...................................$895 ON DIXIE HWY. AT Ml 5 "Your Crossroads to Greater Savings” CLARKSTON MA 5-2604 Pontiac-GMC-Tempest "Same location 50 Years" KEEGO HARBOR 19M GTO 2 DOOR SPORTS COUPE 4 speed, trI-power, reverb. Rally positrectlon, 390 Axle, Romeo. 752-9119. COME TO THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 100 Top Qbolity, one-owner new cor trades to choose fiom WHERE YOU EXPECT MORE . . . AND GET IT 65 Mt. Clemens At WIdt Track FE 3-7954 SHARP AUTOS 1966 Pontiac Hardtop 4-Door, toadod with automat Save 1958 PONTIAC 2-Door Automatic, radio, heater. $495 1965 Catolina Convertible I, whitewalls. Only— $2595 1964 Pontiac Catalina whltswslli. Only— 1965 Pontiac Catalina 2-Door sedon, with, a bssutllul whitewslls, bosutlful $2195 1963 Pontioc Cotalino $1495 ”l964 VW, Deluxe Ststlon Wogon. Low mlloagt, 1 ownsr, rsBdy to go. Only- $1}95 1962 Pontiac Star Chief c, pewtr aSaorlng and b.___ >, haatar, whitewalls. Locally Id, ana owner. , $1095 1963 Pontioc Stqr Chief 4-Door Hardtop. Vista with ai mafic, power steering and brsk whitewalls. The unit has ■ be tiful let black ■ finish. Only- $1495 rSht ***equlStHmtI**wltt ;;*TCMrbr; sutomalic $1995 1964 Buick Special 4-Dbor wtgon. Beige tinlsl matching trim, automatic, heater, whltewalls«- V-S i nice car. Only- $1395 1966 Rambler Classic BRAND NEW 770 2-Deor Hardtop. Red end black, vinyl tnp, automatic, powac- steering end brakes. $600 Discount 1964 Pontiac B'ville 000 setust miles. Poi heater, whitewall tires. Intsrior. 23,- $1995 1963 Pontiac Catalina 4-Door Sedan. Light blue < “iS $1295 1963 Chevy Impala 4-Door Sedan with platlnu and contrasting trim, radio, haotor, emltaw $1295 1959 Rambler Ambassador 4-Door Sodon. Jet Mack finish with matching trim, automatic, power steering, radio, hoetor, V4 ongint. A rail sharp car ell the $495 1963 GRAND PRIX I turquolM im, dooblt $1495 1957 Olds Super "•I" 4-Door Hardtop. Automotlc, radio, heater, power steering and brakes. Good transportation. Only $150 $3295 pAwer steering end brakes, automatic Irantmlstlon, radio, lew miltogel Only— $2595 $150 1966 Tempest Custom Sfetloi^egon. Atontoro rod, whHo trim. Luggigo rack, au- brato, V-i angina, EZ aya glast. Save! 1965 Chevy Impala 3S H.R. angina, Aapaad, ——■ Ask for Pat Jarvis — Ken Johnson — Bob Pontiac - Rambler On M24 in Lake Orion MY 14266 r~r rl /. 1 b ' THE J>ONTUC fRESS. MONDAY. JULY Ig, 19W ^p=rn: a r —Television Programs— Programt fumlilMd by ttaHom titled in this eelimin art miI^cgI to change wHiieutMtiee ' Omwiwlii2-WJM(-fV,4-WWMV,7~¥W0n.TV,e-aaW«TV,S0^WK>D-TV,46~WTVS MONDAY EVENING Weather, 7:M l:N (2) (4) News, Sports (7) Moivie: “Tlie Men” (IMO) Marlon Brando, Teresa Wright (!) Dennis the Menace (SO) Superman (56) Friendly Giant f:lS (56) Merlin the Magicianj 6:» (2) (4) Network News (9) Marshal Dillon (SO) Little Rascals (66) Discovering America 7:16 (2) Greyhound Derby (4) George Pierrot (9) Movie: “Ilie System’ (1963) Frank Lovajoy, Joan Weldon (SO) Soupy Sales (56) Anoeilca’s Crises (2) To TeU the Tkuth (4) Hullabaloo m 12 O’clock High (50) Uoyd Tbazton 6:99 (2) I’ve Got a Secret , (4) John Forsy&e (56) Museum Open House 9:39 (2) Vacation Playhouse (4) Dr. Kildare (7) Jesse James (SO) Merv Griffin (56) U.S.A. 9:15 (9) News 9:99 (2) Andy Grifflth (4) John Davidson (7) Shenandoah (9) Movie: “Kansas Pacific’’ (1953) Sterling Hayden, Eve Miller 9:31 (2) Hazel (7) Peyton Place 19:99 (2) Mike Douglas (4) Run for Your Life (7) Big Valley (50) Talent Scouts 10:39 (9) 20/20 11:99 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports (50) Horse Racing 11:39 (2) Movie: “The Unknown Terror" (1957) John Cities and the Poor AMERICA’S CRISES, 7:99 p.m. (56) Cwdasioa «f the “Cities and the Poor’’ feeves on the conflict between federal and local antipoverty programs. MERV GRIFFIN, 8:30 p.m. (50) Merv’s guests include Dorothy Collins, Pia Lindstrom, Dorn DeLuise, Herb Gardner, Dick Lor^ and Joanne Worley. JOHN DAVIDSON, 9:00 p.m. (4) Singers Jimmie Rodgers and Suzannah Joirdan are on the guest list along with the Uncalled-f«--3, a comic MndCleric Really Swings Jazz Pianiot Records Album, Has TV. Plans MIDLAND (AP)-n the next jazz pianist you see on television wears his collar backward, don’t assume be’s putting you on. He might be an Epia clergyman. In fact he might be The Rev. Thomas Vau^, curate of Johns Episcopal Church in Midland. Howard, Mala Powers (4) Tonight (7) Movie: “The Pirate’ (1948) Judy Garland, Gene Kelly (9) Movie: “The Root of AU EvU’’ (1947) Rennie, Phyllis (hlvert 1:99 (4) Beat the Champ (9) Window on the World 1:15 (7) News 1:39 (2) (4) News, Weather (7) After Hours 2:99 (7) Dragnet TUESDAY MORNING 9:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:29 (2) News 6:25 (2) Summer Semester 6:39 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 6:55 (2) Editorial, News 7:99 (4) Today (7) Tbree Stooges 7:05 (2) News 7:30 (2) Happyland 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:25 (7) News 8:30 (7) Movie: “Edison, the Man" (1940) Spencer Tracy, Charles Coburn 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go- Gotham Honors Ex-Bus Boy on Literary, Movie Exploits By EARL WILSON Joe Pasternak’s quite the Uterary and film producing hero around Our Town this week . . . even LBJ sent him a telegram congratulating him on the Pasternak Film Festival at the Gallery of Modern Art. Pasternak modestly said concerning the wire: “I knew that putting George Hamilton a picture would pay off.” He did use George in a film: “Where the. Boys Are.” Forty-four years ago Pasternak was i bus boy at the St Regis. On the roof of that same gilded hotel one night recently, Joe was gnest of honor at a party given by Charles Carey, general manager, salnting Joe’s book, “Cooking With Love and Paprika,’’ published hy Bernard Geis Associates, and his new picture, “Spinoff." WH.SON “I was bus boy here in 1922,” Joe remembered. “The pay was $11 a week. I only worked here two weeks.” “Why did you leave?” we asked. “Too many dishes,” h^ said. ★ ★ ★ Nai Bonet, who’s doing her “Jelly Belly” song and dance (written by our son EW Jr.) at the Latin (Quarter, is wanted at the Concord for a return engagement by entertainment director Phil Greenwald. Nai introduced the dance there before she recorded it for Audio Fidelity. “Hundreds of guests want to learn the dance," Greenwald said. “Besides, there are four guys doing it that I don’t know how to turn off." THE MIDNIGHT EARL . Mayor Lindsay, asked to play a bit role in “Up the Down Staircase”—being filmed here—declined: “I have enough critics now, without taking on the movie reviewers!” . . . Tbe “How to Succeed” troupe, which shot an outdoor scene on Eighth Ave. Friday, had to repeat it recentiy—the film was damaged. Tbe |»-oducer of “Alfie” gave Michael Caine a novel gift— a one-month vacation in NYC . . . Jacques Bergerac’D be in . . . Sammy Davis, who never slows down, ^1 make a 3-day tour of N.Y. theaters when his film, “Man Called Adam,” opens , A famed singer, who’s made millions, has money woes; his ez-mgr. grabs all salaries until their settlement is reached. ★ ★ ★ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: There’s a new Las Vegas paslno so swanky that the dice players throw unlisted numbers. WISH I’D SAID ’THAT: Today’s glamour girls must be very frugal—they all try to get the most out of a low-cut dress. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “The average American takes 18,908 steps a day-^mostly' in the wrong direction.”—Arnold GlaSow. EARL’S PEARLS: Milt Kamen says he hasn’t yet read *‘yalley of the Dolls,” the book about sleeping pills: “I’m waiting for the capsule version.” Charlie Mtuuia, at The Royal Box, paid tribute to the 10,000 librarians meeting in N.Y.-he took his bookie to lunch. That’s earl, brother. Round 9:99 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Living (9) Romper Room 9:39 (2) Dick Van Dyke 9:55 (4) News 19:99 (2) I Love Lucy (4) Eye Guess (9) Hercules 19:25 (4) News 19:39 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk ($) Hawfceye U:99 (2) Divorce Court (4) Chain Letter (7) Supermarket Sweep-stakes (9) Vacation Time 11:39 (4) Showdown (7) Dating Game (50) Dickory Doc The Rev. Mr. Vaughn, who swings between the rectory and the rea»ding studio, plans TV appearances on nighttime network shows in the next month or so. The priest, who signed a contract with a major recording company last October, has brought out an album of tunes his trio recorded at New Yoit’ Village Gate. JAZZ FESTIVAL The trio,, fresh frmn this year’s Newport Jazz Festival (“We broke the aialience up’“ is to participate in the Detroit Jazz FestivM Aug. 7. The Rev. Mr. Vaughn contends “there’s a tremendous amount of joy and understanding in jazz,” but stresses that his church comes first. AFTERNOON 12:99 (2) News, Weather, Sports (4) Jeopardy (7) Donna Reed (9) Luncheon Date 12:39 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Swingin’ (Country (7) Father Knows Best (9) People in Conflict (50) Movie U:tt (2) Guiding Ught 12:56 (4) News 1:99 (2) Uve of Life (4) Match Game (7) Ben Casey (9) Movie: “The Verdict” (1946) Sydney Green-street, Peter Lorre 1:25 (2) News M) Doctor’s House Call 1:39 (2) As the World’Turns (4) Let’s Make a Deal 1:55 (4) News 2:90 (2) Password (4) Days of Our Lives (7) Newlywed Game 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) A Time for Us (50) Love That Bob 2:55 (7) News 3:99 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Topper 3:25 (2) (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Ni^t (4) You Don’t Say (7) Nurses (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Johnny Ginger 4:99 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Dark Shadows 4:39 (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action Is “(«) Fun House 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:99 (4) George Pierrot (7) News, Sports (56) Koltanowski on Qiess 5:39 (56) What’s Nevf 5:45 (7) Network News 5:55 (4) Here’s Carol Duvall “The music is over and above my work in the church," he says. “How much I do depends on how much my health can take." He says he doesn’t accept music engagements that would conflict with his religious duties, and he doesn’t play in bars. T never did woilc commer^ cial gigs,” he explains. “I’ve always been indep^ent and I’m certaiidy not going out to play ‘Melancholy Baby’ for WARREN (AP> - Three ministers were to arbitrate a labor di^te today, deckling the complaint of a former Sterling Township public works employe who said he was fired in March by a tempwary foreman for fusing to operate a piece of ma-| chinery. I Nonviolence Dead, Claims McKissick NEW YORK (AP)-Floyd B. McKissick, national dbrector of the Congress of Racial Equality, says “nonviolence is dead.” You can’t teach nonviolence any more,” he .told reporters after a local television appearance. “We are a nation of violence.” McKissick was asked whether he thought there would be more racial violence in cities this summer. “God only knows,” he replied. -Weekend Radio Programs— WJIKTaO) WXYK1270) CKIW(800) WWJ(950) WCARd 130) WTOWO 460) WJ9K(1600) WHH-HK>(»4.7) Newt, Sportt WWJ, Nmn WXYZ, N«wi, Spoilt CKLW, Ntwt, Wu(.r WJBK, Th# Orton Homot WCAR. Ntwt. Jot B-Kii.Hi wriM, uncM Jty 4:1S-WW> Sportt WWJ, m WJR, • WJSK, M WXYZ. Id MoffM NMn, Itn ROM wjBic, r-‘-wjiTm i:l»-WHFI, BrRI WJR, Nowt, Mink »!W WWJ. Ntwt. Sportt WHFIi Jock FuHir ItilO-WXYZ. Dtnnv Ttylor TUISDAV MORNINI OilO-WJR, AAink HOII WWJ. Ntwt CKLW, Ntwt. Bud OoviM WCAR, Nowt, Dotall WJR, Ntwt, Mutk I WOON NoWt. Bob L_______ TiJB-WJBK, von Ptirick, 0:00 WJR. Ntwt, -------“■* 0:N -WJR, MtfC f WCAR, Nowt. Sandtrt WWJ Ntwii PMoy UkN Joy WWJ, AM NttobbOr noo-wjq, WXYZ. Irtokfotl ^ WJBK. Ntwt, Mutfc WPON, Nowt, SOP M HiOB-wjr. woow AriB , Rovlow; Ntwt; S WXYZ, stevt Lundy, WCAR. Ntwt. DtIztII WCAR, Ntwt, Dtvt Loek- WHFI, Ntwt. Ineort WJBK, Nowt, Shlrloy Idor ItilO-WWJ, Moledy Parodo ItOO-WWJ, Ntwt, Coll Kon. WJR, Ntwt. Illlol PWd CKLW, Ntwt, Otvt Sbtitr til^JR. Ntwt. LInkItNor WRON, Ntwt. Ptio Ladd WXYZ, Oavo Prlnoa mtoiSS Ministers to Arbitrate Philosophers SSActofeu^nS otoidom UCoitalB booM Jay^"***** phUotopbor SvISwr 1 (ootroiL) SOmiM mliMrtl dSPotm aStoSItti^of 22 ToUO*tOBol . ntctr&l t*ttct(niu»W «Wingt Englntert (tb.) “ 24 Danith wel^ S8 5^ 'Dog Food' Marine at Family Reunion Friend of Old Met Won't Pull Curtain NEW YORK (AP)-The old Metropolitan Opera House, object of a campaign to save it from destruction, has found a new friend. City license commissioner Joel J. TVler said Sunday he will keep the->entertalninent license for the building in force while a committee wtH-ks to save the (Bd Met, whose opera company has moved to Lincoln Center. ■R ★ “As long as there is a chance for the Old Met to survive,’' lyier said, “this department will not ring down the curtain. As far as we atH concerned, this is just an intermission.’ night, Pfe. Daniel Rembyer torned down the offer ef a b«e vacation at Oceanside, Calif., the city from which )|e had received the dog food, which contained a note reading, “Eat welLanimaL" Rombyer thanked the city of Oceanside for its offer but said he wanted to spend as much of his leave time as possible at his home in Jackson. Rombyer arrived back in the United States on an unscheduled flight fPMn Camp Butler in Okinawa three hours earlier than he had been expected. NOT ABOARD His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Rombyer of Jackson, were unaware of his arrival and met the later plane only to find he was not aboard. However, after being informed that United Press International had talked to Rombyer after his arrival, base officials checked further and Romlyer was finally reunited with his parents. Tech Picks New VP HOUGHTON (AP)-Dr. Dean W. Stebbins, dean of faculty at Michigan Technological University, has been named to the newly created positlcm of academic vice president. Dr. Wayne G. Brandstadt Says; Blood Pressure Range May Vary Widely [ am 57 years old and about a rice diet used at Duke fully adjusting the dosage and have hi^ blood i»«8sure. What should my {h^ sure be? Would a cocktail before dinner be harmful? Would a large amount of salt on my food^ affect my blood' pressure? Several years ago I re ad BRANDSTADT University to control high blood pressure. What do you think of this diet? Markedly in 2nd Quarter The uppo* (systolic) reading should be about 100 plus half your age but readings that are much higher may be observed and have no significance. The reading to watch is the lower (diastolic) level which should never be over 100. Inasmuch as a cocktail may help yon to relax it may lower your blood pressure slightly. Sodium as table salt or In any other form tends to In- WASHINGTON (UPI) — The ^dng almost solely on a tight nation’s booming economy showed a “substantial slowdown” during the April-May-June quarter of this year, mostly because Americans finally were ending a montba-long spending spree. The Commerce Department repmtad SuadagAhat the Grom National Product (GNP) ~ the ffHce tag on the nation’s total output of goods and servicea-increased during 1966’s second quarter by oidy $10.8 billion. This was the smallest gain since the fall of 1964, and pnt the GNP at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of fJ3Z hll-llon. money policy to stabilize the 'Unless the credit situation eases,” he said, “soon we may be faced with something more serious Sion.” MAIN REASON The main reason for the second-quarter GNP stowdbtTtt Was 'a marked tapering in consum-ir spending” following a kmg period of rapid gains, the gov- While tfad economy was slackening, prices were rising as fast as the irevious three months. In fact, inflation ate up $6.5 billion of the $10.8 billion second-quarter gain, leaving only $4J billicHi as a “real” increase. ernment said. Automobile sales alone drq>ped $3 billion at an anmiafrate. Behind the drop In spending were increased payroll withholding and Social Security taxes, the latter to help finance Medicare. The $10.8 billion GNP Increase in the second quarter compared with $16.8 billion in the first quarter and $17.9 billion in the last three months of 1965. Because of the GNFs importance as an economic barometer, speculation immediately wai raised about what effect the latest figures would have on the need for a tax increase to cool off the economy and curb inflation. The administration’s answer, according to one offleial, is that the possibility of a tax hike still exists, but its probability is “a little lower.’* Bat Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., today urged Presideiit Johason to ask Congress for a raise in personal and corporate faieom taxes- He proposed a IJ to 2 per cent bike In indhrldiud lacoiae taxes and a 2J to 3 per cent raise in Javits said increased taxes should be balanced by an easing of credit and a lowering of interest rates. In a speech prepared for Senate ddivery, he predicted the Federal Reserve Board would adjust monetary policy if the administration took the lead. Tbe New York Republican erWdMd Hia PmUmE fvn- from one to anotb-er, yon doctor can help yon A — Tbe blood pressure varies Q — My 18-year-old son gets excited when his blood pressure is taken and the doctor says it goes up to 190. He says he feds fine. What should he do about his high blood pressure? A — You failed to say what the lower reading was. Many young penK»s have an unstable systolic pressure sHiicfa is of little significance. If your son were to lie down and have his pressnre taken every 15 miaates It wodd most likely retm to normal to less than 39 mtontes. As long as his diastolic pressure is within normal limits the no cause for alarm. Michigan Wafers Claim Teen, Girl During Weekend The rice diet was highly successful, in reducing blood pressure when properly adminis-terol but was too unpalatable for most persons and was deficient in protein., It has no advantage over a more liberal diet that to poor In sodium and to now rarely prescribed. Substitutes for table salt are now avhilable for persons who don’t like unsalted food. By United Press International A teen-ager and a 6-year-old girl lost their lives du^ the weekend in Midtigan waten. Jack Newnon, 15, of Okemos drowned Saturday afternoon in Grand Traverse Bay while swimming at a beach nea Tn-ch Lake TownsMp, Antrim County. Ann Brozek, 6, Q — What causes high blood pressure? Can It be cured? Are (ho-e any side effects from drugs given to reduce high blood pressure? City drowned yesterday afternoon in Bishop Lake, Living-ston County. Her body was recovered by a lifeguard. Q — A friend has a blood pressure of 180 over 110. I didn’t think a person could have so high a diastolic pressure and be able to worit. Isn’t she to danger of hav^ tog a stroke? A — High Uood inrossura does predispose to a stroke but it doesn’t usually cause any warning symptoms. Your friend should be treated to bring her diastolic pressure down b^w 100. ‘aaNiwn*''AtMdiSlMi)'^ A — Tbe cause of high blood pressure to not always apparent but nervous tension and obesity certainly aggravate It. Aftiiough a cure to unlikely It to both possible and advisable to control this condition. Many different drags are used for this purpose and all of them may have undesirable side effects but, by skOi- KITCHEN CABINETS 5-Ff. Kitchen SOCQOO COMPLETE fCDu 7-Ft. Kitchen SOQQOO COMPLETE INCtUUtS UppK-r and Lower Cabinet'., Counter Tops, Sinir with Faucets, I WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PUNS - NO CHARGE 15W.UWRINCI ^nitki€ Mich. ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING ^ADDITIONS^ riHlLT BOOHS ALUMINUM sum BEC. BOOMS Roofing-siding ■t • THE PONTIAC PltBSS, MONDAY. JX3LY i», Segregated Schools Still a Harsh Reality Count for Counitlors ^ ARBOR (I) - ne Uni^ versity of Michigan whl offer a short course July 3IV-22 for voca- By WHITNEY M. YOUNG, JR. National Directer Urbanl^gne fEDITOR’S NOfE ^ ThiB is the first of three articles on education and integration.) In 1954, the Supreme Court delivered its historic decision declaring segrated schools unconstitutional. The decision was grounded on ' the realization that an inferior education hand-i icaps an indi-V i d u a I and breeds poverty and feelings of inferiority. Ten years later, the Con-' gress passed the Civil Right^____________ Art of 1 9 64 YOUNG which included Title IV, a provision banning racial discrimination in federally-aided pro-gram.s and whifch authorizes the government to wothhold funds to compel integration. Despite these measures, our nation’s schools are still segregated. North and South, integration is a dream rather than a reality. U. S. Commissioner of Education Harold Howe II told a school administrators conference that only about 5 per cent of Negro, students in the South attend! classes with white students. i In the North, only 15 per cent of Negro students are in in-, tcgrated classes. LITTLE GAINS The twelve years which have slipped by since the Supreme Court decision have resulted in few gains in intregation and a loss in quality in many school systems. I frankly can’t see how quality education can be separated from integration. In a democracy, the schools serve the function of preparing their students for their future roles as responsible citizens, while transmitting to them the cultural heritage of their country. They also equip them with the skills they ne^ to contribute to Ithe nation’s economy. i None of these functions of the educational system can be met by segregated schools. Educators realize that students get only a partial ednca-tioB if they are not exposed to different Ideas and people. Diversity is -a essential to learning as reading primers. The Negro child is even more damaged than the white child by segregated schools. He is handicapped by rundown schools, fewer facilities, outmoded equipment, and a teaching staff which is often drawn from younger, less experienced teachers. One study showed that three-fourths of the teachers in a ghetto school had temporary teaching licenses. The result of this inferior education is a deterioration of the c h i 1 d’s abil-ies. A study of school children in a central Harlem school district showed that their median IQs were lowered between the third grade and the eighth grade. This is not education, it is miseducation. Small wonder that the dropout rates in these schools are so high. tional rehabilitatioa wiM work with adults language or speech due to brain injuries. Afttndant Is Robbtcl DETROIT (AP> - Fillii station attendant Edward Need, 37, of Detroit, said he was kid- naped a^ gunpoint and robbed of |3N by sv nwi Sunday. Need said the bandits let him out of the jnr six blocks away from the station. Funtral In D»arborn DEARBORN (Jfl - A funeral mass will be sung Tuesday in Dearborn for Dr. Alphonse C. Sawicki, a past ti elation. Sawicki died in Detroit. nr of the tal Asao-Saturday S/VR(S:1 uKTO Tracf , l'-■ 'Free' Food to Reds Up WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Communist bloc's dependence on free world food supplies appears to be growing. An Agriculture Department nport, made public yesterday, said Communist purchases of wheat from Western nations rose to a record total of 725 million bushels during the year that ended June 30, up more than 57 per cent from the previous yellr. The department said the increase was due to low wheat production in Russia and Red China. HOME OF RNEST BRAND NAMES 108 N.SAQINAW-FE 3-7114 New! IX/lagnavox. Stereo Radio-Phonograph, choice of 4 decorator styles This amazingly compact, space saving Mag-navox combines superb stereo phonograph with exciting stereo FM' and Monaural FM-AM radio. Powerful Solid State stereo amplifier produces 20 watts of undlstorted music power—so dependable that Solid State Components are guaranteed for 5 years. Advanced Acoustical System projects sound from front and sides of cabinet. • 4 Speakers • Micromatic Record Player with Diamond Stylus guaranteed 10 years. Choice of 4 beautiful styles. Warranty: I year on parts, 90 days service. YOUR CHOICE ►50 198' PERSON-TO-PERSON CREDIT • No Down Payment • 90 Days Same as Cash • Up to 36 Months To Pay Open Monday,Thursday, Friday 'til 9 P. M. — Park Free Rear of Store DON’T MISS THESE IMPORTANT SAVINGS OF AS MUCH AS NOW ' AT PONTIAC STORE ONLY WAS Traditional walnut, glass door chincf......... ^169^^ 5-piece maple, plastic top dinettes, 42" round table with 4 mate's chairs Drexel-modern walnut dining room, china, table and four chairs................. Authentically crafted maple captain's chairs Stanley dining room tables in American walnut. Drop leaf or round with leaf 5 Piece French provincial-plastic top extension table and 4 side chairs . . OF DINING ROOMS i » 89“ .. *405’"’ *249“ .. »149« *119“ .. ^638^° *449“ $ 2995 * 19” DINETTES! Metal dinettes in many styles and prices for kitchen or dining room. Prices ripped. Hurry, quantities are limitedl Th0 W90fhT Very Warn THE PONTIAC VOL. 124 — NO. 138 ’ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY, JULY 18, 1966 -44 PAGES UNITtD PRESS INTEMATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS Mass-Murder Suspect in Hospital CmCACJO (AP) - Richard Speck, the most wanted man in the country tor 15 hours, lies in a prison hospital bed charged with murder today while police piece together the story behind the massacre of eight student nurses. Speck, a 25-year-old ex-convict, spent his last hours drink- ing and carousing before he attempted — unsuccessfully — to end his life, yesterday. In an Ironic twist, the fugitive whose name and picture were flashed around the world was taken to a hospital by ■ "In’t recog- nize him. State’s Atty. Daniel Ward said Speck would appear in Circuit Court today on a charge of murdering 22-year-old Gloria Jean Davy, one of the eight student nurses massacred in their residence early Thursday. Ward said he anticipates filing multiple murder charges against Speck and that he prob- ably will present the case to the grand jury this week. Speck has been under sedation in the city jail hospital and reported in good condition. Ward said Speck had not been questioned and had made no statements. He was under heavy guard. The nationwide hunt for Speck ended in a skid row flophouse when a tenant saw Speck staggering down a hallway, covered with blood. The tenant called the desk clerk and he summoned police. Mitchell said Speck may have reasoned “he had run out of time,” and attempted to kill himself. Police placed a tourniquet on the profusely bleeding left arm and took the man, reeking from alcohol and unconscious, to Cook County hospital. TOKYO (AP) - North Viet Nam made an unusual appeal today for more material and rnoral si^port from its Communist allies and other nations, describing its war situation as “extremely serious.” But Red China indicated it is not ready to send its soldiers into the fight. The plea came from North Viet Nam’s Fatherland Front and was addressed even to the Anierican people in an effort to weaken the Johnson administration’s political flank at home. It followed President Ho Chi Minh’s decree of partial mobilization of North Vietnamese reserves yesterday. The mobilization decree touched off speculation that North Viet Nam planned to send more regular troops into the south in reply to the intensified American air war, using the reserves to fill gaps at home. 17th Parallel frontier where a North Vietnamese division of 3,-000 to 4,000 men had been reported. Fighting tapered off today, but the allied force was reported to have killed 160 Reds Area Mishaps Claim 2 Lives Avon Twp. Man Is Troy Hit-Run Victim Military action in South Viet Nam suggested infiltraUon ffiltfil !)£ IMeasIng drei^. Three thousand U.S. Marines and .South Vietnamese troops swept an area just below the A 30-year-old Avon Township man and an 18-year-old Dearborn youth were killed in Sep-____________ arate area accidents yesterday. Blake A. Fos-ter of 2478 Ym FVankapn, Avon • Township, was killed when his motorcycle was struck In Today's Press British Pound Value drops on world market — PAGE A-3. Bobby Baker Enjoying new life as a motel operator — PAGE C-8. Soapy-Jerry Cavanagh’s pleas for a debate are ignored — PAGE B-11. Area News .........A-4 Astrology .........D-3 Bridge D4 Crossword Pnzzle . . Comics ............D-3 EdItoriaU A4 Markets ............D4 ....D4 C-1-C4 ....C4 D-ll Veterans* Series B-8 inben, Earl ......D-ll Women’s Pnges B-1-^ from behind by an unidentified vehicle. IVoy police said he was thrown into the street where he was run over by a second vehicle driven by Nancy J. Miller, 23, of 5570 John R, Troy. Tbe Miller woman told police she and her passenger, William Goiey, M, of Trenton, *‘saw something in the road” and she tried to avoid it. The editorial dangled the threat of CTiinese Intervention, declaring "we will take action any time we consider it necessary.” But it emphasized that China regarded its role now as a supporting one - "The vast expanse of our country is the rear area of the Vietnamese people.” MORE COQPERAITON The Fatherland Front’s appeal suggested North Viet Nam wooid iiiwr to see more cooperation between China and the Soviet Union to help the Hanoi regime. But Peking replied with a new swipe at the Kremlin. Rainy Night a Possibility Foster was dead on arrival at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. The accident occurred at 10:18 p.m. on John R between Wattles and Long Lake. Troy Police Chief Forrest 0. Fisher Jr. said there were apparently no witnesses to the hit-and-run accident. He said it is still under investigation. NOVI FATAL Eighteen-year-old Christopher R. Wimsatt of Dearborn was killed at 12:01 a.m. yesterday . as he was walking on 1-06 near 1 Beck in Novi. Officers from the Redford State Police Post said he had stopped to remove a lawn chair from the highway and was re^ turning to his car when he was struck by a car driven by Mery L. Kulow, 38, of Taylor Township. Today’s thermometer reading could rise even higher than that of last weekend. Today’s predicted highs are from 86 to 92. There is a possibility of scattered thundershowers this evening and tonight. Yesterday’s skies were clear as the thermometer rose to 89 degrees. While Saturday’s skies were often cloudy, the high was only 82. The low tonight will be 66 to 70. CLEAR. COOL Tomorrow will be clearer but cooler with highs of 80 to 86. Southwesterly winds of 10 to 20-miles-per-hour will diminish tonight. Wednesday will be partly cloudy and cooler. BUeaNS ARTHUR MOORB PROBATE JUDGE Space Pair Ready for Today's Trip CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) —Relaxed by a day of fishing, two primed astronauts were ready to ride the Gemini 10 spacecraft today on a bold dual-rendezvous and space-walk adventure that could take them farther from earth than man has yet ventured. Navy (^dr. John W. Young, veteran of last year’s Gemini 3 flight, and Air Force Maj. Michael Collins had most of the day to prepare foi^ their three-day journey among the stars. Their ’Titan 2 was scheduled to blast off at 5:21 p.m. (Pontiac time). An Atlas was to vault skyward 101 minutes earlier — at 3:41 p.m. — to hurl an Agena space vehicle Into orbit as a chase target But a young surgeon who had just read a newspaper recognized a tattoo and summoned police. This came less than 15 hours after a murder warrant had been issued for Speck. ’TRIED SUICIDE Detectives theorized that Speck drank himself into a stupor and tried to commit suicide after he saw a drinking buddy in the back seat of a police car. Detective John Mitchell said Speck may have spotted Robert Gerrald in thh back of a squad car as police toured skid row in a systemic search for Speck Friday night and Saturday. Authorities said he used either a broken bottie or knife to slash his arm and wrist. He lost IVi pints of blood. WERE TOGETHER Police picked Gerrald up Friday afternoon after witnesses reported seeing Gerrald with Speck in a rooming house liiursday afternoon. Police said Gerrald told them he and Speck discussed tbe nurses’ massacre while drinking in a tavern the morning the bodies were found. Gerrald said Speck told him: "It must have been a sex maniac who did that crime.” bloodied man — who was registered in the Starr Hotel as B. Brain — in the emergency room as just another slashing case until he saw something under the coat of blood. "I moistened my finger tips and rubbed,” Dr. Smith saM. "I saw a b. I rubbed some more and saw b-o-r-n.” It was the first word of a tattoo reading “born to raise hell.” Dr. Smith recalled the newspaper article and quickly washed the bfood off the arm. The tattoo was one of the identifying marks flashed across the continent 15 hours previously. “What’s your name?” Dr. Smith asked the man. "Richard, Richard Speck,” he answered weakly. The story unfolded all day yesterday as details of police activity were made public. SAW TATHK) The young surgeon. Dr. Leroy Smith, 26, worked on the “This is the fellow police are looking for,” Dr. Smith told a nurse. “Get hold of the police right now.” At one point. Dr. Smith said, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) PRESS WINS AWARD — The Pontiac Press is accepting the award from Roswell S. Bosworth was awarded second place in excellence in typog- Jr., publisher of the Phoenix Times Newspapers, raphy, unlimited daily newspaper division, at the Bristol, R.I. First place went to the St. Peters- 81st annual meeting of the National Newspaper burg (Fla.) Evening Independent. There were Association meeting in Boston Saturday night. John more than 2,600 entries in both daily and weekly Riley (right), advertising director of The Press, classifications. With all preparations proceeding smoothly. Young and Collins took a day off yesterday and went fishing in the AtUntic off Cape Kennedy. North Viefs Ask for Help From Red Allies, Others since the operation began Friday. Red China reacted to the mobilization decree by offering again ”to take all necessary action” in support of the North Vietnamese but implied it thought they could win with their own forces. Adjusting to a sleep schedule that will keep them up late each night in space, they retired about 3 a.m. this morning, and space officials hoped they’d sleep until after noon. LEFT IN SPACE The late afternoon launch times were dictated by the position of another Agena left in space last March by the Gemini 8 pilots. After catching and linking np with their Agena late to- HOW THEY COMPARE-At right is a drawing made by a Chicago Police Department artist of the slayer of eight student nurses. Left is a police An editorllal in the official Peking People’s Daily said the decree showed “the unshakeable confidence of the Vietnamese people in their resolve to fight and win.” night. Young and Collins plan to fire the target satellite’s powerful engine to shoot to a record altitude of perhaps 468 miles to position themselves for a tricky rendezvous with the Gemini 8 Agena Wednesday. Lansing Employes Strike Collins is to take a space walk over to the old Agena — which he has dubbed a “dead bird” because it has no battery power. This is one of two 55-minute work periods he plans outside the Gemini 10 spacecraft. The firet is to be a simple “stand up” maneuver tomorrow during which he’ll open his hatch, poke the upper half of his body into space and conduct scientific and photographic experiments. FUTURE PROGRAM LANSING yP) — Some 250 unionized city employes went out on strike today after contract negotiations ended abruptly with union representatives accusing the city of unethical labor practices. Members of Local 1390 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees AFL-CIO set up picket lines at city hall and other municipal offices at midnight. Bargaining ended last night after Jerry Wurf, international president of the AFSCME, claimed he had been assaulted by an attorney for the city and accused the city of using tape recorders and plainclothes policemen to harass the union. State Nurse Dated Suspect Says He Pulled Knife in Barroom Incident “Almost everything we do will be directly applicable to the gram,” commented command pilot Young. "There is some strange conspiracy going on here to evade dealing with us, hoping that we would say something somehow that would discredit the union, and the city could escape its responsibility,” Wurf said, as he walked out of negotiations at city hall. ★ ★ ★ Wurf arrived from Washington yesterday afternoon to help the union reach its first contract with the city before the strike deadline. The tmion-lesi yeer-wen-the nght AG-Wgain lor-aonw.^ 400 persons employed by the city’s civic center, pubilc service, parks and recreation and traffic departments. Mine Search Continues The nurse said Speck drew his knife during an argument with another patron of the bar, but put it away when she asked him to. CALUMET (UPI) - Although hope for the survival of 7-year-old Ruth Ann Miller was lacking, wouldbe rescuers poured over mine records in an effort to find a new route into a murky, mile-deep copper mine shaft. Search operations were held up yesterday by a jam-up of timber, concrete and iron pilings which had closed the shaft at the 400-foot level, keeping the search crews from peering into the dark depths. The child tumbled into the abandoned shaft Saturday while, according to her 18-yenrold brother Gary, they wera picking berries. The shaft had been partially closed by a concrete slab for 35 years but was reopened Saturday in a feverish effort to find the girl to the shaft below the 400-foot level. NO HOLE A State Police spokesman said at that time there was not a hole big enough “even to see through.” He added, however, that it was not known how much debris had collected at that poipt since the girl fell in. He said, “There nuy have around-the-clock shifts, continued their rescue efforts, descending time after time In a large basket lowered by a crane. The shaft is rectangularshaped, about 12 by 18 feet, and drops straight down. The girl apparently fell (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Doctors at St. Joseph’s described yesterday their operation on Speck’s appendix after the accused slayer was removed from an Inland Steamship Co. ore carrier May 3. "It was a red hot appendbc, ready to burst,” said Dr. Paul Goodreau, who assisted Dr. A.D. Aldrich in the surgery. been a large hole there when she fell down.' Below the jam-up the searchers expected to find 2,000 feet of water which has seeped into the mine since its closing. After making very little headway past the Jam-up yesterday officials of Calumet and Hecia Mining Co. began a search of oW records in tbe hope they would reveal another entrance Because of the water, the depth of the shaft estimated at more than a mile — \and the length of time since the%irl fell in Saturday noon, there was very UtUe hope, even on the part of her stepfather, Eugene Taylor, that little Ruth Ann would be alive. AROUNDCLOCK Despite the pessimism SO working in three LI'L ONfS RUTH ANN MILLER “I want you to meet Albert. He’s the tiger in my tank.” AR WIrtAlwta photo of a man identified as Richard Speck, 25, who has been charged with murder in the slayings. HANC(X:K (AP) - Suspected mass-slayer Richard B. Speck, while recovering from an emergency appendectomy in May, pulled a knife on a patron of an area bar, the woman he dated said yesterday. Judy Laakaniemi, 28, a nurse at St. Joseph’s Hospital in neighboring Houghton, said that was the only unpleasant incident during her dates with Speck, whose iife had been saved ear-liGf hy -w wtrgeoH w4 -the--hos*— pital. Following the operation, doctors said. Speck spent a week in the hospital and then another week convalescing in Hancock. During that time he dated Miss Laakeniemi, whom he met in the hospital. i—a 5 « -— . ^ mmm ■■«! THE PONTIAC PHESS, MONDAY, JULY 18, 1966 mmmornbcrs Pound Reds Air Strike to Last at Least Another Week—Negotiators WASHINGTON (AP) - Pessimistic negotiators predicted today the strike against five major airlines probably would last for at least another week. Now in its llth day, the strike has shut down all but national defense operations of the five lines and has inconvenienced travelers throughout the country who have besieged other airlines as well as railroads and bus lines in an effort to carry out summer travel plans. ★ ★ ★ The chief union negotiator blamed the airlines for the slow pace of the talks. ★ ★ * “They keep their feet planted in the concrete,” said Vice President Joseph Ramsey of the AFL-CIO International Association of Machinists. EXTENDED PERIOD Ramsey said extensive layoffs and closing of ticket offices indicated the strike could go on “for an extended period of time. The chief airline negotiator, William Curtin, commented that “we are a long way apart" as the negotiakH-s walked into a meeting with Asst. Secretary of Labor James J. Reynolds. ★ * * Reynolds, who Sunday compared the pace of the negotiations with the speed of two turtles, had no comment today. Curtin said he saw no reason to expect an early settlement. HUGE COST He also said he could not dispute estimates that the strike was costing the five airlines $7 million a day in revenue losses. Ramsey said of the estimated strike losses: “That’s their fu- neral, not ours.” ♦ ★ ★ Ramsey accused the airline negotiators of taking the attitude of “the public be damned.” He added, “We are not attempting to drag our feet.” * * * Ramsey said there had been no progress on one key point, the union’s demand for a 36-month contract. The airlines want a 42-month agreement. Big Oil Depot Hit, Set Afire Ground War Slows Near Neutral Zone Chicago's West Side Calm as National Guard Leaves CHICAGO (AP) — Twenty- they went to armories in the seven hundred Illinois National Guardsmen were removed early today from Chicago’s West Side where they had spent three nights in a Negro district scarred by rioting. Some 1,236 administrative and supply personnel got the first word from their commander, Maj. Gen. Francis P. Kane of the 33rd Infantry Division of the Illinois National Guard, at midnight and went home. ♦ * ★ Three hours later, 1,465 other gardsmen left the streets, but Today I Balloon Launch ' Is Prelude to Mars Tests ALAMOGORDO, N.M. (AP)-An 815-foot tall balloon soared away frorh a southern New Mexico desert site today in a prelude to tests involving the Voyager spacecraft for unmann^ landings on Mars. Billed by the Air Force as the largest balloon ever built, with a helium capacity of 26 million cubic feet, it was designed to reach an altitude of 130,000 feet before descending in the Tucson-Phoenix area of Arizona. ★ w w Test director James C. Payne of the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories said the balloon, launched from Holloman Air Force Base about 8 a.m. (EST) was programmed for a 8-7 h o u r night. In later Bights, the balloon is to carry 1,700-popnd Voyager vehicles in tests of the space-chute systems for soft, uncraft’s deceleration and para-manned landings on Mars. city, on standby duty. Kane said “at the present time, we plan to put troops on the street again Monday night.” FEWER INCIDENTS Kane said that after a 3V4-hour tour of the West Side area he had noted there were fewer incidents and that the district appears to be returning to normal. Police — operating under an emergency plan since the looting, shooting and burning reached a peak last Thursday — I said morning patrols would be' normal. The outburst began last Tuesday when Negroes reacted with rock throwing after a patrolmen turned off a hydrant where kids were cooling off in mid-Ms temperatures. It claimed two deaths, scores of injuries and untol damage before Guardsmen moved in with weapons at the ready Friday night. Gov. Otto Kerner, after a surprise tour of the West Side area Sunday said: “We are hopeful that law and order have been restored.” SHOT MISSED There have been scattered incidents nightly. In one, early today, a guardsman reported that a Negro had fired at him and fled. Police said the shot, which missed, came from an alley that was the scene of the shooting of a police officer, the killing of a Negro and the wounding of another at the riot’s height. Taverns and pool halls in the area, closed by the disturbance, ere allowed to reopen Sunday. The city park superintendent, responding to residents’ complaints that there weren’t enough swimming pools for summer recreation, announced that 10 will be installed in parks and playgrounds. The first went in Sunday. SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Fiftetn waves of American bombers pounded a major oil depot in North Viet Nam Sunday and touched off 35 fires and 51 explosions in the big storage complex, the U.S. military command reported today. U.S. Air Force jets struck the Badon fuel depot 20 miles north west of Dong Hoi while other Air Force planes hit another oil storage area one mile east of Badon. In South Viet Nam, fighting died down in the combined U.S. Marine-South Vietnamese drive against an estimated 2,000 North Vietnamese army regulars eight miles south of the demilitarized zone separating North and South Viet Nam. ★ ★ ★ U.S. headquarters reported two small-scale probing attacks by the North Vietnamese today. The South Vietnamese said their force had no contact with the enemy. Earlier in the operation, which began Friday, 160 Reds were reported killed. UGHT CASUAL'OES Allied casualties were reported light, but 13 Marines were killed when the Communists shot down a Marine CH46 troopcarrying helicopter at the start of the operation. Enemy fire also brought down an F4 Phantom jet, but the two crewmen bailed out safely. Four other Birmingham Area News Wing Lake School Bell on Agenda for Board BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Old sdiooi bells never die, nor fade away. Instead, they slide into oblivion in the dusty comer of an old w a r e h 0 u s e, awaiting eventual delivery to the scrap dealer and subsequent reincarnation into a car door or bridge girder. Not so with the school bell on toe old Wing Lake school building. The old bell was placed in the then new school’s belfrey in 1859 and remained there as the building’s trademark for 100 years. In 1958 the old one - room schoolhouse was abandoned as a classroom building in favor of a RUNS FROM COPTER - A Yank pilot runs from his crashed helicopter during U.S. Marine landings south of the demilitarized zone between South and North Viet Nam in the Song Ngan valley. Other Marines (left) work to free a Marine trapped under the AP Wlraphato collapsed tail. He was recovered with cuts and bruises. 'The Marines started a multibattalion assault on the area, believed hiding part of the 10,000-man 324th North Vietnamese Division. Mass-Murder Suspect Is Hospitalized (Continued FYom Page One) Speck looked up and asked: Will you get toe $10,000?” ■ “I just walked away,” the young surgeon said. The reference was to the $10,000 reward offered by the south Chicago Community Hospital, where the student nurses trained. When Speck was coming out of the anesthesia, the doctor quoted him as saying: Tm scared. I’m scared.” ★ ★ ★ As details of the police investigation were revealed yesterday it showed that Speck might be , I tied to the mass murder partly helicopters were destroyed or!by his desire to reach New Or-[leans. new«r school building which, shares the schoolyard. ♦ ★ ★ Renovation began on the old school in 1959 in preparation for its being turned into a library. The bell was removed at that time because its weght could not be supported by toe building during the latter’s restoration. IN STORAGE Since 1959 the bell has been in storage. ★ ★ ★ Tomorrow the board of education will consider requests from school principal Mrs. Geneva Forslund and area parents that the bell be preserved and displayed as a historical ntarker and reminder of toe area’s early years. 'The school system’s summer Campette program for preschoolers will be climaxed tomorrow morning with a puppet. show to be attended by an estimated 100 youngsters'who are participating in summer programs at Vaughan School. The show, which is being put on with toe help of Mrs. Mildred Berry, will feature a presentation of the play “Rumplestilt-dkin.” Mother Doubts Son Is Guilty Hopes Arrest of Speck Mistaken Identity Story of S. Viet Loss Kept Secret 2 Weeks CA MAU, South Viet Nam (DPI) | Sea Swallows have given as well DALLAS (UPI) - The mother of Richard Speck, accused of slaying eight Chicago student nurses, doubts her son could secret since, have committed the murders. The Rev. A. E. O’Connor, a neighbor, talked with Mrs. Margaret Speck Lindberg before she — One of the government’s costlier defeats in the war took place two weeks ago in the southernmost province of Viet Nam and has been kept a close A multicompany government force suffered heavy casualties when ambushed by a Viet went into seclusion. He quoled ^-g force of about the same ^ strength. Three of the four The Weather American Special Forces advisers were kiiled and the other wounded, American military sources in the province capital reported today. The engagement took place Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Partly cloudy and very warm today. High 88-92. Scattered thundershowers tonight, possibly beginning this evening. Low tonight 66-70. Clearing and not as warm Wednesday. Tuesday high 80-86. Southwesterly winds 10-20 miles this afternoon, diminishing to- her as saying she hopes it is a case of mistaken identity. “I went to them in (he capacity of a minister and neighbor,” O’Connor said. “They wereinastateof shock. They told me they were four miles" south of Hai Yen in going aivay to the home o f Xuyen Province while govern-friends. jment forces carried out a two- “1 din't ask where they were | pronged sweep and destroy opgoing or how long they planned [eration. The Viet Cong attack^ to stay,” he said. “I’m feeding[one government unit from well their cat and dog.” [concealed ambush positions. MOTHER HOPES as they received. PRIVATE ARMY In the days of the late President Ngo Dinh Diem, the Sea Swallows were a private army raised and led by a Catholic priest of Chinese extraction. Father Nguyen Lac Hoa. Despite constant harassment by the Viet Cong, Father Hoa and his Chinese refugees hung on in their tiny enclave in this most inhospitable part of Viet Nam. 17 Killed in the Rush LUCKNOW, India (AP) -Seventeen persons, including five women and two children, were killed today in a stampede caused by religious p i 1-grims running for shelter during a rainstorm at a country fair. “The mother hopee it is a case In. a short, brutal f Women buy 89 per cent of all the remodeling products sold U.S. Air Force B52s softened up the area three times last week, and the big b 0 m b e r 8 struck again Sunday while a thousand Marines landed on the beaches just south of the border as a blocking force. “We’ll just have to stay up here until we find them,” said Maj. Gen. Wood B. Kyle, commander of the 3rd Marine Division. “That could take days or weeks." No fighting of any size was reported elsewhere in South Viet Nam. MORE TERRORISM However, Vietnamese headquarters reported an upsurge in Viet Cong terrorism and harassment, including one attack three miles south of Saigon and another 18 miles east of the capital. In the first, the Viet Cong ambushed a police team on patrol and inflicted several casualties, a Vietnamese spokesman said. In the second incident, a Viet Cong squad ambushed a regional force patrol and killed and wounded several men. The raid on the Badon oil storage depot was one of the biggest in the sustained American drive to wipe out North Viet Nam’s fuel supplies. The Badon depot is a former North Vietnamese army camp which had been converted into a storage area. Pilots said the fuel was stored in drums rather than in tanks, which probably I of mistaken WenWy,’’O’Gonnorpe Rovermnant Iroopa wara said. “She doesn’t believe hen routed ‘contact was boy was capable " of the crime, 'ost with the unit. The Viet Cong moved quickly gathering up .. , •■••V A ovi\4 wiicMi III Tviiiv,!! piuuaui^ juciiviiicu nno lUflrftl ____. . . T" “I told the family all we could do was pray it was a mistaken identity. I told them it was better for Speck to be in custody than to be a fugitive.” O’Connor, pastor of East Dal-j “"“Pi las r’nnnronoIinnQl MoIhnHist I‘^OIUIIUI WCrC hats, shirts and other means of identification from the dead. Thus disguised, they moved to intercept the second column. TROOPS WARY n the second Congregational Methodist | wary, havmg church, said “We wouldn’t ask^^^f - ★ ^ * I waving to give the impression ■’ g mistice agrnementg now in effect between Israel and die ^b states wtth stronger project, also urged the Arab| to cease their acts of temirisfh Israeli territory. Israeli o^ fidab recaBed timt the Damascus government had vowed to “teach brael a lesson’’ and did not rule out the possibilty of more border incidents. Ihursday’s attack was in “re- Syrian planes buzzed the border yesterday but did not cross regime would observe a {Hedge it gave to the U.N. truce supervision chief Lt. Gen. Odd Bull of Norway, last June to refrain from opening fire under any conditions. raids ' and terrorist brael claimed. Eshkol said the Israeli government had hoped the new Syrian However, after sabotage acts against Israeli terhtory Wednes- day in which one Israeli was killed and two wounded, it became imperative to take deterrent action, Eshkol said. Now at All KITE PHOTO DEALERS ^1®® Instant PHOTO ALBUM This Week Only JULY 18th THROUGH JULY 21st WITH EVERY ROLL OrKODACOLOR FILM PRINTED AND DEVELOPED WHY THIS AMAZING OFFER? To show you what wonderful color pictures we make, Hite Photo Dealers you to try their Kodacolor processing service. Once you see your pictures and get your free instant album, we know you will get more fun from your pictures, and become a repeat customer. 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Woodward CRANBROOK DRUG 2511 W. Maple at Cranbreok DANDY BEVERLY DRUG 31215 SeuHiNald nr. 13 Milt DEMERY e C6. 200 NerHi Woodward ETON PHARMACY 221 N. Eton nr. Maple PONTIAC PONTIAC PONTIAC CORVETTES ENTERPRISES MONTGOMERY WARD b CO. A. J. STARK PHARMACY 661 East South Boultvard Telegraph b Elisabeth Lake Rd. 909 South Woodward DOUBLE D. DISCOUNT Pontiac Mall THRIFTY DRUG PARSON’S DRUG 140 N. Saginaw 28 N. Saginaw at Lawrenct 1990 Auburn at Crooks Rd. THRIFY DRUG #2 ELIZABETH LK. PHARMACY RUSS'S COUNTRY STORE 6 South Telegraph cr. Huron 3801 Eliiabeth Laka Rd. 4500 Elisabeth Lake Rd. YANKEE STORE #56 nr. Winding SLANKSTER b JONES PHARMACY 2135 S. Telegraph MIRACLI CAMERA SHOP 284 State St. nr. N. Johnson ORCHARD LAKE 1 2205 S. Tcitgraph Miracle Mila Shopping Ctntor FENTON DANDY DRUG 3236 Orchard Lake Rd. BLOOMFIELD HILLS BILLMEIER STUDIO 100 S. Loroy OXFORD ARHOLl> PHARMACm INC. 2540 N. Woodward HOLLY JACK'S CAMERA {HOP 40 $. Waihingten - DICK'S REXALL PHARMACY MITCHELL'S DRUG STORE BRIGHTON 107 S. Saginaw St. 2 N. Washington LELAND DRUG HOWELL ROCHESTER i 201 W. Main JOHNSON DRUG PAYLESS DISCOUNT 117 W. Grand River 511 Main St. CLARKSTON KEEGO HARBOR ROCHESTER CAMERA SHOP 505 N. Main St. O'DELL DRUG CASS LAKE PHARMACY TROY 10 S. Maina 3000 Orchard Laka Rd. LOWEN DRUGS COMMERCE LAKE ORION 72 W. Mapla HARRY C. HAYES DRUG ARNOLD PHARMACIES INC. UTICA 111 Commarta Rd. cor. S. Commarce Rd. 329 S. Broadway GRIGGS DRUG STORE ARNOLD PHARMACIES INC. 2 South Broadway at Flint 39040 Van Dyka at 17 Mila DRAYTON PLAINS MILFORD 1 DANDY DRUG 45580 Van Dyke THRIFTY DRUG #3 SHUTTER SHOP UTICA HOBBY SHOP 4985 Diiia Highway 310 North Main St. 46231 Van Dyka at Carpanitr nr. Williams Lake Rd. NOVI WALLED UKE LU DRUGS NOVI REXALL DRUG WALLED LAKE DISCOUNT 4390 DlBie Hwy. nr. Saahabaw 43035 Grand Rivtr nr. Novi 707 Pontiac Trail nr. Mapla Defenseless'Sunday for City A Leaders THB PONTIAC fRKSS. MaNDAY, JULY 18, 1966 ,l CLAU A »A$»ALL :r*nbr^ ;io Sir The aass A Baseball League race tightened considerably Sunday during a four-game Jay-see Park slate that was marked by generally ineffective pitching backed by bad fielding. * ★ * Both top teams, the R. T. Clippers and Teamsters 614, were beaten as their pitching had a rough time and their defenses were even worse. Booth Homes clobbered the Clippers, 11-5, with a IWiit at^k that was augmented by seven errors on the part of the loop leaders. M. G. Collision held onto third place with a wild 9-8 win over the runner-up Teamsters who threw in five walks and six errors along with the winners’ nine hits. SHORT TTLT Cranbrook stayed tied with Booth for fourth with a five-inning, 13-0 victory over winless Evans Equipment. Steve Han-way allowed only two hits and struck out seven. Evans had six errors. CIO 594 outscored, outhit and ooterrored Talbott Lumber in a 6-2 conquest that featured Steve Kendrick’s strong hurling. He fanned nine and scattered six hits. Neil Roberts stroked three singles and drove in four runs to pace Booth’s victory over the Clippers. He capped a decisive five-run fourth with a two-run safety. Ed Sparkman saved the in for Dan Fife. Ed Bishop of M. G. outdueled the Teamsters’ Don Picmann over the final three innings after the two teams had scored 17 runs in the first four frames. Bishop retired the final two hitters with two runners on second base to preserve his second n. Willie Holliman cracked a game-tying triple and scored the deciding run on Ron Kind’s single In the fourth. Guy Bramble drove in three runs for Cranbrook, while CIO’s Rich Toles and Ray Heaton each had two rbi’s in winning causes. Heaton rapped two doubles off Talbott pitchers. Tom Hummel’s double began the scoring against Evans and Chuck Heav-enrich added a triple later. ★ ★ ★ Talbott meets Booth under the lights tonight as the home builders bid for a share of third place. I 0*. MicOgnald 4 2 Z If 11 2 0 0 B. McDonald f I I 0 X) 4 ] ;f 4 I ) Da. AAcDonald SiSrl’^d. r Barrel ixt J 0 Talali IS I 7 TalaU IS s -reached bate on Interference ruling aamiian ai4 .........lae saa a-t ) I. o. CaBblan .......SM laa x-f l Triple — Holliman. Rune Batted In lackerly t Fleaar, Barkeley, Lucadam; Mllman 7, Kind. Winner — Blifiop (1-0). -aaer - Bogert IM). Error* — Lucadam 3, Johnion 7, Oodgai Ottman. Kin-- RIVIRSIDE SAVES YOU UP TO *175 OVER REGULAR FACTORY INSTALLATION! WP-FIfe 12-1). Rally Gains Californian Trans-Miss MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Jimj Wiechers of Atherton, Calif., one down after 1* holes, rallied in the afternoon round Sunday and won the Trans-Mississippi _ Golf Championship 3 and 2. Z Wiechers 'busted fellow Californian Bob Smith, Sacramento, on the Edina Country Club course to win on the 34th hole of their scheduled 3Shole match. ■k -k * The husky former football player displayed a deft touch with his irons as he consistently put his second shots within IS to 20 feet of the pin. 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Pontiac Mall TELEGRAPH ROAD CORNER ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD TELEPHONE 682-4940 THE PONTIAC rUhaiS. MONDAY, JULY 18, 1906 Lasf U.S, Town Some WilJ Ever See Bias in Dixie Hurts GIs ByTOMTIBDE LEESVULE, U. (NEA) ~ Hiis small logiiQK community. on t^ f^e of ttw Army Init^tioD, is Fort Polk a temp(Aary home town for stone 1,600 soldiers a month who train to wage the war is South-eastAsia. There is a municipal gtof coprse here, a skating rit ■ y, pimlic rink, a lovety li^ near^, public gardens, three movie theaters and a 29,0116 volume library. realiy. Negro servicemen. LeesViflc is segregated. Color is color here, untfohned or not. Some eateries will not serve the black man and some theaters will not welcome his ticket FEELS IGNORED Some barkeeps ignore hiS' orders and some shopkeepers are not interested in his money. He feels uncomfortable swimming at the lake, drinking at the public fountains and walking in the nicer parts of town. It huitA ^ course. Especially now. Especially training for Viet LOUISVILLE, Ky.-The hordes of rats that' terrorized 13th century Eurbpe as carriers of bubonic plague have been rq>laced today by such “harmless” creatures as prairie dogs, chipmunks and rab- **I4sB^miiidgoiiigtowar,** one Negro reendt explains. *«at I don’t dislike going thoe by way of Leesville, Soldier Not Happy With LeosviHe proper pronunciation place.” And?” This feeling is widespread throughout Fort ^Ik’s colored population. Those w[ come here from other southern cities are generally used to it but expect somethtog better so near a government conqxxmd. So embittered are some Negroes, in fact, that they sim|Hy refuse to stray from toe post. And those who have come here from toe North are, in toe words of one, “siiiq>ly shodted.'* Says he: “IVe never been treated like this before.' “Where are you from?” he Is “New Jersey, originally.’ “And you never experienced this before?” “Oh, sure, but nothing so “How do you me “Nigger, for “And they act like you’re leaving germs in yoor footprints.” Those who do go tend to stick together, avoid the popular spots ' settle (or recreation imvid-sd by toe area’s Negro community. IN CLIQUES Thus grouped, these soldiers also rentain in cliques back in toe barracks instead of mixing with toe same whites they will live and die with in the war. I’ve no Caucasian friends here at all,” one of them says flatly. And why? “Because if I can’t have a especiallv pregnant here is that Fort PoUc trains soldiers for 12 Community College Assuming Its Role By LE8UE J. NASON, ED.D. I predict that, in the 1970s, toe two-year conununity college will find its rightful place in the higher education picture- In many cities, it is already del strating its val-l ue as a step-1 ping stone ht-' tween hlghi school and Job.. For example, San Francisco City CoUege had 276 gradu- NASON ates in 36 occupational areas ' this year. Louis F. Batnale, coordinator of technical-terminal instruction in toe college says, “Our experience shows that all of our ^actuates will be placed, and in many areas we are embar-ruisad' by the number of op-portuiddH ivattable to our students.” The American Assuciation of Jnaior Colleges has a five-year program, dnanced by toe W.K. Kellogg FoundatioB, to sttmulate leadership in technical and occupational ednca- The variety of occupational programs available in community colleges is surprisingly great. Job training programs are organised with toe advice and cooperation of the State Employment Office so that there is reasonable assurance that those complete the program will find Jobs immediately. PREPARATION Most adults who enroll in a post-high school course do so to prepare for a new Job or to learn more about their present Jobs so as to gain advancement. This is tree pwtomlarly it ym^ atodts. For them, cools a real can allow themndves the luxury of takiQg a coarse simply for genend knowledge or to learn more Ooryiwinndenoa from the readers leads ne to believe more attention should be given in the 1970s to facilitating the reentry of students into higher education. Tiny Animals Could Cause Plague in U.S. By JOHN BECKLER WASHINGTON (AP) - Two widely different wars — toe war in Viet Nam and the war on poverty — keep the House busy this week while the Senate tackles the controversial foreign aid program. The busy congressional week I Education and Labpr Comipit-Iso brings lobbyist JuUus Klein'tee, normaUy woUW be before the Senate ethics com- Relatively few cases of plague have appeared in the United States since 1900, but these have been enough to almost panic puUic health officials. The increasing crowds of people visiting recreational areas that contain animal carriers of the plague are improving the chances for another epidemic, the American Veterinary Medical Association has been warned. Dr. William T. Hubbert, public health veterinarian, together with Dr. Martin I. Gold-bm-g. Dr. Leo Kartman and Frai^ M. Prince, all from the U.S. Public Health Service’ Oammunicable Disease Center in San Francisco, combined forces to emphasize their views. mittee Tuesday to tell of his relations with Sen. Thomas Dodd, D-Conn. 2WarsUpforCongre Adding to the problems facdng the bill is a struggle betweoi Speaker John W. McCormack who wants it brought up, and Rep. Adam Clayton Powell„D-N.Y.^ who would like it postpone a week. Powell, as chairman of the charge of its scheduling but special procedure has b^ worked out with McCormack to ss him. A vote on this issue could sidetrack the bill. The House is expected to provide funds to finance the Viet Nam war and run the Defense Department with little dis^nt when it takes up toe $58.6-bilUon defense appropriation bill Tuesday. But sharp fighting aeuld break out Wednesday and last the rest of toe week when the House is asked to authorize $1.75-billion to carry toe antipoverty program torough its third year. DISSATISFACTION Dissatisfaction with the way toe war on poverty is going ‘ widespread, particularly among Republicans, who have dozens of amendments ready to offer. The big defense bill, which accounts for more than half the total annual spending budget, is neariy $1 billion more than President Johnson' requested, 000007 Gefs Police Okay but still may not be big enough to meet Viet Nam war needs. BELLEVILLE, Kan. Uf» -bert H. Bachelor has an automobile tag with toe number “000007,” but it’s only a sample. He saw the tag with five zeros on it on display at the county license office and someone gave it to him. He added toe “7” himself. “I thought I might get a traf fic ticket,” he said, “but I talked to some officers and they said it was okay.” PARIS (UPI) - The United States may seek an agreement with France to allow U.S. forces to return to French bases in time of war, responsible diplomatic sources said today. But they said no such agreement is under negotiation now or is likely to be negotiated in the near future. The UN has designated 1965 as International Cooperation Year to mark the 20th anniver sary of its founding. ELECT John N. O’BRIEN August 2 it Graduate of Lincoln High U of D Law School fr Fonner Ass't Prosecutor Railed in Oakland County sandwich with a white downtown at a cafe, I don’t care to have one with him in camp at toe post exchange.” Leesville, of course, is not the only segregated milltai^ town in the South. Several others are even more so. But what makes the situation months of war. Designated Negroes know during nine weeks of classwork that they will ship out to fight when school is o POOR SENDOFF says a student, “this is hardly a warm sendoff.” “I hate to think,” adds another, “that this may be the last American town I ever see.” But, though toe social predicament is nnfortunate, it is by no means unique for col-ored GIs. It has been the same in many military hamlets since American fighting forces were established late in the 1700s. And perhaps this is the biggest rub of ail. Because the young Negro trooper no longer expects it. He is tutored on enlightenment and law. And, with another chapter being added to 200 years of black white participation in war, he is stunned that it has had so little effect on racial progress. M and H 8th Annual Sale Priced as low as . I. .t Deluxe Champions Tbe ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT tires on America’s finest 1966 cars. Check our SALE! PRICE on ymir I SIZE* Tubeless BLACKWAIXS Tubeless WHITEWALLS |Fed.Bniee 1 1 6.00-13 $18.00 $21.70 1 <1.38 1 6.50-13 19.90 23.05 1 1.66 1 7.36-U (7.00-14 > [■ 7.35-16 46.6e»lS> 21.95 25.45 ' 1.86--1 1 7.75-14 (7.60-14) 1 7.75-16 (6.70-15) 23.20 26.90 1.88 1 1.91 1 6.25-14 (8.00-14) 8.15-15 (7.10-16) 25.45 29.50 ’ 2.09 1 2-18 1 8.65-14 (8.50-14) 1 8.45-16 (7.60-16) 27.95 32.35 2.36 1 2.32 1 8.86-14 (9.00-14) 1 8.85-16 (8.00-15) 31.10 36.05 1 2.66 1 2.70 1 "All prices plus taxes and trade-in tire off your car." NO MONEY DOWN NATIONWIDE GUARANTEE No Limit on MILES... No XJniit on. MONTHS WLL UFUTIMD OUAnANTEK - ...... -Ot^ires^ne Dealers ond ot oil service stations disploying the Firestone sign. 50-ft. GARDEN HOSE 50-fL Length. *FuU-llow an biWB oouplinn ^ ''LifhtwsighL geriWe FULL I ir— 1/S*DIAM. Additional *1.99 esmh MON. and FRI. 8 'til 9 TUES., WED., THURS., SAT, 8 til 6 FIRESTONE 146 W. HURON, PONTIAC, 333-7917 The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by then) in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Tuesday. Stock Mart Lower, Moderate Produce FRorn Apples, Delicious, Red. bu. Apples, Northern Spy, bu. Apples, Northern Spy, C.A., 1 Apples, Steel Red, C.A., bu. Cherries, Steeet, 16 O.R. Crf. Strewberrles, 14 ql.. crt. VESETASLES Asparegus, dz. bcti. Beets, dz. bch. . . Beets, topped bu......... Broccoli, dz. bu........... Cabbage, bu.................. Cabbage, Red, bu............ Cabbage, st. bu.............. Cauliflower, dz. .. ........ Celery, Pascal, dz. stks..... Celery, white, crt........... Cucumber, slices bu......... Chives, dz. bch.............. NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market was irregularly lower today in moderate trading. Fractional gains and losses prevailed for most key stocks. The economic background was mixed, including news of a j jjinew record for industrial pro-6.oo|duction in June but a decrease 2.50 in consumer spending. Rubbers fell afoul of profit 3 taking. Goodrich and U. S. ^ Rubber were off about a point each, Goodyear a fraction. Dill, d- -Kohlrabi, d bch. bch. Potatoes, SO lbs. . Radishes, Red, I di Radishes, White, dz Rhubarb, outdoor, d LETTUCE AND OREENS Endive, bleached . Escarole, pk. bskt. Escarde, bleached, 1 Lettuce, Bibb, p. bsl Lettuce, Boston, dz. Lettuce, head, bu. Lettuce, head, dz. . Lettuce, Leaf, bu. Lettuce, Romalne, b Motors were very narrowly mixed, steels mostly lower, with Jones & Laughlin down 1 and U. S. Steel a fraction. MOTORS MIXED A rise of about a point by United Aircraft was a bright spot in an otherwise drab aerospace section. Electronics were lower as Radio Corp., Zenith and Raytheon took fractional ■ isses. Polaroid lost more than 2. IBM gained 1. Opening blocks included Natomps, up 1V4 at 13% on 13,000 shares; Xerox, up 2% at 263 on 4,500; and Sperry Rand, off V4 at 27V4 on 5,200. On Friday, The Associated Press Average of 60 Stocks closed unchanged at ^.8. Prices were irregular on the American Stock Exchange. Fractionally higher were Ka-wecki Chemical, Mead Johnson, Louisiana Land and Data-Control Systems. The New York Stock Exchange Addrtts 1.40 i 36^ 36'/^ 36V4 + J 52 51^ 51^ - 65 17H W/7 ] 20 54H 34Vk U'M — ' 45 39*4 38^ 38^% — * 7 25314 2 25H + * 24 30’/2 29^4 29^4 — 5 1) 85*4 84^ 84^4 - * 49 79'4 79^ 79^4 - ' GenMilIt 1.50 Goodrch 2.30 Goodyr 1.25 GraceCo 1.30 Granites 1.40 GrantWT 1.10 GtAAP 1- Poultry and Eggs DITROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP) - Pricet paid pe pound for No. 1 llvp poultry: roaster heavy type Ti'/i-Ji; broilers and fryer >-4 Iba whites 20-22. DETROIT EH_. l«lS2nS*U Whftet ’OriSt A extra 'large ^Vi-4c .. la^ 42-44'/:; msdiums 3l'/:-33'/1; small CHICAGO BUTTER, E60S CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Mercantile - - - ■■ teady to fir unchanged; ________ " B 4*W; » score „ AmBdest 1.40 “ Am Can 2.70 AmCrySug I AmCyan 1.25 AmEIPw ).» - Enka 1.10a AMet Cl 1.90 15 1 Exchange: AA a /wvs; to d ( C 4l 41 4014 -t- ' 29 3044 57'4 5744 -1 I 33 32V. 3244 - 44 —K— " ^ 3314 3544 V4 51 37Vi 37 37'Ji - » 14 4I'4 47V4 40 Undtrt .30b Schenley 1.40 Schering I SCM Cp .40b o!TT.30 Stare Roe Is Seeburg .40 Ssrvel SharonStI .10 Shall ON 1.90 ShorWm 1.90 Sinclair 3.40 Slnga^ 2.20 tmlttiK l.lOe SouPR Sugar 5 21 2744 2744 - 14 1544 1544 1544 - 44 S 45 4444 4$ ‘ “ 9lg Pal .9 glRnRad .1 7 3144 5IH 5144 - ' 42 2344 23'4 23'/» 91 40 3944 40 -I- ' 22 27'4 27'4 27'/4 - ' 137 5144 5I'4 5144 4 40'/4 3944 40'-4 -E ' 35 7I'/7 7744 71'^ -E ' I 24'/. 24'/. -E ' Marathn 2.20 MiyDStr 1.40 McCiM .40b McDonAIr .40 Conlr^ C I 27»4 2 Stocks of Local Interest OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Ouotallons from the NASO are repi sentative Inttr-deaier prices of appro malely II am Intar-dealer market, changt throughout the di not include retail markup. I 12.7'DynamCp .40 Mohawk Rubber Co. MUTUAL FUNDS Afflllatad Fund Keyreiw Growth K-3 Telavlelan Electronics 14 122'/. I21'4 121'4 - ' 4044 4744 4144 -EI44 14 19$ 192 195 -E )2 30'/4 30'4 30'/a 17 1344 1344 13H - —E— 32 10444 104 104 - 20 I34'/1 133'4 133*4 - 1 39'-4 39'/7 29'/4 . 7 3544 3544 25*4 -E I 39H 39H 39H 4 2444 2414 MV. + '/« 3 944 944 944 — “ 4144 r 44 41H + 4 I0i4 1IV4 1(44 + —F— 4$ I91V4 m 1W44 43 UV4 1414 M'<4 i9*n5?::t?2J + y Tha AMOcMid Press pia PL 152 30 li 15 44 PMC Cp .75 ■ltd. RaHe util. SttcktlpoodFalr .90 .+•!.......+ J i« str 523.3 194.5 171.. ---,451,4 149.3 >42.^100.0 ...Oalr .50 'raapi Sui l 'rinkp 1.70 »f’S Gan CIg 1.20 OanOynam I Reading Co RalchCh .20a RapubSItal 2 Revlon 1.30 Rtxall .30b Reyn Mat .75 I.) Hlgll Li ) 27H 2) 2 3744 37V4 37Vi - ' 17 3444 34% 3 SldOllOh 2.20 : nW.3 StauffCh 1.60 SterlOrug .10 iJP 2 3 351* 35 12 4444 4444 77 00% 79% . 32 30% 30% 30% - V4 3 5144 SIV4 5IV4 54 55% 55% 55% 13 19% 19 19 15 744 744 744 ... 10 3414 34 3414 -% 19 41% 41 41 — % 4 49% 49% #% 31 47% (7 (7% 5 52% 52% 53% { •» 40% 40% 1 23% 23% 33% 12 37 3444 37 14 30 »% JO 10 3244 32% 32% 4 35% 35% 35% 4 47% 47% 4714 150 27% 27% 17% - % 11 2314 32% 11% -E % 1 33% 33% 33% .. 9 3044 30% 30%- 14 45 44% 45 -E 51 47% 47'/. 4744 -E 44 71% 71 71'* - 5 44% 44'* 44'* - 2 10% 10% 10'* - 15 5444 54% 54% -E 11 41% 42Uance sales at Parker. nvor th. tim. EWrCd, 117 Ri- used bv the Ruanton trRi^ C U N A Schod for Credit Union Personnel at the University of Wisconsin. Eldred is supervisor of the loan dep6rtment for the GMTC Employee Federal C r e d i t Union. Dzendel Target of Young Dems' Censure Motion DETROIT (UPI) - Tlie Sfoto Central Committee of the Young Democratic Clubs of Michigan yesterday adopted a resolution censuring State Senate Majority Leader Raymond D. Dsendzel, D-Detrolt. The commitee raaohitioa crit-ligad DzendMl “becauM hla milB and aetioiis have repudiated the progressive prind-plea and propwns of foe Demo-eratlopa^.^’ Tba Young Democrats diarp xendaal has “lead the aaaauU on dvU libertlas by introducing 'stop and ftfok* legislation,” ky “hifihif to lead the fight tor DManiiigtul fL. bp teOiig a graiv cf betroltlOcMgaD Llqaar Control'Com-Courier received tlaee^ aoMsds mnlberi font “hafc-‘ “ ■diool sessions were tlveir prob- News in Brief Robert Tessi, owner of Bob Tassi’s Sandbar, 3270 W. Huron, Waterford Township, has been fined $150 by the Michigan Uq-uor Control Commisolon for selling alcoholic beverages to a mi- or. iqwii Davk a| 4NB WaUaa. Orion Townshh), reportad to Oakland County SherifTa deputies yeatenlay the theft from his home of Ashing and boating equipment valued at $ai. Gerald and Joseph Ceeeardll, proprleton d the JhJ General Party Store, 570 S. TUegraph, have been flned $150 fay the lor aeDtag hkhoHe beverages to a minor. THE PONTIAC t»RE8S. MONDAY. JULY 18, 1966 Speck Trailed From, the Start CHICAGO (AP) - Rarely has a police investigation been conducted more expertly than the one that led to the arrest of Richard Speck. Detectives were dogging their prime suspect even as the bodies of the elicit murdered student nurses were being removed from the Chicago town-house — even, indeed, before they knew the man’s name. ★ w ★ But the police were cozy. They didn’t let on. Not until they had Speck’s fingerprints, background, name, description and an eyewitness identification (rf a photograph — enough to justify an arrest the news. NA’nON KEYED When they did the whole nation was keyed to receive it, and the very publicity led to his recognition by the hospital doctor treating Sack’s slash wounds. TTie trackdown began wht„ Corazon Amurao, the only survivor of the massacre, gasped her first hysterical description of the killer to a patrolman at dawn Thursday, moments after he fled the blood-splattered . house. bound ship. The name on the application was Ridiard ^eck, and a small, coin-machine pho-1 tograph was attached. Re also left the phone number of a sister, where he could be reached in case a job should turn up. ★ # a Hadn’t Miss Amurao said the killer had demanded money so he could get to New Orleans? Yes, she had. A detective dialed the number. Tell your brother, he instructed, to contact the union hall. RETURNS CALL At 3:10 p.m. Speck returned the call. Posing as a union offi- warrSit - dM tl.ey Troadmt conie to the hall unmediately, there was a job waiting for him Speck said he would be there. Teams of detectives fanned ' out through the South Side neighborhood. One stop was a filling station. A stranger fitting the description had been there, the attendant said. He had left two suitcases there Tuesday morning while he went to look for a room. He came bach the next morning and picked them up. 2ND STOP Next stop was the Maritime Union hall across the street from the nurses’ townhouse. Yes, such a man had been there Monday morning looking for a job on a New Orleans- execntivesl Ov*r 25,000 txacutivei (as wad as tnanagert, salas, technical and ptofauional men) hava found the answer to their career problems in the Chusid Career Advancement Program. For a confidential interview, without coat or obligation, to learn how wo can help you, write or call our nearest office. FREDERICK CHUSID 1, aaempMe. / _______ -.•pelli. New Yam, Oklahema City, Omalia. FlilMsIeaia, Meanwhile, investigators had Speck’s activities well catalogued. Monday night he had stayed 'Self-Defense' in Radio Killing War Hero; 'Pirate' Was Out to Get Me SAFFRON WALDEN, England (* — Maj. Oliver Smedley, wealthy 54-year-old war hero, was quoted today by a prosecutor as sayipg he shot and killed the chief of a pirate pop radio station in self-defense. Smedley, who in pirate stations operating off the British coast, is charged with murder in the slaying of Reg Calvert. Cal-vert, 37, was found dead in Smedley’s home only hours after a raiding party had boarded and took control of Calvert’s offshore station “Radio City” in mid-Jnne. Prosecutor Peter Palmes, ja-e-senting the government’ case at preliminary court hearing, said Smedley told pedke: T shot him” * -k * Later Smedley was quoted as telling police: CAME TO KILL “I know he came here to kill me.’’ Palmes said so far as the prosecution is conceraod tt was “a deliberate shootiiig." He then offered as evidence what looked like a pocket pencil which he said was found on Calvert’s body and asserted; “It is a little gas gun which throws, one assumes, a small jet of tear gas.” at a rooming boihK nearby, the rooms were occu]ded, so he slept on a couch, Thoday-nli^ he had stayed at another rooming house, adjoining a tavern. During the three days before the murders he h^ hung around various taverns and loafed in the quiet park hdiind the townhouse where the nurses stayed. l^ieck didn’t return to the union hall. Instead he gathered his belongings from ttie rooming house, caught a cab and heactod for the other side of town. DRINKING BUDDY Detectives located the cab driver. They also located an old drinkiw buddy of Speck’s, William Kirkland. Thursday afternoon, Kirkland said, he had run into Speck in one of their old haunts and Speck had sold him a IMnch hunting knife for a dollar. Police took the knife to the crime lab. ♦ ★ ★ Lab technicians were already busy with other evidence. They had dusted the town-house for fingerprints and by working round the clock quickly managed to isolate 32 prints that didn’t match those of the girls who lived there. FBI and police files in other sUtes also had provided a dossier of information. TEXAS TERMS Speck had been in and out of jail in Texas, was wanted for questioning about a slaying in Monmouth, HI. He was a drifter, never kept a job long, had few roots. ★ * ★ An FBI courier rushed from Washington with Speck’s finger- Club's Community Project 'for the Birdi' LINCOLN, lU. (in - The Rotary club is “for the birds” in its community service project here. The service club is obtaining Martin houses so that they may be made available to the public in the interests of cutting down on the Insect population. Piaple martins are well known for their “appeUte” for mosquitos and other insects. The earliest published report on the possibility of nicotine being harmful to humans was la 170. prtats. They roatdied the ones * fouM at the townhouse. Amurao, hysterical after her long iiigbt of terror roused frian heavy sedation Friday morning. Detectives visited her in her hospital room. They showed her about 200 photos from police files. She shook her head at each Then, casually, a detective handed her three more, including the one of Speck. PICKS SPECK The 23-year-oId Filipino exchange student, looked hard at one of the three. She tapped the center one. “That’s the i Detectives centered larch in the neighborhood where the cabbie had dropped ^leck. Showing photograpiu of S^ieck to barkeeps and prostitutes, they tradmd him tavern by tavern to a skid row hotel near Chicago’s Loop. ★ ★ ★ The hotel clerk told the investigators i^ieck had checked out about a half hour ago. Detectives staked out the hotel. ★ ★ ★ The next afternoon, Saturday, Cmdr. Francis Flanagan, chief of the homicide division, announced that a murder warrant had been issued naming Speck, and broadcast his description to the nation. WRONG VIEW Until that moment speculation in Chicago was that the police had no suspect and not mudi chance of getting one because the clues, Flanagan had insisted, were pitifully few. But now the police were worried; l^ieck’s traU had gone cold. ★ ★ w Unknown to the detectives manning the stakeout. Speck MOTICi OF FUBUC HEARING •» HwWy (Htn ttwt • pu____ taarlng will to iwW by ttw Fwitlac City Comnirw^ tto Commitilen Ctamtort, - AuMt », )»M at I o'clock I. E.I.T. for Ito pvrpoM of omondlng Zoning Mop of Ordinonco No. wn oi tto Building It r«ono to RtsMontloH No. I, City of Pontloc, Ooklond County, Mkhlgon. By ordor of tto City Commlulon July U IfM OLGA BARKELEY City Clork fflSsoB mt ogMB- •• Ito -Rotoliiiis PmT. mt mm H to canotrucM ond acgulrod tronclorrM itorWrom pprMlcolly bilo to IB^ordlnoneo. Tto form ooporoto ond opoclol tmSi towtt: „ OPERATION ond MAINTENANCE FUND. Out of tto rovtnuoo in tto Ro-coM— Fund, ttofo Nwll to firw IM %rlto- tom, gnitniod to Inckido ocqvWtIon by pur-MOoidand, --------- ■ -to BoA 0X0- Auttortly, u .. Section 3 Public Acts _ _ 222.i£!*lLill “■ P*'’* . ”*• Ctonty punuont -- »•<*. «xcopt tar odvonco -fid Into Ito coiutruction fund. Sortlon I. Tto CommlMlon toroby r partial poymont at a contract ebon In connocllon with uM prolut 1 pay-0 paid Fund Including tto Raurvt therein, o to tto extent ot odvonco rental poymonts, rolmbursod to the County, os tto County 'ommisslon may mutually de- ______ 21. This ordinance shell ba recorded In tto minutes of tto mooting ■' '----liulon at which It was on u procticebta altar its pastego, which records shell be aulhen-ilcaMd by tto ilgnetum of tto Chairman I Suretary-Treisurer of uM Com- ihraw of Rita e ' ilM, Rn u.... r port of this HARRY LAPHAM Suretory-Treoiui MILO CROSS I. HARRY LAFHAAS, Hit cretery-Treeauru of Hie tto (Mktand County Bulk. . ______ r. hereby certHy HiM the tnuBOtafi xtlnence No. 1 of UM AuibirR^i adopiod by uM Commlulon on Juno ». 1^ hu boon sol torth ta fuH ta tap mtautat of Hta moating of Hw soM Com- -----n hold on mM d«ta and Rtat HW -----(tea No. I ta mW mtautao ta ox- •emt by flw Citairnwn and by rms Ria Sactetary-Tradauru, af mM Camnriaatan. Oatad; July 13, 19M. MAMY UkFHAM THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY 18, 1966 New Horizons Names Exec Gkn D. Smith pf Uvonia has been anninted executive director of New HoriztMis of Oakland County, according to J. Lyle Winslow, iH%sident of the organization, which provides vocational training and employment to mentally handicapp^ young people. Smith replaces Charles Nelson, who resigned to become executive secretary of the State of Oregon’s retardation program. Smith formerly was teacher-vocational coOTdinator for the mentally handicapped at Farmington High School three years and taught one year at Ypsilan-iter, Mrs. E. ti. sing. A graduate of Eastern Michigan University where he earned a master’s degree in special education, he is vice president of the Farmington Association for Handicapped Children and a member of Michigan Teachers of the Mentally Handicapped. HARRY W. BLAICHER Service for former Pontiac resident Harry W. Blakher, M, of Mansfield, Ohio, will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at the J. H. Finefrock & Sons Funeral home in Mansfield with burial White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Marquis Lodge No. 680, F&AM, will conduct a memorial service tomorrow at 8 p.m. at the funeral home. Mr. Blaicher, a retired employe of General Motors Corp., died today after a long illness. Surviving are three sons, Del-mer R. of Birmingham, Harry R. of Berkley and Robert W. of Mansfield, Ohio, and a daugh-Bennett of Lan- Also surviving are two brothers, Paul E. of Pontiac, and Carl C. of Waterford T\>wnship. Also surviving are two grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Car Hits Pole; Youth Hurt An 18-year-old Commerce Township youth is in serious condition at Pontiac General Hospital today after the sports car in which he was riding ran off Dixie and slaimned into a utility pole. David Johnson of 2876 Pinto suffered head injuries in the accident, which occurred early yesterday just north of E. Holly in Springfield Township. Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies identified the driver of the car as William E. Siess, 18, of 2757 Pinto, Commerce Township. He was treated for injuries at Pontiac General and released. MRS. KARL ELY Service for Mrs. Karl (Louise P.) Ely, 84, of 42 Summit will be 11 a m. tomorrow at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. An Order of the Eastern Star memorial service will be held at 7:30 tonight. Mrs. Ely died Friday after a long illness. A member of Central Methodist Church, she was a charter member of the Order of the Amaranth, a member of Pontiac White Shrine No. 22; a member of the Dames of Malta; a past matron of the Order of the Eastern Star, Fayette, Ohio; and a past noble grand of the Rebekah Lodge in Fayette. Surviving are a son, Donald K. of Waterford Township; two daughters, Mrs. Kathryn Quick of Rochester and Mrs. Lucille Orr of Omaha, Neb.; and one great-granddaughter. EDWIN C. HEFNER Service for Edwin C. Hefner, 41, of 757 Third will be 2 p.m. Cemetery, Mem(HlaI Estates Avon Township. Mr. Hefner, a former employe of Fisher Body Plant died Saturday. He was a member of St. Paul Lutheran Church. Surviving are his wife, Mae; his mother, Mrs. Goldie Horvath of Pontiac; and two sons, Mi-diael K. and Patrick G. at LAWRENCE J. LAFAY Service for Lawrence J. La-Fay, 50, of Pontiac will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial at Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. LaFay, a former employe of GMC Truck & Ooach Division, died Saturday following a long illness. Surviving are two daughters, Sharon and Lauren of Pontiac, and two sisters, Mrs. Evelyn McKerrow of Pontiac and Mrs. Leona Shore of Auburn Heights. HARVEY E. SANDBERG Service for Harvey E. Sand- berg, 69, of 18 Spokane Villa will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Ottawa Park Cenetery. Mr. Sandberg, a retired accountant with GMC Truck & Coach Division, died Saturday following a long illness. He was a member of the Bethany Baptist Church. POLICE CHIEF DIES -Police Chief William H. Parker, 64, of Los Angeles died Saturday after collapsing at a testimonial dinner for him, actress Betty Hutton and comedian Joe E. Lewis. He had just received his plaque and was walking back to his table when stricken. Cause of death was not immediately known, but he had been recuperating from a heart ailment. Cape Strikers Back to Work CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -About 1,100 moonport machinists were expected back at their Death Notices ■LY, JULY 11. 1*0, LOUIM Md wN* of Karl llyi 4mt mtlh-r ol Mr*. Kanvrn Quick, Mn. • “ r «na OomW K. Klyi arOvad by ana braaiVand-lar. Tha Ordar ol itia I hold TuMday at 11 tjn. at It Sparks - Oriftin Punaral Hama. at tha tunaral homt. Suggastad visltlna hours 1 to 1 and 7 to HEFNER. JULY U, 1*0, EDWIN C., 7S7 Third Straat; oga 41; balovtd husband of Mat J. Hafnar; ba- i Carl C. Hafnar. Funeral Godhardt Funeral Home, Kaago Harbor. Interment In Christian Merrwrial Cematary, Rochester, Michigan. Mr. Hafnar will lie In state at the funeral home. (SiM-gestad visiting hours 3 to 5 and Funeral service w le LaFay; if Mrs. Evelyn Mc-Leona Shore. sXtiDBERG, JULY 14, 1*0, HAR-VEY E.. II Spokane Villa; age 19; beloved husband of Fay Sandberg; Donelson - Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Ottawa Park MINTY MAlb tUnPUCt * Moissminro ^ Ft »1 “HOUSE OF WIGS' W Wii ftAtr II, I will not be -- --------- Sihimmont I tHERfe IS> ■ .. ,rWAV to OVBRCbliHE problems. Loam how it's 'Throuflht the “POWER OF tour SUBCONSCIOUS MIND" -Lectures every Wad. evamng, 7:45 pjn., Pontiac Unity Cantor, Gone- -------r UPUND HILLS FARM PICNIC GROUNDS ^ FARM TOUR LOST: STRAYED FROM 74 WES-sen, black and white English Setter, answers to the name Tim. LOST: AIRLINE TRANSISTER RA-dio, believed lost In vicinity of Baglay and Montana. S10 reward. FE 4 ■— LOST: FEMALE ENGLISH SET tar, white and orange, answers to Rosie, In vicinity of Leonard Mich. pointar. Short v LOST: WHITE AND BLACK spotted wire haired puppy, 4 mot. old, ans. to "Whiskers,'' vicinity of Joslyn and Beverly. Reward. FE Surviving are his wife. Fay ;j jobs today after agreement was one son, John V. of Livonia; and reached yesterday on local is-one granddaughter. sues in a dispute against Trans World Airlines. The FBI reported that in a _ study of 92,869 offenders In|Wednesday at the C. J. God-crime for the years 1963 andihardt Funeral Home, Keego 1964, 76 per cent were repeaters.' Harbor, with burial at Christian GEORGE R. LINDSEY ROCHESTER — Service for George R. Lindsey, 86, of 130 E. University will be 2 p.m. tomor-at the’^Pixley Memorial Chapel, with burial in Mt. Avon Cemetery. Mr. Lindsey died Saturday af-long illness. He was re- The workers, members of the International Association of Machinists (lAM), walked off their jobs July 8 when the lAM called a nationwide strike against TWA and four other airlines. The agreement, ratified only TWA’s “housekeeping” support For Non-College-Bound Math Study Bid OK'd A four-year high school math-lfirst year of a proposed fWe-ematics program for non-col- year study, according to Dr. lege-bound students is to be David W. Wells, instruction and planned by Oakland Schools un- mathematics director for Oak-der a federal grant. land Schools. The U.S. Office of EducaUon CONSULTANTS tired from the Oakland County operations for the National Aero-Road Commission. nautics and Space Administra- Surviving besides his wife,! tion at the Kennedy Space Cen-Sara, are a son, Roscoe E. of A TWA spokesman said the White Hall; a dai^hter, Mrs. Floyd Harp of Pontiac; three brothers, five sisters; three grandchildren; and six greatgrandchildren. has approved the planning proposal, according to Rep. Billie S. Farnum, D-19th District. Fanmm said the amount of the grant it not yet firm. “It is likely it will be in the neighborhood of $37,290 as requested by Oakland Schools,’' he said. Wells said county consultants would meet with representatives of industry, labor and the armed forces “to determine what kinds of mathematical skills are required for successful competition in these fields.” A curriculum then would be designed to meet these needs, possible, and would be tested The grant would cover t h el in Oakland Giunty schools. LOUICA JELL LANGE OXFORD TOWNSHIP - Service for Louica Jill Lange, newborn daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy H. Lange of 1540 Lapeer, was held Saturday at Allen’s Funeral Home in Lake Orion. Burial was in East Lawn Cemetery, Lake Orion. Baby Lange died Friday. Surviving besides her parents are grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Lange and Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Mescher, all of Metropolis, III. MRS. MAX WELCOME TROY — Mrs. Max (Nancy) Welcome, 29, of 1676 W. Square Lake died yesterday after a long illness. strike at the Cape slowed the company’s operations at the Merritt Island moonport, but that essential work continued. It did not affect preparations for today’s Gemini 10 launching. Meeting Called for Pontiac State Hospital Workers Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTItERl ADS RECEIVED B" * ________S PJE. _ __ PUBLISHED THE FOLLOWING DAY. period later tl the charges for that i^lon of fhe first Insertion of the advertisement rendered valuelou throu^ the deadline for cancellation • . Lot ui coniolldalt y Richard Leuhmann, hospital WARREN (UPI) — A week- personnel officer, labeled the long strike at the Cadillac proposed balloting “a mock Gauge Co. was over today as'election.” employes reported back to work ★ ★ with a newly ratified contract “Under Michigan law, the Deagreement. partment of Civil Service does The three-year agreement,! not have to recognize any spe-ratifiod yesterday, provided lotedic employes’ organization as ESCORT SERVICE OF THE BIRMINGHAM-BLOOMFIELD COMMITTEE ON OPEN OCCUPANCY WILL PROVIDE ESCORTS FOR MINORITY GROUPS SEEKING HOMES IN THE AREA. PHONE MRS. RICHARD SCHWING, 444-32*9. ENDORSED BY PONTIAC NAACP, PONTIAC AREA URBAN LEAGUE, THE NEGRO BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL WOMEN'S CLUBS, BIRMINGHAM H U f ‘ “ RELATIONS COUNCIL. M INGHAM COUNCIL CHURCHES. 87 cent an hour across the the sole bHrgHittiftg unit,” he board salary hike. afi or. 3)., J)onali 31. Johm Cadillac Gauge produces small military arms, parts for armored cars and tanks, as well as aerospace and missile parts. said. Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin, a retired German cavalry general, developed the first practical rigid airship in 1900. Beauty And Our Memories... «^***”^ Waterford Man Is Stabbed; Seven Area Men Being Held We appreciate the beauty of the sacred music of the funeral service. We are thankful for the remembrances of flowers. They each are here for a definite purpose, bringing solace to the family in grief. They make fhe last rites for a loved one a thing of beauty—and provide kind memories for fhe future. (Phone federal 4-4511 On Our ^reniitti =||j|||= Seven area men were held for questioning by Waterford Township police today in connection with the midnight stabbing of! 31-year-old Harold Risinger of] 4980 Clintonville, Waterford Tovmship.' Knifed in the stomach and face in a skirmish in the parking lot of the Huron Bowl, Elizabeth Lake, Risinger required more than 20 stitches to repair his wounds. ' He wag treated at Pontiac General Hospital and released. An arrest warrant was to have been sought against the seven men today. 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC Township poUce were s u m-moned twice following the stab-1 bing, by a woman who lives in the vicinity where the of-l fense occurred and by the hospital where Risinger had been taken by friends. IN BAR Five of the men were apprehended in a Dixie Highway bar by township police, assisted by State Police and sheriff’s deputies. The others were captured following further investigation. \ Police, who did not witness the fight, converged on the Dixie Highway bar after receiving Information from a Huron Bowl employe who overheard the suspects say they were heading there. The seven men apparently were engaged in a fl^t with Risinger and three friends, according to township police who, at Hrst, were uncertain what provoked the knifing. HORSEBACK RIDING Is Great at NEW HILLSIDE RANCH tratls. Trail guldat. I ir MA F2922 lor apfwint. LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY WITH DOk-A-Olol ToMolt. Only *1 conti ai Simmi Broa. Druga. _ ________ SEE IMB MACHINE TRAINING AO on entartainmant page C-*._________ I BOX REPLIES iAt 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the fol-I lowing boxes: I 3, 4, 17, 20, 30, 43, 50, I 57, 50, 60, 01, 63, 05, <9, I 71, 118 COATS funeral homi DRAYTON PLAIN* U15^JN°^ DONELSON jOHNa Funaral Homo "DoaIgnoO lor FunoroN" BLACK FUNtRAl HOME Huntoon FUNERAL HOME Sorvlng ponlloc lor 10 voor*_ 7* Oakland Avo.________FBt-WI* SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME _________ ‘Thougntful gorvi^ FE S*2W Voorhees-Siple CHRISTIAN MEMORIAL ESTATES. OorOon ol Mo DMy, Eatolo num-bOf **C. FE H43S.___________ ANY OIEL or WOaSAN NBEOINg 5-ira .**■ the i«44 civil rights LAW PROHiEiTs. WITH C B R T A I N EXCEPTIONS. |•:•:DISCRIMINATI0N OE-¥: CAUSE OF SEX. SINCE;::: some occupations are V.- CONSIDERED MORE AT- vl tractive to persons OP ONE SEX THAN THE ;;;■ OTHER, ADVERTISE-;-;: M E N T S ARB PLACED t-: UNDER THE MALE OR FEMALE COLUMNS FOR CONVENIENCE OP READ- ERS. SUCH listinos are not intended to ex- Help Wonted Mole I experienced auto recon- ditloning man wanted, tor used car clean-up. Year round work. ;llltlL‘’'?ord! PERSON. John SI37 WEEKLY SALARY GUARAN- $600 MONTHLY GUARANTEED SALARY PLUS BONUS AND CO. CAR For Right Man r layolls. Must be neat. We train. Personal I Call 474-2233 4 p.m.-7 p.m.____ OPENING FOR EXPERI- confIdenllB'. Contact Warren Stout, 1450 N. Opdyka Rd. Pontiac, Michigan. Member Multl-plo Llating Sorvico. k-t SALES OPPORTUNITY WITH largest the Ideal in, Pontiac Mall Advancement aeveral peraonnel to branch ora managers have created aev- organliatlon. High earning poten- ALUMINUM SIDING SALESMAN, oxperlonced, ------- - • ■ right FE 3-7*33 ask tor Jerry. ATTENTION $50 TO $90 Port Time ---- .. .......... vending, located in Troy. Good pay and vrorklng conditions. Paid hospitalization and A PART TIME JOB $200 PER MONTH ASSISTANT PARTS MANAGER, irtunity lor exporiencad FE 3-7KB. ASSISTANT CONTROLLER IF40. Multi plant light manulactur- impony em-iln offict In WtSHonm, l»14Mi. ---CAimSh'^YiiHitv— ------------- CARPENTERS ROUGH - FOR APARTMENTS -loti of work. FE S-22SS. , tree bisuronct i k. good I rotlro- *:30 p.m. 5 doyi a weak. Opportunity for advancement. Coll BUI Kolotky, FE 2-I2I4 betwaon * o.m. EXPERIENCEb. APPLY Fox a. Hound! Inn. « DIE REPAIRMEN WANTED. 49 Die AAAKER WITH PROGRESSIVE die experience. Steady lab year around, top rates, working SI hour week. Fisher Corp. 14» W. Maple Rd., Troy, Michigan. Draftsman Trainee DRIVER NEEDED. EXPERIENCED in handling furniture and appli-ances. Apply 1441 N. Perry. Draftsman AMBITIOUS YOUNG MAN 21 TO 34 WITH MECHANICAL DRAFTING EXPERIENCE FOR DETAILING AND MINOR LAYOUTS. SEND RESUME OR APPLY TO CONDECO AUTOMATION INC., 25820 NOVI RD., NOVI, MICHIGAN. AUEN-TION: MR. D. KAPSON. EARN AND LEARN WITH NATION- ^nlngs. For Intarviow call 42S- t Auto Mecca, 3142 Collldge, $150 PER WEEK have sent for information us FREE. We lust do not enough solos representatives ' « Information you have We work from roquests c Write specifications, I MFG. Co. LAKE ORION n Equal Opportunity Emptoyer EXPERlENCeu REAi userf'homt FE 5-947; Senrom. 9 7044. 12311 Foley Rd._____________ SAS STATION ATTENDANT. Experienced, mechanically Inclined local ref., lull or part tlnw. Gull, Telegrr-^ ------------- . EXCELLENT I HELPER WANTED FOR SMALL glass shop. 343-4129 evening. -- 4-2091. --------------- “• INSURANCE INSPECTOR, MI L-lord-Unlon Lake area, also Brigh-ton-Whitmore Lake area. Clarks-Ion-Lake Orlon-Ortonville area. Full time or part-time basis, will con- KXfled man. In go^ health, who I on Social Security but tired if doing nothing. Job pays limit ou can earn under Social Sacurl-y which Is 5125 per month. Great-T part of » ‘ -----‘ ■■■■■ ■' KENNfl.. _. ______________ 1*5 Elizabeth Lake Road, Pontiac JANITORS. PART TIME, AAORN- FRINGES, APPLY KMART, SEE MR. SMITH, MON. THROUGH WED. I A M._________________ Salary Guaranteed this part of e of tha mam pan to I ■fled let______ . mllUan-dollar advertlaing program. (Lila, Look, Saturday Evening Post, Better Horn— —■ TV Guide). Qualifications k WATER SOFTInIA iMTAlLa- llen man, on Me lob tnlnkiM sloady, pood opportwitty. RtvneWi Water CondttMnlna Co. Call WE 3-2SS4 calloct *:J*7m p.m. LOT MAN Good sftady men for va Used Cor Lot. AM bonefi Ing hoapitolliotlon ani 1 once. Paid i---------- - around work. 4 I licence. Good chanoa f Id drlv- vencament. Apply In person el 44*5 Dixie Hlphwey, Clerkston. LANDSC help. *52-1244. CONSTRUCTION MANA3ER TRAINEES The Singer Company now has openings for 2 men to train for future manogement. This Is a salary and commission potltlon Mat eftors financial toeurlty, fringe vofKemonl. "ouairn^lm • 7 p.m. dolly, 2*9 N. , Pontiac Moll. 4 TO DELIVER, INSTALL AND MECHANICAL ENGINEER Designing oxporlenee and maailnas. Knowlo USS shoottngjpnyu-*’-- I of prelect. Dograo or oqulv-iit In okporlanco. Apply Avon ..JO Olvislan of HlgWo Monufic-Mnng Co., Roofer, OL 1-9471. MECHANICS. MG, AUSTIN l._ *— English Ford and other li I. 45 hour weak guaranh MECHANICS FOR CoVlSTRUCTION fttHn^omrol hoattng and oir holpof*, nil Oreho^Lobe"Y5l PiptRtttn MaintMMiKtWtldofs Pointtn It eioziErs / \ Die Mokiri /i ToolmolcErs Pattern Makers Machine Repair Inspector-Tool & Die it bo loumoymon PONTIAC A40TOR DIVISION GENERAL MOTORS CORP. PONTIAC, MICH. n equal opportunity employer Mechanics UNITED PARCEL SERVICE Has Immediate ooemngs for experl-BuMdlng!^ j,.;r wages ai dally fro MEN FOR STEP INSTALLERS AND laborers, must be reliable. Apply Concrete Step Co., 4497 Hlghhuid motel PORTER, OVER IS, AAOTORCYCLE MECHANIC, FULL son Sales and Service. F !is.« Good pay. See h i. Send resume fo Pontiac Press NEW CAR SALESMAN land Ave. Apply li NIGHT COOK WITH BROILER, Experienced. Call for an appointment. Rotunda Country Inn. 4S2- O'NEIL REALTY HAS OPENING for experloncad salesmon. Wo tx-pect 1944 sales to surpou all previous records - your Income potential le unlimfted. Call Mr. Proksdi, sales manager tor por sonal lnlorv>ew. Roy O'Noil, Roaltor 3520 Ponlloc Lake Rood OR a-222* OUTBOARD MECHANIC, EXPERI-enced only, top wages, year around work. Mozurek Motor I, Marine Sales. 245 South Blvd. East. FE 4-95*7;______________________ PORTER WANTED. JANET DAVIS PART TIME-FULL TIME. EX^R- Pontlac Airport. POT WASHER, KITCHEN CLEAN-er. From I p.m. until 9 p.m. Good wages, meals and unltpmis reliable man cation and chance t.. -------------- ment. Must bu relloMo. Apply In person at 3275 West Huron, Pon-tlac. Comer of ElliobeM Lake Rd. PARTS MANAGER r In person . Jack Hau PROCESS ENGINEER TOOL DESIGNER AND DETAILER highly Dui nor esseniiai. Growing company, many fringe bene- PORTERS. CONTACT HOLIDAY inn. ISO) S. T---- “— Apply In Real Estate Trainees Guar. Training Salary ROUGH CARPENTERS CONTRAC- Salesmen Due to our p expansion we need to train more solesmen, to grow with us in the following high-volume deportments; MAJOR APPLIANCES BUILDING MATERIALS Good compensation, excellent em-ployN benefits including profit-sharing. Come in and let's talk about your future. Montgomery Ward r*s*iz im:.'t^y, MK*i. ' ' • SkhviCE STATIOll ATTKNDANr, and ItaM machankal snrk. Attar-