stopped dancing. Theyihouted
I *M
I0NEER
PLAIN or
TWEED
r heavy ^
PLUSH
ACRILAN
"501"
NYLON
TO“\T CELEBRATE OUR NEW r STORE IN £ PONTIAC!
PLUSH
It's Now! SPACE DYED
, hWVK .
>r Sheared
CANDY
STRIPE
NYLON
Bacteriologist Dies
3Y&MST0 i'll • ti
FIRST •' |QUALlTrl
^100% WOOL^
MULTI-COLOR
Itltn* WltiJJ ^Sk A. m
Convenient
VIRGIN WOOL
.WILTON
'l^riMTQUAUTYt*^
RANDOM-SHEARED
ALL-WOOL
SHOP-AT-HOME
SERVICE
Tense Nerves Block Bowels
Ganulne Wilton quality in an ex-
pltlng "mix W watch" color bland that adds an accent t«
ony decor. \
k', F,B*T
jk. QUALITY!
3127 W. Keren Nr. UlluSMti L»k»tw. FE 5-5000
21170 W. 8 MILE
’■ NWr Cwisrvwi
817-4035
Tffife i’0\;rj|i(v ^RKss. yvminksj) a y, July i„ umv*' *
mwlMill ■ l yj 1 ....r.,y vr
State Dinner High Jinks #
Luci Twists, Daddy Watches
STRIKE BREAKERS-Pollce use dog* last night to dislodge itriklng grain handler* from baryteade* they placed across an access road
AS PMiei«
to the Standard Milling Co. grain, elevator In , Kansas City, Kan, Pickets attempted to keep grain trucks from eqteHpg: f . 1 ,
Dogs Break Strike Line in Kansas
KANSAS, CITY (AP) — Violence broke out last night In a gralri handlers strike against half of jihe terminal elevators , in the. Kansas City area.
Police and striking elevator employes, members^, of Grain M|llers Union Local 16, clashed at the Standard Milling Co; plant In Kansas City; Kan. Other officers, with dogs, broke up the demonstration.
Later, two truck drivers leaving the plaht were attacked. One of Me drivers was struck by a stone. Ben-* jamin Fitzpatrick of Lamar, Mo., was treated for a three-inch gash above his left eye. He laid he was leaving toe plant when Informed it could not unload him. '
The’other truck driver escaped injury. Both drivers said 12 to 15 men were throwing stones at them..
A union spokesman, Howard Richard Porter, 39, was arrested at the scene and charged with disturbing the peace and disorderly conduct,
PEAK OF HARVEST
The strike began Monday - night after a breakdown In negotiations. The walkout came at the peak of the wheat harvest 'in Kansas.
Judges Set Meeting ori Jurat's Pay
■ DETROIT * (AP) —. • Wayne County’s 20 Circuit Court judges, shocked at the plight of a man who said he lost (1,800 in wages and loans while serving on a jury, will meet Thursday to discuss juror compensation.
Many of the judges have been reported to favor increasing the present $8 daily fee.
The juror, Karl Sauermilch, was empaneled May 4 and served until last Friday. He said his take-home pay fell from the $133 a week he earned as a pluber to (32.
Judge James N. Canham said "This was a tragedy.”
If the judges reach a decision, It will be referred as a recommendation to the legislature, which sets the fee.
Pqntfac City Affairs
3 Board Vacancies Filled
Vacancies on two .city boards were filled last night by the Pdnttoc City Commission.
. Commissioners reappointed Vernon Page to a five-year term on the Pontiac Housing- Commission. His term expired June 30.
Page, pf 199 Rockwell, was first named to the commission to fill a vacancy Oct," 1, 1957, and .reappointed to his present term in 19M|.
Daniel H. Veasey and Barney M Habel were .appointed to, three-year terms on the Zoning BoariroF Appeals.
Veasey, who also heads , the City Flan Commission, succeeds Arthur M. Shick on the zoning board,- while Habel 'was reappointed to his second, term on the board.’
fleeted concern last night over receiving only one bid on public liability, property damage and workmen's compensation to r waste collection and disposal employe*) , •
A resolution whs approved • directing the finance director and city manager to prepare by* May 30 each year bid forms to give all qualified bid-, der* the .opportunity to make a hid. ' ,
The purpose of the bid forms, which will contain a history of the city's Insurance losses, is to furnish all potential bidders with adequate information to make a bid.
ONLY ONE BID
City Commission members re-
Cornmissioner Robert C. Irwin commented, that he thought the reason there weren't more*bkis this year was because background Information was not available soon enough. ;
WASHINGTON (DPI) • -"Daddy say* it* pit right," said Luci Baines Johnson every time she ton up to society band leader Letter Lanin to * request another twist tune.
. "Well, If It's Till right with the President," LanI n, said with quhatical lobk. He then would strike up a number that only teen-ager* could dunce to, such as the "fru|rr The teen • ageri literally H took over the dancing phase ] of the state dinner last night in'honor of President and Francisco 0 r 11 eft of Costa Rica. .
, Luci again proved that she „1» the dancer in the' Johnson family, even outshining her. father. The President, wjio usually dances a lot, sidelined himself last night, ■/,
Most' of the evening, he sat, out. the fait dances when Luci, and her, teen-age friends had I he floop. He walked .around, with hla hand s; behind his back, preferring to w a to h rather than to do hla favorite two-step.
TEENS. A HIT
' Luci and her friends brought down the house • with their, twisting and wiggling. John-sob led the applause for his daughter, Who will be ^tomorrow. , ■
» . Former’ Vice President Henry A. Wallace, watching on toe East Room terrace which had been turned into a roof dance spot with fishing poles supporting lanterns, commented i "Former first ladles would turn over In their graves." '•
But the observationkdid not: hold for at toast two farmer residents of tile White House. While Luci was twisting with Stafford Hutchinson, a ton of an Jntentate Commerce' commissioner, she had the .com--pany of Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. also doing the twist.
When the twisting stopped, Alice Roosevelt Longworth, daughter of , President Theodore RooSevelt, went,,up to Lanin to request another twist or at least “a rock n’ roll.”
• Only at’ one stage of the party did the Jotyison family lose the- spotlight. That was
‘ Its easy with Michigan Made Pure Sugar. .Whether you're whipping up a batch of „ cookies or a pie for that special occasion add Michigan Made Pure Sugar to give them that ummiipi- always right flavor. Look for the red, white and blue package of fine granulated Pioneer* and Big , Chief Sugar. '
NEW YORK (AP) - Dr. A. ‘ Raymond Dochez, 82, noted bacteriologist who made major . contributions iifthe fight against jmeumonitis and infectious diseases, died Tuesday after a long illness.
SUGAR
MADE IN MICHIGAN-PROCESSED IN MICHIGAN AND SOLD IN MICHIGAN
OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M
CLOSED 4lh OF JULY WEEKEND ONLY!
A “OAKMT CENTER" CXOLUSIYU
instant
.nstalution
Ti TM Biilin For tich coupon you po-copl m our oolhorliod o(ont) wo will poy you tin loco value plui uiuol Mn-dilng cltpriti, provided you odd your ouiioditr Irave compiled with tho termo oi ihli Mien onv otpor applicalton con* otllutoi fraud. Involcoo ohowlni your purchou of lufflclont stock lo cover oil coupoai ridoimod must bo ohown upon requoit. Void If prohibited, (mo or restricted, Your cuitomer muii ply ony lain ton. Cash value 1720th of 1 cent Redeem only through cur reprenntotlvo cr by mailing to Standard Brandi Incorporated ati P.O. Box 2062, Birmingham, Alabama, offer good only In tho United Btotei. Coupon enplrei sept. 30, iBSd^
for Pressure Tests
HOUSTON, TEX. (AP)-NiM chimpanzees will, undergo tests at Holloman Air Force Base, N.M., to determine the affects on toe body of sudden/loss of pressure. .
The chimps will be subjected to sudden decompression from a simulated altitude of 35,000 feet to'a pressure level approaching a vacuum in one second.
, The tests are being conducted by the 0571st Aeromedical Research Laboratory for t h e Manned Spacecraft Center here.
■Q — I am 30 years old and have been taking Enoyid for several months. Are there any harmful results from taking this drug? . e, «
A — Although too large a dosage may cause such side effects as headache and nauaea, when taken in the prescribed amount this drug can be safely taken for prolonged periods.
Q — What is Decageslc and what is It given for? ,
A — This la a combination of dexamethasone/one of the cortisone group of drugs, with aspirin and aluminum hydroxide It la especially recommended for rheumatoid and other types of arthritis, bursitis and other 'diseases of the Joints.,
farm Pond Kills Boy
DRITTON (AP) -James Bohannon, 7,v drowned Tuesday night When he tumbled into a pond near his farm home outside Britton. .. '
and prove to yourself... New Instant
Tender Leaf Tea
SAVINGS lit BY /m My I
yhi Toth omthe II/mu rC /
MONTHEARN^WtOM /Q ."gf
' COMPOUNDED AND PAID QUARTERLY
E.tnhll.h,dlnl890 — jVwmr mltnd paying a dMdtnd.
.. . * Ovmr 74 year* of IOUImI muopimmt — jpur auurance f of tecurily. Aiieti »m over 95 million dollar*.
CAPITOL SAVINGS
* LOAN ASSOCIATION
75 West Huron
DbwWowm Detroit Office Wajhinglon Blvd. Bldq.
■ Corrrar Slat* SNpt Wp 2-IO?9
FI 4-0561
INSTANT
i'flfMh');
•00% PURE TEA
Loon Bank System
Member Fed<
■ ’ ' . - , TIIK, TONTIAp I’llKSS. \yKl)M'„Sl)AV, JULY. 1. linn
'!-l •i; '■'am™
OrCOLOlP^
Alaska Now ’Grecrf Land* With a Huge Headache
CHORAGE, Alllka APi— 'urban renewal althmiah ‘Cltv Anchor*a« i« eittina m th* i. *L. a+d: _«.i _..J ,, » „ . >.,* A... 'A'* tf.'*■, ,.v
, ANCHORAGE, Alaska AP)~ Alaska la an Aleut word which means "Tha GrNt Land.” To-day, three months After a great earthquake battered aectiona of it, Alaska also has a “great Headache,"
Th« nation's 40th state, Molting to recover from the disaster, ll encountering problems nnirdelayg in reconstruction no ohi could foresee immediately aftor the aouth-cenlral section stopped shaking that fatOful March 17.
'urban renewal although City Manager J, W. Harrison indicated the tpwh felt the propptod plan was too ambitious. Estimated at up to IS, million, the
,4 In Alaska^ problems of soil stability have required time-consuming testa, Soma sections have been found to have dropped at much as five feet, as the land tilted. The question of tides has not been settled completely. All these factors have slowed reconstruction In an ana where construction work outdoors must end when the .frost hardens the ground In •mld-PctobOr. 1
■“And one prominent banker
aroaa. Resident! point out that the town, with the anotwcoverod mouhtalni reaching almost down to thd water, has as much
«>a as it needi and wants/ il land.
is a major clianga ai Valdes, too. Tha children and dogs are back and are, playing in the streets, They were con-spbnfifu.s by their absence shortly after tha selamlc wave swept more than 30 persons to their .death tha evening of Mirch 27. Soil teats show tha picturesque little town must be moved to a new alto 2 miles wait, but this
fears that the Initial impetus to rebuild', so prevalent imnwdl ntely after the qutka, may. have
bean lost.
RAPID CHANGE The situation changes so rap-. Idly In the hardest hit areal of Anchorage, Seward, Kodiak and Valdes that an un-to-the-mlnuto (Abort la almost impossible.
✓ But the picture one gains from a tour of the area is that the final road to reconstruction ' will be a tent ana.
What has been done Is small, potatoes compared with what hat to be done," said Lt. Col.
Manley E. Roger!, Watoryille, Maine who Nads the U.8. Army
Corpe of Engineers residency for tiie Anchorage area.- *
If there is one villain In tigs drama of tiie Northland, It is the unstable anil1 which was greatly responsible tor, damaging slides in Anchorage, Seward and Valdes.
SHOCKS FELT , ! ’
Aftershock! still were being felt wNn tN Army Engineers moved In swiftly to restore essential public services, demolish badly damaged buildings, remove * rubble and mdve undamaged buildings from unsafe land,
But in Anchorage, the state's largest city and fihancial center, water lines still run,on top of tN ground to furnish water to some areas. These must be buriad before winter. Some major buildings stiH stand empty and others, obviously damaged beyond repair, have not been . demolished.
plan provide! for turning dfcva-•tatotf dock areas into park
Anchorage is sitting on the edge of Its chair waiting fdr the inswap to what will be dope 'with mla land—and other land now in what is described as a ‘•high-risk" area,
On May IP, Task Force 9, a toy ter .................
field study team of the Alaska Reconstruction Commission that
ia hepde ‘ covered seetioni^pf a bluff on the. soil and dotermine/ whlcn,F.(,0“ fnd ,to°8t of,lta docks,
The area included the Turn-'the Klmendorf military reserva-| era weak areas, how far back l‘Wfu » still u thankfuhie||.
from a slide area the land la
is a long-fange program. In < housing ,for tN whi-
ter must be assured the some 800 persons who have returned.
One great monument to ftos-, Ration and the adil problem is IN * three-block i stretch of cleared land on toe north side of 4th Avenue in Uie center of AncNtage’s main business district. .
LAND FEf-L
It was here that the land dropped out from under a score or more of business houses and tN Denali Theater.
:Tirm crtffftgh to, support strut1-lures'-- the Kind and s]zA of structures,
' DeslBnalcd'an, AH-Amorlca City for 1983, Seward had planned a big celebration for
The firm of ShAnndh Ji'Ellsoh, ',u' nl«W of March-.27 until Seattle, Wash;, toll meehAhlcs kompono, suggested It’ might and foundation englheersjwas r.l0t eppreprlfite for Good Fri* assigned the 9700,000 soil; test!Bnd -the. celebration .waa project and ra making thousand! !'P<,s‘P<)n®ti. - ' >
of tesufT , - ; T
if they had gone .through with 'tho original plan, at 8:30 p.m. Seward time, 1,800 persmia would have .beeq sitting down to* 'ft\dinri§r on 'the water-front, Tiie waterfront was wiped out that, night. , ;; v
_ - "Aik% # « , ^EsttolcaVof the total, damage, which soared as high as 1780 million sNrtty after toe disaster, havosNen revised to around 1430 million, although Alaska Gov. William A. Egan believes the cost of full restoration Will be considerably above that. *
Preliminary reports are in, or, 'Will,be shortly, The final report Is due Aug. 26.
The picture is not all dark. 'Alaska hopes that tourists will flock there this shrnmer, There are as many accommodations as before even ln toe aouth-veenlral cities.'And such cities as • •Faii'bttnk.v, Juneau; Nome, litka and Ketchikan were not touched by jhe quake. v HIGH HOPES .
CLIP TODAY
SAVE TODAY
Ridtem at your GrooirV
THREE MISSING BLOCKS - The ftfea of cleared land Is where three blocks of Anchorage, Alaska, weto destroyed in tN March 27 earthquake. Though the rubble has
'been removed, the future of the area in-tho center, of. the pity’s main business district -must await soil studies to determine d ETuilH-Ing will N permitted there.' , *
Dr. Wayne G. Brandstadt Say$:
Before March 27, tourist bookings were 20 per gent, above a year ago and Hopes .were high. Even after toe quake Alaskans. hoped tourists would flock in to' see what had happened.
1 This did not materlalize. Eith-♦cr those in the ‘‘lower 48" states were fearful of mor! quakes — » there have Nen none — or they feared accommodations, were
IIrKIa . r
's Disease Not a Form of Cancer
TN pletoaped, devastated area of .KediAkonly a Small' part of^Uw^enttoe town — *•“" been cleared *of rubble.
An urban renewal program has been apffoved although some fishermen scoffed at a plan for a fish pond In a major < fishing area and a covered matt. ■ ?
HUGE TASK <
At Seward, huge cranes are tackling tN jack-straw piles of twisted rails, burned railroad care and masse! of concrete In tN start of a cleanup program. Freight care MU1 lie in Resurrection Bay and must N removed U the town's pOsitloh as an important seaport is . to N restored. '■»
Seward, too, it looking toward
Q — I have had a portion of my bowel removed because of CroN’s disease. Is there any cNnce that tN disease will come back? Ia It a form of cancer.?
A..— Crohn’s disease or gional- Ileitis la ,tn Inflammation ' of t h e] stnatt Intestine (ileum). ThisBRAND6TADT cause Is not known. It ia not a form of cancer.
It oftenInvolves several short portions* of tN ileom with normal Nwel in Ntween. TN victim has cramping palas ia tN abdomen often
aggravated by eating, loose stools and loss of appetite.
ANut one third of the victims recover, spontaneously from qn acute attack. In the rest, toe 'disease becomes, chronic and extends to involve an ever greater portiqn of tN intestine.
The treatment la not vary satisfactory and several' approaches must N used.
BLAND DIET
A bland diet with antlspas-modlC drugs and enough food , loss of
to prevent, loss of weight Is Important. In . some vie t l m psychiatric care is necessary to remove, emotional factors that hwy1 N aggravating tiie disease.
J Antibiotics may -N heeded fer IN acute attack.
Removal of tN Involved Segment has been widely used; but because recurrences have been •o common -surgeons are now advocating an opening of the healthy „ Nwel through the abdominal watt (ileoftomy j to give the diseased portion a rest.
As with all drugs-containing j A —Dexedrine is a brand of cortisone or related hormonest ld^tro^mphethmlne. It ty com-It should not N taken oyer1 a toonly used as a nervous system prolonged period' ' stimulant and appetite depres-* * : * sant. Large doses may cause In-
Q — I have'been taking Dex- f somnla, nausea or fainting. It
not available.
Charles B. West, president of Westpurs which operates ships, motels, buses, etc., reported mi, upward trend several weeks ago and predicted the tourist business Woqld equal that of last year. - |
> There is hope for more government Nip — although this ) hope Is dimming insofar as it concerns outright grants or pre-larthquake type insurance. In
edrlne for several ytors to help Mould not be used continuously the field* of urban renewal they me reduce. Will it, cause any] because it is habit-forming. , {hope that tha present allocation
bad Side effects?
n for N*w-p*p*r RnrarpriM Aiin.) | of 75 per cerit federal funds to
iFr*rP'
m
Coordination Helps Grbfjes
I'l^NTIAC FRKSS, WJfiDNKflDAV, JULY -I, IQflt
mm
BIN CABBY
Sport? Help Students Build Confidence
..jtmAami pu no imt mma
Ak(£> mtistp
By LESLIE J. NASON, Ed. ft ■ What skiII is your child developing this summer? Running,
- jumping, swimHimg, climbing, sailing; muiie?
Any, one of these help* a chlldrealige that hi nan I ruin his body jA tip. Ida, iiki-j
ding,
The American . Medical AiiocI-a 11 o n recom*] mends 30 to 60 * minu tea,, of planned exercise every day. But the development of physical skills demands'more than just
getting the jproMr amount of’ex-j lng arid batting a ball can help erclse, , 7 a child overcome his fear.
What is needed is exercise or ! # a, *
other activity that stimulates j When children learn that they the pupiUo devdlep skill and [can control their bodies, it pet
coordination.1
summers ho spent his time sailing, ' . ,
This latter sport gave him, the physical feel of the wind on the lean Gonvrui ineir ooaiBs, u noiiSails, B sensitivity to fl variety only adds to! (htl£* confidence of circumstances,
I luii N(itililnn fk'Mm iii aniilii - IIia iif'l
NASON
Whether It's 'music lesspni or bjut enables them to, apply the ,iwipimlng lessons, the results I samd techntqties elsewhere,'
*"-!» stiidy^g, and jj-ARNKD CONTROL tell, Mbr PR • a number
mlrig team once stated, “When 11 learned that I cotlld control j my thinking in the same manner that 1 learned , to control the backstroke, my grades went up. 1 could handle my school work and stilt travel with the
, Lack *of confidence In physical things Is • severe handicap to children. Those 'who lack the coordination and confidence for games on (he playground are 'often afraid, to try Writing lit the classroom.
Consistent practice lit such a team! simple thing ps throwing, catch-
Jacoby on Bridge
.Bill, » successful businessman, can trace at least part of his success to the development of physical skills. The same kind of planning and atetvlng for perfection paid off In both caiee,
Purposeful activities such as these seldom just happen. BUI was responding to the suggestion* and. encouragement of hie parents. : , ■,1T
There are ijuiny things thkt boys end girls icon "do to gain •kll( in the use of tools; It is. important that they learn to work With, their hands.
It helps them to create arid it gives them a practical understanding of how things work.
Incidentally, the carryover from physical skills to mental skills is not always automatic. Students should have the parallel pointed out to them,
SSTsmopwn* mgApasael ‘ ‘ I mmTi
A MVMOTHSR TH# W
,„TAK* A DRIVE IN BATOV... AMS MAM
Auwr peHoet. mki
THE BERRYh
One summer It was swimming the next year he spehi hours
(You can get Prof. Nason's helpful booklet for parents, Help Your Child Succeed In
NORTH
AQJ4
WAQ1094 ' , ♦J74
*' *J0
WEST . EAST *69 AK100 8 7
JMfll f KTI,
♦ Afl2 SKI
*10 8 8 4 5 ,*7 01 SOUTH (D)
■ *A#S -, f JS ■ s ♦ Q 10991
' * akq
North hnd South vulnerable South Weal North Eut 1* Pen 1* 1*
1 N T. Pa'M 3 N.T. Pass 3 N.T. Paw Pan P«*» Opening loud—* e.
I W«t mi,tit ta* «t m tend grayjfW* *■" ShaffW W»sJiE •*
, .... . IBM P .________VPon a super-[Your Child, Box 1277, General
by playing second hand high in vised* playground. Two other Post Office, New York, N.Y.) I
By OSWALD JACOBY
the Brat diamond lead and se ting up his partner's spade suit j BERRY'S WORLD while East still held the King .of,... diamond but declarer still could hive made the hand by two different llnesofpiay, r One way would have been to, let Bait's king hold thp first spade trick. The other to go right after hearte ahd Wind up /with two epidei, four hearts and three clubs.
Could East have set the hand by playing the ten of spades at trick,one? Could. South have made the hind agalrist* any defense? See tomorrow's article for the answer.
By Jim Berry
Hero is a hand from Edgar Kaplan's' “Winning Bridge Complete" that illustrates qu!te«a few principles of bidding and , P*«y-
WCRRDJfr****
Q—The biddingitas been: South West North Ea<
1* .-if X* 2*.
Pass , Pals 9* Paw
Let’s Consider-the play In j» novice game.
The Jack of ]
■ p a d e s’,1 lij played*
West’s six. East JACOBY . covers the jack with king and .South with the ace. South leads a diamond toward dummy. -West ducks and the, jack forces East’s king. .Hie ten clearh the'spade suit, but South continues - about the bhsinessjof setting up his own diamonds.
, You. South, .hold:
*A * ¥K J 71 ♦ A11 *Q 191 f What do you do?
A—BId three no tramp. You hive heart* well stopped.
TODAY’S QUESTION Your partner ghee, to four dubs, What do you do now?
"Help,,helpr- my foot is.stuck,in these narrow trousers!’
BOARDING HOUSE
West gets the lead with the ace and plays a heart. If SOuth finesses he will be set t w o tricks, but South. counts nine tricks and goes up with the ace • and winds up with two spades, one heart, three diamonds and throe clubs;
Astrological.
Bfr t5r7
Forecast
M. ^ Jg
There Is travel, chan
change, consultation w
__ ....... —• indicated. Display vi
satlllty. /Accept chellenge. And member to smile! *
“\URUS.................
-point n
_____I........ ... ,o May sort
viewpoint may ba obscurad. But ..... ... i. tarriporary condition., financial
becking due. Cycle begins to rrjive u
Gemini (May it -to Juno 90):
wary of speed. Attitude should 'be "__
but surd." Don't attempt to rush protect. Heed advice ot friend. . Don't lot pride ■J accomplishment.
.CANCER (June. 51; to J .Who is supposed to protect .- fake* day on. “------
/ OUT OtTR WAY
... _____„ency call
Sltauatlon developing PfRiONAL attention.
(.60 fJulv MJa Aufr..Ml.t.;j.ttand..
IEQ (July torn Aug. Ml- Sand lunar aspect highlights KNOWLEDGE, arT ewers to perplexing questions. Take time to survey situation. Member of oppo-alto sex means wail. But actions moy tell another story.. '
VIRGO (Aug, 23 to Sept. 23) Hfgher-up went results. But ypu must watt untl you got agreement in WRITING. Don-give in to temptation where money I: concerned, impulsive action proves cost ty. Please waltl
* libra (Sept. 23 to Oct. 32)! Result of past efforts bear fruit. Those you rs spect due to- pay compliments. Do nww llstanlng thantalklngi Hold oft on new- . protect, Obtain valuable hint- tron) yt6-day's;VlRGO messege,
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21): P
deney Is to forgot health, rules.. New enterprise absorbs your t.attention^ BuV^do
Ineonnectlon v..
cent resolutions.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov: 22
What associates promise a ............I
are capable of .JCuvarlntt., * may not be the/seme. Reap today's CANCER . massage. Vour hunch is cprreetj Take : time tc ‘cSow throughjon suggestions.
" CAPRICORN (Dqc. ■ ?* *“ mi ■n‘
9): D»*
i hendle them.
. atfWflng home life, ^urjtvvv
,.v.i affairs demand attention: Recent .events point way to future action. Fine for homo improvement—frank talk wlffi family member. ‘Change necesjary—b“" not today. *
PISCES
pleasure through aceompltshhwnt. nothing for granted. Check met psSsetilens. Experiment , KlmK d'-* Mm -^ra||“
• V W • * . ■ * ' . ( ... V , IP THURSDAY 15 YOUR glATHDAY .t ; .-you ore,sensitive, possess deep - understanding hkltlm|||Ej >
TO Mf OMIT, you MUST PM0 THE DEfONMNT MOT
aunryi MOwyou waixoTEmTOPHjgtiteffl
MORTY MEEKLE
By Dick CavuQt
x
By Ernie Bnohmillor
GRANDMA yx:
PfajjALD DUCK
■ By Otaris* Kuhn
By Walt Disney
&................................^...7-....L:i / __\iA
THE; ftOlTO&C PlftKSH, "WKllN K8UA\'. ,MI*V 1, MHl,k
•Junior Iditori Quiz .,•$
LAKES
o*“WPJ£
■ QUESTION; Lake Maracaibo' l« not completely unround* ed by land — u fhy la It a lake?
ANSWER; A "lake" generally meant a body of *1111 water lurrounded by land, but Die word may aide be uied ifiuch a mata of water hat a connection with the tea.
At bur map shows, Maracaibo It situated near the coait "of Venezuela, la Ike northern part of Sooth America, and hat an arm which It open to tbf tea bn the north tide, . making the water on this tide tomewhat brackish.
, The southcrir part, fed by rivers, Is fresh. This big lake, ;«lth an iron of 6,300 squarsmiles, It a waterway over which boate early farm produce, but It* chief Importance to Vene-zuela it In the heavy depoalts of petroleum which lie undeH tee bottom and on tee shores.
In soma places, Maracaibo Is dotted with oil derricks built ever the water. The wells pour out to much erode oil (hot It imbuls te M pm* cent of ter country'! exports, making Veoesuola one of the most prosperous of the Latte American countries. ’
When.'the.-Spaniards first explored South America, they found an,Indian village built on polos over Maracaibo's waters* and this reminded them of Vdnlce In Italy — hence the name, Venezuela.
ENTIRE INVENTORY GOES FOR EXACTLY..
»/ FOR YOU TP DO; Check the location of Venezuela bn a map and loam something more about this prosperous, troubled country and its people
A Financing Plan for Every Need
NOTHING HELD BACK ... EVERYTHING GOES at Vi OFF!.. . Here’s year chance to save on Nattcaal Quality Ladies’ Dresses, Goats, Suits, Fort, Sportswear, Beachwear, Purses, Lingerie, Sleepwear, Hobos, Bras, Girdles, Hosiery, Uniforms and Many Mora!
JUST TAKE YOUR OWN PRICE CUTS OFF THE ORIGINAL PRICE TAGS
SAVE! SAVE!
39* LADIES’ PANTIES . . .
1.00 MOJUD NYLON HOSE .
1.S0 EXQUISITE FaRM BRAS . , .
1.99 LADIES’ BLOUSES . .
1.99 LADIES’ BERMUDA SHORTS .
2.99 LADIES’ HALF SUPS /_____
2.99 LADIES’ 2-PC. PLAY SETS , .
2.99 LADIES’ BLOUSES .. . .. .
3.99 LADIES’SKIRTS OR SLACKS
3.99 LADIES’ POLO SHIRTS , . .
3.99 GOWNS and PAJAMAS . . . 199 PERMA-LIFT BRAS . . .
4.99 LADIES’ FUL.L SLIPS ... . .
7.99 LADIES’ MAGIC SLACKS 5;99 LADIES’ SWEATERS V .
7.99 BOB EVANS UNIFORMS
7.99 LADIES’DRESSES . . .
9.99 LADIES’ SWIMSUITS . .
12.99 LADIES’ DRESSES . ^
14.99 LADIES’ RAINCOATS .
19.99 BETTER DRESSES . , .
19.99 LADIES’FORMALS ...
19.99 LADIES’ SUITS. . . . v i
19.99 LAbiES’ GOATS . . . .
29.99 LADIES’ COATS . . . 99.00 LADIES’ FURS ,:.
provides funds for major medical bjllo
qnd related expense* quickly— **V, -
confidentially
Now there in no need to' let surgical, maternity, dental or other medical expenses drain away your savings. The Associates new Medical Financing Plan will provide the money you need today. And/ payments will be arranged for your convenience. Associates offers specia} loan plana for any responsible person ... any personal, business of professional need. Your request, large 6r small, will be handled promptly and in strictest confidence. Just write or telephone the Associates office near you for an appointment.*
IN PONTIAC
liMirN< Sdfllnaw Street...,.v..,FI 389 North Telegraph Road.......’,. **.'«
’ Pontiac Mall Shopplns^enter
4476 Dixie HlphwOy.
STORE
1j
vmm
Campbell's the Picnic Favorite!
jnATiui
OUARAHTCE mir
Briquets
Watermelon
«ptR»
OPEN
JULY 4th
1a.m. to 6 p.m. For Your Shopping Convenience!
;100
Count
Pkg.
Pert ■ Have Plenty for Your Picnic* em , m mm _
Paper Napkins 2 ~ 49
STAMPS
LUNCH MEATS
All Deliciouo Flavors, Kids Love It!
Low, Low Prices on Health and Beauty Aids !
SI.00 Sin, DmI Pock,' Uasld . mgWm
80 EXTRA S STAMPS
More Cookout Favorites!
Deliclept, T.nd.r * Juicy. U S. Choice, Com FW M jr m
Boneless Check Roast. u-©“
SolM, Loon, U.S. Choice, Bonelen Rmy or 000
Rotisserie Roast ; ... . L‘- o“
U.$. Choice, Com M Ooof, Fency Indiriduel fgfl.
Boneless Club Steak. . "
f • •wee maef vonvemenr vnoaoranr : i
Ban Roll-On . .&v
7fo Si«e, Heir Coro in 0 Hondy Tube : 3_o».
Scon Hair Cream
) 1.J* Site, Fort Actin*
Buffferin Tablet!
SI.SO Sls«, The Fovorite Heir Spray »’
Aqua Not . .
Fill WITH THIS COUPON
80 EXTRA tr STAMP
. With The hurchete of.4 Con *f OoH
CHAkCOAL LIGHTER
A Ilf Jor of Pickles for A Big Holiday
Vlasic Polish Dills
So Fresli, Creamy A Rich, For Salad* or Sai
5f;r g| Salad Dressing . |
The Extra Touch of Flavor for Holiday Foods,
£ I69 Salad Mustard . .
Quick Or Easy, Low Calorie Dessert Topping
Dream Whip Topping 4 p2^
Rich Coffee, Flavor in or) Instant with
Yuban Instant Coffee .
Lots of Good Coffee in A Big Jar cJf .
Yuban instant Coffee .
26 EXTRAS STAMPS J
With The Owrchow e» Any Too Tim# , *
ICE CREAM TOPPING ■
Seem Thit Coupon At NoNonai Feed Store*, hg
GoldoQ»;Quaftors; Smooth Spreading
Fleischmann Margarine
| Hormel's Spam . . 'll"
Buy Hi# Big Can Far A Big Holiday, Van Camp
Pork & Beans e Economy Sizt|
Have Plenty of Lemonade with Rsalsmon Rocomtituted
J lemon Juice ...
Ld All Flavors, Sorva Well-Chiliad, Top Troet ^
j Beverages . Uft 6»«“«
.*,625 Extra
S & H Green Stamps with Coupons in This Ad!
i EXTRA HSr STAMPS 5
- With The Purcheie ef l'V ' -R.
BAN CREAM DEODORANT M
Top Teste, Golden Quarters , CORN OIL
Pef-Rifz, Frozen APPU or CHERRY
Carden Freeh, Frozen
CRINKLE-CUT
S|r Holden Itud Stamps *■
■ STAMPS :
With $5.00 Purchase or More
(Net,Including leer, .Wine or Cigarette*) Rddeem Thie Coupon ot Notional Food Storor
Wedgwood A Co., Ltd. * , 1 '
4 Copt er Breed l Bettor Plate*, or 1 Creamer I
One Coupon Per Family M W,
RIDISM THIS. COUPON [AT NATIONAL FOOD STORM I
Couoon Cxolroi SoturrUv Julu. Jth . R
FOOD STORES
PACK YOUR PICNIC BASKET WITH
'll i
ssss
m1 ^
Vr \ :'l
ijffl
w
y§^II 4&^&JU,
»’• HIMILAH TNMTIII
“ rwft
EAGLE
NOW}
WAYNE
STEWART
GRANGER
“NORTH TO ALASKA”
TICHMICOlCM
“ilLLY
BUDD”
PETER USTINOFF ROBERT RYAN
THE PONTIAC PBKsa.1 YVKl)Nm)AVV ju:
Out-Stafe Buyers to Gel New Tags
LANSING (AP) - A new type of in-tranilt license plate la being laaiied starting today to smooth the way for out*W* slaters buying cars in Mich-Igan. ‘ » =
Secretary of State Jamee Hare says he hopes the new license systejn will provldjf “a real stimulus'' for out-of-state residents to visit Michigan, buy cars and spend their vacations in the state.'
w,, ★ : w ,v
Tbs new1 license*, plate, made of heavy cardboard, will fit hi .the regular license plate spot and replaces the former sticker, pasted 6n the rear window/
-Firs' Chiefs to Meet
f GRAND RAPIDS (AP| - 400 persons from throughout the state are expected here Monday for tfa four-day , annual convention of the Michigan State Fire Chiefs Association,
'Wildand tOonderfuf COLOR
rRmv Curtin * Christine Ifaufmann
COMMERCE
EM 3*0661
OPEN
Ww u># Rt aisssiw as. AT DM
NOW THRU SATURDAY
Billy Wilder's TWO Funniest Hits!
'mL&msL
HMM rear JACK * MORWCWWIpmwiJ
MrWKI
. WiNtnHsn
'SbMElifcK •vffMr
N. - MQN. - TUKS.
BROUGHT BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND!
Tht Academy Atcnrd Winntri! l
VIHlas af the Maid" - “Tin Mlraols Worker"
At Fammcl Hollywood Eatery 1 i
try
Chef Enjoys 42 Reign
By BOB THOMAS
AP MoVle-TelevIslon Writer
HOLLYWOOD - Jean Rue rujlei hie realm with a soft voice and a wooded spoon. He Is tne chef of the Musso and Frank Grill, the oldest and still thefj^estrestaurant on f h l boulevard.
' In gentle gallic tones M. Hue whaedios from tradesmen' the most qualtta-. THOMAS ’ tive of provender for his kitchen. With his spoon he tastes the concoctions f of his assistant chefs, bestowing a nod and a few French Words of commendation.
* #, h
Rue has lived In the aromatic world of Musso and Frank's for 48 yearf. When he first came to the restaurant, Hollywood Was a village .with- unpaved sidp streets. The growing moyle so-
nil wiui a nvn
nodeh spoon. He
' jik,
m
II
ciety was centered on the boulevard,, :
“They all used to come here," the chef recalled. “Rudolph Valentino was a regular customer; he loved the Italian spaghetti. Charlie Chaplin had lunch here almost every day; his favorite was the boiled lamb with caper sauce. Thera we're many others —Douglas Fairbanks, Bebe Dan-lels^Alen Hale. I -remember whenHAfe flret brought in hls little boy —the boy who Is an actor .today,";
CROWD MOVED • Hollywood grew, and restaurants proliferated. The, movie crowd moved to Beverly Hilla and the San Fernando Valley, But Musso and Frank's continued. While the younger set prefers flashier places, the boulevard landmark is still a favorite with fllm veterans, and especially with. writers, press agents and advertising men.
/ Musso and Frank's was only three years old when Jean Rue arrived in February 1982. The
AROMATIC WORLD - Chef Jean Rue of the Musso and Frank .Grill in Hollywood tastes some of hie cooking in the kitchen where he rules pis rfalm with a Aoft voice and wooden spoon. His reign at the famed rAtaurant has covered 42 years. *
founders hove long since passed from the scene, hut Rue coptln-oies his, guardianship oft; the kitchen, ' 1 '
'A •, ‘ * • W , # ’
X. native of Linages, France, Rue served two years of apprenticeship In the bid country before graduating to Maxime'i and fur Hue. After cooking on the French Line, he landed in New York, then the Ambassador Hotel how. ; , i
* * ★
A smallish man of AA years, he has a brush mustache and a lean flgura despite a lifetime of intimacy with food-SIMPLE FARE
: “I eat plain food, very plain,' he explained. “When I go home at nigit, my wife makes me a simple meal --l have taught her pretty good, Some Jboiled beef or fresh fish, some fresh vegetables, that Is enough {oir me,"
Nothing much riles M. Rue, but he does express dismay over the way Americans eat. *
★ ’ ★ * ,
“The gourmet has almost disappeared,’’ 7 hb lamented. “Americans are too much. In a hurry. In Europe , the people spend one hour, two'hours, even three hours over the midday meal, They know how to enjoy food," ' ' *
Dorman’s
OLD MILL TAVERN
INTERNATIONAL
BUFFET
FRIDAY,
5 to 9:30 P.M.
SUNDAY,
Complete Dinner Menu -1P.M. to 8 A.M. DORMAN’S Old Mill Tavern OR 3-1907 ,
Waterford, Michigan
Cello, Viola Bring
$90,000 in Court
.LOS ANGELES (AP) - Two stringed instruments crafted by Antonio Stradivarius, brought f9D,OAO when they wofe sold in Superior Court,
p “V, . _,l§ ; * , ,r, . "
one of the craftsmans 20 Cellos and ope of nil 12 violas, both (fern the estate of Sarpue Crocker, were purchased at auction Tuesday by Rolf * Hibli-reutinger, textile manufacturer from Plawll, Switzerland,., m
'MMH FEATURE SHOWH FIRST AMO XUS’
It’S that METRO-GOUMW-WAYER.mM,
‘Go-Go1 guv mm
as he tackles a band of desperate pirates! v
in AJACK CUMMINGS-GEORGE SIDNEY PgpOUCTION
rflltiS Together/ flrhey leave thw peace-I time army in pieces!
TaHuNIXR
TERROR... TTSTRANGE LOVE
1CWN WAYNE
. WHITMAN persoff
. : m " i ■p*-'1' ', « % \ \ »i-,v
jjh v/ - aS/1;®}
fro PONTIAC PRESS, Wm^KSDAY, ilJLV
ftlltf***
ShopPin9
ouvov/»^G
fovo rit«»
.d. J“'«
**" Don’t
co«fo*o
/ with SwoH
Melon
Patalw*1
Eatinfl
Steaks
pers\anu^"
Fr ; . . . . 3"
Mortdn —- Frozen Beef/Qiicken, Turkey
Pot Pies . . . . . .% 5
Mel-O-Crust Hot Dog or Hamburger
■M Purchase of On» 37-ot. Can * Cuifiitt
„ CHARCOAL STARTER
Llnilt One Coupon. Sxpl ret. July 4,-MM.
! extra
GOLD BELL
STAMPS
EXTRA
GOLD BELL
STAMPS
EXTRA
GOLDBELL
STAMPS
EXTRA
GOLD BELL
STAMPS
Top With Sauce or'Seasoning and frrboqui
Hickory Smoked — Sugar Curod
SPARE RIBS
Medium
Size
BIMIjESS HAMS
U. S. Choice—Table Trimnrted
Chuck Steaks.. ififlS*
U. S. Choice—-Table Trimmed
Swiss
Gulf Kist
491b. Tiger. Town, Lean Sandwich Sliced Boiled Ham . . . ..... Full Half. Pound
69V Pretsel, Glendale or Peschke t.th
Skinless Franks <£X+- : t> Pkg, I
p£ 89c Oscar Meyer, Eckrich of Boll Park Franks G^hi Mb. f ?kjT «
a Meadowdale Frozen '
V Lemonade . .; — ',0s
Realemon Assorted Frozen
Fruit Drinks. . ; . . ,
Royal Garnett Froicen Sliced
Strawberries r
ea< Colonial German Frozen
v Chocolate Cake . .
Meadowdale French Fried-Frozen
S Potatoes o . . . .
Household
6»oz.
25e
Cans
4 «£• 89
Limit Six wlffc.Ceepon at Lott
Vftlygt Smooth or Krundiy „
Pednuf Butter taT
Realemon.**:■ 'pi ‘ ‘ I
Lemon Juice . fij
^Food Club ■ 1 •
‘Fruit Cocktail ^ \ gTp^ Drink;-- 432£*\
Iced Fudgies,.Raisin OatmeaJ or Crunchee Brittle
• 32'oz. CQe
. v Bo«i^ oy
4^89*
/Mel*0*Cru$t
Italian Rolls
Bond Potato
Dinner Ro|ls
Braswell 1 1
Fruit Drinks.
' 12,ct. 0.1 c
, ., pkg. Or
857-oz. $106 Cans M
Golden Cookies
Aunt Janes Fresh-Sweet Sandwich
Pickles . . . , . ^ !j7c
Butterfield
*Potat6 Sticks . fef • • i
1 -lb.. $1 do
O Pkg5. I ■
O 24-oz. $100 O Jars ■
Special Label —'Save 5c*
Nescafe InstantCoffee
Suntan Lotion
Coppertone «.* . ... .
Medium V
Pinconning Cheese .
6-oz;
Jar
2-oz.
Tube
_ _ , Vapf Camp's * '
379 Pork^& Beans . . . tTT
Hygrade Party Leaf
Luncheon Meat *Zl5c 3
Hygrade
Corned Beef -%?. . .
Hygrade *
Viennas . ,1 - S’* 3
QOc '' Special Label
Palmolive Liquid . ^
Hc Premium
Mustard . *£ ..... .
. ’ . Foii Cookouts — While They Lastv
69s, Bar-B-Q Grills .
V .J ‘
BsElSm 1 /
L7 iy^^Uhwk * ^ oi\ .»•)>' '!»/ f» , tiHe r—
AT HOME. ..ENJOY A
......... r_ ....
OXTIAC HiESS, WEDNESDAY, JVXOfaJjm * 1, •
,;V * ' ’"<1 ",’< ■' / '' J' vl, /\j| f‘,l V 1' l,h«!',-«!
Regular Size
lifebuoy Soap
Mild
Lux Liquid Detergent
- Special Label ■W*
..Surf Detergent . . . .
Baggies
Sandwich Bags 7. .
For Floors, Walls
Ajax Cleaner .^mHU
Regular Size
Palmolive Soap .
Borjdware - Hot- Drink
Paper Cuds . ... . .
Country Chum
Button .v.\; Citronella Candles
50
EXTRA
GOLD BELL
50
EXTRA
GOLD BELL
50
EXTRA
GOLD BELL
STAMPS
GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS
PH
I!
jLi-'^2a'Z L- 1.L jl’b \lll/kli^-T A'’j.• .7j'7'y.^Li j ibAtitoeiM
■ jrcjj* * /
M
■§
■ 11
’,J- Wjf*
f one 7 'calorie'
jvtix ounce eernAf
ttl« WIDE LOUVER Stmdifd Modtl
« • Insulates ... home is warmer '■ M | in Winter, cooler in Summer B | • Saves on painting and .upkeep R
W • Saves on heating bills "
» • .'House stays like new. for years to come
We enclose it With glass, jalousies, awning-* type or sliding windows. Free estimates.
| GUTTERS and DOWNSPOUTS | I. CEMENT, STONE and BRICKWORK I | Alum, and Iran RAILINGS * ROOFING | I INSULATION • CARPENTRY |
I |
% VISIT OUR BEAUTIFUL, COMPLETE | I HOME IMPROVEMENT CENTER' I
Only one-calOrie per delicious 6-ounce serving. Available in Ivandy half-quart bottles, convenient 12-ounce cons,- and family-size full-quarts,
QUALITY . DISTINCTION
FAYGO-OAKLAND DISTRIBUTING CO
.*» FDkTHHlSTflNE aBfc:!-:.. \" . PHONE: 334-5405
• 26400 W. 8 Mile Roald -Mties West of Telegraph'
»wH«e fl 5-9452
NO PAYMENTS UNTIL ’65
'Space1 Race Speeds Up Development of Medical techniques
(Editor's fyolt—Thli la the , seotitifl oI (uto articles on (he „ spaed revolution in tha (Jnited J Statatj
. outline hie hopes of collapsing the time it token to make tin-{portehtmedtoal discoveries*!
, —*^1- ' . " "take the work in developing
• Uy RAY.CRQMLEY a now piece* of research equlp-WASfUNQTON (NBA) A | mont. - pile of our doctors had Vanoer specialist at the 'National I a new Idea; Wo had it worked
Tnatl^utea, of Health plvatdly I up and made ready' jin 48 houra
by turn jpg to an atbpiic energy 4enm at Oak Hldge, '• « 1 .
"'If we had farmed It out to an old-time firm they’d have, taken month* to do the job In the traditional way, ' "When these new men go after something. they get it dope. 1 don’t know quite ,how to I latch, on to Jthli new ’way of doing things, but 1 have an ides.
M*. !t,iWi*lfke ttn-seli fob people ,] here and hr Congress on the idea of .sotting «up a'number of three-man.teams '*,
tlent? You could, ifor example, get a series, of* analyses daftly at a reasonable cost, if you needed them. *
“But I paii’t toll what Ideal would appear as being the most practical. Thetis why I’d have engineers, doe tors and mathematicians work together and see What would " happen.” ,
.1 This'same thinking is to' ho found among other dectora and among the engineers and man-, agement merv at the, spaed Industries Ip U)ulsiana.«aud Californio;» ‘ . ,
some of the more important do-1 velopments we find: , ’ J
A device used In making - Inertial guidance' systems kas ‘
turned but to bp a valuable medical r o i e n r o h tool for studying bleed.
An electronic atethoicope has
Mix-Up at Hospital
Parents'Spot Baby Switch
EACH TKA.M
"Qn each team there would he a doctor,‘^an engineer and a mathematician. You can't sit on your owii Job, pick mut things and Say this or that dould he used by someone in a different field.
. Tht vice president of one dor-poration ipaklng space rockets said, “We’ve got our. company doctor Working with our engineers on some new Ideas. We're enthused."
"But If you put' men together with different ways of looking at things,Ifolnk some-
thing wopld happen, J it would change medical re*
NEW APPROACH^
Already, some radically new medical approaches are being developed as a result of the Intense space work', Scanning
HAMPTON, S.C, l^i—The proud parents who took thejr infant son home from Hampton County Hospital thought he Did not look like the baby they ‘had been shown at the hospital, and a pathologist has confirmed their doubts.
,I)r.'Wiliiam B, Mullins tbqk Mood samples from two sets of parents and two baby boyp who were born June 18 and agreed the hospital had inadvertantly switched babies.
jpeen deiigned to give physicians tiie same hearing quality aa present units, -but with many times the hearing powtr.
. < Douglas Aircraft has made several prototypes of ail electronic thermometer,
MONITOR CONDITION *
Boeing haa developed an Instrument system which can monitor 'the; physical condition
ism while simulating weightlessness are providing valuable data . on the prevention o( muscular ^ atrophy, the cauaa and treatment of kidney, stone! and the factors influencing calcium afc sorption, metabolism and excre- . lion.
The results will have great importance in the cure and treatment of fracture cases and ■ polio patients.
of men and women while they CONDUCT EXPERIMENTS
are .performing normal,opera- j Hons, thin giving medical men
National Aeronautic* and
W, L. Mlkell, lather of one of the Infants, said he h ihd I
been .shown, a blond baby at the hospital nursery but that he and his wife later wore given one with brown hilr.
Tht MIkills kept the baby for two days before notifying doctors a mistake had been made. 1 . ,
★ ★ ★ .«'i .
•pie Hospital arranged for the blood tests and saw to ti . that the Mlkolls and Mr, and Mrs. Robert A, Youmans got the right babies. - e
imHt (non meaningful ,u. ,„ | t
tom. thiln Ifi ,uiio *<«Wla SSMtf
i doc-
measurements taken in tor’s 0akm$' \ it .Studies (ti animal hibernation aim nt reducing the mot-abolks activity el fstrOnnuta to permit extended apace trips, 'As a result, doctors may, pin knowledge ef the blit ways to’ decrease body temperature ter surgery or for other treatment.
Studies on calcium metabol-
pressurei in astronaut pressure suits has shod now light on foe us* of Increased oxygen pres- , •ures during surgery to prevent lung collapse.
NASA's efforts In mapping and charting the brain and developing advanced measuring equipment have contributed materially to the therapy of dia-orders of foe nervous system forolugh active stimulation of foe brain.
search radically.
| “Doctors now doh’t'have the Inforpiation they need t\ work *', with. If you have.a'paiiei gpt his temperature; his jfulse j and other data at Intervals, get a blood 'analysis or sbipe ; other .analysis, now and again.
FOLDED FLAG — Adm,. Henry D. Felt looks.down at , thS folded flag of his command which was lowered for foe last time yesterday in change of command ceremonies aboard the USS RangeT in Pearl Harbor. Felt was succeeded as Pacific commander In chief by Adm. U. S. Grant Sharp, behind Felt.
"You really don’t know what’s’ going on in your patient all the time under different conditions:
Says Canterbury Archbishop
j CONTINUOUS REPORTS 1 “Some of .the new space tech-j nlques make it possible, cheap-I ly. to get continuous reports on j «• iot^of things about yOur pa-
Understand
, DURHAM, England j#x-The Archblshop^er Canterbury says^Kfaerstanding,’ notshoek, should bourne Christian te-■ action to topless drosses.
t Dr. Michaejptamsay, 59, the .anfowahop, said yesterday, “The worstjxaaible thing for dxtrch people is to adopt an attitude QfDeing shocked,’ '
s' - it *
must accepMfTe fact that*youAg people* express .-memselves in newjwefoods*of dress that may seeni queer to foe/older of uv-we must accept that fact and . . understand themj.^ *
Festivities irt Canada Mark Dominion Day
TORONTO (AP) - Sporting , events,, parades and festivals j range throughout Canada today as the nation observea Dominion I Day, marking the 97th aqni-l versary of its birth, I
Prime Minister Lester B.r Pearson will attend ceremonies in Ottawa, where a feature will j be, a changing of the guard Ceremony op Parliament .Hill.
w~ The Deluxe"/
FOLDING Alum. AWNING
ONLY SUN.CONTROL HAS'IT!
Aluminum i RiM -custom-fitted to cover all exposed outside woodwork. Eliminates costly, tedious painting.
BUT DIRECT!... WE MANUFACTURE • WE INSTALL WE UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEE I
What is it that some people drink for their teeth?
Others drink for their waist?
But most people drink or its true, true cola taste?
.1 f . * i % .a:
ibiki ■J "SlM
lia*
'*7FWt'T
11
i\,l! IMIMHSn, WJ/fnXK^JAV, .11 \LY ' \
m
Battle of No-Hit Pitchers Fizzles Out Early
Burning's Duel
Fails Jo Jell
Cubl' Jackson Takes One-Hit Victory From Reds' Joey Jay
‘ By Thr Anwctoted Press Jim Running'of Phllsdelphls, one «f the few men to pitch i perfect game, and Ken Johnson of Houston, one of tijw tow to Idee a no-hitter, faced each oth*
So, who came. closer to per* faction?
Larry Jackson of the Chicago Cub*.' * , - v.,\
’Hie Bunhlng-johnson duel , failed to materialize at Houston 'Tuesday*night.-Running lost his bid for a perfect game In the' first inning and Johnsonnever survived it - the victim of three errors that led to five runs and an R-t Philadelphia victory?
"At Chicago, however, Jackson had a perfect gama for six In* nings against Cincinnati and ad* mlttedly had started thinking ! . seriously of a, no-hitter., i ONE MORE TIME "For the first Ume In my^life 1 really feit 1 had a chance," said Jackaon. , "The thought Which raced through my mind was that I could do it U l went through the ‘order- one tnord tinted
, He couldn’t get past the next bailer. Pete Rose, leading oil the seventh, ripped a slider into center field for a single. That was it* for the Reds, however. Jackson aet the final nine men down in order, Winping 1-0 over Joey Jay, sjrho, was touched for only two. hits.
Tigers JReturn 'Even' on Road
■ DETROIT (AT 'Tigers .returned home today with-the memory'of one swing that knocked victory out of thblr hands;
The Detroit I Fred Valentii\e walked to load the bases. ' > -
Then Don Blnslngame sent grounder Jo Luiripe, who toptbd
liospltal but Tiger^offlplalp huU x-rays showed no Serious injury
1 The Senators edged Detroit to McAulmv to force Valentine, fl*5 ,Tuesday night on John Ken* But the Tiger shortstop’s return nedy’i three-run homer in the I throw to first wag’wide fof. an Tflnth inning at Washington. The error. > - , blow gave the Nats a sweep of Wert left the game In the fifth Iha two-game series and left the I inning when he was struck on Tigers with a, 0*0 record for. the 1 .................
the left wrist by;(2*7).
Dave Wlckersham, seeking what would have been'a major league high .of 11 victories, gave way to Mickey Lollch when he tired, in 87-degree heat with one 1 ,out and one on'In the ninth.
Lolicn walked pinch hltti Chuck Cottler 'and Kennedy fol-
Tribe Woes Start With 2 Outs
White Sox' Rout Indians, 72-3
DOWN AND OUT —.'Minnesota Twins’ second baseman,, Jim Snyder rolls over imad effort, to avoid a tag by Baltimore ■ first baseman Norm Siebern in-a double play rum down. Snyder wa»out but the Twins won the game, 3*1, to snap the ■.Orioles',aevwngame streak, ' ■ w . “ ,
Jackson’* one-hitter made him ‘tfle sixth 10-game Winner in tbe National League and put him to an exclusive group of seven NL pitchers who have hurled (to. juttersf or one-hitters this sea-
son, surpassing the entire 1903 (jtlal. ■ 'A,,. ' ■
; San Francisco s (laylord Perry also*, turned in a ahutout, blanking the New York Met* 5*0 on three hits as the Giants re-.mained one-half game to front: ' of fhe Phillies. Milwaukee edged Sti Louis 5-i In thf-only other * game scheduled.
FIVE HITTERS,
Running, knocked out in ■ his ■ last start'.Friday, 'posted his first victory since his June 21 perfect game against the New York Mets by checking the Colts on five hits. Any thoughts of another perfect game left after, the leadoff bauer drew a walk and any prospects of a nohitter disappeared when Nellie
* Fox, Ute second man up, sin*
- gled.’ ■' / ; \
Johnson, meanwhile, never had a chance. Walt ’Bond dropped a fly ball hit by the A Phillies’ leadoff batter, v Tony Taylor, and later in the toning: added a throwing error while Joe Gaines also dropped a fly ball in the Phillies’ five-run
* burst. Bunning, now 9*2, chased , Johnson, 6-7, with a two-run single that wrapped up the rally.
- ★ “ * ‘ , 1
Perry retired 19 consecutive Mets at one stretch, brought his record to 6-3 and lowered his earned run average to 1.65 as toe Giants -won their 10th game In the last -12. Perry received home run support from Oriatfdo Cepcda and Tom Haller.
Hankp Aaron collected four hits for the Braves, Including a homer, before pinch hitter *Ty Cline clinched it for Milwaukee with a two-run homer In toe eighth. It AW# Cline's first homer of the season and tagged Cardinal reliever Roger Craig with the loss. ' .
Great-Grandfather Cops Seniors Golf
By the Associated press ■ r Cleveland, nursed n 1-0 lead: final two • runs—all afte Mrs. Doubloday’s Jlttle boy through four innings but with | were out' '
Abner decided, the game ought two. out and-two on In the fifth;
...v. ......__M |P to bfe played with three outs In the rbof fell In. Three hits, a. hit
I towed with hid game-winning Iever,^ *0htog, Cleveland,pitchers batsmen -and 'a walk lator the
blast, Kennedy/ had driven In wou^ be ®I1 right If they need-1. White Sox had seven runs,, Then 1 ad only,two. V ■ , cam# out No. 3j ■,
' The Indians'siaff-wasn't hav- *
IwAnivtWin much trouble getting those] There were two out and a man
-AKL.Y m.aii _ first two outs Tuesday night on waond to the sixth when Detroit Jutoped to a 2-0 lead against Chicago, The 12-3 White three White Sox hits produced
i|| |nj|| || sox romp came While the Indian I three more runs. Arid In the sev-
staff was chasing that elusive Tenth, ah error,, two hits and a third'one, |walk accounted, for Chicago’s
another Senator run with seventh-inning single.
Age hasn't cramped the golf, the nine-hole route and .finished Swing of Ed Harrison. - with a net 857 Th3 70-year-old , great-grand- j' Jacob MyersVlred a 53 and father who retired in 1959 aftor also finished with a net 35, Wlto 32 years with the Standard Oil an 18-stroke handicap, but Har-Company, breezed around Pon-|rison pk'ked up the winner’s Uac Municipal Golf Course yea- trophy with his 43 actual, torday in picking up his fourth .. „ . _ .
Sjmtors’ Golf championship to
* * , w . . in 1959. lie grabbed his second
u , ' . ." to i960 and he was St toe top
Harrison, who has seven again in 1962. grandchildren and one great- . ’
grandchild, recorded a 43 over i «ilAr! Button r«torded an actual j 39,. lowest score of the day " , . j among the 37 entries, finishing
j with a n^t 36. <■. ,
1 D e fen d I n g champion Ray Clothier fired a 45 and closed, with apet 39.
to the'opening inning ,on Gates Brown's single,. A1 Kaline'a doubts, and a single by Norm-Cash.' . Dick McAuiiffe’s single and,a double by pon Wert gave Detroit another run In the fifth, and two more runs scored’ in toe sixth on Bill Freehan's RBP stogie and an error.
! The Senators scored two runs, one unearned, In the fifth, Don Lock and Ed Brinkman singled wlto one out and pinch hitter
, In'other AL action Tuesday, New York swept a .twi-nlght. doubleheader from Los Angelos 4-0 and 3-2“; Minnesota topped Baltimore 3-1, Washinigton edged ‘Detroit fl-S and, Kansas City nipped Boston 2-1, — 1
ALL SINGLES
The Twins got .all their run^ on stogies, Bob Allison drove in' one to the first and then Jimmie
\|wo | Hall delivered the other two In the third ,after Steve' Barber, had wild pitched the; runners Into scoring position.
\ Roger Marls tagged five hit* for the Yankees including the game-winning,, homer» in' the nightcap a* New York swept two from toe Angels. Jim Bou- . ton fired a four-hlttpr to the opener and A1 Downing, Winning , his first game in over a month, took the second game. ~
Semifinals at Wimbledon
McKinley Gets Right-Handed Foe
WIMBLEDON, England (API j sion. He r
Mickey Mgntle drove in tyro runs in toe-first game and Bouton never allowed more than one base runner in any inning, Clete Boyer’s sensational game-ending catch balled downing out of a two-on spot in the nightcap., i
Rocky* Colavito drove In both Kansas City runs With a homer
WASHINGTON
Clippers Rally to Edge CIO
i-t.
0 0 0
BiaV’ame : Corntr ph Kennedy 3 Klnn ri
Cash lb
lump. 3b
B.Phillip! 3b I 0 o o Hannan Wlck'sharh * * “ —
D. Phillips
mm toed the semifinalsi,or left-handed, I Just take.them ^ » double and three Athletli
■ChuckMcKinley/the defend-j by defeating sou thpawsTomag j as they come," >. -1 pitchers combined for a two-
tog Wimbledon tennis cham? Koch of Brazil, Torben Ulrich I McKinley's only right-handed hitter. » '. "
pion-, faced a right-handed oppo- j of Denmark Billy Knight of | victim was Terry fyyan of South f (
nerit today for the first time Britain and Abe Segal of South Africa, eliminated to the first Moe Drabowsliy and Wes since the fournamehrs ooenina I Africa. . round , • 1, Stock permitted -just one Red
,■ Zlmr
: 2 o i o *iRcd the t'purnameht,'s opening Africa.
1 ‘ jo olu0U"fl~aud1 his tojituto last STUDIES MERITS a u o barrier between McKinley and v
iiT#o U berth in toe final.
oooo ' ^ * w . Imerits, .McKinley said. "Right
lINIOrt TOURNAMENT
Bun
mil
Oakland Hills Tour for Champagne Kid
n a,
Champagne Tony Ltf winner of three. tournai in the past .{opr weeks; tookv his first look yesterday at Oakland Hills where the $290,500 Carling World (fpen Will be
held starting Attg. 27th.
Lema, 9fho won the Thun-
, derbird, Buick and Cleveland Opens, played the ragged layout with head pro A1 Watrous and amateur Gene Eytor.
He was in the area early this week In conjunction with •/a movie of his*’ Buick: Open victory,- N.6 «score" was report-
. The Clippers exploded for ] 91 three runs in the bottom of the fifth inning last night to pin a 6-4 defeat on CIO No. 594 *in . Class A baseball action.
The win was , the seventh j against three losses for the Clip- ! pers, leaving them three games i behind league-leading Huron-Airway.
,:«?:
CIO moved into a 4-3 lead Murphy : with three runs in the top of toe tjriimtn fifth, but toe Clippers- mixed a: f'Aa!T>on< - ' double by Dick Toles with sin- a-,:; gles by Mike Dodge,* Felix Brooks and Gene Cox to put the! .. '.r-n---
game' on ice.
T*f«i» j The American ace met Fred'
wibninp wBorn, | stollo. the tall Australian he^ oo« 020 ios—a i beat for the title a year ago. T tro'rr- ''top-seeded Roy Etoerson of
iA/nr a
— K*nn»dy I?), sb — Himoo. Wijhelm Bungert in the .other fiQlDS yYLJ\.7 A .. hr iRBB so I semifinal. (zMMi"
Wlclcerthem m, B t-3 10
Bird'Streak
* * . i Sox hit over )he first eight,
• Billie Jean Moffltt, the Wight- ttlng® but Carl Yastrzemskl’s man Clip star from Long Beach, "Mb bomer of the season broke Calif., was the only other"U.S. I the shutout in the ninth. Joha stogies hcrpeful after Nancy j came^n‘to end It. . Richey of -Dallas lost her wom-
S -Wlckershem.
»" 2
Ouckvwrlh
J i
34-17 .—37-43. 6 -37 . 45- 8, -37 46- 8W-37'4 46-6VT-37VJ RMtik, W, 3-1 .!!! 2 V, 0 0 WP — Duckworth. T—3;i4, A-
47- 9VW3m 'S 4UW37V? Major f!
51-13(6-3764 U 33-13 -38 league^
53-13 —38 47- 47- ivy—9vy 4#I # ~40 • 53-13 -40 AMERICAN LVAOUt. . Won Lott Pc tsltlmors ... 46 26 *;63< New York 42; 2« M
. 3 - - 3
semifinal McKinley, Davis Cup star-from San AntonioJ.Tpx., said he wasn't bothered by having to play four left-handers In succes-
, . Potter lb
I f.Sr*
i f K.c«
) t Tu«k rl Marcpux rl
ru] County Cager Hi Picks U. of,D,
? 2 I' ’ 1..T.Iy ...
— Berg. Taylor. , Qoublrs Tolas, Oodpe. Fields. Runs Jylor 3. Berg; Brook's. Cox, Foster, Fields, wfonlno Pitch-
----- 1 .Pilcher — Dave
ino, Goniolas, Nei-
Dodge son;’ Ptlidi, 'Dodge!
,»,' Si
Pontiac Poim u, cardinals Webb Fuel M, Whitfield I Lakers f, Wllllm Miller Rea CLASS F
X-tSs 13, Washington Perk 4 ------JL“ *-Tie JT, G“ - ‘
MboM ». I A few 41, t,
‘ WIDGET Optlmlit No. 1 9, Cube i Moose 4, Giants 1
J T-BALL < Angels 33, Yankees ?
Red Sox 17, Optlmlat No.'l 11
The first athletic scholarship to be awarded to a basketball player at Brother Rice high school went to Paul J a gel a who signed a tender to attend the University of Detroit. * Jagels, whose home is ir Rif Chester, was one of the top point-makers on the team for th s past three
years,,
’ He was named to the All-Oakland' County team last season.
The June graduating class was the first at Brother Rice located in Birmingham.
Lot Angtles .
Detroit
Washington
TUESDAY'S RESULTS Minnesota 3. Baltimore 1 Kansas City 3. Boston I Chicago 12, Clavaland 3, night
TODAY'S OAMIS
Cleveland (John 2-7) at Detroit (McLain .141. or Aguirre 1-3). night ,
Los Angeles (Chance 5-4) at Baltlmora (McNally 3-3), night
Kansas City (O'Donoghua 3-4) at New i York (Ford to*i) '
Minnesota (Grant 3-3)- at Boston (Con-
. holly T
Washington' (Rudolph 1
Slut Francisco ,
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
Cjqetmrtt!......
Chicago Milwaukee st. Louis -
Weekly Play
quarter-final match Tuesday to Australia’s Lesley Turner 6-8, 6-4.
I Miss Moffltt crushed Mrs. Ann Haydon Jones of Britain $-3, 0-3 j and gained a semifinal slot! Wednesday opposite defender! Margaret Smith of Australia.
Mrs, Dorothy Thompson of | Marfa Bueno oU Brazil, seek-- ' Oakland Hills used a string of ing .to regain the title she won!
.432
birdies to capture the weekly Women's' District Golf Association topirney yesterday at Orchard Lake Country Club.
■■ Mrs. Thompson put together rounds of 40-39 for a 79 to edge Miss Nancy Smith of Windsor toy throe’ strokes. ,
• Mr.s. .Keith LeClair of Ann Arbor, the iVDGA’s 1964 champion, came in third with an,83.
In 1959 and 1960, plays Miss^ Turner in Wednesday’s otheift semifinal. I
Go To OrioN
■! For Your ' :
. GTO
and SAVE at...
RUSS JOHNSON* MOTOR SALES
89 M24i Lake Orion 693-6266
i RESULTS,
Houston ......'31
Now York 2!
' TUESDAY'. ,
Milwaukee 3. St. Loulb .
Chicago 1,'Cincinnati 0 San Francisco 3. New York 0 1 Philadelphia 8,1 Houston i, night I Only games scheduled.
. TODAY'S OAMES
St. Lou Ik (Sadecki 8-6 or Simmons 8-6) ^jW^MgaaCFlichar **), night .
Philadelphia .....
(Koufax 10-4), night Chicago (Ellsworth 106)
.and Buzhardt .3-4), 3, tv THURSDAY'S OAMES nd at Detroit, night ,
JAGELS
j EXPERT
ENGINE
OVERHAULING
GUARANTEED TUNEtI|PS 1 LOW PRICES | EASY TERMS AUTOMATIC 1 TRANSMISSIONS DOB SPECIALTY
V MOTOR EXCHANGE, ,
,W5 S. Saginaw Street | 4PE *3-7432
Pittsburgh (Veale 7-5)
~ (Marlchal 't0*3)
THURSDAY'S
Philadelphia af Los Arfgples, Chicago at Cincinnati, night New York at Houston, night Pittsburgh at San PranciGCo
. ^ CHAMPIONSHIP s; iDpFpthv Thompson ,
$. Keithiuciair ‘ \ l';s';;
. FlRSf ' PLlOHT
Someday, someone may learn how to make a better whiskey than this. But, as of today, f nobody has*
Ars. J. P, SlflOCMSlas 49-42 ' SECOND' FLIGHT - Mn |3-46—89; Mrs. W. Delay 4 I,' M. Thompson Jr, 44-49—I ■THIRD FLIGHT—Mrs. Ri
FOURTH FLIGHT -
NEED CASH NOW?
H
Ja' l AI*A .• ‘ &
Which is, of course, the reason Imperial -86 proof-continues to bp the'choice of Knowledgeable People.
DIENDIO WHISKEY • SS PROOf . 30* SIMpi WWSjjjttS JOB GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS > HIRAM WALKER S SONSjffC*. PE.0RIA-, 1tl
ISSi
‘VI T:
I-v, ',i,"JUi ■ -y , v-v1
^THE POKTIAC PllESS, WE^OTSDAt, 10(14
d-ht-
'111' 7mt T' ’r .y*
Women'! Golf Outing Mnl. Madeline C««tltt)ierry fired H 4# lb plpk up low groan Honors yesterday 1A the stiver Luke Ladles1 Tuesday golf outing, ■' •,< • ’
Mrs. Clara Poren led the tyst
flight with a net 36; Mrs, Kay Dando shot a net# to lead the second flight; ana Mrs. Mary Turner's 3g net topped the turd night. " ■« I ■'
Mrs, Poren picked up low putt honors with IB.
-*-4
in
mm
VAi:
W
OPEN
WIDE!
Pull your dusty suitcases out of their hiding places and get set to go!
Where?,,. Whin?... Hou>?
Talk to die friendly young lady at your Auto Club office. She's an AAA travel counselor and an expert at leading you to carefree,^vacation travel She can handle just about every travel detail' except packing your bags.
AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF MICHIGAN
■ ... WIMH, 4U-UII C. H. BWM. MI-4437 K. V. Kmmt (H.lly), *17-143 1. a. TyMn, *74-1)10
jack Mnm, PI iwt . H. W. McNtlMV, OL 1-774 C.. W. ZMflMr, M5-1MI « p. >. AH*n, 471-1931
• Harmi, 71 Hill
3017.
• ”*W4swsrm*'‘
L
,WE
I.M.S— v. CwiJW^Maiittwiwt
Hut land, Keith !■ used hit arris and bat In leading 900 Bowl to a 94 triumph over first place Arro Realty hut flight, and the victory moved 900 to within a game of the toji in tha American League.
Keith came On In the fifth Iik ntng In raliaf of Floyd Hicks after tha losers had tied the •cote with tfo runs.
And with two out In ths bottom of the fifth! Keith banged out a double and scored ths winning run op another two bagger by Jim Long.
The lote left Arro with an 9-1 mark. 90S Bowl Is aff-9.
In a second American gat Lee Sherby burled five-hit •S Elks No. 910 defeated Reaves, 4-0.
In die International loop, Pontiac Merchants trimmed Buck*
Detroit River Record for Gold Cup Prelims
DETROIT (AP>—-Seattle milkman Bill Brow, whipping Miss Exlde through some turns at nearly full power, set a Detroit River course record , Tuesday with a three-lap Gold Cup qualifying average of 119.657 miles per hour;
The run, made under smooth conditions on the normally choppy, river, eclipsed the (117.646) mlle-per-hour posted minutes earlier - by ■. another Seattle driver, Ron Musson, and his defending champion boat Miss Bardahl.
* * ★
It also was the second fastest time in unlimited .hydroplane history, Just under the 110.098 average notched by Bill Stead, and Maverick gt Seattle in 1998.
Both Brow' and Musson surpassed the old course mark of 116.323 miles an hour set last year by Bill.Muncey In Miss Tbrlftway. * ,, .
Tuesday's third qualifier was Detroit’s Mariner Too with Col; Warner Gardner at the wheel. He averaged 09.662.
The old Maverick, now Miss Budweiser, raised a few eyebrows when driver-Bob Schroed-
DIEM’S
Mid-Summer Sale Men’s Shoes
SAVE 30% to m
ON EVERY PAIR OF SHOES IN THE STORE INCLUDING LADIES’
MA88AQI0
OR
Weyenberg
SHOES f
Reg. $16.95 NOW $XO"
Superb styling, Roe 'craftsmanship, arid premium leather* are combined to give you complete comfort ta these handsome, wonderfutty fitting shoes! Choice of many styles, in all sizes.
1 Black & Brown, Inc. Sport Shoes.
Sizes 7 to 14 Widths A to EEE . Add $1 hi 13 and 14 , '
■9
, '
■i
WEYENBERb |-| Reg. $15.95
In Downtown Pontiac ; Next .'.Door 'to Federal's
Opean Friday andJVlonday ’til 9
PONTIAC’S POPULAR SHOE STQRE
% 87 NORTTJ SACINAW
,er of Buffalo, N.Y., upped his qualifying average to 110.980 miles an hour for the third run in two days. Schroeder was ths first to qualify a boat Monday at a little over 108 miles par hour. He later boosted this to 100.
Nine,of 17 boats on hand have qualified for 12 position* In Sunday’s race. All have until race time to make tne minimum 90 miles per hour qualifying limit, But each driver has the right to qualify at a higher average once hg makes thei minimum.
* * •:■7'
Other boats which have qualified, their drivers and speeds speeds are:
Notre Dame; Bill Muncey, 118.302;^ Miss Madison, George Byers, 113.247; Miss Eagle Electric, Norm Evans* 108; Miss U.S. V, Don Wilson, 106.537; and Tahoe - Miss, Chuck Thompson 103.188. . ' *
Palmer, Le m a Pass Nick lavs in Dollar Race
DUNEDIEN, Fla (UPl) - Ar-nold Palmer took over first place .In the PGA money-winning list and red-hot Tony Lema vaulted Into second place today ahead of Jack Nlcklaus, who had been the top golf money winner almost all year.
Palmer, who hasn’t won a tourmapent this month, and Lema, who has wori three, were Involved in a playoff Sunday for the Cleveland -Open title in whlph Lema took away ;320,006 first-prize money.to boost his earnings to 960,561.59 this year, Palmer received 812,000 to in-crease^his , total to> 961,651.25, less tnm 81.000 ahead of Lema.
Nicklaus received 96.250 tot. finishing in a third-place tie at Cleveland and dropped to Vhlrd place with a total of 957,676.00.
Record TV Slate Revealed by NFL
DETROIT (UPI) - A record total of 22 live National Football League telecasts, 10 Involving the . Detroit Lions, _ was announced Tuesday fop die Detroit area by William MacPhail, CBS sports director and Lawrence Carino, gener al manager of WJBK-TV, local affiljpte of the network.
: ★ ★ ★
- In addition to the customary seven away games during the regular season, Michigan fails also will see the Lions, play three out-of-town exhibitions.
ATTENTION MUONS *wl CONTRACTORS
Mason Sand ISc T.n 'SALEM SAND & GRAVEL
5175 Oak MU Rd. “ Clarkston 628-3055
Kefth*sAm, Bat Wih So Game
ner Finance, 8-2 and Lytell-Gola-grove edged Motorcar Transport, 44,
The Elks picked up two runs In tha second on a walk to Fred MiUlron, a double by Jerry Den-rill and a eingle by Sherby. They added "the final markers In tha third onslngles by Jack Avery and Bob Sherman arid a double by Mtlllron,
TIGHT GAME *'
The Merchants broke up a
Goal!® Turns Pro
SEATTLE (AP) Goalie Bob Gray, who was named most valuable player In the 1994 NCAA hockey tournament in IcsdlngvMlchlgan to the national championship, signed a contract with tha Seattle Totems qf ths Western Hockey League.
for TAXES, MEDICAL BILLS, NEW CAR, VACATION, FURNITURE, oft.
We Can Loan You At Much At
*3000CASH
On 2nd Mortgages and Land Contracts
eat payment.,. one place to pay.,,
• a payment plan to tuft your buditet.
Your Lean Fully Protected by Life Insurance
FAMILY ACCEPTANCE G0RP.
tight game with four runs In the fifth on four hits and an error. Dan Mclnnla paced the at-tack with two Ijriti In three trips,
. Lytell-ColegroVo pushed across two runs in the last of the seventh timing In winning Its third gams of the season, Mickey Allen’s triple lent-Gene Riibucka across with the tying run and Allan acored tha clincher on a single by winning pitcher Jerry Redman. '
; •' * £ * j .
In Waterford Township action, Harry Dearborn cracked out a pair of doubles; drove bi two runs an^ecored twice as Spen-
cot Floor won Its 19Ui gams of tha season, a & | triumph over Lakeland Pharmacy C,
In a second game, Jtm Ad-dard clouted a baaea-loaded home run in the sixth Inning to lead Lakeland Pharmacy B to. a 114 decision over Haskins Chevrolet.
ra w.tti i i
wlnnstv-Rmroy tmr SSIwoBd
...The BIST for ywir CAi for fmL
i
it onf mmAmnm m» « tbk Km , *, aad bet been ter merelbm4Syeenl
BRAKES
.Ford WHEELS Installed
99
25,000 Miles
9etMtthrtlltHbmmtm
lulck—Ch*vrol*t—ford— Cemtt—Marwry—Corvolr—
Rambler— Falcon—Stod*bak*r
t Be* BONDB) QvoOy Brake Lhhgt MoJel • hcMeiiepwHn Ik®
+ he* Wheel bewhm e A Comptete Normal Brain ■ InthMaHom A
m ALL-NEW CHEVELLE!
m * SPORTY C0RVAIR
€ SPUNKY CHEVY E-
(AND LOVE^ EVERY MINUTE OF ITI)
4| Jet-Smooth CHEVROLET
ALL-SPORT CORVETTE
HOT SUMMER PRICES
fM :AS LOW AS ' :
■it
Other Model* Priced Accordingly
WE’VE GOT ’EM BY THE NUMBERS DURING OUR
SHOP TODAY I RIGHT-NOW DELIVERY ON MOST MODELS, MOST, COLORS I
631 Oakland qt Cass
>..
Open Mon., Thurf., Fri. 'til 9 P.M; "fu®e.j Wad., Sat. Til ft RM/, '
v i ' : M
Hargreaves
FE 5-4161
.1. , r '
Ilipl H j Pp K \ Jll
;"*'R yww
/»''^>,;i '■ ritlNTmi!: pRya^ \v^NKHj)^h^JTTi7Pt' 1, iflN,. 1 11:.
tta j ; i ryTm,
. r > * 1 I.1 •r.tT77Ti. ^ , JlrrV. i"
r. - 'f'0kj«7t
.K QutMrlMit
with DON VOGEL-Outdper Editor, fentl.c Prill *
U. S, vs; Russian Fishing
Horsehair L Used
By DON VOGEL Nlckolal Ivanov might still ba flolling with a forked pole, and horsehair line in hia dative Russia if an American Army major hadn't decided to bend the Yalta agreement.1 • * «
As thing! turned put, the 41-year-old bachelor was casting wMvm.o d e r n spinning equip-.tnent Monday night when he caught a 6^-pound largemouth baas ai Kish Lake in Rose Town-: ship,, , <
This ia the heaviest fish Ivan* ‘ ov has taken since coming to this country In 1961.
The bass lead* Its dlvlatoa la The Footfac Press Big Fish Derby.
. Nickolai and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gregort Ivanov, live
at 220 Cherryland, Auburn Heights. But If the military officer hadn't turned up at the right time, all three probably would be tilling the land- today on a Russian commune n o a r Leningrad. /» . ..
Vhe Ivanova, includldg daughter Nina, became displaced persona in lMl when Nazi occupation forew moved the family to Germany to work aa slave labor.
“W# wer# In a part of Germany occupied first by the Americana and then the Russians." aald Nlckolal In accented English. '"It was April, 1946, and the Russlana were circling the Urea preparing to take over. DIDN'T KNOW
"We didn't want to go back,
although we could have under the Yalta agreement, because we didn't know what awaited us’ — maybe Jail, or something else."
An American major befriended the family and agreed to apply “his version? of. the Yalta agreement and .take the Ivanovs to the American sector, now a part of West Germany.
"Nina was in another part of the city and we welted two hours for her," said Nldkolal, "but the Russian troops were already entering qnd we had to lilVt.
Nina, now 34, Is living Hi Estonia and has not seen her brother or, parents since that tnU-tol day.
the Ivoihdvs worked in West, Germany until 1951 'when they finally were cleared for entering fpe United .States. They
lived for seven months In'Texas before 'comlngvjto.the Pontiac area. V’»
"T)ie only difference between fishing here and in Russia," said Nlckolal. "is that the equipment -Is much,better here.
"We never had lines like you have. We woujd'take four or five strands of horsehair and weave It together. The rope was then tied, to a pole with a fork in the ’end and the extra; line wrapped '•around the prongs."
The lake near the Jvanov home was a mile long ‘and a half mite wide and a river flowed out of it to the Baltic Sea.\. ,
"We caught eels, that came up the river, northern pike, like you have here, and perch, The- perch there srf dhrker and broader than in this epun-
Sij , ■ Nntiac **•«.•
. -SAME RESULT—The only difference between fishing an inland lake in Russia and similar waters In the United States is the equipment, according to Nlckolal Ivanov, 225 Cherry-land, Aubdifi Weights. In Russia, he used a horsehair, line. Monday night Iyanov was fishing Fish Lake in Rose Township with modern spinning equipment and caught this 544-pound largemouth. bass, a new leader in The Pontiac Press Fish : 'Derby., .. i
Department Seeks •Opinionson Dogs
Library shelves of 47 state parks and recreation areas in Michigan have been filled with ... . '8,000 books to help vacationers
thinking on how dogs Should fV.no„ ljt in those rAiny dsys and get
in N* mUc~Kc- more out of their fun-time ex-
Questionnaires are being phsspd out to a random ‘sample ; of state park visitors to get. their
reation _
The opinion survey, which runs through Labor Day, is prompted by a growing number of complaints against dogs and the Conservation Department’s' deferred pland to bar these pets frorq state parks during the , peak vacationing season.
It is deigned to find out if visitors think ’current controls are adequate, or whether they favor stricter regulations over : - dogs.
Ttw questionnaire’s choice of stronger measures calls for restricting, dogs to certain parts of campgrounds, or completely closing state parks to the animals during the busy May 1-Sept, 30 season.
'Dog Show" Classes Set
Instruction classes in “How to Show your; Dog" will start July 8 at Oakland Park.
Pontiac Kennel dub instructors will direct the one hour sessions which will be' held on Wednesdays during July, The starting time is 7:15 p.m..
The. program fs open to ahy breed of dog.
PKC officials have long felt that there are many people living in the Pontiac area wh6 1 would like to enter their dogs in regular'shows but do-not know . die proper procedures and tech-
^ . The classes wiB be shifted tb . McConnell School in the event ,• of rain/ • f
State Parks Loan Books
“There were rfiany other varieties of fish, tod." . j£ They used red worms on minnows for bait. The minnows for pike fishing. f»! ★ f it
“We would wrap the rope fhorsehair) around the forks, and when a pike hit we would drop the tip so tee line could be pulled off.”
♦LARGE PIKE
Largest pike Nickolai can re-
more out of thfeir fun-time excursions this summer*
The reader service is again provided by the State- Library and tee: Conservation Department, with books available for free loans at park- manager offices. ./
Reading, selections are keyed to interests of all age groups and include numerous books 'about the outdoors, and Michi-gSn hStory. |
member being caught from the lake Was a 38-pounder taken by a neighbor, v The lake froze over In the winter, but the fishing was done “by men wittenets."' ' ( . This Ivanovs have a cottage oil Pish Lake and Nickolai, now a citizen of the United States and an employe of Jig Bushing Company, is oh vacation. He was. fishing with his 69-year-old father when the .big bass hit a Jitterbug about 9:30 p.m. -
It may be the. biggest fish for him in this country, but Nickolai is just catching up to his tether/ “My father catch two or three1 last year that go between five and six pounds,? he reported, “We always get big bass1 after* dark.” j-
That should be hint enough
YANKEE
DOODLE
DANDIES
comm nm sinus n
m of «m, j*lt «t sksuu
Mansfield
Manager Rudy Forslund I
1104 Baldwin
lutoSiles
FES-5900
Elk License Forms Coming
Schedule Distribution During this Month .
License applications for Michigan's first elk huntirig season in modern, times will be available by the m 1 d d 1 e of this month. •
The forms are being printed and will be distributed to the Conservation Department's regional offices In Marquette, Roscommon and Lansing. ■
Other field offices - Iirilay CJty is expected to do Included — and , the; department's publications room In Lanslng will receive the forms. '•
Only, 300 permits will be Is-sured for the Dec. 6-13 sea-
A 825 license fee must accompany the application. A drawing late In August Will determine who Is to receive the permits. The 125 wjil be returned to all unsuccessful a p • pllcanta. '
Out - of • state sportsman and full<• time Conservation Department employees ,will not be permitted to apply. 1
Not Really Ldrks
Meadowlarks are not larks at all but actually bejong to the blackbird family,
Report Second Best Deer Season in
Michigan's • 1963 firearm deer season goes into the record books as’the second best In the state's history with a kill of 124,000 whitetalls, flnpj. figures of the Conservation Department show.
Topped only ,by the 1082 harvest of 162,000 deer/ last-season's take* was up nearly 30 pet* cent over the previous year, according to results, of thf department’s a n n u a 1 postcard Survey of licensed hunters.
Buck kill was the highest since 19&L jumping to' 74,710 as a record 802,000 sportsmen took to the state’s fields and forests.
Last scasph's • antler less deer take\rosq4o'49,360, an increase of 50 per icent above the year
Solunar Tables
The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed below, has been takeh from John Alden Knight's Solunar Tables.
KtuSiw
Minor Moior Minor Motor 10:30 4!lS lOifO 4:40 11:90 5:05 11:40 5:50
s i;j| ISS.IiS
iijj | m iiS
3:50 10:05 4:20 10:40
second
before which places It
to the 1082 total- . «v
Included In Die antlerless figure ore ll.ooo buck fawns and whltetalfs with sbb-legal spikes,
, Statewide, nearly one of every four hunters took home a deer.
In the Upper Peninsula, more than 30 per cent of the hunters Were successful. Also scoring in the kill column were 28 per cent of the hunters in the' northern Lower * Peninsula and 12 per Oent In the southern Lower Peninsula,
NEW HIGH s*”*?
Compared with the 1962 season, buck kill edged up from 17,* 800 to 19,700 abovi the Straits, while climbing from 40,130 to 4^)220 In the northern Lower peninsula.
Hunters took 6,790 bucks from the southern Lower Peninsula's fast-growing herd to notch that region's new high in kill for the third, straight year.
Last November's special seq-, sons in 48 trouble ^areas pro-’ duced an antlerless harvest of-12,700 animals in the Upper Peninsula and 36,870 * In the northern Lower Peninsula.
- An estimated 515,860 deer licenses Were sold test year, shattering the record of 468,623 set in 1980.
, TAKES LEAD - Jack Weiss, 4420 Meigs, Waterford. Township, holds the TMPpound northern pike he caught last week at Grassy Lake in. White Lake Township. He caughjt the pike while stul fishing using a large shiner for bait.* The northern leads the pike division of The Pontiac Press Big Fish Derby. , '
WIN A *25.00
HMHIKMT WJUMME
■ FM YOIM (Hill
Yankees Will Give Atbay Free! a *25.00 Value20-Pc. PLAYKNI
Wardrobe in Your Choice Color and Size 1 to 6x . . . Nothing to Buy!
JUST REGISTER IN MIMCLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER YANKEE STORE
KIDS LOVE TO GO
AROUND IN
fLAYKNITS
KNIT Tp $IZE • NO SIDE SEAMS
March Into Slimmer With Major Go-Go and Hit Care-Free,.Durable, Playknits
♦l“. m
March' into summer With Major Go-Go and his carefree; durable Playknit by Healthknit. Completely colorfast and machine washable. Choose -from cotton polos, cardigans, shorts and 2*pc. sets.
mmm
■
—
m
MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER - PLENTY OF PMMCING
Si
m
^ Jy.hWffm'te,//'.1‘I'PH M
• ,. L. L .
ASSORTED FLAVORS
<™egsF™t.‘u
| ANO tS PURCHASE OR MORI |
I ASSORTED FLAVORS' .1,
BIC "It" BIVIBACBS I
LIMIT 6 CANS
BN -R" BEVERAGES 1 l-OI.. CAN S' SAVI 11’ ' LIMIT * ON I
C««|Mn valid a! Kf«f«r In Detroit and Michigan thru Saturday, July 4, IW4. Umltone coupon par family.
WITH COUPON AND ONI )S purchase entities you %T0- AU COUPONS IN THIS AD
KROGEfR BRAND
SAVE lfr-VLASlC KOSHER OR POLISH
SAVE UP TO, lO'-SORDEN'S OR KROGER
KROGER EVAPORATED
r>A , STUFFED MANZANILLA
1 MARIO'S OLIVES
i4*oz.
BOTTLE m
WITH COUPON AND
ONE $S PURCHASE ENTITLES YOU lh _ TO All COUPONS IN THIS AD^
BOTTLES
HOLLYWOOD CANDY BARS
BORDEN'S SHERBET OR
REAL QUALITY |Y NABISCO
SOCIABLE
CRACKERS
YOU CAN'T GET A BETTER WASHDAY |UYI
SUPER SUDS DETERGENT . 2/
PINE-SCENTED All PURPOSE
LESTOIL CLEANER
GALLON
SECOND h GAL.
114)2. OIL
FOR LIGHTER. TASTIER SAUD DRESSINGS
KRAFT OIL
WITH COUPON AND
ONE $5 PURCHASE 'ENTITIES YOU J TO All COUPONS IN THIS AIL*
POR’WHITER, CLEANER, SANITARY WASHES
CLOROX BLEACH
»sJu®.I *° an* JZ*itmw I “ ,*«*» I W stamps ■» mu ,SU stamps |
I NORMANDY ROSE DINNIRWARE g WITH THIS coupon and purchase op I WJ™.,, ~°.VP?N." W,CHA” - WITH this coupon ANO PURCHASE a with this coupon and purchase I ** 11 ” 1 R«M Houswond Cordon CKfany two pros, tips. cheese bus | op 1*4)2 ORU-oz jajt 1 <*m* assorted varieties J
.1 ^ Thi. caupan stw ; I *«»»•«» ■•*5 * "Off" Bomb I KROGER SNACK CRACKERS I ^P0*®**1* lostoot CeHn lc-. **J;*^. »{,
n Detroit I Coupon yolid at Kroger in Detroit | Coupon.volkl al‘KfO(far In Dalrait *t | Cou *atid Kroaar'in Dafroit ' I C#1*p*n *«*'«* ■» K»H» l« Datiait | ffP** yoHd1L?.\*,#9,,,.n »•*'" I
VALUABLE COUPON
VALUABLE COUPON
VALUABLE COUPON
VALUABLE COUPON
VALUABLE COUPON
VALUABLE COUPON
VALUABLE COUPON
1‘HB rOSTIAC PHES8. WBDXESIJAV, JOT,y/i'.> Toi
FW THE J l FRIENDLY
*•’«»vrowy
THRIFTY BRAND
FLAVOR*SfAl*PAC
STEAK
FO/t THE
FRYER PARTS
vsil LEGS portion
ZifRIFTV BEEF
fm sraw 79
Mm sm an,
g!®* stem.. 49, MWEUSSiK 7a.
GLENDALE BRAND
WIENERS . . . 7.
HYORAOE'S TASTY f, .
BALL PARK omim
SO T.V. STAMPS WITH COUPON SHOW
WIENERS
BONELESS BOSTON IUTT
PORK ROAST
WITH RIBS attached
swici
CHICK
98*
PROS
KROGER FRESH HOMOGENIZED
CHIP'S PRIDI
GRADE "A" MILK
37
Vi SAILOR CARTON
. KRAFT'S PHILADELPHIA
CREAM CHEESE
8-OZ.
PKG.
29
B&M BAKED BEANS
■'ll
J*«S ■ 34'
■ 77-01. ^ ■ SAVE
JARS . ■
SAVE 1C-0RAN0I, GRAPE OR LEMONADE
BORDEN'S DRINK „
,29‘
,39*
CHARCOAL BRIQUETS
20 89
CHARCOAL LIGHTER
tHJART
CAM
29
PRESH BRAND
POTATO CHIPS
49
1-lB
.PKG
HALVES OR sliced _ _
PEACHES
3 89
SAVE O'-DEL MO^Tt _
FRUIT COCKTAIL
DEL MONTE
Mappie^’"*
Mdr.ii
PIAR HALVES. . 2 “ 59*
2 SB* If
4**1 i8f 149*
S 303 CANS
DEL MONTE_ -
SWEET PEAS..
DEL MONTE CUT^ ,
BREEN BEANS.
CANS
, ' Mf| II* FOR AUTOMATIC WASHERS-13* OFF LABEL
*******mm*mmmml ‘ *D DETERGENT
"OIVIS YOU A BUCKET OF POWER- SOAK YOUR XIDS CHAN
AJAX FLOOR & WALL CLEANER urge fko. 29* SOAKY BUBBLE BATH,
WITH BICLORIN BLEACH
ii-oi Bit, 69* AJAX CLEANSER.
SANITIZES DISHES .
PALMOLIVE LIQUID
WITH ULTRAMARINE PLUS •
AJAX DETERGENT.
FOR A CLEANER WASH
laJoz in. 37* ACTION,BLEACH
FOR A BEAUTIFUL COMFLEXION
.. ii-oi, fko. 41* VEL BEAUTY BAR SOAP . .,.
ALL-PURPOSE CLEANER WITH -AMMONIAL
50-count fko. 29* AJAX CLEANER.......................*..
SANDWICH SIZE
ot fko 74* BAGGIES PLASTIC WRAP
3BB5I!S0G*|I
CTAIADC 1
50 EXTRA VALUE stamps!
WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE f pF IW-U. PKG. HASH-0,MHZ FROZEN I
JIFFY STEAKETTES •
Extra VALUE stamps r
I THIS COUPON- AND PURCHASE ! OF 77-COUNt j*G *JW
CUR AD BANDAGES I
___^ ^ ii / 1
Luh [.;
VALUABLE COUPON
Plv §; TOP VALUI i STAMPS!
Be Prepared 1
thrifty beef
SEMI-BONELESS
WHOLE OR HALT i
WAFER SLICED
4 i. v
Ml jh: / \ M\ Xj
I \ 3-day holiday wmIc and tMina 10 nualt to * plan ihaad—a 2-day week and means 7 meala. Kroger make* your planning aaay wljit maaalva aalaotlona Of [ foods and naads for camping trips, picnics, backyard i partial, light "itay-at-homa" meals and loungt-around Jk anacluf. Bgcauaa w« aall big and aall for leaa wo can Wk paaa big lavinga on to you, That'a why Krogar'a
t 4th-of*JuJy price* art ao low—and you M gat Top Valua Stamp*, too.
HOLIDAY STORE HOURS
Pontiac Moll Open Sat., July 4th .
boiled mam . ..87
IWlFT'E premium ' “ W #
CANNED HAM 5**3" SPARE RIBS .. .... 39*
IARAN WRAF v * *wf .
BOLOGNA SLICED . . .39*
9 A.M. to 6 P.M. And Sunday, July 5th
10 A.„M. to 6 P.M.
HYGRAOE'S FULLY COOKED
WBT HAM
WHOLE
OR HALF. •
VIRGINIA
SHANie^FORtlON
SMOKED HAM
CANNED HAM
750 N. Perry at Jo»lyn Open Sat., July 4th
9 A.M. to 6 P.M. And Sunday,vJuly 5th
10 A.M, to A P.M, 8010 Cooley Lako Road
Opon Sat., July 4th 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.
4370 Dixie Hwy. at Saihabaw Open Sat., July*4th
9 A.M. to 6 P.M.
And Sunday, July Sth
10 A.M. to 6 P.M, Bloomfield Mbaclf Milo Cantor*
Opon Sat., July 4th 9 AM. to 6 P.M-
And Sunday, July 9th 10 A.M. to 6 P.M.
And Sunday, July Sth y 0 A.M. h---------
OPEN FRIDAY, JULY 3rd FROM 8:00 AM. to &00 P.M.
KROGER IA-OZ. REGULAR RYE OR 20-QZ.
SANDWICH BREAD
t 2 39c
KROGER SLICED WIENER .OR
SANDWICH BUNS
29
'jg; mmmm save
KROGER BRAND
QUART MAYONNAISE
39
QUART
JAR
VERNOR'S^.
KROGER MAND
ICED TEA BAGS
FKO 99‘
_ FRESH ROASTED
smtinht c—m
3 J89
HOUSEHOLD QUILTED ALUMINUM
25-FT.
ROLL
KAISER FOIL
29
FOR COOK-INS OR COOK-OUTS!
ORANGE, GRAPE OR ORANGE-PINEAPPLE
Hl-C DRINKS
■ 46-OZ. O
CANS
PURE GRANULATED
PIONEER SUGAR . 5&49
COUNTRY CLUE
LUNCHEON MEAT
DYER 500 HEALTH 1 BEAUTY aids at DISCOUNT PRICES PLUS T.Y. STAMPS
bufferin tablets
100-COUNT
■°tt« *'Wm
■ Compare at $ i.3t SA VE If
AQUA NET HAIR SPRAY
CAN*
, COMFAR* AT *7*
SAW 21'
breck shampoo
ML
i mi
COMPARE AT SI.OD
ttVIfl*
REGULAR SIZE ’ ’
PALMOLIVE SOAP.....,,.2 ear, 23
BATH SIZE-MILD
PALMOLIVE SOAP... .,...l ....... 3 ears 49
’ REGULAR SIZE— 1 ■ SALE % ''
CASHMERE BOUQUET ..... ...... wa. of
POWDER FOE DISHES QR LAUNDRY « .
VEL DETERGENT .... .;. 1#.bz. *c 33
FOR LOVELY HANOI
VEL LIQUID...........................a,., m-o*. in. 65
GETS CLOTHES CLEANER, WHITER, BRIGHTER-lO* OFF UBIlff
rFABrfiilERGENI-^T^SSi^^^HiT. fko7 74:
SAVI
VINE*
RIPENED
13-OZ
SWEET HAWAIIAN
FR?SH p,«APPLE ,„39 WINESAP APPLES 3. 69
UO SIZE* ^
SUNKIST CA
lemons59
9
mm
i:
Seek* Court Position”
MlCkWkND (AP) — Circuit Judge IKirtwid K Holbrook b(, the SUt'Judicial 'Ciroultr Tue«-
m
(INTI AC
m
day announced hls'cinjidacyf Labor Boss to Run for the new llete Court, of *
Appall from the Third Dletrlct. • DKTROIT (AI*L-Wipi«m C Judge Hulbriwk was el«ci|?f| tu I Marshall. executive ,vice presl* the Circuit ienfeh in 1047. ' )dent o( the Michigan APM’IO.
THR POyitAC:
atvnouiifced ^andidicy ,Tuesday
HFS.S. WRDNRSI)AY, JULV V, 1004
m jit
II pi■ r7,r
-K
for 'Democratic nomination a* Ntate »enntor from the new 10th
District in southeastern Wayne
County!
CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY
GharnigldWi
GAS YARD LAMP
In p Mad, Bad, Moss-Grown World
Checklist Helps T ell If You're Still Young
MOBIL 100C ENDS FRIDAY, $ JULY Sri
ONLY
INCLUDING NORMAL INSTALLATION
J l
BOYLE
Pries ineludei installation ef lama, up to a distance of 60 foat from haus§y Nominal charge'tar additional footagi, Offer applies only'to rflideruial gis euitomtri of Cgniumars Powar Company,; ’’;-.ir.;-,'
Gas Yard Lamp Gives a Soft Glow to Yard or Patio in Discourages Prowler* .Repels Insects . .. Makes Steps and Walkways Safer
Other Models Choose From
MajlCwaM tar Mart Information
Consumers Power Company Insert Addraaa ' > •* "•
Insort City, Michigan
Nome
Address
City
OFFER
IS
LIMITED ... BUlL NOW AND SAVE!
By H*L BOYLE N1W YORK (AP) — Noma people don't know whether they are young, middle-aged or oia.
For thane condition* are not always a ‘matter of physical aga, amottonaij fooling or menial elasticity*. \
He re 'i a checklist to help gulds you. Tha chencai • r a that you'ra itlll young in heart, and perhapi In txxtyl If— ,
Without blinking about it, you automatically'yield a seat on tha bus to an older paraon—Instead of racing him for It.
Moat of the -girls tn the office call you by your first name, rather than address - you aa “mister." . V , When ha'a lonely, tha kid in the apartment down tha halt aaka if you won’t go out and play catch with him. ROMANTIC LANDS Whan you daydream at your office desk, your mind turns t6 thoughts of adventure in romantic lands — instead of how soon you'll get your pension.
You go up a flight of stairs two at a time without having to pause halfway uto, and took around for medical help.
era are leagued In a conspiracy Vo wreck your career.
There are so many things you'd like to do that the days seem tOQ snort. ' Anything you eat agrees with mu, and, you're not at.all fin-, cky about , what you put Into your stomach, >
You'd rather go water skiing thin golfing, You'd rdther play gin rummy than, bridge,
When you look up a dumber in the phone book, you''don't
have to put on giiiaes or light
a.match to read the fine print.
When you go to the dentist, is still r*----------- --------
he i« still more interested in jibing your taeth than in pulling them,
You know you ought to read more good books, but there are m> many ’ other Interesting things to do that you just don't find tithe. , /
When the phone rln|f, you don't* jump three feet tn the air in, compulsive fear,, wondering what problem, it will bring.
You atili Uke to sins In the shower. And* If you wop the soap, you doii’t sigh and taka a
deep breath before bending over to ptok It up.
When you glance at the obituary .pap of a newspaper, you rarely or never find In# name , therf of anyone you know personally.
You'd rather plan for the. future then remember the past.
If all these tl
you, you're still youthful.
i are true of
Unbelievably youthful, in fact. For how can anyone that young be left in e mao, had, moss-grown world? •
CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY
The only medicine, you usual-I ly take is aspirin, *
I' You took forward confidently | to promotion in the offlcp—that is, If you choose to stay with j the firm—and .-you don't have’ the Idea.0tat all your,co-work-
/fowA INSTANT FROZE R
TO PROTECT FRESH FLAVOR LOROERI
5 Delicious Voriet/os of .^V
BAKED
FOODS
Fully-baktl-Jiut t/uw end sunn. if you prefer, aw noffks oak* can be heated in thair own containers and served Pun country butter makee our all butter eeketMrWiarHldellcloueetenyyouVe urn Mud-si any price.
Flvu tnstn-tnmptlng varieties
quality. Try all flvs-on uls only at your Kroger ator».
THIS COUPON GOOD FOR
| 50 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS
with osfeh purchase of | |
COUNTRY OVBN
1 FROZEN BAKEFOODSL.______I
Valid at any Kroper Store through July '4 S
COUNTRY OVEN
Instant Frozen
ALL-BUTTER COFFEE CAKE
WITH PECANS
Hare’s tha nlceatbreakfaat and snack treat you can Imagine! Light, ' testy coffee cake with big paced halvea-aprlhkted with cocoenut , and deliciously lead on top. Extrijkgpd when.......
If
container for about 20 minutes.
sjMswaB»iswam«wiMtw*w«si^»»«»*«»Miw««**
COUNTRY OVEN Instant From,
ALL-BUTTER POUND CAKE
B
13-bz,
69
COUNTRY OVEN Instant Frozen
ALL-BUTTER BROWNIES
13*02.
75‘
V7
TURN THE PAGE FOR LOW KR6GER MEAT, GROCERY^ND PRODUCE PRICES!
. I • Generous portions oftinnamon and chopped S JL - • nuts. Extra good whoryhtatad Ip H* container a - about 20 mlnutH ipd “““J
t n '1/ I • "rvfp?1 ! Wf! ..i™, K¥S”\[
^ 1 1 rag roN'rrXc i’HKSH, wiHrtfkmAv, ji'ivr
f—
2; Markets^ Business and Finance
I Pii H | Ipil 11 :
I
MARKETS ]
The following ere topprlgas covering sales of localiy grown , produce by growers and sold by thwtn In wholesale package Iota. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau/of Markets as of Tuesday.
Product
eeuirs
Apple*.Northern Spy. CA, tiu, UK
Applet, iityie Km, in. ),it
SC
CurrenNi red.............. , , . «to
ItreedNrrleii It qtt, , ,,,,,, s.lo
VBOSTA8LBI
’ Seen.' preen, tab >,,,, ■•,, s up
Beene, wee. hi. Ain
Reels.Mb Ml. . 140
Cetera. fikpI ,
{Gains Are Narrow
—~yt. ■■£0 A'-,;.;
Stocks Move Up Cautiously
NSW YORK (AP)-The stock market moved cautiously ahead this afternoon.
Trading/Was moderately ac-live with changes of most key issues narrow,
a ★ m
Brokefs said traders were taking ’ It eBay because of the long’. Fourth of July holiday weekend ahead,
Steels, aircrafts, Chemicals, utilities, rails, airlines* and to* .bacchs were mostly ahead, *
ISSUE UNCHANGED American ■ Telephone, which
before.th,e opening of trading re? ported record' earnings for the three monies ended May 81, was tinohanged, ,
Burroughs’ we* actively traded on blocks ,ofr 25,000, 21,000 and 12,500 shares, The issue was off about 1% points at one time but this loss was helved. Burroughs had been recommended by an advisory service as a "comeback" stock,'
The Associated' press 00-stoclH average at noon had gained .41 tb 312.6 with Industrials fup .3, rails up ,3 and,utilities up .6. *
Pure Oil, which received A $700 million rpurchbse wfer, spurted 6 points to WiV a new high. .
Also reaching a new high was Lukena Steel, up 1 at 81 Mi, Kennecou wan unchanged despite a strike at its properties in Utah and Arizona: AMERICAN EXCHANGE ’ Prices on the American Stock Exchadge were higher in quiet trading, '
. Corporate bonds, were steady to a little hlghetppnd govern* ments edged uptprd.
Stall Passage of Wage Hfe
Proposed Changes Slow Congroii Raise
The New York Stock Exchange
Washington w-a shower1
of proposed amendments cloud-ed plans of Senate leaders today for prompt passage of a IftfB-million pay raise for son)0 1.7-mllllon federal workers, Including 'members of Congress,'* Majority leader Mike Mansfield, D-Monf ., said dial ha had hoped-to complete action on the House-approved bill laie today, hut that this might nut be possible. i , •.
t , #■"
=14 another day Is, necessary, Mansfield said, he would try for arf agreement to limit debate and assure passage tomorrow when the Senate Is scheduled to qultj< until next Monday for a July 4th holiday.
* Opponents of the proposed 17,600 salary boost for tpembers | of Congress promised a floor fight, but backers of the Increase expressed confidence of success. /,
They said that If the House could go along with this Increase, when all of Its members are up fpr election this year, the Senate should be able to do so'without difficulty, Only one-, third of the senators must face the voters this fall.
The bill covers about 1.7 million classified civil Vervlce and postal workers and also all federal executives and U.S. judges ak well as senators and "representatives, % ';>'
PUSHING HARD President Johhson has been pushing hard for prompt action on. the measure, asserting the executive raises are essential to retain key personnel in his ad-ministration. <
Senate Republican Leader Ev-erett M. Dirksen of Illinois told a reporter he would like to see the bill amended to give a $10,-000 rafse to members of Congress, the same as that which would be.granted Cablhet ment-hers. ' ''
* *’,-■# ■' , He conceded that the chances for. this seemed to be slim. Congressmen are now pai(jl $22,500 annually. .. ■ ’*» =
Sens. William Proxmfre, D -Wis,, and Frank J. Lausche, D-Ohio,, pledged a fight to knock out the congressional, increases, arguing that a one-third p a y raise was not justified.
H ,} r and six bowling balls from the ;North Hill Bowling Alley, •Si Rochester, Avon Township, wqs under investigation today by detectives froth t h« Sheriff’s. Office. / .
.The items, .valued at $265, were discovered missing when the building was opened by an employe at noon yesterday, t ie + , +
An* undetermined amount of money was Jaken from a] cigarette' macnine 'and- a pool table.
It has not been determined how' the thieves entered the building. ’• \
News in Brief
Nelson Wright, 25, of 111 Prospect, reported to Pontiac police yesterday that a $250 TV set was stolen from his apartment.
Hair clippers, hair cream and assorted c o m b.s were stolen from Jack’s Barber Shop, 221% Brapch, th|e owner John E. Jackson, 27, of 513 Branch, reported to Pontiac police yester-day.
Engagement and w e d d i n g rings- valued together* at $400 were sto 1 en from her house; Mrs. Norman Newton,* 1150 Porter! Waterfbrd Township, told police Yesterday.
James Kyto,' 4805 Fenmore, Waterford Township, told police yesterday that his fefoot- boat valued at $100 was stolen from ijts Crescent Lake docking site.:
MORI’S Rummage: Thursday, 9 to 12, Indiahwood and Baldwin.
' j' . , .c *»• pgotefaii
collision “ F|ameii and smoke trail two Air Fore! planet colliding negr Bermuda yeeferday”: This photograph, reltfaied by the Department of Defame, wai taken from c boat The Air Force declared 17 officers, and enlltted men dead. Seven men, “who parnchutesd from the pianei In •
„ training mission before the." crash, were rescued from the
Tracing of
in Hoffa C
CHICAGO (AP) — A Federal 11000. The prosecution charges Bureau of investigation account- Dranow set the firm up to help ,ant Tuesday testified that he "*"■ * - * •
traced ipo.000 from a< Team-steps pension fund loan allegedly diverted for James* R.
Hoffa's benefit to a lawyer who represented an associate of the Teamsters’ union president,
■' John* C. Connors said the $80,000 went through several )Florida banks to an Orlando,
Fin .‘,1a wyer who represented Benjamin Pranow;
_ , Sr • Sr , *.
The'gbvernmlent charge"!
Hoffa devised~a plan for diverting the money to himself , to extricate'himself from a falling land development hear Orlando called Sun Valley, Inc,, in which he was financially involved.
The 190,000 came from the proceeds of two pension, fund loans totaling $1,275,000 made to Samuel Hyman, president of the Key West Foundation Co.,.
Key West, Fla,, Connors Ukti-; fled.. ’ ■ ' ' Xi
FUNDS MIXED .*
Under crops examination by defense' attorneys the accountant said proceeds of the pension on whether any progress ■ was fund Joans were mixed with | made in settling the strike that other Key West Foundation has tied up car deliveries to funds. dealers since last week.
> He said he could not be suite ■ * *
that the $50,000 in question was The negotiation meeting coincided with the Eastern Conference of Teamsters, which is being addressed ‘tonight by Teamsters President James R. Hoffa. Delegates, representing some 700,000 Teamsters in 15 eastern states and Canadian
Hoffa out on the home development,
The prosecution further charges that Dranow was planning to buy Sun Valley and save Hoffa. The project went bankrupt in J98L
Parties Meet in Hauler Strike
' New Cars Piling Up at Assembly Plants
ATLANTIC CITY; N.J. (AP) •With new cars and trucks continuing to pile up around auto assembly plants on the East Coast,' Teamsters Union leader! and representatives of new car haulers held a negotiating session here "Tuesday. -Information Was not available after the meeting broke, up
. pension fund money;
if ★
Hyman and the other six defendants are charged with fraudulently arranlging more than $20 million in pension fund loans and diverting more than ■ $1 million for their own pur- provinces are attending, .poses,
, The alleged' diversion was discovered through records of ’the . Miatni National Bank, Miami,
Fla., where proceeds., qf the loans to Hyman were deposited,
Connors testified.
RECORDS CITjBD He explained that bank records show the $50,000 In what Hie prosecution says was pension fund . money was transferred i to 0 r .) a ndo lawyer Charles Davis May 2, i960.
* ‘ Davis was an attorney for Union Land /and Home Co. in
Zoning mooting Hall, 484 Mill St
a Brangpn Township i the Brandon Township oet.jjrtonvlllo, Michigan
.,_m Agricul-Rosldontlal. This property Is
_______an the west side of .Baldwin Road
between Seymot “
f reionlng c
located o
Section
1. Road. The legal description of property is — T5N, Range 9 East of Ion 25. Tho parts of the E of
Baldwin Road*
NEjED HELP WITH YOUR INVESTMENT
problems?
...CALL FE £-9274
W-atling, Lerchen & Co.
2 NORTH SAGINAW ST; “ONTIAC, MICHIGAN
- tf-mrnbnt NtwYork Stock Exchange
.Hoffa negotiated a national contract with haulers of new cars, but 18 East Coast locals have refused to ratify contracts in their, areas.
DISSATISFIED WITH TERMS
Speaking for New Jersey locals, Anthony (Tony Pro) Pro-venzano has said repeatedly that the strikers were dissatisfied with the terms of the contract but jjiat they were not in revolt against Hoffa.
Provenzano heads the New Jersey Tqamsters Joint Council and is president' of the 14,000-member Local 560 of Union City.
; ’P: #; *' if :
’Disorders at picket lilies around car assembly plants broke/out again Tuesday night, this time at a General Motors plant in Newport, Del. -
Police said Teamsters David McQuown of Avondale, Pa., and Eugene R. Schmidt of New I Gas tie | Del., were arrested after ihey sat down Jp the path of new cars being moved out of the plant, v . . / 'V* a s
★ \ .★ . * . j ;
The New p o'r t Teamsters, members of Local 107, are. striking against ^ Anchor' Motor Freight, Inc.' of Wilmington,' Del., which delivers cars "from, the GM plant to area dealers.
Michigan Week Chief
LANSING (AP‘) - Woodward jC. Smith, Wee president, of Central Michigan University, was named-1965. general chairman of Michigan Week Tuesday by Edwin O. George,, president of the Greater Michigan Foundation/.
• T • . ,
NEA, Union Set to Battle
brganlslng Efforts
Center of Controvtriiy
, WASHINGTON (AP) - Amid bitter charge!, a battle la shaping up ov$r organised labor’i ef> forte to woo the nation's school teachers away from their traditional organisation, the, National Education, Association,
.The NEA'i executive secretary, Dr William fi Carr; tiled the'organisation's national convention in 8@flt.Tlo this week as a platform to launch a major at' tack' on AFL-ClGforganising drive, i • ha
w /'
It would tjeatroy the National Education Association and its state and loobl affiliates," 3arr charged,
* Or . *
"Scare tactlcs," retorted Carl J. Megel, president of the AFL-CIQ American Federation of Teachers which Is .spearheading the organising campaign,
UNION SUCCESSES Although NEA; with more than 900,000 members, Is nearly 10 times the. ilse of the teachers' federation, the union'has scored some notable successes that doubled Its membership In a relatively short time.
Megel laid his union has a record of recent collective bargaining victories affecting 70,000 teachers, compared with only 7,000 for thtt NBA*
* * - s.
"Mr.. Carr's fears were expressed because he knows, we have a positive program for classroom teachers and that the NEA Is dominated by school administrators and cannot possibly find the solution for classroom teachers," Megel said.
■ * W it,
"We're going to keqp right on organising/' an AFL-CIO spokesman said in reply , to
Carr's charges that unions would drastically afreet the teaching profession.
NEW CAMPAIGN *
The campaign to sign up
teachers Is .part of the AFL-ClO's stepped-up emphasis- on trying jto organise the nation's millions of nonunion white-collar workers to make up for slipping Industrial membership.
Group Eyejs Promise of Pure Coffee
LONDON UP) — Good, news is in store for coffee addicts in this world of substitutes. The International Coffee Organization Is trying to make sure they get their brew almost pure.
. Nearly every cup of coffee hides a substitute, sometimes called1 an additive. It may be ordinary roasted dried bean or barley or chicory.
L , wn -.fl* w it The executive board of the ICO in a report today called on its . member nations to implement legislation requiring coffee roasters’ and . packers as well as manufacturers of instant CQffee to see. that Vhat they Wand "as ‘coffee is jnainly coffee.
' • . ★ * w \.
They suggested a tolerance of 10 per cent—caHed for in the World Coffee Pact-which means that at least 90 per cent of the stuff marketed as coffee would be coffee.
18 POINTS
This is one of 18 points the board will consider when 11 meets Monday to* prepare ah agenda for a meeting of the ICO Council opening in London July, 27., ■
it it it
Officials rf the organization are worried about the failure of the U.S. Senate so far to pass implementing legislation to make the coffee pact operative. The legislation has been passed by the House of Represehta-fives.
'dr '* ★
The pact is designed to stabilize coffee prices ' by regulating exports and imports, using quotas where necessary. Since the United States formed ACT, Stanley Branehe, 89, organiser of a school boycott Ih* '"hosier, Pa,, and Charles Prlcw, 18, of Chicago.
They were charged with conducting an open nir meeting without n permit.
Landry and 19 others wen arrested af 47th Street and south Parkway .where the group had apparently assembled preparatory to marching to police head-quarters south of the loop,
The group had planned to protest Landry's arrest Monday njght at the same spot he was arrested lalt night, FLAUNTPOUCE While the group was In custody at the Wabih Avenue police station, nearly 300 persons, mostly teen-agers, gathered In front of the building taunt police. They chanted "Freedom, Freedom, Freedom" and sang,
I ‘We wUl Overcome.*^’
★ ' h ★
The second batch of arrests took place after sdme of the persons In frpnt of the station became unruly, polled said.
Then the demonstrators went to 48th and State streets where several of them attempted to block traffic, police said, They, too, were arrested and charged with dleorderly conduct.
Death Notices
'RawisB.*
Pontloe TowninlBi MIpvM infini ion of Morvln and Colloon Budtt. 'door bobv brothor di JoMpb ond Litonlta aiidd. runoi'ol lorylci will bo heltf Thurtdny. July 2 at 0 o.m. at tho Socrod Hoort Catholic Church, inlormont In Holy Sap-jilclir^ Comohiry. Arran^anionta by
Orlffln Punora'l Homo, Auburn [Heltj^tj, where Baby Pronclf will
bniovod husband ol Anno Cantor/ Poor father of Mrs. victoria (nick) Colanu. Mrs. Mary (Clyde) Ooorgi, Mrj. Slltoboth (Ooorgol Franco end Aorot Cantor/ daar brothor of Pgior Contort also survived by It grandchildren end five groat orond-. chlldron. Funeral brrongotnonts •ro ponding from-tho O. 1. Pur. a toy Funeral Homo whore Mr. Confor will lie In itofe otter t
m
6WF^JTJUr^w7TW"MAV“H:, 1550 Cypren, Union iako; 000 84/ dear mother of Donald J. puffy/, daar Cater of Mrs. .Alice Voren. Kamp, O.B.S. Memorial service undor the auspices ol the Commerce ' Chapter,, No. 901 will bo hold Thursday it 7:30 p.m. Ot tho DonOlwn'^nna Pbnorol rlom*. Funeral ^torJfel
John* Funeral Home, intarmant in -WWW.,'Mount Park Cemetery, (lug. pasted visiting^ hours/ 9 to 5 p.m.
SAAtitWdHYH., ’ JUUI N. tfo4,
OSCAR M.,,12 qingoTl Street/ ego 49/ beloved husband of Imogono "ornswortir/ deaf f
555DWIN, JUNE k U04, BOSt H., 097 James K Blvd., Sylvan ■ .Lake;, age 50/ beloved husband of' Delores M. Goodwin; dear father ot Rleherd aE" ifia lurvlvod b" neral servl
, July 9 at v .... T.
Lutheran Church, interment In White Chapel Cemetery. Arrangement* by Datwison-Johno Funeral Homo where Mr. Goodwin will lie in state until 1:90 F.rldey, otter ..*'— 1 taken -to
.Ar, Hort,_,. .... (Suggested visiting hours ,.no. and 7 to 0 p.m.) jdriNSfSfK JUNE 30. 1944, EVERT E„ J05 Oak Hill, age 77; beloved husband of Goldlo- Ht Johnston; dear father of Evert, E, Johnston , Jf.t deer brother of Mrt. Rose Harden, Mra. Edith Kerns, Mrs. Naomi Rowe, Theodore ohd Jghn dphnatph^ Funerel service wjll be ^heoel
OLSOhl, JULV i, 1944, RUTU, M ' Homo Street; age 70/ dear mother of Mrs. Donald Nelson; dear Sister ot Mrs. Ann' Nelson, Victor, end. Arthur Enlund; also survived by . five grandchildren, Funeral arrangements are ponding from, the Sparks-Grlftln Funeral Home where
RAOA'ti, jOlTlnHO, bORTHEA, 4072 Arcadia Park Drive; age 50/ beloved daughter of- Mr, ana Mrs.' Edward Radata/ also, survived .ty one sister. Funeral service will bo held Thursday, July 9 at 0 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home . with .Rev. .Richard C. Stuckmeyer officiating. Interment In Perry Mount Park Cemetery. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 ,tp 9 p.mr) '
SaaiTh; i1Ji)ne 29, 19H SlBanor C., 1077 Putney Drive, Birmingham/
M. (EMzabeth) Connor and John R. Smith; dear grandmother^ ot
it the Donelson-Johns F
WILLIAMS, JUNE 29, 1984, DORO-thy C., Export, r.d. X POnnsyl-■.vania (Newlonsburg); age S3; dear slater of Mrs. Lewis E. (Gertrude) , Woodward, Mrs. L. (Thelma) Irwin, Laura E„ -Roy K. and Albeit J. williams. Funeral service will pe field fnurtdov, July 2 at .1:30 p.m. af the Calvery Lutheran ^ finljMl' Wlth Pastor Rev. Frederick A. School officiating. Interment In —Dads Cemetery. Arrange-by the M. Barrett r——* ms Funeral Home. .
1964, BETTY Street; age 32; beloved daughter of wilhelmlnp Zloftki deer slater of Mrs. Mir-Kfa* (Arthur) Mrs. Bar-
Leo J. jnd Leona .Zletek ", FUnenal service will be held Friday, July | ,at 10 -a.m. at “ St/- Mtehftl'e A Cattiolic ’Church with/ Fr. Britz , officiating. mtermUftt Jn Mt; Hope r Cemetery.. Jg/angements by the p. E. Pursley Funeral- Home where MISS-Zletek will lie In state. (Vis-.
^9d&-?;3#- »m'' if.
CaH if nwaki , » ,1 Mai, LEONA HiaaiCK ANO
B|RU|-
IN LOVING MEMGEV OF FRED-rle. TJ, Kelly, who passed away July loti ]VM.
You .left this world of sorrow And ore troor from pain end •/. harm, .
And iww rest In maso and
tnlooti^ Vnmt, 5
Olfr OUT OF ,0«|T ON A FLAN eon afford,
MICHIGAN CREDIT V COUNSELORS
' 7M PONTIAC |tote Bank atda, Pontiac's atilsit and largest budgst. AIRlItinEf comfMiny, .
HAYflDIST”"
Old fashioned, horsedrawn, gr> rlnEomonti tor luncheon ami done-
it llmmi Brothers Oqtgs.
''' NEED WOMM^POWIfF' *
For lummor vocation roplocomonto
MANPOWER
If I, Chi , pi 9 i9w
PiylTYoUr'Wlli
* p ymont|#|p * ^ *wggl|,
. Fiwtit your lob ami Credit.' Home or On loo Appolntmonii,
City Ad|ustmsnt Ssrvko
792 W, Huron . FR Mill ..Lwoniojrond Ponded by Mow
-BOXUEI'I.IKS-At 1$ a. m. today (h«re worn repllei at The ftroii oiflcts in tho following boxes: '
4, I, S, 10, 11, 1$, 11,
17, 82, 83, 81, », $1, II,
78, 71, II, IS, IS, 89, 100, 104,10$, 111, 111.
fuatrali Pjroottfg. 4
COATS
CJ‘
D. E. Pursley
FUNEiytL HOME
nV* FB AH^fV ___
I)<5nelsoW6hNS%
' — funeral home
”DHlMod for Purser
HUNTOON
- FUNERAL HOME m „!?rvl!l® PontlK tor 50 years ■79 Ookiond Ave, • Ft MW
, SPARK^GihlFFlN
'funeral home
"Thoughtful tarvtce"_F» M04t
FUNERAL. HOME PI 24971
Cgawtofy L#t»__________________4-A
beautiful lot, will DtVIDI. Ferry Mpum Fork Cemetery — Phone Ft 4 »sil otter 4 p.m.
WHITE CHAPEL CEMBfBRY, Gordon of Modllotlon. 3-grave tot, ^EC5 0425*aft rU**C*t0n' ' wmiam Hensoy (signed), 2786 AAarlingtbn Plaint, Michigan.
■TVui/1 A»"/rar-Tr
ON AND AFtiR THII BaTC JuU! »th, 19*4, l"wlit not bo rotponi-Iblo for any debts controctod by any other then myseii. Kenneth RuaOMl Byrd (signed* It Wilniit St., PonttK Mldugon. '
Off : ANP zA P Tlir Tt-ilj 6aT8.
- V >**4. I wUl not bo rospom SlWo- tor any debts connected by any other men myself.
Jsrnr ». Howard, 002 MontOceito, Pontiac, Mlchlgin. .
LgH and Found ' S
vine, about 6 word. FI 0-0794, offer 6p,m.
FOUND: OACHIHUN9, iR SILVER Leko area. OR 9-7451.
FOUND YOUNG MALE~I8A'4lW, 1 glass oya, OA now. , -
POUND: GERMANShIphIrP
puppy. For price of od, OR '3-9371.
LOVh^id^TQN BULL TERRIER.
LOST^ BROWN 3 k rL(X)5B LEAP
Keep money oa reword. Frank's Sunoco Mrvlce Station of Clarks-ton. 6354011 Or S794427.
Collie, Ylclnlty Joslyn, Clorkston end Indlanwood Ro» Lake “ ' — "Tobby." MY 3-2790,
1 Orion,
Hg|pWanigd^M0fir
2 MEN WITH CAR/ PULL OR PART time, good earnings, -working'with mo In Pontiac and vicinity on 'service routes, phone Mir. Leggett, PC
, 2-3059 between I Q-m. and 9 o.m.
3 REAL ESTATE SALES PEOPLE.
, Men or women 1 for now and used
homes. Will train. Call 673-1273. -
In the morning or evening for 3 to 4 hours, $200 monthly guaranteed. For information coll Mr. Pace, 5 p.m. to 7 p.m, l»B 54243
$120 to $130 Weakly
NO SALES EXPERIENCE - NECESSARY
t will personally train all men accepted for this hon-seasons I bipedal type rout* work. Must lb*
LliBE-M
-..mlngham „
finest. Hospital plan .... .... ... surance, paid vacation, plenty of work and opportunity, Mr. Land,
APPLICATIONS BEING TAKEN for .full time lanltor. Experienced preferred. Apply Division Printing, 1179 SylvortTs off M-», Pontiac.
AUTO FiJLjlH Afip GLEAN UP ■ mart/ Must b* first class. Expert- -enced. Top wages. OR 4-0308. 2527 Dixie Hwy.
A (J to reconditioNiNg m e1 n ; wanted, wheel and under-hood, full time, year round employment. 134-
ASSISTANT MANAGER t .POSITION
we wont a man who feels he ha* ■the, ability to -be developed Into management- 3 month* will tell If yap have what tt tafts, up" to $500
»fe.aM¥ ,,iwv w Spartan Dodge
APoTwIlueL.™ .n,,.p „ Tight nmiijimo ’ with mil.
WRECKER DRIVRR AND
KT-GO PONTIAC SALES larC'ifl'YE iiglfL ftpil
Bis Boy - Kln-„w- ,c,„,0„r.
3 Huron and Me= Nwy> ang Silver Lafee Stag. . .
BtfifK kNOfflEIT /vtrLsotlSrtm , . Haw iM Ism.......
or
Finish gradar for production homas 1 W, 39I4M6 - , ~
{wiiHiM'wirswmif
man. hip pay for right mon, p|
dluTift ' *
m who want n ##rn good mangy, new any baek at tcnooL Car natal, wry, FI 1-0717'U g,m, , .
DRIVER SALiSMANf
Wa will imp lay you ay I routo cmraior. (,ua;«nleml M.JOO par 1 y*2r, glut oanuiei paM .twice * yearly.^varao* man^ can ^earl) well
riad, -saia* gaMrianei haigfui. In day weak, oxeallont company bana tils, car and all, oparatlno a«-panm furnlihN For ggriiwgl in- ■ larvlaw call OR S»7M, 9 am. to -9 o.m. „
rLWfsiei*)noT’wtB r Tw.cut
machines, aari ttma or cahtraef. • Rachaalar arta^Call OL 6.1i»7,
ELECTROLUX
’"fXRRIINCfD *” SHEET METAL MAN
lust ot aula to moko, gorto tom Into from -hlunprint. Job roauliti imt layout and mm terming,
MI>1 OPERATOR
trlnt and i¥#'. 1791 W., MAPjyjl
McORl8oORn m1
FiNitit £AAFVUVgR, MuiT Il
f ‘WBIiTTW
h-lmjthwl grtduotti. MV 34170, FURNACE MEN, IXPBR.BNCBD WrVMMtJr. to rlgtit mm. 693 1767 offer 4i30 gjw.
GAI ItAtlON ATTiNDANt, IX-MrtoncMt, Sylvan centar- Shall. Orchard Lgk* Rd. cm mmi# Balt,
o a;! ! sT ati6n At t k no ant : nous t b* WaHstmtl tn tybricaiion and minor rapalrc. Gam pay. Sumco ' >i*iim, Taiatrapn and Maaia Rdc.
AiNTjCTL lljSAWjer'ftai
dnaiarshlp. ftMrtln. laMrltnea netesssty . Ask for Merle. OA
5!iLL.'iiUH;,'SMb WAAIL^m
pitoiliatlon. vocation with gay, must nSvl tMigkfMt *MB*rt*Mt. Apply of Big Boy DrlvsMn. TON-graph Ot Huron St. or Dial* Hwy.
; GRINDER
TooLroem paper tone* on prototype pin*. "■ ■ •*.
M, C. MFG. CO.
tilJndionwood Ro.. Lake Orien An EOyol Opportunity Bmployar I HAVE OPENINGS FOR 9 SUAlT* Had men, DM p*r week guar an-
JANlTdR, MARRIED-MAN FKW-. tarrad, Call 3t94947, Commarte • Dr)vo-in Thaater.
LATHE, MILL.G.D. Ol l.bt OAiND> EDS, EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. . BRINEY MFG. CO.. IjM SIBA RD , OFF W. M-59 NEXT TO ROL-LAOIUM.*.
Tterifewiii1 oNiyYsir-
CALC 343-3(148 -
MALr'S'$uUf|lTAU6 M'iSgiay-
neous how fir moot' dopjirtmmf. can otter a. FE S4S93.
MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
TuInaCI InITALLA-I HI' work: or pie* ««*“ Orchard Lake Rd., Koogo 1
- w. 682-1100. .
' tSANTfANlTEO As WAT6UMAU,
aga 45-55, rotaroncM mu9f ba fur-nlfhad. Talaphona Olive 3-1400' be* twoan l g.m. and 4 p.m.‘ mechanic, !6t|ViAc, tUttK ktk-gorhpeo. Exeollont pay and fringe
MEN
STEADY WORK
Ho layoffs, no exporlanc* necessary. 3 Character references required. Car advantogoua. For opr polntmont cod PB 4-44)5, oak for personnel manager.
NIGHT F51YII, APPLY li ion: at Howatd -Johnson between a 9 a.m. and noon, 3450 Olxit Hwy.,
'• Drayfon Flam*. .
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
Aiiured sioo par weak * * With affort, 1154 par weak with work, 4340,-Rgr weak »
’ Hard smirk, NOS gar Weak No traveling (abaohrtely) Dependable tlrml largest In hatlon) High inccifiig urilfMnmn , For kitorvMw oppojntmont, phone ‘ Pontlec 3304M. /
Opportunity
PART-TIME
Mon 2t to 45 needed at enca to call on established customers, is to 14 . hour* weekly. Averaoe S3 hourly. W* train, f
Permonent—Port-Timo or SumtoEr Work .
sary. Coll Air. Bryan, OR 34565 to arrange Interview. „
Portek BxpfttigNciU F6k ,
of men's clothes, experienced, apply Fox Dry Cleaners, 710 W.
I, steady work, gobd --
;ns. Paid Insuranca benefit*. To
Real Estate Salesman
,i Men or^yomqn with ItceMe to, sell
model to show, tSISW’MS tiple listing. CALL IVAN W. SCHRAM. FE 54471.
.
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP POLICE DEPARTMENT Age 21-29. Must be e resident of Township 1. year prior to date of application.' Apply at Waterford ToWhship Qlerk's -Offlce. Deadline date for returning applications:
5 p.m. July 6, J064. - •
iALllkiift to complEtR AMAIL
I talas force tor a 2-car dealership. ;
m
'Street, Rochester, ,
sary) Got benefits.
absolutely i__—
slan, with fringe Botiig Hi :
Haig Wgnlod Maio b
ROOM ANO ^«D FOR HANDY
servicing all make: prod
make ot (ii)pllanr.os. tfovida ralaranebt
_______teuaite
jna,PontiacFra
nSIstlm, VaphTlisfli
s-voioo,, An..^na 4j(p#rl*fli4 prtb
RffM.. e Psntiid
Safurdav,
'"'Mi IwOTV
Lm.mIL.-
supIrvisor
Flaiflic Manufaaturtr affavi Mt-i tailanf tiiimirlinilty for rasponubla nviMi Must ba soil, |)fnriPF, kite
work' mtl longhaurs, Good call/y and bmuf irrlnMmmti paid trim, Inu patted, for inwrytew wHt* tr
is netting up a Iralnlng, gro> tor young man inrarulea In Ing lurlm grlndine, Mum be II yoori off Mo with a, high
gram for young warning suites* ~‘"t is ytari ol wi oducoiign. ( 7 WI, 9'ft
VALCOMAtie'F'
" >714 W. MAPLE R-‘ trIm MRFjNjnliwXRTnr^
WoSlSctl
'Ll ROAD'
'bTbS^
land AvonuQi roniloo,
VSgAf iiiiMr tII TIU Ijr'AND
ouuui lunitiWi '"FmHiaagiMmmfi TE 2 44/5 ksKumtlrlci, M4 Rlkor , Budding,' *
WaNT^i'T menjhat d«I|W
m oaoroi* tholr own ouclnosi.
n«iim. KM E, MonKsIm.______
WANTED! EXPERIENCED MB-.
ofr!5jbho’<'we**.
M_______..„Mnlc, Apgly in
parson *1 144 OmlMd Avo-new. Ponliac, (NOW Car Deal- >
wANTgo 'pAaTi MAN, 6m F'Ak’rc
iUBgrtatida nraterwi, Gaad salary,
wAgf'IB*” MATT ’GKIffffR
tala* wark m iymkar yard. Musi LAp/iiy 7960 Cooley;
proven ability. Plenty at loads fur-nlshad, APPLY ALBERT, X BROKER. 3M W. WAL-
r lanced in gmaraT ohd dairy farm, ■ g. One interest## in a steady 5 by me month.-ME / 3»#1.
urfiD: TR IM AND RWKHt CAR.
“ mutt b
! *
|«S by’the montic MF 14461.' WaniCD: TRIM AUPRQUGHLp.^
lb iSTCUft
bar yard, osmirwMa naeaaaary. jtejaly 7960 Coatey Lake Rd.. unim
H>ig Wa4H»g N4aah ’; J'
1 GRILL COOK, t PIZZA MAKER ■ Frost Top, 3114 w. Huron,_
AHip thI fWIIW INCoMi -ONLY * law hours dotty, start your own buiinos* now, W* train you to Mown* On Avon Roeroomt. (tlv*. Writ* FvO, i*s 91, praylon PlaHW or call FI 44441. «
, (TCSirerWlU'fl 4fANY"WtHCU haad* full time ■ toad tuparvioer,' with eiearlmce In .buying, Making and serving toed in gumnfvt else rtcaptloni and saKiai teas. f Must have aapartanca In baking, dacoratlng ana sueorvlsHig votun-feer lialp and keep too! cost*. Good salary to right person. Rooty Pontiac Press Box 64.
,BaIVIFYf fir fiTTIUTTinrai
.over, *30 a waok, Watartord or**,
■M_________
«|^"Wmir~wAUYI5 "TTS
XX
3-2044 at
•AKllVnpiLilwdfAAN,' days, no evenings. Anderson Bakery, 124 w. t4 Mila. Birmingham. Ml 6.711 A
h’,/tilBTM6 wAitRIUn^
ten Lake area. EM 341 it__ ,
PlAUtY UPlBAfdIk, JkEIRi-enc4d only. Phone FE 64*46 etltg
j Pit.,.
El a U'tV ' OPtRATOR V Joset’s Salon, fiaemfWd 1 >161 for aoeointmont,
Book keeping A jfo .oaiitUkAL
offle* work, esparloncad profened but will seriously consktor moturo woman who has raised her family, and wishes to work again. Must ilka people. Reply listing qualifications to box 104 Pontiac PrOt*. _________________________•
nromnr.
BOOKKEEFIR-TYFIlt
WWW!.........—
i» oxporlcnco, ago, marital cfatus, . to FgnfMFmaa Em ai •
AREA. STEADY
.OYMBNT.
3-1494.
IlWiatiOWPfR 8HB 8I»
. oral ceokme. villa Hut, my $4193. COUNTER ' OIRL, KITCHEN. Day'-and night shifts- Super Chtef. Teke-
. 'graph at Dixie. : ..■ -
DEpfNDaBlE WOMAN TO LtVB In, care^ Wj children, light house-
K^AND Stf&S Dfivl-iN. Mfo -Highland Road. 6734942. Curb girt* wanted, fi and over, -tun time. * Under II PArt-tlmO. Top pay plus bonus.
DRUG CLERK, FULL TIME, WILL train rtnaonslbte person. Ruts’* Cauidry Drugs, 4500 Bill'. Lake Rd. bui TD’li'HAWr'iN' MAMAW-ment, -need 2 additional wamaff tor aur sates fore*. Must drive, full ar part lima. .Phone Mr. taooaff ■ FC 2-3053 between I e.m. and 9
ixplRiBtidEO cob k, Fu L l
EXPERIENCED NURSES Al5'C.' )
.........................
EXPERIENCED >REPSRiiBr» woman and chlfdran’t shots. Full. or part lima. Apply Wallet F%r* sonnet Office, 9:30-12. 5th floor. EXPERIENCED SrtDRt 6R8CK grill and proparotlon cook Raol’a Drlve-ln. OR 3-7173 after 6 p.m.
experiencIdw aTt Besses.
MUST BE NEAT AND CLEAN,
' TOP WAGES. HARVEY'S COLONIAL HOUSE, 5476 DIXIE WATERFORD.
FOOD CHECKER SALES GIRL
Foe, .retail bake shop, pleasant working conditions, meals and uniforms furnished, paid vacation and Insurance., Apply Mrs. Keaton, Id's Restaurant, 725 S. Birmingham.
Orta
Hunt
GIRL OR WOMAN II UP, LIVE IN, „ "“"“Trk. Call ■«" ■ *
6-3523
- Good ■
HOUSEKEEPER, CAPABLE WpM-" general house cleqitlng,
HOUSEKEEPER, MIODLEAGEp'TO -live /n, weekends off. Cake - bf 4
L a^ato.
■ Help WiRf! ForirU
’ ’ ii. wofoMte. Mara far noma fhan teaaos, Fmllot Fran lax 1, -LADY TO CAIlf( FDR PARAKREt
I irBNiRO PRACTirAK FOR PR |
MEDfCAL^fflMjV'jM 1 |tiL
M Sjr*r ’ 5?
Minor sewing, counter and - marking. Steady, quimy dry ciaan-
NEAT APPEARING OFFICE GIRL
mnmIi iMM iummettwi
jgawuttLS SSBI
Ol DIR WOMAN TO EARY HIT flf
f'Ue ol.lll COCK, PXPEtllEMCED, mm Fled Flgar Rtilaurtnt,
Fi’F'h ANO MOM'S DRIVE JN, Till Hanger y: Hwy,;,' wanM 1 nfflhf , curb glrli; must ba li t njakf waitress muil be ta or ever, (fall JekSsljm. m,' jatempm ....
Rial litati Saliiman
Women or nuri wnk iiconce id new otjd uiwl homoi, «gn-
*
RtCRPTIoWlIT F»RLFHVIfflAN'»
office*. Musi know ho---
stale ago,. oaeertence a
iu. cr..1 ru/JcLf
K|t milt h Woman 7«i PVI Iff, yp housework, nhist llko cnMeron, ^Private hem gnd TV,7 Ml 744M.
Hf. l IAII) t WOMAN OR (tllll. Prtn
-44Nin.gtitfiwa‘a.
tar 6(30 ar syaakandi. ,
SAI tiWOMAU WAN TED; MUST
be tnoiine and hay* gilt car. To say vice astabiishad drug itern =roitle. !,wrlli itaflog mitmm
te! NAILlCdAM, INC., Ml* Grand Riygr.Ava,, Dgtrolii' Mich-
llitical typetng
I gii ip.
116881AEY1I0I"8EA P1RC IfL
.. ■— ggkjuaigng yhbtejj
“m^HoirwR r
Opening* tor 4 girls, np osportenet necostory, 164 a wow guaronte* thus tncanitefi and bonueas. *»>
, SW5* J Tear, Apgw 14 - 6 pm __J0 W, Huron. Rttem 31*, »
Waitresses $1,25 Hour
rf g-EoTt? «mi
bath Lena Hoed,
Wait hi if, “ mAV WI|K, II,h ■, ?*w. Bob'* Raetawrant, Kaaga tear-bay,, 60144*7, , . 7* ■
»xinrnni"TYix« m wieu
Fiji llma er iteMy. dan ang *»**. Moray's Dolt and Country iommsrt ReST L<** ; fTT^afr #AiTi^ii^MriE'’'JFjaY'*''DN
Siijcwiji V’/»<
toterdty, Aeeiy rliMMrc dU* roods, 114 N. Woodwotd. ftrmtng; hem, ■ : • ■ ■*
ilnT^ffin'wAWIB~r6ir^DtL
ttma amp toy mart Apply tn parson only, no jmqno COIN , acaretad - ■ Frank-* R*st*uran|. - Mow leeafion, 449) Orchard Laka kd.. next 'te .Interlakof Auto Wash, KOtgo Her-■ hor. , ■ , ■ ■ ,. •
WXifliiu WAt^gp (Jfi'BIB ' «ncaP* Apely1 in^parton, trot o' •r.Borral Drtv*.ln, 3UI Union .Lak*. Rdv ft Cammsroa Rd, yWBKUr ■ To' pfVl Tllr CaIV'-SE
^mw+rs iftof MTHfAi tovmrpr*. ffftftrtoie f W MWf
Ntlg WiRtod ' |
, ’ ■ ^ RANK TELLER.
Wi KlVf ' M Bitifui to# 1 tun
ol iocNfttr, 4)S It,; RocK*i
J*. «f C4MI .
. “RIOT '
URGENTLY NEE0E0
W^MANV\,ttl^tglIT'V,,
■»v®I».^ik“f^c,t9.47
IXPERIENClff RiK'RfM'" Hip. waaaands Clarks Or'veln 23 W. Montcalm. 1 . , :*
B8uX cD6k WANTED, GG&D wages, paid veceitons and ho*, pltiftiatlon, ' apply in , parson Crtckar Barrel Oriva-tn, mi Untqn Lake Read at Commerce ■ Road. ■ j .
'■ H AIR DR E SSf?rii5o" OU AR AN T E E tor rtyiut.. Mr, Thomas’ Hate ftshten*. Ft 64242.
Sototltolts Mali ftioto M
la>l>lGyiiiBB« AfiMtos 9
EVELYN EDWARDS
NCR MACHINE .... . . . .steo Payroll posting * ■ 'Tv
Tiiaphon# FE 4-0584
24W E. Huron |uha 4
hitmtl>g>idiwlf 10
A FUTURE BY LBARNINO
IBM MACHINES
Loam IBM key punch, r eratton end wiring; con
h, machine op-
. placement service.
"General institute
73935 Woodwerd . FemdOi*
CALL COLLECT
543-9737
■‘ifiESiLtNGINE MECHANICS - Factory training avallabte I.T.S. »7>gi Jama* Coutans. un 44604.
IBM TRAINING
'1 Learn IBM, ktypunch, .machine optralton and wiring, 1401 computer programming. Mtch. State Board at Education approved. Proa placement eecvtce. Fm parking. Comptete financing, . no money
SYSTEMS INSTITUTE' ' '
L E"A"R n oozm!>.oRAfttki
cranes, field training. Key, 17SII Jamaa Couzane. Phone 8644606. iSMI • DIESEL TRUCK DRIVER training' sgteoL . Truck, 14S» Uvtmol*., Detroit. Call UN -A
; WANTED I TRAINEES!
New'Training Program May 4
Study *« school or ot homo / AAACHINIST TRADE
WALT
‘'".fe'Kssa"10-
You Cen EARN otyour LEARN .... /hon* Fe 4-4507 or write Allied inghut.^ iMO^MIchlgan
I r 11
Stud»n?Ylslres^rk.^lS-i^^y
COLLEGE STUDENT WANTS steady summer • work, good ret., _ own car. MA 6-3595. EXPERIENCED "WINTER. REA-soneble prices. 473-0216.
BXPB^eNCEO truck Driver
ployer
Mm*
\W It'S A NEW HOME ADblTION/ recreation room or you hood some remodeling. Call Chamberlain & , Co. Fully licensed -and insured, In-FE*^1tWlMr| 4d£>. ln,urWC*’
, LIGHT HAULWiS"......■"V'
334-3048
PORTERS WANTED FOR AFTER-noon and eve. work. Apply In person, Rotunds Country Inn, 3230 Pine Leko Rd.
YOUNG MAN DESIREfT wORk. OF
L,ke-
Work Wanted Female ~l2
. CASHIER. WANTED MUST ; WORK split shift, apply In person. Rotunda Country Inn, 3230,Pino,LakTRd.
•W
W«rk W*«U4 Female V 11
liCimM'
Wf6 ^ in
| TRACTIf-AI-^UMOV,)UiLt71
WOMAN blSIRBt UAY W6«k. *4
- Jf>
kll(¥«fl| CoNGNIf) JilAC nHIVB, IHJI
PONTIAC Busings* Service 15
ILteTRlC MOTOR lPMVU.li i til I, hi
Dressmaking A Tailoring 17
MIMMANIM, TAILQNlNg I
alii-idion# Mil mull’ll. I H 4'
toCIMI
laE4afpH*f y <"~18- a
Complete' Lavm Service
Fartlllilng wi. Swilns - sodding.
lawn colling and waatl spraying
Don's lanaicojM 363*2880
Cardan
ROTO-TILUNO m II HI HOUR.
= ■ f- ■ gB'MBftt
. CeBYGUaeefrt-NErttsiig 21
OPENINGS AT PONTIAC LAKl
—IWI*1"?1 .”**"*'. , f
Moving and Trucking 22
IA MOVING JORVIClit REASON'
•we i-h * m**, pi imt,
AA MoVlftt,, I'AIICP.H. inA ratwi* Equipped,> uL V““ 311
Moving and 1 miking XI
‘in Sfi"*'
I I I'll T MAUI IN6, RASfMBNfl ■ ep sir*a*i ciaanad, rf mih! ‘JUSTt fi7.fi,
4_-THM l’ONTMC
;T'r
Painting & Dacorallng ’ 23
■ iwsr
ruMiRiny %■ S2gEI
Wantod Miscellaneous 31
PAIR FOR YOUR UIPP furniture and apnllancei, PE j-j§44.
' ■ lAlFt grant
npiRltfSiml annliai ;Rays anjyr jfEif .ftCTIOMBllltftf
uit^lfppiei PORNiTplr^iii* »typowrllar nmr (miir 'bviF Wllniti OR HW, or Ml
Mm waihlndi, OR' IFaW:
•ilisrfitEBs
ItMatfar
tANffO ,y
EOBMEHiS
Wanlod Monty 31
NIRO MONIY «, HA VI" 111,060
WiRHtl f Rtnft , |j
9 RRDROpMI NIAR UNION1 LAKH,
partly m turn. Coll after.
Can" Wit h'' u’ab d fe7™!* iWIrv
u/fiiiid1 iika t0 7«n( it home omi-1
illy, RaaMnanla Rani,
JPj
j))M
MCTMlRWlTH^dUBeHILBRiN
... pfij|,n|a||^Li ^ (or j,Darfl^
turnlihM) houw by July t,
Mil,______ ■
i^IBWHTWrinsi 9'btdrdom houu far on# yaar laaia, in tha Penllac araa, mA t* I M3 I War jp, m, . F,. ,
«wr R iWtaV iHLAVICf,' HAVe whim nnonu Wlfai win aacvr iMiFMn location,
rri,
-
fob'» Von Sgrviit
WKW, ; Wonttd Houttfiold Cociii 29
V: It!
tk«N living QuarUri
until naadifor Innadliia i
Warren Stoufi Realtor
I CM N, Opdykf Rd, f , PR |4lM -_MUitlPlf kotnJ lilRViet
8M0!R n
wm........ "* ■ «
w commlMlon, Mr, Rial vajiAoBiaiiy.
.cash;
48 HOURS .
ISHT
Ml OaManif Ay| P» MUI
Commercial Property Coih
ApaFtmeni buiidlnsh slprasr ala,
MICHAEL'S REALTY ■
Oil rISUlTT”"
We NIROHIilInti, Call in I W auieK «le andtep.m vaM,( it It’i raaF titan, wa
** ootl WHITE, INC.
' tat! OlMla Hwy.
; Pnqna iMont *
' JOHNSON SAYSt
hay« me ii will trade,
'AUGUST JOHNSON
ant .with itd. v it who carpM
tM
CAUC J
C^InRtoiMr YfAIH,‘ 'ICKit
St
In^* f
M.ID
6K joy," OR jpi RRI01
JOLL REALTY ”
(Ml ORCHARD 1AK( RO„ :1* _ , NlAR TiLlORAPH
, feLHffl! OR m«n Nmmi AT ONif i.ihini.n mi MM Ml m Pentlacand lurrcundlng
nS11 lfij\o LaSy^iiHITtoI"
CLARENCE RIDGEWAY .
JehStij P™p.jaja w. walWA1"™ < om-iom
— multiple liitino hbvico
REALTOR PARTRIDGE '
"11 THE RIPO TO A,,-.
"'TirACii^btf iOY ~ t*u
trap (lair tor quck raiuili,
■ ^TtooT « » 1 i .
Alomlnum Siding
Aluminum Siding And Trim
MAINTENANCE' PRIR . Ri YNOLOS-KAIIb (“ALCOA
Aluminum Windows $ 9,89 Aluminum Doors $24.89
Custbmtzed Siding
BONTIAC/ , , M)0lM , TROY / ' , ' MU t-WT?
{■a aluminIjm IiBinS. 'iYfiXWI. awnlMi, Vinyl **IM inatailad ,ar mat*'lata. Oualtty tow ton,
pr yalLbly ol Mia
AiCOa, KAilP* HOiNO STORM WINDOW*. DOORS IIMOOILINO and AOOiTIONt
KAISER AI.c6a ALUMINUM INC,. AWNINOk, OUTTB ... STORM WINDOWS - DOORS, PA-
Digging and Tranching ____ Imstroagliltti
> O lAVRtTROUOH, I
Oaiyaniind or aluminum.- P r * a aatwnatds. ttMM. ■ Engino Ropoir
JR COOLtO INOINRS RRPAlRBD
MOfORTXCHANGE”cQ.’
TIOS. ROOPINO. SUPERIOR. PR
ArckHocturoi Drawing
l, lAOiii'Aw Pi tt,
Ttitclaf_______________
PONTIAC FENCE CO.
• 0‘» CONSTRUCTION Hrw litImaTn. Orlvawayt, parking lata, taa-ciia. opan -• £ ~*r....—~a—===-
OR S
Ftoor Sanding
CARL L. BILLS SR.I FLOOR SAND lng~ PB 2-STtf
J5Hn ' TAYldR, PC068' “CAVIH'b
H .......liming, ts yaan
97-MM.
*D17vKfaV "shI? fAusT--
FREE BITlMATSt ,_______ HR Mtal_________,
biioiwAYt' c6uiyi;~iyc:i;ny
_Uw.jantrajMr. Pi HS1C. » 1
Auto Upboistoring
CONVBRTWLI tops, act .as and . up. campiata In Mr lor trim, Alrto Tran snap. Ml . Mr. Clamans Si.
rr '4HV5rA, PdMf Cayino,
tandMi and rutlanloa, Pi wn.
mBwieprewbriI ,
Home Improvements
Pxch*i, addltiona, aitpa, gpna ramodtllng and camant wo Oulnn Canatructlon Co.
FE 5-9122
PR 4
- L.
Garages
Watorproofiag
KAR LIFE BATTERY CO. Gonaratnra-^Ragulatora—Startyra
Batteries $5.95 Exchange
liacFlipiiig ~
. KAR OARAOt, Wit reel. OH Doom, ConcroM Ploon . Addiriont. Hoytt Ralabig PAW. GRAVES CONTRACT!N< Pm* latlmataa
■ALi'fYPi's'ereamfRuctiON
Paaaa OulMara, FE scats
1 contractor poR EvRry-
. rhino. IMIa Lumbar & Madamha-tlon Co. la llcanatd and Inaurad to do all typaa of raaldantlal and cam-marclal ramodcilne and building.
- Garages, roofing and alum, aiding. Prat designing and estimating. Bast raft. Eaay MriAs. PB »SS?l.
'oR 4-l5ir NEIDRICK BUILDING ICRVICE -yr» e.|»n Unm,' n«r»iu. rihliutt AiMItlnni
INTERIOR FINISH, KITCHRNS, paneling, 40 yaara experience. FE Mm-
Carpet SerYlco-Clooni^
CEMENT WORK - D Aiiws pen cemEnt v"
Cement Work A
Licensed camant contractor,
FE 5-9122
"r CEMiENT WORK, REASONABLE.
Pma aatlmataa. I
; S-444H aftar 4. Eways. WORK
licensed. Bert Commins. FI
MITCHELL'S BUMP SHOP, SHE-' ciaiiting In rwaty spots. OnAday deliver*. 2SS Oakland, Pontiac. man?. • , , • ... >/"■-.
latboylEg ^
.. ■ - 5-MW._________________
Ban a larry-i soooiNo ANd leading. PE H44t or PE Bt094. LANDSCAPINt), TRUCKINO, BRO-kan aldawalk tor retaining walls by load at installed. Did caw me-njira. PE- 4-33M.
MERION blue • s6d, Pick up or
delivered. 2*01 Crooks. "UL 9-4443.
..SOboiNG SEEpiNG-GRAOiNG '
Free attlmaSM
QlbKIuaanar 411-1994
SODDING,' SEEDING. RETAINED walla, pat lot, basement calling PI 4-1147,___________
HofTWty QlfSMf
FhA TlRMS.
TALBOTT'LUMBER'
Moving and Storage
Co?
SMITH A
Nurseries
> A-1 SOD
Painting and. Decorating
1-1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR painting, trap aatlmataa, work guaranteed. Reasonable rates. M2-
" PAINTING AND DECORA-
Painting anti Decorating
‘Til toll you one thing I miss about sohoolj the rice pudding In the cafeteria I >
Rent Houiss, Unturnishod 40
1‘BCDROOM, OARAOH, BAIIMBNT
tencec1 —-Sl— 1--------
Itgvt
Hinu m
..... - .-...Ho'atOFi Drayton . w’ww, Sacgrlfy bapoall,
s RooMt, wm“ff«rhiAOb
iitlinit-.. la/.mi. INI, Bdllh,
AUwfr_N«w”*iN0i1OiSWf~TH
“‘k POIHlM ----- R'-u.—
im/ t
WANTED BUILDING LOTS
, CASHI
. RUILPIRI
michaVl'^Vbalty
WlBOARb8!.....- • Vfl B4M<
Plastering Service
wiLffTETIRTW ‘
On .bauaea, acraaga. Wa buy and Mil land cenlracta. Call, ua on any i property you With it Mil,
PONTIAC REALTY .
n? Baldwin pe am
' WANT TO SELL? •.
OIL ■ U1 A TRY
prospictBoalori ,
JAMES A. TAYLOR, Reoltor
Rent Lake Cottages 41
CQTTAbf, BLACK LAKP, OOOD waeh, timing Boai-MR 4-4WI. MOUSBKBBPINft fABINl. SJ1PPR wwk. I'rlvMn laka, tat* batch. dji ,-iPMiy RtMr” Or-
aim,
arn, taia death, b‘_1 ' Had
Raallor. ri } 0(93.
Rigrf
Ru S i'A* 6 'CA¥ii“H'50fRlIPTRb cottagai, 9-0, llnan and boat turn., good swimming, aki boat rtnlai.
W44P, _________1 , , '
LAKR’ V fRSNi CbftAObl AT Lawjtton, PR S’1)11- after i p.m.
Is.o3o« - Rant Rooms
PLASTBRINO. pin ■•IIWATiJ; ,Wsga *ln*WhltaLl.aka -or Clarkatwi > LAROI PRONT ROOM, PI
42
Idle Heum . _, : !;4f
0WNPR. i HPOBIViM HOME
lY.GWNPR, 1 BpIlROfn
Oh wif'f 1
* ” CAsi iff wceor
- hid
Pti Pi
v«iht«£r’H fin 'ingki-
3fT
0^0'
Idle Heviei
i OAKLAND lAKi
leans, iftirntKlIAIp iwsieMlon, -
riini^()ji)Y LAvlWbiR
liyilt
Rf aTtor ■ parTrtdqe
.....thIJird ig |dd”
Brick iiisnfily; incoms is . inttje iifsfs, > T mm ins Bam cap. In* 1rlBn*ani ilnlel, phI eysllrtir US i Call J| Mfjli # Bsy
CaD/PE' 8>iiM Nlgni
JOHf K, IRWIN & SONS
bedrm^ ^1, r«n|Ml^ lar^ rear *yarlli bjaeman^ n^
iy 9wn#f, , 0™™„ swn, ms Cnsflssms. '
,R0CHISTER
Mm,?y
to; Main RpHilfif
III irl level nn a village ’ .. .„ Jhooil fur only air,aw, 'IkWILL ft THllafff
Wl ’lTTkLifli 3
Mb, fane bfiek, fir* basement, uarau*. • *«i sir,
), /S9 9f
GAYLORD-
OF OKPORb h epfnr.e, naila III
REALTOR‘PARTRIDGE ■
"IS THR RIRD'TO aRR" 1 lAUNDBRI A WYATT ‘RIACTY’
TfWA HR TfRUT “ 4
Mm, Hi stories, nles'hom*,
H" oi, terms, jnm MM
SOUTH AfiDRiaON
M.S00 Cl
it furnile PB 4 8180
oesemeni, aluminum tiding, aelecl Tin oak floors, plrch cuBboerdi, All roc mil on year ioi for »ib,9ls, fermi, bet ..Call Mr ijati or pi a>fM9; r am
49
HOejll,. BRINO R6<
LAWRENCE W.< GAYLORD
, MY 9-919! tf PB 1-9499 Broadway ana Pilnf, Laka Orion
r ’HAMMOND im '
FRFMfA
, ; ' - SPlcfAL r *, V ' HURRYI HURRYI HURRYI in mm0
Kiftii^LMa'
• BOOMS NBAR WiaNIR, 70 FOOT lot, beaemenii. fireplace, garage, Terms, trede. MA a-919t,
a • room kioMira 'BfSRodMi,
Eerge
'h0USE1(1|ANV*^PIT^L^Y 1^.^: fongieilow ’
I ml A 5P Ml 4.74ia WE HAVE THE KEY-HURRY
r lion at model,» I to.S o.r '
■hiitehI
Condition end Only neve ts b
bedroom, ifMrafe , dining teem, . X Jk, fp'i beaement, oil heat, IVa-car ga , a> , n rage. Large Inndaqaped * lot with goorf garden apet, Phona Al‘a Lend- i
W’iwrvp/U^ or
t-ROOM hAuII AT 1*997 RsiWeTe
peymeel, Por further Infermetlgn write tei Rlehard aenneft, 4979 Harlan Drive, N1. laiam,’ Oregon,
7 Mom bargain “
Bio lef, beaement, near Wlaner, Tull price, it.NO. 81,000 down, 191' per fnbnlh. SAVE auto ,
Pj 1-9971
11 Un|ti*-lflke Front
beech lake from. One of Oakland Counly'a "fiahingeal" lakes io mllaa from Pontiac, Includes own era 9-btdroom apartment and a Small business building. Potential Income of 19,790 per, year, Price 147,S00, Will trade equity ot 499,-' 000 on farm or other real estate, lab or call Mr. Partridge, Par-tonally. 1090 W. Huron, Fh, PB
,, 9-cpf garage, Call today,
WATER PRQNTAOI — bams, 99 ff, living ““ iFeee, bulll-l" *i,iS‘
mf -
CLOSE TO" at, PAT’S SCHOOL I Ike new, 4 rooms end bath, large living room, atom, storm* r
flnffifi, r,|alto'SV b* Lake Rd, PB 9-0179, tvbi.
14-)l9l, ■ 1 , ■ i. .
REALTOR PARTRIDGE
*"18 THE BIRD TO 8BB"
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY
Eight 9-bedroom all-brlck vhomei.
CANLL 333*7*5*5^
MICHAEL'S REALTY
BM BOiM 'PiX|fiTrfT1n-sa7»,
ACH E LOk APAktNlHht ALL furnished. S47 Per month, 494-9749. CLEAN, M068EN', BABY wl'C-- * - "• PB. A79S3.
sLltpiNolodbi woiElinWiCY,
394-9344, Otter 4 p.m. 1 v
Rent Stores
.$1,000 DOWN
BEDROOM, PULL RASRMRNT name with carpet *"** «»*«•• i«-.eluded for only
Including insurance and teats. This cute home has: fenced backyard, storms .and scraens and Is In excellent condition, Cell for an appointment.
DON WHITE, INC,
9891 JPfKfg -HWV. 174-0494
$1,000 Down^$60 Per Mo.
~™\| Country living, noer good shop-ping facilities, lake privileges on
dandy 9-bedroom home, compact Fx45', 7433 M99 AT WILLIAMS neat end clean, new oil furnace,
lake Road, has office, OR 3-uii\. Pul! price S9,300, land contract.
I HAROLD R. FRANKS, REALTY
.^..*.** ------ M „ Wi . jjjj UNION,LAKl ROAD
*«»«» |m 3I390S — ‘Wd
PE S-9431.'
Rant Office -Space
RAY O'NEIL; Realtor
I 3-7103 J OR' 4-0437
too SQUA'tfl >ilt' AYYBaCTTvI
____, ; «t S199 par imp
r lease, an W. Huron St.
I of Tel-Huroh Shopping :. G. .Hempstead, Reellor,
1 -‘•a Rd„ PB 4-89S4,
Rent BMaiiteai Proparty 47-A
Huron and Perr
Perry
—0 tq. ft, elf attractive 2nd floor ottlce space, excellent • advertlelng postlbllltles, e c r« a t from Pederel ^Bjdj Annqtt Inc.
SPECIAL
FOR 7
Small building on the comer ot Hazel end Telegreoh, Ideal *"■ bar shop or of«ctl?J“
^«-4W9lv ’*V
MiX’lD' NBIGHBORHOOD, 2 - ROOM apartment. FE 5-0494.
parYLy pURNiSHlb APT., £6u-
Sole .Houses