The Weather (Omni m Pin u THE PONTIAC PRESS Horn Edition VO*,. 128 NO. 128 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1965 —28 PAGES U S. Road Toll Sets Mark for 3-Day Fourth Senate Opens Debate on Bill tor Health Care Big Pittsburgh Police Search Man Is Killed After Slaying 2 route to a hos- al football player, and Aaron Godfrey. iiw _____UJ m * McDonough and officers Leo Btnefits and Cost* of nollwmon and the father of his “We knew he was wounded Mincin, 37, and Joseph Laffev, policeman and tne tamer oi nis but ^ look ^ hurt t0 n who were woundedi had been Social Security Would g5flfrlend> and wounded two me when he raiged that rifle," called to the Godfrey home, a other officers today. He was ^ patrolman James Hinte- two-story frame house in a low- PITTSBURGH, Pa. OPl — A rifle. He died e young man armed with a re- Ptt*l-peating rifle killed two men, Reports Push Fatality Total to Record 542 21 Die in Michigan; Less Than Half of 43 Killed in '64 Holiday Charles Schweinberg, 42, said he fired once. FIGHT FOE SPACE - Inhabitants of Ba Gia fight for space aboard a U. S. Marine helicopter in a frantic effort to escape from Viet Cong mortar shells yesterday. The Little Contact in D Zone helicopter was one of two able to land at the besieged outpost 330 miles north of Saigon. Children run about in confusion as smoke rises from village. Rise in New Program shot to death at dawn after a # massive manhunt. The rifleman was identified as SHOTS FIND MARK WASHINGTON pf — Leroy Francis Scott, about 24, “We bom saw him at the The Senate opens debate who had a record of minor ar- same time. I think I hit him . . K- , .... rests. with three shots," Hintemeyer today on the histone bill . added. The other patrolman, which would establish Two p t^!^ •arprised rharXc - - .............. ' , , , him in a wooded area where broad health programs for he ^ hidden {or flve hourg> 19 million Americans 65 nursing an apparently serious or older and increase all gw»bot wound received in an _______, c • , earlier exchange with police. present Social Secunty ghot him m he raised hls benefits.. The plan would cost an estimated 9.8 billion a year. It would be financed primarily by an increase in Social Security taxes, both to the employer and employe. Sponsors said they would push for passage by the end of this week, and forecast as many as 80 favorable votes out of the 180-man Senate. rent section of the city’s Hazelwood section. By The Associated Press Belated reports of traf-Police said there apparently fl® deaths during the had been an argument over three-aay Fourth of July Scott’s attentions to Godfrey’s weekend raised the na* d.u'hter, Ru,h' “• tion.1 toll to 542, a record HIT FIVE TIMES for , obsery. Killed in the earlier ex- Scott opened fire, apparently . .. holiday change of gunfire with Scott hitting Godfrey first. McDon- ™ce « ine nouaay- . were patrolman Coleman McDonough, a former profession- ough was hit five times and his (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Combined Force Hunts Cong Last year, the Senate narrowly adopted, 49 to 44, an amendment to a House-passed bill adding health care for me aged to Social Security. The measure died in conference between the two branches. SAIGON, South Viet Nam borne Brigade, probed a stretch Seven Japanese water can- * a A (AP) — U.S. paratroopers of jungle about 30 miles north- teens of World War II design. This year, however, me House joined Vietnamese and Austra- east of Saigon. But a U.S. A Viet Cong illustrated maga- passe(| a health care-Social Se-lian soldiers today for their sec- spokesman reported that, like zine. curity bill. The margin in me ond combined operation against the first such combined opera- WWW April 8 vote was a solid 313 to the Viet Cong in a segment of tion last week, there was no sig- One French artillery shell 116, the D Zone, which was subject- nificant contact with me en- made in 1932. The Senate Finance Commit- Hearing Today for Youth, 16 jj Final figures were expected to raise me total killed during the 78-hour period even higher. The previous record toll for a three-day Independence Day holiday was 684, sot last year. The count of traffic fatalities this year came close to the rec-for a four-day Independence tervance, SS7, established in Ask Murder Charge in Fatal Stabbing The tally of traffic deaths began at 6 p.m. local time Friday and continued to midnight last night. A Probate Court hearing is HALVED TOTAL slated for mis afternoon to de- with 21 deaths reported, Mich-termine whether or not a 18- igan more than halved mis year-old Waterford Township Fourth of_ July holiday week-boy will be charged with first | degree murder. coleman McDonough mu* LEROY FRANCIS SCOTT ed yesterday to its second bomb- emy. ing by Strategic Air Command T h | American!, however, BS2 jets. ■ ^ ^ found such things as: About 2,500 troops, including . Three stacks of love letters, more man 1,000 paratroopers tied in a yellow ribbon, from a from the U.S. Army’s 173 Air- «>rl to a Viet Cong soldier. Dozens of empty thatched tee made numerous changes in roofed houses. the House bill but preserved all Three fish traps. —- of its essential provisions. Its ^ ^ ^ vote was 12 to 5 with Chairman Harry F. Byrd, D-Va., among The nearest the troops got to dissenters, the Viet Cong was a sniper who 41 Die in Crash Bandit Takes Shot at Youth Rocket Blast Injures Man Homemade Dev'rce Blows Up in Hand 2 Missile Sites Virtually Ready in N. Viet Nam WASHINGTON (AP) - A State Department spokesman said today work on two missile sites in Norm Viet Nam is virtually complete and two other mtaile sites have reached an condition at Pontiac General advanced stage. hospital after a homemade rock- A a a et he was making blew up in Press officer Robert J. Me- his hand. Closkey said mat there is no Roger Howard, 22, of 622 Unevidence that missiles have ion was at the home of his been installed in the two com- (jJ^ff^^lan^Townshi^ bombers hit the area, pleted sites. But obviously, be ^enthe accident occurred. ‘ " The provisions include a 7 per cent increase in Social Security retirement, survivor and disability benefits, retroactive to last Jan. 1, and these two new health programs: of RAF Plane NUNEHAM COURTNAY, England IUPD — A Royal Air After Holdup A masked bandit held up Car- opened up on a platoon destroying the fish traps. He got away after a brief fire fight. NO CASUALTIES By late afternoon there had been no casualties among the # a basic plan financed under with 41 men aboard crashed ry last night, and then took a allied forces. Social Security covering hospi- 57 toni&ht. F* of shot at Fighting was bloodier else- talization, posthospital nursing _1186, „ *11 VV .*7„ to pursue him down an alley, where. end’s traffic death toll from 1964 when 43 died on the state’s highways. The Oakland County Prose- Ten persons lost their lives cutor’s Office will ask juvenile ,ta water accidents during the authorities at me 1:30 p.m. hear- °*1* ing to waive jurisdiction over State police said they taew ol o n __ no-, iiui no specific reason for the rela- Ross Pearson, 1127 Alhi. tivelytow baffle death toll, al- Pearson has one 0ffjcer remarked been held In that “maybe people are start-custody at the ing to take safety on me road Children's Cen- seriously.” ter since he fa- This year’s national toll/ tally Force Hastings transport plane ter’s Party Store at 550 N. Per- home care, outpatient hospital The victims included an RAF diagnostic services, and post- crew of six, other RAF person- Mrs. Betsy Carter, 46, wife A U.S. spokesman said 2 hospital home health visits. ' neL and a number of army men 0j tbe owner t0]d p0ntiac po-Americans and 26 Vietnamese # A voluntary, supplemental from a paratroop unit. ’ nKBiH.lii troop, were mining „„„ and m. ptane. .. . tr-tota, ““ “ “ and 4 Vietnamese were killed in 8ome additional health services, mountainous Pleiku Province, Aj Milf°rd^ man is in ^critkaj 215 miles northeast of Saigon. The BS2s dropped 508 tons of bombs into the Viet Cong-controlled D Zone yesterday. The planes flew from Guam, 2,280 miles away. U.S. officials said “about 25’ New Algerian Regime Recognized by U.S. WASHINGTON UB—The Unit- I stabbed brought a stern warning from Jeffrey Talbot, Howard Pyle, president of the 17, June 27 in National Safety Council, view of more “Never has driver improve-than 20 witnes- ment been more badly needed," ____________ PEARSON ses, including Pyle said. “The attitude! and vMth who attemDted ** victim’s father, Dr. Frank skills of too many drivers are y G. Talbot. failing to meet the exacting de- The stabbing took place in mands of billions of mile! of front of the Talbot home, 2845 high pressure travel. Watkins Lake, and climaxed “Every driver," Pyle said, a feud between the youths “should begin at once to over a girl. sharpen old skills and devel- ercise, was headed from near- The youth died on the operat- °P new ones through available by Abingdon to .he Hold nl “J ,her„ ",d ^ tag table at Ponttoc G«*r.l «*»-*•' Benson. It plunged into a 30n' willlam H. bJ lie on the . ( . grems. into the store shortly before 11 floor. The bandit, who was carrying a sawed-off 22-caliber rifle, took $488 from the cash register, and fled out the rear door. Hospital four and a half hours after the 9:30 p.m. incident. added, this is a question of time. The missiles have been de-scribeji as .surface-to-air for defense against air attack. All of the work on missile installations is being done in the Hanoi and port of Haiphong areas, he said. Oakland C o u n t y sheriff’s deputies said Howard and his brother, Ronald, had earlier successfully made two other rockets. P*** American spokesmen said the Uon from the Algerian “revdu- the: tall barley grass a garaga Pyklng a viet Cong in Pleiku attacked a tionary leader on U S. Inde- search with poUce and firemen Pearson and a companion, Robert Green, 17, of 1512 Ea-Waterford Township, Another safety council spokesman estimated that the final toll would be about 550 traffic (Continued on Page 2, Col. I) r In Today's Press Voting Bill House faces fierce interparty fight — PAGE 9. Copter Units > Army wants to create more companies — PAGE 18. Moon Program U.S. race to moon running smoothly—PAGE 2. Area News ........ 14 Astrology .........1* Bridge ............ U Crossword Puzzle...27 Comics ............tt Editorials * Markets . .........*• Obituaries ....... 1$ Sports .......... K-W Theaters 8 | TV A Radio Programs 27 I Wilson, Earl 17 * Women’s Pages 11-12 mixture with powdered sugar into a half-inch steel tube v * the explosion occurred. ★ * * . | The blast shattered the tube. % sending fragments into How-% ard’s face, under his left eye, H and into his stomach and chest. 1 HAND RIPPED The explosion also ripped off part of his leR hand. Howard is an unemployed electronics technician. Hit wife said, he hoped to be a research scientist and was studying and working toward that goal. The Howard’s have one child, a son, age 4. AAA When sheriff’s deputies arrived, Howard was slumped on a lawn chair in the front of the home. INTERN AL INJURIES He was rushed immediately to Pontiac GenerakJHospital. Officials there say he is suffering from severe internal injuries, as well as lacerations on the face and hand. „ A A A Howard was one of 23 persons who were injured in explosive accidents in Michigan during the weekend. field near the Abingdon Quarries, apparently just after taking off. “I ran to the scene but there ed States announced today that was nothing I could do,” said a ~ l woman from Nuneham , Court- taiuiBm « v»,. iitaiu. itabut- nay. “Flames were leaping out David Patch, 18, of 142 Cham- turned themselves in at the Pon- I r* 1 starto 25-mUes north of Saigon which took power from otlthe top ofJthe Plane.. They berlain toJd police,he sawjhe tiac Post of the Michigan State OOT6 As far as they taiew, all the president Ahmed^Befi «st fire to the crops.” _ thief leave the sloreland began paHpHs minuted after the stab-T — --------- planes returned safely to Guam g^ja June ,9 a a a to follow him in his car. hin. the spokesman said. It would It was ais0 disclosed that Wreckage of the aircraft and a a A 8 take several days to assras the j„hnson has sent a belongings of the victims were Patch said that the subject DRIVER OF CAR effectiveness of the attack, they message to Boumedienne in re- scattered about the scene. Four started running, then turned Green is reported to have ply to a message of congratula- RAF helicopters flew )ow over and fired one shot. driven the car in which the two ■ ......... tog * * aaa boys fled from, the scene. He The bullet entered the radia- was released pending further added. in County, but Woman Dies (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) pendence Day. But there were no survivors, tor of Patch’s auto. investigation. 800,000-Pontiac Year Seen Oakland County motorists apparently joined other Michigan Judge Norman R. Barnard residents in heeding safety slo-was to hear testimony in the gans during the weekend, case and then make a ruling on the petition to waive jurisdiction. Pontiac Motor Division's new cited two major factors in the had," he pointed out, “but it general manager John Z. De- continued sales growth of the was the best for any six-month Lorean optimistically predicted local cars. an 800,000 unit year today, and Distinctive styling and engineering features were the points mentioned in boosting Pontiac ahead of the 693,718 cars turned out last year. It was DeLorean’s first press conference and statement since he was promoted from the post of chief engineer last week. period.” Sales in Jane set an all-time record, 74,949 Pontiacs and Tempests, surpassing by 11 per cent the June sales a year ago. Warm Day in View, but Rain Due, Too ference here that although part of Pontiac’s first-half showing was attributable to an order buildup from the strike in late 1984 sales will continue strong through the balance of the year. Currently in its fifth coosecu- tn the June 21-30 period sales l*ve year in third place in the lowers headed this way are were 26,193 topping by 24 per 2r'SerD%tE's nearrat exPected t0 arrive and cent the sales during the same wa8 constantly wid- 8tay «™und tomorrow, period last yrar. ening. “ ^ ^ Scattered JOHN Z. DeLOREAN pion, 39, of Heights, Ferndale, was killed in thunder- a two-car collision at an intersection in Hazel Park Sunday. Sheriff Frank Irons said local drivers did a good fob during the weekend, but he pointed out that both tiie road patrol and The newlv named GM vice " " Temperatures will be warm- state Police were out in full prosident said 444,891 Pontiacs , “We "P0***:" .*? er, the Tow in the 50s tonight, force watching drivers. sjjjrcrsris?ssssssxtirjstto£ ^ aS“"U"""1 ‘“l“- “»> PKcarioui Uiird-plaoe Partly 3oufrwde«ller h the “SSI ■*»«»! «p« " dMlaj Ih. W ham. tm, * 7 a features,” he said. 3-POINT PROGRAM Mining northeasterly winds . . Pontiac Motor Division has FEVER LASTING He outlined a three-point pro- at 4 to 12 miles per hour will ^ the md. chalked up the biggest first half “The spring car-buying fever gram, which in his own words become east to southeast to- but that {or the part, main its 39-year history, beLorean !»d»iqingiy is carrying over into “would strengthen our position morrow. torists used caution, stated. the summer months,” DeLorean in a very competitive market.” aaa During the 1964 Independence said. “The market looks very Included ia DeLoreaa's plan A low of 50 was recorded at Day weekmd^ three persons was the production and osar- 6 a.m. today. The mercury had died in auto accidents and two (Continued on Page 2, CoL 7) climbed to 78 by 2 p.m. others drowned. THE BEST EVER “Not only was the first half 8tron« for ®ur of this year the best we’ve ever DeLorean told the news con- ■ W M, TWO THE PONTIAC PB%SS, TUESDAY*. JULY. H, IW Ask Tougher for Use on Rioters ByThe Associated Pros Officials called today for tougher penalties Sod firmness in the wake of rioting and disturbances by beer-drinking, carousing youths in five resort •towns over the Fourth of July Weekend. > Mayor Wilson W. Finley of <}eqeva-on-the-Lake, Ohio, where nearly 380 young people were arrested, said he plans to draft new ordinances with higher penalties for disorderly conduct and resisting arrest. “What we need,” said Finley, “is more and more enforcement. And we need higher fines. We are going to re-vamp ordinances to cover situations like this. We don’t want trouble every holiday. We might just have to pot a gate on the town.” Hie rioting at Geneva-on-the-Lake, on Lake Erie, and at Bussells Point, (Milo, on Indian Lake in western Ohio, where some 100 persons were arrested, prompted Sen. Tj a n k J. Lausche, D-Ohio, to issue the following statement: A A * “Only encouragement will be given future riots unless the prosecutors, tile sheriffs and other law enforcement officials are given support by the judges. I do hope that the pleas advanced by lawyers and social workers that youth must be ★ ■* * Fifty Arrested at Saugatuck SAUGATUCK (AP)-Some 50 persons were arrested as an estimated 10,000 visitors invaded this Lake Michigan resort community of 1,000 during the long Fourth of July weekend. Village President Lynn McCray said Monday those arrested “had to learn the hard way by being pot in jail,” He said they ranged in age from 17 to 30 and most were charged with liquor-law violations. McCray said Saugatuck has a population of about 1,000 in the winter months. “On the whole they behaved much better,” McCray observed. “We started clamping down on them, and we’ll continue to do so,” 1M4 RAMPAGE Gangs of college - age youth went on a rampage here a year ago and threatened to do so again last Labor Day when some 60 state police troopers were assigned to the area. McCray said he estimated he had about half that number on hand this July Fourth weekend, plus reinforced local police. dealt with gently under the circumstances prevailing at these two resorts will not be given attention.” COLLEGE STUDENTS The rioters were mainly teenagers and college students, Mayer Ben Saunders of Arnolds Park, Iowa, who handled dose to 111 cases ia mayor’s court as a result of the weekend disturbances, said, “Well bo taking some precautionary measures.” Other trouble spots were Rock-away Beach, Mo., and Lake George, N.Y. .. A it it Sheriff Lyman Cardwell reported that “the situation is quiet at Rockaway Beach — all the kids have left.’* DEVISES A PLAN Cardwell said he has devised a {dan for preventing a recurrence but “I don’t aim to publicize it at this time.” At Lake George, which had the biggest crowds and the most arrests — about 358 — officials would not call the disturbances riots. “Sure the number was high, but only a few were serious,” said Police Justice John Dier. “Preventive police work was the answer.” A * it Lake George Police Chief James Troy said officers can spot some potential troublemakers by auto license plates. NEW ENGLAND “This weekend,” he said, “most of the trouble came from boys from New England. They have been to Hampton Beach and Fort Lauderdale. They are trained troublemakers and we watch them.” The disturbances left shattered glass, beer bottles, paper-littered streets and thousands of dollars in property damage. In some instances, the National Guard was called out to stop the rioting, and clubs and tear gas were used. Bussells Point Mayor Gene Gooding blamed the melee there “a loss of control by par- “These kids,” said Goodings “have lost all respect and gratitude for the reasons we celebrate this holiday.” APPEAR IN COURT At Geneva - on - the • Lake, 26 persons charged with disorderly conduct appeared in court yesterday. Most of them pleaded guilty and were fined ISO plus $6.50 court costs. Twenty-nine others were turned over to the Ashtabula County Common Pleas Court. Twenty of this group posted $200 bail and were release!. The other nine remained in county jail pending hearings today. Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly sunny and cooler today, high 78 to 78. Scattered thundershowers developing tnnight nod continuing Wednesday. Not so cool Untight,Jtoys. in the 58s. Warmer Wednesday, high 71 to $2. Winds northeast to east to southeast 5 to 15 miles tonight and Wednesday. Thursday outlook: Partly cloudy and cooler. TaUay la NaNac m rt*e» Tuaaday at 1:41 p.m aat temperature Nt lamparaturfe • temperature Highest M Vtar A«a Hi Pantiac This Data la » Yuan Monday's Temperature Chart HuupMpn *) 44 Kansas City I laiBas 74 44 La* Angelas U s* Marquette 54 47 Miami Beach 14 N Pension 43 11 Milwaukee 71 Traverse C. 43 31 New Orleans II 11 45 New York 71 _ 34 47 Pheealx 111 II " Pittsburgh 13 57 Salt Lake - - - . S. Franclsu. „ I S. S. Marie 57 AP Plwlalax WOMEN GET ALONG TOGETHER -Seven French women emerge from a deep grotto in Gahors, France, yesterday, after spending two weeks underground in a scientific test. They were selected from a wide range of backgrounds and the test was to see what personality clashes, if any would result. The women said they got along fine and had fun. They are wearing dark glasses to protect their eyes from the sun. Under Debate Senate May Vote on Measure Today WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate leaders hope to complete congressional action today on a proposed constitutional amendment covering presidential disability and the filling of any vice-presidential vacancy. Birmingham Area NmM* To Discuss the Effec of Parking Rate$oo$ts of the coat of developing the lot on which the structure will be built. . rl § The 588-car parking facility BIRMINGHAM — Anticipated < factors affecting proposed In- < creases in municipal parking I rates will be brought to the at- , fpnHnn of the City Commission will be constructed on the L-tonight. shaped lot fronting Woodward Commissioners are consider- and Willits. big rate increases Monewy, starting diacusston af the Two hours were set aside for ®f providing most tf tin funds | proposed financing, city cam-debate. i for a proposed $1,174,800 park- mhslouers tealgfct wifi receive ing ramp. a report from J. H. Purkiss In declaring the structure a Jr., director offlaa nee for necessity two weeks age, they voted to assess only 18 per cent of the cost against downtown property owaera. Trade Group Nearer Collapse France Withdraws Envoy to Euromart BRUSSELS (UPI) — France withdrew its ambassador from the European Common Market today in a Gallic display of displeasure that brought the six-nation trade group even closer to collapse. The situation was so serious man officials that are expected to result in renewed Halo-German affirmation of their Intention not to bow to French agricultural demands. Italy is the current chairman of the market’s council of ministers and Italian Foreign Min- that Walter Hallstein, president ister Amintore Fanfani accora-of the market’s executive com- panied Saragat. minion, canceled plans to travel to Bonn in hopes on-the-spot talks in ~ would ease the crisis. President Charles de Gaulle had brought the market dose to collapse yesterday when he announced he was withdrawing a number of his representatives from Brussels in a farm price dispate. Today a French spokesman announced that Ambassador Jean-Marc Boegner, the French ambassador to the market, had been recalled to Paris. The move was considered serious because there was no statement he had been called home only for consultations. Hallstein had planned to travel to Bonn for talks with German and Italian officials on the impasse. Italian President Giuseppe Saragat arrived in Bonn today for talks with Ger- Atlanta NATIONAL WEATHER -r Showers, thundershowers are forecast for tonight to western Lakes area, upper and central Mississippi Valley, northeastern Plains, Texas Panhandle and western Kansas. Drizzle expected along northern Pacific Coast, Cooler weather expected for northeastern quarter of U. 8.; wanner in upper Mississippi Valley and northern Plains. Prince Is Unlikely to Get Rebuke LONDON UR — Political observers see little chance of the House of Commons even debating a motion to warn Prince Philip to keep quiet on political issues. Although the motion was signed by more than 30 Laborite legislators, leader? of both the Labor government and the ~ servative opposition were ported anxious to let the matter drop.__;____ The prince, husband of Queen Elizabeth II, has come under leftist criticism at home and African criticism in the commonwealth for counseling restraint in. the argument over Rhodesia’s future. The central African colony has internal self-government and the ruling white minority shows no sign of agreeing to the British government’s demands for a constitution promising the African majority” control ultimately. Asian and African mem-I bers of the Commonwealth want Britain to force the Rhodesian whites to accept such a constitution. TAKE IT SLOWLY In Edinburgh last week the prince suggested that negotia; tions on Rhodesia’s future should be taken slowly rather than “risk a blood bath and many other unpredictable results by forcing the pace.” -Philip added: “I think everybody recognizes that the ultimate result (African rule) is inevitable. But I think a few years here or there do not matter If we can achieve this result peacefully and quietly.” Philip’s Laborite critics considered tiiis a statement of personal political opinion such as modem British royalty is not supposed to make. The only, political statements allowed to the queen in public are those approved by the gov-ernment in power. Prince Philip’s position may be somewhat different since his precise constitutional position is(, not clear. Slayer Killed in Pittsburgh (Continued From Page One) body was found lying across Godfrey’s inside the ramshackle house. Police said McDonough or one of the two wounded officers hit Scott before he fled. Blood was found on some nearby stairs that led up a steep hill Into a wooded area overlooking the Monongahela River and the vast Jones & Laughlin steel works two miles north of Pittsburgh’s downtown. boycotted this meeting. SPLIT POSSIBLE France did not say if the Boegner recall was permanent. If so, the move could raise the possibility of a diplomatic split between. France and Belgium since he also is ambassador to Belgium. The absence of any officials of de Gaulle’s government effectively put the Common The glow of steel furnaces I Market into a deep freeze, cast a flickering orange light Ail important decisions re-over the scene as 200 policemen qnfre unanimous agreement ringed the area, about as big as1 *“ P—”* ®"* ^-------------- 10 city blocks. , CUT OFF POWER ' Hie proposed constitutional change, a compromise of differing versions previously ap-proved by each branch, whisked through the House last Thursday. The Senate has been expected to act quickly too. but a snag developed alien Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., and others contended language empowering a vice president to contest a pres-J ident’s ability to carry on was ambiguous. I However. Reoublican T eader Everett M. Dirksen said Friday be saw no reason whv the amendment should not be approved as it stands. San. Bhrh Bayh, D-Ind., floor manager of the measure, predicted its approval. MUST BE RATIFIED After Congress acts, a constitutional amendment must be ratified by three-fourths of the the city. While revenue projections for existing ncilities are fairly safe, Purkiss notes those for For other tots, the affected i additional facilities are baaed property owners’ share has been on the assumption that parking 40 per cent. .demands will increase sub- * * ★ stantially. The decision to decrease the * ★ * amount was based on the fact | increasing municipal parking that property owners already { spaces by 23 per cent will not have been assessed 48 per cent j necessarily generate more de- 800JIM Units Seen for Year (Continued From Page One) i ketlng of the best-styled and state legislatures before becom- . . ,h. inn pffw-tiv* The Pr-Wonf’. b^t-perinrmta* c,r _■ “* The crisis arose ever French demands that the Common Market nations subsidise agriculture. This would benefit French farmers who work the bulk of the market’s arable land. The other five members refused. There were immediate repercussions in member countries. A Dutch spokesman said Holland considers the French action in freezing the Common Markets activities “completely disproportionate” to developments at the last meeting. All market decisions must be unanimous and no work can be done without a French repre*. - _ . I Hi sentative. However, trade ex- Constitution provide that when a peris from the executive com- president is incapacitated or mission did meet today with a otherwise unable to discharge Nigerian trade delegate. France I *te powers of his office, the vice president shall become acting president. If a president notified Congress of his disability, the vice president would take over until the president sent word that he was able to resume his powers. ACTING PRESIDENT In case a president was unable'or unwilling to declare his disability, the vice president would become acting president if he and a majority of-the Cabinet, or a majority of such other ing effective. The President's signature is not required. One section of the proposed amendment provides that if the office of vice preoident becomes vacant, the president shall nominate a successor who would take office upon confirmation by a majority vote of both bouses of Congress. Other sections designed to plug a worrisome gap in the j by France, West Germany, Italy and the Benelux tries. Duquesne Light Co. was asked Officials in Brussels referred JL/UUUV4HIV U1KIH VW. WOO OOn^U j . ., _ , . to cut Off power so police would | f? French strategy as an not present good targets. A squad of officers wearing bulletproof vests and carrying submachine guns was sent into the area with lights to try to draw Scott’s fire. All they found was some padding from an auto seat that Scott apparently nsed to stop the bleeding of bio wound. Some K9 patrolmen and their dogs formed a skirmish line as dawn broke and started to move through the woods. Scott was perched on a board hi the croffch of a tree; a few feet above the ground and shielded from the two officers when Hin-temeyer and Schweinberg came on him. » FEET AWAY 'We were- about 25 feet away,” said Hintemeyer. He said the dogs may have sensed he was there but apparently did not see him until the patrolmen did. Simtt was wearing a T-shirt, soaked with blood. Police said the exact motive for Scott’s rampage haid not been learned. He apparently bought the rifle in the past few days. hi * Police said Godfrey had warned Scott to stay away from his daughter and had recently called Scott’s mother to complain. Scott bought the rifle in the past few days and was carrying it in the box it came in when he went to the house, officers said. Police said Scott had served ne in the Allegheny County workhouse for minor charges including disorderly conduct. He had once been arrested for robbery. Neighbors described him as quiet. They said he apparently was unemployed. McEtonough, a halfback, played for the Chicago Cardinals of the National Football League in 1839, the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1839-41, and the combined Cardinal-Steeler wartime team in 1944. United States, file building of a more reliable and safer ear and expansion nf existing denier service facilities. Discussing briefly the second point of his program, DeLorean added emphasis was going to be placed on areas dealing with reliability and safety, wee “Currently, in our home plant, we have 1,100 employes devoting full-time to assure that each car meets exact quality requirements,” DeLorean said. CONTROL STAFF “In other words, one out of every 15 manufacturing employes is engaged in inspection and reliability control.” He also promised Pontiac would continue to pioneer in the safety field by adding to such safety innovations as Wide Traek, the integral aluminum wheel and hob, and the articulated windshield wiper. a- a A As to dealer service facilities expansion, DeLorean said, “every step is being taken to encourage dealers to further ex- __________pand to meet the anticipated the president was unable to dis-1 customer demands of tomor-charge his duties. body as Congress might later provide for by law, sent a written declaration to Congress that A president could regain his powers by advising Congress that his inability no longer existed, unless this were challenged within four days by the vice president and a majority of the Cabinet or such other body as Congress provided. Such a dispute then would be settled by Congress. It would be required to assemble within 48 hours if jt were not in session. If Congress determined within 21 days by a two-thirds vote in both the Senate and the House that the president was unable to discharge his duties, the vice 'empty chair policy. They recalled that de Gaulle employed the same strategy in January 1963, when he blackjacked his trading partners into keeping Britain out of the Common Market. ACCEPTED VETO At the time, the five other members accepted the french veto because they feared a halt to Common Market progress would hurt their own prosperity. France has retained leadership of the trading bloc from that day. Last week, however. West Germany, Italy, Belgium, Hoi-land and Luxembourg turned down a demand for an agricultural policy which they felt favored French farmers. In turn, they demanded some political progress .toward a United Europe. DeGaulle, determined to preserve French independence, rejected his partners in the trad-1 Jr. had threatened him with a tog bloc. 1 knife and a barbeque fork. Currently, he said, one out of three Pontiac dealers is already in the process of expanding and modernizing his facilities. New Rains Cause Flooding in Kansas HAV8, Kan. (AP) - Heavy rains caused new flooding in Kansas today, this time to the north of the heavily battered Arkansas River basin. ....,, ■ . i flash flood at Hays sent president would continue to act I water ^eral feet deep into a nr*. » Otherwise the residential area Just four blocks as president, president would resume the powers and duties of his office. Killed by Patrolman DETROIT (AP)—Detroit patrolman Charles Norton shot and killed James Sabra, 53, Monday njght. Norton said Sabra and 33-year-old son, James Sabra from the main business district. Water was reported up to the tops of cars for a time. Hays received more than two inches of rain overnight. Several hundred residents were evacuated from their homes as the rains sent Lincoln Draw and Chetoiah Creek out of their banks. Both streams drain through the city, emptying into Big Creek. BUSINESS GROWTH “This demand is entirely dependent on growth or development of private businesses within the central business district,” Purkiss said. A , fr . h He commented that boosting only the rates for the parking ramp would be unfair to users of the facility and would tend to discourage them from parking there. “It would to some extent tend to encourage parkers to look for street meters or use other facilities, perhaps Complicating already congested traffic problems,” Purkiss said. U.S. Traffic Toll Sets Record for 3-Day Fourth (Continued From Page One) deaths. “More traffic fatalities may be counted during the final hows of the weekend,” he said. WWW "Motorists who delayed their start home are tired, in a rush,” he added. “They’re driving faster than conditions permit and they make mistakes.” FIVE STATES Traffic accidents in f 1 v a states — California, Missouri, New York, Ohio and Texas — accounted for more than one-third of the deaths. Fifty persons, were killed on California roads, 31 ia Missouri, 33 ia New York, 38 ia Ohio sad 27 ia Texas. No traffic deaths were reported in three states — Rhode Island, Delaware and Alaska. The District of Columbia also reported no traffic fatalities. WWW The, most serious accident took seven lives in Colorado Sunday. An Oklahoma crash took six lives. Crashes in South Carolina and New York each took five lives and Ohio reported three brothers killed in a single crash. The worst traffic, toll for any holiday period came nine years ago when 706 persons were killed during' 1 four-day Christmas observance. Truck Mishap Fatal WISCONSIN DELLS, Wis. (AP)—Donald E, Porter, 30, of Grand Rapids, Mich., was killed today when a truck be was driving ran off Interstate 90-94 near' here. Combined Force Hunts Cong in D Zone (Continued From Page One) patrol of Vietnamese mountain troops accompanied by two American advisers shout a mile from the Due Co special forces camp last night. At the same time the Viet' Cong fired a mortar barrage into the camp. UjS* * helicopters and F100 fighters moved in to strafe but apparently were too late to save the patrol. The camp was not sources reported ■ killed, were missing after the Meody fighting yesterday around the jungle outpost of Bi Gia, 338 miles northeast of Saigon. The sources said South Vietnamese losses were 28 dead, 39 wounded and 107 missing. Ba Gia, 19 miles from the Quang Ngai airstrip, was re-| ported quiet today after a mor- tar barrage before dawn. But strong Viet Cong forces were reported holding their positions in the area. » Air strike against suspected Communist concentrations near the post continued. A b a a t 188 government troops were left to defend the peat, 338 miles northeast of Saigon, after an estimated 888 to 1,56$ guerrillas overran it yesterday- Hie Viet Cong withdrew after two hours but blasted the remaining defenders with mortar and other fire throughout the! day and the night. The guerrillas also captured two 105mm howitzers. MOVEP FROM AREA Military sources said the guns had been reported dismantled and moved out of the area. There were fears the Communists would use the howitzers to shell the Qnang Ngai airstrip. Gen. Nguyen Chanh Thi, commander of the Vietnamese 1st Corps, told reporters he had requested U.S. Marines be sent to reinforce Ba Gia. A A,-' h He refused to send Vietnamese troops from Quang Ngai, saying they might run into ambushes. FIRED ON The heavy fire from mortars and recoiUess rifles prevented helicopters from bringing in affective reinforcements. “ Every one of the craft that landed was fired os, la one attempt to deliver more troops, only two of 18 helicopters managed to land. Hwy carried 16 soldiers. Associated Press photographer Eddie Adams, Who spent tRP hours at Ba Gia yesterday reported the - Vietnamese troops at the post were near panic when the two helicopters landed. TANGLED WRECKAGE They rushed to the ships, trampling the dead and wounded, and the crew had to fight them off. ★ A * ' The post was pockmarked with mortar craters and the tangled wreckage of a U.S. Army armed helicopter was strewn across an open piece of ground. A A ' A The helicopter, flown by Maj. Irwin Cockett of Koloa, Hawaii, was brought down by 50-caliber machine guns while attacking Viet Cong position. Cockett’s eopilot was Idlled. THREE SVICTOB *Simple-To-Operate *10 Key 4 Full Keyboard •Repeat Key »T otol/Sub-T of I Control JULY ADDING MACHINE SALESI MIDWEST TYPEWRITER MART 88 N. Saginaw St. ...(Next to Simms) FE 4-5788 TOTE PONTIAC PRE$S, TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1968 N Destination Moon ~ 1 U.S. Space Machinery Roaring Ahead (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first article in a three-part series on the V£. lunar program.) By AL ROSSITER JR. HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (OPl)-The ominous blasts of warning horns rumbling over the rolling hills of northern Alabama signaled the start of a new era in man’s climb tathe moon. * - * * The scene was the Marshall Space Flight Center — the no them peak of a crescentshaped string of southern space installations moving at ,1 u U speed toward landing men on the moon before 1970. Here, at the base that built the rocket that orbited America's first satellite seven years ago, the United States is developing the awesome boosters. needed for Project t polio. To the east, from the former sand barrens that have mushroomed into Cape Kennedy, the trip to the moon will begin. To the south and west lie assembly and testing points in Louisiana and Mississippi and the control center in Houston. ★ ★ * From Florida to Texas, the bases for America's moon program are moving ahead smoothly. Their growth has been nothing short of fantastic. Scientists are confident. Astronauts are well into their training programs for the space voyage less than five years away. FLASH OF FLAME It was here, after the alert had been sounded April 16, that the giant 7.5-million pound thrust Saturn-5 moonship launcher burst into life with a great flash of flame and clouds of smoke that billowed high into the sky. It was not the first test firing here. They have been go. Ing on for years. Bat it was the biggest and one of the It was the first time that Ml five engines oo the Saturn-5 first stage had been fired together using equipment Identical to the rocket that will send a three-man ship racing toward the moon from Cape Kennedy. ★ ★ ★ President Kennedy four years ago committed the nation to the ambitious |30 billion Apollo program. And his 1060 target date for the first manned lunar landing by Americans still stands. CAN MEET DATE To Dr. Wernher von Braun, the man heading Apollo’s Saturn rocket development here at Marshall, the date can be met. “Our schedule very definitely calls tor landing on the moon this decade,” Von Braun said after watching the Saturn-1, the first of the super boosters, score its ninth straight success May 21 at Cape Kennedy. . “I do not believe the Saturn-5 will be the pacing item,” he said confidiently. Marshall and its Michoud rocket manufacturing plant in' New Orleans and its test site at Hancock County, Miss., are making come true what once were dreams on a drawing board. END OF SERIES The Saturn-1 is nearing the end of its 10-shot test series with a perfect record. It proved that the basic Saturn theory of multiengined rockets works and it showed that high energy hydrogen-fueled upper stages are feasible. The Saturn-IB, first of the Saturns designed for three-man missions, recently completed ground tests here and is now being readied tor launch early next year at the cape. The Saturn-IB is scheduled to orbit three-man Ap-pollo craft within two years. And with the successful April II tost firing, tbs final aeries of ground tests on the biggest of them all—the Saturn-5 — is now moving ahead. The Saturn-5 first stage that is now undergoing static tests will remain locked in the concrete.and steel embrace of its firing stand for months of ground experiments. SECOND BOOSTER A second Saturn-5 booster with two hydrogen-fueled upper stages bolted to it will be mounted in a huge tower now nearing completion for an exhausting series of “shake” tests to make sure the 364-foot vehicle is strong enough to stand the stresses of launch. “We are very gratified with the way the testing is coining along,” Von Braun said in an interview. “So far, it’s moving so smoothly, it’s dull.” ■ May 'til It Shoo ’n Save At aim and Tomorrow, Wed., 1A.M. to 6 P.M. The Saturn-5 boosters to be used for lunar launches will be assembled in New Or lb an a. They will be tested at a new proving ground now nearing completion 38 miles north of New Orleans in Hancock County, Miss. ★ A ★ The first of the Saturn-5 sec* ond stages will be completed this fall with the first test fir- j ing scheduled for next January. The first boaster will be tested at the center in the summer of 1966. A A - A ■ After being test-fired, the Saturn second stage will be shipped by barge to Cape Kennedy. The first stage will be barged back to New Orleans to be refurbished and then shipped to the launch site by a ship traveling through the Panama Canal. (Tmnorrtw: Tlw launching point.) Semi Annual Clothing And Furnishings SALE Begins Tomorrow NOW IS THE TIME FOR BIG SAVINGS! The Style Corner of Pontiac SAGINAW AT LAWRENCE . <272 W. A0APLE-—BIRMINGHAM WHAT-TO-WEAR WITH GOLDEN SKIN.. 3 LITTLE BARES by max Factor new bare-hugs of color for sun-warmed faces and fingertips This is bareness with flair! Not too hot nottoo bold"... Just three wisps of color to wear with golden skin. Don’t shy off. Go hunting todey forth* , new (and wild!) young bares. Mocha Bare, Papaya Bar* and Baby Bare in' summery new Hi-Society Refills $1.10 and matching NaH Satin 759. SIMMS"! OPEN FRI. 'TIL 9 WE PAY THE PARKING OPEN FRI. TIL 9 Shop Simms Camera Dept First For All Electronic Equipment CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNT SylyanijLor General Electric 12’s Flashbulbs 79’ Realtone ‘Comet’ Pocket Radio Compare mm D 0 m d*® $10.95 Model No. 1887 Hi power radio, complete with case, batter/- and earphone. Powerful Wide rong«T reception. $1.00 holds in layaway. Smith-Corona Electric Adding Machine 7998 Electric plug-in odding machine odds, *. subtracts and multiplies. Totals 1c under fARlYINIWEfK Sizzling Savings For Ml The Smart Simms Shoppers Sine* 1934, Simms hoe educated Pontiac Folk* in what** a bargoin-cmd we know you know a bargain when you lee on*. So Simms naturally l*ade the way with bargain*. Proof? Look at that* today and Wednesday specials li*t«d hetnw Riahts reserved to limit all quontittos. __ Discounts All Over the Store-Simms, 98 N. Saginaw Specials Today and Tomorrow Only Sale Ladies' Sportswear a Ladies’ Jackets Ladies’ Toppers B. Ladies’ Culottes 0. Ladies’ Knee-Knockers A. Pin stripe Colons*# Arnel jocks! with button front in peach or blue in Maes 10 to 16. B. ladles’ culottes in blue and white stripe or pin (tripes, ripper or button front, die* 10 to 12. C. knit tope In pullover* or cordigons In prW*,> stripes, solid* in sizes S-M-L. D. Knee-Knockers in white duck, buckle style with side ripper, sizes 8-10-12. Items not exactly as pictures. — Main Floor Ladies’ Capris or Bermudas American Made Wash ’n Wear Capri slacks in cone spun blends—Fortel, Polyester, Cotton, f Twills, cotton stretch in grey, blue, green or brown colors. \ Sizes 32 to 38. Bermuda shorts in cottons or rayon and cotton. Green, blue, block colors In sizes 32 to 38.—Main Fleer Pay More? What for? Simms is Right Here In Pontiac. Just Arrived! Bamboo Shades £29 Imagine^Heavy STAINLESS STEEL at This Prieo 9-Pc. Cookware Sets $19,95 value Stainlets steel set 'hat 2-qt. sauce pan, 10" chicken fryer, 8" skillet and 4-qt. dutch oven- —. complete with, covers. For better waterless cooking. — 2nd Floor |0U Cuts Easily to Any Size and Shape Custom Rubber Matting 6-FT. Roll for- Dozens of uses, — To beautify, protect, reduce noise or glamorize. For cabinet and table tops, stairs ond landings, window sills, shelfs, etc. Cleans easily too. Choice of colors. $1.19 value. M 2nd Floor Si Glamoroes ‘RUBBERMAID’ Poly Vanity Wastebaskets $2.00 value — Unbreakable, rust-dent-proof basket adds a decorator touch to any room. 9Kt" dia., 1046” high. No. 2640 with life-like corsage. — 2nd Floor 78* Large 10-Inch Enameled Fry-Pans Marble finished'enamel-pan Tor home, cabins, cottage* and camp->ing. Large 10-inch diameter. Easy to dean enamel pan in colors. m SIMMSJL Bigger Ulm—nts Always v* FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1005 Tot's Arm Freed From Pipe | ARLINGTON, V*. (AP) ~ Anne Marie Russik) was playing In the wading pool at the Ft. Myer Officer’# Club yesterday utoen she spied a drain pipe. if it ★ The Sfe-yearold tot etude her arm inside. When she tried to remove it, the arm stayed put. lifeguards tagged at the arm. Firemen were called from nearby Arlington. They failed, tee, bat called for a Washington fin track equipped to dig up the pipe. Air hammers removed the pipe from the concrete. Other tools shortened the pipe to make it portable. ■ • *1' ' •** » %r? ' ’* Then Anne Marie and the pipe were taken to the base piymhing shop where her arm was freed. * ★ ★" . After a stop at the base dispensary, where doctors found no injuries, Anne Marie and her parents, Navy Capt. and Mrs. Alfred D. Russfllo of Arlington, headed home some 2% hours after the episode began. INSURANCE BY Thatcher, Patterson means you get protection for your boat. If you should hove an accident, sink or damage your boat, immediate claim ^ service would salvage or completely repair your boat. In a case of Ion your boat would be totally replaced. THATCHER-HOTHKORL INC. "Since 1889 — Tailored Policies, Total Protection" 711 Community National Bank Building, Pontiac, Michigan FESeml 2-9224 WOodward 1-4656 Spectator* At Scene Where Noted Playboy Died Arrest Arizona Airman for Painting Signs TUCSON, Arte. UR — An airman at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base painted Nasi swastikas, Confederate 4kg» and abbreviations of 10 Southern states on a section of the flight line, over the Fourth of July, base officiate said. ,a w ★ They said military police picked up the airman and he admitted the work. He is to be questioned by the base's office of special investigations, authorities said. *1,000 to *5,000 lA *r 2*41 i ROME i MORTGAGE t SMALL monthly sM^ymentsi « ★ | CREDY1, L1FB I INSURANCE I AT NO EXTRA COST! Cash when neededl Without obligation, lee and talk wftk Me. Merle Vote or Mr. Buckner, wbo bare been loaning money to hundred! of people in Pontiac during the peat 40 years. All borrow-era will teatify to receiving fair, honeet. end courteous treatment. (Do not take a chance dealing with stranger! or fly-by-night lender*.) T hen you deal here, yon receive the full amount of your loan in cadi at once. No papers to sign until the loan ia closed. No charge for Inspection, appraisal or survey. No charge for ahetract. title search or title insurance. Borrow from us to consolidate your debts, to pey off the balance you owe on your contract. to pay taxes to make home repair* or improvements, or for any other good pur-., pose. See ns today. SPECIAL Free Parking on county lot comer N. Saginaw and W. Huron St*, each time you bring to our office a Ml monthly payment. Free Parking whenever you apply for an approved loan or renewal. Bring us your parking ticket to bo stomped. VOSS and BUCKNER 209 NATIONAL BUILDING « FE 4-4729 ' Police Theorize• Fatigue Factor in Playboy Death Back Lawman inlA Shooting LOS ANGELAS <* — Telegrams iron* throughout $B nation ale pouring into police headquarters in sympathy with a police lieutenant who officers say shot a man he believed to be one of a gang that raped his daughter. Officers said Lt. Thomas R. O’Neal, 41, fired three shots into Carl E. Norman, It, Friday in a Log Angeles police station in the belief that Norman raped his lAyear-old daughter, Air-ley Dianne. Norman was booked on suspicion ef possession of marijuana but subsequently. was exonerated of any involvement with the rape. He is in serious condition at Los Angeles Connty General Hospital, doctors said today, Lt. O’Neal has been suspended from the farce and faces arraignment Thursday’ on a charge of assault with intent to commit murder. that, a trust fund, has been established for O’Neal and that be also has received numerous offers of assistance for the offl- Former Editor Die* HOLLAND, Mich. (AP) - M. M. (Kro) Kesterson, 66, wbo retired is managing editor of the Grand Rapids Press in 1963, died Sunday after suffering a coronary thrombosis. He joined the Press in 1925 and was named managing editor in 1946. 2 at Wo J Quit-Fast ATLANTA (UPI) - Assistant cashier Herndon Adams, making a routine cheat of a hank ckned for toe Independence Day holiday, walked in on a burglar yesterday. :t. a -★ a “What are you doing here?’’ the burglar demanded. “Why, I work here,” Adams replied. The burglar fled, abandoning his tools. PARIS (AP) - Police speculated today that fatigue may have been a factor in the death of Porfirio Rubirosa, the international playboy whose sports car smashed into a tree as he was heading home from an all-night party, o ★ a The 56-year-old ex-diplomat and former husband of heiress Doris Duke and Barbara Hutton died in an ambulance after his Ferrari clipped a parked car and rebounded into a tree, police said. He was flung against the wheel and windshield. The driver of the parked car and a passing cyclist gave first aid and called an arnbu-lane. The accident, in the Bote de Boulogne, was not far from the spot where Prince Aly Khan, close friend of Rubirosa, died in an automobile collision in May 1960. * ; * * Rubirosa had s p e n t Sunday night celebrating the victory of his polo team over a team led by his friend Elie de Rothschild. VICTORY PARTY The party began at “New Jimmy’s,” a fashionable discotheque in Montparnasse. Rubiro-sa’s wife, French actress Odile Rodin, left at 5 a.m., saying she was tired. Rubirosa and several friends went on to a place across from the Hotel George V to continue the celebration. In the dawn hours, Rubiro-sa drove off alone in his convertible. Rubirosa, the son of a Dominican general, started his career of headline loving and living in 1932 when he married Fk>r de Oro Trujillo, daughter of Dominican dictator Rafael Trujillo. Trujillo made him a government minister and then a diplomat, and sent him to Berlin and then to Paris. ★ * a , Rubirosa and Trujillo’s daughter were divorced in 1937, but he fell out of the dictator’s favor only once, in 1953, when tobacco heir Richard Reynolds and society golfer Robert Sweeny named him correspondent in their divorce suits. Rubiros’ diplomatic appointment was “He’s still in a dazed condition,” said a police spokesman. The spokesman added that “scores of sympathetic telegrams” arrive daily, "offering canceled, hut it was reinstated, help and even money.” at the end of the year when he Max Herman, a former detec-married Miss Hutton. I five and O’Neal attorney, said ALUMINUM PATIO LIMITED TIME ONLY NO MONEY DOWN 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! AMT SIXE UP TO AND INCLUDING HUGE 10* X 20’ CALL TODAY FE 4-4418 PATIO SLAB HOT INCLUDED HOMEOWNERS THIS FREE HKTRIC CAN 0KNER r COMPLETELY INSTALLED Lenar Jobe Pregestiaeaety Priced VALUE CORSOO. M® foe y«»2r l&El ftcid* Mountain Valley Water of Ota HOT as*HOS, ASKAN&AS wwjMMaryjFE 2*5655 Jim’s Market ^ n mattars at haalth always « THE PQKTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY a, 1905 Find U.S. Is No Paper Tiger NATO Appears to Be Uniting Policies (EDITOR’S NOTE: Following is the second of two, reports by Leon Detmen, NEA’s foreign news analyst, written • after a two-month tour of European capitals.) By LEON DENNEN ' NEW YORK - (NEA) - Despite some anxieties over United States policy in Viet Nam and the Dominican Republic, a majority of Europeans interviewed by this writer are impressed by President Johnson’s determine ation to check Red aggression in Viet Nam and Communist subversion in Latin America. There is not a single member-nation of NATO that backs French President de Gaulle’s anti-American policies. Not is there a single European leader, except de Gaulle, who wants the United States to poll rat of Europe and NATO or to negotiate with R n s s i a the question of German unity or other European problems with United States participation. The global conflict between Russia and Red China which has split the Communist world into two hostile camps has con-siderably reduced the Red Army’s immediate military threat to Europe. * * These are highlight Impressions gained from a tour of western Europe. LITTLE LOSS Americans who read The New York Times or Walter Lipp-mann’s columns will be surprised to learn that the United States suffered little loss in prestige because of President Johnson’s policies in Viet Nam and the Dominican Republic. Americans were never liked in some countries of Europe, especially in France. They are still hot liked. But today the United States is respected by the European man-in-the-street. Also, for the first time since the JKorean War, Europe’s diplomats, politicians and intellectuals, are awakening to the fact that the United States is, I found this to be true of all NATO countries, Including France. But it Is especially true of West Germany, the strongest nation in the Western alliance. FRIENDS OF U. S. Chancellor Ludwig Erhard, a Christian Democrat, and Socialist Willy Brandt, Mayor of West Berlin, will run in West Germany’s general elections in September as friends and supporters of the United States— and not of President de Gaulle. AO major German parties are convinced that no progress can be made in any negotiations with Russia oh (tor-man unity unless the United States supports the Western initiative. ' In fact, because of President Johnson’s unambiguous foreign polity, NATO, after a period of dissension and uncertainty, appears to be closing ranks again. it it ★- Even President de Gaulle, despite his anti-American obsession and antidehivlan ideas of national grandeur^ is realistic enough to know on which side his bread is buttered. He makes his overtures to Russia and Red China confident that should any serious crisis arise the United States will always come to help, out of American self-interest. < • B a t flic French President, according to some of his closest associates, has a healthy respect, if little admiration, for President Johnson. He regards him as the first pragmatic and tough politician to occupy the White House since Franklin D. Roosevelt ’ «r ★ *' De Gaulle also knows that Western military leaders are convinced that NATO countries Severely Burned Mother Leaves Hut for Hospital LOS ANGELES (*) - For two months, a young Mexican mother, burned over 70 per cent of her body, took aspirin, sat through 115-degree heat in her'mud hut in a remote village, and waited for help to come. ★ ★ ★ It did, in the form of five doctors who spent the Independence Day weekend flying mercy missions into Mexican villages where there is no medical aid. Now Ramona France de Portola, who spent those two months in an upright position, is lying down — here at White Memorial Hospital where doctors give her a 50-50 chance of surviving. Dr. Robert Lawson, an Upland, Calif., dentist who helped bring her north, described her suffering from third-degree bums as “a living hell.” * * * “Since a stove set her clothes afire May 5, she lived in an upright position in unbelievable pain in the hut where temperatures rose to 115 degrees,” said Lawson. 'A REAL MIRACLE’ “It’s a real miracle she’s alive.” Dr. Lawson and four other doctors found Mrs. de Por- SHOP WAITE'S MON., THUR., FRI. and SAT. TIL 9 Amel Triacetate Print Jersey Dress $1499 Try this for a carefree summer, colorful print sosh dress with contrast . piping in nosy corn Arnel Trie male Jersey. Ratos first in comfort, wrinkle free all day. Drip dry and little or no ironing. Brown, bfoo; 12-20. 14to-22Vi. presses... Third Floor tola Saturday in the village of Tesapaco, Sonora. The doctors are members of Liga International, a volunteer group of doctor-pilots. ★ ★ ★ Fearing her first airplane ride and reluc^uit to leave her 2-year-old child, Mrs. de Portola postponed her departure a day until her husband, Humberto, 25, convinced her it was for die best, Lawson said. PRIMITIVE STOVE The woman was burned on the Mexican Cinco de Mayo holiday when she tried to light her primitive stove for her family's holiday meal. Alone when her clothes caught fire, sbe rolled on the hut’s dirt floor to extinguish the flames. Her husband found her unconscious. ★ ★ * “She was propped on the bed, and she apparently moved very little until we found her,” said Lawson. “Any movement of her body brought* excruciating pain. Only a very brave woman with a strong will to live could have survived it." can defend themselves even without France. NUCLEAR UMBRELLA Ifce French president will thus pursue a go-it-alone policy and {day follow-the-leader as long as he has the protection of the American nuclear umbrella. But be understands only too well that without the power of The United States France will merer ly be a sitting duck for Russia’s Red army. In view of pome of de Ganile’s associates, the F r e a c k president is waiting far a face-saving gesture from President Johnson before adopting a more conciliatory policy toward NATO and the United States. Perhaps the most significant fact-in Europe today is the marked decline in Soviet prestige. The Red army’s threat is still present. Nor is there any doubt that the Russians and their East German puppets will continue to make trouble in Berlin which they always exploited for purposes of political blackmail. feut Moscow’s new faceless rutes, plagued by mounting political and economic difficulties inside the Red World, are not likely to challenge openly — in the immediate future at least-Westem positions in any important area of Europe. The Russians are sticking, in the face of strong Red Chinese disapproval, to the doctrine that war is not inevitable and that outstanding East-West differences should be settled by negotiation. In the view of Western spe-| cialists on communism, the Soviet leaders will continue to pay I at least lip service to this doctrine as long as the disarray in Red ranks continues and Russia must prepare to defend her | 4,000-mile-long frontier with Red China. * * ★ Thus, the immediate future in Europe holds no promise of peace, nor the intensification of the cold war, but rather the prospect of a * long breathing spell. A RARE OPPORTUNITY We need two sales Consultants, male. They must have a late model car. They must like to work with people.' They will be properly trained. They will receive much better than average income. They will be working with the Bettone Family, world’s largest exclusive hearing instrument manufacturers. No experience necessary. No age limit. Established territory for right party. Inquire at . . . Beltone Hearing Aid Center 138 N. Saginaw St. Pontiac 334-7711 Beltone CHURCH BONDS Secured by First Mortgage For Brochure or Information Call 674-2650 SHOP WAITE'S MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NITES TIL 9 CVEHY FLOOR AIR-CONDITIONED SHOP TONITE 'TIL 9 Semi-Annual SHOE SALE i Fabulous Values Choose From These Famous Makes Life Stride, Air Step, Joyce and other National Brands Value* to 16.99 *8.90 and *10.90 ChooM yours from this wida assortment of famous make shoes. Choice of Spring and Summer styles In high and mid heels. Black, Bone, Red Patent, Black Calf or While Patents. Sixes 5 to 10. N and M widths. , * Woman's Shoes... Streat Boor TOMORROW TONITE 0 WEDNESDAY ONLY! reatMaelMt four Smm •SAVE *6.00 PANEL END FULL SIZE CRIB Regular 25.00 0 3-Posit on steel link fabric springs * 3 twirl balls .for baby to play with FULL SIZE INNERSPRING CRIB MATTRESS, Rag. 8.99..., »6’ $1900 YOUR CHOICE-HIGH CHAIR OR SHOPPER:. P T* {Pj Reg. 17.95 and 18.95 $1266 High Cholt . . . Chromed tubular Peel with stainless metal tray. 3-Position foot-rert, Converts to |unfor chair. / ShoppSir... Chroma plated tubular steel with reclining bock. Swivel wheels, 'canopy, basket, troy and ,. Second floor Spacious Dresser WARDROBE Chrome Plated Tubular Steel WALKER Reg. 25.00 *18 97 Regular 6.99 $5 66 Table top when open measures 34x18 inches. Top has strap to hold baby down. Folds up to a space-saving 18x18". Charge It. Infants'.. \ Second Floor Heavy chrome plated tubular steel frame. Helical springs for smooth jumping action. Extra wida wheel ’ span for safety plus. Extended hand bar with forge plastic play beads. Smart, navy blue reinforced nylon. Infants'... Second Floor y THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, JULY «. 1965 HAKOLD A. FITZGERALD Disunity and Misery Communism’s Allies In evaluating the Free World's measures against the incursion of mnrimiinifim in countries around the world, those unversed are often misled by the comparatively small number of Communists Involved and inclined to wonder whether the need for American intervention is indeed justified. A good answer lies in the time-proved adage that an organized minority can invariably lick an unorganized majority. ★....★....★ Where communism moves into a country for a takeover, it is always well organized with well-defined objectives. The country into which it moves is often faction-split, with the populace either poorly Informed or indifferent about the power play afoot. desk is a smash with customers and clients. But a big burly guy in the shipping room has applied for the receptionist job and his aptitude tests show he could handle it. Does he get it? • You are running a barber shop. A cute little manicurist is a barrel of fun. But you know.in > your heart that a middle-aged , porter in the building, who wants the available manicurist's job, could wield the nail file and scissors just as well as the gal and could also talk baseball and the races with the customers. What do you do? eSuppose you are head of a young ladies’ college. A former big-time football star applies for the job of house mother at one of the dormitories. His reputation and prestige are great and the young ladies aren’t complaining. Is the job his? it ★ -* ★ But at least one decision is still David Lawrence Says: Van Pontiac Take Prid in Display of I recently read an article on segregation which pointed out Mississippi as the state which is out of step with all Others in its enlightenment. I wonder how much pride we in Pontiac can take in the fact that the recently elected Negro member of the Pontiac school board has been the recipient of numerous threatening letters, has had a rock thrown through his window, and must have an armed guard in his House to protect his family? ★ ★ * Dr. Robert Turpin is a fine professional man who rendered national service, is a university graduate, the father of four children, and a participant In dVic affairs with a sincere desire to serve for the betterment of our schools. His wife has also been active in many civic projects and Is a university graduate. ■ . ★ ★ it Why must we in Pontiac show our bigotry in not accepting these fine people at the face value of their worth, without displaying the badge of ignorance and prejudice for one of a different race? JUSTICE FOR ALL Youth Need Education, Not Vacations There should be no school vacations. We Americans should know that the key to world peace lies in the education of our young people. A vacation does nothing to meet this need. We must abandon this backward belief and start thinking about the advancement of our children. LUDWIG VON BOTCH Warning Buzzer For example, there are reportedly but 600 to 1,000 Communists among the Dominican Republic’s population of 3.5 million. But the country was in a fair way of being gobbled up by the Reds had not the U.S. stepped in. , Similarly, U.S. experts estimate that fewer than 1,000 Communists succeeded in taking over and holding power in Guatemala from 1050 to 1954, until a counter revolution ousted them. Guatemala has 3 million inhabitants. In 1958, Cuba’s 7-million population couldn’t cope with the 12,000 organized Communists, and Castro took over. , Currently, the Communist party is working an old tactic in British Guiana-working behind a "front” organization. There, leadership of the largest political organization — the People’s Progressive Party — Is in the hands of a few Communists. ★ ★ ★ We’ll conclude these observations with another apt axiom: An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. ’How to’ Tips to Grads Old Hat Still Stylish Review of a dozen or so commencement talks delivered by important, distinguished persons in the last few weeks reveals that the gist of their advice to the graduates is about as foUows: o Whatever you do, at work or at play, give it everything you have. You don’t win success by half-hearted effort. • While ability is of course all-important, it rarely is enough without dependability, loyalty and dedication. • While it is true that things are pretty well messed up aU over the world, then still is unlimited opportunity for achievement and success; in fact, the worM is crying for leadership and new ideas. ★ ★ ★ There is nothing new or startling in this advice and cynics may write it off as trite and corny. But it does have one thing going for it. It is true. New Hiring Law Seen Scrambling Sex Appeal Employers who enjoy wrestling with personal problems can have a ball with the new Federal Fair Employment Practices law. The law is aimed at eliminating employe discrimination not only in terms of race or color, but of sex. Men and women are now to be treated exactly the same, period. So the bosg can make a fun game out of such puzzlers as: • A curvy blonde on the reception easy for the employer. He doesn’t have to give a male employe time off to have, a baby. But is it really fair not to? The degree to which people have a good time during a weekend holiday is closely commensurate with the number of accidental deaths that occur during the period. Big Battles Still Facing Congress By HARRY KELLY WASHINGTON (AP) - With a full six months of work behind it, Congress still faces some of its biggest battles on domestic legislation amid the continued debate on U.S. policies in the Viet Nam war. The White House’s January hopes for a midsummer adjournment on Capitol Hill faded long ago. Not that Congress has been sleeping at the switch. Presideat Johnson has piled on a heavy load and is already talking abont next year. So far Congress has enacted three of - his top priority items: excise tax reduction, federal aid to- secondary schools and aid to the Appalachia area. ★ * ★ Despite some sound and fury Congress is almost certain to approve the President’s request for a voting rights bill, a program of health care for the aged, an urban affairs department, housing and higher education bills and a 'proposed constitutional amendment on presidential disability. LEGISLATIVE MACHINERY Some of these are well along the road to final action. Many other measures have been acted on or are progressing through the legislative machinery., Although the Democrats have top-heavy majorities to both the Rouse and Senate, taking the suspense oht of much . of the congressional tugging and banting, there have been indications that the road ahead will not be entirely smooth. The administration is preparing for some fighting over five of Johnson’s proposals—the most controversial of which is a bill to extend and revise farm programs. Others already catching plenty of heat are Johnson’s call to amend the Taft-Hartiey Act to strip states of the authority to outlaw the union shop; to expand coverage of the federal minimum wage; to abolish the natural origins quotas of the immigration law; and to increase benefits and set up federal standards on unemployment compensation. MAY BE SET ASIDE Some of these may have to be set aside until next year. ★ A * Johnson hasn’t taken a public stand on the proposed constitutional amendment aimed at diluting the impact of the Supreme Court’s "one man, one vote" ruling on-legislative apportionment. Unless they can find the votes—and they haven’t yet— to defeat the proposed amendment which requires a two-thirds majority for passage, some Senate liberals have threatened to filibuster. Verbal Orchids to- , Mr. and Mn. Roy Gillespie of Goodrich; 55th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Lena M. Miller of 36 Union; 90th birthday. Mrs. Cora Cheat of 51 Newberry; 83rd birthday. Could Dramatize July 4 Better WASHINGTON - Was Independence Day celebrated properly? News dispatches tell of disorders at crowded resort areas and excesses of all kinds, including careless d r 1 v* ing on the high-^ ways. How many ofl the millions of| citizens who are given the LAWRENCE right to vote can read or understand the words of the Declaration of Independence itself? There’s an even more important question that might well be asked: How should the occasion of America’s famous pronouncement on the right of self-determination of peoples have been celebrated? A golden opportunity was missed by failihg to dramatize and publicize throughout the world the immortal principles written in the document proclaimed 189 years ago by the founding fathers. WWW Condensed into.simple language, the Declaration of In-dependence could have been applied to the situations existing among the oppressed peoples of every continent in the world. PERTINENT TODAY The rules of international and national conduct contained in the Declaration are in every sense pertinent today. If these were taken to heart by the peoples ef those countries now living under dictatorships, the whole world might rid itself of the perennial fear of aotocratic governments which threaten the peace. Although the Declaration of Independence enumerated the basic reasons for initiating a revolution against the British crown, our forefathers also outlined a philosophy that teaches a significant lesson to malcontents who are impatient oven with representative processes and seek to undermine them, notwithstanding the fact that the exsisting machinery provides an orderly means of redress, w w w The following excerpt, rarely quoted abroad, is pertinent: "Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes, and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are suffers We, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpation, pursuing invariably the same object, evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it to their right, it to their duty, to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security." SUMMONS TO ACTION Translated into many languages, these and other passages ki the Declaration of Independence could become a most powerful summons to con- certed action by oppressed peoples everywhere. This could have been and still caa be to them the true meaning of a worldwide independence dty. All sorts of leaflets stressing these points could have been dropped from planes circling the earth. The “Comsat" mechanism, which permits instantaneous contact with all parts of the world by radio, could have been utilized effectively. Communication facilities of many kinds are available. The necessary funds for this worldwide missionary effort would have been provided by Congress if there had been a leadership by citizens’ groups. Money to appropriated annually hr the “Voice of America,” but no activity carried on by that division of the U.8. Information Agency could accomplish more for the benefit of mankind than a campaign giving a timely explanation and emphasis to the enduring words of the Declaration of Independence. ‘All This in the Name of Christian Unity’ You know a smart gentleman, whom he normally is, should never pick on anybody’s daughter; but especially n6t when she’s the President’s, and just turned eighteen and only in search of the truth as a “young adult” sees it. ★ * * Bishop Pike was an almighty-mite. Man did he nibble dinosaur meat with a jackknife! He spit, he swore, he ripped, he tore. You see he was mad over who should—and when—and how many times—throw her in the water. And in the name of Christian unity yet! I can hear the chosen chuckle endlessly. HARRY J. WENZELL 1461 OAKWOOD The Better Half Bob Considine Says: Manned Space Launches Will Never Become Jaded NEW YORK - Some newspapers put out special editions commemorating, let’s say, the bad little compound fracture suffered by the Liberty Bell on that otherwise happy July 4. But not the Cocoa (Fla.) Tribune, in whose folds I am proud to ap-pear, even CONSIDINE when writing cross things about that boom area of the space age. The Trib to about to celebrate the 15th anniversary of the first launching from Cape Canaveral. Happened in mid-July 1958. The first launching was a Bumper, a captured German V2 with a .WAC Corporal on top. It was all pretty profound for that time. Today that whole assembly could be strapped to the side of a Titan HI or the many-rocket-ed Saturn, which is known as Clusters Last Stand, and none of the observers at the press site would notice it I’ve witnessed all the manned shots from the cape, beginning with Alan Shepard’s lob. This is a sequence which not only never jades but, if . anything, increases to stupefying tension. With each new Gemini mission we dose in on the terminal of JFK’s great dream to get to the moon and hack safely by the end of tbe decade. We assign not only the wizards we call astronauts but now we turn to trained scientists, civilian types. One day we’ll send up a poet to do justice to the stunning spectacle below. Over the years I’ve covered just about every realm of man’s activity on earth. But a reporter, I find, becomes more emotionally involved with covering the space effort than with any other endeavor. One gets to knew the principals, the families, the industry people who bet their shirts that this or that will work on schedule, the public relations people who contemplate hara-kiri when their products blow a fuse, the people wha come to the baches to watch, the re- porters who talk shop through the night above the roar of the jukes. The Cocoa Trib is a lucky newspaper, born into a stretch of land thqt to lifting tbe eyes of all mankind toward the stars. "It says: ’You are an absent-minded dreamer, and if we told you your weight you’d just forget it to two minutes anyway’.’ In Washington: Leaders Disagree on GOP Rift WASHINGTON (NBA) - A handful of the most seasoned Republican professionals are saying privately that the dto-array in their party-is of the^ gravest order. In their view, neither, moderates the conserve tives come well at tjtli critical mo- BI06SAT ment when the party has the lode of an underprivileged minority. One grizzled veteran whose personal conservative credentials are unimpeachable deplores the formation of Barry Gddwater’s Free Society Association as a "bad deal" and j adds: "We’re to a hell of a fix. We can’t live with Barry and we can’t live without him. He’s got maybe five to six million followers, and he’s got all those rich characters.” This same source berates some conservative businessmen for what he considers gross po-1141c a I ineptitude. He brands their attitudes as highly damaging to Republican prospects at tbe polls. ★ A * (Curiously, similar caustic criticism of such businessmen was voiced to this reporter at the height of the 1964 campaign by e Goldwater manager heavily dependent upon their support.) The rival moderates, however, are wianteg no contrasting praise from the tough GOP professional!. Comments -one flinty moderate: “Some of these dopes on our side couldn’t get through a township meeting.” A * A The biggest charge laid upon tbe moderates to that they are lost in their own parochial concerns and are no nearer to forming a solid front than they were in their disastrous attempts of 1964. One moderate leader whose hopes were high in March for a better co-ordinated effort to now muttering disconsolately. These dark impressions of toe “Republican condition’’ are not, to be sire, found everywhere to party circles. At the GOP National Committee meeting here, a canvass I took among leaders to two-fifths of the states disclosed a fair number who say the party to stabilizing Itself for a big recovery try to 1616. Key figures in such states as Connecticut, New Jersey, Delaware, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri and Kansas argue that either moderate or "traditional conservative" Republicans hold control against tbe more rigidly conservative Goldwater ele- The Associated Pm) Is mHIM exclusively to Vw vs* tar rapubll-caHsa m an heal nows printed in Ms nmtepaper^as well as all AP Tha Pontiac Press b delivered bp carrier tar SO twill a week; where milled In Oakland, Genesee. Up *■ ■“'* -Lapeer ajM* Conversely, Tom Stagg Jr., Louisiana’s national committeeman, contends that the political machinery which nominated Goldwater for president in 1964 "has not been dismantled" and will operate again to cover what-. ever candidate Barry blesses form Nevertheless, behind these occasional confident assurances is heard the insistent drone of the truly veteran professionals who report the state of their party. They stop just stout of accusing their less practiced party colleagues of not knowing what the game is all about, or not facing the full depth of the party’s plight. Jgj:,' A it While the arch-conservative Goldwaterites are thought by one professional to be only “mumbling on the fringes” at toe moment, it to widely felt that their attitudes have hardened since the 1964 defeat and that they threaten future action ranging all the way from mere nuisance to attempted veto over major party decisions. Not‘me ef tbe top "eld hands” believes ‘this problem has bees adequately dealt with by toe party. They fault traditional conservatives and of inaction. To the veteran leaders, Gold-water’s new Free Society Association to symbolic of the unsolved dilemma. One of these, ripped into by a Goldwater man for daring to criticize toe FSA, exploded: "You had your chance. You had your run. Now go away and leave us alone.” 4 SEVEN Foreign News Commentary Algeria-Cuba Diplomatic Break Due? By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Newt Analyst Algeria’s new regime may break off diplomatic relations with Fidel Castro of Cuba. Hie close friendship which existed between) Castro and the] ousted Ahmed Ben Bella has] suffered vere blow as suit of the dependent icy course, tins new strong* man, Hon a ' Boumedienne. NEW80M ,4 ★ - ♦ Already, Algeria has closed the offices of the Cuban news agency for circulating a speech by Castro attacking the Algiers coup. Boumedienne is expected to follow up the move with a break of diplomatic relations with Havana. LESS INTELLIGENCE Military men in Kuching, Sarawak, are not particularly happy with the Malaysian government’s decision to resettle re- mote villagers away from the border with Indonesia. The villagers have long been a prime source of information on the movements of Indonesian intruders. Loudest complaint is from U. Gen. W. C. Walker,’ former director of Borneo operations. BEN BELLA FUTURE The new Algerian government has not dedded'When or whether to put ousted president Ahmed Ben Bella on trial publicly for treason and dictatorial acts. The principle of such a trial has been adopted. But there is sufficient pro-Ben Bella sentiment in the country to make a public show trial risky in- the near future. Meanwhile, the government is paving the way by an intensive propaganda campaign against the cult of the popular idol and one-man ruler. WILSON’S BRIDGES British Prime Minister Harold Wilson’s moves in recent weeks to build economic bridges with Europe are being received cooly by Comrpon Market countries and their executives in Brussels. The six-nation community considers the proposals made so far are too vague and that it can wait for more specific offers. Since both France and West Germany face elections this year, few observers belive there can be any real bridge-building attemps until 1966 at the earliest. WHISKER CLOSE The Philippine presidential race between incumbent Dioeds-do Macapagal and Senate president Ferdinand E. Marcos is nearly five months away but already it appears whisker close. Marcos predicts he will win by at least one million votes (out of eight million to be cast). His chief basis for optimism is that he is an Ilocano. This clannish linguistic group lives in thickly populated Luzon Islands and Marcp’s supporters say up to 90 per cent of them will vote for him. Despite this, Macapagal is still rated a dime thin favorite to win although no incumbent has been reelected since independence in 1946. Newport Festival 'Real Cool' From Police Standpoint NEWPORT, HI. (AP) - The 12th Newport Jazz FesMva) completed its four days with none of the violence that marked It in the past. Ten persons were arrested after the windup performance Sunday night, bringing the total of arrests to around 66—aB for minor offenses. * * +’ Police Chief Joseph A. Radlce said, “The festival was a great success from the poliee standpoint.” Sunday night Frank Sinatra flew in from Warwick by helicopter and drew a capacity crowd of more than 15,000 tana He told the crowd, “This is like a state home for the ldp. I’ve never seen so many beards in my Ufa,” and sang 18 songs. Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch—Relieves Pain found a new healing substance with the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids, stop itch-ins, and relieve pain - without surgery. In one hemorrhoid east after another .“very striking improvement” was reported and verified by a doctor’s observations. Pain was relieved promptly. And, While gently relieving pain, actual reduction or retraction (shrinking) took place. And moot amasing of all -this improvement was maintained In eases where e doctor’s, observations were continued over a period of many months! In fact, results were so thorough that sufferers were able to make such astonishing state- men ta as “Piles have ceased to he narcotics, anesthetics or astringents of any kind. The secret ta a new healing subetanoa (Bio-Dyne*) — the discovery of a world-famous research institution. Already, Bio-Dyne ie in wide use for hading injured 1 ’ isue on all parta of tho body. This new healing substance is offered in rappott tory or ointment form called Preparation-H*. Ask for individually sealed convenient Preparation H Sup-tion H QHPPMHPM! i applicator. Preparation H is sold at )latracnt with special a all drug counters. ONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 0, 1965 PHOTOGRAPHER AT SEA - Trying to get “just the right angle” on a bathing beauty shot, photographer Larry Woerner went just a bit too far at Redondo Beach, Calif., yesterday. He got almost set to take the picture (top photo), but then ran out of dock, to the amusement of his model, Shelley Lessin, Miss Redondo Beach Chamber of Commerce, and Chamber Manager R. S. Fitzgerald. It’s Easy to SAVE MONEY HERE! ROCK BOTTOM LOW PRICES ON QUALITY MERCHANDISE IPEN T8NI6HT til 9 EM. ft ■enneuf ALWAY8 FIRST QUALITY £ Agilon Seamless Stretch Nylons PR. FOR H Countless woman already know the charms, the out-and-out flattery of Agilon® seamless stretch nylons! Stock-up—or tiy them once, you'll love their clinging comfort, doiightful sheemess, the low price! Beige glo or sun tant short, average, long. SORRY: NO TELEPHONE ORDERS HOOVER Convertible Vacuum Cleaner Coolerator AUTOMATIC DEHUMIDIFIER Eliminates Dampness, The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC 51W. HURON FE 4-1555 FRIGID AIRE “Jetaction” Automatic WASHER $9Mtoo n«y Delivered, Installed, ® ™ ^ Serviced low Priced 2-speed It’s the BIG ONE... with theWService-Free” Roller Drive Transmission, and a new and lodger warranty. Jet Currents remove the most stubborn soil — and new Jet-Away Rinsing scoots lint and soap scum right out of the tub. Also has Activated Soak Cycle and 4 Wash and Rinse Temps. GENERAL ELECTRIC WASHER 184 with FILTER FLO 00 BIG 14-POUND CAPACITY No Money Down, 90 days same as cash! FREE Service, Installation, Delivery GIANT 14-lb. CAPACITY f.. tnd it’s loaded with the fea-tures you want!- Filter-Flo (that cleans, and re-cleans water as you are washing!) —thrifty Automatic Water Level Control — 5 Wash and Rinse Temperatures — 3 Cycles including “Soak” Cycle. This little Card does the trick! PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE OPEN MONDAY thru SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. | AIR:CONDITIONER by General Electric VERY EASY TO INSTALL SPECIAL DO-IT-YOURSELF BTU 1 I \ \ 00 2-speed washable filter, Thermostat, [Jj plug into 115 volt house- current. BurNow Pay Later! NO CASH NEEDED Our Low Prices are complete with-FREE Service, Installation and Delivery! 3 YEARS TO PAY... or 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! Large Capacity 4500 BTU ADMIRAL f WITH EASY MOUNT DO-IT-YOURSELF KIT Cools off a big room — fast! Runs on 8 amp., 115 volt current. Side panels expand to fit windows from 23 to 36 inches wide. ^995 GIBSON Air Conditioner! *12400 BIG 5,000 BTU Install-it Yourself Expando-Mount Kit. Lets you install it by yourself in just a few minutes time. No special tools are needed! Has turbine Blower — easy Filter Removal—5 year Warranty on Sealed Unit. is cu. ft. ADMIRAL No Defrosting $092 231 -lb. Capacity ^ WMk|y * Another Admiral Bargain * I jSSTtBoBsSTit V % \ ; EIGHT i PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY ( ' FRIGIDAIRE “BEST BUYS" When You Buy This FRIGIDAIRE JET ACTION WASHER! TOO RECEIVE YEAR PROTECTION PLAN-AT NO EXTRA COST* Automatic Soak Cyclo-- ptoiat Action pb] features talon! \b^$l88 *One - yaor repair of any d*focf without chargo, plus fow-yoar protection plan for furnishing Mplocnmnnt for any dofoc-tiw part in th« ( JnmiglflL. or pocity waterjggrQg, ioofcmgfor4 2-cfoor? BIG FAMILY SIZE 2-DOOR FRIGIDAIRE • Automatic Dafrost Refrigerator! I BEST o Egg Sholf for Eggtl |BUY! • Butter Cempartmentl • Extra Deep Doer Shell For H Gal. Carfons! M 111 N. SAGINAW FE 5-6189 CHEAT-GREAT- GRANDPA seas here! ! W. HURON * We Pay 4Ve Per Cm* on YourSaeingtAccount! SEVEN HURT — Firemen direct streams of water onto the roof of the $12 million Cambridge Electronics Accelerator building in Cambridge, Mass., yesterday after a Squid hydrogen explosion. Seven researchers were Injured. Much of the building, operated for nuclear research by Harvard and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is underground. 7 Injured in Liquid Hydrogen Explosion CAMBRIDGE, Mass. UR—“It»s only by the grace of God I’m here. I was lucky,” said a shaken Harvard physicist, Joseph Szymanski, of the blast that wrecked part of die ^12-million Cambridge electron accelerator. Seven colleagues were injured - three critically — in the blast early Monday as Squid hydrogen was being pumped into a chamber of die center’s big experimental ball. Dr. Sxymanski, who was in charge it the babble chamber where the explosion took place, said be was at a control panel when he spotted hydrogen feed pressure higher than it should be. He shut it off, but it still climbed. Then came the blast. ★ ★ ★ "When the debris stopped falling, I got up and saw this fellow running by me on fire,” Dr. Szymanski said. “I don't know who he was. SMOTHER FLAMES “I picked up some heavy paper, wrapped him in it and smothered the flames.” Three co-workers were The center director, Dr. M. Stanley Livingston, professor of physics at MIT, said there was no possibility of radioactivity. He said, "I can say emphatically that we did our best to install every safety device known to this type of experiment . . . There is a known ride in this type of work.” ★ # ★ He estimated the damage at $1 million. Dr. Livingston said, “We do Need work? Use Pontiac Press Classified Ads. Low in coat. Fast in action. Phone 232-8181. the danger list at Massachusetts General Hospital. They were: John Schivell, 22, Harvard graduate student from Twins-burg, Ohio. ★ ★ ★ Arthur C. Reid, 19, a technical assistant at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. MIT SOPHOMORE , Frank Feinberg, 20, of Providence, R.I., an MIT sophomore. In less serious condition at the same hospital: Dr. Louis Hand, 31, of Cambridge, assistant professor of physics at Harvard. * ★ ★ Dennis N. Ehn, 25, of Greeley, Colo., Harvard graduate student. AT OTHER HOSPITAL Held at Cambridge City Hos- r -pitaL m.ij;* .t L';i f-'ir - '.., . Bent HuM, Monrovia, Calif., Harvard graduate student. Donald Golaskie, 27, of Somerville, technical assistant at MIT. * ★ ★ Dr. Sxymanski was released after treatment for chin and leg injuries. AEC GRANTS The center has been jointly operated by Harvard and MIT under grants from the Atomic Energy Commission since it was completed in 1962. Sato's Party Keeps Power in Japan Vote TOKYO (AP) - Japan’s ruling conservatives lost four seats in the upper house of Parliament but still held a majority of 30, returns from Sunday’s election showed today. Prime Minister Eisaku Sato’s pro-Western Liberal Democratic party retained 140 seats in the 250-member upper house of the Diet despite opposition attacks against rising consumer prices and the government’s support of U.S. policy In Viet Nam. ★ ★ it The Socialists gained 8 seats, boosting their total to 73. A gain of 7 was scored by the Sakoa-gakkai, Buddhist lay party, which pegged its campaign to demands for a Viet Nam ] conference in Tokyo with the Communist Viet Cong taking part. The party, which claims 10 million members, raised its total in the house to 20. * * * About 40 million voters, or 67 per cent of the electorate, balloted in the election for 127 seats. Elections for half the upper house are held every three years, and this time 'there were two additional vacancies.. ★ * * Of the other seats at stake, the Communists won three, raising theic membership to. four, the Social'* Democrats three and independents one. Communist party Chairman Sanzo Nozaka scored a prestige victory, winning 'a seat in the Toyko constituency. ' i Lowest-priced 2-door I from FRIGIDAIRE! | llfilipl 8 IgSBLt PjfljP | • Coma sot the big 120-lb. size fop freezer! 1 • Come touch the vegetable Hydrator. 1 • Compare Frigidaire shelf for 17 oggs. a Full-width, full-depth shelves-deep door shoif and more in the door. BSSESI SSL'S!"' (NEMA atandard) If Aztac eoppar or whlta 1 ttmkfiadyn II ’ 2133 Orchard Lake Road tJLimlL ItFll ® Phone: 333-7052 Mon. bud Fri, 'til 9—Tuo*., Wed. - wife and fhvre. 'til 6—Sat. 'HI 5:30 P.M. not know at this time the cause of the explosion.” The Mast tore off about one third of the concrete slabs on the roof and smashed windows and equipment. The hydrogen chamber is used to trade the path of electron particles produced In the accelerator section. Center staffers had nearly completed a week-long task of filling the chamber with hydrogen liquified Under temperatures of 470 degrees below zero Fahrenheit. Rebels Protest Junta Actions Charge Provocation by Dominican Frigate SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (AP) — Incidents in Santo Domingo Monday set off new rebel protests against die Dominican junta and the United States. * # it A Dominican navy frigate followed the U.S. Navy oil tanker Pioneer Valley Into Santo Domingo harbor, leveled its guns at rebel command posts for an hour and did not leave until the U.S. destroyer Davis escorted it back to Its berth. Col. Francisco Deno, the rebel chief, charged that the junta brought in the frigate to provoke a shooting incident that could justify an attack on the insurgent stronghold. U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker, head of the mediating team of the Organization of American States, said the OAS had clearance from both sides to bring in the tanker carrying fuel for a power plant that supplies a large section qf the country. t ' 4t 1t “We weren’t able to get into communication about the' frigate in time,” he said. Informed sources said the junta sent the frigate in to demonstrate that it controls the port. Hail Damages Jetliner; No Trouble Landing DALLAS, Tex. (AP) - Hail shattered the outer half of a double windshield in an American Airlines 707 jet from New York but it landed here without difficulty Monday. Employes 'W&id the hailstones also knocked a hole to the Mg airliner’s radar dome and battered the leading edges of the wings. One estimated the damage at 625,006. Annual coinage of domestic coins grew frpm 1.6 billion to fiscal 1963 to 3.9 billion in fiscal 1963. ; Plfgllig Tim MORTAR CORNER Patenta and Yomr Health! TW. —itqtte ITS* OmVhmMlW* m Itw A ' .....I......pfnR mna ever 100,000 r mtdlrinplB. Tim LIT US FILL YOUR NEXT PRESCRIPTION Pharmacy Plaza Pharmacy Jtrry t Joann* Dunsmort, RPH 3514 Pontiao Lk. Rd., Pontiac, Mich. PIlOM 673-1167 *4 Hour, A Day.Service FMf DIIIVIIIT DMMfOitenlHMORm mttaftrtlklmiyhmteM L Y«NllwRwMIRia»»lfcaH»»Han—E J hi t:\Alt REDUCE JLTdndLOSE ^OP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! Easier to taka and 'mot# effective than tha powdered and liquid food supplement, and costa less including Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, M.D No Gastritis or irregularity with Medic-Way cepe. DON'T. DIE I —JUST EAT! As thousand* have done, you can lost 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP Ft OFF! MEDIC-WAY MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 7 Offices In Oaklaa* and Wayaa Caanllta - Oat la Minel# N Dr. Livingston said the blast set back center experiments many months. Injuries Prove Fatal GODERICH, Ont. (AP)-John G. McIntosh, 65, of Detroit d Monday in a hospital here of in- y juries suffered Saturday in a car-truck crash near this community 60 miles northwest of London. Car driver Clarence Betz, 64, also of Detroit, \ killed. CEILINQ TILE SPECIAL 11x11.......8c sq.ft. I I2xt2.......12c aq.fft j LIGHT FIXTURES CLOSE- OUT 50% PONTIAC'S LARGEST TILE CENTER Installation Work Dono by Exports ........... and Fri. til SiN PJMTddfc.WaN^Tlwra^SailSI NJL ESTHIATISg If You Don’] Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! WORLD'S LARGEST HAMMOND DEALER HAMMOND ORGANS played jn the Music Festival at Cobo Hall NOW REDUCED! Once-a-year opportunity to save on a limited number of Hammonds used In the Festival. Hammond is exclusively with Grinnell’s. Fully guaranteed. Hammond Spinets With percussion. All finishes $70 C ' from / 7J Hammond Chord Organs With percussion. All finishes GRINNELL'S Pontiac Mpfl—682-0422 0 Downtown, 27 $. Saginaw St. — FE 3-7168 Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days same as cash) or Budget Terms THE PONTIAO PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1063 NIKE House Faces Fierce Inferparty Fight Over Provisions in Rights Measure WASHINGTON (AP) — The House faces a fierce Interparty fight today as it takes up the voting rights bill which carries > top priority tag in President Johnson’s legislative, program. Leaders hope for a final vote by Friday. They have said it appears certain some form of legislation will be passed to enforce the 15th Amendment’s command that no person shall l>e denied the right to vote because of race or color. ★ . ★ * ; But a struggle looms over what approach should be taken — especially on the question of poll taxes. Johnson urged prompt actiori when he sent his voting rights blU to Capitol Hill in mid-March at the height of racial demonstrations in Selma, Ala. NO BAN The Senate passed the bill May 21 by a 77-19 margin. It contained no ban on the use of poll taxes in state and local elections — the President had not asked for such a ban. It did IM- ROBERT L. COE Plumbing & Heating WrIM L*k« Phon«: MA 4-M74 include a provision calling for a court test on the constitutionality of such taxes. And the bill said Congress would declare that state poll taxes are used to discriminate against Negroes and the poor. Poll taxes still are collected in Texas, Alabama, Mississippi and Virginia in state or local elections. w ★ ★ Key points in the Senate bill and the Democratic bill before the House are the suspension of literacy tests in elections and the use of federal registrars under certain conditions. These provisions automatically would trigger enforcement in seven Southern states — Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia. But the House version of the Democratic bill includes a ban on poll taxes in state and local elections. This was added as the bill came out of the House Judiciary Committee.. SUBSTITUTE MEASURE House Republicans have drawn up a substitute measure. The big difference between it and the Democratic bill is that the GOP version has no automatic trigger which would apply it to specific Southern states. ★ * ★ The GOP proposal calls for sending federal registrars into any state or county in which 25 persons complained that they were denied the right to vote because of their race. The House GOP Policy Committee calls it a straightforward attempt to deal with discrimination wherever it exists. WWW On the issue of banning poll taxes, the Republican substitute supports the approach favored by the administration and the SUMMER SAVINGS Senate bill; It does not bat poll taxes, but would put the matter to a quick court test. The Democrats’ big majority suggests their bill will prevail. But Republicans are determined to make a -strong fight to at least make substantial changes in the Democratic measure. The' GOP substitute is not m fora the House. DECISIVE FACTOR Southern Democrats, view the Republican bill lesser of two evils, could a decisive factor if they solidly with the GOP. as the prove voted Except for its poll tax ban, the House Democratic bOl follows recommendations made by President Johnson last March. w ★ * The impact of the measure on the seven Southern states is predetermined because die bill’s main thrust is at states employing literacy tuts in which less than 50 per cent of the adult population either registered or voted in last year’s election' It is that formula that has drawn the most fire from both Republicans and Southerners. GOP spokesmen call it arbi- trary and punitive. Southerners call it unconstitutional. Defenders of the Mil say the evidence is overwhelming that literacy tests, low voter participation and discrimination go hand-in-hand. By concentrating the formula, they say, they will weaken the most massive centers of resistance to Negro voting. British sovereign who ruled the longest was Queen Victoria, BNNPBNIBflUwho reigned over England for on the states encompassed by 164 years. MILLIONS OF FREE TOP VALUE STAMPS DANISH CROWN IMPORTED CANNED mimq GOVERNMENT ** ROUND GRADED CHOICE STEAK SLICED BACON ... »69‘ WHOLE OR HALF Semi-Boneless Ham * 69* CHOICE TENDERAY REEF FAMILY SIRLOIN fBONELESS ROASTj IO“T°° flff IreWKBk I U.S. GOV'T. GRADED CHOICE TENDERAY T-BONE STEAK is *1°* * U.S. CHOICE CHUCK STEAK ie.*9* Fu.S. CHOICE TENDERAY BEEF RIB ROAST FLAVOR-SE Al-PAC \ FRESH 4TH A STH RIBS 79 TOMATO SOUP . = 10‘ SAVE 34‘—WHOLE BEAN COFFEE SPOTLIGHT.___3 HEINZ TASTY CREAM OF 179 ■ ALL BEEFM HAMBURGER 3HI s129l | nil | LESSER QUANTITIES AT REGULAR. RETAIL . TASTY REFRESHING MOTT'S APPLESAUCE . 3£98c KROGER GRADE 'A' LARGE EGGS.............2 - SAVE 11‘-KROGER-WHOLE WHEAT, CRACKED WHEAT OR WHEAT BREAD 2»-39e SAVE 11‘-KROGER WIENER BUNS OR SANDWICH BUNS • 2 - 39c | WITH THIS COUPON A S5 PURCHASE-KROGER [tomatoCATSUPs 14-OZ. BTL. SAVE II* LIMIT 2 BTLS. SAVE 13‘—ASSORTED COLORS SCOTTIES TISSUE. ...5 iSl $1 SAVE 10*—BORDEN'S CHOCOLATE MILKT~"19c| 39*1 - 4-0Z. $1 KOS. SAVE 1 O'—VANILLA, NEAPOLITAN OR VANILLA FUDGE BORDEN'S ice milk . .*c SAVE 17‘—MORTON'S FROZEN APPLE, PEACH OR CHERRY PIES...3 LONG BURNING CHARCOAL.nm»20& 79* VaM at Kragar thru Saturday, July 10, 190S. Unit ana raupaa par famOy. ^B !■■■■■ K'JWM.IN JM.TTTCTM ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ I WITH THIS COUPON l 15 PURCHASE-EATMORE Lmargarine BOOK r VaM at Ktapar thru Saturday, July 10, IMS. limit ana raupaa par famRy. it Ktapar thru Saturday, July 10, i ■ ■ ■ beb—i—anu ■ ■ ■ ■ WITH THIS COUPON A S3 PURCHASE-KANDU BRAND BLEACH c Vtfd at Kraprr thru Saturday, July 10,1000. UmM aaa raapaa par famOy. ru,l!WM4 rl 1 rumTT tuSh PJ. TOP VALUE JJ M ATOP VALUE 50 STAMPS!! 50 STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON Oi mm mm TOP VALUE mm mm TOP VALUE LJ AM wm TOP VALUE 50 STAMPSu50 STAMPS || 25 STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON ITrTBNHK' l I ROASTINC CHICKENS I VaM thru Saturday, Q | I sot s-oz. wt. nuks. A iWHSftu i uu Saturday, M| | mm TOP VALUE E5 STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON FBI CHOPS VaM Thru Saturday, LaaL1—1^1' IF ■ **»’•< 1*M- ANY 1040. BAA I uoom OtAHAM (X | ML VI. MR SPOTUEHT 0> | MTATMS L SttOeiSAB ' IRBtCR -START (MHi ! PMdthruSMwday, a! VaM thru Saturday. Vrfd duv Saturday. AM I TEN The PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JlttYS, 1963 'tuci Asked for Rebaptism' Pri«st Says He was Fulfilling Church Law WASHINGTON (AP) - The Rev. James Montgomery, who baptised Luci Johnson into the Roman Catholic church, said to-day the rite was requested by the President's daughter and he fulfilled the laws of his church. Hie priest declined to com: ment specifically on criticism of his action voiced by the Rt. Rev. James A. Pike, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of California. Bishop Pike, in a sermon in Saa Francisco on Sunday, called the baptismal cere-many “a direct slap at our church,” in which the 18-year-old Luci formerly was a communicant. The bishop said Luci had been baptized in the Episcopal church, and the Roman Catholic church recognizes the validity of baptism in other branches of Christian faith. ★ * ★ He raised no question as to the propriety of Luci’s conversion to Roman Catholicism but said the repetition of the baptismal ceremony last Friday was “totally void of any sacramental effect and thus sacrilegious.” GIVES REPLY Asked for comment on Bishop Pike’s statement, Father Montgomery replied: “I have nothing to say about Bishop Pike’s comments.” But in general reference to the ceremony, he emphasized that it was Luci’s wish. ★ ★ ♦ “I did what she requested and fulfilled the laws of the church,” he said. “I did what thousands of other priests would have done and they have agreed with me." MADE REQUEST He said Luci requested the baptism because she wished in conscience to be sure she was meeting the requirements of the church. “I made sure she met the requirements of the church and fulfilled her wish. Thus, you may call it a conditional baptism,” he said. An American priest, who holds an important Vatican post, said: * * ★ “The principle of indiscriminate rebaptism is very unecu-menical, to say nothing of canon law prohibitions. ARE JUSTIFIED “If that was the case with Miss Johnson, then .Episcopalians are perfectly justified in feeling as they do. “Canon Law is very specific in forbidding Indiscriminate conditional rebaptism. A readministering of the sacrament is to be done only when there is prudent doubt about the fact of a prior baptism or about its validity.” w *■ it Roman Catholic teaching is that baptism is a sacrament which confers an indelible character upon the soul and thus . cannot be repeated if once received validly. Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas Retired Bank Exec Dies in Birmingham BIRMINGHAM-Edwin Stahl Snyder, 67, of 823 Colonial Court, a retired vice president of the Detroit Bank & Trust Co., died yesterday after a long illness. * ★ ★ Mr. Snyder was executive director of the Detroit YMCA Endowment Fund, a trustee of the Birmingham Public Library and a member of Bloomfield Hills Country Chib.— ■ '•* •.* ★ Surviving are his wife, Helen; a daughter, Mrs. Robert Aikens of Birmingham; a son, Capt. Eld win K. Snyder of the U.S. Navy; two Mothers; and seven grandchildren. Service will be 11 a.m. Thursday at Christ Church Cran-brook. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery by Vasu - Lynch Funeral Home, Royal Oak. QUILLER ANDERSON Service for Quiller Anderson, 48, of 497 Raeburn will be 1 p.m. Thursday at Providence Missionary Baptist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by die Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. Mr. Anderson, a member of Providence Church and an employe of Pontiac Motor Division, died Sunday after a three-year illness. Surviving are his wife, Nati-line; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Anderson; and several children, Alexander, Earline, Dowell, Betty Jean' and Quiller Jr., all of Pontiac, and Leroy, Vann and Bobby, all at home. GARY LEE BRANDON Service for Gary Lee Brandon, 18, of 503 Hilldiff, Waterford Township, will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Burial will be in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Gary died when his car hit a tree Sunday in Gaylord. He was an employe of Fisher Body Division. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Brandon; his grandparents, Wilfred Sa-bourin of Bloomfield Hills and Mrs. Garleline Blair and William Brandon Sr., both of Pontiac; a great-grandmother, Mrs. Hattie French of Alpena; and two Mothers, Harold Jr. and Randy, both at home. EUGENE V. CLEMENT Requiem Mass for Eugene V. Clement, 48, of 421 Raeburn was scheduled for 10 a.m. today at St. Vincent De Paul Catholic Church with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Clement died Saturday after a long illness. He had been employed at Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edmond Clement, and a brother, Lewis of Pontiac. LESTER CRAMER Service for Lester Cramer, 43, of 104 Norton will be 1:30 p.m. Thursday at Sparks-Grif-fin Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Cramer, a machine operator at Artco, Inc., died yesterday after an illness of several months. He was a member of the American Legion, Lake Orion, and Veterans of Foreign Wars No. 1370, Pontiac. Surviving besides his wife, Sarah, are his mother, Mrs. Ida Bell Cramer of Rogersville, Ala; two children, Leslie and Cheryl, both ^t home; four Mothers, William of Pontiac, Henry of Orleans, Ga., and Alyis and Claude, both of Rogersville; and a sister. MRS. RUSSELL R. HIGH Service for Mrs. Russell R. (Jeanette W.) High, 67, of 26 Union will be 1:30 p.m. tomor-the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs.. High, who attended the First Congregational Church, died Sunday after a three-month illness. Surviving are one son,, Gerald S. of Hillsdale; two sisters, Mrs. Willis Brewer of Sylvan Village and Mrs. Maynard Slater of Pontiac; one brother; and five jgrandchildren. , MRS. GEORGE THURSTON Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. George (Millie) Thurston, 78, was to have been 10:30 a.m. today at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Thurston died Sunday after a lengthy illness. She was a member of the Central Meth- odist Church, Waterford Township. Surviving are two sons, Homer of Downers Grove, 111., and Eugene Thurston of San Francisco, Calif., a daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Van Hoesen of North Muskegon; five grandchildren; two brothers, Peter McVean of Oxford, and Homer McVean of Bloomfield Hills; and a sister, Mrs. Grace Cook of Lake Orion. MRS. ROY VERMETTE Service for Mrs. Roy (Vera P.) Vermefte, 45, of 123 Adelaide will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at the St. Benedict Church with burial in Lakeside Cemetery, Holly. Rosary will be said Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Mrs. Vermette died Sunday after a six-month illness. She was a music teacher in Waterford Township. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Thomas Thompson of Da-r, a brother, Louis Borst, and a sister, Mrs. Harry Terry, both of Pontiac; and one grandchild. BARNEY YOIJNG Barney Young, 79, of 169 Wolfe died this morning after a long illness. His body is at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home. Mr. Young was a retired machine operator at Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are a son, Homer of Pontiac; a daughter, Mrs. George Theeringer of Columbus, Ga.; fiiree grandchildren; and a sister, Man Wounded by Rifle Shot A 24-year-old Waterford Town- lip man, who told police he shot himself in the arm while fishing at Lake Oakland last night, was treated for the wound at Pontiac General Hospital and then released. Austin R. Crisman Jr., of 3439 Alco was taken to the hospital after he stopped at Club Tahoe, 4769 Dixie, and attempted to make a phone call. •k k ★ Police later went to the site where Crisman said he had been fishing and found a 22-caliber rifle. Crisman was unable to explain why he had the rifle at the fishing site. Boy Recovering; Resuscitation Saves His Life SPARTA (AP)—An 18-month-old boy who was found floating face down in Camp Lake near here Sunday was reported in fair condition in a Grand Rapids hospital today. Andrew Thayer’s seemingly lifeless body was found in the water by the boy’s older sister. They had come with their father, Everell Thayer, for weekend swimming and fun from their home in Grand Rapids. ★ ★ ★ The sister carried the boy into a nearby lakeside cottage where a nurse, Mrs. Evelyn Greenwood, also of Grand Rapids, administered mouth - to mouth resuscitation. When the boy gave signs of returning life, hie was rushed by. Kent County Sheriffs men to Butterworth Hospital in Grand Rapids. CALVIN M. BALL PONTIAC TOWNSHIP — Service for Calvin M. Ball, 83, of 1621 Opdyke was to have been 2 p.m. today at die Lewis E. Wint Funeral Home, Clarkston with burial in Davisburg Cemetery. Mr. 'Ball died Saturday after a long illness. A member of St. Helen Lodge F«tAM, St. Helen, Ky., he was retired from the Wilson Foundry. Survivors include his wife, Amanda E.; two daughters, Mrs. Peter Schiele and Mrs. Reuben G, Lindeberg, both of Pontiac; and a son, John M. of Ortonville. Others are two sisters, Mrs. Hampton Palmer of Pontiac and Mrs.' Seldon Palmer of Tellega, ky.; three brothers, Boney Ball and Charles Pryse, both of Pontiac, and Fred Ball of Cincinnati, Ohio; 21 grandchildren, 94 great-grandchildren; and four great-great-grandchildren. MRS. WILLIAM B.' BLODGETT BIRMINGHAM - Service for former resident Mrs. William _ (Eleanor) Blodgett, 80, will, be 11 a.m. Thursday at Manley-Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Blodgett died today after a long illness. She was a member of the Covenant Baptist Church, Detroit. Surviving are three grandchildren. DONALD N. HILDEBRAND AVON TOWNSHIP — Service for Donald N. Hildebrand, S2, of 307 Oaklane will be 2 pm. today Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Cremation will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Hildebrand died suddenly Sunday. An employe of Republic Steel, Steel and Tube Division, Ferndale, he was a member of the Robert Simpson Lodge F&AM 713 of Cleveladd, the Consistory of Youngstown; !) h i o , Moslem Temple of Detroit, and the Rochester Shrine Club. He was also a committeeman of the Sea Scouts, dad advisor for De-Molay boys, and a member of the first Congregational Church of Rochester. Surviving are his wife, Elizabeth;line son, Len N. at’home; and three sisters. MRS. GENTILE TESTAGUZZA ADDISON TOWNSHIP -S e r v i c e for Mrs. Gentile (Maria) Testaguzza, 7l, of 3681 E. Drahner will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. Joseph Catholic Church, Lake Orion. Burial will be in East Lawn Cemetery, Lake Orion, by Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford. Mrs. Testaguzza died Sunday after a long illness. She was a member of St. Joseph Catholic Church. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Tina Massacesi of Addison; two sons, Gino of Addison and Caesar of Royal Oak; one sister; and seven grandchildren. HERMAN E. WHITE AVON TOWNSHIP — Service for Herman E. White, 63, of 3136 Nortonlawn will be 2 p.m. Thursday at Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. White died suddenly yesterday. He was an employe of Avon Tube Corp., Rochester. Surviving are his wife, Cora; three daughters, Mrs. Shirley Brown of Rochester, Mrs. Carl LOUIS J. KRAMP AP Executive Dies of Cancer Once Headed Detroit, Indianapolis Bureaus NEW YORK (AP)—Louis J. Kramp, 53, the Associated Press assistant general manager in charge of all relations and services in the broadcasting field, died Monday of cancer. He died in White Plains General Hospital after several months of illness. ★ ★ a Funeral service will be conducted at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the Immaculate Heart of Mary Church in Scarsdale, with burial at 10 a.m. Friday in Calvary Cemetery, Springfield, 111., his home town. In 23 years with the Associated Press, Kramp had served as news correspondent in Spring-field, as a newsman in Chicago, and as chief of bureau in Indianapolis, 1951-53, and in Detroit, 1953-56. TO NEW YORK He was transferred to New York in 1956 as a general executive in the Personnel and News-features Departments and then director of member relations, directing programs for expanding AP service to newspapers and broadcasting stations. He was appointed an assistant general manager in 1962. Upon his graduation from St. Louis University in 1933, Kramp became a junior executive in the electric utility business. Three years later, he landed his first newspaper job—as a sports writer, and later political writer, with the Illinois State Journal at Springfield, where he stayed for six years before joining the Associated Press. In this so-called modern and sanitary world, human beings, especially children, still suffer from intestinal parasites, according to Dr. Barnard D. Berman, Oakland County Department of Health. * yjt., ★ . While generally considered moire prevalent in southern or moist, warm climates, the parasites are by no meads confined to those areas, according to tir; Bgrman. Pinworms, which are the most common, can thrive in ail climates and are found world-wide. Their eggs are easily spread by contaminated fingers of one child to another in families and children’s groups. Giant roundworms tare also resistant to wide varieties in temperature and infect some three million people in the United States. ★ ★ * Trichinosis, caused by the TrichineUa parasite from undercooked pork, is also widespread and infects more than 15 per cent of the people of the United States. While younger children are affected less often, infection of young teen-agers is not infrequent. CAN BE FATAL Although intestinal worm infections are frequently mild and may even pass unnoticed, the Waterford Crash Injures Girl From Independence Linda Gaddis, 18, of 5485 Oak Park, Independence Township, is in satisfactory condition at Pontiac General Hospital with injuries suffered hi a two-car collision at 2:30 p.m. yesterday in Waterford Township. WWW Miss Gaddis was a ger in a car driven by Howard Fletcher, 19,. of 5170 Hillsboro, Springfield Township, that collided with .one driven by Fren-chle Dunivan, 22, of 1693 Els-mere, Waterford, w w Dunivan told police he was Schoenberg of Washington- driving west on M59 when Flet-Township, and Deborah at cher’s eastbound car op M59 home; two sisters; two brothers; struck his auto at the intersec-and three grandchildren. I tion of Crescent Lake Road. MortCsNnfortWtariiig FALSE TEETH upper pad lower plate* bold* ....... in* *0 that they feel mere com- ^Sj&SWS'iJSISiKS’ acid). Doee not aour. Check* “plate Oder breath". Oat FA8TEETH today at drug counters everywhere. World's Largest Magnavox Dealer 19" PORTABLE TV 1 With this new Magnavox portable TV you get full size 19” screen with built-in quality performance. Full-transformer powered chassis, telescoping antenna, optical picture filter. automatic fine tuning. Silver Seal Warranty includes — one year on parts and picture tube. 90 ENJOY SUMMER MORE with a Magnavox ONLY 139 No down payment required GRINNELL'S Pontiac Mall — 682-0422 • Downtown, 27 S. Saginaw St. r-FE 3-7168 Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (yO.days same as cash) or Budget Terms Intestinal Parasites Are Still a more severe infections can be serious and even fatal. Children are mere susceptible because of their greater exposure to infection and lack of immunity or tolerance to many of die parasites. Careful attention to personal hygiene, good eating habits and proper sanitation are important for prevention. Handwashing after toilet and before meals is essential. - • • • ★.w w............. Pork and pork products such as sausage should be cooked thoroughly. If an infection is suspected, do not delay in obtaining medical aid, Dr. Berman said. Credit Pair With Saving Fisherman A Waterford man and his fishing companion were credited with saving the life of a Canadian early yesterday morning in the St. Clair River. ★ ★ k Victor Tejkl of 2800 Ironton and George Tkaczyk of Chesan-ing were fishing in the river north of Blue Water Bridge when they rescued Ernest Arthur. 39, of Brights Grave, OpL Arthur, buoyed by a life jacket, was floating in tbe river when Tejkl and Tkaczyk pulled him into their boat at 3 a.m. and took him to the Coast Guard station. Suffering from exposure because of 60-degree water temperatures, Arthur was treated and released from Port Huron Hospital this morning. k k k Arthur told hospital officials he was unable to remember what happened to his motorboat. His wife said he had gone fishing at about 5 p.m. Sunday. Powerboat Wake Puts Pair in Lake A 23-year-old Warren woman was treated Saturday at Pontiac General Hospital after the rowboat in which she was a passenger was overturned in the wake of a passing powerboat in Cass Lake. , k k k A nonswimmer, Mrs. Roslind Petriilo and her husband, Anthony, clung to their overturned boat until rescued by other boaters. The incident occurred at 4:30 p.m. off the beach of Dodge Park No. A. ‘Thrust-Back Collar' TOILET TANK BALL Am 1 IK# efficient' the low 751 AT HAKOWAKg STORES Weeks Of Back Pain Now Relieved "After week* of pain in my back and hips, I tried Dewitt's Pill*—aot wonderful relief," ea]n Mrs. R. Gardner, Waterloo, Iowa. People write la every day praising the remarkable rdief they get with De Witt’s Pills. De Witt's Pills aot fast with a proven analgesic to relieve pain of backache. Their mild diuretic action helps to eliminate retained fluids and flush out irritating bladder wastes that can cause physical distress. If pain persists, see your doctor. Dewitt’s Pills often succeed where others fall— quickly relieve minor muscle aches and pains, too. Insist on thefenulne De Witt's PiUs. Over ltd million DeWltt's Pills ue sold by druggists day after day afwr day, die world over—a tribute to their Complete Optical Service PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER 3ThTrH3fflrCT**T1 Open Sveahtgs ’Ml Mg MI-1111 The doors of our establishment are always open to those seeking advice or counsel pertaining to funeral matters. wte Outstanding in Pontiac for Service and Facilities 46 Williams St. FE 8-9288 PUT TOUR TEENAGER IN A ROOM OF HER OWN! CALL POOLE LUMBER this mk lor on 'ot horns' estimate Un adding a’room to your homo. Wo offer a complete Heme Improvement Service... that include! budget-wiie financing. Coll this week and well send Jim McNeil to your homo to show you how easy and economical it is to add ==nr- LUMBER & HARDWARE 181 OAKLAND AYE. - PONTIAC Phon# FE 4-1594 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JULY 6, 1965 ELEVEN Fall vows are planned by Matiann Christine Engelhard, daughter of the Ludwig F. Engelhards Whittemore Street and Lt. Ernest f. Lovell, son of the William Lovells of Southfield. She is an alumna of University of Michigan School of Nursing. He also holds a degree from U. of M. Parents to Give Rehearsal Fete J, F. Bells Dr. and Mrs. J. F. Bell of Urbana, 111. will give the rehearsal dinner for their son John Sinclair Bell and his fiancee, Marilyn Squibb, Friday, in Orchard Lake Country Club. MAR1ANN C. ENGELHARD International Flavor Nearly 70 international teenagers have come to Inter-lochen National Music Camp this season. Canada, Asia, Europe and South America all are represented. ★ ★ Many of these international students will be members of Interlochen’s World Youth, Symphony Orchestra which will perform regularly throughout the summer and take part in the Interlochen I Arts Festival Aug. 24-26. The Festival also will bring > May Order the Menu for Party By The Emily Post Institute ' Q: My husband and I would 1 like to invite about 10 or 12 of our closest friends to dinner ' in a restaurant on our 15th wedding anniversary. , I thought of going to the i restaurant beforehand and or-J dering the dinner in advance ■ to eliminate the confusion of ■ everyone ordering separately. 1 Will you please tell me if ; this will be proper, or should the guests be free to order whatever they wish? A: It will be entirely proper to order the dinner in advance. BRIDE’S PARENTS’ TABLE Q: Will you please tell me who, besides the bridegroom’s parents, is asked to sit at the bride’s parents’ table? A: Grandparents and especially close relatives and friends of the bride’s parents or distinguished guests are seated at this table. The clergyman who performed the ceremony may, or may not, be included. If a high church dignitary has performed the ceremony, he is always seated at the bride's parents’ table and is placed at the left of the hostess; his wife, if present, sits at the bride’s father’s left. ... Hie Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mail, but all questions of general interest are answered in this column. Metropolitan Opera star, Roberta Peters for an Aug. 24 appearance. W W ★ Others to appear are violinist Carroll Glenn, pianist Eugene List and Dallas Symphony Orchestra conductor, Donald Johanos, a former Interlochen camper who will conduct the World Youth Symphony. * w ★ Approximately 350 concerts, dance programs, operettas, plays and art displays are scheduled for the public dur-ii.g the activity filled two months. Personals Mr. and Mrs. George T. Trumbull of Bloomfield Hills are entertaining some 50 guests at a dinner tonight. They will take their guests by bus to the home of Chancellor and Mrs. D. B. Varner for a social, hour. The group will then go to the Meadow Brook- Festival grounds for dinner on Trumbull Terrace. The Trumbulls gave die money to erect this new building which houses festival food services. WWW Mr. and Mrs. E. Gilmour Winn of South Pemberton Drive and her sister, Mrs. Philip F. Hoops of Chicago will visit Mr. and Mrs. John R. Orr of Pottstown, Pa. lor several days. Mr. Orr is a brother of Mrs, Winn and Mrs. Rpops. ★ k k Mr. and Mrs. James W. Schultz (Virginia Dowling) who have been residing in Lawton, Okla. and Port Washington, Long Island, N.Y. since their marriage are presently with her mother, Mrs. Franklin Dowling of Birmingham while relocating in the area. The Harvey Kresges .will host a luncheon for the bridal party and out-of town guests on Saturday, the day of the wedding, in their Bloomfield Hills home. , ★ k k A swim party for attendants and guest arrivals is set for Thursday at the John Rumaey home on Whig Lake. Honoring the bride - elect, daughter oftheGeorgeR. Squibbs, at luncheons preceding showers were Mrs. William Bur gum and Mrs. Cart Abbott in the latter’s home in Bloomfield Village; Mrs. Otis Thompson, Kenno-way Drive; Mrs. William Bird, and Mrs. Gene White, both of Birmingham. John W. Hoyts Hie John W. Hoyts of West-acres will give the rehearsal dinner for their daughter Carole Ann and her fiance, Gregory Kreutzer, Friday, in’ their home. Mrs. Harky Brewster of Upper Long Lake and Mrs- M. G. Seymour of Berkley honored the bride-elect at a recent luncheon at Oakland Hills Country Club. ★ * w Margaret Barbour gave a luncheon and pantry shower in her Detroit home. Mrs. Addison Dunn of South-field honored her niece at a combined trousseau and ‘round-the-clock shower. Mrs. Anthony Kreutzer introduced her future daughter-in-law at a recent party at her home in Buffalo, N.Y. Chicago Residence for Newlywed Couple A recent evening ceremony and reception in the Grace Lutheran Church marked the vows of Colleen Kaye Springer and Terry Kalten Wilkins. The couple whose parents are the John 0. Springers of Neome ’ Drive and Mr. and Mrs. O. D. Wilkins of Waldo Street, will reside in Chicago after a northern honeymoon. ORANGE BLOSSOMS Orange blossoms and seed pearls covered a silk pillbox capping an illusion veil for the bride who wore white silk organza and lace. August Date Is Set Mr. and Mrs. Louis Tanu-ta of West Pike Street announce the engagement of their daughter Judy Nott to Meinhard Leo Lorenzen, son of Mrs. Ramona Lorenzen of Third Avenue. An Aug. 22 wedding is being planned. She held white roses, carnations and Ivy for the rite performed by Rev. Richard Stuckmeyer. With honor matron, Mrs. Mrs. Richard Bray were Mrs. John Tews of Menominee Falls Wis. and Sue Cucksey attending as bridesmaids. On the esquire side, were Russell Rizzuto, best man, and ushers William Rotsel, John T. Springer, Richard Goodwin and Jerry Cunningham. k k k The new Mrs. Wilkins is a graduate of Mercy School of Nursing, Detroit. Mr. Wilkins holds a master’s degree from the University of California. Colleen Kaye Springer, daughter of the JohnO. Springers of Neome Drive exchanged recent vows with Terry Kalten Wilkins, son . of Mr. and Mrs. O.D. Wilkins of 1Waldo Street in the Grace Lutheran Church. MRS. TERRY KALTEN WILKINS Breakfast Meeting The Woman’s Society of Christian Service of Oakland Park Methodist Church will meet for breakfast Thursday at 10 a.m. His Mother Fans Flame as Wife Does Slow Burn By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My husband and I lived for a year with his parents, and when we were Hiis is the last meeting until packing to move I ran across September. Exquisite fun-. top by Garland gives a perky new look to the summer sports outfit with its barearmed cardigan styling and textured tick-tack-toe Jciiit: Crochet edging and softly burnished golden buttons accent the open bulky . texture, that's airy-light in wonderful all-American wool. Vivacious little wool Fun-Top by Garland catches every eye with its ingenious knit of loopy curls in multicolor rick-rack stripes. Warm, featherlight all-American wool makes it a natural as a beach cover-MR* and it’s just as much fun as a lively mate with shorts, slacks or skirts. Bride-Elect Was Feted Susan Elizabeth Raymond, daughter of the Kenneth L. Raymonds of Windcroft Drive, was honored recently at a linen shower in the Bow Lane home of Mrs. Steve J. White. Cohostess was Mrs. Edward La Douceur of Oxford. k k k The bride-elect will wed Donald H. Smith on August 21 in the Kirk-in-the-Hills. For Washing Sweaters Women Reject Machine A recent survey explodes the myth of the major need for machine • washability in women’s sweaters. When sweaters in man-made fibers first arrived on the fashion scene, the consumer was led to believe that they opened up a whole new concept ‘ of easy care through machine-washability. The customer was tokl to ture are (from left) bhawmna Hughley, six weeks old; her mother, Mrs. Willie Hughley of Parkhurst ~ Street; Mrs. Lummie Bass of De- Mrs. M. A. Horn of narrtson Avenue, the great-grandmother; and Mrs. James Edtoards also of Harrison Avenue, the grandmother. “Just toss sweaters into the machine and forget, forever, the hand-laundering chores— This is another great milestone in the push-button era.” The notion has persisted ever since that machine-wash-ability is one of the vitally important buy - appeals in -women’s sweaters. IGNORE MACHINE A surprising rebuttal to this theory has been disclosed in the results of a survey conducted by a leading magazine among 1,325 teenage members on its consumer panel. The survey revealed that 79.5 per cent df the girls queried hand wash their synthetic sweaters, and-63.1 per cent hand wash their wool Sweaters. Only 5 per cent machine-wash synthetics; 0.67 per cent machine-wash wools. k k k Actually, the initial impact of machine washability- was made in classic styles of manmade fibers. As high-fashion was intro- * duced, the advisability of machine washability lessened ac- I cordingly, and today more and j more synthetics are tagged: i “hand wash as you would any fine garment.” k k k While many women do ap- ! predate the convenience of laundering their classic sweaters by machine, they are understandably reluctant to subject a highly-styled and expensive sweater of any fiber to thb operation. Intricate stitches can be pulled out of line; trimmings may be too delicate for ma- the wrong r lining couk chine agitation; thread, binding < cause havoc. In the long run, machine washability can be only as e ficient as the policing every minute detail of the garment. NOT DIFFICULT Hand washing a wool sweater is no more involved, time-consuming or risky than sudsing out lingerie and stockings. Use cool water and gentle soap and wash with a squeezing method; avoiding rubbing and rough handling. No blocking is necessary if this method is followed. Simply press out excess moisture with a thick towel, spread on another towel to dry, lightly finger-pressing the seams in line. While the man made fibers have a tendency to thin out and become limp with frequent washings, naturally resilient wools are constantly renewed by laundering, fluffing up to a softer-than-new thickness each time. framed picture of one of my husband’s old girl friends. I started to throw it away, but my moth--er-in-law agked^^^^^^_ If she c o u 1 have it for ■frame, ally, I gave to her, lng she it only for the frame. * Seven years and two small children later she still has that picture in the same frame, displayed on the mantel. She was never very close to the girl and my husband didn’t go with this girl very long. (She has three other sons who went with girls longer than my husband went with this girl and she doesn’t display THEIR girl friends’ pictures.) Every time I see that picture I bum up. Why is she holding on to the girl’s picture? She wouldn’t like it if my mother kept one of my old boy friend’s pictures on display. And neither would my husband. STILL BURNING DEAR STILL: Your mother-in-law is playing a game. Tell your husband you don’t think it’s funny; that if she continues to flaunt the old flame, you’ll stay clear of her house.' And if he wants a healthy marriage, he had better throw some water on the fire. k k k DEAR A B B E Y: I have a problem. My sweetheart and I plan to be married soon and we have been studying all the etiquette and customs of weddings, receptions, etc. Neither my bride nor I like the idea of standing in the receiving line and having to let every man who walks through kiss her for luck. She is not being selfish or silly. She just doesn’t want to be kissed by any man other than me on her wedding day. How can she get out of letting them kiss her without hurting their feelings? What if she says, “Hands off,” and they try to kiss her anyway? NO KISSES DEAR NO: A woman (or even a man, for that matter) who doesn’t want to be kissed on the lips need only turn her head, to indicate that a kiss on the cheek is expected. I doubt that it will be necessary for the bride to say, “Hands off’ to anyone. If you seriously object to even a kiss on the cheek “for luck” w*. you two ought to go off by yourselves and get married. ★ w w DEAR ABBY: I just read the article about the man who considers it “effeminate” to kiss his little son. It sure burned me up. We are the fortunate parents of a whole houseful of boys, rang- ing in ages from teen-agers down jo toddlers. My Mg, strong, strapping husband kisses and loves his boys all file time. And when they line up every night for the good night Mas ritual, tot teen-agers lead the pack. k k k When they get too big to crawl up on Dad’s lap for affection, they get hugs, pats on the back and their hair tousled. And my husband is the most masculine man I have ever seen. So I agree with you, Abby. If a fattier shows outward signs of affection to his sons, it does not reflect on his masculinity. It only accentuates It. A REAL MAN’S WIFE k k k CONFIDENTIAL TO R. G.; An “apology” given in response’to a demand doesn’t mean much. It is merely a c o 11 ec t i o n of meaningless words. k k k Problems? Write to ABBY, In care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. k k k Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to Abby, In care of The Pontiac Press, for Abby’s booklet, “HOW TO WRITE LETTERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS.” Robert Stout of Hickory Lane recently received a Juris Doctor degree from the Detroit College of Law. Guests Honor August Bride August 21 bride-elect, Sharon Marie Blacklaw, was honored at a recent miscellaneous shower in the home of Mrs. Wendell White of.Leota Drive. Cohostess was Mrs. J. B. Springer. ★ * * Among the twenty -five guests present were Miss Blacklaw’s mother and mother-in-law to be. WWW, The George E. Blacklaws of West Huron -Street are the parents of the bride-elect. Her fiance, Michael Lynn Duff, is the son of Mrs. A. H. Duff of Michigan Avenue and the late Mr. Duff. Surprise Program Fashion Your Figure Club will meet Thursday, 7:36 p.m. at the Adah Shelly Library. A surprise program is planned. Guests are invited. PERSONALIZE YOUR GIFTS IN GOLD STAMPING • Napkins • Convention Guest Ribbons • Personalized Stationery Names in Gold Embossed on • Bibles • Books • Leather Goods CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9591 New Ftibrics to Dress Your Furniture! Only at Elliott's will you find the, selection of fabrics to give your furniture the exact look that you desire. Hundreds of the latest modern materials, nylons, friezes, plastic, leathers, tweeds, metallics, all in the complete color range of the rainbow. Furniture ami Onliljr Carpeting Since 1924” OR 3-1225 EASY BUDGET TERMS 5390-5400 DIXIE HWY. OPEN FRIDAY TIL 9 A Enjoy the Hospitality ' <; xf ' of the /Baltott itotel V WMjj Famous For Our Fine Buffet Vf Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner Alto Ala Carte Menu Service *JL** CATERING TO • BANQUETS - MEETINGS AND • WEDDING RECEPTIONS • BANQUETS • MEETINGS « k Comer.of Pike and Perry RECEPTION^ .135-6167, TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1965 SUMMER SALE 9? SUMNER DRESSES— SAVINGS TO 1/2 aid More BUDGET Were to 29.98 $8 $10 *12 BETTER were to 39.98 *14 *18 -4 *18 -SPRING GOATS- Were to 49.98 $22 —SPRING-SUMMER SUITS- Were to 59.98 -SPORTSWEAR- C00RB1NATES «7“ BLOB TM'VtA fAOT TIPS W.r.t.s.9, T-T —INTIMATE APPAREL— SLEEPWEAR $.m $988 Were to 5.98... U “ 9 M® $i88 . $£88 Were to 10.98. i " W HANDBAGS $«»88 $488 Were to 8.98.. 0 * T JUNIOR HIGH- swim sum Were to 8.98 T - *5“ SHIFTS _ Were to 8.98 T - V -YOUNG FOLKS- GIRLS’ DRESS SHIFTS Were to 7.98 $(88 - *4“ GIRLS’ SWIM SUITS Were to t5.98 *2“ - *3“ INFANTS’ SUN SUITS Were to $3.00 $J38 $(88 'ijk M -HATS- CLEAKANCE OF SUMMER HATS $9 Were to $8.98 ................ U Wore to 10.98 ........... W Were to 15.00.................. \ Straws, loco*, Orgonzos, Hair Braids. MR HATS Were to $40.00............................ Mr. John, Cathay, Michaelterre, Jilla, Schiaparelli ¥ Pfc. and Mrs. Frank Rut-tell Baker (Undo Sue Berry) left for Monterey, Calif, after recent vows and reception in the Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church. He attends the Defense Language Institute of Presidio of Monterey. Their parents are the Percy L. Berrys, East Howard Street, Mrs. Louis G. Rolley and the late Reuel Baker. The bride wore white peau satin with lace bodice and carried white cymbidium orchids. Rev. Theodore Allebach performed the rite. V Meet Friends for BREAKFAST Mid LUNOH Always Hood Coffee BIKER FOUNTAIN Mktr Bids. - Lobby Children Are Victims of Alcoholic Father By MURIEL LAWRENCE DEAR MRS. LAWRENCE: My husband drinks. Last week-, end when he came hone liquored up, my oldest child — • girl of 15 — left the bouse to stay with my sister. She says die won't come home. I guess toy husband is a real alcoholic. When he is liquored up he is so abusive and wild that the neighbors complain to the police. dr * ★ We have three younger children. God knows hie has put me through enough for the last tour years but what I can’t forgive is what he is doing to toe children. They are so ashamed of him ANSWER: Congratulate Bleach Wipes Off Stains Clothes aren’t the only articles that stain. Woodwork, wallpaper and kitchen utensils also become discolored. To clean wood boards and counters, spread a thin film of liquid chlorine bleach (1 oz.) and warm water (one cup) and let stand for 5 to 10 minutes before rinsing with clear, cool water. Far wood handles that have become rough with wear, try sanding gently with fine sandpaper. A quarter cup of chlorine bleach will help remove stains from enameled pots and pans, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. After the stain disappears, wash the pan with warm, sudsy water and then rinse. f, You are aware of their hart. That sympathy tor toe suffering of the children of alcoholic fathers is. apparently, rare to their mothers. According to A recent study of the families of alcoholic husbands, their wives "pamper” them and pay little attention to toe children. Says the report: “The parents are intensely and resentfully involved with each other. Apparently, the fa-tom1 has been in competition wito’the children from their birth and is always given preference by toe mother. Instead of receiving aw understanding of their suffering from her, they are required to understand her suffering.” * * * You’re Dot like that. You resent the hurts being inflicted on your children. Take the next step. Know your own resentment at the hurts being inflicted oa you. It is healthy to resent the demanding tantrums of alcoholics. It’s fine to resent the noisy abustveness that overwhelms everybody else to the family, the absences which tortare everybody with terror if the disasters the alcoholic may be Incurring, the stupors be? do whoa he wakes up-As you seem on toe edge of knowing your resentment ft these demands, ft may be time for you to write Al-Anon Family Group Headquarters, Inc., an agency which seeks to encourage alcoholics’ families to respect their own needs for attention. I Its address is P. 0. Box 12,. Madison Square Station, New York, N. Y. 10010. It will refer you to Its nearest local branchy | -FUR TRIM WINTER COATS-. 30% - 40% Below Regular Prices There's a demand for Graduate Operators! ? “learn a professional service” Faculty 4 Initructlorii* ora Randal ★ zota jaynes GRACE COLLINS * MARY ANN LEATHERBERRY 1H4 S. SAGINAW - PHONE: FE 4-2352 STAPP'S . annual mid-summer . Sale Starts Wednesday, July 7 9:30 A.M. Shoes from, our regular quality stock . . value priced! ODDS and ENDS TABLE INFANTS' CHILDREN'S GIRLS' BOYS' includes slippers, tennis shoes, play shoes, for boys ond girls and on assortment for. teens, too. $1°J 00 GIRLS' SCHOOL SHOES A wonderful value group fonts' sizes 6-3, misses' to size 3, growing girls' 5 to 8. Loafers, Choice of and assorted colors. : many styles i$ Boys and Men-^Here Are Bargains* 99 Oxfords, loafers, blocks, browns, beige. Smaf footwear for all V uses. Famous makes at sale *r prices. Boys' sizes 3!6 to 6, men's BVz up. 0 99 O pr- Bargains O 9*; Pr STRLDE-RITE Discontinued Styles :$i"99 Values . . . bargains . . . buys in boys' and girls' styles; straps, loafers' oxfords. Reds, browns, beige and natural elk. Sizes 8V2-3, and growing girls' sizes 5-8. Nationally Famous Brand Tennis Shoes A table of'colorful styles that will r\r\ be discontinued ofter this seoson. v r \ y y Children's sizes dt all stores. J * / Women's Sizes at our Downtown / Store only. jp: * Pr- STAPP'S JUNIOR SHOES 418 N. Main St. ROCHESTER JUVENILE BOOTERIE 28 E. Lawrance St. Downtown Pontiac JUNIOR SHOES ' 928 W. Huron St. at Talagraph Keeping Cool Requires a Plan and Patience By MADELEINE DOEREN There’s a cool approach to sunny days when the thermometer soars and everyone is trying to convince you that it Isn’t the heat, it’s the humidity! To keep fresh as a water- lily during summer days and nights, shift to lightweight porous fabrics; batiste, sheer gingham and cotton blends are more comfortable than jgyntbetics. T i *----------- If your figure is slim and & | SK ii K -Z. wjrap v’ |p4V'* mt: SVv Summer makeup requires perfection,- as the face is most often seen in all-revealing sunlight. It is more difficult to have the same pretty face at noon that started the day at nine. The most endearing characteristic of Vglva Smooth Lotion it its ability to check facial perspiration for hours, keeping makeup smooth, free from streaks or smears. Cotton Livens Cottage If your family is going to spend vacation time in a rented cabin or summer cottage, plan to take along a few inexpensive cotton Items to brighten toe interior. * * * ★ The National Cotton Council reports that cotton terry kitchen towels in colorful prints nuke attractive cafe curtains. Large beach towels can be used as absorbent slipcovers on chairs and sofas. Just tuck or pin the towels over seats and backs of furniture and they can be easily removed for washing. Besides adding a note of color, toe towels are are practical protectors against wet swimsuits. To cover toe scarred top of an old kitchen table, take a gaily printed cotton tablecloth with a slick vinyl coating. It can be quickly sponged off after each meal. Here’s another tip: If you have several cotton - covered pillows in bright colors, take them along for toe bed or sofa, to give the cabin a homey air, EXTRA SPECIALS Ref. *25 PERMANENT SZ *12^ Whatever Its present condition — thin, dry, brittle, abused — you can give your half a new lease on life with this remarkable new cold wave! 11 N. Saginaw St. I No Appointment Z Needed! Beauty Salon Phone FE 5-9257 svelte, look into the next-to-nothing new foundations that are barely there at all. Their clever seeming and light fabrics, really do give support. eieanae and your complexion often with a skin freshener kept in the refrigerator between clean-ups for expracoolth. NEW TREND Ctoling and pretty, too, la the new ‘powder’ trend In makeup. Eye shadow and brow pencil, also pressed powder and ‘blusher’ can be brushed on this season. The effect is to make you naturally and coolly pretty. Cologne helps take the simmer out of summer. a It Is a cologne because it contains a high percentage of soothing, refreshing alcohol that works a cooling magic on skin temperature. a It is Inexpensive enough to be splashed or sprayed liberally and frequently. SLIM DOWN Appetite lags In hot weather so summer is a good time to diet. Try fruit salads with a low-calorie filling base of skim milk cottage cheese. Blender-made drinks using fresh fruit and/or low-carolie soft drinks take the irk out of dieting. ★ * * Why not investigate Isometric, yoga, the trimming lazy-girl exercise in which toe muscles are working, but you aren’t. Many can be done while lying on a chaise longue. Patting humid-moist skin with generous amounts of fine body talcum before pulling on girdles and stockings helps to cut doWh on skin irritation. ★ * ★ Many deodorants have built-in anti-perspirant properties. Anti-peroptants, used by themselves, seem to be more effective when applied at night after your shower. START SLOWLY Begin the day with a cool, relaxed, evenly paced attitude, remembering to pat, not rub, yourself dry after a tepid tub or shower. Splash or spray summer cologne alb over your body. Follow with a light dusting of powder; giving a double puffing to toes. Apply deodorant and anti-perspirant under arms and back or neck and touch perfume creme sachet to wrists, temple, neck, behind the knees and in the crook of arms. .. + * * - Facial perspiration is a problem with many women. One company now offers Vel-va Smooth Lotion, a dear astringent, tinged) with the freshness of citrus. Apply with dampened cotton pad tothoroughly cleansed skin as the perfect prelude to makeup. R is a final sealer even to a finishing veil of powder and insures the longevity of makeup- PONTIAC CHAIR ft TABLE rentals PUNCH FOUNTAINS • Ctoapaga* Slaaaas • Naali Fountain • Silver Trays Nkar TaMaa » Wtari Stairs o Hospital Stas • Safey Sods o Crutchos o Walkors o Coffoo |FE 4-4044) 140 Oakland Ave. *CUSTOM DESIGN* PERMANENTS Prices $10 and Up HAIRCUTTING AND COLOR TINTING Scissor Haircutting X Beauty Shop Riktr OM«. FI 1-7114 FrM Parking on COOWMOM Lot , Annual Summer GIKDLE&BRA SALE Our regular merchandise and some discontinued numbers. 25% to 50^. off PETER PAN FORMFIT BALI MAIDENFORM WARNERS PLAYTRX SARONG • CHARGE ACCOUNT • FREE PARKING Bobette Shop 16 N. SAGINAW DOWNTOWN Quality Training by Lopez Sterling Beauty School Walton Blvd. at Dixie Hwjr. Drayton Plains OR 3-0222 2S5 Pierce MI 6-7790 BIRMINGHAM -Don’t Throw It Away. *. REBUILD IT TODAY! Our ouptfto wM raotero now comfort, higher quality Into your present mat- ■ Guaranteed iff Writing 7 Years \ OXFORD MATTRESS CO. i ! 49T North Parry St., Pontiac FE 2-1T111 SERVING THE PONTIAC AREA OVER 41 YEARS ■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■'■■•■■I ) JTHE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 9,1965 THIRTEEN WE3MESDAYS 49'ehEAY Dig into as many golden buttermilk pancakes as you can eat for just.. • SANDWICHES 4 STEAKS • SALADS WOODWARD AVE. Mi 14H Mil* Hi. BIRMINGHAM 15325 W. 8 MILE jMt East of Grt*nlitld 10001 TELEGRAPH RD. Off on a Florida honeymoon are the junior Frank Lawrence Baders (Bonnie Louise Keelty) who were wed recently in St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church. Their parents are the Francis A. Keeltys of Silver Berry Road and the Frank L. Baders of Whittemore Street. White Chantilly lace over taffeta fashioned the bride’s floor-length gown worn with fingertip illusion veil. She carried white roses and Steph-anotis. M*nlrui i»l.Crumb* Flnoil PwNIn hnnonoMs Call 682 9868 3369 Orrhtrd I,k. Itil. •I Commerce Rd. At-rosa Front High School * Choose from more than 2,500 ktautiful pattern* of special telacfed stock. WALLPAPERS Trimmed—Pastad-Wosliable trtm 20*' „ 99*r. Room Loti — $1.98 and Up ACME PAINT New Shoes Swapped for Antiques Women farsighted enough to put their old shoes, or grandmother’s old shoes, in the attic or store closet may now have an opportunity to swap them for three pairs of high heel shoes made with a new Anthonized tintable glitter fabric. Nailhead Creations Inc., New York, manufacturer of the Anthonized material, will exchange the modem shoes for each pair of old shoes it accepts. AAA “We’re • looking for ladies shoes dating back before the 1940s,” says J. G. Anthony, Nailhead's president, “in order to create a Footwear Museum.” w. Anyone interested in swapping high-button or other early model shoes should send a photograph, along with a brief description, to: Shoe Swap, Nailhead Creations Inc., 20 West 31st St., New York, N.Y. 10001. Include your shoe size. NEW SHOES “We’ll have shoes made to order to swap for those we select,’’ says Mr. Anthony. “They’ll all be constructed with the new tintable material, and they’ll all be white. The advanced construction of our fabric will allow the women to dye the shoes any color they want, completely and evenly.” Polly's Pointers Keep Down Clutter Adds More Room If a dress has become too snug in the bodice, rip out the back darts and convert to. the needed fullness with gathers. DEAR POLLY — Each time my child receives a new toy she must part with an old one which she can choose. This keeps the clutter down and teaches her she must give to receive.—LINDA DEAR POLLY—When painting from the paint can dr even pouring paint into a roller tray, I tear a piece of cleansing tissue in half, twist it and tuck it around the Up of the can. This absorbs the paint that ordinarily fuip into the -Up around the top of the can. When the painting is finished just puU the tissue out' and there is not a lot of residue to clean up. The top fits tightly again and a lot of time and “clean up” haS been saved. - A full tissue is too heavy tb tuck in propertly but one half of one will fit almost around the entire top of a quart can. Many of us like to stand platters and so on against the backs of cupboard shelves but have no plate grooves in which to place them. I take a pipe cleaner, twist each end into a small loop that a thumb-tack will hold firmly to the shelf and place it so the strip is in the desired place on a shelf to keep the dish from slipping down. This has the additional advantage of being easy to remove at house cleaning time, can be placed on top of shelf paper at the proper distaace from the waU to hold a particular piece and saves shelf space as well as broken dishes.—MRS. G. B. DEAR POLLY—Knowing that my boys’ shirts with long sleevhs and long inside tails will probably be too small next winter, I am converting them into new style summer shirts. Simply cut off the sleeves to come above the elbows, allowing for lW-inch hems. Snip off the tail allowing for a 2Y4-inch hem that’ is to be turned up to give the appearance of a 2-inch band at the bottom. Add a buttonhole and button in the center front of the band. Next pleat over on the side seams to take up the excess width and sew down with two matching buttons for each side of this band. For the cost of 1$ minutes, a bit of thread and five buttons 1 have the latest style shirt from what would likely be a discarded one next fall. — SHARLENE GIRLS — I am so sorry but | it is impossible for us to answer the many requests for “repeats” of previous hints. Do try to clip and save any that interest you.—POLLY Share your favorite homemaking ideas . , . send than to Polly in care of The Pontiac Press. You’ll receive a dollar if Polly uses your idea in Polly’s Pointers. Telephones Busy j More than 175,000 telephone j calls a day are made to and j from the 6,500 telephones at | the New York World’s Fair. Samuel E. Hartman, son of the Rudolph Hartmans of Glendale Avenue, received his B.A. degree from the University of Michigan. JNeum< “SMART GIRL” SEAMLESS Plain or Micro with nude heels and demi-toes. We Will Be CLOSED From Monday, July 5th Through Saturday, July 10th FOR INSTALLATION OF NEW EQUIPMENT -OPEN- MONDAY, JULY 12TH Quality Cleaning Since 1919 donnell’s Hair Stylists ||M| WMfl&vHW* v . •* & $45 to $8(1 The season's most talked about news . . wigs and wiglets of fine European hair. From dark to lightest blonde shades. Learn the excitement of creating hair fashions with -a real hair wiglet. Bring in your own wig today, for a free consulta- We Sell and Service WIGS from $150 to $300 r:30 Tim. Ev*. Open 9 • 9 — Saturday 9 - 6 82 N. Saginaw St. ~ 719 WEST HURON f&fr FE 4-1536 The new toothbrush | is molded of Forticel ; plastic with a hole that 7 runs down the fength of the handle. If you put one end in the stream I under the faucet you i can sip up water to rinse ■ the toothpaste out of * your mouth after brush-i ing. The traveler need ' no longer worry about ! cups or glasses unth this I handy device built into j his toothbrush. These I Rinsin toothbrushes are j made by Renco Labs, P.O. Box 3442, Ana-I heim, Calif. and will be 1 available at drug, de-! partment and variety I stores. AT LAST. for those that hear but do not understand • N# card*- its HAm-M kuttnn*—n* ••(Knot, bottom • Mod* to tit your *or and hearing probUm. o Tb* M*t tomfartobl*, notoral koorina lma|laaU> • Ft*, ontiroly In tb* **r-4», net *»»ck at*. II Better Hearing Service “|. FI 2-0292 IV* ra. jgyinuw-rn. n *-v*r*. & | la With Pontioc Optical, Actme from Simmt , | (Rental may b* appliad to $ 1 pwthnao) 1;1 ci > **'•*: ( jj ' '■* ' fi l 1 am intomatod In t*n*m# t, Avoilokla only at 8 | 1 won* hnfbor information ^^ ^ — J AitMl'i July Ctmam Mens Clothing Cuppenheimer and Madison Suits $49*o$79 Regular to 189.95 ItZ $89 ,o$124 Sport Coats Year 'round and lightweight .o'fftoo *3*» $66 - Slacks 1690 *° 2490 Regular to $30.00 Sport Shirts Regular 099 . 0*9 to $13.95 O andQ Dress Shirts Short and Long Sleeve Regular to $8.95 399 * £99 HURON at TELEGRAPH CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY Budget ng Tonight FARMINGTON-Public hearing on a $6.4-million operating budget for 1965-66 will be held by the Farmington Board of Education tonight. if it "if Anticipating an enrollment jump of about 1,000, the board is seeking authority to spend some fl million more next year than it did this year. The final proposed budget comes much closer to being balanced than did the one tentatively approved by the board in March. Larger estimated receipts, principally in the amount of state aid, have cut the expected deficit from $319,335 to $985. -_jL-_jfc__.it.. ... Of the $6,395,673 in proposed Utica Driver Dies After Auto Crash UTICA—A Utica man, George L. Carbary, 37, of 6045 Catalpa, died Sunday of internal injuries received in an auto accident last week. ★ ★ ★ Police said neither Carbary nor the driver of the second car, Bruce E. Laegstra, 32, of 41431 Mound, reported any injuries at the time of the accident. ♦ ■ f 4r They said Carbary began feeling dizzy two days later and checked into St. Joseph Hospital, Mount Clemens, where doctors attributed his death to injuries received in the accident. ■ * ★ ★ Carbary was charged with failing to yield the right of way after he pulled in front of Laegstra at Hall Road and Merrill. expenditures, $4,877,370 would be used for instruction; ADDED TO BUDGET The category includes $330,918 added to the budget by improvements in the teachers’ salary schedule. Included in the amount allowed for instruction would be $2,551,890 for elementary; $1,-991,689 for secondary; $393,652 for special education; $13,499 for summer school; and $16,-650 for adnlt education. A breakdown of other costs lists operation of plant, $679,316; maintenance, $203,362; administration, $196,170; transportation, $195,806; and capital outlay, $113,000. ....* V € ' Jrf " Others are fixed charges, $112,600; health services, $8,000; attendance services, $7,000; and community services, $2,450. SCHOOL OPERATION Property owners in Farming-ton city and township will pay 2L5 mills for school operation while those in the West Bloomfield Township portion of the district will pay $21.30 per $1,-000 of assessed valuation. Added to these is an 11-mill levy for debt retirement. Tonight’s public hearing will be held in conjunction with the board's 8 p.m. organizational meeting. Church Guest Speaker Will Be District Leader AVON TOWNSHIP - District superintendent Rev. Leslie Williams, of Flint, will be the guest speaker at the 11:15 a.m. service Sunday at Elmwood Methodist Church, 3050 S. Grant. Following the service, ground breaking ceremonies will be held foe the new church on Crooks. SO CLEAN SO COMFORTABLE SO ECONOMICAL No l/l/ondet Ho Specified Notml 60s! • SUPERIOR RAMBLER • BILL SM OAKLAND AVE., PONTIAC • HOUGHTEN A SON, MC. ROCHESTER MOTOR SALES LAKE ORION • ROSE RAMBLER, UNION LAKE Pleasant, relaxed contentment springs from knowing that your home is staffed with the carefree conveniences and worry-free comforts of versatile Natural Gas. IPs wonderful to know that at your fingertips—at the touch of a thermostat—your home can be cozy-warm in winter and delightfully cool in summer. Gas heating and air conditioning provide a perfect indoor climate—a boon to health. Families have better appetites, sleep better and feel better in air-conditioned homes. And Gas ends fuel deliveries, storage problems, breakdowns—yet it is so economical! Yes, it’s a good feeling to know that your home provides all the comfort, cleanliness, efficiency and quality that modem .^living demands—because you specified Natural Gas, Today 8 out of 1Q new homes specify NATURAL GAS FOR HEATING CLASSIC—new Intermediate-Size Rambler; In eedant, convertibles, , optional vinyl-roof hardtops; to a 327 cu. ln.V-8. You'll swing a sweet Now! Rambler^ SWAP 'NGo SALE AMERICAN-the Economy King; comas aa sporty at you want to mako It and atlll.savas you plenty. MARLIN-the man-a/za aports-fastback; standard-equipped with pure excitement, Power Disc Brakes, reclining front seats, more. AMBASSADOR-largest finest of the now Ramblers. Beautifully, luxurious. Sales are up 136'/. over last year-greatest percentage increase of all '66 cars. Big excitement, big savings, big summer deals—all on top of the extra savings you make with the auto excise tax cut in effect right now Do yourself proud and save a bundle. Try a big-performance '65 Rambler. Take in the luxury, room, sporty extras. Then check the free-swinging summer deals during Rambler's Swap 'N Go Sale! Just swap your present car for a hew Rambler on a terrific deal at the lowest prices yet (even lower with the new excise tax cutj) - and you go Rambler-solid, Rambler-aure, and with all the Rambler extra values, like Double-Safety Brakes, Ceramic-Armored Exhaust System, Deep-Dip Rustproofing, and more. So come on In—the going's great and the buys are the greatest at your Rambler dealer now! THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1965 Cereal Leaf Beetle Story of an Unwelcome Immigrant' About five years ago, a tiny insect crawled out of the hold of a European freighter docked at Detroit, spread its wings and started “lookin’ for a home.” A few days later the first cereal leaf beetle jo enter Michigan settled into a Berrien County oat field and started raising a family. Since that time, the descendants of this hardy pioneer have spread throughout most of southern Michigan, much to the consternation of farmers and the State Department of Agriculture. How this grain-destroying pest actually crossedthe Atlantic from Europe, where it has been a serious threat for many year a gri cultural experts say. J ★ * But it stands the test of logic for the simple reason that the cereal leaf beetle was unknown in this part of the country before the opening of the St. Lawrence Seaway. HERE TO STAY When it became evident in 1962 that the new pest was here to stay, the Department of Agriculture launched a massive control program. But the beetle had already established a firm foothold in southwestern Michigan, and several hundred acres of oats and wheat were destroyed before the controls became effective. In addition to aerial spraying with malathion and carbaryl, both powerful insecticides, the department started establishing agricultural quarantines in counties where the beetle was detected. Its progress across the state could be easily followed as the quarantine spread northward and eastward through some 30 counties. ■!* ' '♦ Jr Federal amL state-agricultural field men, constantly “patrolling” lower Michigan for signs of the beetle’s migration, first detected its presence in Oakland County last summer, when they discovered signs of it in Lyon Township. UNDER QUARANTINE The township was immediately placed under quarantine, and the restrictions are still in force, according to Jay Pof-fenberger, Cooperative Extension Service agent for Oakland County. A new outbreak of the beetles was .discovered in four counties surrounding Oakland last week, and the entire area was quarantined. Rose Township Was included in the restrictions, along with Washtenaw, Livingston and Genesee counties, and four townships in southern Lapeer County.' ★ * * As long .as the restrictions are in force, fanners and truckers are prohibited from moving grain, hay, animal bedding, seeding sod and harvesting machinery without clearance by state field men. CUMBERSOME NUISANCE Obviously, such restrictions are a cumbersome nuisance, if not a serious drawback to agricultural commerce. The qnaraatiae is designed to prevent giving the beetle a “free ride” to uninfested areas. Research has disclosed, however, that it is a seasoned traveler in its own right. Specimens have been collected by researchers in airplanes flying at altitudes of several thousand feet. And the bug is known to “ride” for many miles on high-altitude winds. This accounts for the fact that some areas are “skipped over” as the infestation spreads. HOT YOUNG PLANTS Although the beetle is most damaging to oats, it is also’ a threat to wheat, con, barley and rye, attacking the young plants in spring and early summer. The adnlt beetle is three-sixteenths of an inch long. The head and hard wing coven are metallic bine-black. The legs and front part of the thorax just behind the head are orange-red. Its life cycle begins in April, when toe adult lays its eggs on top of the leaves of host plants. ★ ★ ★ The larvae hatch in five to 10 days and feed on the leaves until the latter part of June. They then burrow about two inches into toe soil, where pupation takes place. HIDING MACES When toe adults emerge early in Jiily, they again feed on toe host plants until mid-July, when they dMcontinue feeding and seek overwintering sites under the bark of trees, in fence posts and logs, in baled hay and straw and similar dry, secluded hiding places. Researchers say early planting aids in control of the pest, as it prefers young tender leaves. The Department of Agriculture says its spray program if helping to keep the infestation from becoming overwhelming. - *•—*• But toe fact that toe pest is constantly being detected in new areas is evidence that the threat of complete destruction of Michigan grain crops, such as occurred in Yugoslavia and other countries a few years ago, is by no means past. . Unit to Hear Urban Plan Procedures ROMEO — The various areas of urban planning and what it entails will be explained to toe newly created planning commission at a 7:30 meeting tonight in theviUage hall. Village Clerk Norman Engel, said Gerald R. GUI and Lestor R. Nichols, both of the Community Planning Division, Michigan Department of Economic Expansion, wUl discuss urban planning and available financial assistance. • * •* ★/ Engel said the village has applied for federal funds from the Planning Assistance “701" Program, under which Romeo would pay one-third of the cost of a planning program. The federal government would pay the remainder. it 'it ■ it “I don’t know how far we’U go with this,” .said Engel. “Right now, we’re just concerned with getting the planning commission off in the r i g h t direction.” Thumb Area Antipoverty Grant Is Approved, Hackie Reports LAPEER-A $16,961 Program Development Grant for- toe Thumb Area Economic Opportunity Commission, Inc., has been approved by the Office of Economic Opportunity, Congressman Jobh C. Mackie reports. * * * -^::k The money will be used to develop antipoverty programs tar Lapeer, Tuscola, Sanilac and Huron counties. Clifford Sanford, supervisor of toe Lapeer County Bureau, of Social Aid and an alternate on toe commission board of directors, said the money will be need to hire a director and staff to develop fntnre programs. “We’ll start screening applicants right away and try to get under way by August.” he said. ★ it * Two programs in the making are a pilot program for family counseling in Tuscola County and a training program for low- income families in homemaking service and child care. The program; If approved, wjll be tried first in Tuscola Cmkity, and if Satisfactory may be expanded to toe other counties. The Thumb Area Economic Opportunity Commission Board of Directors will meet July 13 to screen applicants. Exchange Students to Visit in Avondale ! Exchange students, from 22 I countries will be toe guests of the Avondale AmericaijField Service Thursday througn'Sat. urday. ★ ★ ★ The studen(s, who have been living in the United States for the past year, are touring the country before returning to their homes. * w J The students will take a tour of the Pontiac Motor Division Friday morning. That evening there will be a cooperative dinner at Avondale High School followed by square dancing. * * * All interested persons are invited to the dinner and may call' Mrs. Don Allen or* Mrs. Dan VanderBroek for further information. Deaf-Mute Chair Slated TROY p| The deaf-mute chojr from «rand Rapids will perform at toe 11 a.m. jnd 7 p.m. services Sunday at the Troy Assembly of God, 3200 Liver-nois. The choir, which sings in sign language, Is directed by Miss Phyllis Clapper, an ordained minister with the Assemblies of God. Rev. Louie H. Calaway wilj preach at the 11 a.m. service. JULY JMUOIEE Take advantage of this offer NOW! COMBINATION ALUMINUM DOOR Full 1* Deluxe Door- J Complete with all hardware Also • ALUMINUM SIDING fWw stvif BVtythlwaj m ylwthu for flf • AWNINGS lASTmor-Wi-e-. • PATIOS • DOORS • SLIDING DOORWALLS • PRIME WINDOWS • STORM WINDOWS AND DOORS • PATIOS ENCLOSED w**"*t~« Showroom Open8 A.M. to ALL AWNING, A** * >. jit . All Insurance Work 919 Orchard Laka Ava. ....,er..* PICK UP AND DELIVERY THE PONTI AC PRESS TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1965 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN FIFTEEN Ford Posts 10th Victory for Yankees Cool Heads, Strong Arms Help Tigers Gain Split DETROIT (AP)-Joe Sparma says a cooler head — and the strong arms of coaches Bob Swift and Frank Skaff helped him gain his third straight victory over the New York Yankees Monday. Sparma needed relief help, but was still the pitcher of rec- ord when the Tigers scored three runs in the seventh inning (m their way to a 54 victory over the Yankees in the second game of a holiday twin Ml. * * * . Whitey Ford posted his 10th win of the season when the Yankees took the opener, 7-2. SpaMna triggered a heated argument iq the third inning of the nightcap when Yai^cee pitcher Steve Hamilton threw the first pitch over his head. LONG RUN Before it was all over, Joe Pepitone had raced in from words and Phil Linz was ejected after coming out of the dugout and allegedly using abusive lan-,guage against one of the umpires. * * * “They were on me in the first inning," Sparma said. “They right field to get in a few choice | said last year 1 threw at their best hitters and they continue to think, that today. "I don’t try to hit anyone. But I do tiy to pitch to a batter’s weakness and when a left-handed nitter is up there, I’m naturally going to try to pitch him high and tight,” Sparma continued. He threw one pitch to Tony Kubek which hit Kubek’s bat as he ducked away and sent Pepitone sprawling with a change-up pitch “that got away” from him. SIGNALS KUBEK After Hamilton’s high throw, Sparma Walked in front of the plate to show he didn’t like the pitch, then motioned to Kubek to come in, thinking the Yankee shortstop wanted to talk to his pitcher. Kubek, thinking Sparma was asking for a fight, rushed at him but was caught short. Swift and Skaff held on to Spar- 'Walking Wounded' Favored in British Open Throat Ailment Slows Palmer; Nicklaus Okay Event Will Start Wednesday; L e ma to Defend Crown SOUTHPORT, England (AP) — The word went out today among the ranks of the world’s greatest golfers: “Watch out for the walking wounded. They’ll beat you.” A half dozen of the top stars in the Held of 130 that has gathered for the British.Open are complaining of health problems of one sort or another. Arnold Palmer, who won the Open on Royal Birkdale’s 7,037-yard par 73 course four years: ago, wore a turtle neck sweater ' against chill winds which might further damage a sore throat he has been bothered with for several days.. BAD THROAT Bruce Devlin of Australia had such a bad throat he even had it, X-rayed in case there was some foreign body lodged there. It | wasn’t. Kel Nagle, fellow Australian who was runner-up in the U.S. Open this year and won the British Crown at St. Andrews in 1960, had a sore back. So did Bob Charles of New Zealand, the 1963 champion. The Birkdale Chib lined up a local physiotherapist to tend them1. Defending champion Tony Lema of San Leandro, Calif., breezed in Monday, back to his playing weight of 17S after he started smoking again to reduce from 195. But Lema recalled a stomach upset he had last year in England and said “I hope that doesn’t show up again.” WINDS BLOW Gary Player, the little South African who won the American Open three weeks ago, said he was pleased that the winds w6re blowing in off the Irish Sea. “My hay fever, you know,” he1 said. Everybody in the star studded field seemed able and willing to have something wrong with them, except Jack Nicklaus, who is the 3-1 favorite to win his j first British Open, the only major championship that has eluded the Golden Bear. ___“I’m fine," he said with a big smile. “And I’m desperate to win this one." In his tuneups for the 72 hole medal play which starts Wednesday and ends Friday, Nicklaus had a special look at the 468 yard par-4 sixth hole. “It’s the worst hole,” he said. ••It’s all right for power hitters like myself, Palmer and some others and I can play it. But it must be powered.” - That may be the hole where the Open is won or lost. There usually is one like that. The first prize of $4,900 is only! chicken feed to the big golfers.! But the winner gets a shot at the four-man World Series of Golf with a $50,000 first prize. As Lema, who did that double last year said, “It’s worth a lot more than that.” , CUB TRAPPED — Chicago Cubs’ outfielder Jim Stewart is tagged out at the plate by catcher Chris Cannizzaro of the Mets in the first game of yesterday’s doubleheader. But Mets Monday's Best Stewart was cutdown trying to score from second on a single. New York won both games, 3-2 and 3-0. Reds Take NL Lead By The Associated Press i Cincinnati squeezed ahead of Los Angeles into the National! League lead. But if the New York Mets! played only on Monday, the j Reds and Dodgers wouldn’t even be in the race. Cashing in on a succession of wild throws, the Reds scored three times in the seventh inning Monday night and beat the slipping Dodgers 7-4. That putj Cincinnati into first place by two percentage points, dropping Los Angeles out of the top spot for the first time since May 4. Meanwhile, led by the slug- j ging of Shea Stadium's reigning idol — Ron Swoboda — the last-place Mets continued to work their Monday'magic. Swoboda knocked across the first five runs of the holiday doubleheader with a pair of homers as the Mets swept Chicago, 3-2 and 3-0. Since losing to the Dodgers on ! 128 Teams Enter Forest Lake Golf Blitzen Wins Regatta MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP)-•Blitzen, skippered by Bill and Tom Schoendorf of Milwaukee, placed first overall and won the 1 Queen’s (kip regatta from Muskegon, Mich., to Milwaukee during the weekend with a corrected time of 13 hours, 14 min-' utes and 27 seconds. Some of the area’s leading amateur golfers will be on hand when the third annual Forest Lake Invitational Golf Tournament gets under way Thursday. A total of 128 two-man teams will tee off in the qualifying round Thursday, and they will be paired into eight flights for the first round of match play Friday. • Returning to defend their title are Harry Nederlander of Forest Lake -and Gene Eyler of Oakland Hills. Other twosomes in the field include Tom Draper of Birmingham and H^arry Everett of Resd Run, father and soil team of Pete and Ed Green, of Orchard Lake, Parry Byard and Chuck Stinson of Red Run, and brothers Gordon and Chuck West of Oakland Hills. opening day, the well-entrenched tailenders have won eight and tied one on Monday. Included in the unusual string is the 1-0 triumph at Cincinnati on June 14 — the night Jim Maloney pitched a no-hitter for 10 innings — as well as three doubleheader sweeps. And to prove they’re not one-season wonders, the Mets won six of seven on Monday last year. Also in the NL — the Philadelphia Phillies made it eight vic-tOrieS fn their last 10 games by knocking off Pittsburgh twice in a twi-night doubleheader, 3-1 and 6-2; Curt Flood’s single in the 12th inning enabled the St. Louis Cardinals to win their sixth straight, 3-2 over San Francisco; and Walt Bond’s squeeze bunt in the ninth brought in the run that gave Houston a 5-4 decision over Milwaukee’s slumping Braves. Crowds Swell at Ball Games The Reds got only one hit in their seventh-inning ' rally against the Dodgers — Leo Cardenas’ leadoff single. But losing reliever Bob Miller threw wildly to second on winning pitcher Jim Maloney’s bunt, followed with another wild throw — to third r- !on Tommy Harper’s bunt, and center fielder Willie Davis then threw wildly to third after catching Pete Rose’s sacrifice fly. Result: Three runs. MONDAY DUD Swoboda, who had been a Monday dud for the Mets with only two hits in 15 tries, made up for it against the Cubs. The rookie outfielder homered with two on in the first inning of the opener for the Mets’ only runs and hit his 15th homer in the second game, with one aboard in the second inning. ♦ * a Jim Bunning threw 8 five-hif-ter in the Phils-Pirate opener, with Philadelphia backing him with two runs in the sixth inning on two walks, Ruben Amaro’s single and an error, and Alex Johnson’s homer in the eighth. Bob Veale was the loser. By The Associated Press Holiday attendance figures for both the National and American Leagues swelled Monday as thousands of baseball fans celebrated independence Day at major league ballparks. The largest crowd of the day was at Detroit where the Tigers split a doubleheader with the New York Yankees before 40,-153. Last year, the Tigers played a single game against Washington on Independence Day amkattracted only 8,481. Soaring Pilot Wins Top Spot With Fifth Chicago .. . Pittsburgh NATIONAL LEAGUE Houston at M .. AMERICAN LEAGUE New York at Detroit, 1 i Boston at Minnesota, t, day-night Baltimore at Kansas city Cleveland at Chicago, night Total* ................... Grand Tetal 145,oat Taja] si\m ADRIAN (AP) - George Moffat Jr. of Elizabeth, N.J. placed fifth Monday in the fifth event, a 149.8 distance flight, of the National Soaring Championships held here, but Moffat still was in first place over-all. Moffat covered only 135 miles of the trip from Adrian to Van | Wert, Ohio, and back. He still . led over-all standings With 4,535 | out of a possible 5,000 points. ★ G * ; Winner of Monday’s event was jJohn Firth, of Montreal, Cana-j da, who was the only glider pilot to cover the entire distance plus an optional distance for a total of 171.3 miles. , Jim Perry Pilots Twins to League Lead First Start Since '64 Helps Team Sweep Past Red Sox By The Associated Press In one crack, Minnesota’s Jim Perry has started as many games as he did all of last year, completed as many games as he had in two jears and gained as many shutouts as he had in nearly three years. Ferry aim pitched the Twins into a lVfe-game lead in the American League, stopping Boston 2-0 On seven hits and | helping Minnesota complete a sweep of a Monday doubleheader. The Twins won the opener 6- The start for the 28-year-old right-hander was his first since June 4, 1964, when the New York Yankees battered him for six runs in one inning. He hadn’t completed a game since Aug. 9, 1963, when he defeated the Red Sox 5-3, and his last shutout was June 4, 1963, a 5-0 triumph over Kansas City. FORMER LEADER > Perry hadn’t done much toiling at ail, except in the bullpen, until last month. By the end of May, he had pitched only 10 innings, far different from more plentiful times, such as 1960 when he led the league with 18 victories while with Cleveland. Despite his relative inactivity, Perry picked up four victories in a 17-day period at the end of May and the beginning of June and now is 5-0 with a 2.57 earned run average. His record also reads: one! start, one complete game, one shutout. In other AL games, Chicago trimmed Cleveland 3-1, Baltimore defeated Kansas City 7-4 and Los Angeles downed Washington 5-2 before bowing 4-3. FIVE STRAIGHT The Twins extended their winning streak to five behind Perry in the nightcap. The right-hander allowed only one Boston runner to reach third base. He got all the support he needed in the fourth inning when Bob Allison singled, stole second and came all the way home when catcher Mike Ryan threw the ball into center field. Dave Boswell stopped the Red Sox on six hits in the first game until he needed relief help from A1 Worthington in the ninth. Harmon Killebrew hit a key two-run single in the sixth. Cleveland started out the day tied with Minnesota for the lead, but pitcher Sam McDowell uncorked a wild throw on Ron Hansen’s sacrifice bunt in the seventh inning and Chicago went on to score two runs. Bill Skowron scored on the error, and Floyd Robinson singled in Hansen. Robin Roberts allowed only four hits in 71-3 innings of relief j and broke a personal seven-game losing streak for Baltimore. Boog Powell led the attack against Kansas City, driving in three runs with a double and a single. ma as others kept Fepitone away. “I was _________ . Baltimore 7, Kansas City 4 Today's Games Boston (Stephenson 1-2) at Grant 1-2). night Cleveland (Slebert 1-3) a (McLain a-... ....... Washington (Daniels 5-t or Kopllt; at Los Angeles (Chance 4-4), night Monday's Results Houston S, Milwaukee 4 jis (Simmons 4-1), night ’Ittsburgh (Cardwell 7-3) at 1 * (Culp 5-4), nlgt- E—Wert. DP—New York 2. LOG—I iork 7, Detroit 5. 2B—Lopel, Pepitone, Trash, Wert, H Horton (If), Pepitone (t). SF-Fr**ha NEW YORK DETROIT ' 0 0 0 0 Rlch'oon 2b 5 0 3 2 Thornes r. Kube* is soil frown ph till Trawl if 2 0(0 Cash It) * - * -Pepitone rf 1I 0 0 Lump* 2b Barker lb 3 0 0 0 DomMor II Repoc cf 4 111 Horton it Boyor 3b 4 110 Wort lb Gibbs c 3 0 0 0 Northrop r Mantle ah 1 0 0 0 Oylor is LOPU ph 0 0 0 0 M'Aultft* si Mosc'ltt* pr 0 1 0 0 Sperm* p Kalina ph Weed pr Tetal* at < 14 Taut* New Yerk ............... too « Detroit ................. OH 11 1—Kubek 2. DP-New York 1, * LOB—Now York i, Detroit 7. Temeter, Bi-- ----“ I—Repot C Hamilton 0 2 0 2 0 0 2 2 0 0 o * t i Patriots' Receiver First BOSTON (AP) - Flanker-back Jim Colclough, one of the. Patriots, became the firM ver-eran pass received to sign a 1965 contract today. • " I DAWN DONUTS 804 NORTH PERRY Pontiac, Michigan Phone 334-9041 Every Sunrise ' ...... THIS WEEK’S SPECIAL! i ALL BISMARKS M Sugar Coated With Jellies And Jams In A Delicious Assortment of Flavors This Week'* Added Feature: FRITTERS-JETS-APPLESAUCE FRtEO CAKES If You Like Apple Flavor, You'll Low Tho*o New Variety Taste Treat* APPLE TREATS On The Way To Work Or Home From A Party, You'll Enjoy Dawn's Famous Flavor Brewed Coffeo DAWN DONUTS a* SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1965 WSBKBND MMI ■ By Tb* Assaclatad Fra imla - Mjp*. m 1 >*dT?*» leu Kano, 114. So 11MTM, i U. 8. fishermen aptod an estimated 9.5 billion eadi year. WouldnYYou Really Rather Own A Buick? 210 Orchard Lk.Ave.afWm*. FE 2-9101 Opel Men., Tee*. A Then. Nights All-Star Picks Include Three from Twins, Yanks KING EDWARD” Ampries't Lergetl Spiling Cig»r BOSTON (AP)—Three Minnesota Twins and throe New York Yankees were among nine picked for the 1965 American League All-Star team Tuesday by Manager A1 Lopes of Chicago. The Yankees, shut out in the balloting for the starters in the annual All-Star clash at Minnesota July 13, will be represented by catcher Elston How- Latter Day Saints Lead Ball Teams ih Church Loop The final first half standings in the Waterford Church Soft-ball League have the Drayton Plains Reorganized Latter Day Saints team alone atop the standings. The other six loop squads, second or fi Drayton’s RLDS finished unbeaten with a 5-2 triumph.over Donelson Baptist which was bidding for a share of the lead. The winners grabbed a quick 3-0 edge and rode the 11-strikeout hurling of Wayne Jenks to their sixth conquest. Two upsets found Christ Lutheran dumping St. Steven’s Lutheran, 7-3, as Jerry Johns, Bob ard, second baseman Bobby Richardson and outfielder Mickey Mantle. This was the 14th All-Star selection for the ailing Mantle, making him the senior on the team announced by American League headquarters. Chosen to Join Minnesota’ Earl Battey, the starting catcher selected in a poll of AL play-coaches and .managers, were shortstop Zoilo' Versalles, first, baseman Harmon Kelle-brew and outfielder Jimmy Hall. KALINE NAMED Also named by Lopez were third baseman Max Alvis of Cleveland and outfielders Al Kaline of Detroit and Carl Yas-trzemski of Boston. As the AO-Star manager, Lopez must also name the pitching corps—to be announced Friday. au-irPtrsas smsasssu: two hits, and St Paul Metho-won its first, taking Union Lake Baptist, 1M. WATERFORD CHURCH SOFTBALL Drayton RLDS « I I | Vanity Lavatory . Los Errors—Sanchez. Ber Robinson, D. Millar. THIS IS A FREE COUPON IT'S HOT GOOD FOR fcNYTUmCl ^ ITS JUST YREfc ErlDUINCfr DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Air Condition Your Car! WE SERVICE ALL CARS! SPORTS CALENDAR U Jayta* Park — Huron-Airway vs. R. I Northslde — Michigan B vs. Buckner Finance, S;W-“i Drayton Plalm Fork -Lakeland Pharmacy, 7 enjoy driving againl get a cool EATON car air conditioner today from PIKERAD,AT0R SERVICE 403 E. Pike St. FE 4-6692 Convenient Bank Term* Watch For The Arrival Date. Custom Color 238 W. Montcalm FE 4-9513 Pontine Jim Butcher Believes • *» The Big Difference In Cars Today Is The Service They (let Practically any new U.S. built car you bay today is ■ good our. And, ear for car, tba prices are generally competitive. Tbe service the dealer gives yea on your ear b tbe real big diflereoee as you roll up tbe-miles. Aod we’ve bad a let of people tall os that they Just haven’t been able ta got good service work aaymare. That’s why Pm deteraaiued to make the arrvice we give yoa tbe very fiaeat yoa eaa get anywhere aod at a lair aad That’e tba see big piu* we offer yoa ia add it too ta aft tba other phsaaes yoa’II Had la oar Chrysler aad Plymouth rare. 8a, if tbal'a what yoa’re leokiag for, drive right la here. YoaH get it, believe toe. Jim Butcher*» Oakland Chrysler-Plymoith. lie. 724 Oakland Avw., Pontiac Complete RELIABLE iSSo TR N. Perry. FE4*0701 I THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1965 SEVENTEEX Major League Boxes MINNESOTA abrbM l 4 6I ‘ ill tot* sirs M.,bc iillffllLSw*, tec- tjtjm,,'* b' till it w IS-Hall 2, Allison t Conlgllaro. IB— Oliva. HR—Horton (2), Thomas (14). IB —Jon**, Hkll I. S—Klndall, Vertalles. w.hTu.«......... « —::■***] 1 S ? I Boswell W, 14 ... i 1-3 i 2 2 2 10 Worthington S3 1 9 9 0 I WP—Dullba. T—3:04. A—22,443. Night >gw» BOSTON MINNBSOTA kkrhM abrhfcl Schilling 2b 4 0 0 0 V'raaHoa as 3 0 0 0 Jones 3b 4 990 Oliva rf 3019 Horton lb 1 0 0 0 Hail cf - 4 0 2 0 MMtlllk cf- 4 0 10 Klllab'w 3b 4 0 0 0 TnOnta* If 3 0 2 0 Mlnchor lb 4 10 0 Cmgl'ro rf 4 0 10 AHIaon If 1110 Brooaoud u 4011 Battay c 4 0 3 1 Ryan c 4 9 0 0 Allan 2b 2000 Mantl'd p 3 0 0 0 Noaaak ph 0 0 0 0 Tinman.ph l 01 0 Klndall 2b 0 0 0 0 Wilson ,pr 9 0 0 0 Parry p 4 0 0 0 Mai zona ph 10 0 0 Tatata 33 0 20 Totals 321*1 IP H R BRBBSO Brumley c 0 0 0 0 iatrlMO 3b 1000 BrTtman ss 3 0 0 0 May p 3090 M’Corm'ck p 1 0 0 0 Paaraon ph 1 0 0 0 llmmer ph 10 11 Powar tb 10 11 RMzIk p 10 0 0 King ph 10 10 Total* 33 3 9 1 Tatals 33 * * I Washington aaa ais ia*_l Las Angaiat II (I). SB—School, f gCormlck ....... 31*3 I Silk L, 24 It'.". 3 3 1 1 42-3 S WASHINGTON .. LOO ANGELES iu r m ut abrli 3 0 0 0 Cardinal cf 4 401 0 Paaraon rf 3 4 0 2 0 Frogasl ss 4 4 0 10 W-Smith H 4 4 10 0 Ranaw c 3 4 2 11 Ikpwar ib 4 .. . 4 0 0 0 school 3b tool 3 0 0 0 Adcock ph 1 0 1 0 3 12 2 Logaz or 0 0 0 0 Koppa 3b r" Totals 33 4 0 3 Tatals Washington (a* Angola* J—Nona. DP—1Washington Washington 4, La* Angalas 4. ' 2B—Kirkland, Frogosi, Adcoc Powar. MR—Lock (7jT Fregosl (I aon (3). s—Hamlin. IP N R E Ortaga^ .. ....... TB 7 3 Newman' L, if T f 3 4 WP—Nawman. T—2:24. A—10,1 000 002 *10—3 LOS ANGBLIS CINCINNATI obrhbl ab Wills st 3 0 0 0 Harpar If 3 Gilliam 3b 5 0 0 0 Raaa 2b 3 * . . Davit Cf 4 0 0 0 PIMM cf 4 0 0 0 Fairly rf 4 1 3.0 Robinson r" M--- Ros'bors c 4 0 0 0 DJ'nson Parkar lb 4 110 Pavt'tich BALTIMORE KANSAS CITY _ abrkbl abrkM Aporld* aa 3 1 1 1 C'pan'rIs ■ nn BJ'nson ss 10 1—1 Stir CT Of.. __________ Blatary M 5 3-10 HttTaon w tiii Snydar It 0 0 0 0 Hkorgor rf 4 0 1 0 Robinson 3b 4 0 I 0 Groan tb 3 0 00 MMR Ife 'f 011 InfM 0 1000 BtMMtrf 4 0 0 0 RaynoM* N 4 011 Adrift |B 4 13 0 Lkshi'n c 4 019 Browne 4|i2Shaldtnp 10 00 MCNally • 0 0 0 0 Rosario ph 1010 Rokart* p 4 0 0 0 Causey 2b 2 0 0 0 2B—Brown, Brandt, Landis, Lacha-mann. 3B-Aparlclo. HR—Brqwn (3). SB -Camganart*. son, Chart**. IP H R BRBB McNally ----- o 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 In 7th; McOowtll need 3 man in 7m. WP-Howard, 2. T-2:24. A—31,723. Young Bettor Wins Big PITTSBURGH Bailey 3b 4 « PHILADELPHIA M Mr S 0 CalHson r 3 00---------- I 4 010 Amaro 2b 4 0 0 0 Wina ss 3 0 0 0 Corral** c PjjfrM. « j | y j Banning p veal* p f a a a Ratals11 31 It 4^T 0 n rf fill \ {ill m PITTSBURGH PHILADELPHIA •b r b M ab r I Ballay 3b 4 0 0 0 Rojas If 3 210 Ct'mant* . Stargall It 3 0 ll Allen 3b 4 0 2 1 CWitMn 1b 4 010 Stuart lb 4 13 2 Maz'oakl 2b 4 0 0 0 Johnson cf. 3 110 — m 4 0 6 0 Amaro 2b 4 111 ____I__c 3 0 10 Win* ss 3 0 10 Virgil pr 0 0 0 0 Corral** c 10 0 0 Mots ph 0 0 0 0 CovInTn ph 1 0 0 0 Wood p 2 0 0 0 Wagntrp 10 0 0 Fraasa ph 1 0 0 0 Mahat'y p 10 0 0 Smith c oooo Darmpi* c 2 0 0 0 Lynch ph 10 0 0 fatal* 34 3 0 I 30 410 5 Ml 100 OOO—I 000 033 ION-4 2B—Clemente, Vlrdon, Amaro, l._ Herrnstein. 3B—Vlrdon. HR—Stuart ( H R BRBB St ‘‘30 ..........*, Perez. 3B—Maloney. HR— L. Johnson (4). O. Johnson (14). SB—L. Johnson 2, Letebvr*. S—Harper, MalonOy 2. SF—Rote. CHICAGO NEW YORK ab r b bi ab Beckert 2b 4 0 10 Cowan cf 4 Wagner Mahaffay ft________I WP—Mhatfey. T-2:3J. J E-Ga HAZEL PARK (AP) - Hazel Park race track paid the high* eat winning sum in Michigan’s 33 years of parimutuel betting Monday — $103,987.20 on the twin double. One bettor won it all. , An unidentified young man in a sports shirt and Bermuda Shorts, only one to hold a ticket on the four races, walked off with all of the pot. He alone held a winning ticket in the crowd of 26,000. The twin double pool actually totaled $122,338 but the federal government and the state of Michigan took their cuts from The youth presented himself at the $50 betting window to make his collection. WAITED AROUND “He simply presented himself and waited around until the money could be counted out,” said mutuel manager Frank Stepek. 1 The winner walked away with a companion, also casually dressed, and neither spoke word. Stepek said the youth made no request for police protection. He was given his win- nings in cash in two little brown bags. The payoff was on Gem Line in the fifth race, Touch Bar in the sixth, Abdul in the eighth, and Little Lu in the ninth. The largest previous twin double payoff here was $52,-235.80, June 17. Boxing Probe Set to Start WASHINGTON (AP) -V A congressional Investigation aimed at putting professional basing back on its feet under supervision of the federal government opened today with former heavyweight champions Jack Dempsey and Rocky Marciano ready to lend a hand. * * * Before the bearing opened, the man who suggested the investigation, Rep. William L. Springer, Rill., urged it be ex-panded to cover ther impact of Big Net Tourney Opens; Favorites Post Conquests MILWAUKEE (AP) - Third-seeded Frank Froehling of Coral Gables, Fla., and defending women’s champion Julie Held-man of New York City swept to victory Monday in their opening matches in the 80th Western Open Tennis Championships. ★ ★ ★ Froehllng’s powerful strokes kept him in firm command against Richard Dow, Chattanooga, Tenn., and he closed the match with an ace for a 6-0, 6-3 victory. Miss Heldman, seeded No. 3 this year, dropped one set, but dominated the other two en route to a 6-0, 6-8, 6-2 victory j over Patricia Cody of Bell, Calif., in one of only two worn- j en’s matches Monday. The top-seeded players, Dennis Ralston of Bakersfield, Calif., and Nancy Richey of Dallas, Tex., were to begin play commercialism on other spectator sports. He said that other sports like professional baseball and football, as well as bating, were becoming entangled with Madison Avenue and he worried about the day when television programers got their hands on football schedules. “Hie broadening commercial ramifications of sports, particularly their relationship to broadcasting, confer not oily justification but duty upon us to scrutinize them to see what if anything should be done,” Springer said. RANKING MEMBER Springer, whose district covers the University of Illinois campus, is the ranking GOP member of the House Interstate Commerce Committee - whose boxing hearings were set off by the Cassius Gay-Sonny Liston heavyweight fight at Lewiston, Maine, in May. The hearing centers , on a bill by Committee Chairman Oren Harris, D-Ark., to establish a federal boxing commission with authority to investigate boxing and to block national newspaper coverage and broadcasting of a suspicious bout. * * * With Dempsey and Marciano on the first day’s list of witnesses was E. William Henry, chairman of the Federal Communications Commission. CASH? Ask tha MAN with the PLAN! a ca* loan from us means prompt service ... friendly office people who will show you how we appreciate your business ... and repayments tailored to fit your budget Try us. Stop by, or phone—but do it NOWI COMMERCIAL CREDIT PLAN* •A service offend by Commercial Credit Plan, Incorporated LOANS UP TO $1000 Ckaifas an compute* at a rata at 2V4% Bar month m tkat gait *1 tha aaoaM princl**! kalaae* nat la ****** at 1390.09; SM It tb* rata at 114% gar month an any remainder at Ik* angaM principal kalaae*. MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER 2243 S. TELEGRAPH ROAD Phone: 334-9954 HOW MUCH CAN YOU USE? LOAN SIZE CAW YOU REPAY MONTHLY 12 Mm. IS Mot. 24 Mm. 30 Mm. tioo • *n t 6.99 —* — 300 29.31 30.99 $19.33 $14.39 500 49.13 14.19 27.20 23.17 300 7M1 UJ0 42 JO 35.57 1000 93 JO 95.91 52.02 43.71 LOW IN COST. BIG IN ACTION. PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. Call 332*6181 to place yours. WE WILL OVERHAUL YOUR ENGINE Special Low Price! 6 Cyl...........* 9500 V-8's...........*115°° This includes . . . Rings, Rod Bearings, Main Bearing, Grind Valves, Pins, Deglaze Cylinder Walls, williams rt a g a g ninar zz> 3 1 (ante 3b 3 0 0 0 Kranap'l 1b 4 1 hRman 1b 4 0 I 9 Lewis rf 19 Semens If 4 9 2 0 Swoboda If II •alley c 10)0 Klaus 3b 99 R'novs'y c 2 0 9 6 Hickman 3b 3 0 v ■ Kes'nger ss 2 0 0 0 C'nlz'ro c I 9 9 t Stewart si 2 9 0 0 Parsons p 3 0 19 Faul p 10 0 0 Kuerm ph 10 0 9 Am't'ano ph 1 0 0 0 ratal* a 0 * 0* Totals 10 I 4 I Chicago EMH I**-* Haw York .......... OMlMMx-3 *—McMillan. OP—Chicago h LOB— Chicago I. Haw York 4. . 2B—Landrum. HR—Swoboda (15), IF H R BRBB"' Faul L, 0-1 .. 11*3 4 3 3 * USSST*..2” 5 S S './Little Mo' to Coach fcLONDON (AP) - Mrs. Mau- j ri Connolly Brinker, the “Lit- t Mo” who dazzled the tennis world in the 1950s, will coach j Britain's woman tennis team in j the Whitman Cup matches i against the United States in i Cleveland Aug. 7-9. 2B—May*. 3B-' ) Aaron (14); SB I SF— Aspromonte. It's Worth Your While j TO DRIVE THAT EXTRA MILE! ^ See the Exciting New CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH RAMBLER - Jiff Save More Today at BILL SPENCE, IRC. 6673 Dixie Hwy. CLARKST0H Phong 625-2635 EIGHTEEN THElPONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, im Army Wants to Create More Copter Units WASHINGTON (AP) — The Army wants to create some new helicopter companies to fill the gap left in U.S.-based forest when chopper outfits were sent to war in Sooth Viet Nam. Informed sources said today the Army has proposed to the Defense Department that five new helicopter companies be formed. ★., fUm Or This proposal Calls for an increase of 125 choppers and more than 1,000 men. The Army now has 12 helicop- ter companies in Viet Nam totaling about 200 machines. They are assigned chiefly to airlifting South Vietnamese army units into battle against the Communist Viet Cong. RECENT ARRIVALS The most recent arrivals were three companies equipped with the latest model UH1D, a machine which can carry 11 soldiers. The three outfits were drawn from the 1st Infantry Division, Ft. Riley, Kan., the 101st Airborne Division, Ft. Campbell, Jeaftti iTIsvr w. v. Applet, n. Spy. ex. bu NEW YORK (AP) — The stock market advance withered early Oils afternoon and the {nice pattern turned mixed. Trading was quiet. Changes of most key Issues were fractional with a few going around a point. StrcwtwrrlM, V V«Sbt*SLI s®; tpt. Curly, I Wall Street mulled a report by j the National Assodation of Purchasing Agents that business i activity increased at a slower rate in June than in previous months. The market opened with a moderate gain, bringing hopes of a resumption of last week’s vigorous advance. But blue chip stocks came under pressure and much of the gain was erased. Motors eased despite a report that new car sales in June may have been the biggest for the month in history. General Motors was off a fraction after about half having been up a point. The Associated Press 60-stock average at noon was up .4 at 321.9 with industrials up .7, rails unchanged and utilities up .4. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials at noon was off 0.16 at 875.00 after having been up more than 2 points shortly after the opening. Corporate and Treasury bonds were mostly unchanged. 3.00 2.go satev Cauliflower. «. Celery, P«sc»t, crt. Colory, Poocol. dz. Story, warn .......... Celery, white, dz. *telk* ...!•£ Cucumben, SHceri, *“■ * ™ "T4 belie. The New York Stock Exchange BLANTYRE, Malawi (AP) -Prime Minister Hastings Banda said Tuesday Red China is spending millions of dollars to corrupt African leaders and the money could be better spent feeding Urn Chinese people. Banda’s statement was made at a news conference marking the first anniversary of Malawi’s independence. Tumlpo.«. Maim Cabbage. bu..................* Collord. bu................. .oA om. ....................•» Mustard, bu. ............... Sorrol. bu. ................ Splnoch. bu................. Tun#, bu. .. igTrtei Endive, bu. ................ Endive, bleached, bu. ...... Escorulo.goacy ^............. Lettuce. Bibb. pk. boot. ... Lettuce. Boston.dz. ........ Lettuce. Hood, bu ...,....... Lettuce, Hood, dt. .......... Lettuce. Loot. bu. .......... Lettuce, Renta** bu.......... Poultry and Eggs MTROIT POULTRY DETROIT CAP) r _Pr_lS*.?.„Pll< type** hens ZMB! HUtf typo hens heavy typo ywma hen* 27-30. DETROIT BOOS n.?E^TbylA.^"r^.rsPrSS^ ULS.): Whites OradO * JutuOd •*- tro lorgo j7$4> lotoo 34-32) .T*l'uT,r„ 20; SoB 10-20) Browns Grade A lor# 24*-30; medium 20-27. CHICAGO BUTTER, EGOS ftjSS si sx swaw im. SSSt! White Rock fryer* ttVk-W. Livestock CHICAGO UVESTOCK cHicAeq tAfF r i?uRALz„ MM 20) oleuEbtor itStof 330-1444 H» 3345-34.75. Sheep Mi *prbi0 daughter Is.™ sh^sinSmTeim iyty gm#< arol mflTOEOi choice and prime H-105 lb spring Uimba 3S.04-15.S6; pood and Choice Engineering i UMHai Cl SouthnCo 1.00 SouNGos 1.20 EauPac I# South Ry ME Sperry Rend American Stocks NOON AMERICAN NEW YORK (AG) - Follow*!ita list <7 POOootW.«ta» IfonoecUonton t American mi 'ItWhonio with no prk“i SO# JL_ sis«S,.iJ',j t* ArkLoOet IJd •* A,. -1U- ** A. to emm Qk. 3 * f f: Sep*300 ft 78* 74* 741*+ iiI TechnW.75 II II* WVh II*- V* Un Control .K Stocks of Local Interest OvSr THE COUNTER STOCKS tentative Inlordoo# prices ol approximately II ihv lidor deetar work# change threiigtnut the day. Grice* do ,V_I.^0_ _To.li MoeOim markiUiM AT did*.) High Lew La*t Cbg. 45 57* 57* *7* Raytheon .60 Reeding Co ReichCn 30a Ropub Avlat RepubSteel 2 0 13* 1340 134k + V 14 35* 34* 34* - 4k I 34* 34* 34* - StRegP 1.40b 33 34* 34 344k -t SanOImp .i. Schenley 1 Schemg 1.40a i 51* 43* +1 7* 7* 7* — V Banda even accused Red China of a hand in the overthrow last month of President Ahmed Ben Bella of Algeria, although it generally considered the revolution was an internal affair. Recalling the London Commonwealth prime minister’s conference, Banda said many African leaders there were saying “How can China claim it doesn’t interfere when she does this sort of thing.’’ BLESSING IN DISGUISE “The coup in Algeria may have been a blessing in disguise, if this is the reaction it brings,’’ he added. Banda may have been referring to the fact that Red China, apparently seeking to maintain the influence it had during the Ben Bella regime cabled “total and unconditional support to the Algerian revolution’’ of Col. Houari Boumedienne, who ousted the president. tingarCo 3.: SmlttiK 1.GC 57 44* 44* 44* - * M 78 77* 77* - i 37* 37* — * 1 70* 70* 70* - 1 KoHsman 13 If* 1 StOII Cal 3.30 StOIIInd l.50a StO NJ 1.50a StdOilOh 1.80 St Packaging Banda has been feuding with Red China. He turned down a loan offered by Peking, and last September dismissed several members of his Cabinet, charging they had accepted Chinese bribes. At the news conference, Banda charged that one ousted official, former Finance Minister Kanyama Chiume, was in neighboring Tanzania trying to organize a rebellion against him. __ _______ quarterly xml-onnuol declaration. Spcciol or extra dividends or payments not dnlg-noted 01 regular or* Identified In the following footnote*. o-.A# extra or extra*. B—Annual t&cZSTtr pkn *tock dividend. e-Pold loot year. 1—Payable * stack during 1445, ettimoted ce«h value on oxWtvMond or ex-dlstrlbu-Iton data. g-Oociorod or paid eo for Ki« year. h-Declered or^aW attar dock —gjg arrears, n Now teouo. p—Paid t year, ilvldand amlttad. ttatarrad or no action taten at tail dividend mooting, r—Ooclorod or paid la 1*44 plus stack dividend. t-Peld In alack during 1444, -*—*■* value on ox-dtvidond or o tlon. xr-Ex rights. ' xw—Without i being reargan#! i____________________.... Act, gr securities mourned by such cot — oublact to i equeltzatian tax. _ STOCK AVERAGE! Compiled by The Amsdatad Press tad. Rail* INN. Stack* MW change ....... +.7 +.4 +.4 Noon Tue*. ..... 471.1 154J 144.3 331.5 1544 144.4 131.1 WfOk Ago .........457J 153.0 M.4 3)1.4 Mown Xgo ....... 475.4 154.3 170.4 333.7 Yeor Ago ....... 447.3 1S3.I 154.5 117.1 1HI H#h ........ 505.2 W?4 171.2 144.’ 1445 L)P» .......451.4 14M 143d 341.1 .. 475.4 I 6 147.3 332.1 .. 404.4 110.7 144.4 214.1 Tuesday s Dividends Declared Pe- Ilk. W Pay-Rata rtad Rocord aOie REGULAR Altarman Pood* .» Q MS El KVP tut Pm ....575 Q 4-4 M0. Peking Tadics Hit by African 'Spending M i 11 lo n s to Corrupt Leaders' “But if Chiume thinks he can come here with an army from Tanzania he’s a fool,” Banda said. “Chiume and his allies will fail.” ' Transactions Light in Grain Futures CHICAGO (AP)—Transactions in the grain futures market were rather light and mixed today during the first several minutes with prices ranging generally from slightly easier to slightly firmer. Soybeans were % to 1% cents a bushel lower shortly before the end of the first hour, July 82.92%; new standard grade wheat % to % higher, July $1.43%; com unchanged to % lower, July 81.31V4; oats unchanged to % higher, July 68% cents; rye unchanged to % higher, July $1.11%. News in Brief Charles DeMeat of 3956 Em-barcadero, Waterford Township, yesterday reported the theft of $190 in cash from his house, according to township police. Don Wellwood, 51, of 56 Bloomfield Terrace yesterday reported the theft of a briefcase, which contained $850, from his Nation's Banks Told to Report Conditions WASHINGTON UP-The banks of the nation were told today to report their condition as of the close of business June 30. Orders were issued separately by the comptroller of the currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the Federal Reserve System. The Federal Reserve acted through Its regional district banks. DOW-JONES NOON AVBRAGS* STOCKS *• -5us ............... 475.00-4.14 St .................. 14745-005 It* ................. 155.75+447 Xks ................ 303.24+0.15 Pextlac Prats Photo MODERNIZED — Giving a new look at 21 N. Saginaw Street is the Parisian Beauty Shop, marking its 35th year with a new and larger location. Owner Oscar Blomquist said the move from 7 W. Lawrence was completed with the installation of all-new equipment for improved service. %■ I MggtjMKp! * SuccessfulMnvestirig * ta ' #<:' ta ,'#«*<# ta By ROCER E. SPEAR Q. “My husband and I mast live on limited means, but have banked $5,666 for oar small son’s future college education. Knowing little about investments, we would appreciate your help as to how best to make this money grow.” W.D. A. The best ways I know of 1 increase your capital are through acquisition of real estate or the purchase of stocks which are growing faster - in earnings, dividends and price than the economy as a whole. Real estate is generally well inflated and it is hard to pick good values without expert help. Growth stocks are not cheap, but they offer you the most practical method of increasing your capital. Under present uncertain conditions, I would leave $2,000 in the bank and invest the balance in equal dollar amounts of Merck and Motorola. Q. “In n recent column, you advised your readers to buy Pacific Gas & Electric 1st 4%s of 1996 which sell at 160 to yield 4% per cent. Why did yon not recommend Pacific Gas & Electric 5s of 1988, selling at 104% and offering a very much higher yield?” J.L. A. I thought I had made it clqar in past columns that, in buying bonds, the date of earliest redemption aid call price are of utmost significance. Pacific Gas & Electric 4%s of 1996 are nonredeemable before 1969, and then at a price of 104.19 — well above current market. Pacific Gas & Electric 5s of 1989, however, are redeemable this year at a price of 104.30, slightly below wherr~they are selling. I never recommend bonds selling above their call price in the year in which they may be redeemed, since the market is strictly limited at the tap, but not at the bottom. (Copyright, 1165) Romney Kills 2nd Voter Sign-Up Bill LANSING (AP)—Gov. George Romney vetoed a second four-year voter registration bill today. As expected, he returned to the Senate a Democratic-backed bill to make four-year registrations optional at the local level —as he did in April to a House bill that would have made statewide four-year registration mandatory. In his veto message, Romney repeated his earlier statement that he “will not join in such a backward step.” Treasury Position 125,434444,054.45 123,544,044474.1 X~Tn 455,313,407.01 311414454,314.1 0°“ (XI — includes sz»j,ji».t» subject to statutory limit. I. Util. Pfn. L.Yd 31.2 11.2 42.5 43.5 Son Will Stay in Jail r Father Southgate Man Feeb Teens Out of Control SOUTHGATE (AP)-An irate fattier whose 16-year-old sop was jailed for throwing a boisterous • beer and rock ’n*rou party says he win make no «f* fort to get the youth freed (to-cause he thinks teen-agers ate getting all out of hand.” Albert P. (Buddy) Scobie Jr. vyas one of M youths arrested Sunday as police broke up k noisy party in the backyard dl the Scobie home in this Detrqjt suburb. Young Scobie is serving a 1$-day jail term in lieu of a $105 fine. The others arrested week penalized slmilarily on disorderly conduct charges. Police said the youth was the boat for a party on the Fourth of July at which some 80 teen-agers, including some high school dropouts, showed up. Neighbors complained to police several times of the noise of the party. Some 40 officers finally went to the scene and broke up the gathering. Three officers suffered injuries in a melee with the partying youths. AWAY FROM HOME Albert J. Scobie, 44, his wile, and their 14-year-old daughter were away from the home for the weekend. Contacted by police, Scobie told officers to leave his son in jail. On his return, Scobie told newsmen Monday that he thought the federal government “should step into this” and provide funds to establish halfway houses to aid troubled youths. A halfway house is a temporary home for youths without criminal tendencies. Scobie said, “Society itself has to get up in arms and get hold of teen-agers. I think they ail are getting out of hand.” NEED LAWS He said he thought new laws should be passed allowing authorities to deal with disciplinary problems. Scobie, a supervisor at a sheet metal concern, said he and his son, whom he described as a high school dropout, had been disputing for some three years and that he had reached the end of his patience. He said he had forbidden the youth to have social gatherings at the Scobie home. As Scobie talked to newsmen at the Southgate Police Station, about 12 youths picketed outside to protest what they called police brutality. One of them, Gary Garcia, 19, said the group was protesting police treatment of young people who came to the station after young Scobie and the others were arrested. N.5 140.4 17.2 44.1 42.4 Police Chief William Shatter denied any mistreatment of the youths. Specialty Field Grows Story of Packaging By SAM DAWSON AP Business Newi Analyst NEW YORK - It takes some pretty sophisticated machinery to package some of today’s sophisticated products — such as convenience foods, push button toilet articles, or oral contraceptives. With a few except ions, makers of this packaging machinery are specialized and, therefore, small as U.S. corporation* go. n ‘• They work DAWSON closely with the sponsors of new products to devise the machinery needed to package them so they can be transported, displayed—and successfully moved into consumer hands. You don’t see the machines but do see their handiwork in drugstores, supermarkets and other retail outlets across the nation. Some members of the Packaging Machinery Manufacturers Institute will tell you that many of today's familiar Hems Would never have readied the public without the discovery of the proper machinery to make the exact, and popular, package. Even so, the institute president, Eugene E. Lakso, says that the entire industry now boasts only $400 million a year in annual sales. But, he quickly, adds, it is growing fast. Some of the machinery is highly complicated, sort of a little brother to computers. One big corporation with a division in the business is Eastman Kodak of Rochester, N.Y. It has developed a device to pluck a product from one machine while using another to take tiny pellets of raw material loaded in a hopper. It breaks these pellets down and spins them into a packaging material to fit exactly the contour of the product in a few seconds. Eastman says the package is waterproof, airtight, and keeps the product from spoiling and contamination. The contour package also saves space, time and expense in handling. ONE OF SEVERAL Lakso's firm, the Lakso Company of Fitchburg, Mass,, is one of several making machinery for sequential packaging of drug products. This process weighs materials for accurate dosage and packages the product Individually. bi the field of oral contraceptives, the machines stamp num- bers on the piUs so that the usir has a constant check agaiwt is a ma- error. Now being tested h chine that will take varying sizes of pills, insert and number them in proper sequence; wr$p them in different colored mfc-terials as a further prevention of error. ! 0 Drug manufacturers also u$a machines, such as made by t$e New Jersey Machine CoqxM-tion of Hoboken, N.J., which electronically read the labels j>f raw materials and also sci labels on the finished produc to correct errors. Many manufacturers male machinery to put products )n aerosol containers. Among thejn are: Consolidated Packaging Machinery Corp. of BuffaH), - 0f Davao- I N.Y., Rartridg-pak \ port, Iowa; J.G. Machine Worfs of Little Ferry, N.J. and Jotyn R. Nalbach Engineering of Chi- A machine is being readied to put a pull tab on the cotton winding that goes into pill botttsp. This would make it less difficult to extract as the pill level low-ers in the bottle and thus kato people from throwing the coffin away. The idea is both to ensure proper dosage and to make it harder for children to reach iMo ] bottles for pills that might toil them THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, I96fl TWENTY-OlffK On Bigamy Charges r Trial of Sophia Loren Begins • ROME Un — The bigamy filal of film 8tar Sophia Loren and producer Carlo Pont! opened today lira Rome criminal court. Misa Loren and her husband are doing film work outside Italy. Lawyers represented them 111 court. ; The trial before Judge Tom-maso d’Arienzo Is expected to last for weeks. The max imam 'penalty' for bigamy is five years in prison. ,,-The accusation has pursued Jhe pair since soon after their marriage by proxy at Ciudad Juarez, Mixico, in September, i957. It was her first marriage and his second. * ★ ★ Ponti, 51, first met Sophia in Home in 1955, nine years after life married the daughter of an Kalian general, Giuliana Fias-tri, and set about gaining a reputation as a maker of movies. Ing Eric, Lewroneo, Michele, Cheryl, Stephen and Liu Hamm, Mlnori. Cause Me- 20517. To Evelyn Hamm, mother of said Minor children. Worker'i report having been tiled In this Court alleging that tald children come within the provisions of Chapter 71JA of the Compiled Laws of 1*41 at amended. In that the present whereabouts of the mother of said children H unknown and said children are dependent upon the public for support and that said children should be continued under the lurlsdlction of this Court. In the Name of the People of the State of Michigan, You are hereby notified Wat the hearing on said petition will be held at the Court House, Oakland County Service Canter, In the City of Pontiac In eeld County, oh the ISth day of July A.D. IMS, at 1;S0 o'clock In the afternoon, and you are hereby commanded to appear personally at said hearing, at %Mch time temporary or peri—---severance of all parental rights t g Impractical to make personal ----. SUmmons and notice Mail do served oy publication of a copy 'one week previous to said hearing In The Pontiac Press, a newspaper printed and circulated In said County. Witness, the Honorable Norman It. Barnard, Judge of said Court, In the City of Pontiac In said County, this 29th d»y of June A.D. IMS. - (Seal) NORMAN R. BARNARD (a true copy) Judge of Probate DELPHA A. BOUGINE Deputy Probate Register Juvenile Division July 4, IMS STATE OF MICHIGAN — In the Pro-Whte Court for the County of Oakland, Juvenile Division. •In the Matter of the Petition Concern-jn^Thomas Bridges, minor. Cause No. To Francos Stephens, mother ot said Worker's report having been filed In this Court allying that said child comes within the provisions of Chapter 712A d hat violated a law of the state and that said child should be continued under the lurlsdlction of tMs Court. •In the Name of the People of the State af Michigan, You are hereby notified that the hearing on said petition will be Geld at the Court House, Oakland County Service Center, In the City of Pontiac In e Mutual Funds • Confidential Portfolio Reviews • Complete Financial Library For Customer Use • Private Conference Room • Standard Commiition Rates • Stock Transfer Servic* for Individuals, Estates & Trusts • Safekeeping Facilities For Our Clients • World Wide News Ticker, Service • Immediate Payment on Sales INVESTMENT BROKERS AND COUNSELORS FE 2-9117 818 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLDG. immediate quotation service Our Facilities Extended From Coast to Coast Pilot Likes Old Plane CHICAGO, HI. fc 29* N. Telegraph, Offite Girl-Cashier EXPERIENCED, TYPING ESSENTIAL, 40 HOUR WEEK. PERMANENT POSITION. BLOOMFIELD FASHION SHOP. PONTIAC Practical nurse FOit MIvaYE duty, goad wages. Auburn Nurses Exchange. 3323*2. 231 State. PROFICIENT YOUNG LADY >OR challenging iob. shorthand and typ-'Royal Oak area. Ml 4422* RECIPTIONIST, 21 TO 4S. INtkk-estad In dftaUa. Apply person 9 to 12. DONNELL’S at The REGISTERED PROPBSSIOSSAA ANO lUMt practical iwNas. immediate oponlngr y RNa. gnd LPHt only. RNslftl WR*^nriMmum salary, 608 par mo., part time, 83.48 an hr. PNt, toEWmo iwkilmum salary, S3273S per mo. CaH FE 64711. Pontiac General Hooptlel. Personnel Dtp!. BN 8 SLEEVBR FOLDER ANO BOSOM operator tor 3 fkr! etondard shirt anlt, steady wore, joed pay. Clair-mount Laundry 3073 N. Woodward, Baitiied U HM. . . ' WAtTR^~ Far Pontiac Country Club. 42)5 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Apply to par- WE ARE NOW EMPLOYING anT^toarterGar cooks to opanPSnJ tlac's most madam Chalet Ian. Doors open la aanheuto 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. dally. Ada 21 or ovtr whh ref.. Goad pay and woody |ob to quollflad parsons. CHALET INN 79 N. SAGINAW (Grand Opening, July 7 and 8, WAITRBSt FOR NIGHTS, INQUIRE Chief Pontiac Bar, 76 Baldwin. WOMAN FOR HOUSEWORK IS I working < ■ss Eon 16. ______TO 60 ALL PHASES UP general office work Must be geed with figures. Writ* P.O. Box 4273, AnBurn Heights, Michigan, fWMS ' ege, education, |ob exparlencd. (OMAN FOR CLEANING. Wednesday's and T8i anted, OR 3-7416. JT pe »W. WbMAN POR KITCHEN. APPLY Big-Bov Drlva-ln. 2480 Dixlo Hwy helween 2-5 p.— WANTED: LADY house work. Mere than wages. Phone I WHY WORRY, ABOUT VRCaIWw friendly oenw_________ iSnr renuU. | »Wl t writ* Drayton YOUNC LADY TO WORK ON CA8H register and familiar with bosk- YOUNO LAOY, SOME OFFICB Kx-parlance, train In cradR union work. FE 3-TtW.________________' "1401" „ Programmers Will work on a variety of computer programs - an* gineering, production control, distribution and accounting. Minimum of 2 years experience on IBM (‘1401’’ tapa systems. Apply in Person or Send Resume tot SALARY PERSONNEL SECTION FORD TRACTOR DIVISION 2500 E. Maple Birmingham, Mich. ATTENTION COLLtoM aM6 iflGH school students: Summer employment. Now taking appAcaffons. Openings In all departments. Part-time and toil-time. Apply to parson, Ellas Bros. BIb Boy Dftva-Ins., 20 S. Telegraph and 2408 Dixie. No phone calls accepted. ATTRACTIVE OPPORTUNITY POk retired perien* or shift workers. Supply friends and neighbor* with Rawleigh products. Can earn ISO weakly part tlma — *188 and up full time. Write Rawleigh, Deal. MC O 490 219, Fraapgrt, ill. • BEAUTY oAEIUTbR BETTER COMMISSION BASIS FOR Watkins Product!. Full tr part time dealers. Call Mr. Laggatt, FE 2-3063, 8-16, Si._______ BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED RH Fotltoa I 4.0* RH N*g 17.00, 81*68 S 612 DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE in Pant lac Ft 44*47 1)42 Wide Track Dr„ w. Mon. thru Frl.^ V a.m. 4 p.m. < HUSBAND-WIFE TEAM Work together 4 la » p.m., 2 evenings wk.—earn M6-S120 per wk., 96 year old company, no canvassing, no party plan. Ml 46292. JOB OPPORTUNITY TREMENDOUS Income, man or woman with car, •go no barrier. CaB FE 64M aft. MANPOWER—PARfriME WORK Men and Woman 3236286 AM6 iWn TCAM' Vbk Drlva-tn, Telegraph ai -MM AND WOMEN TO TRAIN IN REAL ’ ESTATE Big business with new offices, quality positions available. For appointment Mil Mrs, Williams, F ’sales." ixAEUIENCWTok SHOE sali SEARS ROEBUCK and CO. EMPLOYMENT OFFICES SEARS OAKLAND MALL NOW OPEN 'HOURS: MONDAY FRIDAY 10 A.M. to 4 P.M. BEAUTY OPERATORS CAFETERIA CLERICAL SALES SERVICE STATION TAILORS AND OTHER CLASSIFICATIONS ALL AIM FOE PERSONNEL ARE IDENTIFIED WITH SEARS SIGNATURE (NO BLIND AOS) INTERVIEWS HANDLED CONFIDENTIALLY SEARS Oakland Mall TWENTY-TWO THE PONTIAC yHKSS, TUESDAY. JULY 6, 1963 m.l. U^liiJPantala li AMBITIOUS RtUABLE MAN TO op • rot* an .established grocery rout* In to* Ponttec are*. Mr weak. haalthy outdoor work, car required, no Investmwrt. Apply at Michigan ■wwBtltlli. Security Commission. MIOakland. Pontlec. Commission basis. UHltt GOOD MAN OVER 40 FOR SHORT nt It worth up to fMJN In it* Mr mall a. T. Dickerson, n St., Fort Worth, lMtnKtiMs4ckMls ACt WOW TO OST THAT JOBI DIESEL TRUCK DRIVERS Train on an now diesel tractors DIESEL ENGINE MECHANICS ^MtrfMtctlon-Engln* Overhaul ICRANBS Dragline-Beck Ho* Operate Spoclollzod Equipment "World's Largest Trad* School" |>EWt TECH. C ' Work Wanted M>l« BRICK, BLOCK AND CEMENT work, gsnoral repairs, fro* estl-m ~ s. Prod ~:*J**** CEMENT CONTRACTOR, DRIVE-ways, aldewrtto. ate., FE *-4975. CEMENT WORK, BLOCK LAYING. EM 3-4879_________ LIGHT HAULING YOU CALL — WE COME — WALLS, floors, aluminum siding. Curley's Window Cleaning. FE MW. YOUNG MAN DIMRIt WORITSf any Kind. FE 43147 or FE 34091 CLEANING AND WALL WASHING. awn or m-bn IRONINGS WANTED. WEBSTER-CroteN area. FE 37359. LIGHT HOUSEWORK AND BABY sitting, 3344914. WINDOW DRESSER Young woman, attractive, parson-able, would Mte information on training In IMs field. Short courses, work whllo learning, etc. Reply Pontiac Pros* Box IN. jfciCTEKi MQTQH service-re- trec^.'^IMNMimdon1, Union Like! EM MW, Dr*5iMeklnj| jfc Tiflerinf 17 DRESSMAKING. TAILORING AND alterations. Mrs. Bodoll. FE 49033. NO A N D ALTeEaT futon orsn. MA HM. PEATMOSS, TOPSOIL. PILL M send, anNhad Umaaton*. el, bulldoxlng. Tall Timbers COMPLETE LANbSCAPINO, RE-talning wads and 4-tneh broken k told by load. Fra# estl-FE4-M7L PAVING BRICK FOR PATIOS AND fireplace*. 4" broken concrete. OAKLAND FUEL ANO PAINT. 4S Thomas St. FE 5-aiS». Convalascent-Nursing I and Tncktof tt AA MOVING Mil. BOB'S VAN SERVICE MOVING AND DELIVERY FREE ESTIMATES ROBERT TOMPKINS EM A7K LIGttt HAULING, ANY KIND. Printing * Decernting 23 THOMPSON PE 403*4 A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR, Papering. FE 34143. Nfcrthf jfc PEiEwrthp tl INTERIOR EXTERIOR DEI AlJSSSSFWMJF nrtfrnrirAm RxfunoR polnHng, large or smell lot estimate, OR >0547. PAIN+INO AND PAPKEiNG. YOU II PER CENT SAVINGS ARE POS- m ______ „.j make prompt — settlements. Just phono PE 48284 tor a quotation. IC O. Hempslf1 Realtor .PE ism Ardiitscteral Drawing DURNEN ASPHALT PAVINO CO. 9122 - freE fciti- CEMEHT WORK • Ceramic Tiling New AND REMODELING WORK, the slate, merbta, Pontiac Tile t Marble, 4*1-5590. SEPTIC TANKS, FOUNDATIONS. water ima*. OR 4*m, OR M48S, STARR-EXCAVATING, TOP SOIL. DRAYTON FENCE CO. N Addle St. 474-0511 PONtlAC FENCE CO. II Dixie Hay. _____OR_ CARL L. BILLS SR.. NEW AND old tloor sending, FE 1-3789. JOHN TAYLOR, FLOOR LAYING. FurnncR Repair INTERIOR-EXTERIOR Serv. Also Sundey 3348793 PAINT MAILBOX, POST FOR COMPLETE MODERNIZATION also Kllnglohut brick, call George's Construction at 11(35*21. LAKE FRONT 0RED0IN6 WITH drag lines. OR 4404 or OR 31404,___________________ COMPLETE LANDSCAPE SERV-■ca, patio*, tarracas malntananc*. 474-0510._____________________ ■i MERION OR KENTUCKY SOD, No money down. Breact Lam Mg, FEI Midi or FE 5-HOI. “complete Landscaping, sodding, sodding, discing, plowing, grading, back ho* and front and loading, retaining walls. Broken 4-Inch sldawalk. sold by ' J. Free estimates. FE 43371. brokEn a" concKEYe - PAV- Themas St. FE 54150. THE COMPLETE SERVICE Stonegate Landscaping. 473-0054, TONY'S CpMPLETE LANDSCAP-juH Marian blue or Kentucky sod, Lewd Mower Rtpoirieg Lawn Spraying LAWN SPRAYINO TALBOTT LUMBER Hass Installed In doors and lows. Complete building earvk 5 Oakland Ay* PE Motriny mi tterage SMITH MOVING CO. Mating and Decorating AO PLASTERING AND RBPAtR. Reasonable. Georg* Lea. FE 2-7912 Plastering, free estimates. D. Meyers, 143-»5t5, 474844S. m » Oakland Ava. BROWNIES HARDWARE . FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMBRI RUG CLEANER - POWER SAWS Ml Joelyn Open Sun. FE 44105 Wallpaper Steamer Floor sandor*. polishers, senders, furnace vacuum da_____ Oakland Fuel 1> Paint, 4M On chard Lake Ava. FE 5-4150. SOUTHERN COOKED FOOD. SUN-day, Frankanmuth Dinner Family Style. Adult* Si .50, Children under It SI .00. Home Made Breed. CLARKSTON ROOFING COMPANY, re-roofs end repair. Insurance work and own In Wayne, Oakland and Macomb Ce*«. 4739187. ROOFING ANO REPAIR. 4834790. OL 1-444)____ ROOFt:NEW, REPAIR Oonorol Malntananco 441- Tree Trimmir.g Service EXPERT TREE SERVICE, TRIM-ming and removal—Low ratal. 3344m. Trucking LIGHT MOVING, trash ~haulId Reasonable. FE 4-1551. LIGHT TRUCKING AND HAULING 475-8475 LIGHT HAULING, GARAGL basamantt cleaned. 474-1141. TRUCK HAULING. LAWN, GA cleaning. UL 2 5044. Track Rental Trucks to Rent to-Ton pickup* I to-Ton ttafca TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Truck* - Samt-Trallara Pontiac Fam< and industrial Tractor Co. *25 S. WOODWARD Underground Sprinklers BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS Wads and windows. Roes. Sells-lacMon gugramaad. FE S-Mll. iBdr66m home,' un- ratinances. M4-0444. Businessman wants bro6 COUPLE RETIRING PROM MIL have sold bout*. Warn furnished quarter July II to Nov. M. 4*31505 eves, and weekends. FURNISHED APARTMENT OR spae* tor naw housetraller 12x55, fer nawtywada. 4741185. MIODLE-AOED COUPLE DESIRpS aid*, to rant or buy. FE HI | Qaartsrs tl GIRL WISHES TO SHARE MY lovely turn, apt- with sama, FE S-Wfl._______ MAN WILL SHARE APARTMENT with man M about XL work m office, rat. required. Alter 4 p.m., YOUNG GIRL TO 4HA^MY Wanted Real Estate 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE. PAR-CELS, FARMS, RUSINRSS PROM-ERTIES AND LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed for Immediate WARREN STOUT, Reoitor 1410 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 54145 Dally HI I MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE amgd.-miayLY ' ROOM WITH r5aK6. tpOCG _ _ ^ AIR • CONDITIONED OFFICE IN or Mato. Capital Savings A- t — n»n "5S.a"5«)TSSJ“.B"Sl 5-0511 or Hl-7474. Rent BeiImsi Property 47-A 1 STORES, ONR 14'X44', OTHER la'xSl'xU', Parry Shopping Canter corner Perry, Joelyn and Ivy Sta. acraa* from Kroger Super Market. •OB'S Coney Island, Bob Maota FE 3-9430. Mx40 BUSINESS~5R~PRdFETsi&fi-*1 building—*00 *q. ft. m tha Pan-telnbleau Plan. Call OR 4-in. 30' X 40' SEVEN-STALlI GARAGE, ALL CASH FHA and Gl EQUITY medletaly. DETROIT. ER delays. Cash Im- ANNETT NEEDS LISTINGS Du* to our recant booming a program wa need listings ir— than anytime In our 3-year history. Wa hsndls all types -'- eiTy and all price ranges. Our 11 c|uallf1ed ally discuss sailing your eras Please call tar personal »pi manl. Annett Inc. REoltors 28 E. Huron St. FE 8-0466 Open Evening* and Sundays CASH BUYERS Wa can sall your property^ hAVI Buyers for any kind ' property tar quick sal*, M I fJonas Realty - FE 44550. services, a wholi Emm' Elliott George Vornot Ernie Vaughn Ray ttuntar Don Ganoraux Will Be Happy to Servo You! Times Realty NEW LOCATION-JUST SOUTH OF WATERFORD HILL, SMO Dixie Highway, Waterford, OR 4-03M, OPEN----- * - “ Sounders A Wyatt 0 LISTING^ FE.3 NOTICE I ‘ acreage parcel* tor "'ll l,f8iayi ** ^— Clarkston Real Estate 4 V Main VACANT LOTS WANTED In Pontiac. W* pay mere, I mm J * ----- RE A L VALU diet* closlni sing. RI agfSTS. A WANT 3 TO IS ACRES In either Groveland — Bran Oxford or' Addison Preferably with good home In secluded area. W. H. BASS "Specializing in Trades" REALTOR FE 3-7H0 BUILDER WANTED TO BUY ON LXNlTCON-* ‘ RR |a|| on large FE 4-7747.**°* " "** ir Pontiac. Aportnwnts, Furnished 37 ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH, AD-ults, only, coll after 3. No drlnk-Ing, FE 1-1751. ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WEL-come, $17.50 par week with a $75 deposit. Inquire at 173 Baldwin Av*., call 334-4054. ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WEL-come, $35 par week with a $100 deposit. Inquire at 173 Baldwin Ave., call 334-4054. CLEAN, MODERN. BABY WEL- NICE 1 ROOMS ANDTOPth, WALK In closet, all private, near Oakland University, reference, FE Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Lamp -3 bedrooms, i-story building, partitions- 14-Inches between units, fully equipped, split-stone fireplace to celling with circulating heater built In, breeza-waV' P»*lo. attached garage, eir-condltloned- 444-1514.1275. LARGE ROOMS AND BATH IN Pontiac. Beautiful new kitchen. N LAKE ORION - 2-bedroom lower, adults, references. MY 3-4447 between 5-7 ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS MODERN IN EVERY DETAIL Idults Only____ ft B4Wq Contact Resident Manager 544 East Blvd. at Valencia CUTS LITTLE 1-BEDROOM HOME. Union Lk. area, slngl* man anly. 4*2-3373. > COTTAGE I day or *tu_ Heights Rd. LAKE FRONT I. FE 5-1315 attar 4 SLEEPING ROOM FOR GENTLE- Pontiac Press WANT ADS Rooch tha Most Rasponsiva Buyers ' Phone 332-8181 924 J0SLYN 1 stores, M50 par month. Laai °P"#n‘ m W. HURON SI75 par month, haat, water, a air conditioning fumlshad. BREWER REAL ESTATE 3-BEPROOM HOME ON ONE ACRE 3-BEDR00M RANCH 2-car garag*. panelec room In tall basiemenl, ■ __ 3)4,900 with 10 par cant down. FLATTLEY REALTY 420 COMMERCE___________3434941 3 Bedrooms I basement, oarage and tesdu—i lot alia carpatlna. ly $14,100 GIROUX BEDROOMS, GOOD LOCATION, boiomant, gsre«*- soeon. Term* 2335 Dixie Hwy. 4V4 PER CENT MORTGAGE 3-bedroom brick ranch near 5-ROOM HOUSE, GLASS front porch, 1 acre land, C area, 17500 cash. 415-14*9. $175 DOWN MOVES YOU IN A* tow a* *97 par month. Includr principal, Intoraat, taxes and 1 surance. Taka Orchard Lak* Rd. to Con ---a Rd„ —-----------to 1 624-4200 7 ROOMS, M.950, t506. LAKE OR- ROOMS, MIXED AREA, BASE-nent, gas haat, storms and screens -314 STMarshall. OR 3-3489. 47 MURRAY. CLEAN 2-STORY 2- led room, be seme Jltwn. $79003790 _ occupancy. I2-130T SYLVAN 425-1814 s ans. 134-8222_______ 19 JORDON no money needed to 3 bedrooms, tiled base- HIITER NORTH SIDE—5 ream* and taro* living rgom. oak Itaira high tat, mag to schools. A lt.M0b terms. LAKE FRIVILBOElMgHb th. . bedroom rMMMr, RHij|oai gas haat, attached garage, 100 ft. tot, porch. Son’ fiifartaii tar?0,VoG hrmi Call B. C. HI ITER, REAL; ton, 17*1 ihz. Lak* Rd. MA 43195. ~ IN OXFORD REAL NICE — 4-b#preom tarn*. . 1 complete belfMh large, living room, gap hot water heat In b«*-ment. Price SIMM. Term*. IN OXFORD — Devi* URa i horn*. 3-bedroom home, MR fireplace in tmOvriML^Rj garage. Lara* tot; mtM, tan i^WsaarteK garage, lot 55x150 tt„ $12,750. C. A. WEBSTER, Realtor MY 1-1191________________OA *-2511 LAKE PRIVILEGES Hilt dandy HMHPraiPWnPkaaMnanL :lng dlstanca to p noma In a price that you _ _____ ti.200 plus cotta down. WARDEN REALTY beach. .. afford^ JutS LOW ENTRY About $1M could met........... this newly decorated ranch, large living room hae dining arte to from, 3 BMhuenu, each with ctotata, 1 linen closets, tile bath. Whan school balls ring lit lust black away. *9,400 total, *53.02 mo., pki* tax and In*. HAG-STROM REALTOR, G® W. HU-I RON - OR 44348 - EVENINGS CALL OR 34119._______ Mixed Neighborhood No down payment First month tree Payments Hke rent MODEL OPEN AFTERNOONS M AND SUNDAY WEST0WN REALTY FE 1-17*1 afternoons. LI 34471 FIRST IN VALUE MODERN 1-BEDROOM LAKE PRIV- Immediate posteulen. Charles H. Harmon. PE 44118. MODEL JACK PRESTON BUILT HOMES 4175 Midland — N. of Walton Blvd. 4 Blocks f. off Sashabaw Drum Thurs. *"d 9tL 44 Sun, i ^ NO DOWN PAYMENT NO PAYMENT THE 1ST MONTH Temporary model located at Lt bFlAIRe'hOME BUILDERS FI 8-27*1 1:30 TO » PM. IVENINOS, LI 1- SeI« Wbomr. •JSSSSJSLs REAGAN MODEL Tri-Level OPEN DAILY H0UCREST SUBDIVISION M59 AT TEGGERDINE RD. Brick and P Family Re carpatad Ihrlr an, tonra larg SSKKr. tuM haianiani $14,950. . NORTH ENO ' Maiip..,. ivy-car garage, menace, an paved strati, conveniently located. Only IlMOO easy tarme. MULTIPLE LiniNG SERVICE GEORGE IRWINVICKtOR i W. Walton_________FE 3-7K HPu^ Over 1,350 Sq.ft, of Uv $12,900 EC0N0-TRI I Altechad Garage Family Room_ Let lnc|pded $11,000 Will dupDealt on your let _ J. C HAYDEN, Realtor BIRMINGHAM LAKE PRIVILEGES—Delightful l tlon near Commuter. Live wh you ploy. Three bedroom, 2 b colonial ranch. Larg* family re and separata dining room. Th car garag*. 139-500. WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE toward, B'---1 PHONES IRWIN ■gy.-ytt.-3r-a wtfn nripiKB in nuQf living room# ANNETT 2 Family Located on fenced corner tot. Bach apt. 1 reamt and bath, Clarkston Araa Nearly an aert lot, attractive one-floor ranch horn*, — room a ft. with dinlrH large kitch— ““ 3 good i baths, PA II heat, to ,8jpar AYLORD LAKE FRONT - With 14 fact — Three bedi-------- deck, garag*. flreplaca, Id like Priced r. Brick end aluminum exterior, Scar attached garage tar only *13,5r° You can expect eound ” this at Oaynrd s. Call MY 33 or FE 1-9*93. LAWRENCE W. GAYLORb MY 2-2821 Of Ff MiW -a Lake Often MILLER LAKE FRONT RANCH * large rooms, IVk baths. 15x11 dream kKd>-tth all bullt-lna and lots at ful cupboards. Ceramic at water on this high SlLOOt full price. recreation room. Everything is Immaculeto. 114.000. FHA or Ol or Land contract. PAUL JONft REALTY FE 44550 NOTHING DOWN GI'S ONLY BEAUTIFULLY LANDSCAPED _ OF AN ACRE - S ROOMS AND BATH — FULL BASEMENT AUTOMATIC HEAT - 1-CAR GARAGE — PAYMENTS L O ' THEN RENT. is accepted. storms end screens, fi e home In Pon- 1700 DOWN — 2-BEDROOM, Living room 13xir with fireplace, kitchen, 4-pc. bath, Sxir utility room, oil fumact, ivy-car garage, 1 scenic lots with large trees. 87700 - 140 per mo. Price Is firm. 4117 Welland Dr. off Graan Lake Rd., I miles West of Pontiac. Cell between 4 a.m 4 n m . m Sundey cells. $9,990 HMMMRQBraOMMIIIR 3bad room ranch type home, full basement, birch cupboards, oak floors. FULLY INSULATED. Designed (or bettor living. No money down. WE TRADE Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT RUSSELL YOUNG, 53V5 W. HURON ~E 4-3S30 AUBURN HEIGHTS, : ----J|led and nev lei with nle, Having si BEDROOMS, ly decorated, nsS? y,r<1' bloom/iIld NEW RANCH MODELS OPEN NOW 1 bedrooms, family room, fireplace. 2 baths, basemet, 2-car garage, landscaped. Close to school and church, etc. 2 blocks er** Ted’s on Square Lake Rd.; north at church to houses. I_ 825.5004a.900. Low-down payment. Immediate possession. RORABAUGH WRIGHT REALTY M2 Oakland Av*. FE 24141 Outstanding Buys-Terms Two 75 If. tots. Airport Rd., SIM dawn 49 E. Beverly, $1,000 down 47 HHtsMf, *500 down BREWER REAL ESTATE William B. Mitchell, ! ROCHESTER HOMES 3bedroom ranch, 2 baths, recreation room In basement, lib-car garag*. *17,200. 3-bed room brick, full basement. In town, *14,900. Ol' """FRANK SHEPARD OL 14500_________ ROCHESTER AltSA—WILL TRADlE NIX REALTY UL Mill, UL 1-5375 TERRIFIC BUYS FE 1-5053________________Realtor BY OWNER, ALL BRICK 4-BED-room, lib ceramic t>~|^^jM|aab new carpeting, many carpeted, scenic view, Clarkston Schools. *14,900. MA 5404. CLARKSTON AREA room, ivy baths, larg* 1-car red garag*. Full beaem—* DON MCDONALD LICENSEQ BUILDER OR 3-2*17 COUNTRY BEDROOM FARM HOME Oh Vb acre — large (bad* treat I " quiet country. *10,950. Undarwood Real Estata 0445 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston III 4154415 If no ans. 415-1453 *500 DOWN, LOW MONTHLY Brkk 3bedroom, lull basement, selection ol tiles, atteclwd ov*r-tL ' 2-cer brick garag* and city wat MODEL HOME OPEN DAILY C SCHUETT FE $-7088 CUTE, 2 BEDROOM HOME WITH FHA Repossessions: • Watanga, Unton Lak* I Athlon*, Oxford Tdelln, Oxford North Point Realty 4 S. Main Clarkston i 5-2341 It no ant. MA 31542 WALDON CLARKST__ ____ __—. SlitoW. ARISTOCRAT BUILPI WEAVER AT ROCHESTER 2-story fnrm house on two • Aluminum tiding, storms screens, 3 bedrooms pj yard with trees. Idea Of Pontiac. *34,1(0, to MILTON WEAVER INC., REALTOR In th* VIHaga el Rochester IU W. UntuartWy____*51 Wooded Enchantment This delightfully dean modem bedroom ranch, pestled among n Oldster Walls and lloors scarred by pa of many happy little toft, 5 h been raised her*. 2 badroems,___ Ctosad frant perch, farm type kitchen, toll basement with bath, garage, swimming poot city c— forts. *7,950. Trad* In equity. HAGSTR0M REALTOR FIRST |N VALUE RENTING $59 Mo. $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION S-BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS - WIDOWS, SpninEnOi For Irnmndiatn Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 NORTH SIDE * room* am ____Naw carpeting, naw ga* fur naca. Glassed front porch, toll bsmt. ‘ car garag*. 111,750 on nasy terms UNION LAKE PRIVILEGES. 4 roams and bath, ladgarock f I rep toe*, range and retrlgere'— *“ to 2W car garag*. $14,509. Terms. SUBURBAN NORTHWEST ATTRACTIVE RANCH, 2-btdroom — on* carpatad, alto carpeted " ing room and hall, full batam oil forced air haat, alum, sen and storm sash. Nice lot, 7 120'. Newly decorated, inside — out. ATTRACTIVE PRICE, TOOI ONLY 111,750. TERMS. MUCH WANTED WEST SIDE LOCATION Attractive ranch home. Spacious living room, wall-to-wall carpeting. I00'xi23'. Full basement, oil FA heat. Sylvan Lak* prtvMagas. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. E-Z TBI- SMITH & WIDEMAN REALTORS FE 4-4526 411 W. HURON ST. NICHOLIE NORTH SIDE Two-b a d r o e m bungalow. Living room. Kitchen and dining *-** Utility. Oil HA haat. Gar Fanced rear yard. Terms. 1-FAMILY INCOME n Pontiac. Terms. Kitchen. _____He HA haat. it $350 moves you li SOUTH SIDE Thrae-bedroom bungalow. L — Kitchen. I LAZENBY a 10x13' family rooi peted living room, < My atyia kitchen wtt _ boards end exterior of brkk and frame, with attached 2-car garagt on a comar let. Can ba yours tar lust *14,950. ------| WE ACCEPT YOUR HOME, LOT OR EQUITY IN TRAtw. ROY LAZENBY, Realtor 4183 Dixie Hwy. OR 40301 Mutttpto Llsttne Service KINZLER PICTURESQUE LAKE FRONT On spoclouo grounds grid from* with Mg native traea. Brkk rand custom-built In 19*4. 154oot Hv Ing room, kltchan with matching LAKE PRIVILEGES And tend beach lust across raw Nice dean 3b*droon> ranch typ ham*, to to, family kHOwn an fun batam ant. tiltoN, forms. Bat 4 BEDROOM?-^°$350 DN. A neat and ctaan ham* With to basement and total tor tome of modest miens. Larg* 1 aer lot. 1W<*r garage, near school and mayfog. siuso, *350 dew W* can sail your preswit home. Ask for Grace Rockwall, Harry K rebar. Gut Hoyt Welter Nalr— or Cham Clark*. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor N9 Dixie Hwy. 04-1 Acraa* flrqm Packers Star* Mutttpto Utttae Service Open 94 ______ .aiy bendy Utahan end dining Spec*. 2nd floor partly completed 1 rooms am bath, papwetojintrejtee^j carport. *22,500, mtgs. terms. Professional Service 2 houses with present Income $170 par month. Large 42-ft. frontage on W. Hu 17041. deep, approx. 13,000 sq. ft. of land. Mom for WE WILL TRADE Realtors 28 E. Huron St. Open Evenings and Sundays 1-4 FE 8-0466 OXFORD - NICE NEIGHBORHOOD and good schools. Haro It «“ orw terlarg* family. 4-b*d older but wall kept home basement, gas heat, ona^ar ge-rag* and many other f*ati-“ Paved street, are* tot. In almost to aero. Price *13,500 SEMINOLE HILLS - L^ 9-room —I— *---------—4th 1 b*dro~"« two up. i fireplace, ' dining n ________ paved at. cated on ChtrokMjtototo|| possession. Easy ten anly *14^*0-FURNISHED RANCHER — Situated on almost an acre of tondonhr lil m||M west of Clt ylimits. Large llxlS-fl. tlnlshad family rmm, oak floors, flreplaca and attached two-car pry Owiw Ujevina state. Bast of conaiTion m *?d ill- Beautifully scaped and towering oak for shade. Furniture and I only *19,900. Terms. LIST wi th US ” ___________ service. . Over 27 yrs. of gan. a&pf’&ras l. H. Brown Realtor 509 Elizabeth Like Road 4-3544or PE 1-4*10 _ RHODES hardwood aiding* 3 floors, axtra nl Only, ** IHIPP .SB^^gS.'SJS good 7-room , $7,800. *l»ee0 bow"' ivSSoRY OLDER’ HOME. Near 1VHSS?dltH*»? reoms,focludlrto Sr&rtun»!g only 97400, *1400 down, balance NICE*'RESIDENTIAL LOT. North-west of Rochester, borders p»'"* Creak, scenic. Only *7.500. LAKE ORIQH. NIC* 0*r*g# ALBErTJ/ RHODES, BROKER ARRG CASH FOR EQUITY — LAND CONTRACT WE BUILD - WE TRADE lto ACRES with (room ranch, oak floors, plastered walls, 24-foot family room, lto-car garag*, beautiful yard, lots of shrubs, fruit troas, patio, barbacu* Cqll tor details. NEAR UTICA, 3-bedroom ranch, gat haat, aluminum alarm* acraaru, load*, ol cupboards SHARP 3BEDR00M RANCH. paring and fireplace In living room, family room, 2-car garagt, paved drive, large fenced yard, iacatod In good ntlWibartwod with lake privileges. *15400. LAKE ANGELUS ESTATE. Bdautl-tuiiy wooded let In excellent neighborhood. Over 90 far PHONE 682-2211 5143 Caaa-Ellzabalh Road MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE OPEN BAILY 9 TO 9 KENT SUBURBAN RANCH - Spacious 3 bedroom brick am* *'— fog hem*. WaN k In 2341. living row New family nan LmmIv mortem kt|Mlvn wim baaamant. Parv h llrepface! wo am. farm*. OVER 4 ACRES — Ranch l-b*droom 11-ft. carpatad Mvtng room with NraNaca. Tiled bath, heated- parch —Oil heat. Garage, Pin* Knob area -415,999. Term*. ROCHESTER. AREA - N you like —“-----» you WRI foV* •“ sew*. century PM hi ____ toil shaded g cloua living ar ' natural flr*-‘-*n. One I tat floor. bath an Sac-----....______ 2to-car garage. OMR — Terms. Floyd KantlftCw Realtor fl*9 Dixie Hwy. at Tslagraph FE MIS ar FE fr7S41 HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty . $1050—3-BE OROOM Union ijk* prfvllWMi. Alwn) plus attractlva 911,509-7 ROOMS ^ -—I sized be tonMy roar . Only 9 years o 110,750—NEAR MSI , must*wlf’white bungekw, aluminum stolid. Full basement. Urge : Mma/m jtoMiUBsipttRmmilm Everett Cummings, Realtor 2503 UNION LAKI ROAD EM 3ato 5437181 'SMITH" siding pgtof li gas hea tot. On plus costs n CLARKSTON AREA LAKE FRONT Overlooking Welters Lake, nice 3-bedroom aluminum sided home, ment, 111,900. Tarim. R0LFE H. SMITH, Realtor .. ■- "wr.. TIMES Corner Lot ScKKlT1: SSSnstokV ir, quick gotMtsforu Call now. 40 Acres____________ hams grown 'talers. Don't ba cromtod, call u* on *hlsona Only 825,950, terms. 13 miles to W* have "Lots-o-lots." Three to tarty aero parcel*. Buy now and build later. Don't wait till tomor-row. today's prices won't last. Clarkston - Ortonvlll* - Holly areas. If w* haven't got it, we'll get It tor you. Call us now. Times Realty NEW LOCATION -JUST SOUTH OF WATERFORO H LL, - 5890 Dixie Highway, Watortord. OR 4-0194. Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. "BUD" North Suburban Beauty i offering luxurious approximately to-*cr* lul outdoor Jiving. I large living room with stone lire-piece, additional fireplace In den (or family room), ceramic til* bath with separate shower and formica vanity, 10'xto' pint pan-eted kltchan with extras, Iwgt covered patio off den for outdoor relaxing. Mar attached garag# with llnlthed Interior tor axtra recreational area If daslred. "BUD" Nicholie, Realtor FE 5-1201, AFTER 6 P.M. FE 4-8773 Will Build Large, spacious two story horn*, lto baths, full basement, attached 2-car garag*. Many other fin* features. Only *17.900 on your lot, plus wattr and sewer. See and compare today. East Side Five bedroom, large two atory horn* with two full baths and full ba lament. Private entrances. Many extras that you would not axpact to find In a horn* of thla price. *9950. Call tor Information. 95 Oneida 2 bedroom ranch home located In a good neighborhood. Living room, dining room, kitchen wlfh full basement and gas heat. Nice lot with Mar garage. Many extras. Call tor details. John K. Irwin t SONS REALTORS 313 W. Huron — Since 1925 Phone FE 5-9444 ~ ags call FE 8-195* CLARK LAKE FRONT SPECIAL - 1 . bedroom horn* with furniture on Round Lak* north at Pontiac. Excellent bats and bluegtll fishing. Nk* quiet lake, no spaed beat*. Immediate possession. Only 0499. OUR LADY OP THE LAKES PARISH — 3 bedroom home with larg* living room, entrance closet, good dining era*, larg* family,Wyte kitchen with eating space and bullt-ln desk, lto baths, breazeway and garage. |“ grade school c-‘“ ’ Close 1 814,950. A WORLD OP LIVING - . Only ^ CLARK REAL ESfATE 3101 W. HURON ST. FE 37880 LISTINGS NEEDED Multiple Listing Sorvtc* Frushour Struble HURON GARDENS Convantano* plus It whaf you'll have In this Broom bungalow. Loft of extras to - please the Mrs. Carpeted living 7% quick tata, with ft.. ___ gas haat and Bear ga-You would expect to pay more than SIMM. Hurry WEST NUR0N ST. ACROSS FROM WEBSTER school. 9 rooms, spa ' --- home, 29* carpeted k . I garage, potential commercial a professional building. 117408. PRICE REDUCED FOR 'QUICK SALE. You can a today, located In We- c THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUJL.Y 6, 1905 TWENTY-THREE GILES SPRINOPIBLQ TOWNSHIP. groom, 1-story farm home, 4 |m bedroom, lrxM’ dining room, built-in cmm clooot, vestibule. oak floor*, now oil furnace, now wall, tarammt. Oonwo, ocroanod • in p*fl» Y**, only iaooo. OWNERS LEAVING CITY. Must cell MHO Ohara 3-bad room home. Carpeted living room, full bath, go* neat, boaoment with recreation room, and third bedroom If docked. Lovely J-car garage, date - to ochoolo. Only SIOJOO. NORTH END. 3-bed room homo. Now carpeting, now geo turnoce, . hardwood floor*, pi ottered wall*, h* lament, Nice shaded lot. Paved streets, convenient for schools. tOnly 10,100 on land con- ■ 'GiLES REALTY CO. PE 9*179 ' 221 Baldwin Ave. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE TAYLOR MODEL OPEN, DAILY 1 to 9 (Wednesday by appointment for you convonlenco) 7909 Highland Road (M59) 5 Mills West of Airport •rick and aluminum tiding, 3 bedrooms, IVb bathe, walkout family room, 2-car garage. Will duplicate on your lot or euro. Highland Read (M99) at Elisabeth Lake Rd. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION 3-bedroom ranch, full basement, 2-car garage. Close to shopping and schools. Located on Fronk- INDEPENDENCE TWP. I bedrooms, gas FA heat, aluminum awnings. 100x300’ lot. Ex-:ellent condition. ta,9S0. Terms. WHITE LAKE TWP. ch, large kitchen, raw taxes. 83x200' land-t. 10 par cant down. A-l BUYS PONTIAC-WEST SIDE 4-bed rooms, separate dining room full basement, daraga — nice fam equity or trade for tmallar home. CLARKSTON SCHOOLS 3-bedroom ranch, large countn kitchen, full basement, 100x280' lot -"t privileges toMMMtotaglr"* Sole imm Val-U-Way NEAR LINCOLN JR. HIGH a bedroom heme cemglataty redecorated inside and out, loaded with c oset end cupboard opaoa, sop. clous kitchen and dining area, uflM-ty room and vary tara* r room, gat FA heal, gafMffc bath, alum, storms and ter_ wahe to Wlsntr or Lincoln Jr. High Onto min. if you have good credit is. Full pries ymants of gas $350 DOWN 3 bedroom Hama with full mant, oak floors, ceramic tile both, extra largo kitchen and dining area. Located In a nlc* neighborhood, cleee fa schools anc chopping area. Full price 10,030. WE TRADE EQUITIES Over Ji,ooo.ooo sold so far In '45. ' List Hers-All Cosh for Your Home I v‘ R- J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 343 Oakland Open 9-7 Altar Hotfri PB 1-1344 or FBAddiy SCHRAM Now Doing Custom Building Will build fa your plana or eurt Available Building Sites Lake Front 3-bad room brick and alui Quad-level on a large | Priced to a t $13.500 w DRAYTON PLAINS Naw 3-bed room r WATERFORD REALTY D. Bryson, Realtor OR 3-1273 4340 Dixie Hwy Van Walt Bldg. KAMPSEN n homo lust wsltlni DREAM HOUSE AND LAKE FRONT LOT— The splendid features < s reflect a cherr l brick home t carpeting In the living room a dining all, and family room, I kitchen Is a delight to see w Its built-in appliances and frlgerator. It has two bathroon all this and more, you get lakefront lot on Cass lake with dock Installed. All this for $1 garage. Prlc* Y WAIT? pletely finished breezeway to attached 2-car garage, full base- floored attic. oi Need Time to Wake Up Before punching the time clock? A family home on Mound Road should do the trick. 07x243, fenced lot, cut stone barbecue WHY NOT LET Ivan W. Schram BE YOUR REAL ESTATE » in Joslyn Ave. FE 3-7471 DORRIS LAKE-FRONT DOLL HOUSE. home with attached garage 12x14 summer porch with —P piete lalousie windows for those summer breezes. Full basement ass - _____ — r sting the living room. h recreation n colored fixtures It. beck yard anchor fenced and Of 40 feet of lake frontage. price of 414,f30 with only 0700 ’ large family comfort, roll carpeting downstairs i bath and fireplace. 3 end full bath up plus ■ ralk-in storage closet, fi comfort and ssr i JAYN0 HEIGHTS SUB. MODEL HOME BEAUTIFUL LOTS EXCLUSIVE SUBDIVISION — Surrounded by four natural lakes, located off W. Walton Blvd. and Loon and Schoolhouse lakes, salesman on property. Weekdays 5 to 8 weekends 2 to 0. DORRIS & SON, REALTORS 2534 Dixie Hwy. 474-0324 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Office Open Sunday 1-4 larble flre- GUARANTEED TRADE-IN PLAN No. 57 DREAM HOUSE IN THlE CITY—Extra sharp, extra large with attached 2-car garage. Spacious livlno -place, full basement and finished recreation rooi the way even to fenced rear yard and beautiful • privileges on Galloway Like lust across street. Compere where at only *24,950 with a* little as *2,300 down plus costs. No. 58 FHA TERMS BRICK 3-bedroom rancher with full basement built In 1957. J» yw are looking for something new, modern and nice with all city convenience, including blacktop streets and close to schools, seathll one. Full price lust *13,500 with *450 down plus cost*. CALC NOW. No. 59 APPROXIMATELY $1,000 AND NO MORTGAGE COSTS take* over existing .514% FHA .mortgage an this sharp 3-bedroom, less then 3 years old, tastefully decorated. Full price only *11.900 so Call Now as this should move fast. No. 60 URGE SPRAWLING RANCHER WITH LAKE PRIVILEGES on 2 lakes lust west of town. 3 largo spacious rooms plus JWcsr garage on nearly 1 sere fenced site. Fireplace# large family, room, beautiful carpeting and many plus eemLa, at $^,500 with 001V $1,700 00*11 plUS COSt* No. 42 CHARMING IS THE WORO tor this 2-bedroom doll house. Writ located on 2 beautifully landscaped tots In Drayton Woods. Oak flobrs. plastered walls, gas heat and alum’-.---- ——■**■— ■*'- —* picture; as nice ax w,„. ■ terms. CALL NOW, DON'T WAIT. s and wonderful o MODELS lent Jn a price ranga Ranchers, TrMevets and Colonials, loaded with extra features and beautifully furnished for your Inspection. You Will- Never Build ter Less. WHY WAIT? Be our guest. Models Open Dally 4-0, Saturday 2-4, and Sunday 2-4 p.m. LAKE ORION HIGHUNDS M-24 to Lake Orion, right an Flint St. to Orton Rd* right approximately 1 mile to Bateman sign. LAKE 0AKUND SHORES Dixie Hwy. to Saahabaw, right to Walton, right to Bateman sign. BEAUTIFUL BUILDING SITES TWO NEW SUBDIVISIONS MODESTLY PRICED YOU CAN TRADE 377 S. Telegraph Realtor FE 8-7161 Open Daily 9-9 M.L.S. Sunday 1-5 JOHNSON BIO SACRIFICE, tor sab «r trade. Ptoabt pay ettanttMie tola ad. One throe family frame,,and —-five-family brick tor am an chard Uka mm tofi always rented, tore* EM owner says mutt la sold anc*. Baaing la believing. < WEST SIDE, 7-room Batory frame A. Johnson & Son, Realtor 1704 S. Telegraph FE 4-2533 STOUTS Best Buys Today Ing roam, fireplace, dining i beautiful kitchen with bulit-1 dish washer, family room, turner kitchen, 2 largo bedrooms. ell torcad air hut, tw-car rage, plus carport, large comer tot.. A real value at *1,500 v— terms. $800 Down Only *52.50 par month on I contract, nut 5-room bungs with Sylvan lak* privileges, b mant, oil Iwat, 50-ft. high HURRYI Lakeville on large ua-acro parcel, elled living end dining i ■ . acting space kitchen, utility room, oil-fired hot water heat, attached 2V*-car garage. Only SI 7,500 with easy terms. "Ideal Ranch" custom bultt on your lo ours, 1100 iq. ft. of living --- basement, IVb baths, attached 2W-car garage, aluminum < ' rlor. Model OPEN et your venlence. Call TODAY. Warren Stout Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. Ph FE 5*145 Open Evas. Till I p.m. Multiple Listing Service O'NEIL MODELS Open Daily 1 to 9 Westridge of Waterford da.. homes ■s tour profwtionally I furnished Model i grouping. Namely. "LeGrande," a rambling ultr modem ranch styled and last tn "Optimum" the handsomest, mo: attractive design we've sun In oi area built around an open coui yard and "OH" so beautiful! Dlx! Highway to Cambrook Lane, to to Conna Mara Lana. Trading Is Terrific In Drayton Woods Right .... .......replace. Oil hut. 2-car attached garage, paved drive. Only one block from school. Vary nicely landscaped yard. $20,500. WE TRADE I 7-Room Brick Ranch . _..J carpeting i . Family room, kl of cupboards, oak Northern High Areo ■ 3-bedroom ranch. Large living >m carpeted. Nice kitenen with i built-ins. Full basement tiled, s heat. Paved street. Setting on Income Preparty 50 APARTMENT BUILDING ON LAKE 10-unit, turn., A-l occupancy. Reply Pontiac Press Box 24.__________; Lake Property pavod road, all uflllttos, a walking distance, nlc* bi division. Dill Rd- N. off n 1. of $“*■•*■ beach. *1,500 down. Call Mr. Brock at Brock Realty, CE 0-0401 or Holly ME 33191. FOR SALE: COTTAGE ON tlT-tabawassee. all modem, priced to aelL H. L. Miller,Ph. 554- GRAHAM LAKE Charming 4-bedroom home. Walkout basement to lake. Good fishing. More for privacy. Tall plus offer more privacy. *37,900. Phone FRANK SHEPARD * __________OL 1-0500________ TAYLOR 4 bedrooms, large family bmrtM^lot, garage. Imr WILLIAMS LAKE CANAL MACEDAY UKE FRONT SI home sites, ar a tar, peach overlooking Beaut tors Lsh* arMImaa. ^~..***W Mfft I LAKE FRONT HOMES, NEW AND U*ad- J. L. Deify (*. EM 3-7114. LAKE LIVING. PONTIAC IS MIN-ytat. Lots, 9995, SI0 down, — month. Swim, fish, but doc FE 4-4501, OR S-1299, Blech 8r WALTERS LAKE OFFERS 3-bedroom brick. 112,300 Choice hill Situ tor ranch** -trHavels. 5 lota, SMS total. Dl-rtctlons: Ctorkston-Orton Rd. to Eston Rd., 5 Mocks norm at MM WATKINS LAKE, TWO BEAUTIFUL weeded. lak* prMMVMl tots, good location. Term*. AL PAULY, Realtor 4514 DIXIE, REAR OR 3-3M0________ Ev*S. FE 1-7444 bedroom. Extra large living Cutstone fireplace, full baa. gas Iwat and 2-car garage. Beautiful aculc tot and good beach. SI7,500 full |>rlc*. Terms •vallr’-’- Sislock & Kent, Inc. .1307 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 34-9294 ___________334-0977 LAKE' ARROWHEAD, For Information ull r 473-2042. GRAYLING AREA, 10 ACRES OF large forest camping area 'HI Manistee Lak*. Only S7SI terms. FE S-40M or writ* Box 134, IIFLE RIVER FRONT LOT, Standlsh area, *1,995, *30 down, *20 month. Blech Bra*-. OH 3-1295. Lots-Acreoge 5 Acres Clarkston area, level parcel « apple orchard, good building s Only *3,950 with farms. 32 Acres vestment, gently rolling, partla wooded, blacktop frontage. Prli right at *9,950 with terms. Worren Stout Realtor' 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. Ph. FE 5-8165 ______Open Evas Till I p.m. off M59, no racial barrten, t Estates. *7,500. 673-493*. 200X300 FOOT PARCEL, custom-built homes. I G LOT WEST OF CITY O alleyTealty 473-0701 Brookfield Highlands BLOOMFIELD HILLS SCHOOLS Lon* Fine Rd. and A---—f ‘rict'v*y"w$7,5oo Paved, water system, 100 occupied custom homes hei------ Connected with Sylvan Lake. JACK LOVELAND 2110 CSS* Lak* Rd. CLARKSTON AREA COUNTRY H0MESITES: 1- acre site. 200" road frontage, $3,500 2- acre site, 200" road frontage, S3,900 20 acres with Christmas trus. S' 80 acres, 'A ml. road frontage. HI-HILL VILLAGE Select custom building sites on and good wells', as low as *25 OT WITH ELIZABETH _____________ privileges 50x170. S2.000. Inquire 155 S. Roslyn. Waterford Hill Manor t perfect far your future hor sew section new open. TIMES REALTY. 67S-0394. OUTER SPACE 0 ACRES of beautiful walnut, uk and pin* trus with large hill overlooking country. Property ad-loins state lend and an old 4 bedroom home Is Included. 5400 per aero. Terms. IS ROLLING COUNTRY ACRES with pin* trees, SO,950. Terms. 1* ACRES of rolling lend end a —dad background. A parted * site. $5,950, S7S0 down. 10 ACRES northeast of Ortonvill*. opportunity to Invest In land i a tow down payment. *4,250, S BEDROOM older term home on 20 tillable acres and. large barn. 114*50. Terms. C. PANGUS, REALTOR I MIS , Orionvlll* CALL COLLECT NA 7-MIS for many purposes. Ideal f Annett Inc. Realtors E. Huron St. FE S-t Open Evening* and Sunday 1-4 ACRES, 2 BEDROOMS, GARAGE, 74 ACRES, S BEDROOMS, BARN, IS-ACRE FARM, 4 BEDROOMS. bam, modern, S2S-2130._____ 121 FOOT FRONTAGE On Auburn — 270* deep. Qoc 2-bedroom horn*. Scar garage . Call tor dtototo.7 H. C NEWINGHAM TIZZY By Kate Osann Sol* Household Goods 65 AAA SEWING MACHINE SUMMER SIZZLER SALE 1945 Nacchl. walnut Mbtoto, repossession ,viv.......... Singer automatic, console .. ....... portable ...... Signature automatic . Kenmore portable ... Singer ag-iogger In ALL MACHINES GUARANTEED RICHAMN BROTHERS StWINQ CENTERS , _ Pontiac's ONLY evmeriad Necchl dealer. 445 Elizabeth BRAND NEW 1945 MODEL ROPlR gas stoves. Only 2 left. 3 models In built-in ovens, bronze, whit* and “I hate to go home. I left my room a mess this morning and my mother’s had all day to rehearse the lecture she’ll give me!’’ 118 E. Pike Sale BvsImss Property 57 BUSINESS CORNER AT NW COR-ner of Baldwin end Weldon Roads. Phone Lull* R. Tripp, Realtor, FE 9*U)._______________ Business Opportunities 59 BEACH with bath house, boat doc rentals, amusement, house t.JHP spaces, two-family brick Income, year round cottage. Doing a tremendous business. Su It today! AUTO PARTS Good going business, building 50'x-75', 4 acres at land. Business and real' estate or business only. Call BATEMAN ____ I I I After S:«0 FE 5-9641 ________FE 2-3779 U L L Y EQUIPPED CONCESSION traitor ready to go. Sail or trade. Oat ready for to* fairs. FE 4*722 after 4 p.m,_________________ GROCERY, MEAT, SDD-SbM, *16o,- 080 grou. FE 2-8351. R LEASE. GOOD MOTELS C. B. CHAPIN, Motel Broker MOBILE Operating service station lor leas*. Paid training end financing ' able. Open house Wednesday, 7 at Telegraph and Long Rd. For Information call FE 5*444. in equal opportunity employar. plans for progress company. NORTHERN HOTEL And bar, liquor licenu and SDM. Golden opporti “ Ml Wall i i capacity approx. kitchen. story cement block bldg. 12 roor for rentals, 2-bedroom apt. for ow er. Only *35,000, substantial dov payment. K. L. Templeton, Realtor 139 Orchard Lake Road 4*2-0900 OPPORTUNITY FOR DISTRIBUTORSHIP LOCAL OR STATE n Exclusive Distributor for a . :t that is In daniand by business and home. EXCLUSIVE TERRITORY PROVEN PRODUCT ACCEPTABILITY For complete details write or call: PENGUIN PLASTICS & PAINT, INC. 3411 NORTH LINDBERGH BLVD. ST. ANN, MISSOURI ~~I; 3I4-AX-1-1S00. N G FOR PROFITABLE business POOL fiberglas wall concrete helpful, tx URE OIL COMPANY HAS FOR lease in Lake Orion on M24 3-bay service station. For to# Pur# Oil Co. progr RENTED BRICK I SPARE TIME INCOME Refilling end collecting money from NEW TYPE high quality operated dispensers In this I No selling. To qualify you i have car, references, *408 to S cash. Seven to twelve hours a BALPH AVE., PITTSBURGH, I 15282. Include pi Statewide Real Estate Class C and SDM, grossing *98,C good tuu. Pontiac area. Reas MICHIGAN Busines Sales, Inc. JOHN LANOMESSER, BROKER 1573 S. Telegraph_FE 4-15S2 Sale Lana Contracts 1 to 50 LAND CONTRACTS urgently wanted. Su us bafor WARREN STOUT, Realtor ISO N. Opdyke^ Rd. FE MISS F ACTION an your land centra_ I small. Call Mr. Hlltor, FE 2-0179 Broker. 3140 Elizabeth Lake Road. HAVf OKOUP OF LAND COti- C. PANGUS, REALTOR MIS Orf Call collect NA 7-2815 SEASONED CONTRACT. 28 PER cent discount. West suburban | arty. Lavender Really. 334-3S1*. J" --------PER CENT Wanted Controcts-Mtg. A0-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. Su vs bate WARREN STOUT, Realtor 198 N. Opdyke Rd. PE 5*144 Open Eve*. Til I p. m. Waated C—tracts-Mtg. 60-A CASH For equity or land contract. Small-482-2211. i discount. Marti ». Call Tod McCult Mortgages Hough Sr. NEED LANO CONTRACTS. SMALL discounts. Earl Oarrels. EM 3-2511, Empire 3-4084._____________ CLEARANCE SALE Used Easy Spln-Ory. Used Frigid air* refrigerator, $29. - Reconditioned Frlgldalr* washer. CRUMP ELECTRIC 3445 Auburn FE 4-3373 ELECTRIC RANGE, 4 BURNERS! S7S. 473*404. and Consolidation BORROW UP TO $1,000 34 Months to pay Cradit lift insurance available BUCKNER FREEZER, UPRIGHT, LIKE NEW, *95; upright piano, (40; RCA TV (35; 2-pltc* bedroom sat, ISO; 3-plece Mack sectional, *95; old oak buffet. (20; green davenport, (29; apt. size electric range, IIS; chest of drawers, 115; bedroom suite, SSI; gas range, $40. Coast Wlds Van Llnu, 371 E. Pika St. LOANS LOANS *25 to 11*00 insured Payment Plan BAXTER I, LIVINGSTONE LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on first visit. Quit friendly, helpful. FE 2-9206 Oakland" loan* co. * 202 Pontiac State Bank Bld(j. LOANS TO $1,000 Mpvpompia pe t*in; HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. FE MI21 7 N. Perry St. 9 to 5 delly. Sat. 1 WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $1,000 We will be glad to help you. STATE FINANCE CO. 508 Pontiac State hank Bldg. FE 4-1574 Swops W2'- WILL SWAP LOT AT WOLVERINE Lak* Estate* for late —' ■ up truck end camper. ( nodel pic ■ 1-3750. Sale Clothing 64 CAPE AND MINK STOLE, Sale Household Goods ^ 65 1 BIG BLOCK BUSTER eE 37 PC SET OF DISHES WITH 3 Rooms New Furniture m NICE RANGE AND REFRIG $317.00 $3.00 PER WK. , refrigerator *39.00 dinettt *17.94, odd beds) springs dresser and chests, plenty of use< furniture end factory seconds, a Michigan's greatest buys. JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1441 Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-4842 First traffic light south of 1-75 Acres of Free Parking Open Eve*, 'til 9 Sat, 'til 4 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNITURE 3-R00M OUTFITS $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3 Weekly $478 (Best) $4 Weekly NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS . piece (brand naw) living room 2-plece living roam suit*. 2 step h Diet, matching coffee labia, 2 d*< mattress. 2 *v?n8v *Iamps. A 1120. *1 JO wukly. PEARSON'S FURNITURE M E. Pike FE 4-7 DAVENPORTS, ONE WITH matching chair. Fireplace flex screen end brass fixtures. Wrought iron vanity and total, t twin bad headboards. FE 0-0*05. 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89 Calling tit* TVkc ft. ‘ AMotoaa til* to aa. FRETTER'S WARI iehSuse 0 Per Sale MiscoMaaeeoe 47 9‘Xlt' LINOLEUM RUGS $3.95 4ACH Flattie wan flit K as. " Ting Hit - wall demkng, cheap. Q Tito. FE 4*0*7, ISIS W. Huron 1S**DOT FLAf BOTTOM FISHING jo gallonTSK-gasoline PrCE with any Lawn Bay mower. Tony's Marina, Kaago Harbor._____ 400 REDWOOO PLANTERS, FAC-tory close-out bargains. Liberal Bill's Outpost, 3245 Dixie. OR 3*474. 741 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUl ^14- AIR COMPRESSOR, INQIMOLL Rand, 3 h e., *325. FE 2*130 Ad-• - Sato*. 73* Oakland Ava. , BRAND NEW. _________ _______________Chandler Heating, OR 3-5432._ BATHINETTE: STROLLER; EaI baby Items. UL 2-4901 BATHROOM PIXTURttl,. OIL BUNK BEDS Cheka at 19 styles, trend triple trundle beds and tx complete. $47.50 and uc ton's Furniture, 210 E. Plki Big, Big Values electric broom ... GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP CASH AND CARRY 4‘xl' Mahogany V-Grooved .... $2.95 "x7‘ Mahogany V-Oroavad ... *2.49 Open MON, and Fit Eva*. 711 • O’Cloek DRAYTON PLYWOOD 112 W. Walton____________OR H912 FREEZERS $139 Summer Clearance Sato Nam* brand All Deluxe Features furnishings. 451-3405. LEAVING STATE, NEW SNOW blower, 2 place living room w " 6 place mahogany dining room ether Items, OR MOW. NICE GAS STOVE AND rEfRIG-arafor, $33 each. V. HarrTi, FE REFRIGERATOR, $20. OTHER AP-pllances, naw and used parts. Michigan Appliance Co., 328? REFRIGERATOR, *25. Dryer, *35. Gas stove, *25. Refrigerator with top freezer, 149. 21 Inch TV, *25. Washer, *25. Electric stovs — REFRIGERATOR, 135; GE ELEC-trie range, deluxe, *95; 50-gallon electric water huter, *25; gas range, *25. No money J-- -gtoBwaw wuk. Schick*. 493-3711 Repossessed Kirby WITH ALL ATTACHMENTS, ONE YEAR OLD. CALL AFTER J. Kirby Ca. SINGER DIAL-O-MATIC, ZIG ZAG console, $54.50 terms, CURTS APPLIANCE. OR MATIC - IN MODERN WALNUT CABINET. Embroiders, buttr' holes, etc. Take over paymants SPECIAL O A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OP FURNITURE - Consists of: 2-plece living room suite with 2 step-tables, 1 cocktail table and 2 table prlng* to match with 2 vanity lece dinette set. 4 chrome chairs, ormlce top table, 1 bookcase, x 12 rug Included. All tor tiff. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. E. HURON FE 4-4911 W. PIKE______________PE 2-2150 USED TVs Ilf ft TV, radio, phono combination *49.f5 “ted Frigidaire refrigerator *39.95 Sweet's Radio & Appliance Inc. At Our 1 Armless sol electric - PAto ' Electric GE auto. ' EASY TERMS " clotfiu^ii Aotfciaes 65-A NOW ON DISPLAY: A COMPLETE Hi-Fi, TV t Radies 45 E. Walton, n •■•INCH. USED TV .......... *29.95 Walton tv FE 2-2257 Open f* SIS E. Walton, corner of Jest— Water Sefteaers Fer tale MbceHaaeeas 67 1 WEEK SPECIAL ’xT* BIRCH PREFINISHED PANELING. 3 COLORS 14.97. ALUMINUM SCREEN DOORS, GAS FORCED / . SEARS TRAILER; , 3 chair*; chiM*i it chair; maple ward-mlsc. FE SJ9S7. HUNDRtDS OF PEOPLE USE PRESS WANT ADS AND GET RESULTS! EVERY MY> 3 WALL PAPER STEAMERS. SPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK SujjHy. SOI Orchard Lake. M2- s-eel mom yxr UtiLltY cultivator. PE 4*411. I traitor. Garden Tokococt w Rise tvn from $175, D*lby TV* Ft 11$ *. LAWRENCf ST. M&uStoTgisS, UNIVERSAL CHEF GAY SYo9e, used industrial forcblain, I light flueraacant fixture*. Abe u*ed Chain hellt* - with trolley*. WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS at discount price*. Part**, 4500 Dixie Hwy. OR 3*747._____ tachment*. Cultivator, due, FB 5-tlOl Mr. Hargrave. ANCHOR FENCES MONEY DOWN FE 5-7471 : WELDER ON WHEELS. STA- ampi. Whitman Ford tractor mtk tractor with It ks: < gas furnace and bettor*', automatk water heaters, hardware and atoe-trkto tuppltoa. Crock, *WL cap-par, Mack and galvanized pip* and fittings, Sentry and Low* Brothers paint. Super KanvTon# and Ruttoteum, HEIGHTS SUPPLY CONN ORGANS tot - su the naw MBtoet ____r organ — WOW l Uaad Thomu aplnto organ. IS gadak walnut, bargain Had salnat organ, S29S S0HMER PIANOS Big Savings on all floor madato SUMMER STORE HOURS fill am to S:|| p.m. Saturday te 1:M gum. LEW BETTERLY MIMIC CO. (Acraa* tram Birmingham theater) Fro* PartUng — Bottle Gos Installation Two 10O-pound cyllndort and aquh mant, 112. Groat Plaint Gat Ca FE 5-0072. CERAMIC TILE WALL or FLOOR 301 o SQ- FT. Way below wholesale, many colors to choou from. JIM'S OUTLET Cor. Airport and Hatchary Rd. OR 4*010 Hours f a.m. te t p.m. Mon.-Sat. CIRCLE FLUORESCENT LIGHTS, ---rst light* tor kitchens *12.95 e, *4.95, factory marred. Mkhl-Fluorescent, 191 Orchard Lak* HR .1* pumping,, fully itk at only (349.507 MORRIS MUSIC Acrou from' TtoStSan * FE 2*947 OUITAR CLOSE-OUT. IT7.9S. BLBC- CLEAN RUGS, LIKE NEW, SO ------*- ao with Blue J-ustro.^Rent Hardware, sltfwi CLEARANCE OF USED OPFldl - ---- and machlnei. Forbes, “ — 3-9767. ““ Simple Inexpa ce Builders S For the Finest in Top Quality Merchandise Shop MONTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC MALL complete heatlnf lab. 1 limited In quantity and GARAGE SALE, INCLUDING ELEC- trlc rang*, Wadneaday, Jr*“ 1 1255 Lennox, 1 block SOI Square Lak* Road, west of GARAGE AND MECHANIC HAtiO tools, tar wrenches, ton lack, tiller, rocking chalra. boxes, hydraulic 18 Ariens yardmastar GLEAMING WHITE METAL SHOW-er cabinets, *32.50. B-tolkts, *19.95, hand bulns from IMS. Q. A. Haggerty Has It I Delta Scroll saw V>-H.P. Motor, Reg. *137.70, Clearance 194.97; Delta Shaper with Vk-H.P. Motor, Reg. $190.00, (Clearance SI40.00; Reg. 1152.31, Cluronce $110.00. Haggerty Lumber 2055 Haggerty Hwy, MA 4-4551 -----RT WINDOW PAN, 20-INCH i, adjustable 30*0 Inch. Auto-c timer, V4 heraeaewar meter. INVENTORY* REDUCTION SALE-Usad and naw typewriter*, adding machines, desks, chelrs , tiles, mimeographs, etc. Forbes, 4388 Dixie Hwy. (next to Penflac State Bank), or call OR 3*747. LAKE PUMPS. 10 GALLONS PER -'-jte, will run It ha***. 1*9.95. L Thompson, 7005 M59 W. LUMBER * peoboard I LI a calling til*, first quality, m carton kits, sq. ft. $.08 Aluminum combination door, pre-hung Sin Burmeister's W* Deliver EM 3*1) S day* a weak* a.m. to I p.n Sunday*. 10 la 3 MOVING. GARAGE SALE THIS weekend. 450 Hickory Ni' Cooley Lake Rd. NG: 2 OVEN ELECTRIC ROTARY SWfciPfeR ' screen house . . fi TALBOTT LUMBER vsri MANUAL ORGANS, 13 PEDALS. 1309. Musk Cantor, ’nl imimi Lake Rd. (In Village). dilkHt,” wTli' Tide# SpfiST’iS' inSSk 4140 Qreer Read._________________ EXPERT PIANO MOVING FIANQE WANTED ■OMf ~ EM3J*I> GUITARS GUITARS GUITARS Flat tops, classics, and electrics. Large stock Of all types of gutters from WJt. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. cross .from TeLHuren PE 2*647 Rd. (In village). , ISIS I SELDOM USED TRADE INS Thomas spinet S395 Thomas spinet, toss than a year aid, S493. Thomas spinet, ilka naw, 44 net* keyboard, S595. Gulbransen lull |Im organ, W,79S ALSO SAVING ON FLOOR MODELS AND OTHER TRAM INS Jack Hagan Music Center LESSONS Naw and used aloe, guitars and amp*. FE *4700. Music Center North *agln«w at Falrgrev* UPRIGHT PIANO ...............*3S Used spinet plana — a real buy. Lowrey Organ, Ilka naw, S manual* and ll padals .......S49S Only I used accordion, 120 base with case ................I12S T GALLAGHER'S—10 E. HURON USED ORGANS CHOOSE FROM HAMMOND, LOWERY, WURLITZER, SILVER-TONE, ETC. PRICED FROM $250 Store iquipownt Sporting Goods GUNS: BUY-SELL-TRAOE ^■Burr-Shell, 375 S. Telegraph TWO 22-CALIBER TARGET RIFLES BURR-SHELL. FE 2*781 Saed—Grovtl—Dirt BLACK DIRT, GRAVEL AND SAND buHdorinji specialty In email lobs. ChDTCE BLACK DIRT, 4 YARDS PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP. ply. sand. gravaL fill dirt. OR 3-1534 SAND, GRAVEL, FILL DIRT, REA-senabto. drtlvary, OR 3*728. SAND, GRAVEL, FILL DIRT, TOP TOP SOIL BLACK DIRT, GRAVEL, beach sand, and HU dirt. PE 5 9573 or PE S*4BS,____ AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD, B PLUMBING - PUMPS - I & Ft 4*905. PICNIC TABLES, S SIZES, LARGE selection. Log lawn swing*, rose arbors, traUitaa. Liberal Bills ‘Dut-------------Dixie. OR 3-9474. PLUMBING BARGAINS. FREE Standing toilet, *14.95. NFgelkm heater. *47.99; 3ptoca bath lets 599.95. Laundry tray, trim, S19.9S; shower stall* with trim *14.95; 3bowl sink, 12.95;; Lav*.. *2.95; RIDING ROTARY LAWN AAOWER, King me* tor, humMi ', 1SW i dark vanity, 1 4 light cheet, 1 light oval braided rug, 4*2-4478.________ Rummage —__________ ■ thing, household, ctoMno, baby Items, table, curtail!*, akl'a. AH week, 455 Park, Birmingham, Ml 4*432.______________________ SATIN SMODtN STAINLESS STEEL ' Ma sink, S2S.95. Chipped bath-• S25. G. A. Thompson, 7885 ! POODLE, e. Ft 2-2909. AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES. STUD servlet. IMATODD'S, 332-7139. AKC OACHSHUND PUPPIES. STUD AKC REGISTERED POODlU PUP-pies, small agrlcat mtolatoru, 4 weeks. S4S, also ampltoe groom-Ing service. Ml 4-3789. ALL pCt! PISH AND SUPPLIES. ILL PET SHOP. » FE 44433. Bird* baarden. BORDER COLLIE PUPPIES CANINE " COUNTRY CLUB ' ~ 0. 1 Beule- TWENTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY ft, 1 m MINIATURE MOOLIS' AKC, W. REmoRrt'ft II^M «TWt *V> Mfc*6kALliEO ROOOLI Tm- ______b ig — hjff/ISr' posIrman 'Ti^iggl 33S77*L ■ ...... REGISTERED ENGLISH POINTERS ready Mr Trading mm. H s3w7~ ,___________ Richway Poodle Solon I OAKLAND El SPO ftswl Mw...........; ....v H 1787 MERCURY. IQ-xT-, COMPLBTE_-jMWlf-eontalmd, > raw tiros, EE Jerome-Ferguson FORD Dwter# OL fcssr&r EVERY FRIDAY EVERY SATURDAY EVERY SUNDAY 7:30 P AL 7:30 R.M. 3.8 PM. gBS&.. WBgBKsru OPEN DAILY 9 TO 9 New and Rood towRara o| 1 HALL'S AUCTION SALB ■u w rurktton Rd. Lake Orion WMCY 3-1»7l or MY 3-6141 O'XEORb t0MMUNjTT^A>w.TTSN. tvarvSit- #• ““ "Msn- auction HAWAIIAN* GARDENS nfirtniilnY July 7t • Pm* p?1 Grange Hall Road, ono thli# north- APACHE CAMP TRAILERS JULY SPECIAL: 1965 RAVEN REGULAR PRICE — $523 SALE PRICE $475 EVANS EQUIPMENT 325-1711 4507 Dixie Hwy. (Jurtnp--A-- uyu "'tUofc* Campers WINNEBAGO OVERLAND ANTON PHOENIX WOLVERINE From SI,075 H. C.l Rosewood t stump tm , ______iny eoflw ti mirrors; 3 eornorod stoois wi ■ orellve flborgl*s;J*wn_»**. tbonv S3 Chaise lounges: rood Ion ^r^nd^^D^ fiber mots, 4'xO'; S. &&£ t I mar® mvcniwy RRdRR' nt --7 ,T 24 lAe* gar (ten stools II In.# nail rocopfocEhpiotot to IS in. and KSSThIp mJi9, »r^^ups^*o^lmwt*p"«is plates; stonoworo .cootwot stoves, l sins; brlquots, 00*0 rod. mS»? Jj2*SS!1 ?LS22r™S2 figurines, vases, candlesticks, dishes, platos, mugs,----- pieces; Inventory of I firewood bins, plant__ _____ stMlL scales, table bells, randte-sNcks of all aim and dajcrtptlons Including Lotus and Buddd can-dleabra, lamp vasas of many styles, ash trays, gongs, drawer pulls in 13 patterns; Bronze; Key chain*; souvenir spoons; pewter MSo3&RWU«5ffi^^lwKLrf! COMB OUT AND SEE THE NEW Boo Lino truck camper. Also, now travel trailers, ComanchS, Trot-wood. Frolic Boa Line. Now Skamper, and used. MSS end up. Rentals start at MO par week. Supplies and service. Open weekdays 7-7, Sat. f-6, Sun. 2-5. JACOBSON Trailer Salas' R Rentals CENTURY TRAVELMASTER GARWAY—SAGE Prices on our show traitors hi boon reduced. Save on those 13' S'T 15-ft. Tour-A-Home, sleeps 6 I TOM. STACHLER AUTO l MOBILE SALES I W Huron Si. PE 2-492* CAMMING SITES ach. Pishing. I MIS. Orton- d coasors; straw hats/ aprons; indies galore, e scissors, two shoo; napkins, beach towels; pin cushions; modal Chinese Junkii favors; Ho Tol Como early and partake of the hospitality of the INN COMPARABLE. The sale begins promptly craftsmen of thaPar East. I WED* JULY 1 - if&. HAWAl". AucHeneer. Ph. Swartz Creak 435- 1 BLACK GELDING, $150, rat gelding, SIM. Mara a American saddle bred, hands, axe aguT*"“ —'■ shew. OL 1-0171. TRAINING AND BOARDING. .. years' experience, guaranteed satisfaction or your money back. M. Garnett. TRUCKLOAD SALE I d* safe young ponies, *50 ' — with colts. Palomino mny wim new cart. and harness. 2 kid safe spotted horse*. Terms. Free delivery. H. Hoffman, EM 3-4*14. 10405 Pontiac Lake Road, Soma n Hoy Grah Iee6 > 84 75 ACRES OP MIXED hay. MU 7-1417. STANDING BALED HAY IN FIELO, a bale. MY 3-1430. 31 CENTS Form fapipMit 17 2—I.H.C NUMBER 27-V 7-FOOT mower $100 each. 1—N. I. side delivery reke on rubber, *100 1—Case tractor, model IX. and cultivator 4495. MANY OTHERS KING BROS. Ft 4-1734 PE 4-1443 Pontiac Read at Opdyks 1942 WtfEEL HORSE ELECTRIC 30" root mower and snow Made, $375. 1742 SlmpticRy, 32" rotary mower and $new Made, $375. 1741 Wheel Horse with 32" m fJust mrlh of Waterford Hill) ALUS-CHALMERS MODEL B WITH SIDE DELIVERY BAKES, MOWERS and botors. new, uaad and rebuilt. Davie Machinery Company. Orton-7-3272. Geld Bell Stamps THE LARGEST "REAL" FAR ssrvleB star* In Mjthlgen. Jo Deere and Near Msg parts gatoi Gold Ml Homes wfih all m< II Ntvl, 347-7774. 104p.m. trawl flnlm I LOTS FOR SALK. BEAUTIFUL park near Gaylord. Call MA 4-1071 -r 47HML lfrFOOT TRUCK CAMPERS FULLY contained, $1375. Inc* Rochester FORD wni._________ AlRSTREAM lightweight TRAVEL TRAILERS IP _____ W. Huron (pim to iota one of Wally Byom't oxcltlng caravans) APaCHC CAMP TRAILERS taw now 1744 models left et used trailer prices. Factory demon-stretors and used trailers on display at all times. Open dally 7 ajn. to f p.m* Sundays II a.m. to 4 p.m. Apache factory hometown dealer. BILL COLLER, 1 mil* at~* -* ------ BOOTH CAMPER num covers and campers for pidujp. 4347 LoPoroot, Water , ORT4434.______________ CONCORD ANTON From $134$ I Reece and ,LES and RENTALS Ixla Hlghwe R 3-1454 McFeety Resort, i KENSKILL 'The Graatast Nome In Quality Traval Trailers 16' 17' 19V4' and 23' KENSKILL All these models on display Self-Contained Sleeps 4 Persons Twin or Deubto Bi CREE W, 17' and 20' FRANKLIN Truck Campers and ere completely Holly Travel Coach 15310 Holly Rd* Holly ME 4-4771 -Open Dolly end Sundays— CRUSADER CAMPER COMPLETE-implng , 3123 ELLSWORTH AUTO & TRAILER SALES OPEN SUNDAYS AT 1 P.M. Tawos Braves, FOR RENT: _ ----jrlne 10-ft. cam '45 GMC pickups. $100 w Avaliers, Barths, Wly and Corsr'~ o have rentals. MA 5-1400 FOR RENT: VACATION TRAILERS FOR ItENT, 15-FOOT VACATION MARV'S CAMPERS Rant or Boy fe 5-0fli 1 N. JostynT 2 Mltos N. oi I Reese hitches Instaltod From 1775 JOHNSON'S H7 Beat Walton at Joslyn 4-5*53 or Fe 44 equipped Including ing heater $035. tensnt medals or pk on display at atfl $2900. ■W 1745 14* Cl coaches $495 times $177 to Rtnt or Buy Pick-up campers $775 and up. T & R Camper Mfa. Co. IlM Auburn Rd. 2 Mocks west . Livernois on M59, Rochester, Mich lean. «SM33$ - Rentals - - rentals, and they sleep i Holly d or self-contained mod-ka your roaervotlon now-It Is too late—See Us- Travel Coach, Inc. ~ «-477t SALE PRICES ON ALL CAMPERS and ovemlghtar*. Doc's Jeepland Specializing In One Good Brand of Travel Trailers PLAYMATE Several models on display. JOHNSON'S 111 E. Walton at Joslyn FE 4-5S53 or FE 4-0410 Streamline All 24', 26' and 31' NOW ON DISPLAY —1The twin bod models— —Luxury—Quality- Holly Travel Coach Inc. 210 Holly Rd* Holly ME 44771 VACATI0N CAMPER BUS 1741 Ford Bus Mist sleeps 4 SB has B stays, refrigerator, sink an wator supply. If has a plug I hook up electricity at a trail* camping park. The lop rata** u I to^ rTf WOLVERINE TRUCK (!aMPER$ Lowry Camper Salas. 1325 S. Trawl Tr/jora Boots—Ae«EEnrl»» TAWAS T R A I L E NS- REESE Hitches, Trailer Rantals. GOOOELL TRAILER Rochester Rd. UL 1-4457 AMERICAN. 33mA, I RID toss. 443 LaSalle. TRAVELO, iML 1IHE om, aluminum awntag, alr-con-I loner, partact condition. OL BUY NOW AND SAVE modem MoMl Home park. REMEMBER, LOW OVERHEAD: SAVE REAL MONEY . MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie _ . 335-0772 On* Mock norm ol Tatagragh MM !#I A1L j N, JWtet. FULLY tm, ______Ext. sTattar 3 pm. ALUMINUM HOUSE TRAILER, 23‘ Macomb, exceltont condition, com- HURRY *. »^eS?*S^ Sovlrys YES, we'r YES. wo I YES. wa yKI* w* wt.J______________m YES, w# have many uaad. YES, all Delroltar products moot „ ------." , rigki Blue took healing, plumbing gamble. You always enlov Itw ultimata In safety, camtart and MARLETTE Let us put you *n a new Marietta In our court. Wo have the lot. 10, 12 AND It WIDBS AND UP to 40-77. long. Deluxe and standard. STEWARTS II wide*, 2 stories, all lengths with new toam-e-wall construction. And now warp proof cabinet doors. YELLOWSTONE AND WINNEBAGO, the host In travel unit,, finest built. Truck campers. SlP-IOVb-ft. at clearance WE*RBNT TRAVEL TRAILERS. MAKE RESERVATIONS NOWI Oxford Trailer Salts Open 7 of Lake muXY .tlO.- lwt champion, 2. |-----m, some equity, tako mart- l»riouSfSto,yh«ih,,.mT tact. Featurlrq Usad Truck Tirts All SIzm Buget terms available FIRESTONE STORE 333-1717 Motorcydts 1744 MAICO, 350 CC, 2,000 ACTUAL miles. Exc. condition. 1350. FE 54343. 1744 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE. EM 34333 oftor 4 pjn.________ tm - 1744 TRIUMPH fR4 4loCC. 1945 140 HONDA, LOW MILEAGE. B S A - NORTON *- DUCATI SALES I, SERVICE OP E. Pike________FI 44077 font motorcycM vlth only S2S <$-. PAUL A. YOUNG INC. 1030 Dixie Hwy* Drayton Plaines H0NDA-TRIUMPH-N0RT0N ANDERSON SALES B SERVICE 1445 S. Telegraph Pi 30307 K&W CYCLE YAMAHAS 7 locations to serve you. 3434 A burn, Utica and 7*15 Hlghlai Road, Pontiac.__ SUZUKI Kawasaki and White Ul' Indian. CUSTOM COLOR 331W. Montcalm Bicycles 1-0*34 Of 4524537. Boots-Accessories k 15, 0150. 634-3076 after 4. 14-FOOT BOAT, IS MOTOR AND ' SPEEDLINER. 40 H.P. MER-cury electric. IMastor Croft tilt-■ r. PE 44170. 15-HORSEPOWER EVINRUDE Ml tor with gas tank, 500. UL 24544. IS* FIBERGLAS SEA KING BOAT and traitor plus extras, SO hji. motor, etoctrlc starter, oil Ike new, 01275. 3353071. 14-FT. CANOE, EQUIPPED WITH .“ii 5 hp. Merc. —‘ *"■ Neptune, ON 3-5 8' CENTURY INBOARD, NEWLY reflnlshed. new cover, 110 hp. FE 2-344S. BKS(OISCOUNT5 ON TONY? MARINE JOHNSON MOTORS BEFORE \ STi MS w Ctarfcston Rd* Lake ______MV 3-14M. Mercury outboards, Shell Lake \ ON BOATS NOW IN STOCK Pontiac's Only Mercury NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS, B0ATS-B0ATS Our annual July clearance on! Runabouts. HsMni _— canoes and pontoon boots. Over 30 dHtarsnl models to chooto from. Open daily 7 a.m. to S pjn* Sundays M r ~ - - - — Kill coller, i Lapeer on Mil. -JUElcrT Flbergles In boa re ipaaaeo priced tram SWTS. Set sad I ^OAKLAND MARINE r s. Saginaw FE *4111 Dally '« 4. Sun. HI I pm. lENTURY SUN SL"Tstaeraah alt ■Il55g iTO Raid. 17*4 C06viTTR, GOOD Shape, ly No Money Down. St.77 Call Mr. Bo* hand I o and arrango til ffebminv TEL-A-HURON 60 S. Tehtgraph FE 8-9661 1*57 cHivY. "i660h. Oqobl'uN- i5 CHEVY IMPALA J-DOOR, hardtop, outofnlitlc. r«tk>, heater, get this one et only B27 e month. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY IfM CHEVROLET, NICE (OTfl* “ CaR MSOTl. “And I say that if this is the lost generation, nobody has bothered to look In my living room!” $1297 NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) .Just W mile north of Cobb Avt.) Spartan Dodge 1744 FORD ECONOLINE PICKUP, custom cab. radio, whitewalls, low mltoego, almost Ilk* now I Save I JEROME-FERGUSON, Inc. Rqch-FORD Dealer. OL ‘ *— 744 FORD PICKUP, WITH S FOOT box. Capor build-up and Is yours for only S1475. JEROME-FERGU-SON Inc. Rochaster FORD Dealer. 144 FORD M-TON' PICKUP, V4. 6-ply liras, low mltoeo*. I]** now-Ideal for camper. $1,775. JEROME-FERGUSON Inc* Rochester Dealer, OL 14911. -BRAND NEW- 1965 FORD _____ defrosters, 5-775x15, 4 ply tires. Serviced end 2-yeer warranty! Only - $1795 Plus Taxes and L leant Michigan John McAuliffe FORD 430 Oakland Ave.________F CHEVROLET TRUCKS 1741 VWon I transmission . S775 1743 Vb-ton I „ stick . 41,375 1743 Corvalr 75 panel, blue wMta^S-ton*. 4, stick, radio, PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 104 S. Woodward Av*. “■ BIRMINGHAM. II 4-3715 GMC FACTORY BRANCH New and Used Tr "" FE 5-94*5 473 Oakland SPECIAL 1965 Chevy Demo Vb-ton pickup truck, has tong tu-tone paint, heavy duty springs ran- 1“—~— *•* radio, $1170 plus tax and Henna Matthews-Horgreaves, Inc. TRUCK DEPARTMENT AUTO-RITE BUY AETNA CASUALTY J«m hlah quality, auto I •a ot rant that *av« 2096 TO 40% NO DUES OR FEES CALL US POE NO OBLIGATION DETAILS BRUMMETT AGENCY Cto Mil*________PE 4-0SB7 AUTO INSURANCE TERMS AVAILABLE STOP IN TODAY Anderson Agency FE 4t3535 1044 Joslyn Ave. Foreign Cars 105 1751 VW, SEDAN WITH RADIO AND absolutely no money down. Payments of S34.S7 ear month. Call credit mgr. Mr. Parks at Ford. Ml 4-75011. 50 MGA, BEST OFFER 740 VOLVO 2-DOOR ACYL, •pood, solid black sharpl Prk to toil!I JEROME-FERGUSON IL-. Rochester FORD Dootor, OL 1-7711 /. GOOD CONblTION, MUST 17*2 RENAULT DAUPMINE, NATIONWIDl transporatlon, brill tlnan 4WIDE AUTO SALES, 1 1742 RENAULT OAUtiMlHI EXC. eond. $451. Original owner. NA 7-7313. 1943 RENAULT, HEATER, wh LOW MILEAC— ________ DOWN, ASSUME CAMJFAy-MENTS OF $32.17 PER MONTH. VIuAM IMMGLnlL ' 1744 VW SEDAN, SLIOING STEEL sunroof, 1UXM miles, must soil fast. FE 3-7457.____________ - Volkswagen Center 17*4 VW convertible. Et 7*4 VW 3ee*t station wagon. Radio. Mr mileage .... S177* Autobahn Motors, Inb. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER vs mile north of Mlracto Mil* 1745 $. Telegraph FE *4121 Foreign Curs whitewalls. Exceptionally FE 24747. RARE SUPER CHAllGEb HOLLY- id Graham. 4734B12. YOU BIRMINGHAM few Mi Mmt On 106 ATTENTION! Our credit manager, Mr. Data back, one* again we And It pos bto to hota all our customers w have had credit probtoma, a would like a good used car. V feature spot dollvory. FE 3-7863 CHEVY, 4, 4-DOOR. SEDAN, Air, Ml 40844. IMS CHEVY 2-DOOR. STICK, A-l —JRton. lull. prte*. No money i. Call Mr. Eao. ...ndto and arrange all financing. TEL-A-HURON 60 5. Telegraph FE 8-9661 ONE-OWNER 1757 CHEVY ;---- Tel-Huron 31B W. Huron New rad U-d Cot YOU Can save here 1962 CORVETTE m5rt0!liw*raw condition. »’** 106 Cot m i 1964 DODGE '37,000 Not Dattofs — hut mH*» k a^^JVystori TURNER FORD 4*4 B. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM________I*1 17d 6hBW »BL All. WSOON. 1441 CORVAIRS, FIVE TO CHOOSE mm, aiikiaMHr. radio, heater, excellent condition. new tiros, sharp. No money down, asoumopaymont* , ot » weak. Nacradlt appllca-. Call Mr. Dan FE B4D71 Capitol Auta 312 W. Montcalm 17*3 IMPALA CONVIRTieLB, tomatlc liras, ai Huron ____ FE 54S53. 1963 CHEVY Super Sport 1960 CHEVY Wagon with VS engine, automatic transmission. he .or, r—u Crissman Chevrolet •tar OL 2-7721 (On TOP *1 South HIH) 1797 CHEVY 2-DOOR, AUTOMATIC, rides like new, onto »" MARVEL t» etilVY 4. KCl air, 4-6o6iT owner, low mltoog*. very nice oughout. FE 3-7542, H. Riggins, PE 84772 1743 CHEVY EEL AIR, ONE OWN-1 or. 2-door, sharp, 81,375. HUNTER DODGE, Blrmlnghsm, Ml 7-0755. 1741 MONZA COUPE, BUCK Ilf tarter and axlertor. 1M 4-speed, snow tiros Included. S11M or best offer. OR 1440, 4374 Anderson- eirmlnghanv*'1’ Hurt*r, MI ^ l^fHEVY^WAGON, EXCELLENT >41 cdRvCtrfe "*10" 4-sWreKj top*, bright rad, xealtont condition, will handle flnancTng. NA-TIONWIDE AUTO SALE. 338-4525. 1741 c6RvAiA SEDAN WITH Automatic transmission, radio and heat-- -bll tiros, absolutely no i. Payments oi $24.75 per 14*3 CHEVY SUPER SPORT, door,, hardtop, 447, sharp, raa to go, will tako trad* and ham financing, NATIONWIDE AUT 338-4525._________________ . 1763 CHEVY BEL AIR WAGON, V-l stick, private, 11575. Call_FE $-4342 1744 CORVAIR MONZA, AUTOMAT- age, real 'shai FERGUSON li Dealer. OL T * but miles Mt to I by you In the .jetton at Chrysler* ___ warranty, .lavtohly eoulpped. Pdtara *ljMr ^fWJPj many ^other «fra*°^nil* lovely Xdume can be yours lor lust D*%YVi??sr ^WTc5r*55» . NOW OPEN , Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (jusi^sr^rraiAy.:. Spartan Dodge face FORO, BODY LIKE N1W, tfsa GMC pickup. Mt. box, very flood* Id3-1t30- , m i *pB6»ei37 2895 Dixit Hwy._ FE Mas ---- 1959 T-BIRD Coovwtl^ wlta rodtosnd hostor. Auto Outlet 3400 Elizabeth Lake Read FE 8-7137 1751 FORD, V4 WITH AUTOMAT!^ 2nd car* 8177 * "’*** *" NORTHWOOO AUTO SALES . 38» OIXto HWV. ___FE 8-7237 M57 FORD, f-DOOR HARDTOP, v-8 automatic radlo_. heater. Absolutely No Money pown. 12M week. We handle and arrange all financing. TEL-A-HURON 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 1757 FOR6_CpNVBRTIBLE, R|At good, 8275. Save Auto. FE 5-3271. 1748 FORD STATION WAGON, 4-door, v-8 auto* whit* with white-wall*. I7M. MA 4-1420 before 1 p.m. 1740 FORD CONVERTIBLE, LIKE now, V-t, auto* power steering. $475. FE 4-2433. Rochester FORD MARVEL 1740 FALCON. SEDAN, STRAIGHT $377. ______251 Oakland Ave. problems? Mr? Dan. ' Capitol Atito FE 8-4071 312 W. MONTCALM KEEG0 PONTIAC SALES A SERVICE 682-3400 dean, EM >4224. WE SPECIALIZE IN THE SALES AND SERVICING OF JEEPS DOC'S JEEPLAND Buy-Rent-Lease-Sell 47 W. Huron at Wide Track __________332-7174 Repossession applications accepted. Paymer.-------- lust $12.47 weekly. Call Mr. Caah. at 338-4528 Peeler.__________________ LLOYD'S Continued Clearance 1959 CADILLAC Coupe DeVIII*. Full power, redk heater, whitewalls. Pull price— $1495 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND - 333-7863 1960 CADILLAC ALL THE luxury and prestige of driving the "Standard of the mine white hardtop, power *Sf course, and all Itw standard Cadillac — Impels station wagon. Fawn beige finish. 6-passenger, V8, Powergllde, power steering'................ *i<2»* $1397 Coll 339-4521 MOW OPEN Additional Location 1 855 Oakland Avt. (Outdoor Showroom) (Just Ui mil* north of Cass Ave.) Spartan Dodge Transportation Specials IMS Bulck ............ . . 1898 Chevy 2-door ...... $lt 1858 Pontiac wagon ..... 811 1757 Clwvy 4-door ...... 921 1740 Rambler ........... S21 1757 Pontiac . ,........ Ill 1757 Dodge convertible . 141 1757 Pontiac convertible . *55 1741 Ford Oatoxto ...... $5i 50 MORE TO CHOOSE PROM WE HANDLE ANO ARRANGE allpinancing CALL MR. DAN ' FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONCALM $3795 SEE FRANK STUBBLEFIELD OPEN THURSDAY 'TIL 9 WILSON SMALL WANT ADS BIG DEAL FOR YOU! LLOYD'S Continued Clearance 1962 CHEVY 4-door Bel Air, SIx-cylIndor, auto-1 > whll^allsn$vlhlltonwlth blue Interior. pr*f!io50 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 "v-l.'meny extras. $2,150. ( 1944 CORVETTE STING RAY, 344, 4-speed, red with white top, NA-| TIONWIDE AUta 338-4525, will 1 toko trad* and handle financing. CHEVY, 1744 IMPALA CONVERTI- Clubvlf^^^ 2-4410. , Square Lake. FE 1964 CHEVROLET . BEL AIR 4-door, V-8. automatic, power steering; low mitoagt, dark aqua. *1.775. VAN CAMP CHEVY ig 4-UBS __________MILFORD Reoossession 1744 CHEVY Super Sport, 407 4-ed, no money down, call Mr. mson, at MA 5-1484, dealer. CHEVELLE MALIBU. RADIO, heater, power steering, $1880 Ml _______■____________ . 4-8328.____________________ CHEVY BISCAYNE, STICK. 283 1944 CORVETTE COUPE 300,_4-—— —-ning. best otter. spmd, executive car. $3,295, Firm. 3*1343... __ 338-7771, otter 6. , 145 MONZA 2QOOR, 4-SPEED, 118 hA. OL 1-8982. ________ 145 CORVAIR CORSA, 4-SPEED, dition, no money down. $4.15 par week. Call Mr. Brown. ESTATE STORAGE SHARP 18*1 PAUCON, RED AND Reoossession 18*1 FORD VI onglna, attek shift, no money down, call Mr. Johnson, et MA 5-S8B4 4to*tor. mTfORIJ V-a, 2-DOOR, V B R Y nice, standard shift, bargain, FE 1-7542, H. Riggins, Dealer. Repossession at’°M/( CHEVROLETS Out Birmingham Way 1797 CHEVROLETS Bl«.vne 2-door "*£;**&, 11 FORD Y-EIRD, BGOOR, HARO-top, automatic, radio, hooter, pow- boTkdrst 1741 FORD extras, GM Warranty, will Opdyke Hardware FE S448* taka trade «"d.,h<^!!L,'2*ncln«v te«i fORDTv-I, RADIO, HEATER, NATIONWIDE AUTO, US-4525. | stick shift. 5475. FE 4-5712. 1*1 CHRYSLER. 4-DOOR. ONE OF j mi^FORCT^‘SdSOR SEDAN WITH _____________*t you'll * HUNTER DODGE. Ml 7-9755._______________ Birmingham, PATTERSON CHRYSLE R-PLYMOUTH-VALI ANT July Jamboree -1001 H. Main St. mgr.' Mr. Perks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-757L M2 T BIRD, RADIO, HEATER. AU-tomatic, pi ““ ‘ . ROCHESTER L 1-8551 1748 CHEVROLETS S*4^ltodar,r'Pmvor«l|, hooter. *1,395. I Mil.. Sport Coupe. Blot Interior, VI, stick shift, i whitewalls ................. Air station wagon. I ------ptc iflck a Impels convertible. Dark blue, b trim. VI ----------------------- — Impel* 4- *2,095 imrala Sport Coup*. Goldwood yellow; black Iran, vt ....... —- ar steering, radio, ire aqua a I, radio, M 1845 Monza Sport m with rod Intartor, l heater, whitewalls 17*4 Corvette Fastback. Silver n Whites. Sharpest eng anywhere SUM 25 Months Chtvrobt PATTERSON CHEVROicf Its* S. Woodward APS. MU 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM KESSLER'S Seles end Service Autobahn Specials 17*2 Chevrolet Impale 4 1740 Rambler Moor station wagon. 1741 Bulck Skylark convertible. ; 17*1 Chevrolet eanvertlbtor Eye-appealing autunWKgold finish, low ' ago, excellent condition ......... aide aid out, m *...- ..,_______________ engine, showroom condition . 11971 19*1 Comet ~2-door. Dazzling marine 1742 Skylark hardtop. Rad finish wit! white vinyl tap. Pah power, lee mileage .. 9147 Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER Vk mil* north of Mlracto Mil* INI S. Tatagragh PR 9-451 JMF John McAuliffe Ford . 19634 Ford Fastback Hardtop With radio, heater, automatic. Beautiful red finish. $1797 John McAuliffe Ford transmission, radio, __ _____ shrrpl *1295. JEROME-PBRGU-SON, Inc. Rochester FORD Dealer. OL 1-7711. 1943 FALCON FUTURA, CONVERT- IK-Ttf^ YOU ver equipped, automatli islon. radio and heater, II tires, $177 or your i "'turneiTford' FAIRLANE 2-DOOR HARDTOP, mack, rad bttarlqr, 21,000 mltos auto., whitewalls, seat ball, axe, condition. $1288. FE 1-3784. 743 FALCON 3-DOOR, WITH 4-cvlinder engine, standard transmission, radio, extra clean. *1,075. JEROME-FERGUSON, Inc, Roches-tar FORD Pastor, OL 1-8711. GRAND OPENING SALE 1962 FORD Galaxta "500" Adoar, v-8 standard transmission, ovordrlvt, white exterior, rad Intartor. $1095 ' Full Prici 1959 PONTIAC Catalina 8 psmngar wagon, 44t*r V4 automatic, power steering, brake* and windows. $495 ^ Full Pric* For Your ConvtflitncE Stop and Sat Us Mondoy Bill Smiths USED CARS 462 N.v Perry FE 4-4241 j THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1965 TWBNTYyFIVE New end Used Cars JMF 1964 T-Bird Lartdau Hardtop with Sway power, local owmd, and «h servlctd by us from time It umsoughtl Bi-Monthly tor - $39.90 . John McAullffO Ford *30 Oakland Ava. Fi.M10l _______ 19*4 FORD FAIRLaNE 300 4-DOOR, V4 anolna, 4-ipaed, powar steering, brafcaa, only fjm an Hat, *1,795. J«R0ME-FER0U50N, Inc., Ro-^ FORD Pooler. Qt H711. 19*4 SFORT COUPE FAIRLANE, VI automatic transmission, p o w -•tearing and brama, new car w wiiitr, TIMlianl. EM 3-2339. JMF Mm McAullffe Ford 1964 Falcon. Coupt With radio, heater, automatic, dai blue flnlth. A real boautyl $1795 Jahn McAullffe Ford ____________Fg»4101 19*3 FORD FAIRLANE "500 door nanftop, gold flnleh, magic irtnv V4 with atandard transmit ' *Wv radio, haatar, whitewall,. *1, 194. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., HW frWobdward Ava., bir- MawaadUsed Cart 106 1M4 FORD OALAjttl SO* XL WITH JMF John McAullfta Ford 1964 Ford Fastbock, V-8 Engine With CrultodMMflc. antra sharp, power steering, \ factory fraan. Loaded with jbodlesl $39 down, WEEK-END SPECIAL AT ONLY- $1887 *30 Oakland Ava. Ft 5-‘“ 19*4 FORD 500 4-OOOR A-CYLIN-der, stick, radio, >ow mileage factory official, I1.79S. JEROME-FER-GUSON, Inc, RochaMor FORD Das Isr, OL 1-9711. 1*41 MUSTANG, t-DdOR HARD-top, i cyL, B|d(, Take over pay-ments. IMS Cloverlawn.________ JMF John McAullffe Ford 1965 Mustang 2-Door Hardtop $2695 John McAullffe Ford *10 Oakland Ava. FE 5-4101 Were Determined Tff SELL THE BEST USED CARS TO GIVE YOU THE BEST DEALS TO GIVE YOU THE BEST SERVICE OBTAINABLE TO SATISFY YOU TO YOUR SATISFACTION. '61 '61 '63 '63 '62 '64 '64 '61 '64 '64 1961 BUICK LeSabre 4-Door with automatic, radio, ____ whitewalls, tlntad glass, outside mlr- 1961 CADILLAC Convertible With oulomotlc transmission, radio, hooter, power steering, broket, window, and Mat, new vmltewalli, tinted glass, leather Interior, and a blue' f $995 $2194 S $1993 1963 BUICK LeSabre Hardtop, 4-Door i remote control mirror,' whitewalls, dinted glass, blue as' trim, light blue finish. 1963 CHEVY Vi-Ton Pickup . With the > speed transmission, radio, CT*1 1 |jO hooter, whitewalls, outside mirror, in I I ~1f) bright red finish. This price won't 1962 BUICK Special S-Ooor with V-* economy engine, re-, new whltowolls, standard $1295 $2195 Interior. Light blue finish. 1964 RENAULT Dauphine 4-Door with 3-speed, radio, heater, 195 down. Hunter. Ml 7-0955. 959 PONTIAC STARCHIBF, Automatic, radio, heater. Absolutely no money down. $3.49 week. Call Mr. Bee. fe handle and arrange all financing. TEL-A-HURON 60 S. Telegraph __FEJB-9661 1959 PONTIAC BONNEVILLi, beautiful 2-tonc finish, power steer-ing and brakes. Full price only, $298, no money down, $3.10 per week. Call M$. Brown. ESTATE STORAGE 109 S. East Blvd._333-7141 LLOYD'S Continued Clearance Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 HAUPT PONTIAQ 9*1 PONTIAC Convertible, automat 2 BONNEMUE convertible, i Hi 19*4 PLYAAOUTH Moor hardtop, VS -nglnsy stick. These cars carry JACK HAUPT Famous OOOOt ---- N. Mat Clarkston, Mich. PONTIAC 1942 Bonneville 4-door. Spotless metallic turquoise finish with matching vinyl Interior. Hydramatlc, power steering and brakaa, really clean. $1695 SEE FRANK STUBBLEFIELD OPEN THURSDAY *TIL 9 WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1 block south of 14 Milo Birmingham Ml 4-1930 ' I A C BONNEVILLE, BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY Uir " ford >1 *-453* ,1962 TEMPEST A glowing burgundy LoMam H vertlble. That Is In mint condition throughout. White bucket seats, deep tread whitewalls, and eu mafic transmission, make this ideal 1st. or 2nd. car. $997 Full Pric# Call 338-4528 NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) (Just, to mile north of Cass Ave.) Spartan Dodge tthlng ci l, betweei imouflaged. $1,095. LLOYD'S Continued Clearance 1962 PONTIAC , Catalina. 4-door sedan. Radii heater, whitewalls. Beige wit matching Interior. Full price $1495 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND_333-7863 Repossession 1942 GRAND FRIX wo will bring car to your homo for |uat $13.33 weekly. Establish bank eredl' ... cgih ^ ~~ - 19*3 PONTIAC BONNEVILLI convertible, power steering, i-- brakes, hydramatlc and extri $2,050. EM 3-*707. 19*3 P O N T I A C BONNEVI handle financing. NATIONWIDE AUTO, 33S-4525______________________ New and Usb4 Can 106 m PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Convertible, hydra., tower brakes, bucket seals. S2100. 474-342*. tOOOR VtARbTOF- 19*3 P6fifiAe spare terabla Sharp. PONTIAC 19(3 Catalina sport count. tWBromaBc, power sttonkn --k o s, law mUooga, i still new. Trans-sw car warranty. $2395 *■1 FRANK STUBBLEFIELD OPEN THURSDAY 'TILL f WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 19(4 GRAND FRIX, ALUMliiUM wheels, silver gray with black vinyl top, 4-mood, 11,000 actual milts. 4*3-4174.__________________ 1144 BONNEVILLE CONVERtlbLE, bucket seats, AM-FM radio, vlbra-sordc speaker, posl-tractlon, tran-slsfer distributor, $2,S00. FE S-SS54, PONTIAC 4-DOOR SEDAN, aw BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY Repossession 19*4 PONTIAC LaMans Count, no money down, caH Mr. at MA 52*04, dealer. 1944 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-vartlM*. $2,450. “'n‘ 3C— — FE $-0*53. 19*4 rtjNTIAC WAGON, TOP RACk, power, cleat. 332-4374. blue finish with matching Interior. Equipped with power steering, braket and windows. actual miles. Can't be told 'r0m "$199 DOWN Up to 34 months on balance SEE FRANK STUBBLEFIELD OPEN THURSDAY 'TILL 9 WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC t block south of 1* Milo Birmingham Ml 4-1930 1,963 Pontiac .Catalina,' Station wagon, I $1995 Homer Hight PONT I ACS 19*2 Grand Prlk coupe, b white Intarlor, Hydra! PATTERSON CHEVROLET C 1104 S. Woodward Ave. _____ steering and brakes mafic, sharp. Will taka trod. _______ handle financing. NATIONWIDE AUTO, 338-4525. HILLTOP AUTO SALES, INC. WHERE YOU CAN BUY WITH NO MONEY DOWN AND OUR PRE-DELIVERY 100 PER CENT GUARANTEE ASK FOR SPECIAL DEAL 19*3 Buie < Rlverla, dark blua, full 9*4 Catalina convertible, trl-power, 4 on the floor. 9*3 Bonneville, 2-door hardtop, pow-1943’ Chevrolet 2-door sodan, I, auto-190 CataMna convertible, 3 In the 190 Chevrolet convertible, a black beauty. 3 In the tree, 1*3. 19(2 Grand PNx. low mileage, real 19*2 Catalina, 2-door hardtop, double 190 Chevrolet Impale Super Sport, 327, 3 |n the tree, power steering. 962 OAKLAND _____ FE 8-9291 UNSCRAMBLE THE LETTERS AND PLAY "Auto-Word-Play" "EANMCTGINFI" Here's a hint on today's word: Each and every car at PONTIAC RETAIL STORE is this, in condition as well as price. This assures satisfaction with all our customers. (*) Take the puzzle out of buying a car — depend on THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE. 1964 PONTIAC •GT0 automatic transmission, ilpment, radio, heater, i fires, and almost like $2595 ■1963 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Convertible with sparkling r 1960 PONTIAC VENTURA we with radio, heotor Hydi tic transmission, rod finish w I trim and double power. Shai $1195 1963 CHEVY $2295 r* (*) MAGNIFICENT fMfifffPfJfi)/*) fl $1895 NEED A CAR? Do you have SS.007 Are you working! I'll put you In the car of ye choice today. No cradlt application ref mad CALL MR. DAN WE FINANCE FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 WEST MONTCALM 1*4 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE sports coupe, radio, heater, powr-low mileage, extra nice, Sim. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY 520 5. Woodward Blrmlnghi New mi Weed Cm _ Ml TEMPEST LOMANS, 33L *-id. floor shift, console, vibre-c. Low miles. OR 1-0493. actual mlltt, warranty book. Full price tt*H. Can it purchased with SS down. CMoit 740 FROB- LUCKY AUTO . financing I................... AUTO, 330-403._________________ 1945 LEVANS, MUST SELL, GOING 1, console. tak« 4 >7442 after 5 DON'S USKP CAR* SMALL AD-BIG LOT 50 CARS TO CHOOSB FROM toot' Bulck special, auto. * cyfl. 4to, 1957 Chevy, *dr„ hardtop, auto. I 677 S. LAPEER RD. LAKE ORION MY 2-2041 New ood Need Cor* WAOOI8. MUST >IL,Sm*&Rl4-1W fwl hAMBLBR, an Ocdyka H_______ ________ 1941 RAMBLER AMSAtiADGR itA- tlon wagon with automatic f---- mission, radlp and hooter, s wall tiros, sbulvtsty ns me down. FoyojjfwSs of 01.75 par ir 1940 Pontiac Hardtop, excellent mm Plenty others and trucks, *» up ECONOMY CARS 2335 Dixie Hwy. RAMBLER too "440". Beautiful African sunset bronze with white top, fan, Haatar, automatic traaswileam t-owner. Special at *1*0*. ROSE RAMBLER 8145 Commerce Rood Union Lake 1M >4155___ EM 3-4154 Stop and Compare -Superior Rambler 10*3 Classic, 2-door, automatic. r» 1043 Cadillac convertible. Silver blua sharp .......................... $2,595 19*3 Chevy convertible, auto. $1,597 MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM RUSS JOHNSON Pontiac-Rambler USED CAR STRIP 19*4 PONTIAC 2-door hardtop S2.4M 1964PONTIAC 4-door hardtop $2,495 19*4 TEMPEST LaMans, red .. *2195 19*4 PONTIAC 4door sedan .. $2,395 1944 VW Sedan, 1.000 miles .. $1,595 1943 PQNTIAC Star Chief h'top $2,195 1943 PONTIAC 2-door hardtop 01,09 19*2 PONTIAC B'vlll* cony. .. *1,99 19(3 FORD Gltoxlo "500" .. *1,58 1942 PONTIAC Bonneville .. *1,71 19*2 PONTIAC Wagon, power SI.795 19*2 RAMBLER 4d00r, nice *1,055 RUSS JOHNSON Pontlac-Romblor M34 In Lake Orion MY 3-6266 mmmw mm _ VACATION SPECIALS VAL-U-RATED 100% Written Guarantee Of buying UMd Carol 1963 OLDS F-85 4-Door, V-8, Automatic, Radio, Heater, Whitewalls. Only .................$1695 1964 OLDS Cutlass Hardtop, V-8, Automatic. 30-Day Unconditional Guarantee ...........$2195 1963 OLDS Cutlass convertible, V-8, automatic, power steering, sharp ......................$T995 1964 PONTIAC. Catalina, 4-Door, Hardtop, Power Steer- ing, Brakes, Automatic,. Radio ana Heater, White-walls, Lake New......................$2395 1964 OLDS Jetstar I, Automatic, Power Steering, Buckets, 30-Day Unconditional Guarantee $2595 1963 OLDS "98" Luxury Sedan, (3 to choose from) with full power .. ....................... $2395 1961 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille. Full Power. Priced to Sell .............................$1995 1964 OLDS "88" Hardtop, Power Steering, Brakes, 30-Day Unconditional Guarantee $2495 1963 OLDS 2-door hardtop "88", power steering, automatic, fadio ...........................$1995 1963 PONTIAC Bonneville, Hardtop, Power Steering, Brakes, One Owner................ $2095 1961 OLDS 9-Passenger Wagon, Power Steering, Brakes. Sharp One Owner................ .$1495 ~mmm prrmnr warranty- 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 VACATION TIME SEE US BEFORE YOU LEAVE! 19*4 KARMANN GHIA. Yoa, folks, a real sporty car. Red with Mack leather trim. Most economical. .....................*1*95 1941 BUICK Moor Special. 34.000 guaranteed actual milts. All original from bumper to bumper. It you're net Interested In buying — cams and so* It anyway . $900 , heater, whitewalls, actual miles ...............01795 1945 GTO HARDTOP. 4-speed transmission on the floor, with trl-power. Yes, folks, this Is a 1963 CHEVROLET . Impala Con-vertlble. Power steering aha brakes, Powergllde, v-8, radio. 19(4 BUICK WILDCAT 7-Door Hardtop. 11,00* actual mllos, lust the right accessories, almost brand new Inside and out .12595 1943 PONTIAC CATALINA < brakes, 9 19*1 ECONOLINE VAN. 15,000 1942 MERCURY Custom 2-Door Hardtop. ~ Power tf**rtng and brakes, Morc-OMatlc, radio, hoot- ■ ---------- 34,000 tduai mito*. ............ 11495 1959 OLDSMOBILE 4-Door Sedan. Would mekt someone a nice first or second cor, price Is right a» ......................... 51*5 19*5 CHEVROLET IMFAIA > -------a. ----~ | gwE ronty .77^.. . 7. . .. ,TT.. $2*95 1951 F-85 SEDAN. ----nlsslon, V4 to -, whitewalls. B llnish ....... ISM SPECIAL OoLuxo convertible, Ispssd trsnsmlsslon on the floor, V-S ongktoi white with rod bucket seats ............SIM 19*3 CORVAIR MONZA. * 1 SUN 19*1 BUICK ELECTRA "325“ Hardtop. Full power, Dynaflow, ------------- ---i. Yoa, oquipment. just II 19(3 CHEVROLET BEL AIR t-Door. Automatic transmission, radio, heater, (-cylinder angina and whitewalls. 23,000 guaranteed miloa ........................11495 INS FORD to-ton pickup. Long box and extra nice. Locally owned. Soo and drive this on* to-dayl ................. .......SIIN 19*1 OLDSMOBILE Canvortlbto. Ing leather Interior .... 52095 19*3 GRAND FRIX. Power flooring and brakes, radio, heater, Hydramatlc, whitewalls. Maroon with whlto leather bucket soots. Eye-appeal plus ..........11795 19*3 TEMPEST Station Wagon. BUICK LoSABRE 2-Ooor wring and tio, Motor, gon. b car. F Dyns nealls I960 BUICK LoSABRE Mtoar Hardtop. Power steartng and brakaa. Dynaflow, radio. Malar, whitewalls. A rich cordovan finish and matching Intarlor ....... SION 1940 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF M-dan. Powar stearins and brakaa, automatic radio, Motor, white-walls. Pries Is right st ____ $795 19*3 PONTIAC CATALINA Moot hardtop, with Ventura trim. Faun or flooring and brakes. Hydro-matte radio. Motor, whB* watt* ...............SUN Completely Paved Used Cor Lot—New Car Warranty (Ask For Details) PONTIAC-BUICK 651-9911 855 ROCHESTER ROAD TWENTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY < Tte U.S. national Capitol finding is on a hillside which was tawwa la the earlier days of the dlgr as Dnddtngton’s pas- COMMERCE UNION IK. ATNAOQIRTY RD. mi-mi 1st RUN - ALL COLORI --PLUS--- DARE THE INCREDIBLE 60 WITH ...-VVr Twnom OHM Sawma tmmSmS Wrtwo 4 Markets 'Bombed' DETROIT (AP) - Stench ombs were flung into four east side supermarkets early Monday- Police, assigning 10 teams of detectives to investigate, said they feral no reason for the acts* 12 Teens View 'New World' CHICAGO (AP) - A d< Michigan teen-agers will go home Wednesday with impressions of a big city and a life they had never known. The 12, all white and most of them from small towns, have been meeting Negroes of their own age for the last week. ★ ★ ★ ............ They have visited slums, high-rise public housing projects, settlement houses, urban renewal i, the police department and centers for migrant work-rs. Their trip, sponsored by the Michigan Synod of the United Presbyterian Church, has for the most part been a revelation. 'NEVER NEW* “It opened up an entire world V never knew existed,” .said Mary Jane Mink, IS, of Monroe, Mich., a town of 18,000. “I'd read about the problems of Negroes and the church ministering in the slums,” she said, 'but you never really understand until you see things first hand.” ★ ★ ★ \......._ “I never knew that things were this way,” said Nancy Graham, 14, of Alma, population 8,000. "Alma is so small and doesn't have slums. I think I’ll understand people’s problems better and have more respect for them now.” Sue Cummings, IS, of Ann Arbor said she learned something she had always known—that all people are equal. WHITE HOT VOLCANO SPECIAL! TUES. A WED. ONLY WITH THIS AD SMALL PIZZA ygc 3* VOLCANO PIZZA Pin* Knob Haw Shopping Cantor \Com*r of MoybM M. A Oaahabow PHONE S2S461T CARRY OUT A DELIVERY Ch**** only R—, <1 BUCKET OF OHtOKEN 16 pc. H*g. $3.95 [LAKE] mSeanWi iffiral TkJUMmmSr Starts TOMORROW Walt Disney's MARY P0PPINS” Matin** Wsd. At 1:00 P.M. Four Children Die in Illinois Blaze GALESBURG, HI (Ott-Four children died early today when fir* swept their home. Police Mamed the spread of the flames on fireworks. The exploding fireworks were heard several Mocks away. * * * The victims, aged I> months to 0 years, were the children of Mr. and Mrs. Art Lopeman of Galesburg. Their deaths were blamed on smoke inhalation. The parents were not hurt. * - * *' The family returned late last night from a vacation trip in Missouri. Police said they brought a lot of fireworks with than. WINS OVATION - Soprano Maria Callas is kissed on both cheeks by. her male leads Tito Gobbi (left) and Rena to Cioni after a great performance in "Tosca” last night before Queen Elizabeth II in Londoh. Despite AP Photofix ailments that caused her to cancel three of her four performances, she won a tremendous ovation and 11 curtain calls from the royal party and a diamond-studded audience. QUINN “ZOWBAthoSREEK” • FRIDAY • TWO BEST BILLERS TOSITNiR! PETER SCUMS IN “HEAVENS ABOVE” and L“I'M ALRIQHT JAOKV HURON EUKS . LAST TIMES TONIGHT at 7:00 and 9K)0 OVtR MS HEAP IN LOVE, GIRLS, , HsSb Starts WED. - PJR$T SHOWING 1:10 9.11. Julie Andrews Dick Van Dyke' .. TECtwiiaxoir.. Up With the Times Count Basie Staying in Style By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD - The band played with the same insinuating style, punctuated by har-monie chords on the piano. But something new had been added: a slightly rolling beat reminiscent of the Beatles. The great Count Basie was RHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYC DAIRY FumSmHumOmr Famous Kothar Corned S**f SPECIAL LUNCHEON EVERYDAY RrisUsti — IXnna. CompUt* Corry-Ovt Swrvica \1 SJ&H B.P.O. ELKS 31st ANNUAL CHARITY FESTIVAL V ' JgfNHWKy PONTIAC ^1S Com% TheBksMjwi} StOOMflRDl MIRACLE MILS MIRACLE BILE SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE ROAD Wed., July 7th thru Sun., July 11th featuring the Famous HAPPYLAND SHOWS uMidwest*s Finest Midway* Bigger and Better Than Ever Before a SHOWS 1 GAMES eniuwns*. Ask M r-----BONUS coupon- - - - -1 6 RIDES *1.00 i Exchange this coupon and $1.00 for any 6 rides on . Happyland Midway at-times listed below . . . WED., THURS., 6 to I P.M. SAT., 12 NOON TO IPJI. B.P.O.E. FESTIVAL uirmu imu mnppnn earn* July 141, IMS .----w___-----J THOMAS leading his band through a recording session at MGM Studios. The number was titled "Skel, Sister,” and its .faintly rock *n’ roll style was in [honor of Ann-Margret, who digs such jive. She is the star 'Made in Paris,” in which the Basie band is appearing. ★ * ★ Jazz purists might be aghast at such adulteration of the Basie style, but the pianist-leader himself has no qualms about it “If I can’t beat ‘cm, I’ll join ’em,” he grinned. That doesn’t mean that the Basie band is going to add electric guitars. The count merely believes In keeping up with the' times. Such an attitude has helped keep him in the forefront 'am. r_ Plus Jerry Lews , MONDlf WOtiBCC Starting Wednesday ; Maty Ibppins of the band business for 30 years. GOING STRONG Basie will be 81 In August, but he shows no signs of slowing Ids pace of travel, which amounts to 10 months on the road each year. I noted that members of his present band seemed youth-fid. “Yes, I like to have young players in the band,” he remarked. “That keeps me up in my work; I don’t get a chance to feel old.” The variety of audiences helps maintain his youthful^ttitude, “We play all kinds of dates,” he said. “When we go into a night club, we play before the parents of today’s teen-agers. That gives us a chance to reminisce, both in words and in music, about the swing era. COLLEGE DATES We also play at a lot of colleges, and that’s fun, too. Often I’ll take along a rock *n’ roll combo, which will play when the band takes a rest. The kids get out on-the dance floor and do those new dances. I want to tell you, it’s something wonderful to watch. “That’s why I can’t be mad at rock V roll: it got the kids dancing again. And when they’re dancing, it’s bound to be good for our business.” A ★ A The count’s business remains good, his being one of the few classic bands to maintain a continuity from the 1930b to today. Besides the usual dance dates, he .has had great success with concerts, both as a single attraction and as support for such singers as Tony Bennett and Frank Sinatra. He is playing a half-dozen dates with Sinatra -Oils month:---- Basie maintains a home on Long Island, but he sees little of it during the year. Thirty years of traveling might seem too much to most citizens, but he seems to thrive on it. "To us, it’s part of our jobs; we’re used to it,” he said. “Life has been very good to me.” JAMES BOSS IS BACK... TO BACK I J FEATURES liS8| 10:25 Starts WEDNESDAY! SNBlirt AT l!lB-Si4Mi2S-SiM SPECIAL MATINEES JULY T4-S-1I-11-12-1I ACADEMY AWARD JULIE ANDREWS BESTACTRESS Plus 4 other Academy Awards! A government collection of i historical and scientific objects, is housed in the National Mu-| seum of the U.S. at Washington, D.C. 1 JuKe Andrews-Dick MmDyhe David IbmKnson • Giynis Johns VIBRANT EXCITIII6 DAZZUN6 DELIGHTFUL MAGHUFICOn UPROARIOUS INCOMPARABLE GLITTERING FABULOUS GREAT ADULTS NITES~SAT* and 5(114125 WED.-THURS.-fRI. MATINEE 1.00 \ 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1063 TWEXTY-SEVEft —Television PFograms— ; Programs fumfthad by stations listod in ibis column aro subjact to thanga without notico. a-wjuwv, 4-¥nwj-TV,y~wxitz-W,b-CKiw-TV> aa-WWs ] TUESDAY EVENING <0:00 (2) (4) News, Weather, l Sports J . jl) Movie: "War of the Colossal Beast" (In Progress) 1____(•) Wojdy Woodpecker (^People Are Funny (56) Population Problem 1:0 (?) Sports ItO (2) (4) Network News T) (Color) News, Weath-l er „ , (9) BatMasterson (50) Comedy Carnival 1:4* (?) Network News Till (2) Leave It to Beaver ,;r (4) (Color) Weekend 7) Rifleman (9) Detectives (50) Little Rascals : ' (56) (Special) Ride the Wild Horse (See TV Fea- ■ ^ hires) 7:JO (2) TV 2 Reports y T<4) Mr. Novak ' f1 (7) Combat (50) Lloyd Thaxton (56) Creative Person 1:19 (2) Password (9) Outlaws (51) Silver Wings 8:30 (2) Talent Scouts (See TV Features) (4) Moment of Fear % (7) McHale’s Navy (SO) Swimming Meet $ (56) Heritage ~J (7) Tycoon (9) Musical Showcase f:M (2) Petticoat Junction ■ (7) Peyton Place Norman helps Rita with her schoolwork (9) Newsmagazine 10:00 (2) Doctors/Nurses vf (4) Hullabaloo % (7) Fugitive (0) Great War (See TV Features) (50) Stock Car Racing 19:30 (9) Swinging 31:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports k (50) Horse Racing 41:15 (7) Nightlife 31:30 (2) Movie: Dial M for * Murder” (1954) Ray Mil-land, Grace Kelly, Robert Cummings (4) (Color) Johnny Carson (9) Movie: "The Devil’s Pass” (1956) Christopher War bey, Charles Leno, John Slater 12:00 (50) Jockey Standings 1:00 (4) Thin Man (9) Pierre Berton 1:30 (2) Highway Patrol (4) (7) News, Weather WEDNESDAY MORNING 0:10 (2) On the Farm Front 0:15 (2) News 0:20 (2) Operation Alphabet 0:30 (4) Classroom ; , (7) Funews 6:50 (2) News, Editorial • 7;00 (2) Happyland V. (4) Today Kg* (7) Johnny Ginger 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Fractured Flickers 8:30 (7) Movie: “Ten Gentlemen From West Point” fn (1942) George Montgomery, Maureen O'Hara 0:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round AUTO AIR GONDITIOMNO -Casts Lass Than You Think XT, *199“ MASTER RADIATOR 2293 Elisibeth Lske Rd. FI 2-6887 TV Features Changes in By United Press International RIDE THE WILD HORSE, ?:00 p.m. (50) "Year* of j Learning" first of three-parter, traces recant changes in | teaching math and science. TALENT SCOUTS, 8:30 p.m. (2) George Gobel, Cliff I Robertson are among Introducers. Michael Redgrave a assassination and ! GREAT WAR, 10:00 p.m. (9) Sir covers .period between archduke's Britain’s declaration of war. SWINGDING, 10:50 pjn. (9) Half-hour variety series I makes -debut. 9:00 (2) Mike Douglas (4) Living (9) Kiddy Comer 9:55 (4hNews 10:00 (4) Truth or Consequences (9) Vacation Time 10:30 (2) I Lovq Lucy (4) What's This Song? 10:55 (4) News 11:00 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Concentration ____17) Girl Talk (9) Long John Silver 11:30 (2) McCoys (4) Jeopardy (7) Price Is Right (9) Hawkeye AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life (4) Call My Bluff (7) Donna Reed (9) Cannonball 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) I’U Bet (7) Father Knows Best (9) You Asked for It 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 1:99 (2) Scene 2 (4) News (7) Rebus (9) Movie: “Between Two Worlds” (1944) John Garfield, Faye Emerson 1:10 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 1:1* (4) Topics for Today 1:30 (2) As the Wiwrld TUffis (4) Let’s Make a Deal (7) One Step Beyond li» (4) NeJ9 . 2:09 (2) Password (4) Moment of Truth (7) Where the Action Is 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) A Time for Us 2:5* (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night t4) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Follow the Sun 4:90 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game ' (7) Trailmaster 4:25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Movie: “Best of the , Badmen” (1951) Robert Ryan,' Robert Preston (4) Mickey Mouse Gub (9) Swingin’ Summertime -5:00441 George Pierrot: “Southwest National Parks” (7) Movie: “Apache Woman” (1955) Lloyd Bridges, Joan Taylor (50) Movie (56) On Hearing Music 8:30 (9) Rocky and Friends (56) What’s New IMPROVE YOUR HOME DEAL DIRECT WIBUILDERTHE FREE PLANS and ESTIMATES-NO CHARGE SPECIAL FINANCE FLAN CALL 1 arid tbow ye* hew to pay present bills and do the remodeling wo* hi FE 4-4138 1 one bill. Up to 30 treats to pay. No money dewn. Open Daily and Sun. | financing. | CALL DAY OR NIGHT | ] CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen SOCfl COMPLETE £03 I-Ft. Kitchen $OAfl COMPLETE £03 NCLUDES: Upper a ★ ADDITIONS ★ FAMILY BOOMS ALUMINUM SIDING REC. BOOMS ROOFING—SIDING W00UFIEL0 CONSTRUCTION 111 come to „ WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND 8LAIII4IO CHARGE CALC PI 4-41 !• 5:45 (9) Bugs Bunny 5:55 (2) Sports (4) Here's Carol Duvall 1,000WillStart VISTA Training Volunteers to Go Into U.S. Poverty Areas ACROSS 1 Presidential nickname 4 Biblical character 6 Sir Anthony , 12 Grow old 13 Female equine 14 Rodent 15 Algonquian Indian 16 Maledictions 18 Foes 30 Manacles 21 Prodigal—-32 Direction 24 Endure 26 Strays 27 Close-haired dog 36 Click-beetle 32 Biological classifications “ Miss Lombard 35 Danish seaport 36 Attempt 37 Begone! 39 Restore to health 40 Scraps 41 Craft 42 Concede 45 Seized 49 Ecstasy 51 Fruit drink 52 Disembark 53 Singing &roup 54 Aunt (Sp > 55 Wading bird 56 One who (suffix) 57 Poetic contraction DOWN 1 Foundation 2 Actor Richard —— 3 Essential 4 Violently 5 Ruin 6 Expunger 7 Permit 8 Turn inside out 9 Major—- 10 Ardor PEOPLE OF NOTE r r r r* r r“ r* 5“ nr rr nr 9 14 IT II IT TT“ If m 35“ W W 44 47 48 JT 51 5F u 54 sr 54 5r s -11 Promontory 1? Greeted a villain 19 Maxim 23 Class jargon - 24 Lecture (ab.) 25 Winged 26 Construct 27 Enter • 28 Bear (astron.) 29 Highlander 31 Girl’s name (pi.) 33 Late Indian leader 38 Classify 40 Deflects 41 Drama performer 42 Gudrun's husband (myth.) ,43 Clutch 44 Hindu queen >46 Iroquoian Indian 47'MiaaGorme 48 College official 50 Pints (ab.) Answer to Previons Puzzle WASHINGTON (UPI) - The domestic Peace Corps is in business. ’ By the end of this month, more than 1,000 “Vista” volunteers will be in training for assignments in the war on poverty- After six weeks of intensive training, they’ll be sent to city slums, migrant farm worker camps, Indian reservations, Appalachian mountain v 11 -lages and other places hi America where poverty is as grimly real as la any undeveloped country. VISTA stands for “Volunteers in Service to America.” The program was Established by Congress as part of the war on poverty bill last year. .* * * It’s a low-cost operation, accounting for only $10 million of the $1.5 billion budget of Sargent Shriver’s Office of Economic Opportunity. The law authorizes the recruitment of up to 5,-000 VISTA volunteers for one year of service. They are paid $50 a month plus living expenses. The latter are calculated, as in the overseas Peace Corps, on a spartan basis which assumes that the volunteers will be living among the poor people they’re trying to help. Despite the rugged conditions under which volunteers serve, Americans of all ages have responded to the challenge as enthusiastically as they did to the Peace Corps. More than 20,000 applications have poured in since last fall. Vista officials say they’d welcome still more applications, however. “We can use people with a wide variety .of.skills,” said a spokesman. “We aren’t looking just for teachers, nurses and social workers. “For example, a woman who’s been a good housekeeper for many years, and has raised a family, may be the ideal person to help provide homemaking and child welfare guidance to slum families. “Young people who have finished high school but haven’t settled on a career, or who have dropped out of college to think over their plans for life, may be useful if they can serve as counselors at youth camps, or conduct recreation programs. for poor children, or act as tutors, or accompany poorly educated people to apply for welfare benefits or to get drivers’ licenses.” Plays Deaf to Wilson's Wedding-Bell Question DORR MOOD By Earl Wilson NEW YORK—Cary Grant’s been in town l said to him on the phone, “I heard you’re going to pull a Sybil Burton” ... . "A Sybil Burton! What’s that?" he said ... "I heard you’re going to marry Dyann Cannon?" . . . “Oh, you did hear it, did you? Well, if you want to hear things like that..." ... "Bing Crosby married somebody younger, and they say Frank Sinatra might marry Mia Farrow,” I said. “That’s not wrong, is it?” “I don’t see anything wrong with anybody marrying anybody, do you?” Grant said . . . “You’re in love with a younger girl^* I said . . . “Yell, yeh, yeh,” he said, the rest of his speech being lost in a hubbub around him . . . Grant said-, incidentally, WILSON that he took Miss Cannon to n party in Hollywood where they danced the Watusi, or whatever it is, and he couldn’t hear a thing. “What are they trying to do?” “Drown out their thoughts?” ♦ ★ ★ Taxi Tales: Trini Lopez’* manager Ray Katz found the best way to do NY during the taxi strike was to rent a drive-yourself car (“I tried to rent a chauffeured limousine and they were all taken”) . . . Free-lance limousine drivers were charging about $1 a block if they could get it. John Mills of El Morocco used hip $35,000 Rolls to take customers home. At 6 a. m. I saw a pretty girl thumb a ride on a newspaper truck. Jack Cassidy said he parked his ’65 Caddy outside his door to make sure he’d have transportation—and then it was stolen. WWW Sidney Poitier and Diahann Carroll made it official-they announced their engagement at La Scala in Hollywood (for a fall wedding). Joan Crawford and her one-time husband Franchot Tone are off to Canada (where he grew up) “to swim and fish and walk in the woods.” They’ll be with Tone’s sons, two other actors, and a caretaker: “We’ll be FULLY chaperoned,” Joan said. THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Jane Fonda leased her Malibu home for beach scenes in Rock Hudson’s “Seconds”—she got two mink coats . . . Sammy Davis already decided he won’t do “Golden Boy” on Yom Kippur (in Oct.) ... A famed entertainer kept his promise not to lose a bundle at the Las Vegas gaming tabies-he lost it there on golf ... The Speakeasy joined the new cafe undie-world, with Wednesday lingerie shows. , Actor Steve Cochran was writing a book about his yachting adventures when he died at sea . . . The attempt to return stage-and^creen shows to-4he Paramount cost its hpekers 200Gs . , tJ The Comedy Workshop instituted art “Aquaholics Anonymous” to save water . . . NewB’way fad: Gals strolling barefoot. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “America is the country where we buy a lifetime supply of aspirin for a dollar, and use it up in two week."—John Barrymore. EARL’S PEARLS: Advice to wives, from Pic Larmour: “To keep from getting up with a grouch, get up before he does.” Dean Martin read about the N.Y. water shortage, and shrugged, “Don’t blame it on me—I didn’t like the stuff even when there was plenty of It.” . . . That’s Earl, brother. ---------- --- (TO* Had Syn C?*vle, WPON, Newts, Bon Johnson WWJ. Nows. Musk WCAR, Nows, T. Kollins WHFI, Nows WXYZ. A very. Music. Newt CKLW, Haws, Jot von WJBK, Nows, Eder. Laynt l:S0-WJR. News Art l Ink letter WHFI, Nosh, Encore 1:10—WJR, Furness. Lucy, Guest 1:10—WPON, News. Rot 1:10—W JR/News, Elliot Field Quette CKLW. Sports, Dan Shafer . Columnist, 51, Pies ' BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - Gerald L. (Jerry) Evarts, 51, a columnist for the Buffalo Courier-Express, died Monday after suffering a stroke two weeks ago. SYLVANIA COLOR TV has th* picture tuba today that Is sura to bo tha industry standard tomorrow! • 1 Year Warranty • Free VHF Antenna • Free Delivery and Set-Up 0BEL TV 3408 Elizabeth Lake Road FE 4-4MS ,19M.iip WCAR. News, 8acere!!e WJR.' News. Musk « JO WPON, Mutual Sport! TREMENDOUS VALUES! SALE PRICE *9800 FINER STYLED MODERN DINETTE SETS - PRIDED FROM ONLY A BEAUTIFULLY STYLED AND VERY COMFORTABLE SOFA BED •61" Si 'St" 6-PC. MAPLE DINETTE SET Autfcaattnlly foihionad colonial group includu* round uilumion loblu, 4 choiri, hutch cobinul. LOW SALE PRICE *14888 Remember WE SERVICE WHIT WE SELL l» WE SELL WHIT WE IDVERTISE OPEN MILY TIL MO P.M. MONDAY 1RRU SET. Remember OUAUTY IS OUR MOTTO YOUR SATISFACTION OUR AIM CLOSED SUNDAYS TO ALLOW OUR EMPLOYEES A DAY OF REST WITH THEIR FAMILIES!! OUR WHOLESALE BUYING POWER SAVES YOU MONEY j£hr\^/touLWt HOME ^FURNISHINGS 1108 W. HURON ST. (n«xt to Falica Quality Market) PRIVATE DETECTIVES HAROLD L. SMITH IRVESTIRATIOHS 1302 Pontiac Statu Bank Bldg. FE 5-4222 — 24-Hour Number OFFICES IN FLINT —PONTIAC — SAGINAW TWKNTY-EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY <6, im Will Match All Summer if NecessaVow Chicago Negroes faaCAGO UR — Chicago’s dvil rights drive moves into its fifth week today and its leaders say they wiB march all summer if necessary to gain their de- But Edward Marciniak, head . of Mayor Richard J. Daley’s Human Rights Commission said in an interview Monday, "There's going to be a sat* Dement. There are tee many forces working for n solution. : “We’re in the sitting-down stage. We’re moving.” March grievances at a of the board of education Wednesday. They want the school board to replace Schools Siypt. Benjamin C. Willis. They contend he has moved too slow- June 10, shortly after the board voted 74 to rehire WUlia as superintendent until his retirement at age 80 in December I960. irly, bnt 100 to Ml persons t participated in the ah t daily marches to City Raby, 32, head of nantly Negro areas, At times, up to 50 per cent of the pro- Our emphasis Is going to be on community organizations." GRAND OPINING WINNERS. Don Frayer presents the AUTOMATIC DISHWASHER to Mr. and Mrs. John Harkins Off 1011 Canterbury Drive. Daughters Catherine and Janls are especially pleased with the family gift. The Harkins family recently moved to the United States from Edinburgh, Scotland. DON’T MISS OUT! COME IN TODAY! • ALL FLOOR MODELS PRICED TO SELL FAST AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS LARGE SELECTION OF LIVING ROOM AND BEDROOM GROUPS FORMERLY PRICED AS HIGH AS *279" AND EVEN HIGHER LARGE SELECTION OF LIVING ROOM AND BEDROOM GROUPS. FORMERLY PRICED AT *219" AND HIGHER ONLY NOW DOWN CASH DOWN CASH EASY TERMS TERMS EASY ALL THIS WEEK! », t .. i nA'mz THE PONTIAC VOL. 123V NO. * * ★ ★ ★ ygi < •/ PONTIAC, M1CHIGAn\TITBSDAY, JULY 6, 1965-28 PAGES ASSOCIATED rum UNITED MBSS INTERNATIONAL 10" - s.’&rn am neuaeiU .ft MniiAnnlTi rnffi# nanihe at Dp /AM llullOflUl I I FUTTIC L/cUulb Jl cl 1 l\c ton 9 Kills 2, Wounds 2 in Pittsburgh Rifleman Is Shot PITTSBURGH, Pa. (!) A Leroy Francis Scott, about 24, young man armed with a re- who had a 'record of minor ar-peating rifle killed two men, a rests‘ policeman add the fatter of his Two patrolmen surprised girlfriend, and wounded two him in a wooded area where other officers today. He was he had hidden for flee hours, shot to death at dawn after a nursing nn apparently serious massive manhunt. gunshot wound received in an The rifleman was identified as earlier exchange with police. FEMALE FANCIER — Like most sailors, this S-year-old macaw riding a sloop off the coast of Maryland, has an eye for pretty girls. The birdz owned by Douglas Sager of Washington, D. C., says “nf”/to all the girls who come near but ignores the men. His /perch, complete With umbrella and food and water cups, gives him a good view. Bandit Shot at After Holdup A masked bandit held up Carter's Party Store at 550 N. Perry last night, and then took a shot at a youth who attempted to pursue Mm down an alley. Mrs. Besty Carter, 46, wife of the owner, told Pontiac police that the masked man came into the store shortly before II p.m. and forced her -and her son, William 14., to lie on (ha* floor. The bandit, who was carrying a sawed-off 22-caliber rifle, took 6466 from the cash register, and fled out the rear door. David Patch, 18, of 142 Chamberlain told police he saw the thief leave the store and . began to follow him in his car. ★ ♦ *< Patch said that the.subject started running, then tuned and fired one shot. The bullet entered the radiator of Patch’s auto. Hearing Today for Yputh, 16 Ask Murder Charge in Fatal Stabbing I In Today's I Press Voting Bill House faces fierce interparty fight — PAGE I. Coptor Units Army wants to create more companies — PAGE ». Moon Program U.S. race to moon running smoothly—PAGE 3. Area-News ........ 14 Astrology ......... 18 Bridge ............ 18 Crossword Puzzle .. 27 Comics ............ 18 Editorials .... .... I Markets ........... 2* series ........ 19 to ......... 15—17 Heaters .......... 26 TV A Radio Programs 27. Wilson, Earl :..... 27 Women’s Pagas ., 11—18 A Probate Court hearing is slated for this afternoon to determine whether or not a 16-yearald Waterford Township boy will be charged with first degree murder. * * * *• The Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office will ask juvenile authorities at the 1:30 p.m. hearing to waive jurisdiction over Pearson, 1127 Alhi. Pearson has been held in custody at the Children’s Center since he fatally stabbed Jeffrey Talbot, 17, June .27 in. view of more than 20 witnes-PEARSON ses, including the victim’s ..father, Dr. Frank G. Talbot. The stabbing took place in front of the Talbot home, 2045 Watkins Lake, aad climaxed a feud between the youths over a girl. • The youth died on the operating table at Pontiac General Hospital four and a half hours after the 9:90 p,m. incident. #'4 * Pearson and a companion, Robert Green, 17, of 1512 Eason, Wathrford Township, turned themselves in at the Pontiac Post of the Michigan State Police 45 minutes after the stabbing. DRIVER OF CAR Green is reported to have driven the car in which the two boys fled from the scene. He was released pending further investigation. * w . ♦ Judge Norman R. Barnard was to hear testimony in the case and then make a ruling on the petition to waive jurisdiction. They shot him as he raised his rifle. He died en route to a hospital. ★ * ‘ ★ “We knew he was wounded but he didn’t look too hurt to me when he raised that rifle,’’ said patrolman James Hlnte-meyer, 35. SHOTS FIND MARK “We both saw him at the same time. I think I Mt him with three shots,” Hintemeyer added. The other patrolman, Charles Schweinberg, 42, said he fired once. Killed in the earlier exchange of gunfire with Scott were patrolman Coleman McDonough, a former professional football player, and Aaron Godfrey. McDonough and officers Leo Mindn, 37, and Joseph Laffey, 32, who were wounded, had been called to the Godfrey home, a two-story frame house in a low-rent section of the city’s Hazel-wood section. * * * Police said there apparently had been an argument over Scott’s attentions U> Godfrey’s daughter, Ruth, 16. HIT FIVE TIMES Scott opened fire, apparently Mtting Godfrey first. McDonough was Mt five times and his body was found lying across Godfrey’s inside the ramshackle house. Police said McDonough or one of the two wounded officers hit Scott before he fled. Blood was found on some nearby stairs that led up a steep hill into a wooded area overlooking the Monongahela River and the vast Jones & Laughlin steel works two miles north of Pittsburgh’s downtown. * ★ ★ The glow of ’Steel furnaces cast h flickering orange light over the scene as 200 policemen ringed the area, about as big as 10 city blocks. CUT OFF POWER Duquesne Light Co. was asked to cut off- power so police would not present good targets. A squad of officers wearing bulletproof vests and carrying Senate Opens | Debate on Bill for Health Care Benefits and Costs of Social Security Would Rise in New Program WASHINGTON UP — The Senate opens debate today on the historic bill which would establish broad health programs for 19 million Americans 65 or older and increase all present Social Security benefits. The plan would chat an estimated 6.8 billion a year. It would be financed primarily by an increase in Social Security taxes, both to the employer and employe. Sponsors said they would push for passage by the end of this week, and forecast as auny as 16 favorable votes out of the 100-man Senate. ' Last year, the Senate narrowly adopted, 49 to 44, an amendment to a House-passed bill adding health care for the aged to Social Security. The measure died in conference between the two branches. FIGHT FOR SPACE - Inhabitants of Ba Gia fight for space aboard a U. S. Murine helicopter in a frantic effort to escape from Viet Cong mortar shells yesterday. The Little Contact in D Zone helicopter was one of two able to land at the besieged outpost 330 miles north of Saigon. Children run about in confusion as smoke rises from village. Combined Force Hunts Cong into the area with lights to try to draw Scott’s fire. All they found was tome padding from an auto seat that Scott apparently used to stop the bleeding of his wound. Some K9 patrolmen and their dogs formed a skirmish line as dawn broke and started to move through the woods. t a * Hintemeyer said Scott was crouched behind a tree when he and Schweinberg came on him. 25 FEET AWAY “We were about 25 feet awgy,” said Hintemeyer. He said the dogs may have sensed (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) This year, however, the House passed a health care-Social Security bill. The margin in the April S vote was a solid 313 to 115. ESSENTIALLY SAME The Senate Finance Committee made numerous changes in the House bill but preserved all of its essential provisions. Its vote was 12 to 5 with Chairman Harry F. Byrd, D-Va., among the dissenters. The provisions include a 7 per cent increase in Social Security retirement, survivor and disability benefits, retroactive to last Jan. 1, and these two new health programs: • A basic plan financed under Social Security covering hospitalization, posthospital nursing home care, outpatient hospital diagnostic services, and posthospital home health visits. * * * • A voluntary, supplemental plan covering doctors’ fees and some additional health services. SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — U.S. paratroopers joined Vietnamese and Australian soldiers today for their second combined operation against the Viet Cong in a segment of the D Zone, which was subjected yesterday to its second bombing by Strategic Air Command B52 jets. * ★ * About 2,500 troops, including more than 1,000 paratroopers from the U.S. Army’s 173 Airborne Brigade, probed a stretch of jungle about 30 miles northeast of Saigon. But a U.S. spokesman reported that, like the first such combined operation last week, there was no significant contact with the enemy. The Americans, however, found such things as: Three stacks of love letters, tied in a yellow ribbon, from a girl to a Viet Cong soldier. ★ * * Seven Japanese water canteens of World War II design. Showers Due Tonight Scattered thunder- Morning northeasterly winds thi? at 5 to 12 miles per hour will expected to arrive tonight and stay around tonorrow. become east to southeast to- * * * morrow. Temperatures will be a warm- w ★ w er, the low in the 50s tonight, . , ... the high tomorrow 75 to 82. A low of 50 was recorded Partly cloudy and cooler is the 6 a-m- today. The mercury had outlook for Thursday. climbed to 73 by 1 p.m. A Viet Cong illustrated magazine. WWW One French artillery shell made in 1932. Dozens of empty thatched roofed houses. Three fish traps. w w w The nearest the troops got to the Viet Cong was a sniper who opened up on a platoon destroying the fish traps. He got away after a brief fire fight. NO CASUALTIES By late afternoon there had been no casualties among the allied forces. Fighting was bloodier elsewhere. A U.S. spokesman said 2 Americans and 26 Vietnamese mountain troops were missing and 4 Vietnamese were killed in mountainous Pleiku Province, 215 miles northeast of Saigon. The B52s dropped 566 tons of bombs into the Viet Cong-controlled D Zone yesterday. The planes flew from Gum, 2,200 miles away. U.S. officials said “about 25” bombers Mt the area, wMch starts 25 miles north of Saigon. As far as they knew, all the planes returned safely to Guam, the spokesman said. It would take several days to assess the effectiveness of the attack, they added. American spokesmen said the Viet Cong in Pleiku attacked a patrol of Vietnamese mountain troops accompanied by two Americanjidvisers about a mile from the Due Co special forces camp last night. At the same time the Viet Cong fired a mortar barrage into the camp. TOO LATE U.S. -Helicopters and F100 fighters moved in to strafe but apparently were too late to save the patrol. The camp was not assaulted. Military sources reported .that one American wns killed, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) . Rocket Blast Injures Man Homemade Device Blows Up in Hand 542 Fatalities Are Most for 3-Day Fourth State's 21 Deaths Total less Than Half of 43 Killed in 1964 By The Associated Press Belated reports of traffic deaths during the three-day Fourth of July weekend raised the national toll to 542, a record for a three-day observance of the holiday. Final figures were expected to raise the total killed during the 78-hour period even higher. The preview record toD for a three-day Independence Day holiday was ill, set last year. The count of traffic fatalities this year came done to the record for a four-day Independence observance, 557, established in 1988. ★ ■ -W w. The tally of traffic deaths began at 8 p.m. local time Friday and continued to midnight last night. HALVED TOTAL With 21 deaths reported, Michigan more than halved this Fourth of July holiday weekend’s traffic death toll from 1864 when 43 died on the state’s highways. Tee persons lost their lives in water accidents daring the long holiday. State police said they knew ot no specific reason for the relatively low traffic death toll, although one officer remarked that “maybe people are starting to take safety on the road seriously.” This year’s national toll brought a stern warning from (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) ★ ★ dr Roads Safe in County, but Woman Dies 800,000-Pontiac Year Seen Pontiac Motor Division’s new cited two major factors in the had,” he pointed out, ‘‘but it general manager John Z. De- continued sales growth of the was the best for any six-month Lorean optimistically predicted local cars, an 800,000 unit year today, and Distinctive styling and engineering futures were the points mentioned in boosting Pontiac ahead of the 693,716 cars turned out last year. It was DeLorean’s first press conference and statement since he was promoted from the post of chief engineer Inst week. 1 period. Soles in June set an all-time record, 74,048 Pontiacs and Tempests, surpassing by 11 per cent the Jnne safes a year ago. In the June 21-38 period safes were 28,193 topping by 24 per cent the sates during the same period last year. The newly named GM vice . ■.. president said 444 HU Pontiacs . "We ‘M0**’’1' “C and ta^t. were sold in the !"*"» January through June period, topping the previous record of 389,331 set a year ago. . ahead with j continued emphasis on distinctive styling and engineering features,” be said. JOHN Z. DeLOREAN Pontiac Motor Division has FEVER LASTING chalked up tta biggest first half “The spring car-buying fever to its 30-year history, DeLorean seemingly is carrying over into stated. the summer months,” DeLorean Tire BEST EVER said. “The market looks very “Not only was the first half stroo« {or our Products” of this year the beat we’ve ever DeLorean told the aews con- ference here that although part of Pontiac’s first-half showing was attributable to an order buildup from the strike in late 1964 tales will continue strong through the balance of the year. Currently in its fifth consecutive yur in third place in the industry, DeLorean said the lead over Pontiac’s nearest competitors was constantly widening. * + * “However,” he pointed out, “it’s going to take added effort and much hard work to stay in that precarious third-place spot."? 3-POINT PROGRAM He outlined a three-point program, which in his own words “would strengthen our position in a very competitive market.” Inchnfed in DeLareaa’s plan was the production aad mar-(Continued on Page 2, Col 7) A Milford man is in critical condition at Pontiac General hospital after a homemade rocket he was making blew up in Ms hand. Roger Howard, 22, of 522 Union was at the home of Ms fatter, George Howard, 906 Woodruff, Highland Township, when the accident occurred. Oakland County sheriffs deputies said Howard and Ms brother, Ronald, had earlier successfully made two other rockets. Deputies said Howard was in a garage packing a chemical mixture with powdered sugar into a half-inch steel tube when the explosion occurred. * * * The blast shattered the tube, sending fragments into Howard’s face, under his left eye, and into Ms stomach and chat. HAND RIPPED The explosion also ripped off part of his teft hand. Howard is an unemployed electronics technician. H i s wife said, he hoped to be a Oakland Highway Toll in *65 79 that goal. The Howard's have one child, a son, age 4. * * * When sheriffs deputies arrived, Howard was slumped on a lawn chair in the front of the home. INTERNAL INJURIES He was rushed immediately to Pontiac General Hospital. Officials there say he la suffering from severe internal injuries, as well as lacerations on the face and hand. * * * jji Howard was one of 13 persona who were injured in explosive accidents In Michigan during the weekend. Oakland County motorists apparently joined other Michigan residents in heeding safety slogans during the weekend. Only one motor vehicle fatality was recorded in the county during the 78 • hour period. There were no drown-ings. Mery Champion, 38, of 925 Woodward Heights, Femdale, was killed in a two-car collision at an intersection in Hasel Park Sunday. Sheriff Frank Irons said local drivers did a good job during the weekend, but he pointed out that both the road patrol and State Police were out in full force watching drivers. “Our deportment alone wrote more than IN tickets during the 78 hoars,” Irons said. The sheriff said that there were many can on the road, but that for the most part, motorists used caution. During the 1814 Independence Day weekend, three persona died in auto accidents end two, others drowned. News Flashes WASHINGTON (It—A State Department spokesmen s«id today wofk la two mbsite sites hi North Viet Nam is virtually complete and two other mltllle sites have reached aa advanced stage. DORCHESTER, (UPI) - AReyil Atr Fane here today. First reparts said 48 man warn believed te lave btm killed. Ask Tougher for Use on Rioters By The Associated Press Officials called today for tougher penalties and firmnaaa in the write of rioting and di-turbances by befr♦taking, carousing youths in five resort •towns over the Fourth of July Weekend. * Mayor Wilson W. Finley of •G*w|Va-OO-tbe-Lake, Ohio, where nearly 300 young people were arrested, said he plans to draty new orktaances with higher penalties for disorderly conduct and resisting arrest. ‘‘Ufa we need,” said Finley, H| more and more enforcement. And we need higher ftaes. We are going to revamp ordinances to cover situations like this. We don’t want trouble every holiday. We might just have to put a gate on toe town.” The rioting at Geneva-on-the-Lake, oh Lake Erie, and at Rus-sells Point, Ohio, on Indian Lake in western Ohio, where some 100 persons were arrested, prompted Sen. Frank J. Lausche, D-Ohio, to issue the following statement: t r “Only encouragement will be given future riots unless the prosecutors, the sheriffs and other law enforcement officials are given support by the judges. I do hope that the pleas advanced by lawyers and social workers that youth must he ■ ★ ■ to ■ ■ it Fifty Arrested at Saugatuck SAUGATUCK (AP)-Some 50 persons were arrested as an estimated 10,000 visitors invaded this Lake Michigan resort community of 1,000 during the long Fourth of July weekend. Village President Lynn McCray said .Monday those arrested “had ti> learn the hard way by bring put in jail'' He said they ranged in age from IT to 30 and most were charged with liquor-law violations. McCray paid Saugatuck has a population of about 1,000 in the winter months. “On the whole they behaved much better,” McCray observed. “We started clamping down on them, and we’ll continue to do so,” 1N4 RAMPAGE Gangs of college - age youth went oma rampage here a year ago and threatened to do so again last Labor Day when some <0 state police troopers were assigned to the. area. McCray said he estimated he had about half that number on hand this July Fourth weekend, plus reinforced local police. dealt with; gently under the circumstances prevailing at these tip .resorts, will not be given attention." COLLEGE STUDENTS The rioters were mainly teen-" ages and college students. Mayor Ben Sanaders of Arnolds Park, Iowa, who handled close to IN cases in mayor’s court as a result of the weekend disturbances, said, “We’ll be taking some precaattouary measures.” Other-trouble spots were Rock-away Beach, Mo., and Lake George, N.Y. if r r Sheriff Lyman Cardwell reported that “the situation is quiet at Rockaway Beach — all the kids have left.” DEVISES A PLAN Cardwell said he has devised a plan for preventing a recurrence but “I don’t aim to publicise it at this time.” At Lake George, which had the biggest crowds and the moat arrests — about 3M — officials would not call the disturbances riots. “Sure the number was high, but Only a few were serious,” said Police Justice John Dier. “Preventive police work was the answer.” R * >jR . Lake George Police Chief James Troy said officers can spot some potential troublemakers by auto license plates. NEW ENGLAND '‘This weekend,” he said, most of the trouble came from boys from New England. They have been to Hampton Beach and Fort Lauderdale. They are trained troublemakers and we watch them.” The disturbances toft (battered glass, beer bottles, pa- IXjk 196V sands of dollars in property damage. In gome instances, the National Guard was called out to stop the riotiag, and clubs and tear gas were ased. Russells Point Mayor Gene 'Gooding blamed the melee there on “a loss of control by par-mts.” r ★ ★ “These kids,” said Gooding, hove lost all respect and gratitude for the reasons we celebrate this holiday.” * APPEAR IN COURT At Geneva - on - the - Lake, 26 persons charged with disorderly contort appeared in. court yesterday. Most of. them pleaded guilty and were fined $50 plus $6.50 court .costs. Twenty-nine others- were turned over to the Ashtabula County Common Pleas Court. Twenty of this group posted $200 bail and were released. The other nine remained in county jail pending hearings today. • Fall U. S. Weather Bureau,Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly sunny and cooler today, high 7| to 76. Scattered* thundershowers developing fright and continuing Wednesday. Not so cool tonight lows in the Ms. Warmer Wednesday, high 75 to 82. Winds northeast to east to southeast 5 to 15 miles tonight and Wednesday. Thursday outlook: Partly cloudy and copier. Tatty in Pauline Lowest temperature preceding I 0 At « a.m.: Wind Velocity S f Direction: Northeast Weather: tunny This Date la 0 Than hi till Jl m ii Menday's Temperature Chart pans M 17 Part Worth It >. Rapids H 0 Jacksonville W ittMan a 44 Kansas City 0 wslno 74 4S Los Angelas 0. I 41 Miami Roach 14 I * MmittMa 11 ...._________ J 31 New Orleans ■ Albuquerque *3 0 New York 71 Atlanta 0 47 PtaanlK lit Bismarck 41 0 WtSBSph 0 LIVE ALONE AND LIKE IT -» Seven French women emerge from a deep grotto in Gabors, France, yesterday, after spending two weeks .underground in a scientific test. They were selected from a wide range Of backgrounds and the test was to sae what personality clashes, if any would result. The women said they got along fine and had fun. They ere Wearing dark glasses to protect their eyes from the sun. Trade Group Nearer Collapse France Withdraws Envoy to Euromart BRUSSELS (UP!). — France withdrew Its ambassador from the European Common Market today in a Gallic display of displeasure that brought the six-nation trade group hvm closer to collapse. . < The4 situation was so serious tat Walter Hallstein, president of the market’s executive corn-ion, canceled plans to travel to Bonn in hopes that on-the-spot talks in Brussels would ease the crisis. / President Charles de Gaulle had brought the market rinse to collapse yesterday when he announced he was withdrawing a number. of his representatives from Brussels in a farm price dispute. Today a French spokesman announced that Ambassador Jean-Marc Boegner, the .French ambassador to the market, had been recalled to Paris. The move was considered serious because there was no statement he had been called home only for consultations. / RAW Hallstein had planned to travel to Bonn for talks with German and Italian officials on the impasse. Italian President Giuseppe Saragat arrived ta Bohn today for talks with German officials that are expected to result in renewed Italo-Ger-man affirmation of their intention not to bow to French agricultural demands. CURRENT CHAIRMAN Italy is the current chairman of the market’s council of ministers and Italian Foreign Minister Amintore Fanfani accompanied Saragat. The crisis arose over French demands that the Common Market nations subsidize agriculture. This would benefit French farmers who Work the balk of the market’s arable land. The other five members refused. There were immediate repercussions in member countries. A Dutch spokesman said Holland considers the French action in freezing the Common Markets activities “completely disproportionate” to developments at the last meeting. All market decisions must be unanimous and no work can be done without a French representative. However, trade experts from the executive commission did meet today with a Nigerian trade delegate. France boycotted this..meeting. SPLIT POSSIBLE France did not say if the Boegner recall was permanent. If so, tiie move could raise the possibility of a diplomatic split between France 'and Belgium since he also is ambassador to Belgium. The absence of any officials of DeGaalle’s government ef- NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers, thundershowers are forecast for tonight in western Lakes area, upper and central Mississippi Valley, northeastern Plains, Texas Panhandle ufd western Kansas. Drizzle expected along northern Pacific Chast. CooIer weather expected for northeastern quarter of ^ S.; warmer in upper JphUsrippi Valley and nogbera Plains. Hunted Rifleman Killed by Police (Continued From Page One) he was there but apparently did not see him until the patrolmen did Scott was wearing a T-shirt, soaked with Mood. Police said the exact motive for Scott’s rampage had not been learned. He apparently bought the rifle in the past few days. . * * * Police said Scott had served time in the Allegheny County workhouse for minor charges including disorderly conduct. He had once been arresjed for robbery: Neighbors described him as quiet. They said he apparently was unemployed. McDooough, a halfback, played for the Chicago Cardinals of the National Football League in 1998, the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1939-41, and die combined Cardinal-Steeler wartime team in 1944. Mincin and Laffey were taken to Moatefiore Hospital. Mincin was in fair condition,', Laffey critical’. i I K Prince Is Unlikely to Get Rebuke LONDON W — Political observers see little chance of the House of Commons even debating a motion to whm Prince Philip to keep quiet on political issues. Although the motion was signed by more than 30 Labor ite legislators, leaders of bbth the Labor government and the Conservative opposition were reported anxious to let the matter drop. ,r* r r The prince, husband of Queen Elizabeth n, has come under leftist criticism at home and African criticism in the commonwealth for counseling restraint % Die argument over Rhodesia’s future. The central African colony has internal arif-government and the ruling white minority shows no sign of agreeing to the British government’s demands for a constitution promising the African majority control ultimately. Asian and African members o! the Commonwealth want Britain to force the Rhodesian whites to accejrt such a constitution. TAKE IT SLOWLY In Edinburgh last week the prince suggested that negotiations on Rhodeisa’s future should be taken slowly rather than “risk a blood bath and many other unpredictable results by forcing the pace.” Philip added: *T think everybody recognizes that the ultimate result (African rule) in inevitable. But I thiift % few years her* or there do not matter if we can achieve this result peacefully and quietly.” Philip’s Laborite critics considered this a statement of personal political opinion such as modem British royalty is not supposed to make. r -■ * !#•*-: The- only political statements allowed to the queen in public are those approved by the government in power. Prince Philip’s position may be somewhat different since his precise constitutional position is not clear. Some authorities regard him aa a private, person free to say what he wants to. Others consider him so dose to the throne that he must be bound fay the rules surrounding it . Truck Mishap TFatal WISCONSIN DELLS. Wis. (AP)—Donald E. Potter, 98, of Grand Rapids, Midi., was killed today when a trade he was driving ran offlriterstate 1884 near pat the Cammoa Market into a deep freeze. All important decisions r equire unanimous agreement by France, West Germany, Italy and the Benelux countries. Officials Iri Brussels referred to the’ French strategy as an “emptydhair policy." They recalled that De Gaulle employed the same strategy in January 1963, when he blackjacked his trading partners into keeping Britain out of the Common Market. ACCEPTED VETO r At the time, the five other members accepted the French veto because they feared a hut to Common Market progress would hurt their own. prosperity. France has retained leadership of the trading bloc from that day. Last week, however, West Germany, Maly, Belgium, Holland and Luxembourg turned down a demand for an agricultural policy which they felt favored French farmers. In turn, they demanded some political progress toward a United Europe. DeGaulle, determined to preserve French independence, rejected his partners in the trading bloc. Underheath, there also were some differences on how to finance the Common Market farm policy and when to put it into effect. Sir Winston's Home to Be Sold at Auction LONDON (AP) - The London home of Sir Winston Churchill, will be sold at auction, probably in October. Knight, Frank and Rutley, real estate agents, announced today they had been instructed by Churchill’s executors to sell No. 28 Hyde Park Gate, where Sir Winston died in January) Mayor's Job. Sought by 'Village' figure DETROIT (AP) - Walter C. Shamie, promoter of the now-defunct International Village, a commercial development scheme for downtown Detroit, today announced his candidacy for mayor. In a statement, Shamie, 44, attacked incumbent Jerome Ca-vanagh for his “constant' outpouring of image - building Ballyhoo” and ambitions for ’’higher political glories.” ' 1 Disability Bill Under Debate Sunatu May Vote on Mtaiura. today* $ WASHINGTON (AP) -i ate traders hope to complete congressional action today on a proposed constitutional amendment covering presidential disability and the filling of .any vice-presidential vacancy. Two hours were set aside for debate. Tie prepaid constitutional chaage, a compromise of dif-feriag versions prevtoasty ap-proved by each branch, whisked through the Home last Thursday. The Senate haq been expected to act quickly too, but a snag developed when Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., and others contended language empowering a vice president to contest a president’s ability to carry an was ambiguous. 1 # VI R n R ft • However, Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen said Friday he saw no reason why the amendment should not be approved as it stands. Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., floor nm*»g»r of the measure, predicted its approval. MUST BE RATIFIED After Congress acts, a constitutional amendment must be ratified by three-fourths of the state legislatures before becoming effective. The President’s signature is not required. -One section of the proposed amendment provides that if the office of vice president bc-’ comes vacant, the president .shall nominate a successor who vyould take office upon confirmation by a majority vote of both houses of Congress. Other sections designed to plug a worrisome gap in the Constitution provide that when a president is incapacitated or. otherwise unable to discharge the powers of his office, tlpe vice president shall become acting president. A R • R If a president notified Congress of his disability,’the vice president would take over until the president sent word that he was able to resume his powers. ACTING PRESIDENT In case a president was unable or unwilling to declare his disability, the vice president would become acting president if he and a majority of the Cabinet* or a majority of such other body as Cpngresr might later provide for fry law, sent a writ-declaration to Congress that the president was unable to discharge his duties. A president could regain his powrfo by advising Congress that his inability no longer existed, unless this were challenged within four days by the vice president and ■ majority of the Cabinet or such other body as Congress provided. Such a dispute then would he settled by Congress. It would be required to assemble within 48 hours if it were not in session. If Congress determined within 21 days by a two-thirds vote ta both the Senate and the House that the president was unable to discharge his duties, the vice president would continue to act as president. Otherwise the president would resume the powers and duties of his office. WomanTs Found Dead DETROIT (It - Mrs. Mary Hardy, 42, of Detroit was found dead Monday ta the bedroom of her apartment. Firemen said Mrs. Hardy apparently was overcome fay smoke from a burning couch. Btmingham Area New^ ^ To Discuss the Effects of Parking Rate Boosts ! BIRMINGHAM — Anticipated factors affecting proposed to-creases in municipal {talking rates wifl b* brought to the attention of the City Commission tonight. Commissioners are considering rate increases as one; way of providing SM*t of tae funds for a proposed $1,174s806 parking ramp. la declaring the structure a necessity two weeks age, they voted to assess only II per cent of the cost against down- For other lota, the affected property owners’ share has been 40 per cent. ■ " * R The decision to decrease the amount tras based on the fact that property owners already have been assessed 40 per cent of the cost of developing the lot on which .the structure will be built. » The 566-car parking facility 800,000 Units Seen lor Year (Continued From Page Ojne) kettag ef the best-styled and best-performing car ta the United States, toe. building ef a more reliable and safer car fad expansion jof existing dealer service facilities. Discussing tfrkifff the second point of his program, DfeLprtton added emphasis was going to be placed on areas dealing frith reliability and safety. $ 1 R »R R “Currently, in our hbme piant, we have 1,100 employes devoting full-Ume to assure that each car meets exact quality requirements,” DeLorean said. CONTROL STAFF “In other words, one out of every IS manufacturing employes \ is engaged ta inspection and reliability control.” He also promised Pontiac would continue to pioneer ta the safety field by adding to such safety innovations as Wide Track, the integral aluminum wheel and hub,, and the articulated windshield friper. R R R As to dealer service facilities expansion, iDeLorssta said, “every step is bfetag taken to encourage dealers to further expand to meet this anticipated customer demands of tomorrow.’’ Currently, he said, one out of three Pontiac dealers is already in the.process of expanding and modernizing his facilities. New Rains Cause Flooding in Kansas HAYS, Kan. (AP) - Heavy rains caused new flooding in Kansas today, this time to the north of the heavily battered Arkansas River basin. A flash flood at Hays sent water several feet deep into a residential area just four-blocks from the main business district. Water was reported up to the tops of care for a time. Hays received more than two inches of rhta overnight. Severed hundred residents were evacuated froth' their homes as the rains sent Lincoln Draw and Chetnlah Creek out of their banks. Both streams drain through the, city, emptying into Big Creek. , wtt ' be constructed on the L-shaped lot fronting Woodward awWQMte. \ Starting ffiscossim ef the proposed financing, city earn-missioners tonight will receive a report from J. H. Parities Jr., director of finance far the tty. While revenue projections for existing facilities are fairly safe, Purkiss notes those for additional facilities are based on the assumption that parking demands will increase substantially. i|;| , . * , (R .. Increasing municipal parking spaces by 22 per cent will not necessarily generate more demand. ’ BUSINESS GROWTH “This demand is entirely dependent on growth or development of private businesses within the central business .diririct," Purkiss said. ★ R R. , He commented that boosting only the rates for the parking ramp would be unfair to users of the facility and would tend to discourage thfcm from parking there. "It would to some extent tend to encourage parkers to look for street meters or use other facilities, perhaps complicating already congested traffic problems,” Purkiss said. US. T raffi%Toil Sets Record for 3-Qay Fourth (Continued From Page One) Howard Pyle, president of the National Safety Council. “Never has driver bnprove-ment been more ferity heeded,” Pyle said. “The attitudes* and skills too many drivers are failing to meet the exacting demands of billions of miles of high pressure travel. Every driver,” Pyle said, •raid begin at once to 1 skills and develop aew ones through available drfypr improvement programs.” Another safety council spokesman estimated that the (taai toll would be about 568 traffic deaths. “More traffic fatalities may be counted during the final hours of the weekend,” he said. R R R- “Motorists who delayed their start home are tired, in a rush,” he added. “They’re driving faster than conditions permit and they make mistakes ’’ FIVE STATES Traffic accidents ta five states — California, Missouri, New York, Ohio and Texas — accounted for more than one-third of the deaths. Fifty 'persons were killed oa California roads, 31 in Missouri, 33 in New York, 31 ta Ohio and 27 to Texas. • /" No traffic deaths were reported in three states — Rhode Island, Delaware and Alaska. The District of Columbia also reported no traffic fatalities. ★ ,★ R The most serious accident took seven lives in Colorado Sunday. An Oklahoma crash took tax lives. Crashes in South Giroltoa and New York each took five lives and Ohio reported three brothers killed in a single crash. The worst traffic toll for any holiday period came nine years ago when 706 persons were killed during A four-day Christmas observance. Combined Force Hunts Cong in D Zone (Continued From Page One). were mining after UteMtioedy i toe jungle ratpest of Ba Gta, 298 miles northeast of Saigon. The sources said South Vietnamese losses were 29 dead, 39 wounded and 187 missing. Ba Gta, 10 miles from the Quang Ngai airstrip, Was reported quiet today after a mortar barrage before dawn. But strong Viet Cong forces were reported holding their positions ta the area. Air strike against suspected the post continued. About 188 geveraeut troops were left to defeat toe pest, 888 aries northeast of 181 to 1JM guerrillas overran The Viet Cong withdrew after two hours but blasted the re- and other fire throughout the dapand the night. The guerriltaX also captured two 105mm how&xers. MOVED FROM AREA Military sources said the guns bad been reported dismantled' apd moved out of toe arte. There were fears toe Cara-nuatota would use tot htwttt-ers to shell the Quaag Ngsi Gen. Nguyen Chunk Thi, commander of flte Vietnamese 1st Corps, told reporters he had requested U.S. Marines be sent to reinforce Bp.Gta. day reported the Vietnamese troops at the post were near panic when the two helicopters landed. . „ _ _ TANGLED WRECKAGE salting they might ran into am-} ^ to ^ ^ trampling the dead and wounded, and the crew had to fight He refused to send Vietnamese troops from Quang Ngai, FIRED ON The heavy fire .from mortars and recoilless rifles prevented helicopters from bringing ta effective1 reinforcements. Every sue sf toe craft that landed was fired on. In one attempt to deliver more troops, only two of tf helicopters managed to land. They carried 18 sokUero. .Jt ,R . R Associated Press photographer Eddie Adams, ztoo spent two hours at Ba Gta yestar- * m ■ them off. .» r jr*1 The post was pockmarked with mortar craters and the tapgled wreckage' of a VS. Army armed helicopter was strewn .across an open piece of The helicopter, flown ity Maj. Irwin Cockett of Koloa, Hawaii, was brought down by 50-calibei machine guns while attacking Viet Cong poattkos. Cockett’s copilot was killed. i. K Voice of the People: Van Pontiac Take Pride in Display of Prejudice? I recently read an article on segregation which pointed out Mississippi as the state which is out of step with all others in its enlightenment I wonder how much pride we in Pontiac can take in the fact that the recently elected Negro member of the Pontiac school board has been the recipient of numerous threatening letters, has had a rock thrown through his window, and must have an armed guard in-his house to protect his family? .. ,★ ‘ * * " ' ** • Dr. Robert Turpin is a fine professional man who rendered national service, Is a university graduate, the father of four children, and a participant in civic affairs with a sincere desire to serve for the betterment of our schools. His wife has also been active in many civic projects and is a university graduate. k ir k Why must we in Pontiac show our bigotry in not accepting these fine people at the face value of their worth, without displaying the badge of ignorance and prejudice for one of a different race? JUSTICE FOR ALL Youth Need Education, Not Vacations There should be no school vacations. We Americans should know that the key to world peace lies in the education of our young people. A vacation does nothing to meet this need. We must abandon this backward belief and start thinking about the advancement of our children. LUDWIG VON BOTCH ‘All This in the Name of Christian Unity’ You know a smart gentleman, whom he normally is, should never pick on anybody’s daughter; but especially not when she’s the President’s, and just turned eighteen and only In search of the truth as a “young adult” sees it. A A A Bishop Pike was an almighty-mite. Man did he nibble dinosaur meat with a jackknife! He spit, he swore, he ripped, he tore. You see he was mad over who should—and when—and how many times—throw her in the water. And in the name of Christian unity yet! I can hear the chosen chuckle endlessly. HARRY J. WENZELL 1461 OAKWQOD porters who talk shop through the night above the roar of the jukes. The Cocoa Trib is a lucky newspaper, bom into a stretch of land that is lifting the eyes of all mankind toward the stars. Disunity and Misery Communism’s Allies In evaluating the Free World’s measures against the Incursion of communism In countries around the world, those unversed are often misled by the comparatively small number of# Communists involved and inclined to wonder whether the need for American intervention is indeed justified. A good answer lies in the time-proved adage that an organized minority can Invariably lick an unorganized majority. ★ ★ ★ Where communism moves into a country tor a takeover, It is always well organized with well-defined objectives. The country into which it moves is often fnc-tion-split, with the populace either poorly informed or indifferent about the power play afoot. For example, there are reportedly but 600 to 1,000 Communists among * the Dominican Republic’s population of 3.5 million. But the country was in a fair way of being gobbled up by the Reds had not the U.S. stepped in. Similarly, U.S. experts estimate that fewer than 1,000 Communists succeeded in taking over and holding power in Guatemala from 1950 to 1954, until a counter revolution ousted them. Guatemala has 3 million inhabitants. In 1958, Cuba’s 7-million population couldn’t cope with the 12,000 organized Communists, and Castro took over. Currently, the Communist party is working an old tactic in British Guiana—working behind a “front” organization. There, leadership of the largest political organization — the People’s Progressive Party — is in the hands of a few Communists. ★ ★ ★ We’ll conclude these observations with another apt axiom: An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. desk is a smash With customers and clients. But a big burly guy in the shipping room lias applied for the receptionist job and his aptitude tests show he eould handle It. Does he get It? • You are running a barber shop. A cute little manicurist is a barrel of fan. But you know in your heart that a middle-aged , porter in the building, who wants the available mankorist’s job, could wield the nail file and scissors just as well as the gal and could also talk baseball and the races with the customers. What do yon do? oSuppose you are head of a young ladies’ college. A former big-time football star applies for the job of house mother at one of the dormitories. His reputation and prestige are great and the young ladies aren’t complaining. Is the job his? ★- ★ ★ But at least one decision is still easy for the employer. He doesn’t have to give a male employe time off to have a baby. But is it really fair not to? The degree to which people have a good time during a weekend holiday is closely commensurate with the number of accidental deaths . that occur during the period. ‘How to’ Tips to Grads Old Hat Still Stylish Review of a dozen or so commencement talks delivered by important, distinguished persons in the last few weeks reveals that the gist of their advice to the graduates is about as follows: • Whatever you do, at work or.at play, give it everything you have. You don’t win success by half-hearted effort. • While ability is of course all-important, it rarely is enough without dependability, loyalty and dedication. • While it is true that things are pretty well messed up all over the world, there still is unlimited opportunity for achievement and success; in fact, the world is crying for leadership and new ideas. ★ ★ ★ There is nothing new or startling in this advice and cynics may write it off as trite and corny. But it does have one thing going for it. It is true. New Hiring Law Seen Scrambling Sex Appeal Employers whtf enjoy wrestling with personal problems can have a ball with the new Federal Fair Employment Practices law. The law is aimed at eliminating employe discrimination not only in terms of race or color, but of sex. Men and women are now to be treated exactly the same, period. So the boss can make a fun game out of such puzzlers as: • A curvy blonde on the reception Verbal Orchids to- Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gillespie of Goodrich; 96th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Lena M. Miller of 36 Union; 90th birthday. Mrs. Cora deal of 58 Newberry; 83rd birthday. Warding Buzzer David Lawrence Says: Could Dramatize July 4 Better Big Battles StiU Facing Congress By HARRY KELLY WASHINGTON (AP) — With a full six months of work behind it, Congress still faces some of its biggest battles on domestic legislation amid the continued debate on U.S. policies in the Viet Nam war. The White House’s January hopes for a mki«»mnrter adjournment on Capitol Hill faded long ago. Not that Congress has been sleeping at the switch. President Johnson has piled on a heavy load and is already talking about next year. So far Congress has enacted three of his top priority items: excise tax reduction, federal aid to secondary schools and aid to the Appalachia area. AAA Despite some sound and fury Congress is almost certain to approve the president’s request for a voting rights bill, a program of health care for the aged, an urban affairs department, housing and higher education bills and a proposed constitutional amendment on presidential disability. LEGISLATIVE MACHINERY Some of these are well along the road to final action. Many other measures have been acted on or are progressing through the legislative machinery. Although the Democrats have top-heavy majorities in both the House and Senate, taking the suspense out of much of the congressional tugging and hauling, there have been indications that the road ahead frill not be entirely smooth. The administration is preparing for some fighting over five of Johnson’s proposals—file most controversial of which is a bill to extend and revise farm programs. AAA Others already catching plenty of heat are Johnson’s call to amend the Taft-Hartley Act to strip statef of the authority to outlaw the union shop; to expand coverage of the federal minimum wage; to abolish file natural origins quotas of the immigration law; and to increase benefits and set up federal standards on unemployment compensation. MAY BE SET ASIDE Some of these .may have to be set aside until next year. A A A Johnson hasn’t taken a public stand on the proposed constitutional amendment ’ aimed at diluting the impact of the Supreme Court’s “one man, one vote” ruling on legislative apportionment. Unless they can find the votes—and they haven’t yet— to defeat the proposed amendment which requires a two-thirds majority for passage, some Senate liberals have threatened to filibuster. ches tell of d i s- I WASHINGTON — Was Independence Day celebrated properly? News dispatches tell of disorders crowded resort areas and excesses of all kinds, including careless driving on the highways. * „ .How many the millions citizens who are given the LAWRENCE right to vote can read or understand the words of the Declaration of Independence itself? There’s an even more important question that might well be asked: How should the occasion of America’s famous pronouncement on t h e right of self-determination of peoples have been celebrated? A golden opportunity was missed by failing to dramatize and publicize throughout the work! the immortal principles written in the document proclaimed 189 years ago by the founding fathers. ★ ★ ★ Condensed into simple language, the Declaration of Independence could have been applied to the situations existing among the oppressed peoples of every continent in the world. PERTINENT TODAY The rules of international and national conduct contained in the Declaration are in every sense pertinent today. If these were taken to heart by the peoples of those countries now living under dictatorships, the whole world might rid itself ef the perennial fear of autocratic governments which threaten the peace. Although the Declaration of Independence enumerated the basic reasons for initiating a revolution against the British crown, our forefathers also outlined a philosophy that teaches a significant lesson to malcontents who are impatient even with representative processes and seek to undermine them, notwithstanding the fact that the exsisting machinery provides an orderly means of redress. AAA' The following excerpt, rarely quoted abroad, is pertinent: “Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments loqg established should not be changed for light and transient causes, and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are " more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpation, pursuing invariably the same ob> ject, evinces a design to reduce* them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security.” ' SUMMONS TO ACTION Translated into many 1 a n-guages, these and other passages in the Declaration of In-ependence could become a moot powerful summons to con- certed action by oppressed peoples everywhere. This could have been and still can be to them the true meaning of a worldwide independence day. All sorts of leaflets stressing these points coukl have been dropped from planes circling the earth. The “Comsat” mechanism, which permits instantaneous contact with all parts of the world by radio, could have been utilized effectively. Communication facilities of many kinds are available. The necessary funds for this worldwide missionary effort would have been provided by Congress if there had been a leadership by citizens’ groups. Money is appropriated annually for the “Voice of America,” but no activity carried on by that division of the U.S. Information Agency could accomplish more for the benefit of mankind than a campaign giving a timely explanation and emphasis to the ehduring words of the Declaration of Independence. (Copyright, INI, Now York HoroM Tribune Syndicate, Inc.) CONSIDINE Bob Considine Says: Manned Space Launches Will Never Become Jaded NEW YORK - Some newspapers put out special editions commemorating, let’s say, the bad little compound fracture suffered, by the Liberty Bell on that otherwise happy July 4. But not the Cocoa (Fla.) Tribune, in whose I folds I proud to ap- 1 pear, even when writing cross things about that boom area of the\space age. The Trib is about to celebrate the 15th anniversary of the first launching from Cape Canaveral. Happened in mid-July 1958. The first launching was a Bumper, a captured German V2 with R WAC Corporal on top. It was all pretty profound for that time. 1 Today that whole assembly could be strapped to the side of a Titan III or the many-rocket-ed Saturn, which is known as Clusters Last Stand, and none of the observers at the press site would notice it. I’ve witnessed all the manned shots from the cape, beginning with Alan Shepard’s lob. This is a sequence which not only never jades but, if anything, increases in stupefy- ' ing tension. With each new Gemini mission we dose in on the terminal of JFK’s great dream to get to the moon and back safely by the end of the decade. We assign not only the wizards we call aftropauts but now we turn to framed scientists, civilian types. One day we’ll send up a poet to do justice to the stuhning spectacle below. Over the years I’ve covered just about every realm of man’s activity oi) earth. But a reporter, I find, becomes more emotionally involved with covering the space effort than with any other endeavor. One gets to know the principals, the families, the industry people who bet their skirts that this or that will work ou schedule, the public relations people who contemplate hara-kiri when their products Mow a fuse, the people who come to the beaches to watch, the re- The Better Half “It says: ‘You are an absent-minded dreamer, and if we told you your weight you’d just forget K hi two i * In Washington: , Leaders Disagree on GOP Rift - GOP professionals. Comments one flinty moderate: “Some of these dopes on our side couldn’t get through a township meeting.” A A A The biggest charge laid upon the moderates is that they are lost in their own parochial concerns and are no nearer to forming. a solid front than they were in their disastrous attempts of 1964. One moderate leader whose hopes were high in March for a better co-ordinated effort is now muttering disconsolately. These dark impressions of the “Republican condition” are not, to be sure, found everywhere in party circles. At the GOP National Committee meeting here, • canvass I took among leaders in two-fifths of the states disclosed a fair number who say fee party is stabilizing Itself for a big recovery try hi 1988. Key figures in such states as Connecticut, New Jersey, Delaware, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri and Kansas argue that either moderate or “traditional conservative” Republicans bold control against the more rigidly conservative Goldwater elements. an, MucomU Uwr aO Munaw Count la* 0 ii StMt a I AMm Hi MlcMgon aid •Mr ataca* h M UMM N S3*.00 a yaar. All mall ■*- Conversely, Tom Stagg Jr., Louisiana’s national committeeman, contends that the political machinery which nominated Goldwater for president in 1964 “has not been dismantied” and will operate again to cover whatever candidate Barry blesses forl988. Nevertheless, behind these occasional confident asaar-ances is heard fee insistent drone ef the truly veteran pro- state of their party. They stop just short of accusing their less practiced party colleagues of not knowing what the game is all about, or not facing the foil depth of the party’s plight. 4 'A A A While the arch-conservative GoMwaterites are thought by one professional to be only “mumbling on the fringes” at the moment, it is widely felt that their attitudes have hardened since the 1964 defeat and that they threaten future action ranging all the way from mere nuisance to attempted veto over major party decisions. Not one ef fee fop “old hands” believes this problem has been adequately dealt wife by the party. They fault traditional conservatives and moderates alike ou grounds of inaction. To the veteran leaders, Gold-water’r new Free Society Association is symbolic of the unsolved dilemma. One of these, ripped into by a Goldwater man for daring to criticize the F&A, exploded: “You had your chance. You had your run. Now go away and leam uxekitt.” WASHINGTON (NEA) - A handful of the most seasoned Republican professionals are saying privately that the array in party is of gravest order. In their neither moderates the fives come well at t h i critical mo- BIOSSAT ment when the party has the look of an underprivileged minority. One grizzled veteran whose personal conservative credentials are unimpeachable deplores the formation of Barry Gold water’s Free Society Association as a “bad deal” and adds: “We’re iu a hell of a fix. We can’t live with Barry and we can’t live without him. He’s got maybe five to six million followers, and he’s got all those rich characters.”. This same source berates some conservative businessmen for what he considers gross po-litical ineptitude. He brands their attitudes as highly damaging to Republican prospects at the polls. AAA (Curiously, similar caustic erttidsm of such businessmen was voiced to this reporter at the height of the 1984 campaign by a Goldwater manager heavily dependent upon their support.) The rival moderates, however, are winning no contrasting praise from fee tough t t THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1905 House Faces Fierce Interparty Fight easure employing literacy tests III which less than 90 per cent of the adult population either registered or voted in Inst years election. It is that formula that has drawn the most fire from both Republicans and Southerners. GOP spokesmen call, it srhi- WASHINGTON (AP) - The House faces a' fierce biterparty fight today as it takes iq> the voting rights Mil which carries a top priority tag in President JoMMn’s legislative program. Leaders hope for a final vote by Friday. They have said it .appears certain some form of legislation will be passed to enforce the 15th Amendment’s command that no person shall he denied the right to vote because pf race or color. Semite MIL It hoes not tap! poll taxes, but would put the matter to a quick court test. The Democrats’ Mg majority suggests their Mil will prevail. BuTRepublicans are determined to make a strong fight to at least make substantial changes in the Democratic measure. The GOP substitute is not now before the House. DECISIVE FACTOR Southern Democrats, who view the Republican MU as the lesser of two evils, could prove a decisive factor if they voted solidly with the OOP: Include a provision' calling for a court test on the conStltu-tionalify of such taxes. And the bill said Congress would declare that state poll taxes are used to discriminate against Negroes and the poor. Poll taxes still are collected in Texas, Alabama, Mississippi and Virginia in state or fecal Defenders of the bill say the in*-evidence is overwhelming that ' ■ “ literacy tests, low voter partici- British nation and discrimination go the longe hand-in-hand. By concentrating who reig da the states encompassed hplMyears. Key points in the Senate bill and the Democratic MU before the House are the suspension of literacy tests in elections and the use of federal registrars under certain conditions. These provisions automatically would trigger enforcement in seven Southern states —- Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia. But the House version of the Democratic bill includes a ban on poll taxes in state and fecal elections. This was added as the Mil came out of the House Judiciary Committee. SUBSTITUTE MEASURE House Republicans have But a struggle looms over what approach should be taken — especially on the question of poU taxes. Johnson urged prompt action when he sent his voting rights MU to Capitol Hill in mid-March at the height of racial demonstrations in Selma, Ala. NO BAN The Senate passed the MO May .16 by a 77-11 margin. It contaified no ban on the use of poll taxes in state and local elections — the President had not asked for such a ban. It did DANISH CROWN IMPORTED CANNED The GOP proposal calls for sending federal registrars into any state or county in which 25 persons complained that they were denied the right to vote because of their' race. The House GOP Policy Committee calls it a straightforward attempt to deal with discrimination wherever it exists. GRADED CHOICE U,S. GOVERNMENT tenderay hep ROUND SIRLOIN PONEIESS ROAS STEAK STEAK tJH*!*** I ROSton Mun i STEAK STEAK IchS^EXJ *ou«d| 851 9ft M ROAST RORERT L. COE Plumbing Hr Hooting WalM LaM PMaai MS 44174 On the issue of banning poU taxes, the Republican substitute supports the approach favored by the administration and the. FLAVOR-SEA L-PAC FRESH r ALL BEEF 1 HAMBURGER U.S. GOV'T. GRADED CHOICE TENDERAY T-BONE STEAK U.S. CHOICE CHUCK STEAK ia *t" HEINZ TASTY CREAM OF -WHOLE TASTY REFRESHING KROGER GRADE 'A' WITH THIS COUPON A $5 PURCHASE-KROGER LARGE EGGS • • • 2D 79e SAVE 11*—KROGER-WHOLE WHEAT, CRACKED WHEAT OR WHEAT BREAD. 2^39* SAVE 11‘-KROGER WIENER BUNS OR SANDWICH mi . 2sa 39* *1 CHOCOLATE MILK-19* SAVE 10*—VANILLA, NEAPOLITAN OR VANILLA FUDGE BORDEN'S .c. m.lk . S 39* 14-OZ. BTL SAVE 13‘—ASSORTED COLORS Save on World's Most Glamorous Awnings SAVE 17*-MORTON'S FROZEN APPLE, PEACH OR SWEET CALIFORNIA Thsrs is a difference! Come in, let us show you why custom-fitted Sun Control Siding and trim is by far your BEST BUY. - pros. FRYER PARTS oe . 1 ROASTING CHICKENS f VaU riw Saturday, A | Be modern with PROTECT YOURSELF AGAINST HIGHER PRICES SAVE! BUY HOW AT PRESEHT LOW-LOW PRICES WITH THIS COUPON ON WITH THIS COUPON ON pm mm TOP VALUE 25 STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON | • BUY NOW - SAVE! NO PAYMENTS UNTIL 1966 M mm TOP VALUE 71 m* TOP VALUE 50 STAMPSLI50 STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON || WITH THIS COUPON ON | mm TOP VALUE 15 STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON mm™* THE PdNTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 0, I MARKETS | Hie following are lop prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and arid by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by tbe Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesddy. Produce mum Apples. MS Delicious. Ml. .11.75 Apples, Res OelMeMi ca- Mi........am Apples, Jonathai*T£l»btL ........ AM Apples. Mclntotti, CA., Ml. ........ AM Apples, N. Spy. feu. .....AM Apples. N. Spy, CA.. bp. ...... AJO 55m*. Steele Red, bu. .......... AM Cherries. 1+qut. crt. .......,.*.4.,ff|. Slrewberrlee. 14«|t. crt..........AM VMtTASLSS Boons, Keen* bu.................. UM Beets, ’...uiAviB i8 Csbbeee, Curly, bu. .s............LM Cebbege, Rd, Ml................ AM cebbeii esresle, bu...............MS Csbbage. $M., bu................. AM Cauliflower, ................... Celery, PaocaL crt.............. *J* Celery, Peacel, di. stalks .......SM Celery, WHIM .....................AM celery, white, dz- stelks ...... Cucumbers, Sllcers, bu. ..........AM Dill,*. MBA .................. •• IS Kohlrabi, dz. bchs.............. AM Onion, grain. dz. bchs. ............. M Parsley, Curiy, az. bch....... J.JJ cabbage, b Col lard, bu Turnip, bu........... LSTTII Endive, Mi......... Endive. Weeehed. bu. Cscarele, bu. ........ E sea role. blaechad Lettuce, S»b. pk-Lettuce. Rotton. dz. Lettuce. Heed, bu . Lettuce. Heed, dz. . Lettuce, Leal. .bu. Lettuce, domains, bu. Poultry and Eggs tor No- I 12-23; Holst tV S lbs. »Ml t whites 20-21. DETROIT (APt-iSS £5*.P?f,ff dozen by first rscshisrs llncludlno U.S.). Whites Grad* A. wire _lerps..Myi 30-33; medium 27-29;sm.n lMOj Srotm* Grade A large 30-31; medium 27-m; smell tl; chocks It. % CHICAGO eUTTER. BOOS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercanlls Excharwa - Butter steady; wholesale LylnTprlcea unchanged; <3 raora AA iil. 92 A M»s; *0 ■ 57*; It C 57; I II I W ra?. mbM Livestock i zs is moony w 24.7AM.00; M 3SA400 lb. sows Ml 4QMM Ms. 20JO-11 .Ml MO-1l.7A1t.75. eotyeo .none; OWSjjtjr steers steady to » Mshfi .y prime 1.2M-1JM Ib.lt.M; highw~~ --1 prime 1.U0-UM Me., *7.7A2t,M ana prime i*ijim»w _ ■»• > choke 1J0A1J00 lbs. MJOj*.Wi -r-choice end prime around tM » iMUB™T heifers 24.7S; choke 7SOtM lbs. 24J0- spring slawghter Iranba end —fully steady; a tew l grime SAW M. 3.50; most choke prlng Ip 4.00-25.00. lambs 25.00-23.5 American Stocks *JT _ 10 4* 4 V, 2 42VS .42VS T*+ V* AssdOII * O Atlas Cowl Barnes Eng Brez Tree Brawn Co JO Campb Chib Cense PM / Cdn Javelin Cinerama , Country Rlty JO Creole P 2.40e rS'k;a Felmt Oil .1M Gen I AM SAM 2 5-14+1-tvs tVS fVS-1 fit fit »•'— t Devel i Plywd mt Yet JO Hycon Mfg Kaiser ind Mackey Mr McCrary wt Mead John .; Scurry ROM Sbd w Air Signal OHA M iOMnr B *L- Syntex Ce JM Technlcol .7S~ Un Control .20 5 39* 19* 39*. J. » » ’J its ms Kj 1?,» & |s+ * 14 Jtb M 4 - 2 7M TVS 7VS< - H UK IMS 13VS+ 4S k MB 7VS+ VS r ** 4vs+ vs k 4 4V%t Vk I IMS 17VS. f UK Mk MVS- VS j'Kw • 4 VS Mb 4*+ *i m* m* &*+* Stocks of Local Interest Figures attar decimal paints are eighths XWlTngt Art the day. Prtraa It markup, markdown :::!:::jd!i i VT CtfP- ......... socleted Truck ... run Engineering . nens Utilities Claa imond Crystal ... lyl Corp.......... I Rubber CA -v-v•■•••WJ S m Siam Wee Tube Co. ..MJ S Chemical Fund Y.'.V.........MJj » Kayafon* Growth K-2 .......... Mass. imwratti Oreotth .......oM io.m Mass, investors Trust . Trading Is Slow Market Resumes Its Advance NEW YORK (AP)—The stock market, back from the long Fourth of July weekend, resumed early today its advance of last week. Trading was slow. dr A * Motors gained fractionally on reports that June may have been the beet car sales month in history. Changes of most key issues were fractional. The National Association of Purchasing Agents reported that business hctiVity increased at • slower fate in June than in previous months. . Corning Glass opened , with a gain of S points. ’ tf A dr Gains of a point or more were made by Air Reduction, Polaroid and American Airlines. Opening blocks included American Telephone, up V« at 68% on 5,900 shares; General Motors, up % at 98V4 on 5,100; Chrysler, unchanged at 47% on 4,500; Ford Motor, unchanged at 53% on 3,500, and Westinghouse, up % at 48% on 2,500. a Friday, the Associated Press 80-stock average advanced 1.4 to 321.1. Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange. The New York Stock Exchange NIW YORK tAP)-Followlng It I ot selected »hrt t«n*PCtk«*gn lit* York Stock Exchange with 19:30 P< —A— Wt High Ltd Loit 45% 45* 45* Admiral “ “lid 1J0 |CCvk?°5 ...... Pw 1.04 Allied C 1.90b veil 2 l Cyan 2 lEIPw 1.24 AmPhoto .20 Amph Corp l MwW|1.75g Allot Cp Auto cant .N Avco Corp t AvonProd .M Bonguot .05a Both Sfl 1.50 irlsfM^I.20 uOcyBfle 2 Fkl Jit ___m H .M CtmpRL .450 Comp Sp .90 Con Dry 1 CdnPac 1.50a CaraPLt 1.14 Carrier 1.30 cmmii sip t ChPnou lJOo Chrysler tb CIT Fin- 1.60 Cities Sv 2.M ColflnRod .50 Colt Indus, ' CSS 1J» „ Col Got 1.M ComIC re 1.00 ComSolv 1.20 CamwEd 1 JO Comsat Con Edit 1.00 CmfiiclM t CnNGot 2.30 I 1.(0 CoxBUcas so CrowColl .991 Crown Corn Crown ZtN 2 Cruc Stl 1.20 OoltoAIr t.« DenRIoGW 1 DetEdls 1.30 DougA Ir ,30d . DowCh 1 JOb duPont 2.50g Dug Lt 1.40 OynomCp .41 Bast Air Lin . East Kod 1.40 EotonMf 2.20 ElBondS 1.55 i',p»r (mar El 1.20 imerRad .40 IrfeLock" RR EvansPd .30d %t j k 4SM + Vk i TTVb + V» \ 27Vk 27 17M 17% 47 44% 12% 12 34% 34% 34% + 34% 34% 34% - V 2% 2% 2% .. 37% 37% 37% + 1 39% 39% 39% + I 29% 29% 29% + V 41% 4t% 40% — ' 1% 1%. 1% ...: 35% 35% 33% — 1 41% 41% 41% + % 75 74% 74% - % 1% 1% 9% - % 42% 42 43% + % l|% 15% 1S% - % 11% 11% 11% + % 21% 21% 21% + 34% 34% 34% + 32% 32% 32%-50% 57% M% + 44 43% 44 + 55% 55% 55% -14% 14% 14% -43% 43 43% .. 70% 70% »% .. 29% 29% 29% -50 50 50 34% 34% 34% + M% 14% M% 32% 33% 33% + 44% 44% 44% + 47% 47% 47% - 41% 41% 41% ... 41% 43% 41% - % 32% 32% 32% +1% 25% 24% 25 .... 14% 14% 14% — % 34% 34% 34% + % 30% 30% 30% ..... 14% 30% 34% 31% 31% 31% + % 54% 54% 54% + % 51% St 51% + % 44% 44% 44% ... . 31% 31% 31% + % 71% 71% 71% — % 54% 54% 54% - % 32% 32% 32% — % 29% 29% 29% ... M 49% M + % 43% 43% 43% + % 40% 40% 40% - ' 30 30 30 - ' 12% n 12% + i 19% 19% 19% - ' 35% “ 35% 35% - ' MS 38% + »% 70% 70% -235% 235% 235% + 33% 33% 33% + 22 09% 79% ! 1 0 49 41% 4 2 34% 24% 3 7% 7% 7% . 73% 71% 7M9 + ^ - g%j I 30% 39 I 22 n I 41% 41% FilrCom .Mo 49 47% 42% 42% 4 Foirch Hlllor 12 1 I 14 Fanstaol MM » *4 in ti 4 FoSSltr’TjO Fed Mog iJl FerroCorp 1 Flltrol Cp 2 FstChrt 1J11 Fllntkote 1 Fie Pow 1.20 Flo PL 1.40 FoodFalr .90 FMC Cp 1.20 Prate M ,20e Ford mk 2 Fora Mr JO FrooM S 1.40 FruihCp '1.50s,-r- GAccept 1.10 GonDynem 1 OenElec 2.20 [ 53% 53% 53% + I 14 14 14 ' »; 51% 52 + I 30% 30% 30% + Ik + % + % G PubUt 1.34 iaRfiaMiT GooTke .49 GaPocIfk tb Goodrch tM Ooodyr V.I3 j 3? 5 56% 56H 49 25?% 25 Vi 2l 5^ ^ i mi p S 499b 49H •* »V| sns=2 13 31 V% XVI JIH + tVlrS 2 544 6 10% 2 4Mb 12 MVb Golf Oil 1.80 —H— 3 40 40 3 359b 35 54% 54% lO'/j lOVb ... 40Vi 409b + 22'/j 2Mb 4 27 27 ... 5a«/j 569b + 26 — HercPdr 40g Hertz 1.20 ' Pac .100 ____ Electron HollySug 1.80 Homestx 1.40 rRind 2 d Stl 2 ■oturNoAm 3 iterlkSt 1.49 ) 53% 52% 53% i 45% ,45% -i 44% 44% -i 14% 14% 4 i 35% 35% — SwPtc 1.40 South Ry 2J9 Sparry Rond E&J. Std Kollsmen StOII Col 2.20 StOitlnd 1.50a StdOMOh StauffCh 1.40 StiilDrvfl .75 Stevens 1.50b Studebdker Sun' Oil Tidewat Oif JohnsManv 2 lonLogan .00 lones&L 2.50 KeyterRo .60 KOlWOCOtt S KernCLd 2.40 Kerr Me 1.30 KlmbClark 2 KirkNat .40 KorveRe Kretge 1.40 Kroger 1.20 Leer Sieg .50 LehPorCem 1 Lehman 1.78g LOFGIs 2.80a LlggeHAM 5 Lionet Corp Clttonln i.87t ----jsO .769 _____idAlrc 2 LoneSCem 1 LoneSGa 1.12 Long Itl Lt 1 Lorfllard>,?.50 LTV .50 LuckySt 1.20b Lukent Stl 2 Mack Trucks Mad Fd 1.55g Med So Ger MagmaCop 2 Magnavox 1 \ 70 Vis 70Ve 70Vj + TX MayDSI McCall McOonA Mb McKess 1.70 Merck la MerrChap .10 MGM 1.50 k Mid SUt 1.24 MinerChem 1 Minn MM 1.10 Mo Kan Tex Mo Pec 2.S0g Mohasco .70 Monsan 1.40b MontDU 1.40 MontWard 1 MorrellCo 1b 5 599b 59H 5 x3 20’/b 20Vb 2 6 384b 311b 3 10 36Ve 361b 3 10 SIVi 51 Vb 5 * 1 7H 79b 1 70Vb TIVb 7 2 30\b 20Vb 2 13 I7H 869b 8 NatGyps 2b NLead l.50g Not Steel 2 Net Tee .80 N EnaEI 1,20 NJ Zinc 1 NYCent 1.30a NiagMP 1.10 NAAvM NorNetGeir-^ NorPac 2.40a Northrop 1 OhioEdis 1 OlinMath 1 OtisElev 1, 2 399b 39 Vb 399k + 1b 12 731b 72Ve 7W+ 1b 8 53Vb 53 53 10 529b 521b 521b — ; Pac G Et 1.20 Pac Petrel • PacTliT 1.20 Pen Am M Panh EP 1.40 ParamPlct 2 ParktDav lt Ptob Cool t Penn Dixie 1 Penney 1.50a PoPwLt 1.44 Penn RR It PepsiCo 1.40 PfizerCha la PhelpsO 3.40 CNATPlrW Ph!!l!pslet1J2 PltPlata 2.40 Polaroid J9 ProctBO ]J5 Pullman 2a . PuraOII 1.49 Rayetta .41 B*9MP 1-40 Raytheon JO Ragging r* RelchCh I 37% 37% 37% - —P— II 37% ’ 371b 37% + 1 28 99b 91b 99b 4- 22 269b 269b 269b II 31% 28% 28% - 6 68 68 di —1 1 37% 37% 37% - 56 39% 39 39% -F 6 77% 77% 77% + 1! 53% 53% 53% ... 3 69% 69% 69% i 37 36% 37 + _ 1 37% 37% 37% — 9b U 53% m 2 74% 74% I 619b I » 72% 72% 4 b 419b 15 45% 45% 17 579b 57% ~R— 45% 4 I 36% 36% 36% . 19 iPb 15% m 4 ReyTob 1.80 RheemMfg 1 RlchfOil 1.80 aXp’-s; icwanlay t Saignig 1.40a , SCMCorp J|t iomniB .so Saab AL 1.40 Start GO 1.30 Rra t Seeburg .40 Sprwil ’ ” Shalt 0911 1.79 pmT Jig Shgrwhi i./o Sinclair 2 ' SkCrCt 2.20 SmRhK 1.40a ' lorany IJ9 SoPRSug .fOg g 8. 1^ i|j- 14VS - E«:rt rs-r- 85% 85% 85% -21% 21% 11% 4 sales Net (lids.) High Lew Last Clm. 8 6 66 65% 65% - % 0 2 33% 33% 33% *- % I 15% 15% 15% - 1 21 47% 42% 42% 3 30 30 30 4 49 40% 49 3 20% 20% 20% 2 99% 59% 59% 10 29% 29% 29% 9 46% 46 46% —T— 25 S49b 54% 54% 4 % 11 107% 107% 107% - % * 1 16% 16% 16% 4 % 3 57 56% 56% — % ..ansitron Trl Cont .75a Twent C .60b In Carbida 2 In JElac 1.12 in Oil Cal 1 in Pac 1.00 in Tank 1.10 Jn Air LI.50 Unit Alrcft 2 Unit Cp .35g Unit Fruit UGasCp |*70 Unit MM 1.20 USGypsm 3a VI3 5% 5% 5% 4 3 29% 29% 29% (15 38 38|, 31 4 % 4 ,3Tb 38% 31% 4 % 20 53 52% 52% ‘ i ^ IS I tstgEI 1.20 blrliMwl Cp Wlnnblx 1 Woo I worth Worthingtn 13 6191 60% 61% 4 . 7 102 101% 102 4 35 48% 48 48 — 5 49b 4% 4% . 2 15% 15% 15% - 3 44% 44% 44% - I 15% 15% 15% ~ 15 47% 47% 47% 4 —W— "■ 2 IVb IV* IV* .. 1 35V* 35V* 3M .+ 2 31% 31V. 31Vk -7 34V* 34V* 34H - 14 39V* 3H* 399k + 48 48V* 4SV* 4SVk + 38V* MV* - : 2 42V* I 309* 30V* ’ I 39’/. ! k -399* + - 299* 29V4 299k + 2 599* 59Vk 59V* + —X—Y—Z— .50 17 145V* 1459* 145V* - 1.M 11 41 409* 409* - 8 18 759* 75V* 75V* + Solos figures are Unofficial. Unless otherwise noted, rates ends In the foregoing table ar Federal Sites Hit on Wastes Study Claims Sewage Dumped Into Water WASHINGTON (UPI) - A congressional study claims the administration's war on dirty water would get a big boost tf government installations would stop dumping millions of gallons sewage into fivers and streams daily. The federal government has spent $640 million over the past years helping states to-fight water pollution. J But the surveys said that for reasons of economy or. bureaucratic foot - dragging, Washington has been ignoring dumping actions by 68 federal facilities, mostly Defense Department bases. «To overcome the first prob. lem, the House government operations committee wants Congress to appropriate annually $5 million earmarked for sewage treatment plants on federal in-1 stallations. Federal lethargy is another matter. The committee recommends that the Department of Health, Education and Welfare — headquarters for govern- j ment antipollution efforts — annually survey each federal base to find out what it is doing about dirty water and make suggestions for improvements. MADE IN PAST The recommendations were made in a report based on a subcommittee's work that included visits to almost 1,000 bases operated by the federal government. The survey pinpointed 68 bases spewing 19 million gallons of sewage and 2.4 million gallons of industrial wastes into streams and waters every day. Of the 68 offenders, the committee discovered 64 instances of water pollution coming from Army, Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps posts. The agriculture department, Federal Aviation Agency and Coast Guard were blamed iot the others. Son Will Stalin Jbil-Father Southgate Mart Fm§L Teens Out of ContrSf" SOUTHGATE (AP)-An Irak father whose 18-year-old son" was Jailed for throwing: a bois*,. terous beer and roek ’n’r^l party says he will make no Effort to get the youth freed fie; cause he thinks teen-agers are getting all out of hand." ' Albert P. (Buddy) Seobie was one of u youths arrested Sunday as police broke up f noisy party in the backyard td* the Seobie home In this Detrdi|; suburb. MODERNIZED — Giving a new look at 21 N. Saginaw Street is the Parisian Beauty Shop, marking its 35th year with a new and larger location. Owner Oscar Blomquist said the move from 7 W. Lawrence was completed with the installation of all-new equipment for improved service. # %> . Successfuhlnvesffng * •# % S \ w 'ift txtra dividends or [ following footnotes. e—Also extra or rote plus stock dlvk or raid I !—Paid Iasi n dote, g—Declared or paid so ter this his year, .dividend omitted, deferred or to action token at last dividend meeting. —Declared or paid in 1954 plus stock Jlvidatid. t—Fold in stock during 1944, estimated cosh value on ex-dividend or e distribution date. delivery. V|—In bankruptcy or recelvershii being reorganized under the Oenkri Act, or securities assumed by such ponies, fn—Foreign issue subject ti Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)—The cash position of the Treasury compared with corresponding date a year ego: Jrao 39, mi Juns 29, 1944 MHHppReM YrarJUiX 125,954,849,059.95 >23,598,060,878. <—Total-Debt— 310,455,313,807.01 31 Kit**. 314.06 Transactions Light in Grain Futures CHICAGO (AP)—Transactions in the grain futures market were rather light and mixed today during the first several minutes with prices ranging generally from slightly easier to slightly firmer. Soybeans were % to 1% cents a bushel lower shortly before the end of the first hour, July $2.92%; new standard grade wheat % to % higher, July $1.43Vg; com unchanged to % lower, July $1.31 Vi; oats unchanged to Vt higher, July 68% cents; rye unchanged to % higher, July $1.11%, stock AvaaAse* Compiled by Tbe Assaciatad Frost 30 If It M _nmnnt M ^1. Hacks |& gSp 155’t i+j r 448J 155.7 148.2 319/ 458.4 483.0 Week Ago ...... 451.4 152.0 145. Mohlh Ago . . . . 483.0 151.3 172.6 aV'Jm- ■■ 445.4 mfa 155.7 JMI HW . . . . . .505.2 177J 178,2 1945 UjW ....... 4S1j (49J 162.6 7SJ 189.4 104.6 Ik? Dgclarad . $tk. M Fay- Hutsmonn Ratrlg x o dow-jones noon AvaeAoet 11* 128* + 4* 30 Indus It Ralls ... 171.21-0.38 ..,. 195.90+0. It 31* 35* 41* 411* +,* w unit —- .... 301.52 + 0.25 34* 34* .... 7* M* + * It Higher ipraio roH* It Second grad* rails ..... M-MI V.. n 01.55+0.03 31* 31* + * *1* 61* + * 11* II* It Public utiKtios lt Industrials M.15+0.02 . .. f3.B2-0.00 ■OND AVERAGES CmgM By. >bo AgwcMra Pratt » it ti w 1 Rails M. URL Pgk Lt 1945 High 83.7 102.4 88.9 IMS LOW 82.0 100J 88J 1944 High 82.9 103.5 88.4 19*4 Low MJ 100.8 P.2 . By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. “My husband and I must live on limited means, but have banked $S,60Q for our small son’s future college education. Knowing little about investments, we would appreciate your help as to how best to make this money grow." W.D. A. The best ways I know of to increase your capital are through acquisition of. real tate or the purchase Of stocks which are growing faster earnings, dividends and price than ihe economy as a whole. Real estate is generally well inflated and it is hard to pick good values without expert help. Growth Stocks are not cheap, but they offer you the most practical method of increasing your capital. Under present uncertain conditions, I would leave $2,000 in the bank and invest the balance in equal dollar amounts o! Merck and Motorola. * * * Q “la a recent column, you advised your readers to buy Pacific Gas & Electric 1st 4%s of 1996 which sell at 160 to yield 4% per cent. Why did you not recommend Pacific Gas & Electric 5s of 1989, selling at 104 Mi and offering a very much higher yield?” J.L. A. I -thought I had made it clear in past columns that, in buying bonds, the date of earliest redemption and call price are of utmost significance. Pacific Gas & Electric 4%s of 1996 are nonredeemable before 1969, and then at a price of 104.19 — well above current market. Pacific Gas & Electric 5s of 1989, however, are redeemable this year at a price of 104.30, slightly below where they are selling. I never recommend bonds selling above their call price in the year ih which they may be redeemed, since the maiicet Is strictly limited at the top, but not at the bottom. (Copyright, 1165) Gl to Continue Hunger Strike FTl MONMOUTH, N.j. UP -Pvt. David R. Ovall says he will continue his hunger strike against the Army “until I get thy discharge as a conscientious objector or until I die.” ' The 23-year-old draftee from Los Angeles says he is drinking water but he has eaten nothing since June 21, when the Army said he ‘‘did not meet the criteria” for a conscientious objector’s discharge. ' it ★ * Ovall is getting medical checkups twice daily and is carrying out his duties as a clerk satisfactorily, the Army said. Ovall, drafted last August, said he does not belong to any denomination but attends various Protestant services. Was in Right 'Gear' for Hazardous Driving LONDON (UPI) - Motorcyclist Michaer McDade, giving evidence in a dangerous driving case yesterday ,was asked by the protsecutor: “What gear were you ta?” “My leather jacket and boots,” said McDade. Young Seobie is serving a m day jail term in lleir of a $n, fine. The others arrested were, penalised similprfly on disorderly conduct charges. Police said, the youth was the boat fur «*■ party on the Fourth of July 4 which some $0 teen-agers, %-eluding some high school drop* outs, showed up. Neighbors complained to R£» lice several times of the noW'-of the party. Some 40 afflcO> finally went to .the scene stem, broke up the gathering. Three-officers suffered Injuries in > melee with the pertyinf youths. ~ AWAY FROM HOME Albert J. Seobie, 41, bis wife, and their 14-year-old daughtyt: were away from the home f$f; the weekend. Contacted by per-lice, Seobie told officers toteaC his son in jail. * * * : S, On his return, Seobie tofiL newsmen Monday that jM’ thought the federal governm^f. "should step into this” end prpr vide funds to establish halfwajT houses to aid troubled youths? * A halfway house is a temporary home far youths without criminal tendencies. Seobie said, “Society itself. has to get 19 in arras and gti' hold of teen-agers. I think thfC ell ere getting out of hind.” NEED LAWS He said he thought new law£ should be passed allowing alt*; thorities ta deal with disciptfip; try problems. ‘ • Seobie, a supervisor at a shert: metal concern, said ha and Im. son, whom he described as^# high school dropout, had be4fl‘ disputing for some three yem?:; and that he had reached the end-of his patience.. He said he hi*, forbidden the youth to ha%< social gatherings at She Scob$$; home. * aL * * ★ As Seobie talked to newsmen at the Southgate Police Station,' about 12 youths picketed outside to protest what they called Police brutality. One of than,. Gary Garcia, 19, said the group was protesting police treatment of young people who came tp^ the station after young Seobie and the others 1 Police Chief . William Shaffer denied any mistreatment of the youths. r M Specialty Field Grows Story of Packaging News in Brief Don Wellwood, 51, of 58 Bloomfield Terrace yesterday reported the theft of a briefcase, which contained $850, from his car. Charles DeMent of 3956 Em-barcadero, Waterford Township, yesterday reported the theft of $190 in cash from his house, according to township police. Nation's Banks Told to Report Conditions WASHINGTON UP—The banks of the nation were told today to report their condition as of the close of business June 30. Orders were issued separately by the comptroller of the currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. -and the Federal Reserve System. The Federal Reserve acted through its regional district banks. Sweet Job for Children LONDON (UPI) - Gangs of children cleaned up a street in till Balham section of London today after a heavily loaded truck flipped over. TTie trade was hauling candy. By SAM DAWSON AP-Business News Analyst NEW YORK - It takes some | pretty sophisticated machinery to package some of today's sophisticated products — such as convenience foods, push button toilet articles, lor oral contraceptives. With a few {exceptions, makers of this packaging ma-| chinery are specialized and, {therefore, small {as U.S. corpo-{rations go. They work closely with the sponsors of new products to devise the machin-'| ery needed to package them so they can be transported, displayed—and successfully moved into consumer hands, we* You don’t see the machines but do see their handiwork in drugstores, supermarkets and other retail outlets across the nation. Some members of the Packaging Machinery Manufacturers Institute will tell you that many of today's familiar items would never have reached the public without the discovery of the proper machinery to make the exact, and popular, package. DAWSON Even so, the institute president, Eugene E. Lakso, says that the entire industry now boasts only $400 million a year in annual sales. But, he quickly adds, it is growing fast. Some of the machinery is highly complicated, sort of a little brother to compueters. AAA One big corporation with a division in tbe business is.East-man Kodak of Rochester, N.Y. It has developed a device to pluck a product from one machine while using another to take tiny pellets of raw material loaded in a hopper. It tweaks these pellets down and spins them into a packaging material to fit exactly the contour of the product in a few seconds. Eastman says the package is waterproof, airtight, and keeps the product from spoiling and contamination. The contour package also saves space, time and expense hi handling. ONE OF SEVERAL Lakso’s firm, the Lakso Company of Fitchbuig, Mass., is one of several making machinery for sequential packaging of drug products. This process weighs materials for accurate dosage and packages the product inai-vidually. A A. A In the field of oral contraceptives, the machines stamp num- bers on the pills so that the ui| has a constant check agin error. No# being tested is a nil chine that will take varytt sizes of pills, insert and numa them in proper sequence, wra them in different colored ni terials as a further prevent!* of error. A A A . ‘ I Drug manufacturers also us machines, such as made byjp New Jersey Machine Corral tion of Hohokeh, N.J., wra electronically jead the labels* raw materials and alao relabels on the finished 1 to correct errors. Many manufacturers machinery Ip put products ] aerosol containers. Among ti are: Consolidated Machinery Corp. of Buffil N.Y, Kartridg-pak of Dawf port, Iowa; J.G. Machine Worn of Little Ferry, NJ. and Jon R. Nalbach Engineering of CU cego. A machine is being readied Jty put a pull tab on the cotton era ding that goes into piH bottMa This would make it less diffiett to extract as the pill level Ira ers in the bottle add thus raa people from throwing the cotra away. The Idea is hotiU to enrai proper dosage and ro makera harder fer children to ranch Ira bottles for pitta that might ittn them,