Tff Wmath^r (OMNt M PHI 1) THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 123 NO. 140 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1965 —24 PAGES Goldberg Is President's Surprise Choice for U.N. Post WASHINGTON (J»- President Johnson named Supreme Court Justice Arthur J. Goldberg today to be the new U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. In a quickly arranged ceremony in the White House rose garden the President, with Goldberg at his side, named his choice to succeed the late Adlai E. Stevenson. Goldberg said in a short talk that the message of Steven-son to the world most contin- tiop to “grant ns peace.” He promised to attempt to bring “the rule of law to relations between the various nations — it is that or doom ana we all know that,” Goldbnf said. The selection came as a distinct airprise. SPECULATION Speculadon had centered on the idea of a Cabinet reshuffle. had said yesterday that Johnson might offer the U.N. post to Secretary of State Dean Rnsk, and they t mi^t be receptive. Some of the talk revolved around the idea of shifting Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara to the State Depart- Goldberg was the late President Jcdut F. Kennedy’s first appointment to the Supreme Court. Before that he served in the Cabinet as secretary of Labor, after a long career as a labor lawyer. Now he will sit in the Cabinet in his new n^. Other names had flitted about in speculation on a successor to Stevenson, who died of a heart attack on a London street last Wednesday and was burled yesterday in Bloomington, Hi. ★ * it On the plane with Jotmson, going to and returning from the funeral, were Goldberg and bis wife. There was, however, little (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) 'Viet Situation Has Deteriorated' CARL F. FOSTER Foster Trial Ended; Verdict Is Tomorrow The guilt or innocence of Carl F. Foster in the violent death of his wife will be decided at 9 a.m. tomorrow. The verdict will be the sole responsibility of Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem, who heard the case without a jury on the request of defense attorney Joseph Hardig. The five-day trial of Foster on a charge of first degree murder ended this morning with Assistant Prosecutor Walter D. Schmier rebutting Hardig’s summation. Hardig was appointed by the court to defend Foster. During his summation yesterday, Hardig attacked the testimony of one of the prosecution’s key witnesses. Dr. Richard E. Olsen, pathologist at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. He claimed that Olsen was “too dogmatic’’ when he said that it was medically impossible for anything other than fingers and a thumb to make the bruises that appeared on the neck of Foster’s wife Angela. The death of the 25-year-old mother of three children was originally ruled a suicide by hanging on Feb. 28, 1964, but the case was reopened this spring and her death declared to be the result of manual strangulation. DID AUTOPSY Olsen concluded that she had not taken her own life after he performed an autopsy on her body 14 months after her death. Hardig emphasized that the testimony of two defense witnesses, Dr. Andrew Climie, chief pathologist at Harper Hospital, Detroit, and Dr. Robert C. Hendrick, pathologist at University Hospital, Ann Arbor, revealed that other things could have caused the marks. Hendrick also said that on the basis of the pictures presented to him, he, as a deputy coroner in Washtenaw County, would have seen no reason to recommend prosecution. Under cross-examination by Schmier, Hendrick did say that the pathologist who performed the autopsy would be more qualified to come to a conclusion. Called to the stand in rebuttal of earlier testimony, Olsen said that there was nothing said by the other two pathologists that would change his mind. Hardig argued that Angela Foster committed suicide because she possibly was in a state of depression resulting from a miscarriage the day before Christmas, 1963. Reds May Try Space Hookup MOSCOW (UPl) - The Soviet Union may attempt a rendezvous in space before the end of the year, informed sources said today. ♦ ★ ★ They pointed out that the 1965 space launching season has three, possibly four, months to run and the most advantageous time is the late summer. Some W e s te r n observers speculated the Russians might try to bring off such a spectacular in August—possibly to upstage the forthcoming American Gemini shot. But there was no evidence to support this belief. The Soviet cosmic splurge plus the approach of the ciemini shot quickened the tempo of speculation about another Russian spectacular. In Today's Press Defection Former Chiang aide de- ; 1 fects to Peking, blasts ^ I U.S.-PAGE 22. P Flood Threat I Missouri towns threat-* ened after heavy rains — ’ I PAGE 3. I 'Eye TesF I Gemini 5 spacemen to I view charts — from 100 t H mile up — PAGE 4. | I Area News.......... 13 | Astrology ........ 12 Bridge ........... 12 Crossword Puzzle.. 23 Comics ........... 12 Editorials ........ 8 Markets 18 Obitnaries 8 Sports 14-15 ’Theaters 22 TV A Radio Programs 23 Wilson, Earl . - 23 ’8 Pages ... »-ll ON THE TOWN-The thriU of a visit to New York City was heightened for members of the Ernest Landry family of Bloomfield Township yesterday when they learned it would cost them nothing. Mr. and Mrs. Landry and their six children are being treat- ed to a grand tour as part of a New York promotional program. Here showing them Rockefeller Center is Gladys Moir, the city’s “Summer Festival’’ queen. (&e story. Page 8.) Pontiac Boy 1st Waterford Lake Fatality An 11-year-old Pontiac boy became Waterford Township’s first water fatality of the year yesterday afternoon when he drowned in Loon Lake at Sandy Beach, 3412 Dixie. Charles R. L. Moring, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Moring, 228 W. Yale, was pulled out of shallow water at approximately 4 p. m. by his 14-year-old brother, Billie, and Jay Clarkston, a lifeguard at the public beach. Artificial respiration was administered by township firemen. The boy was dead on arrival at Pontiac General N-Blast Detectors Rocket Orbits Three Satellites CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. -Two Sentry satellites and a tiny pygmy satellite vaulted skyward today in a step toward development of a system to detect secret nuclear explosions anywhere from the surface of the earth to 200 million miles in space. The launch had been scheduled yesterday but delayed by mechanical troubles. The trio of radiation-sensing pnyloads rode atop an Atlas- Agena rocket which blazed brilliantly into the early morning darkness at 3:27 a.m. ★ ★ ★ The Air, Force said the three satellites had been drilled into separate egg-shaped orbits with 10 minutes. ★ ★ ★ Preliminary orbital figures showed the satellites were higher than planned, but the Air Force said it still was pleased. But Situation Not All Grim "McNamara Heads Back to U.S.; Apparent Try to Kill Envoy Taylor Is Foiled SAIGON, South Viet Nam UFl — Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara said today the Vietnamese situation has deteriorated in many aspects in the last 15 months, but the picture is not all black. Then he headed home from his five-day survey to report to President Johnson. McNamara said nothing in a news conference statement about expectations that this report will form the basis for a sizable increase in U.S. military strength in Viet Nam. “I can only tell you that our recommendations will be directed toward tnItUling the commitment of our nation to support the people of Viet Nam in their fight to win their independence,” he said. An apparent attempt to assassinate U.S. Ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor, a savage battle at a garrison post near the Cambodian frontier, and a second Viet Cong attack on the U.S. 1st Infantry Division’s 2nd Brigade at Bien Hoa were among developments of the day. it ^ir it Four suspects, including two boys, were reported arrested after discovery and disarming of a bomb planted at the entrance to a stadium where Taylor and senior Vietnamese officials were attending a unity day celebration. WITH McNAMARA'^^ Returning to Washington with McNamara were Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; and ADLAI’S SUCCESSOR-President Johnson stands beside Arthur Goldberg at the White House today. The President named Goldberg, associate justice of the Supreme Court, to be the new U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. Star Witness Gone in Gambling Case The star prosecution witness in the Madison Heights Steren Assembly Club gambling case has left the state and may not return to testify. Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jej^me Bronson revealed yesterday afternoon that tbAwR..fl ess, 29-year-old Margaret Allen, is in New York City. An assistant prosecutor and two state police .officers traveled there after learning Friday that she had departed. The long - postponed Steren trial, involving 21 defendants, is scheduled to begin Thursday in Manistee. Tbe trial was transferred there after the defense attorney claimed the case had received too much publicity. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Keep Sweaters Handy, Despite Warming Trend Although temperatures are I rising, the weatherman says that you will still need your sweater today and tomorrow. Seventy-six to 84 was the high predicted for today. Tonight’s low wiU be 45 to 50. Tomorrow will be sunny and slightly warmer with the high, 78 to 88. Fifty-one was today’s low mercury reading prior to 8 a.m. By 2 p.m. the temperature scale had reached 74. According to Lt. Frank Randolph of the Waterford Police Department, the Moring youth was seen floating on hi^ back by his brother who was playing on a dock with other boys. The boy apparently was playing in shallow water near the shore shortly before he was spotted by his brother 60 feet from shore in the bathing area. Randolph theorized that the boy, who was wearing underwater goggles, may have been trying to retrieve a rubber ball he had been seen playing with prior to the tragedy. The boy’s father, who was working at the time, told Randolph that he had been instructing his son how to swim. News Flash NEW* VORK (AP) ~ Two men today stole ^ million worth of stock certificates in a holdup in front of an office building on Broadway, New York’police reported. It was not immediately known if the certificates were negotiable. FLOODWATERS ON RAMPAGE-A house trailer carried by floodwaters of Line Creek in the Kansas City suburb of Riverside is crushed against a bridge. Torrential rains flooded a nearby motor court and carried away a number of trailers. Several communities in Kansas and Missouri were reported inundated by the rainfall—up to 21 indtes in places-mkhnt least 10 persons are dead (See story. Page 3.) Miss Allen was a stenographer for Democratic members of the state legislature when she assumed an undercover role for the state police in 1963 to secure evidence against the alleged casino. WENT TO CLUB The attractive brunette, posing as a gambler’s girlfriend, entered the club on two successive nights before it was raided on Oct. 11, 1963. “Her absence was unaiv nounced and unexplained," said Bronson. “She is a woman who has been subjected to tremendous pressures. A woman of normal stature would have caved in long ago.” ★ ★ ★ Details of her meeting with officials in New York were not disclosed. HAS HOPE “I am not overly optimistic that she will appear,” Bronson noted, “but hopeful that she will. “This is not the first time that she has been reluctant.” said Bronson. Bronson said, if necessary, they will try the case without her. He said that if this was done her testimony taken during the preliminary court examination in early 1964 would be read into the court proceedings in Manistee. , ★ ★ ★ She was on the stand seven days during the lower court hearing, mostly undergoing cross-exandnatlon by defense attorney Carlton Roeser of Pontiac. During the 11-day pretrial examination in Famdngton Township Justice Court, Miss Allen named each of the defendants and testified about their part in (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) MARGARET ALLEN Cancer Claims Clyde Beatty Famed Lion Trainer, 61, Dies in California VENTURA, Calif. (AP) - “I want people to see me close,” (Hyde Beatty used to say. “I’ll give them anything. I’ll give them everything. But not that one thing. I won’t give my life.” w ★ * The famed wild-animal trainer, his body crisscrossed with claw and fang marks from 40 years of facing death in the ring, lost his battle yesterday to an inner enemy — cancer. He was 61. more than 188 tinws in his career by Hons and tigers, lost most of his stomach in an operation in Jnly 1184. He resumed his wild animal act last Aprfl on Long Island, N.Y., with two thee shows a day. The next month be suffered a hemorrhage and returned to htt home, but refused to announce his retirement, saying ‘TU never quit.” He was hospitalized two weeks ago and died at 2:38 p.ro. in Community Menxurial Hoqji-tal. Only a nurse was wiQi him. Ifis wife, Jane, had just IMt, after he seemed to rally. TWO TftE PONTIAC PR:eSS. TUESDAY, JUI4Y 20, im City Is Expected to Act Tonight on Plan for Industrial Park Site City Conunission action is scheduled tonight on a proposal that the city acquire a projected industrial park site on Pon-tia’s southeast side. Essentially, under terms of an expected reccnnmendatioh from City Manager Joseph A. Warren, the city would take ovw the project fostered by the Greater Pontiac Industrial De-vel(H)ment Corp. (GPIDC). The latter group offered its interest in the park site to the city when the corpora-tioB decided earlier this year Senate OKs Benefits for Today's Gl WASHINGTON Wi-The Senate has passed an administra-tion-oppo^ “cold war" GI Bill of Ri^ts measure. Hie issue pf educational allowances and' home loan benefits for post-Korean veterans now is up to the House. The Senate rejected yesterday Republican propel to restrict the nid to veterans of / passed the bfll, « to 17. The House failed to act on a similar.Senate measure in 1959, but Seri. Ralph W. Yarborough, D-Tex., of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, has announced plans to hold early hearings on the new hill. Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield indicated he expects favorable House action this year, when thousands are serving in Viet Nam. BACKED BILL Mansfleld supported the bill, although the Budget Bureau, Defense Department and Veterans Administration opposed it. Sen. John G. Tower, R-Tex., voted for the measure on final passage, expressing hope that the House will convert it “into the Viet Nam GI Bfll we so badly need.” He had participated in efforts to restrict the benefits to men who served in areas of hostil-ties. ★ ★ ★ An amendment along these lines, offered by Sen. Leverett Saltonstall of Massachusetts and other Republicans, lost, 52 to, 36. EFFECTIVE DATES The bill covers all veterans serving from Jap. 31, 1965-the declared tejrmination date for establishing eligibility under the previous Korean GI BUI — to July 1, 1967, the termination date of the compulsory draft law recently extended by Congress. that it conid not make a go of Its industrial park plans. GPIDC plans called for an industrial park made up of smaU, light industry to locate on a 25-acre parcel on the northeast corner of South and East Boulevards in South Paric subdivision. ♦ ★ # The GPIDC offered to give the city its interest, valued at 1100,000, in the project. STUDY OKAYED The City Commission informally authorized a study of the park plan by Geer As^i-ates, city planning consultants. The Geer report was favorable to the city's taking over the project. The Geer report further proposed that pnly 19.6 acres or 175 lots should be acquired ini-tiaUy by the city. To do this, the city would have to assume financial commitments on the land made by the GPIDC. ★ ★ > Development cost of the 19.6 acres was put at $258,000 by the Geer report with the cash investment this year being only a porthm of this total price tag. COST DETAILS Warren is expected to detail the city’s cost for the park project in his report tonight. In other business toni^t. City Commissioners will receive a report calling for construction of two ^estrian overpasses in the city, and that negotiations begin for a third overpass over railroad tracks in toe north end. A staff recommendation wUl be presented for an overpass on Huron in front of Webster School and on Wide Track at Whittemore. * ★ The Uiird overpass would run Sheffield to Walton and span the railroad switching yards there. City Manager Warren is also to report tonight on the city indebtedness in another of his reviews of the city’s financial condition. Senate Unit Bocks Ex-Dixie Governor WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate Judiciary Committee today approved, 11-2, President Johnison’s nomination of former Mississippi Gov. James P. Coleman to be a judge of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Voting against recommending Senate confirmation were Sens. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., and Philip A. Hart, D-Mich. Three members of the committee not present at the conunittee’s closed meeting John L. McClellan, D-Ark .; Hugh Scott, R-Pa., and Geo-ge A. Smathers, D-Fla. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Sunny and slightly warmer today, high 76 to 84. Fair and cool tonight, low 52 to 60. Sunny Wednesday, high 78 to 86. East to southeast winds 5 to 15 miles per hour. Thursday outlook: Partly cloudy T«0«y In PMtlnc At I (jn.: Wind Vtloclly 10 n DIrnctlon: Southnut Sun Mtt Tundny nt 1:05 p.m. ly nt 5:15 i.m. ■t 12:55 p.m. ■t 11:47 p.m. Hiphnt Inmpnrnturc . On* YMr At* In Pontine TMo Onto In 03 Mtnday't Tnmptratprn Chnrt ma M }4 Oututh 07 40 innbn 71 50 Jttknnvllln M 74 RnpWl 70 50 Knnui City 70 71 r>M«n Ai M io« Angplus 01 SO Onncii 00 70 ........ukna 57 57 01 a New Orlanni 02 71 50 h New York 01 50 72 41 Omaha 71 M 03 50 Phoanix 105 73 07 70 Pittsburgh 73 45 55 M Salt Lake C. 05 50 70 50 5. Francisco 50 55 50 53 S. S. AAarla 50 45 04 SO Seattle 74 55 01 53 Tampa 01 75 71 50 WAITS FOR RALLY - Maxwell D. Taylor, U.S. ambassador to South Viet Nam, waits for a government rally to begin in Saigon today. At right is Satoru Takahashi, Jap- anese ambassador to the guerrilla-torn country. Police said they stopped a Viet Cong attempt to kill Taylor as he leR Cong Hoai Stadium, site of the rally. U.S. Helps Rights Tests in Bogalusa BOGALUSA, U. (AP) - Civil rights forces step up public accommodation tests, picketing and a march today following Justice Department action with suits to halt police (rffidals and the Ku Klux Klan from interfering with demonstrators. ★ ★ ★ A. Z. Young, president of the Bogalusa Voters League, told a rally Monday night of the plans for widescale public accommodation tests and demonstrations. ★ ★ ★ He said that Asst. U.S. Atty. Gen. John Doar, on a peacemaking mission to the racially torn town, “had brought something to town that we had lost.’’ LOST CONFIDENCE Young said, “We had lost confidence in the federal government and the FBI. ★ ★ ★ “At one time, we thought anything could be solved by the FBI. But these Kluxers in Bogalusa were so strong that they had the FBI eating out of their hands.’’ ★ ★ * Young did not elaborate after making the comment at the mass rally. Doar, who heads the qlvil rights division of the Justice Department, filed suits in U.S. District Court at New Orleans Monday to halt (My police officials and the KKK from interfering with civil rights demonstrators. HELD IN CONTEMPT He also asked that Public Safety Conunissioner Arnold Spiers and Police Chief Claxton Knight be held in contempt. Doar was on hand Saturday when white bystanders attacked a group of biracial pickets outside a shopping center about a block from the City Hall. ’There ! no city police on duty there. AP PMofax NATIONAL WEATHER — Weathermen predict showers and thundershowers tonight from the Pacific Northwest to the northern Rockies, over the upper and middle Mississippi Valley and in parts of the northern and central Plains. It will be cooler in the Pacific Northwest and warmer in the aoutbern Plains and from upper Lakes area to the northern Plains. House Boosts Military Pay WASHINGTON (fl - T h e House passed today a bill to give 2.6 million uniformed military personnel a $1 billion annual pay raise. The Senate has not yet acted. As passed by the House, the raise would average 10.7 per cent, with low-ranked enlisted personnel averaging 13 per cent and officers 7.2 per cent. Debate on the measure, twice as costly as proposed by the Johnson administration, was concluded Monday with no spoken opposition. Only the fact that some members were in Illinois attending Adlai E. Stevm-son’s funeral held up' its formal passage. House leaders put off the roll call vote to prot^ the absentees who want to be on the record in support of the bill. * * ‘k Because the average 10.7 per cent boost proposed is more than double the 4.7 per cent increase recommended by a presidential panel, congi^ional leaders privately predicted that tl|e uniformed services could expect a pay hike of betyveoi 7 and 8 per coit when Congress finally disposes of the measure, not yet considered by the Senate. Viet Situation Is Worse’ (Continued From Page One) dor-designate Henry Cabot Lodge, who is to relieve Jaylor in mid-August. “Gen. Wheeler, Ambassador Lodge and I have completed our five-day visit to Viet Nam,” McNamara said. “During 'this' time we discussed with representatives of the government their plans f«x-countering the intensified attacks of the Viet Cong. We reviewed with Ambassador Taylor and Gen. William C. Westmoreland, conunander of U.S. forces in Viet Nam, their appraisal of the problem and their recommendations for the future. “Over-all, the situation continues to be serious. As a matter DONALD B. BAILLIE Missouri Man to Head County Child Clinics A Springfield, Mo. man, Donald B. Bailiie, has been named administrative director of the Oakland Child Guidance Clinics effective Aug. 1, Vernon E. Keye, president, announced today. ★ ★ * Bailiie, who will Uve at 2024 Rosemont, Berkley, succeeds Donald J. Kern, who has been named regional consultant fdl* the Michigan Department of Health. ★ ’A' ★ Bailiie has headed the Greene (bounty Guidance Clinic in Sprin^ield for almost 14 years and has been a leader in community affairs in Springfield and 1 a statewide level. He served as chairman of the Missouri Health Agency Executives’ Conunittee for two years, chairman of the Southwest Missouri Association for Social Work, a director of the hfissouri Council on Children and Youth and as a-delegate to the 1960 IVhite blouse Conference on Children and Youth. New Zealand Prison Escape Attempt Fails AUCKLAND, New lAaland (AP) — Rioting prisoners hurried out Mount Eden jail today in an attempted break, but none of’the 293 inmates escaped, police reported. It was the worst prison riot in New Zealand history. k k k Armed guards ringed the outer walls of the jail as police and firemen fought the blaze touched Off by a hard core of rampaging prisoners. of fact, in many aspects there has been deterioration since I was here last, 15 months ago. ★ ★ ★ “’ITie size of the Viet Cking forces has increased; their rate of operations and the intensity of their attacks has been expanded; their disruption of the lines of conununications, both rail and sea and road, is much more extensive; and they have intensified their campaign of terror against the civilian population. “But toe picture is not all black by any meant. The Vietnamese peo]de contome to be wiiling to fight and to be willing to die in toefr own defense. “The Viet Cong, as you know, are suffering increasingly heavy losses and the U.S> combat forces are adding substantially to the military power of the government. ★ ★ ★ “Based on my observations and discussions here, we will be making a report to the President at some time within the next few days. 1 can tell you only that our recommendations will be directed toward fulfilling the commitment of our nation to support the people of Viet Nam in their fight to win their independence.” ON BATTLE FRONT On the battle front, an outnumbered Vietnamese special forces garrison fought off a powerful Viet Cong attack in a “valiant stand” early today but suffered “an awful lot of casualties,” a U.S. spokesman reported. He said Americans were among the dead. Six U.S. special forces advisers and 200 Vietnamese made up toe garrison, at Bu Dop, due north of Saigon and five miles from the Cambodian border. The Viet Cong repeatedly assaulted the camp, the spokesman said, but did not penetrate far into it. • k k k The biggest assault was launched at 8:30 a.m., the spokesman said. ’The Viet Cong hit the north wall of the camp, swarming across a moat and through a mine field. REPELLED The attack was repelled by a handful of defenders who held several fortified positions, armed helicopters and fighter-bombers from Bien Hoa air-Mise. The Viet Cong piso hit the 1st Division’s 2nd Brigade near Bien Hoa early today with mortar and small arms fire for the second day in a row. U.S. casualties were described as light. Three Americans were killed by a Viet Cong attack on the unit yesterday. ★ ★ ★ Sources in Hue, near the border between North and South Viet Nam, reported that North Vietnamese gunners fired across the frontier today at planes of the South Vietnamese air fwce. It was the first tone such antiaircraft fire across the border had been reported. . DURING RALLY The firing occurred during a rally of several thousand persons on the southern bank of the Ben Hal River, which forms the border. No casualties were reported and no planes were reported hit. I U.S. Denies 'Spy' Charge French Say Jet Plane Photographed N-Bose WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defense Department is investigating French charges of aerial espionage stemming from the flight of an American plane. It says “there was no intent to overfly any prohibited area in France.” Otoer than that, the Pentagon was keeping mum about the incident. ★ k k Frtmce accused the United States Monday pf photographing its Pierrelatte nuclear cmi^ex, the site where enriched uranium is produced for its nuclear weapons. The incident, the French Defense Ministry said, occurred Friday when a U.S. Air Force RFlOl reconnaissance plane snapped 175 photos, later surrendered on French demands. DENY INTENT The Defense Department'first said only that it was investigating the affair. Later it issued a brief statement ,saying that there was no intent to overfly any prohibited area. k k k Previously, American officials had said first reports indicated the plane had strayed off course while on a routine training mission. They said they doubted the craft had overflown the Pierrelatte complex. ★ ★ * The State Department only that an official French protest had been received at its Paris embassy. The French said the American plane made four straight photo paSises over the plant. A French Vulture fighter intercepted the craft on its second pass and identified it, they said, but the American pilot used his afterburners to outrun the French plane and make two additional passes. ASKED FOR FILM The French said they determined the American plane’s German base and asked for the film. ★ ★ ★ Jacques Baumel, secretary-general of the Gaullist Union for the New Republic party, said 28 of the 175 photos were excellent. Hie French said their official protest was handed to Robert H. McBride, the No. 2 U.S. official in the Paris embassy. BIRMINGHAM -t- A final (to-termination on the method of financing the city's first parking structure has b^n delayed four weeks. The aty Conunlsaon was .cheduled to make^i^ decision last night but acUoh was adjourned after a proposal was made to pay for the $1,174,000 garage entirely with parking revenue. The hearing will he held Aug. 16. Commissioner Carl Ingraham advocated the plan. The motion failed Ity a 3-2 vote. V - After the proposal was rejected, Ingraham asked for the postponement. 5 VOTES REQUIRED Noting that only five of the seven commissioners were i»es-ent and toat at least five votes are reejuired if an assessment is levied, Ingraham said: “I know how important this structure is, but in good faith I could not vote on toe structure with an assessment.” The commission last month tentatively approved a 10 per cent assessment against property owners in the downtown district, with the rest of the cost to be covered by parking revenue. k k k ‘ Last night’s hearing was scheduled for the final formal action needed — confirmation ,of the assessment roll. RATE HIKE City Manager Robert Kenning warned the commission that if there was no assessment it would be necessary to hike the rates on all parking meters. Commissioner David Breck JOHN C. AUSTIN Will Retire From County Auditor Unit John C. Austin, a member of the Oakland County Board of Auditors since 1938, announced today that he would retire Dec. 31 when bis current three-year term expires, ★ ★ ★ Austin’s county service began in 1929 when he was employed by the board of auditors as a member of the accounting staff. He was appointed to the board of auditors in 1938 by toe Oakland County Board of Supervisors and is now serving his ninth term on the b<^. Austin said he was making the announcement now to give the board of supervisors ample time to select a successor. ★ ★ ★ Appointments to tlte three-member board of auditors generally are made at the October meeting of the supervisors. k k k There is no mandatory retirement age for af^xrinted officials. Austin is 71. Birmingham Area News Financing Left Up in Air on City Parking Facility Gaming Case Witness Gone ((Continued From Page One) the alleged conspiracy to violate state gambling laws. Two of toe defendants, Eddie Guarella and Joseph Brooklier, had been identified earlier at a Senate investigating committee hearing as members of the Detroit-area Mafia, a crime syndicate. After her role in the investigation was disclosed, Miss Allen was criticized by some Democratic legislators for not telling them she was helping state police. Later, the Democrats failed to rehire her in the new legislative session, and she went to work for the Ford Motor Co. Tractor Division. NO REASONS Bronson refused to reveal where Miss Allen was living in New Yorjc or the reasons she gave for possibly remaining away. He indicated, however, that Miss Alien and her parents had been threatened. Roeser denied any intimidation by his clients. He labeled Miss Allen’s disappearance “a publicity stunt” and predicted that she would return to testify. k k k “Certainly she had not been contacted by anyone on our side of the case,” said Roeser. “None of my clients or anyone assdbiated with them would gq. within 50 miles of that girl.” FLEW TO NEW YORK Assistant Prosecutor James Finn, State Police Lt. Raymond McCWiell and Detective Christopher Swartzen^ber contacted Miss Allen after flying to New York late Friday. Finn has been assigned to bead the case in Manistee, along with two other assistant proBeento-s, Patrick Oliver and Thomas Plunkett. Oakland County Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem will officiate at the trial. A panel at 120 prospective jurors has been drawn. Each of the 21 defendants is allowed five legal challenges. Actor Faces Charge of Drunken Driving BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) — Actor Howard Duff faces trial in municipal court S^t. 15 on a charge of drunken driving. said an over-all Increase would have an adverse effect “By doing this we would be playing with fire,” he said. ★ ★ ★ Businessmen have objected to the 10 per cent assessment on the basis that they have been assessed for all the surface parking lots. WOULD BE TESTED Bernard Powell, owner of the Briggs and Birmingham Theater buildings, indicated to the commission that if a special assessment were a{g>roved it would be tested in court. Fred Pew of Max Broock, Inc., told toe commission that the first structure should be built without an assessment as an experiment. “We are tired of assessments,” he said. “But if this doesn’t work I am sure the businessmen of this town wilt go along with futore assessments.” The five-level structure, to be constructed on the existing parking lot fronting on Woodward and Willits, will house 566 LBJ Chooses Goldberg for U.N. Position (Continued From Page One) guessing that he was a probable choice to fill the U.N. vacancy.; Johnson said it was at his insistence toat Goldberg had agreed to leave a lifetime job on toe nation’s highest court and step into toe field of international diplomacy and ne- Like Stevenson, (toldberg comes from Illinois. ★ ★ ★ ■ Johnson recalled that while Stevenson’s heritage was from the oldest American lines, Goldberg’s is from some of the newest. ROSE FROM STREETS He said his new appointee rose from the city streets to the Cabinet Ind then the Supreme (3ourt. He called Goldberg a man of courage, conviction and hu-manitarianism. “Always,” Johnson said, “\te strive for a world where all men live in peace under a rule of justice under law. It is fitting that we should ask a member of the highest court to relinquish that position and speak for the United States before the United ‘ Nations.” Earnestly responsible, Goldberg will be the v the alert. The 25-year-old monarch threw out Papandreou because of the premier’s plans to purge political activists from the army. ’The king’s action touched off angry demonstrations in the Greek capital and other cities, including (^u, where Constantine, Queen Anne-Marie, and their new baby are spending the summer. WENT AHEAD Athanasiasdis Novas, the former president of Parliament, went ahead with fondation of his new government. FfteriititeD poft GOOD mmmm fxfra Covragm SptM ItofM —usually much MORE —usually LOWER than than you now ■-— ---------- Call Us Today! HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE 185 Elixobeth Lake Rood CwMr tl MMrshy M- t Blveto M W N The new premier must seek a parliamentary vote of confidence by Aug. 1. It will be a major test for the Center Union to which he and Papandreou belong. and temperatures in nuny areas were below normal. Readings in the low 40s and lower were reported from Upper Michigan southeastward into western Pennsylvania. Early morning marks ranged from 35 at Pmiston, Mich., to 93 at Carlsbad, N.M. Where the Girls Are , N. C. UB -Greenstxa-o College, a girls’ school that went coeducational in 1954, is a happy exception to North Carolina’s overcrowded colleges and universities. “We can accept boys and now have space for about 40 in a brand new dormitory,” said admissions officer AHen Kivctt. “Not only that,” Kivett added, “but any boys who register here will be outnumbered by girls four to one.” Emergency Road Fund is Increased in House WASHINGTON (fl - The House has voted to increase from $30 million to $50 million I the emergency fund for repairs to federal highways. The bill passed yesterday and sent to the Senate is effective July I, 1966. Emergency funds for the current year already have been provid^. Ex-Ad Agency Employe Gets Prison Sentence KALAMAZOO (UPI)-Circuit| Judge Wade Van Valkenburg sentenced Richard C. Siannon, 33, a former advertising agency employe, to fronr4% to 10 years in Southern Michigan Prison yesterday. ★ k k A jury found Shannui guilty Of obtaining $210 from the I. E. Sergeant Fuel Co. of Kalama-uo under false pretenses. He Was accused of selling the company an advertisement after he had left the agency. Shannon allegedly pocketed the money for the ad. SIMMS wS.SsktoSi NEW SBIVKE HOURS Wa*M*day—10 A.M. to REMINGTON liSSERVICE SIMMSil Ooetrie Shaven -Main floor featuring Quality GAS ^^FURNACE With LIFETIME GUARANTEE HEAT EXCHANGER TlieriO'Prodvds.fflcI^^^ -lUI aooo tUSINUS UNI- ______I tafloy and onmlM wr oMlHr Dm ■( hwHiia ond coalino oquipiMiit. TIm ilaidy CMWkiKlIao «i TImiim.P>M*'< fuHy outaowMc (gm w oO) oinliy air con- dHfening dagwidoblo garfgwigoti o*d IimHiio »«■*»»♦. * Exclusive Greater Oakland County Dealet CHANDLER HEATING CO. 5480 HIGHUND ROAD Va Mile East of Pontiac Airport SALES 614-3411 FHA TERMS NIGHT SERVICE OR 3-5632 *%*k 151st Semi-Annual Statement Lansing, Michigan, June 30, 196S First Mortgage Home Loans.....................................$ 94,526,006.98 Home Purchase Contracts.........................................4,211,970.05 Share Loans..................................................... 522,431.80 Home Office and Branch Buildings — Less Depreciation....................................... 1,816,861.30 Furniture, Fixtures & Equipment — Less Depreciation........................................... 189,213.11 . Real Estate including R. E. in Redemption ....................... . 192,786.05 Miscellaneous Assets...............................................43,634.65 Federal Home Loan Bank Stock................................... 1,300,000.00 United States Government Securities........................... 5,948,090.52 Other Investment Securities........................................46,841.60 ’Cash on Hand and in Banks...................................... 4,030,046.93 mwiEiw LIABILITIES... Shareholder’s Accounts including Dividends Credited.....99,222,998.72 Loans in Process................................................1,675,073.20 Tax and Insurance Escrow Accounts............................... 1,440,44401 Unapplied Credits................r..................................2,999.15 MisceUaneous Liabilities......................................... 17,823.81 Contingent Profit on Mortgages and Land Contracts............... 291,823.14 Federal Home Loan Bank Advance..................................1,500,000.00 Reserve for Interest Uncollected................................ 101,495.87 Reserve for Taxes.................................................196,381.95 "Reserves— Legal Reserve......................$6,500,000.00 Undivided Profits .................. 1,878,843.14 ...........8,378,843.14 DIRECTORS. ClifTord W. McKibbia Joseph C. Coleman Harold J. Reniger Rnbjr B. Pennell Waller A. Gi “ Paul F. Kreger Stanler V. Weed Charles F. Cninmins A. Tarlor Menaies Richard P. Lrman, Jr. Honorary Dircclort Bmce E. Anderaon For Wednesday Only CLOTHING DEPARTMENT SaleMLadMs’ Summer Dresses Values to $10,98 1.99 Take your choica of a lorge lalaction' of dresses, shifts, shirt waists, {acket dresses, cotton knits, eyelets. Some half sizes, some with sleeves, some without. Soma cottons, acetates in' prints, plaids and solid colors. In sizes 8 to 20 and 1216 to 2416. Including ^lly Goldberg' sizes 40-42-44. SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT 2Hnch Lightweight-Men^s Suitcase 14 & 16 Inch Durable Canvas Duffle Bags |59 Lar^ 36x60 Terrycloth Beach Towels Heavy duty, largo enough to wrap around. Attractive prints for the beach/ home and comp- |59 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Rani Brand Two Tana WhistKne Tea Kettle $3,95 Value |S3 Aluminum tea kettle, with on-nodized top. Whistles when hot. Push button, spout. 3 qt. size. Teflon Coatid-lroning Board IPad & Cover Set 50>oz. Liquid Decanter Unbreakable plastic decanter with screw top cover ond hinged pour spout, for mixing, serving, stor-hig. With separata 2 cop measuring cup. Decorated Dinner Plate Superior vHraous wore bi gay chonti- . deer aarthanwara pot* I background. Glazed fMsh. Crock and oven proof ' for extra utility. Yowr Choice ef Road er Spout Plastic Pdii Your choice of two styles of plostic polls. WHh a pouring spout or round top Bole handle. WonTchip, crock or 44t SIMMS!*. t! youR ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JULY 30, 1965 Long-Disfance 'Eye Test' Slafed for Gemini 5 HOUSTON. Tex. W - A space veteraa and « tattooed nxdde astMowt wDl have to be ea^e> eyed on their Gendnl S qwce miadoB next month. L. Oordoe Cooper Jr. and Oiarles Conrad Jr. outlined details of vbibUity experiments that will employ giant eye charts on the ground near Laredo, Tex., and at Carnarvon on the West Coast of Australia. These will be viewed from 100 miles up. The spacemen talked to news- men Monday about the eight-day fligl^ which the National Aeronautics and l^oe Administration set for Aug. 19. ★ ★ ★ A rende^ous with a snull utellite, which will be kicked out of the capsule on the second of 121 orbits during 195 hours in space, likewise is on the gram, x ^WAY CONVERSATION Another pr(^>osed test is a hookup for a two-way conversg-tion with fellow astronaut M. NEW! REDUCE EAT und LOSE <^UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CXPSULES! Easier to take and rrurfe effective than the powdered and liq- uid food supplement, and costs less including Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Phvfician, M.D No Gastritis or irregularity with Medic-Way caps. DOlN'T Diti —JUST EAT! As thousands have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP If OFF! MEDIC-WAY MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 I OHkn In OaklMS aM Wayna Cawitlaa - Ona la tMrscla Mila Hw iHrtiain out tT Hi* kaiaM w Ml Mm aot altw aiiV a law asm ana a*** MaTbaA an laslin a hanyl LET US FILL YOUR NEXT PRESCRIPTION Pharmacy Plaza Pharmacy ^ Jerry i Jeaime Daniaiera, RM ISM Ponflao Lk. Rd., Pontiae, MIeh. Phone ITI-1NT X4 Hour, A Day Stnlem FRnDELIVIIIY Mountain Valley Water r t—HOf wami anaiMi FE 2-5666 JiH’t Marini In mattan ol haalth aiwayi aaa your Physician THE INTERNATIDNAl WHISKY.. ^ Ertiy t/rop of tho 40% straight whisky /n Sir John is 12 yoars or mora old and blandod with 60% of tha ehoicast Grain Nautrai Spirits. Eighty proof. Schenlay Distillars Co., N.Y,C, Scott Carpenter, who wiD be in a diving bell beneath the Pacific Ocean off CaUfrumla. The spacemen said some orbits will be over the United States at night, and it may be possible to see the capsule streaking through the heavens. Previous flights all passed over this country during the day. it It it The fUght will end in the West Atlantic just after 121 revolutions. Cooper, 38, a Mercury astronaut and Air Force lieutenant colonel who has flown 34 hours in space, said the reentry is set for about 8:45 a.m. EST Aug. 27 and It probably will be visible over California in eariy morning as a "good meteorite show.” NO SPACE WALK . Cooper saicLthe back-up system for reentry won’t be Used again because the tfaruster fuel will be consumed in the rendezvous experiment. Both men were emphatic in saying no space walk will be attempted airi the capsule’s doors will not be opened in space even to throw out accumulated trash. Conrad, 35, an Ivy Leaguer and Navy lieutenant commander who wears a large tattoo on his left arm, said water, a byproduct of the fuel cell, won’t be used for drinkbig as first programmed. * The water oi»nes from the hytteogen and oxygen us«d to generate electrical power to run the spacecraft. It will be contaminated and^ filters would have to be installed before the water could be drunk, he said. Some of the visibility experiments to be conducted include sighting rockets fired from California and at Cape Kennedy. The two also will look for the plume of a high-speed rocket sled fired at Hollcunan Air Force Base, N.M. After sighting the fiery Masts, the astronauts will try to measure the beat content with an infirared instrument. Cooper said this sensor will be turned on the moon, stars and planets because scientists want signatures of these celestial objects without the earfii’s atmosphere distorting the images. ’Hie giant eye durts will be composed of a series of rectangles, starting large and gradually dwindling so that the smallest would be impossible to see UO miles high. These rectangles will be white, made from sea diells in Australia and from gypsum at the Laredo site. A SMALL PROBLEM—Reaching high enough to dial a telephone is just one of the problems faced by Claudia Bishop, 17, of Douglasville, Ga., who is just 3 feet 11. She and her companion, Eileen Shanahan, 23, of Chicago, are in Gloucester, N.J., for a convention of the Little People. The group comprises persons under 4 feet 11. \ Half Mars Photos Sent; Moy Show Vegetation State Officials to Study Effects of Strike Against Road Builders LANSING (JB — The possible effects of a strike by three unions on the Highway Department 340-million road - building program were to be studied by department officials today. The Michigan State Carpenters Council, the Bricklayers and the Operative Plasterers and Cement Masons unions Monday struck the Michigan Road Builders Association in a dispute over new contracts. ★ ★ ★ The Highway Department was to get reports from its 10 districts today on possible effects the strike rhight have. John E. Meyer, department director of engineering, said the strike might halt work on 344 bridge projects and an undetermined number of road projects. THREATENS DEAMJNES Meyer said a wwk stoppage during the summer months could upset road constructiim deadlines since coperete only can be poured from April through November. Efforts to reach agreement on a new contract had been continuing since the Carpenters Council contract with the MRBA expired Sept. 1,1964. it it it L el) n a r d Zimmerman, a spokesman f(»' the carpenters, and Robert Browning, MRBA executive secret^, agreed the negotiators were stymied on both economic and working conditions. Zimmerman declined to specify his union’s demands because "it is complicated and just confuses the issues.” , Browning said the union demands were “more than we can reach.” INSURANaBY Thatcher,* Patterson moans protection against burglary. If the cat burglar should strike your [ewelry, jvatches, furs as »ll as other items'would be re- ^__ Also all damage to tho house would be repaired. HUTCHER-miTERSON.IIIIL __fsoA pA/iriV«. Tofj/ Protection "Sinca 18S9 - Tailorad Policies, Total Protaction 711 Community National Bank Building, Pontiac. Michigan PEdaral 2-9224 WOodward 1-4S56 A RARE OPPORTUNITY W« aeed two sales Consultants, male. l%ey most have a late model car. They must like to wwk with people. They wlU be properly trained. They will receive ranch better dian average income. They will be working with the Beltone FamUy, world’s largest exclusive hearing instrument manufacturers. No experience necessary. No age limit. Established territory for right party. Inguiris at . . . Beltone Offk* wini Or. Jarry Lyiw Beltone Hearing Aid Center 138 N. Saginaw St. LOW IN COST. BIG IN ACTION. PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. CaU 3324181 to place yours, Lomt-priced 2-door fimFRlGlDAmr • Como 100 the big 120-lb. size top freezerl a Como touch the vegetable Hydratqr. • Compare Frigidaire shelf for 17 eggs. • Full-width, full-depth $helves~deep door shelf and more in the doo^ • ^ 00 Modtl PD-12Ti 12.1 eu.ft. (NEMA ilsndsrd) Aztie eeppsr at wliits <228 CLAYTON’S 2133 Orchard Lake Rood Phone:333-7052 Mon, end Fri. 'til 9—Tues,, Wed. and Thurt. 'til 6—Snt. 'til 5:30 P.M. /I PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -Mariner 4 forged well into the homestretch today in relaying to earth a possible 21 photographs of Mars — pictures of what some scientists say could be vegetation. AC* Jet Propulsion Laboratory Director William H. Pickering daid the rest of the Mars pictures would not be made public for “a matter of weeks” after the last picture has been received next Saturday. ★ ★ ★ The path of Mariner 4’s flyby past Mars last Wednesday indicated its eighth and subsequent pictures, taken less than 8,000 miles from Mars, might show dark areas which some experts think could be some form of plant life — though one unknown on earth. The first three pictures were at a distance of about 10,000 miles, and showed an apparently barren northern desert. The closest pictures, from about 6,-000 miles, were due toward the end of the photo sequence. CHANGES TRACKS At 8:15 p.m. Monday, Mariner 4's tape recorder successfully switched tracks on the stored photo-tape, thus marking the halfway point in relay of the pictures to earth. The equip-t was programmed to record 10^ photos on one track, then take loVk on the other, and relay all 21 photos in fashion. ALUMINUM PATIO LIMITED TIME ONLY NO MONEY DOWN 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! IMT SIZE UP TO AND INCLUDIN6 HUGE 10’X 20' CALL TODAY PATIO SUI Not INCLUDED FE 4-4418 am 6vtT 24 lUurt Including $m. HOMEOWNERS THB WEEK FREE EUCTRIC CAN OPENEB COMPLETELY INSTALLED L«rf«r |o8( ProMrNemtely PrktJ VALUE CONST. CO. ^ IW OPESI Michigan Bank SQUARE LAKE RD. AND TELEGRAPH The Area’s Newest and Most Beautiful Bank, OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY 9:30 to 4:30 • Daily Hours: 9:30 to 4:30, Friday to 6:00 • Com pint* Cantral Loan Snivicn • Drivn-ln Banking • Full Bank Services • Frnn Personal Checking Accounts When $300 Balance Is AAaintained Com* in and get acquainted with a bank datignnd for th* family "en-thn-go." Wa am open all day Saturday for your weekfnd banking convenience. Our compintn Central Loan Sffvicn is eager to snrvn you in one prompt centralized transaction. MICHIGAN DANK PAYS 100 AHENTION TO THEIR CUSTOMERS'NEEDS YES! 4% on all Saving Accoirnfs YES! Free Cheeking Aeeounts WITHmiUMOE ADD YOUR DOLLARS TO OUR 380 MiaiON OF SOLID BANK PROTECTION All Depmaiu inaurad aptaSl0,000 hy tha Fadaral DepotU tms THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 20. 1965 FIVE Foreign Aid Confore« Final Pattern Only a Guess R«cms Without Accord WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate and House confo^es tm the |3.36-billion foreign aid authorization bili were in recess today after faiiing to resolve the differences between the versions passed by the two chambers. Another session has been set tentativeiy for Wednesday. The jslncipal difference remaining after 11 days of negotiation arises from Senate insistence on authwizing the sum for each of the next two years and House firmness for a one-year authorization only. New Jersey produced 25 per Cent of the phonograph records in the country last year. Life Insurance For People Ages 39 to 79 Now you can apply by mail, direct to the Home Office, for a Life Insurance Policy providing $2000 guaranteed-rate lifetime protection. Application and rates mailed to you without obligation. Tear out this ad and mail today with your name, address, zip code and year of birth to Great Lakes Insurance Co., Elgin, 111. 60122. loll to O.pf. MG270P11J ‘1 Oreol Lok*. Inturonc. Co. ' Elgin, lllinoii 60122 ; Fiooto ■ U.S. to Shed Much More Blood in Viet (EDITOR’S SOTE - Hal Boyle has returned from an assignment to Viet Nam. This is his sign-off column from the war tone. By HAL BOYLE SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — There is a time to stay and a time to go, and my time to leave South Viet Nam has come. At least for now. The wayj the war is going, however, none can say how many who have served here for a while may be summoned to come again. For this is the war nobody really knows. Most of us see only fragments of it — even those in high places on both sides — and can only guess what final pattern will emerge. But it is clear that many more American tears and much more American blood will be shed before the situation is ended by a political agreement or a battlefield conclusion. We are no longer a referee ot an umpire in a foreip civil struggle. We are no longer merely advisers. We are no longer simply pocketbook sup- porters of the side we favor. We are military participants will become so in fuller measure. MORE THAN CASH Now we must supply more than cash. Now we must provide both badcbone and muscle if we propose to continue here. And it would help the situation if we were to realize this fully BOYLE CE SERVICE MISTM HHWU IwariM, Atmy 70 W. Lawrence St. at W. Widetrack 332-0241 It is easier to be an authority on the war in Viet Nam if you have never been here, or if you have been here SO hours, than if you have been here 50 days or, probably, 50 months. It is easier to have hard and clear views as to how it can be settled. * ★ * The longer you stay here the more difficult it is to be sure you understand what really is going on, or whether any solution offered is the right and satisfactory one. Here are a few of the am-fusing things you run into in this most bewildering of wars: The land is lovely, but It studded with millions of hidden bamboo and steel spike traps that will rip an unwary foot through to the bone. ★ ★ ★ The people seem, on the whole, friendly to the American outsider. But a cousin of the smiling little boy you pat on the head this morning may blow up your billet tonight. There are no fixed lines as in previous wars. Thei enemy is before you, beside you, and behind you. There is no absolute test to tell friend from foe. HOLDS aTIES Our side holds the big cities; their side holds most of the countryside. But they have fifth columns in every city, and we are trying to infiltrate the land areas they run. Our side has all the necessary big weapons to win an orthodox war — from aircraft carriers to I self-propelled guns. But they know better how and where and when to ambush us than we seem to know how, where and when fo ambush them. ★ W A The nawe Viet Ckmg we I the more of them come into fight. Their morale Is still unquestioned by most U.S. intelli^nce officers. Those same (^fleers, however, worry about how deeply the attrition of innumerable ambushes has affected the Bus Patronage Hits Low for'65 The seasonal slump in bus patronage hit Pontiac Transit Corp. last month as the number of riders dipped to a new low for the year. The bus firm carried 60,358 riders in June and reported revenue of $16,293, compared to 65,752 passengers and $16,652 in revenue the month before. / Patronage last month was behind that of a year ago, but revenue continued to top that of 1964. In June 1964, Pontiac Transit carried 62,534 passengers for a revenue of $14,717. ★ * ★ With the exception of one month — February — the bus firm’s monthly revenue this year has stayed over the $16,000 mark. In February revenue was $14,997. PASSENGER TOTALS Passenger totals for the first half of 1965 are behind last year, 407,307 to 430,209, while revenue is slightly higher at $101,631 compared to $96,040 for the first six months of 1964. Increases in revenue come primarily from a fare hike last fall. fighting spirit of the South Vietnamese. NO CHANGE The Ifiet Cong have had no change oi government since the conflict began. The South Viet- unese have had many. Some hold the war can never be won on the battlefield by either side, and that the only ante military stalemate is diplonoatic bargaining. WWW Some hold that diplomatic compromise would only postpone the issue. They feel that after a pause of a few months or years the Viet Cong would take over political power they have been unable so far to achieve ‘ ambush. This, in summary, is the present state of the war nobody knows the outcome of. WWW But it is obvious that we can no longer win it with a checkbook alone. As scores of thousands more U.S. troops make the long journey to Viet Nam, what they do there will bring home to us all the deepening price we must pay if we are to achieve our purpose in this mixed-up land. SHOP TONITE, THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS Until 9 P.M. PRE-SEASON SALE! BLANKET LAYAWAY Viet Death News by Phone Protested WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Stephen M. Young, I>Ohio, told the Senate yesterday he had been shocked and astounded to learn that some persons have learned of the death of their loved ones in Viet Nam by telephone from Western Union. “This aJd, heartless practice is inexcusable,” said Young. He. suggested an immediate Defense Department injuiry to determine whether military officials could not notify next of kin directly. A spokesman for Western Union said that there are strict regulations that wires notifying relatives of a serviceman’s death be delivered. Only in rare instances are casualty telegrams not delivered by hand, he said. SUMMER CLEARANCE! TYPEWRITERS Dog Has Top Position on Most Wanted List WINCHESTER, Ky. (ffi - The No. 1 spot on the “most wanted list" of Winchester police is held by Chester, the department’s 65-pound German Shepherd dog. (Chester chewed through leather strap holding him in his kennel and fled the home of his trainer, Sgt. Velmont Hall. Undorweod or L C. Smith Compere of »5ir with 90 day $OQ88 Guorantaa dLO New Roller —>, New Ribbon — New Cover Only 10 of Tbit Price! TRADE-M ACCEPTD-UYAWAY * YOU WBH PRIVATE KTEentES NAMU L SMITH INVESTMATIONS 1302 Pontioc Stofo Bonk Bldg. FE 5-4222--24-Hour Numbor FLINT- OFFICES IN -PONTIAC —SAGINAW r'" "" DC I I r A I D t L L L AIK Coast to Coast.. Deluxe Acrilan* Acrylic _ BLANKETS S.M, $399 ^ SmoW p Wm Belleair Voimpr Blanket, Reg. 6.99........ 4.99 \ A [ j\ \ Belleair Acrylic Blanket, Reg. 8.99...... 6.99 ^ Belleair Reversible Acrylic Velvet Blanket. 12.99 '‘A • _ Belleair Seasonaire Thermal Blanket, Reg. 7.99.. 6.99 Belleair Dream Tone Blanket, Reg. 8.99........ 6.99 Belleair Electric Blanket Twin, S. C. Reg. 12.88. 8.66 -1 V nK BiSileair Electric Blanket Full, S. C. Reg. 14.88. 9.66 Belleair Electric Blanket Full, D. C. Reg. 18.88. 13.66 Belleair Acrilan® Acrylic Elec. Twin S. C. 19.99 Belleair Acrilan 1963 SEVEN RALPH BOGART Legion Unit's Commander to Be Installed Soon Newly elected commander of the 18^ District of the American Legion is Ralph Bogart, 3102 McQ>rmick, Waterford Township. He is a member of the Hill-Gazette Post No. 143, Avon Tow^ip, and will be installed with other officers there Aug. 6. * ★ ★ Other officers to be installed are Thadeus Mieckowski, senior vice commander; Billie Coyle, junior vice commander; Chester Evans, adjutant; Harold Quinn, finance officer; Virgil Randolph, chaplain; Gerald Joyce, historian; and George Griffin, sergeant at arms. Child Deaths Still Mystery No Solid Clues Yet in New York Slayings NEW YORK (» - Police say they have no solid clue in the slayings of a blond 5-year-okl boy ^ his 4-year-old sister,, both of whom vanished mysteriously six days ago from their another’s Queens apartment. The investigation was intensified after the discovery yesterday of the blanket-covered body of a boy, believed to be that of Edmund Crimmins Jr. His sister, Alice, was found last Wednesday with a pajama It is estimated that by 1980 there will be 100 million passenger cars registered in the U.S. and that they will travel one trillion miles per year. neck. Preliminary investigation showed she had been strangled. The boy’s decomposed body was fpund by a passerby on an embankment overlooking the Van Wyck expressway within sight of the World’s Fair. A medical examiner said the child had been dead from three to five days. The spots where the two bodies were discovered were within a mile of the family’s apartment in Kew Gardens Hills, but in opposite directions. The girl was found in a vacant lot overgrown with weeds. The attractive red- haired mother, Alice Crimmins, 26, was estranged from her husband, Edmund, 29, for a year. They have been reunited by the deaths. She has told police the children were put to bed July 13 and that she checked on them as late as midnight. CLEARANCE SALE I Hi* 2 4-Button 1 S ' Elactric Dryer | 19 1 Automatic Washer—Whirlpool *149“ 1 Electric Range — Stoinless Steel Built-In *189“; 1 Gas Ronge— Stoinless Steel Built-In *179“ 1 Electric Range — 30" White *179“ 1 Gas Range — 30" *159“ 1 3 Gas Ranges—30" White with 5 Burner, Ctr. Grill *179“ HAMPTON ELECTRIC CO. ; 825 W. Huron St. Tdrmi Avoiloble FE 4-2525 ; '4|^' , AP PtwMax ' Pallbearers Carry Casket To Burial Plot 'World Statesman' Laid to Rest BLOOMINGTON, 111. (AP) -Adlai E. Stevenson, the wit and scholar who overcame diffidence to become “statesman for all the world’’ lay finally at rest today with his ancestors in a quiet country cemetery. His funeral took place yesterday after a five-day state journey from London, where he died of a heart seizure on a sidewalk Wednesday at 65. * * * President and Mrs. Johnson with their daughter, Luci; Vice Rail Line Asks Service Cut OK LANSING (AP) - Permission to abandon service on two trains daily between Grand Rapids and Traverse City was asked Monday by the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway. * ★ ★ The railway claimed in its petition to the Public Service Commission that the trains “have been all but abandoned by the traveling public.” ★ ★ ★ The trains, Nos. 25 and 26, leave Grand Rapids in the early morning for Traverse City and Traverse City in the early evening for Grand Rapids. The railway said that in the first 156 days of operation this year the trains carried an aver^ age of only between three and five passengers a trip. President and Mrs. Hubert H. Humphrey; and Chief Justice and Mrs. Earl Warren led an impressive corps of dignitaries who brought their respects to the former United Nations am-ador in this central Illinois community of 50,000 he cafled home. The humbler people, too --their number estimated at 60,-OOO by Bloomington’s police — paid him their tribute, some of them standing for hours in the sultry summer heat to watch the cortege. BROUGHT HOME The body of Stevenson had been brought home from England in the presidential plane to rest in state in the Washington Cathedral, and later in the Illinois Capitol in Springfield where Stevenson sat as governor from 1949 to 1953. Stevenson moved from the governor’s seat to unsuccessful candidate for president on the Democratic ticket in 1952 and 1956. * ★ * His body was borne here for a last few hours in which his neighbors called at the Bloomington Unitarian church. Then came the last two formal services in the church and in the Illinois State University field-house before a simple 13-minute burial service at the Stevenson family plot in Evergreen Memorial Cemetery. There were other memorials in other cities, and one in the hall of the United Nations in New York. ★ ★ * U.N. Secretary General U Thant said that Stevenson’s; “voice rang as the true voice of the people” and “his eloquence expressMi the hopes and aspirations of the common man the world over.” Rhee Funeral Set for Hawaii Koreans Eying How to Honor Ex-Ruler HONOLULU, Hawaii (AP) -Funeral service for former South Korean President Syng-man Rhee will be held Wednesday in a small Honolulu church he helped found 47 years ago. Later this week, the “Tiger of Korea” will return to his homeland for burial at the National Cemetery of the Republic of Korea overlooking the Han River at Seoul. Whether he will receive a state funeral In Korea was under *Bispusslon by the South Korean Cabinet. The ruling Democratic Republican party, whose membership includes many of Rhee’s former supporters, also held a top executive meeting to discuss the matter. Party officials said a majority opinion of those at the meeting was that the first Korean president should be accorded a state funeral to honor his devotion to the nation’s independence. They said that the government was likely to accord Rhee a “people’s funeral” — second highest honor that can be given a deceased national leader. Rhee’s wish to return to Korea and die in his fatherland was turned down in 1962 by the military government head^ by President Chung Hee Park. The government then said Rhee’s return home might incite another student demonstration like the one that caused his ouster in 1960. Uimnswerod phonos cost you immey Thty Lose Sales, Contacts, Friends and DRIVE BUSINESS TO YOUR COMPETITORS Today, moro than avar, opportunity it at likoly to phono at to knock, and only ONCE. Complotod ealit tpoll PROFIT. To koop your phonot on tho job ALL THE TIME, put our TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE to work for YOU. Our rotot oro probably much lowor than you think. Coll Mrt. Roblin at FE 4-2541 for comploto dotaik Or, ^ttor ttill, drop in to too hor. TELEPHONE ANSWERIN6 SERVICE, Inc. PONTIAC OFPICE, 15 W. LiwrinM . Other OfNeet in Sirmingham, Royal Oak, Southfield, Livonia and Ootroit. Need work? Use Pontiac Press Classified Ads Low in cost. Fast In action. Phone 3^181. PATIOSopORCHES CARPORTS IS YOUR KITCHEN OUT OF DATE! Thon it's time to coll POOLE LUMBER for on 'at homo' ottimoto on romodoling your kitchon. Wo con design and build o kitchon that will bo just right for your noodt and work habits. And wo con do it for a price that will be just right for your budget. LUMBER & HARDWARE 151 OAKUND AVE. - PONTIAC Phont FE 4-1594 BIG 10 SALE FIS Inkb UwrtrtI .mIOkFOIOINU Picture BBfldow Awninf BIG I w FT. PICTURE WINDOW AWNING EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1965 Await U.S. Funds in County Poverty War Is Marking Time Oakland County’s War on Poverty already Is being waged on paper but the proposed frontline held offensive awaits appropriation of more federal funds. James M. McNeeley, executive director of the comity’s utipoverty program, said today that planning and organ-utioB of the program is progressing under tte $77,000 federai grant received iast AprU. An application is pending for a $l.l-milUon operational grant that would put the poverty war into motion, McNeeley said. ★ ★ A McNeeley is hopeful this will be forthcoming by early fall. CENTRAL OFFICE Presently, the antipoverty program has a central office at 1 Lafayette with temporary offices in Pontiac and Royal Oak Township. The staff consists of McNeeley, the two area directors, Frank Alioto and Luther Flanagan, and three clerical McNeeley anticipates that 100 Waterford to Study Request for Wafer full and part time persons will staff each area office when the poverty war reaches maturity. AAA Several services are proposed for the poor who are defined as families with incomes of $3,000 per year cr less. SERVICES ITEMIZED These will include medical and dental assistance, counseling in legal matters, family pi^Iems and employment as well as home management guidance. Carl F. Ingraham, chairman of the Oakland County Economic Opportunity Commission which administers the antipoverty program, feels progress to date has been White Lake Township officials last night requested water service from Waterford Township for a proposed 80-acre residential development in White Lake Township. Waterford Township Board members referred the matter to township officials for study. White Lake Township officials, in a letter to the Waterford board, asked tiiat Waterford officials submit a proposed agreement with spMifi-cations and costs for furnishing water. Waterford Township Supervisor James E. Seeterlin and Kenneth Squires, water department superintendent, will study the project, which would costAin estimated $58,804. AAA Seeterlin said that the study would take at least one month. Both Seeterlin and Squires expressed initial opposition to the measure unless something suitable can be arranged with White Lake Township officials. 3 HOLES DRILLED Seeterlin noted that White Lake Township has drilled three holes without success in its effort to secure water for the section. Also at last night’s meeting it was moved and supported that Township Attorney Paul Mandel request a meeting with Robert Allen, Oakland County corporation procedures to be handled on , all township toning petitions. Township Planning Director Vernon Wiggins seeks clarification on a recent opinion of Allen’s which states that all Township Zonbig Board decisiems on zoning petitions, whether requested or denied, must be submitted to the Oakland County Coordinating Zoning Committee for review prior to final action by the various township boards. AAA In the event the attorneys are unable to reach agreement, the Township Planning Commission requests the Township Board to obtain from the state attorney general a ruling stating the ex- act status and position of the Coordinating Zoning Committee in reviewing Waterford Township zoning cases. PREVIOUS METHOD Previously, only approved zoning petitions had been submitted to the Coordinating Zoning Committee. Wiggins contends that the committee’s requests are unreasonable and that the county shonid be concerned only when property borders another township. “This is a prerogative of the Township Board,” said Seeterlin. Wiggins asserted, "We are an autonomous unit of government. AAA In other business last night, five bids were opened far a dump truck for the cemetery department, the final plat of Huntoon Shores was okayed' as was a special assessment district project for a sidewalk on Pioneer Street. APPARENT LOW BID The apparent low bid was $3,7M.$4 submitted by CMC Truck & Coack. It was moved and supported by the board that the bids be referred to the clerk for analysis to be reported at next Monday’s meeting. AAA The Huntoon Shores plat is located at Huntoon Lake off Airport Road and consists of 30 lots. Altogether there are 106 lots in the development. The Pioneer Street sidewalk, which will be financed jointly by residents and the township, will cost an estimated $549. Four families are involved. Also last night, the June building and clerk’s financial budget reports were approved as was the May police report. PONTIAC MAIi. OPTICAL aNTER fI1 Ingraham said he learned in a donference of county officials last week in San Diego that Oakland County was ahead of most communities at this point. AAA ’The City of Los Angeles, for example, has not received its initial War on Poverty grant, Ingraham said. U-M Vice President Eyed for Berkeley Post BERKELEY, CaUf. UR - Roger Heyns, University of Michigan vice president, is one of about a dozen persons being considered for appointment as chancellor of the University of California, according to University President Clark Kerr. “No formal offer has been made to anyone,” Kerr said, ‘“niere is an active list of about 12 names. Expirations are still being carried out.” Area Family Gets 'Free Ride' in NY If you asked the Ernest Lan-drys of Bloomfield Township, they’d tell you the cheapest way to visit New York is to take a large family and plan to see everything. Mr. and Mrs. Landry their six children arrived In New York yesterday with the idea that their vacation would cost th«n a little something. No so, the City Convention and Visitors Bureau informed them. ’Die Landrys, 177 Barringhxi, will be guests of the city as part of the annual “Summer Festival” promotional program. ★ A A A chartered bus will take them sightseeing around the city. DAY’S ACTIVITY Then they’ll attend the World’s Fair, dine at some of the city’s best restaurants, see a Yankee baseball game, take a boat ride around Manhattan and see two shows. It all happened because Mr. and Mrs. Landry and their offspring, aged 6 to 18, constitute one of the largest families visiting New York. They were spotted when they called ahead for reservations. Stunt Ends in Death SAUSBURY, Rhodesia (UPI) —Arturo Grice, a “human cannonball” from Spain, was killed last night during a circus here. Grice missed the net and landed on his head. WHAT LIES AHEAD?—Many children and young people recovering from mental illness at Pontiac State Hospital have no home to which to return after their stay in the hospital. In such cases, the hospital seeks to place the y^ngsters in boarding homes which provide the needed security, affection and discipline. State Hospital Is Seeking Families to Board Children The Children’s Service of Pontiac State Hospital is seeking boarding situations in private homes for several youngsters recovering from mental illness. Some of the children have no home to which to return. Others can’t be returned immediately due to stresses within the home which may adversely affect their recoveries. The Children’s Service attempts to place these youngsters in private homes which will offer them security, affection, guidance and discipline that every child needs for proper development. A , A A Pontiac State Hospital pays a daily rate to persons who are accepted as foster parents of these children. OTHER PROVISIONS The hospital also provides all clothing and medical requirements. > A social service staff member is available to provide counsel to foster parents who feel the need fOr this service. The illness of most of the children for whom a boarding situation is sought resulted from emotional instability within their own homes. AAA Such children can make sound recoveries in the proper environment, according to hospital officials. HARMONIOUS SITUA-nON Hie h 0 s p 11 a 1 requires that placement of these youngsters be in a home that will fulfill the child’s need to be in an har- monious situation with a father and mother heading the household. AAA A simple evaluation of a prospective home by a hospital staff member can qualify it as a legal boarding establishment. AAA Persons interested in providing boarding services for children may contact John Taber, director of social services for the hospital’s child psychiatry department. 0, O, should Have Left 'O' in Ohio Alone Peafbs in Pontiac Area I FLOYD A. CHASE ^rvice for Floyd A. Chase, 48, of 4406 Rohr wQl be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow Rt Sparks-Grif-fin Funeral Home with.„burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mr. Chase died Sunday after a brief illness. \ KAY DERBYSUqiE Service ftir Kay Derbyshire, 28, of 502 S. Sharon will be 11 a.ra. tomorrow at St. Andrew’s Episcopal Churcb, Waterford Township, with burial In Lakeview Cemetery, Clark-ston, by Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. » Miss Derbyshire died Sunday following an automobile accident. CHARLES R. L. MORING Charles R. L. Moring, 11, of 228 W. Yale drowned yesterday. His body is at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. ■ The boy, a student at Owen School, was a member of Friendly General Baptist Church and Pontiac Boys’ Qub. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Moring; three brothers, Billy at home, Jimmie J. of New Orleans, La., and Donald G. of Oakland, Calif.; and one sister, Beverly at home. CHARLES C. O’CONNELL HOLLY — Service for Charles C. O’Connell, 82, of 204 Maple will be 2 p.m. Thursday at the Dryer Funeral Home. Burial will be in Lakeside Cemetery. Mr. O’Connell died yesterday after a long illness. He was a retired farmer. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Bemetta McGinnis of Holly; three sons, Chester of Jamestown, Calif., and Ronald and Robert, both of Fenton; two sisters, Mrs. Frank Stack and Mm. Claude Gordon, both of Holly; seven grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. MRS. N. STANLEY PEABODY BLOOMFIELD HILLS-Serv- WASHINGTON (UPI) - Rep. Wayne L. Hays, DOhio, thinks Postmaster Gen. John A. Gron-ouski ought to worry more about getting the mail delivered than about Zip codes and changing state abbreviations. A ★ A Hays complained yesterday that Gronouski recently changed the abbreviation of his home state from “O.” to "Oh.” He said that when Zip codes were introduced, the result was that deliveries between Ohio and the capital were slowed from overnight to four days. ★ A A “The three most dangerous men in the world are an alcoholic with a bottle of whisky, and arsonist with matches and a postmaster general who likes to experiment,” said Hays. - Cash and finances ore not a matter of concern tp some ... to others they ore. We hove o complete ronge of services and extended payments ore available, if necessary. Thoughtful Service Outstanding in Pontiac for Service, Facilities 46 Williams Street FE 8-9288 vru; teenf Interest Exempt From All Present Federal Income - Taxes and Mkhiidn Intangibles Tax $1,500,000 Clarkston Community School District Oakland County, Michigan Mad My 1, 1*6S Dm Tlka DitirM, |Mp«l«liaii 10,000, arts abo« Hat halwaaw PanNoc and Flint, aapwximataly SS mlla* narlh-waal af Mroil, and lurrawndt Ilia Vllloga af Clarktiaa. Tlia ganHy rallinf, waadad hllk and lohat in Mia DItIrM hova ol-•roclad incraaaine awbarban davalapmant, wiHi ranch tyya homoa In Mm $15,000 la $15,000 ronga. AnaHiar racoM hand Ic Mia ■ $300 ta avar $1,000 par ocra, abviawily in anUcipcMian a( canlinuad cvhiirhan grawMi. Ihroa Impartant higliwayi tarva Nia Dlilrict. M-15 (aorhclaii-loy City), aid US-10 (DalraH-Flinl-Satlnawt and Mm lacanMy and MNnca narMi la Mm Mackinac Iridga. Thara ora Miraa IMor* chongac In Mm Diilricl an 1-75. Di...................... pralauianal, amcvMva and high * THESE BONDS HAVE BEEN QUAUFIED FOB PABTICIFATION IN THE STATE LOAN FUND ^EQUIVALENT TO A STATE GUABANTEE- NacU aad NoU.aaBiiaI IbIctmI (M» I tad 4a»iaU Dm . Pric* $ 10.000 4M% 1967 2.65% 10.000 4Vk 1961 2.75 10.000 4^ 1969 Z8S 1S.OOO 4Vk 1970 2.90 15.000 4Vk 1971 ^95 15.000 4Vk 1972 3.00 25.000 4H 1973 3.05 25.000 4 1974 3.10 90.000 3H 1975 3.15 30.000 3H 1976 3.20 CO.OOO 3W 1977-78 3.25 35.000 3M 1979 3.30 70.000 9Vk 1980411 3.35 110,000 SW 1982-83 3.40 70,000 3Vk 1984 3.45 100,000 SVk 1985 100 290,000 3H 198607* 100 290,000 3A0 198848* 3.SS 290,000 3.60 1990-81* 100 aa. WrM. Ml t.nhUtm. MpUaail H dMoftad In the cMdil dccolar. Rrst of Michigdn Corporation Blytk & Co., Inc. dark^^Dejy >> Co. Manley, Bennett, McDonaldi Co. Area Motorcyclist Is Hurt in Crash Robert M. Adler, 122 E. Co. lumbia, was reported in fair condition this morning in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following motorcycle accident early last night at Elizabeth Lake and Crescent Lake Roads. I * * A I I Adler received head injuries ■ when he lost control and was thrown from the motorcycle. A A A He was traveling southeast on Elizabeth Lake when the mis- | hap occurred, according to Waterford Township police. I AAA i. Adler told police ha blacked ' out and was unable to remem-11 ber what happened. ice for Mrs. N. Stanley (Louisa) Peabody, 79, of 3847 Peabody will be 1 p.m. Thursday at the First Presbyterian Church, Birmingham. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery by Manley Baijey Funeral Home. Mrs. Peabody died yesterday after a long illness. She was a member of the First Presbyterian Church. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Donald J. Parry of Chatham, N. j., Mrs. Thomas T. Stolberg of Birmingham and Mrs. Charles C. Hoover of Ca-pac; three sons, N. Stanley of Fenton, James W. of Bloomfield Hills and G. Robert of Fenton; one sister; one brother; and 27 grandchildren. CHARLES W. PRICE INDEPENDENCE T 0 W N-SHIP — Service for (Charles W. Price, 49, of 5280 Clarkston will be 2 p.m. Thursday at Stensels Funeral Home, Farmer City, 111. Burial will be in Maple Grove Cemetery, Farmer City. Arrangemenis are being handled by Lewis E. Wint Funeral Home, Clarkston, where the body may be viewed until 10 tonight. Mr. Price died Sunday after a long illness. An employe of the Motor Car Transport Co., he was a member of Joe Williams Post 55, American Legion, Farmer City. Surviving are his wife, Emma; his mother, Mrs. Laura Newberry of Urbana, 111.; five sisters; and three brothers. WALLACE W. SMITH BRANDON TOWNSmP-Ser-vice for Wallace W. Smith, 84, of 3127 Baldwin will be 2 p.m. Thursday at the C. F. Sierman, Funeral Home. Burial will be in Mt. Pleasant Cemetery. Mr. Smith died yesterday after a short illness. A retired carpenter, he was a member of the Oakwood Full Gospel Church. Surviving are his wife. Myrtle; and six daughters, Mrs. Lula Barton of Myert, Calif., Mrs. Nora Button of Roscommon, Mrs. Mable Richardson of Flint, Mrs. Helen Robinson of Roscommon, Mrs. Ruth Smith of Detroit and Mrs. Dorothy Algo of Oxford. Also surviving are two sons, Kenneth of Flushing and Bor-ros of Detroit; one brother; one sister; nine grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. Fiscal Hearing Due in Pontiac Pontiac will be among several state sites slated for public hearings on tax reform during the next month to provide a guideline for fiscal policy. The local hearing is scheduled Aug. 4. No location has been specified yet. CowincUBg the series of hearings begfaming Monday in Lansing will he members of the House and Senate taxation Rep. H. James Starr, D-Lan-sing, said that the purpose of the hearings will be to build up public understanding of fiscal problems and support for necessary changes in fiscal policy. AAA The hearings are expected to include questions such as the exemption level to be allowed under a state Income tax and^ whether food and drugs should be exempt from the state sales tax. Bill Gives Page Jobs to Needy Collegians WASHINGTON (AP) - Legislation has been introduced to end the hiring of young teen-agers as pages in Congress and give the jobs instead to needy college students. Rep. W.. R. Hull, D-Mo., the sponsor of the bill, said the boys 14 to 18 years old who now serve as pages are sent away from home without adequate supervision; are overpaid; and given an education, the special three-hour-a-day page school, that is of debatable value. PERSONALIZE YOUR GIFTS IN GOLD STAMPING • Napkins • Convention Guest Tags • Gift Ribbon Gold Embossed Names on • Bibles • Books • Leather Goods CHRISTIAN UTERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Ave. FE 44581 PERRY DRUG COUPON FREE! 30 HOLDEN RED STAMPS NO PURCHASE NECESSARY LIMIT 1 - ADULTS ONLY - EXPIRES JULY 25 rainiu mme wtniirQM mi l•M«iR Ml Eatl ll. See ua today. SPECIAL VOSS and BIJCKMER 209 NATIONAL BUILDING - FE 4-4729 TUK PONTIAC PKKyS, TUK8QAY. JULY jo. 1»65 NINE Making Visits Bowers’Sons Traveling in Europe Mrs. Victor Sutt (Kay), St. Joseph Street, West Bloomfield Township, has been appointed chairman of Pontiac Area United Fund women’s residential campaign. She is responsible for getting Some 500 workers for the 1965 campaign. Long a UF volunteer, Mrs. Sutt is also active in other community activities. The Sutts have three children: Glenn, 19; Kathy, 17 and Randy, 14. Mrs. Sutt won’t have many moments to sit and knit when the campaign gets into full swing. Plan WTHS Reunions The Waterford Township High School aass of 1955 will hold a reunion from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Saturday, July 31, at Edgewood Country Club. ★ ★ ★ Further information may be obtained by contacting Carol Wolverton, head of the reunion committee. * w ★ The ISth class reunion of the WTHS class of 1950 will be held from 6 p.m. anti] 1 a m. Aug. 14 and 15 at the CAI building. ★ ★ ★ A social hour is scheduled from 6 to 7 p.m. followed by dinner and dancing. Music will be by Wally Earl. For information contact Mrs. John Mellema of Dill Drive. VFW Unit Meets Members of the Veterans of Foreigft Wars Auxiliary No. 1008 will gather Wednesday at 1 p.m. in the Legion Hall on Auburn Road. Group Elects Delegates for Convention Delegates for the Veterans of World War I national convention at Tampa, Fla. early in September were elected when Oakland County Auxiliary No. 49 of the group met for a cooperative dinner at the American Legion Home. Five auxiliary members attended the recent state convention in Sault Ste. xVarie where Mrs. Harold Schingeck, Keego Harbor, was elevated to senior vice president of the Department of Michigan. A second prize for Americanism work was awarded the group at the convention. On Aug. 7 a picnic is planned at the Union Lake home of the Sam Korvanens. It's Polite to Wait for Others By The Emily Post Institute A question often asked is, whether it is necessary for guests at table to wait until all have been served before starting to eat. In answer: At a small table of two, four, or even sjx people, when the delay will not be sufficient to cause the food to become cold or the souffle to fall, it is poiite to wait to start eating until all have been served. In this case, the hostess should pick up her implement first, and the others follow suit. If the group is larger, however, it is not necessary to wait until all have been served. The hostess, if she is at all aware of her guests’ comfort, will say, as soon as the first two or three guests have their food, “Please start — your dinner will only get cold if you wait," and the guests take her at her word and start immediately. If the hostess says nothing and you realize that her attention has been devotcid to serving or supervising, or that she has simpiy forgotten to say anything, it is not incorrect to pick up your spoon or fork after five or six people have been served, and the others will soon follow your lead. WEDDING REHEARSAL Q: I am going to be married next week. We are planning to have a rehearsal at the church the night before the wedding. I have been told that the bride does not take part in the rehearsal but merely sits on the sidelines. Is this true? A: The bride rarely takes part in the rehearsal as it is supposed to be bad luck. Someone else, anyone who happens to be present, is appointed her stand-in. Some clergymen, however, feel that superstition, has no part in religion and, unless the bride feels strongly, insist that she play her own part. Who pays for what at the wedding? The Emily Post Institute booklet, entitled “Wedding Expenses,” answers this question in detail. To obtain a copy, send 10 cents in coin and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Emily Post Institute, in care of The Pontiac Press. By SIGNE KARLSTROM Jonathan and Henry Bowers, sons of the Paul S. Bowers, are having an interesting summer traveling in Eunqie ★ w ★ Jonathan, who is a student at the University of Michigan, left in May to visit his moth-er’s sister. Countess Piccolo-mini in Florence, Italy. He also is spending some time at the Etruscan digs at Spannoc-chia. ★ ★ ★ . Next month, he will meet his brother who is in London and visiting his godnnother and her husband, Mr. and Mrs, Dennis Whitehead at Cambridge University. ★ A •* Mr. and Mrs. Albert Thorndike Jr. and Albert III (Mrs. Thorndike is the former Delly Bowers) are here for the summer, staying in the Robert Bates home on Greenwood Road. it it It ' Mr. and Mrs. Martin Arch-angeli have moved to their new home on Guilford Road. Presmitly, Mrs. Archangel! says, they are sort of camping, trying to get things in order vrtiile workmen are busy on various projects. ★ ★ ★ Their daughter, Christie, is at the University of Pennsylvania in clinical training for occupational therapy. Fortunately for Christie, the . Bryn Mawr tennis courts are close to her living quarters with the swimming pool near too. Christie is an enthusiastic tomis player. ir it it Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Moore with Evan and Brewster spent a long weekend with Mr. Moore’s aunt. Miss Eva Moore at Crysta! Lake. Last week, Mrs. Arthur Raisch entertained at morning coffee for a group of friends rf nuny years, honoring Mrs. Hazen Streit who used to live in this area. Dr. and Mrs. Streit now reside in UMesa, Calif. They came in their own plane (both are pilots) and are the houseguests of Dr. and Mrs. Arthur Seaborn. ★ ♦ ★ Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Wellock will have as house-guests, Mrs. Wilbur Wocken-fuss and her daughter, Janine, who will arrive next week from Indianapolis. Mrs. Wellock will be entertaining for lunch at the Village Women’s Club, honoring Mrs. Wockenfuss July 27. Lacota Road announct the engagement of their daughter, jMary Suzanne ' to Earl William i Nicholie, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. Delos Nicholie of __ jLafce Angelas. September 18 nows are planned for the couple who will presume studies at Michigan State University MARY SUZANNE MADOLE tall- If Takes Men to Tell Gals Whaf Faults They Possess Mother's Attitude Wrong; Daughter Isn't Guilty HELEN HENNESEY Women’s Editor Newspaper Enterprise Assn. NEW YORK - Professor Higgins' diatribe against women delighted everyone in the “Fair Lad;^’’ audience. But he’s not the only chap to complain about the fair sex. I’ve found you can get the shyest fellow you know to talk freely when the subject gets around to what’s wrong with women. ★ ★ ★ Last week I baby-sat for friends. The husband, a mild man who defers to his wife, is the epitome of courtliness. ★ ★ ★ Yet, he found the courage to bellow “You can’t go out in THAT,’’ when aU 160 pounds of her drifted down the stairs in a brief Coureges-type skirt that showed ample (not dimpled) knees. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I’m not the type who vrrites to a news- I , Mr. and Mrs. Leon Thomas of Rivona Drive announce the engagement of their daughter, Susan Margaret to Philip L. Ragatz II, son of Mr. and Mrs. Philip L. Ragatz of Hazard Street. No wedding date has been set. Motion Accenting Fall Footwear Motion provides the decisive factor in design for this fall’s footwear silhouette. Toes are a fashion story in themselves, with an importance that hasn’t been equaled since the days of the needle toe. Shapes are now charmingly full and rounded with a young look. ^ Materials are pliant and toes have a suppleness that sets them well apart from the rigid, bui!t-up baby doll 6f two decades ago. Viewed side-on, the new toes are rather flat, thus creating a line that is not only indispensable to good fashion now, but also makes good sense. LOW HEELS While these toes look , best with low heels, there is some experimenting with heels in the mid to somewhat higher range, and the look is good as long as the heels themselves are blunted and sturdy. Where toes are less round or blunted, heels rise to keep the look in balance. Here the movement is still away from the elongations of past seasons. * * * The cowboy heel is good now, sometimes squared off at the back. The boy bed is better than ever, always broad based and straight and in heights that vary from wafer thin to a little over an inch. For city hnd evening wear this low heel is high fashion. The all-purpose shoe is passe. What is in is a shoe for each look, each coior concept. each destination of a busy day. Everywhere in the fall collections, the forefront of fashion is not only shortened and rounded but built up, high tongued, strai^d, peaked or tied to give the front of the shoe the highest importance. Buckles are perhaps the most important single decorative device in all the fall collections. They appear on most of the strappers interpreted in brass and silver and elegantly Openly beautiful is a French red kid halter back slipper spiced with a straight-away black grosgrain bouk By Gamins ,. . $20. Hosiery by Hanes. A National Shoe Institute Selection. , carved steel. And they add new glitter and importance to shoes that dance all night. • Boots have become true classics running the gamut from boot shoe to high side, high heel and high front. Every indication is that they will enjoy a long and vigorous life. * * * Tops this season are the boots that barely reach the calf, show the tender curve of leg below the knee. White kid is the favorite but there are tweeds and smooth and brushed leathers in every color. WHITE FOR WIN’TER Colors run through all the young shoe shapes giving them added snap and flair. Newest are the winter whites ranging from immaculate chalked tones to the somewhat beiged ivories. Blues are this season’s beauty queens, along with the turquoises and the fragile whitened blues. Greens are livelier than ever and have a softened touch for daytime wear. Winter’s wonderful materials are used lavishly in the evening elegants. Laces, damasks, velvets, silks and brocades are all part of the newest evening look. Mules are pulling the greatest fashion weight in the stay-at-hom«, their vamps decorated with buckles, braid, brilliants and bows. He had found his voice. Gone was the shy, diffident man I had known for years. ★ ★ * , “How 9razy can women get?” he asked. “Do they have to wear whatever is new even when they Took terrible in it?’ Those short skirts are for kids, not cows.” ★ ★ ★ The poor man was beside himself. I know he didn’t honestly think of his wife as a “cow.” ★ * ★ But I couldn’t blame him for deploring her foolishness. Too many of us are slaves to fashion rather than good taste. ★ ★ ★ We tend to forget that the models in magazine photos don’t eat pasta and desserts— and we do. I sometimes wonder if there isn’t a shop somewhere that’s making a fortune selling magic mirrors. The kind I have would nip in the bud any desire to wear anything simpiy because it’s new. But I, too, came in for criticism from a male friend, jealous of his prerogatives. We were going out to dinner and I marched to his car, opened the door and got in. - “You women won’t let a man be a gentleman,” Old Glass Collection on View A collection of paintings, drawings, prints, sculpture and American glass assembled by longtime Detroit residents Dr. and Mrs. George Kamper-man is now on exhibition at The Detroit Institute of Arts (through Aug. 29). ■Ar ★ ★ The generous gift of this collection was presented to the museum by Mrs. Kamperman in 1964. Both she and the late Dr. Kamperman were friends and ardent patrons of many Michigan artists, of the Art School of the Society of Arts and Crafts and of the Founders Society Detroit Institute of Arts. The Kamperman collection — 112 pieces of 19th century American glass, 61 paintings, sculpture, prints and> drawings was created by the couple for their own personal enjoyment. ★ ★ ★ However, Willis F. Woods, director of The Detroit Insti- tute of Arts, emphasizes, “Such was their taste and judgment that the collection will have a broad appeal to a wide public. These objects also serve extremely well to strengthen and augment the Institute’s collections.” ★ ★ ★ Displayed in gallery 32, the group of rare American pressed, molded and blown glass includes many types and shapes not previously represented in the glass collection of the Institute. A delicate dancing pump of multi-color brocade rises on a high heel and employs an ankle strap for ultimate flattery. By David Evins . . . $45., ABBY paper columnist for advice, but I have no one else to turn to. We have a 21-year-old' daughter of whom I’ve al- | ways been so ^ very proud, 5: until now. My ‘' bubble has burst. 1 went to work in an office to send her to college. She was an honor student and married the week after she graduated from college. She had planned to teach school in the fall. Now she’s told us she is preghant and can’t teach. Her doctor told her the baby is due exactiy nine months and ten days after her wedding date! I can hardly stand to look at her, Abby. I know everyone will laugh and count the time. If that baby comes early, I will die of shame. I haven’t been able to eat or sleep properly since I’ve known about it. Perhaps if you publish a part of this it wilt make other girls stop and think before putting their families in this embarrassing situation. * SAD MOTHER DEAR MOTHER: So what if the baby DOES come early? Your daughter is married and your melodramatic moaning about “shame” is unwarranted, unnecessary and brutally selfish. Retire to the wings. Mom. Your daughter has the stage. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: This is for “DEPRESSED,” the 22-year-old woman who argued with her boyfriends about her make-up. I am 20 and I wore quite a lot of make-up until two years ago. My bojdriend asked me to take my make-up off as be thought it cheapened me. So, because I wanted to please him, I washed my face, and now I would never be bothered with make-up again. I always look clean and now I don’t have to worry about getting makeup all over everything. Looks are only skin deep an9 a person should be Ukri for herself. We are going to be married soon. I am so glad I washed my lacs. I can see things a lot more clearly now. KATHY ir -k it DEAR ABBY: Years ago I had a boyfriend who was always haiping on how men preferred girls with the “natural” look to those who wore make-up. Well, I got skk of bearing it, so one night I appeared for a date without one speck of make- on. Boy, was I a beauty with my sallow complexion, dark shadows underneath my eyes, yellow teeth, pale lips and invisible eyebrows and eye- Unfortunately, this was the “real” me. He changed his mind in a hurry. And now he refuses to be seen with me unless I “put my face on.” PLAIN JANE it it * Problems? Write to ABBY, care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press for Abby’s booklet, “HOW .TO WRITE LETTERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS.” Mules take on new meaning and purpose. This strapping version in Terra Cotta calf taos designed for city streets and country yoalks. By Margaret Jerrold . . . $32. A National Shoe Institute Selection. ■t NMl'FritiMlt for NEAKFAtTMitfLIIIIGH jUNvoyt Sooi Ooffto HIKER FOUMTAIN Rik«fMg.-Ubkir Quality Training by Lopea Sterling Beauty School WsHm Blvd. at Male Hwy. Drayton Plains OR 3-0222 pKU Trading boats is easy with a Pontiac Press Classified Ad. Just phone 3324181. Purse Resembles Rural Route Box Look for one new riiape of handbag to catch on — the cylindrical shape of the road-side box to hold the home-delivered newspaper. Designer Pauline Trigere showed the cylinder, with ends closed, in tweeds to, matdi tweed costumes, and in furs. At Miss Trigerc’s opening rf her fall and winter collection, the “travelogue” cylinders opened to disclose contents such as cashmo^ sweaters. Girl Scouts Galore There are almost three and three-quarter million Girl Scouts in this country and one out of every seven girls from seven through 17 is a member of the organization. ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a ■ DonH Throw It Away ... ■ REBUILD it: TODAYI [ Our axpaftt will r*iter«n«w comfort, ! highor quality into your protont mot- * tioM or box spring . . . comport ! 27“ I I GuaranUMd in Writing 7 Years I OXFORD MATTRESS 00. I I 497 North Porry St., Pontiac FE 2-17111 I SERVING THE PONTIAC AREA OVER 41 YEARS | Thera's a demand for Graduate Operators! “learn a professional service” Ftumity A hutruetUmi^ ORA RANDAL ir ZOTA JAYNES GRACE COLLINS ir MARY ANN LEATHERBERRY llMi S. SAGINAW - PHONE: FE 4-2.352 Swimwear OFF The Wilfred S. Bestows of Lake Orion announce the engagement of their daughter Evelyn Joyce to Bruce W. Lloyd, son of Mrs. Metro Zazworshy, Mechanic Street, and Clarence Lloyd, also of Pontiac. Late August vows are planned. PRINTED PATTERN ?4695 ' 10_18 Ba Sew-it-iiva-Day dress — two main pattern parts plus facings! Wear it belted or free-flaring lot work or play, indoors or out. Printed Pattern 4695: Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size 16 requires 3% yards 36-inch fabric. Fifty cents in coins fw each pattern—add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York, N. Y. 10611. Print Name, Address with Zip, Size and Style Number. Complete Fashion Report in our new Spring : Summer Pattern Catalog plus coupon fw One Free Pattern! Everything you need for the life you lead-350 design ideas! Send 50 cents Local Man Says Vows in Kansas Tbpekh, Kan. was the honeymoon destination of the Ranald Earl Metzes foUowing their recent wedding in the Church of the Nazarene, Junction City, Kan. Rev. 0. A. McGuire and Rev. Uluss Rushing performed the rites for the couple >whottom of your range storage drawer is a big help in keeping utensils from shifting and rattling when drawer is opened or closed. Chic and Quilted Watch for quilted fabrics for late day and evening wear next season. Larry Aldrich showed a number of “quilties” in black. A tote Sunday afternoon ceremony in the Gloria Dei Lutheran Church united Ingrid Maria Danielson of Coleman ■Avenue and Afitkumar Ambe-gaoker of Chicago. Rev. Charles A. Colberg officiated for the pair whose parents are the Richard Danielsons of Ringvatnet, Sweden and Mr. and Mrs. Gopinath Ambegao-her of Bombay, India. Imported French sUk fashioned a floor length sheath goum with Sabrina neckline accented with Alencon lace. A lace mantilla fell from a small pUlbox for the bride who carried white carnations and daisies. Daniel R. Danielson gave his niece in .marriage preceding the garden reception in his Coleman Avenue home. The couple will honeymoon at Mackinac Island and later will reside in Chicago. All of Our Famous Brands are included Men’s and Children’s Swimwear To Off I P Use A Convenient Lion Charge \ EXTRA SPECIALS Whatever Its present condition — thin, dry, brittle, abused — you con give-your hair o new lease on life with this remarkable new cold wovel *750 9 Comp. SIIPRENE KRUUm Reg. sis Now *9^ keg. *2S PERHINEIIT 11 N. Saginaw St. m No Appointment " Needed! Beaoly Mm Phone FE 5-9257 Take a good look at these fascinating wide-eyed glares from the Fashion Eyewear Group of America. Feast your eyes on this outstanding, outsized frame which iS' scalloped from mottled mother-oj-pearl. For the woman who likes spectacular spectacles. Made of marbleized mother-of-pearl, it’s as light in weight as it is in color. Shaped like a bowknot, it looks marvelous worn as a hair-band. Wide-open eyes are contoured into a shell shape with two shades of neutral shadow ... in oyster tone across the lid, pearly luster beneath the brow. Polly's Pointers Anglers Take Heed DEAR POLLY - My Pointer is for those hshermen who carry a bar of soap in their tackle boxes for washing their hands. A small plastic squeeze bottle filled with Hquid detergent is far better. Just try it. - A LADY FISHERMAN. DEAR POLLY - I suggest that one cup of vinegar be added to the water in the washer when laundering clothes that have been packed away in moth balls and still retain the odor. This also removes musty smells from clothing.—MRS. 0. R. / GIRLS - Mn. O.R.’s Pointer worked wen for removing the mothbaU odor from washable fabrics. Test a coraer for the effect on colors before plunging in, even thongh mine showed BO change at aU. Always pretest such remedies in an inconspidous spot. — POLLY. ★ ★ ★ DEAR POLLY - It is straw hat time in many areas so would like to tell the other girls that I clean my husband’s straw hat by spraying on window cleaner and then wiping with a soft clean cloth.—MRS. M. H. DEAR POLLY - When my baby first started to feed herself, I found that the tray on her folding chair was not wide enough for the usual round plastic dish to fit on it. I BOW use a foil plate that came with a three course television dinner. This fits perfectly on our high chair tray and since the divid^ sections keep my little girl’s food separated it is very easy for her to feed herself from it. I have used one for six months and it washes just fine and never seems to wear out. Also if the child happens to drop such a plate wr throw it on the floor there is no danger of breakage. Hope this helps others as much as it has helped me.— MRS. S. C. ★ ★ ★ DEAR POLLY - Being In need of a small budeet to bold paint as I worked, I cut six inches off the bottom M a plastic bleach jug to make the bucket part. Another strip about one indi wide was cut from the bottle for a handle. I punched two holes near the JHeumode Sale 82 N. Sofiaow top of the bucket, on opposite sides, and a hole near each end of "the handle part. The handies were fastened n got one professor who’s human enough to talk to me about my Work! < I’m on my own all the time -a de-humanised cog in their damn education machinei^ and if I don’t function, it will be just too bad for me . . WWW listening to him, I thought: “Young man, I bet your mommy did a lot of sympathetic hovering over you and the homework you used to bring home from your elementary grade teacher and high school.’’ Training bi “independent work” is how anthropologist Margaret Mead has defined the fonctioa of If you do not require your File for Finery Piace a small file box near your laundry unit. Store in it washing instructions for each new garment purchased, marking the instructions as to which garment it is. Saves trouble and time later. feel cheated and abused when be reaches collie age—and discovers that his professors, unlike mommy, require lonely and unsupported effo^ from him. It is now the fashion for stu-doits of our big universities to attack them as impersonal, “dehumanizing” education factories. Well, nobody ever said they were nursery schoois. ’They are staffed by adults who’ve had to agonize through to their own Ph.D.’s in lonely research and so are entitled to expect other adults who want them to do exactly the same thing. w w w As to this “de-humanizing” nonsense, young people, I remind you that nobody can possibly de-humanize us but ourselves. Instead of raging at your impersonal professors, I suggest that you recover your Practical and Pretty Make Feminine Gifts Here is a combination of prac-ticai gifts for the dressing table, all excellent simple-to-make home sewing projects. Make them as a packaged gift for a friend or relative, or enhance your own dressing table facilities with their practicality. COSME-nC CAPE You’ll need: % yd. blue fabric (36” width) 1% yds. eyelet ruffling (L3810-1) 1^4 yds. eyelet beading with lace edges (L3742) 4 yds. double fold bias tap. It. blue. To make: 1. Cut two pieces of blue fabric 32”xl3%”. Stitch ends together to make double length. 2. Stitch 1” casing along top edge. Hem remaining three sides. 3. Stitch eyelet ruffling to bottom edge. 4. Draw bias tape through beading. Stitch beading to overlap top edge of ruffling. 5. Stitch open edges of bias tape together to form drawstring. Draw through casing and tie knot at each end. You’ll need: Mi yd. cotton fabric, blue 5 yds. double fold bias tape, blue / |V4 yds. eyelet beading with lace edges (L3742) 8” diameter circle Pellon 7” diameter circle cardboard To make: 1. Cut two blue fabric circles 8” in diameter and one Pellon circle 8” in diameter. Place Pellon between fabric and stitch together Mi” from e)0U •!*<«• ANpTH» TWO y8«» »UFE 3 IMBWI»«iW»1OP«0NT^ ’ ms^oriNfi IikBLE! /-•*gr WASHINGTON (AP) -> Sen. Everett M. Dirfcsen today carries his fight for a constitutional amendment on legislative reap-portiooment to the apparently equally divided Senate Judiciary Committee. Barring last-minute shifts in position, the prospwts pointed to an M tie vote. Hus would deny Dirksen, the Senate Republican leader, the majority support he needs to bring the issue bef«% the Senate itself. ★ ★ ★ Conceding the possibility of such an outcome, Dirksen reit-o-ated to reporters his determination to get Senate action on the proposed 'amendment on which President Johnson has pnade no public statement but which Vice Presklent Hubert H. Humphrey is actively nghting. “I am a determined man,” Dirksen told reporters. He would not indicate how he would overcome a committee setback. But he is at liberty any time to move to substitute the proposal for any measure now on the Senate calendar. NORTH *9 T Q 10 8 5 2 0 Q 10 0 4 3 ♦ AJ A53 VKJ7 4 AJ75 *10782 EAST A642 VA08 ♦ K82 *Q963 SOUTH (D) AAKQ J1087 V43 ♦ 6 *K84 Eaat and West vulnerable Seath West North Bast 4 * Pass Pass Pass OpenlBS lead—* 2 JACOBY By JACOBY & SON North’s tone of voice was philosophical, but with a slight tou^ of bitterness he asked his partner, ’T suf^iose you took that club finesse just to see if finesses were going to work for you today. Or were you taking pity on your oppo-j nents?” “It looked like a free finesse," replied South, didn’t see that the play could cost me a trick. Anyway, it might have worked.” South had played the Jack of clubs from dummy just about as soon as dummy had appeared on the table. East’s queen had forced South’s king. South had led his singleton diamond at trick two. East had won with the king and shifted to trump. South had plenty of time playing the rest of the hand but all to no avail. He had to lose a club in addition to his three red cards and was down one trick. If West had opened a trump, South would have had no play for his contract, but the club lead had delivered it to South on a silver platter. All South had to do would be to think awhile before playing from dummy. He would have seen that he had nothing to gain by a successful club finesse, llien he would have gone up with dummy’s ace, led a club to his king, ruffed his last club and claimed his seven spade tricks. Instead, he hurried at the first trick and then spent several hopeless 'minutes in an unsuccessful attempt to recover from his initial error. •recast . ....... « aiplratloni. Prapara paign. Good tima »o deal with gi praanizatlons. CANCER (June J1 to July M): -for making top-laval daclhjona, carrying through on promliei. Pay and c^ler‘ dabtt. Friends could play Importai role In actlvHy. Retax later with co genial persons. LEO (July n to Aug. M): Time finish whet you start. Expand Inftueno Gain Indicatad through doo , publishing. Kaep con ______ __________ Be alert. Don't hamper prestiga by engaging In verbal fireworks. Stress TACT and DIPLOMACY. LIBRA (Sept. J3 to Oct. 22): Use your Intuition. Put together various pieces ot puzzle. Seek pattern then base actions on Inner f» Delve deep. Understand your motives. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21): SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec You could be called upon to ensw recent extravagances. Be preparer, facts, llgores. Sincere approach gets best results. Be REALISTIC an- “ operative. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan........... Reltet of tome restrictloos and greater freedom Indicated. Especially good tor romantic pursuits, vacation activity. Stress creativity, change, travet. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. Stick with the (amlllar-try to r PISCES (Feb. If to Mar. 20): Mon nrassura dua to be relieved. You ha y for talf-exprettlon. pidting the preleO. IF WEDNESDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY * ’ ’ tl*^ilf* to*** sex end would make fins sales executive. WWW OENERAL TENDENCIES; Cycle tor TAURUS, OEMINI. Special < to UOITTARIUS. ------------- Dirksen wouldn’t speculate whether a threatened filibuster by liberal oppcments of the reapportionment proposal would delay the Labor Day adjournment of Ccmgress he and Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield are seeking. Dirksen and Mansfield expect to take up that matter at a meeting ’Thursday or Friday with Johnson. The Republican leader observed that up to this point Johnson has given no indication he would be willing to let some of his legislative proposals go over until next year’s session. WWW Mansfield told a Democratic conference Monday he believes parts of the program can go over. Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., apparently destroyed Dirksen’s chances for a favorable committee vote on the Illinois sena tor’s proposed reapportionment amendment when he offered a revised version of it. Q-Th« bidding hM been: Snet South Weet North 1 * Dble. 2 e-' Pnu Puss ? You, South, hold: *AQ78 qKJ88 WS*Kt«8 What do you do? A—Double again: Tour partner should have a few high eards and a four-oard suit ■omewhere. MOAT’S QUBSTION You double again. West bids three diamonds and it Is passed around to 70U. What do you do now? Javits announced that if his substitute is rejected, he will vote against Dirksen’s version in committee. Both the Dirksen and Javits proposals would permit the voters of each state to decide whether they want <»e bouse of their legislature apportioned on other than the pop^atim basis ordered by the Supreme Courts in its one-man, one-vote decision. WWW But Javits’ version would keep the court in control of all reapportionment actions by requiring that any plan must take population into account as one of its factors and must bear “a reasonable relationship to the needs of the state.” Injuries Kill Woman DETROIT m — Mrs. Bernice Posen, 73, of Detroit died Monday of injuries suffered when hit by a car while walking across a street in Detroit Friday. BERRY’S WORLD By Jim Berry • 1N5 WNEA.Im.'* I “I came here for gall stones, but when they showed me the bill, I got ulcers!” BOARDING HOUSE 910RTY MEEKLE By Dick CavalU NANCY OH. mister—M BELIEVE I'M A r BEAUTIFUL TWENTY-YEAR-; OLD BLONDE By Ernie Bushmilter w ✓-y I BOIKSHTTHB \ / PANPIEST LITTLE 1 / PORTAHLITV ] i V RECENTLY,, J ^ MR. OTIS / / 1 TEN DOLLARS \ DOWN AND Five ) DOLLARS A / _. WEEK... J Sm*: By Charles Kuhn I JUST LOVE IT... AND I E6PBCIALLV LIKE THB TRIPS TO MAKE THE , aAYMRNTd. DONALD DUCK By Walt Dteney THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY. JULY 20,^«li PONTIAC. MICHIGAN THIRTEEN Industrialist Gets OK on Holly Township Mobile Home Park HOLLY TOWNSHIP - Fred D. Barton, millionaire industrialist, will be allowed to establish at least one mobile home park in the township. The Township Zomng Board of Appeals yesterday decided to permit Barton to develop a 25-acre site off Grange Hall Road as a trailer park. Still in the fire are Barton’s plans to create a mobile home retirement village on 160 acres he owns at Fish Lake and Knrts roads. Hearing on rezoning for the larger project will be held before the zoning board of appeals at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. No rezoning was invcdved in the approval for the smaller project. NOT COMMERCIAL The property, which lies 400 feet south of Grange Hail Road, carries a commercial classiflca-tion. However, the township zoning ordinance requires zoning hoard of appeals approval before a trailer park can be de- Report Given by Area Airline June Passengers Top May Total; Below '64 Outbound North Central Airlines (NCA) flights carried 27 passengers from Pontiac Muni-dpal Airport last month. This was more than double the passengers for May. In May, outbound NCA flights carried 12 riders. Inbound passengers last month totaled 28, compared to 13 passengers in May. Total patronage for June was down from that of a year ago. In June 1964, NCA flights brought in 37 passengers arid boarded 28. NCA flights to date have carried 120 outbound and 123 inbound passengers this year. In the same six-month period last year, 125 and 108 passengers respectively were carried on NCA flights. AIR MAIL RAUL Departing flights hauled 1,162 pounds of air mail last month, up from 982 pounds in May. Inbound flights carted 960 pounds of air mail, down from 1,036 pounds in May. Outbound air express poundage totaled 402 pounds in June, compared to 8M pounds the month before. There was no air express shipped in for either May or June. In June, NCA flights departed with 1,669 pounds'of air freight, while inbound flights landed 5,374 pounds. In May, outbound freight totaled 479 pounds, while inbound totaled 2,921 pounds. Lake Orion Takes Home Rule Step ALMOST READY - Utica city officials plan to move into their new municipal build- building, located on Auburn,' opposite the ing this weekend and hopefully will be ready post office will contain city offices, the pub- for business'Monday morning. The $125,000 lie library and the police department. 3 Appointed to Committee Posts in Troy TROY - The City Commission last night appointed representatives to three committees. Roy C. Beach of 6248 Livernois was named to the Commercial and Industrial Development Study Committee to replace Ed Dyer who moved from the city. James Tracey of 3505 Rochester was appointed to the Liquor Committee and Carl Schom of 3127 Oakhill was appointed to the Building Authority. The commission is also studying substandard buildings in the city with an eye to either requiring them to be brought up to standard or condemned. City Manager Paul York said there are about 45 such buildings listed, and more that are unlisted. He said they are mostly vacant houses. The building department will inspect each building and prepare reports for Uie conunis-sion. A heated public session on the matter was held a week ago, with the board postponing formal action until yesterday. * ★ A Objections to the proposal centered in the fear that mobile homes, while housing children who must be educated, do not pay their own way in property taxes. MONTHLY TAX Supervisor Seeley Tinsman noted that the owner of a mobile home pays a tax of $3 a month to the township. In addition, he said, the property value — and consequently the asMssment — on the land will be increased as the site is improved. “We thought this was fw the best interests of the community,” Stanley Hanson, appeals board chairman, said today. In noting that the three board members voted unanimously to approve the project, Hanson said opposition was not strong enough to warrant rejection. j WEST OF SITE The site for the trailer park' is west of the Hawaiian Gardens, also owned by Barton. It is separated from the $1.25-million restaurant-motel-resort complex by three subdivisions in which Barton owns property. Barton earlier this year was thwarted in his plans to build the proposed mobile home retirement village in the northwest portion of the township. * A ★ Development of the $l-million Old Mill Stream Village would require rezoning the 160 acres from agricultural-residential to commercial. IN OPPOSITION Some 200 residents signed petitions in opposition to the move. The Township Board declined changing the classiflca-tion on the advice of the Oakland County Coordinating, Zoning and Planning Committee. The county group had recommended that the request be turned down because of inadequate roads and the fact that the township zoning ordinance contains no provision for lating trailer parks. Such an ordinance now is being prepared to govern lot sizes, parking areas, recreation areas, garbage disposal, front and back yards and other items. Barton has taken his. request to the appeal board, which will Zone Hearing Slated in Troy Auto Agencies Plan Car Shopping Center TROY — The City Commission will hold a public hearing Aug. 9 on a rezoning request to allow an automobile shopping center on Maple east of Cool-idge. * * * City Manager Paul York said three auto agencies want about 40 acres rezoned from industrial Murder-Suicide Ruled After 2 Bodies Found FLINT UP - The bodies of Mrs. Pauline Vaughn, 40, and James Bwry, 50, were found in the woman’s home in Flint Monday, aniL investigators indicated it was a murder-suicide case. A rifle lay on the bed next to Berry’s body, police said. Mrs. Vaughn was a widow and attorney, however, contending, that Parent! is no longer thej village attorney and cannot represent the council. ’ •k * -k j He also maintains that thej Swem case Will clarify Paren-ti’s status, although the attor-1 ney is not named in the com- ■ 'plaint for writ of mandamus submitted by Swem. | TO HEAR CASE | Circuit Judge James S. Thor- j bum is scheduled to hear the i case, which hfs been postponed three times, on Aug. 9. In introducing the home mle resolution, O’Brien pointed out the need for a full-time vil-j lage manager and deplored I the “lack of progress in vll-i lage affairs during the past ★ * * four months.” If revision of the charter is gaming the UTICA - Utica teachers last $200 after 15 years in the sys- approved, Parenti saH the mm- ^ meeting) the viHage tern with 10 graduate hours be- mission will then proceed ta jj ayjj,-yg -o’Brien said, yond the master’s, and $200 draw up a new charter, which, k k -k after 20 years if 20 graduate will probably include provisions j Rossman agreed that the vil-hours are earned beyond the for a village manager form of j^gg charter needs updating, but master’s. government. |,g jg steadfastly opposed to ac- The principals’ salaries will ; ABOUT A YEAR cepting legal advice from Par- remain the same until next i Preparation of the new char- ®^***’’ "'*tter. year. ' ter will require about a yedr. Schools Supt. Phillip E. Runk- said So any change . from the antiquated system now el said the increases were made ^ ^j„3gg possible by additional local jg gyn nearly a year and a revenues and an increase in half away. Board Grants Raises to Teachers in Utica LAKE qRION - The VUlage Council took a long-awaited step toward making Lake Orion a home rule village last night by adopting a resolution calling for a referendum vote on the matter. The resolution was introduced by Councilman William O’Brien and adopted by a vote of 5-0. Councilman Lewie Rossman abstained from voting. Attorney Robert V. Parenti said a special election will be held in the village in about 90 days. At that time, the people will vote on whether or not they want the present charter revised. At the same time, a five-member charter commission will be elected. He said there is a possibility that five agencies will eventually build in the area if the rezoning is approved. In other action last night, the commi^ion approved an application to the State Board of Libraries for $15,000 in funds available under the Library Services and Construction Act. ★ ★ ★ The first application in March was rejected by the state board because Troy did not meet the requirement that at least .3 mill be allocated to the support of the local library system. NOW ELIGIBLE The new budget allows .772 mill for the library, making Troy eligible. The money is to be used to renovate the present city hall, which will be converted to a library when the new city hall is completed. York said the $15,000 is one-third of the estimated cost of the renovation. k k k The commission set Aug. 12 as the date for a joint meeting with the Birmingham City Commission to discuss a water purchase agreement from the Walker Well. 1962 AGREEMENT Under a 1962 agreement, Troy has purchased water from the well to service an area on Maple east of Coolidge. k k k The agreement gave either party the right to terminate with six months notice. In January Birmingham notified Troy it intended to terminate the agreement as of July 31. ★ ★ ★ York said there is a “defi- night were granted raises by the board of education ranging from $50 to more than $400. ’The new salary schedule ranges from $5,250 to $8,551.70 for a bachelor’s degree and from $5,650 to $9,203 for a master’s. Under the old schp'fule, teachers with a bachelor’s degree received $5,200 at the beginning and $8,470 at the top. ’The master’s degree schedule ranged from $5,500 to $8,770. ’This schedule was put into effect in January with the promise that if additional funds from local sources and state aid became available, it would be increased ★ w * Under the new schedule, the doctor’s degree will earn $800 above the master’s degree schedule. EXTRA PAY Extra pay will also be granted for additional education, including $100 after 10 years of experience in the system if a master’s degree has been earned. the state aid bill. ’The district will receive about $200,000 more in new revenues. About $80,000 will come from the new state aid bill and the rest from local sources. COST TO DISTRICT Lake Orion is one of the few villages in Michigan which still operate as general law villages. ’The statutes providing for this system date hack to 1895. Compared to the controversy that has resulted from the introduction of relatively trivial Runkel said the raises will matters in recent council meet- ASKED WHY Mrs. Juanita Robbins, vice president of the Lake Orion Homeowners Association, asked O’Brien why he would prefer a home rule village to a home rule city. cost the district about $47,500. ★ * ★ In addition, the board approved a single subscriber Blue Cross plan in which the board pays the employe’s Blue Cross. ★ ★ ★ Runkel said this will cost the district about $89,000. Junior Livestock Judging Slated for First Time at the State Fair hold its public hearing tomorrow I nite need” for Troy to continue night at the Township Hall. ' purchasing the water. The youngsters who soon will i be running Michigan’s farms and leading the state forward in agriculture will be competitors in judging livestock for the first time at this year’s Michigan State Fair. Robert Zeeb of Bath, State Fair Authority member who is chairman of the premium exhibits committee, said the junior judging contests were added in line with the fair’s policy of continuous expansion to better serve all the people of the state. About 200 rural youths are expected to take part, said Robert McLachlan, agriculture exhibits director. ’Hiey will compete in judging 12 classes of beef cattle, sheep and swine. k k k Winners will be selected on their ability to judge livestock and to state orally their reasons for the placing of the animals. 82 Million off Market? Cherry Withholding in Crucial Stage ’TRAVERSE CITY (UPI) -The Cherry Growers Action Group entered the crucial stages of its planned withholding action today with promises from 844 growers to kdep 82-million pounds of red tart cherries off the market. Spokesmen for groups of cherry buyers said that the, number of pledges appeared sufficient to force the price of red tart above the,4.8 cents per pound fnpiw offe^. The only question was how many of the growers would watdi their crop rot rather than take a minimal payment, they said. One large buyer, James H. Brian, president of Smeltzer’s Fmit Orchards, said he would announce a price today of “probably 5 cents” per pound. He said the slight increase was occasioned by crop damage in portions of western Michigan A check of buyers in the Traverse City-Frankfort-Bear Lake area showed that only a trickle of red tart cherries had reached market yesterday. BEHIND NORMAL However, the crop was a week to 10 days behind normal, they said, and red tarts could not be expected to be ready for sale in any quantity before tomorrow. Mrs. Betty Brey, secretary the Cherry Growers Action Group, saliL growers would need at least 5W cents per pound “to pay the interest on their investment and he able to eat and paint the buildings.” Paul Johnson, Mrs. Brey’s brother and head of the group, had indicated that growers Berry a long-time boarder at usually tapped for cherries for the house, detectives said. > the (Hchard. along with a national red tart cherry picking holiday called yesterday by 0. E. Herkner Jr., president of the National Red Cherry Institute and of the Red Cherry CouAcil. Johnson had offered $10 to' the grower who caught the largest fish during the holiday, but he had no takers as of late yesterday. HAVE SIGNED A spokesman for the Great Lakes Cherry Producers Marketing Cooperative said 26 cash processors have signed to purchase cherries at 4.8 cents per pound. Eight others have held out and can be assumed ready to negotiate a higher price, he said. The contest’s purpose, said McLachlan, is to help train future agriculture leaders in the fundamentals of sound livestock selection. Members of 4-H clubs and the Future Farmers of America will be among those taking part. However, affiliation with the FFA or the 4-H is not required — any youth 14 to 19 is eligible. Entry forms for the contest may be obtained by writing to the Department of Animal Husbandry, Michigan State University, East Lansing. ★ ★ ★ Completed forms must be returned to Mr. Robert McLachlan, State Fair, Detroit, Michigan, 48203. Entries must be postmarked no later than Aug.! 17. FEE OF $1 A fee of $1 per contestant must accompany each ent^. In return, each contestant will receive a gate pass to the fair and a noon lunch on contest day. Sept. 2. In addition to the individual judging, any FFA chapter or 4-H club may enter one team, consisting of four members. The three members with the highest scores will make up the team’s score. Team members, of course, are also eligible for individual awards. * ★ ★ The junior livestock judging is but one of several additions to the agriculture program at the State Fair, which runs from Aug. 27, through Sept. 6 (Labor Day). ings, the home rule resolution was passed last night with comparative ease. k k k Village President Clarence Rossman asked that action on the matter be deferred until the Circuit Court rules on a suit brought against the village by Hbbert J. Swem, but O’Brien received strong support on the resolution. RESIGNATION ACCEPTED Swem was elected last March and submitted his resignation in May. He later attempted to withdraw the resignation, but it was accepted by the council. He is seeking reinstatement to the office. Parenti, who has been relieved of his duties as village attorney by Rossman, has been retained by the council to defend the suit. Rossman has retained another Deadlines Nearing iorSlale Fair Entries Deadlines are nearing for entries in the Michigan State Fair, which runs Aug. 27 through Labor Day. k k k ’The first deadline i$ July 30 for baking, canning, sewing and creative craft entries in the community arts division. Livestock, horses, agrkul- tural and art entries are due by Aug. 6. Entries in the new livestock judging contests for the state’s farm youth close Aug. 17. ★ ★ ★ For the first time in 12 years, the light and heavy horse pulling contests will be featured. k k k Charles Figy of Morenci, chairman of the State Fair Authority, said record entries and attendance figures are expected. More than one million persons attended each of the past three jfairs. He explained that becoming a city would require lengthy and complicated annexation procedures. A city would also be more expensive to operate, the councilman pointed dut, citing fire protection as a major Increase in operating expenses. k k it The village paid $2,800 out of $22,000 for fire protection last year. The remainder of the cost was paid by the township. Some Rate for Wool Act Deductions Deductions for financing the wool and lamb producers’ self-help promotion program to be made from payments for the 1965 marketing year under t.h« National Wool Act will continue at the same rates as *n the past, Frank Light, chairman, Michigan Agricultural Stabilisation and Conservation Service (ASCS) State Committee, announced today. Deduction rates will be 1 cent per pound from shorn wod payments, and 5 cents'per hunted pounds of liveweight from unshorn lamb payments. These rates are the same as those made from payments received by producers from the start of the program. The promotion program is conducted by the American Sheep Producers Council, Inc., under an agreement with the secretary of agriculture providing for advertising, sales promotion and related market development activities on wool and lamb as an-thorized under the National Wool Act, said Light. The present agreement covering the four years for which the act was extended in 1961 was approved in a producer referendum held in 1962. The original agreement between the council and the secretary of agriculture was entered into upon approval of producers in a referendum in 1955. Under that agreement, deductions were made from the payments for the first four years of the wool payment program of the original National Wool Act. ' A second agreement was entered into following a referendum in 1969 to cover the three years for which the act was extended in 1958. Blaze in Lake Orion Damages Garage, Car LAKE ORION - A fire start-Mrs. Brey said growers will^ed by burning tjeash destroy^ be held to their withholding pledges for at least another might hpld out for 6 cenU per | two days. She said the outlook PO®"**. \ j was "bright” for negotiations * * * I of higher prices within that Most Michigan growers went period. DAWil DOiinilS 804 NOR’in PERRY Pontiac / . ' THIS WEEK’S SPECIAL! GLAZiW *• DONUTS ^ ^ This Week’s Extra Special! French Donuts Dawn's Delicious Chocolate, Vanilla or Nutty Frosted On The Way To Work Or Home From A Party, You'll Enjoy Dawn's Famous Flavor Brewed Coffee the roof and damaged a car in a garage at 129 Slater about: 1 a.m. today. j Fire Chief Jack Caylor saidj^ the extent of the damage has I not been determined. | Daw2i sojiniis FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JULY 20, im Senator Ace Hurls 3-Hilter at Tigers, 8-0 Ortega Keeps Detroit Bats Silent; Hamlin Clouts 2 Homers DETROIT (AP)-Extra hitting practice before the game did nothing to help the Detroit Tigers Monday. Washington pitcher Phil Ortega made it look like the Tigers had left all their hits in the pregame session as he gave up only three hits in an 8-0 Senators victory. * * ★ Ortegti almost duplicated Mike McCormick’s two-hitter against the Yankees Sunday in giving the Senators two straight shutouts. The triumph was Ortega’s 10th in 18 decisions. The Senators have won 38 games. “I knew (Mickey) Lolich didn’t have it in the second inning,” Manager Charlie Dressen said. “But I used my best two long reliefers—Joe Sparma and Lany Sherry — in batting practice. It always seems to backfire.” PACED ATTACK Ken Hamlin, who was hitting .281 but had only eight runs batted in going into tte game, paced the Senators with four RBIs on two home runs. Woodie Held knocked in three with a three-run homer in the third inning as the Senators did all their scoring in the tirst four innings. Hje Tigers have scored only two runs in their last 2T innings of play. Norm Cash singled off Joe Cunningham’s glove in the fourth inning for the first hit off Ortega. ‘‘Lolich was out of action for two days because he had to train with the Air National Guard,” Dressen explained. ‘‘I guess the layoff hurt him more than I thought because he was missing s(Hne spots by four feet.” FIRST RUN A single by Held, Don Lock’s ground hile double and a fielder’s choice gave the Senators their first run in the second inning. Hamlin’s first homer triggered 1i four-run rally in the third which was capped by Held’s homer off reliefer Orlando Pena. Hamlin’s second homer, off R(hi Nischwitz in the fourth inning, followed singles by Cunningham and Ed Brinkman. Nischwitz settled down after that. He allowed (Mily two hits before giving way to a pinch-hitter in the eighth. Dave Wickersham, looking for his first victory in 97 days, and Pete Richert, the most effective of the American League pitchers in the All-Star game, were the scheduled starters for tonight’s windup of the two-game sieries. WASHINOTON DSTSOIT •krkM •krhW Hamlin 2b 4 2 2 4 M'A'Ilffa u 4- M'Mull'n 3b 4 1 0 0 Lumpe 2b 4 Howard If 4 12 0 Cash 1b 4 KIrkl'nd rt 0 0 0 0 Kalina cf 2 Hald rf 4 2 2 3 Thomas d 2_ Lock d 3 0 10 Horton If 3 0 0 0 Zlmmar c 4 0 0 0 Norfhrvp rf 3 0 0 0 CMn'ham 1b 4 111 Wart 3b 2 0 0 0 Br'kman tt 4 1 1 0 Frsahan c 3 0 0 0 Ortega p 3 0 10 Lolich p 0 “ * Brown ph 1 . . . Nlschwlti p 1 0 0 0 Demetar pn 10 10 Tafals 33 0 10 0 Totals M 0 3 0 Washlngfan .................. 014 000 000-0 Dafrall ..................... 000 000 000-0 E-None. OP-Delrolt 3. LOB-Wash-Ington 3, Detroit 4. 3B—Lumpe. HR-Hamlln 2 (3), Held (ID. S-Ortaga. IP H R RRBBIO Ortega W, 100 . . f 3 0 0 1 * Lollch L, »-5 . 21-3 4 4 4 2 Pana ........ 2-3 1 1 1 0 Nischwitz .......... S S 3 3 I Fox . 1 0 0 0 T T-2:24, A-4,004. Clarkston Golfer Scores Ray Conley of Clarkston aced the 195-yard, No. 5 hole at Highland Hills Saturday using a 5-iron. He shot an 87 for the round. The ace was the first on the course this season. Afe/e Out but Still Win^ 5-2 ★ ★ ★ Braves' Hurler Rips Foes Instead oi Uniform Pants By The Associated Prew Ken Johnson, who once ripped a pair of baseball pants in half, tearing up the National League now that he’s escaped the Texas Trauma. Johnson recorded Milwaukee’s first shutout of the season Monday night as the Braves whipped the New York Mets 64) for their seventh straight victory and moved into third place in the National League. ★ ★ * The 32-year-old right-hander has been a different person since Houston traded him to Milwaukee for outfielder Lee Maye last May 23. While with the Astros this season, Johnson posted a 3-2 record with a 4.15 earned run average AP PholPlM TAKING A BREATHER-Roberta Albers (left), 18, of Miami, Fla., and her playing partner Barbara Mclntire, 30, of Colorado Springs, (iolo., take advantage of the slow play in the qualifying round of the Women’s Western Amateur Golf tournament at Minneapolis and get a few moments of rest. Miss Albers is the reigning Inter-Collegiate champion. Miss Mclntire, former two-time winner of the tourney, fired a 77 yesterday to share medalist honors with Marcella Rose of Jefferson City, Mo. Pro Loses Golf Crown After Switching Courses Special to The Press PORT HURON - They switched courses for the last round of the Michigan Professional Golfers Association assistants’ tournament here yesterday and in doing so switched to a new champion. Defending champion Bob Nodus of Bloomfield Hills Country Qub fired a 72 in the morning round at Port Huron Golf Chib to lead the 131 contestants into the final 18 holes during the afternoon at Black River CC. Cbuck Knowles of Holland, who went into the second round one stroke behind Nodus, posted a 69 while the Bloomfield assistant slipped to a 74 and lost his title. The 25-year-old Knowles posted 73-18—148 to earn the top prize of $200 in the $1,800 Stan Brion of Tam O’Shanter also came on strong at Black j It's Worth Your While > TO DRIVE THAT EXTRA MILE! ! See the Exciting New - CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH - JEEP Sore More Today at BILL SPENCE, INC. M73 Mxie Nwy. CLARKSTON Phem 625-2435 River, posting a 69 to go wUh a first round 74, for a 143 total «nd second place. Nodus was third with 146. Roger Danielski, assistant pro at Rockfield Silver Lake Country C3ub, aced the 122-yard 13th hole at Port Huron Golf Club. FAR BEHIND Danielski, however, finished far behind {(nowles, ending the round with an 84 and adding an 88 on his second round for a 172. Other top finishers, in order, included Larry Bianco, Franklin Hills CC, 76-71-147; Robert Walsh, Blythesfield CC, 74-73-147; Jim Picard, Tam O’Shanter, 79-68—147; Dick Bury, Grosse He CC, 76-73-149; Tom Watroos, Oakland Hills CC, 75-75—150; Tom Cosmos, Oakland Hills, 80-76-150, and Gary Rosely, Cascades CC, 74-76— 150. Mel Mzhickteno of Orchard Lake CC fired a 75-77-152 win in the caddymasters’ division and Tom Vanderploew of Green Ridge CC scored 79-74— 153 to win in the shop assistants’ division. UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. »id no complete games in eight starts. FOURTH STRAIGHT His triumph o^er the Mets was his fourft straight and gave him a 7-2 record with the Braves. In that time he has compiled a 2.7tf ERA, completed five of 12 starts and defeated seven of the other nine teams in the league. Johnson never had such fortune with the Astros. ★ ★ ★ When new uniforms were issued prior to the 1964 season, Johnson found his pants were too long. He said he wouldn’t wear the pants and, to show he meant it, he ripped them in two and left the pieces on the clubhouse floor. Johnson' received a new pair of pants and shortly afterward, on April 23, pitched a no-hitter in Houston’s old park. But he lost and today stands as the only man ever to pitch a no-hitter and lose in nine innings. If he thought his fortune would chaiige when the Astros moved to their new domed stadium this year, he soon discovered how wrong he was. DOME’S GLARE On May 23, in the first inning, San Francisco’s Jim Hart lofted a routine fly toward center field that turned into a three-run, inside-the-park homer when Jim Wynn lost the ball in the dome’s glare. Tbe Giants went on to defeat Johnson and the Astros 5-2. But that traumatic experience was the turning point in Johnson’s career. Just about an hour later, it was announced he had been traded to Milwaukee. ★ ★ A In other NL games Monday, Los Angeles knocked off Houston 8-3, Pittsburgh trimmed Cincinnati 3-1, I%iladelphia defeated St. Louis 5-2 and Chicago downed San Francisco 6-2. Don Drysdale scattered nine hits, bringing Ws record to 15-8 while also collecting a run-scoring single and a double. Los Angeles snapped a 3-3 tie with a five-run outburst in the sixth inning, Lou Johnson scoring the first run on a wild pickoff throw by Houston starter Don Notte-bart. LAW ARRIVES Vernon Law stopped Cincinnati on four hits, and six Pirates each rapped two hits. Donn Clendenon’s fourth-inning home run broke a 1-1 deadlock, and Pittsburgh added a run in the eighth on consecutive singles by Roberto Clemente, Clendenon and Bill Mazeroski. Philadelphia downed St. Louis as Chris Short spattered seven hits for his 11th victory against seven losses..Dick Stuart and Alex Johnson each knocked in two Phillie runs. Lefty Spahn Joins Giants SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Manager Herman Franks looks to the 44-year-old arm of Warren Spahn to give his San Francisco Giants a winning boost in the National League baseball race. Franks, freshman pilot who last Saturday was awarded a new contract through 1966, went to bat to get the veteran lefthander who was cut loose by the New York Mets a week ago. * A * “I just have a feeling, he’ll be a tremendous help for us,” the manager declared after the Giants announced they had reached a salary agreement with Spahn and that the pitcher will report Wednesday. In the twilight of his great major jeague career Spahn says he still is in excellent physical shape and his arm feels good, adding, ”I think I can help the Giants win the pennant. I am confident I can still pitch nine innings, but I’m ready to do anything the manager wants me to.” AAA Franks told newsmen, ‘‘I just may start him. 1 just don’t know yet how he’ll be used.” Spahn’s 360 games won are the most for any left-hander in the major leagues. OFF-FIELD COACHING—Minnesota Twins manager Sam Mele (right), who was fined $500 and suspended for five days by American League president Joe Cronin yesterday, gives his replacement, coach Hal Naragon, AP Pholotax some instructions prior to last night’s game with the Los Angeles Angels. The information Mele passed on must have been good. The Twins won, 5-2. Pontiac Golfer Disqualified Experience Can Be Quel Teacher Experience is sometimes a cruel teacher. Ask young Gary Balliet of Pontiac. The 15-year-old Balliet turned in a 37-39-76 yesterday at Detroit Golf Club in the U.S.G.A. Junior Amateur qualifying round, and thoi began making mental preparations for the finals, slated for early in August in Wilmington, Dei. Gary’s 76 was good enough to earn him one of tbe 11 qualifying spots available and all he had to do was wait around for the U.S.G.A officials to assign qualifying berths to the winners. It didn’t woric out quite that way for Gary. AAA He shot a 76, but he failed to check the hole-by-hole scores on his card and in doing so at- PBI Regains Lead in Men's Baseball Pontiac Business Institute blanked C.I.O. No. 594 last night, 13-0, to move back into first place in the City Men’s Class A Baseball League. A A. A The winners pounded three C.I.O. hurlers for 13 kits in four innings in running their record to 10-4, giving them a half game lead over Cranbrook (9-4). PBI pushed across nine runs in the second frame on eight hits and added four more runs in the third. The game was called after four innings under the 10-run rule. Catcher Neil Roberts and shortstop Rick Pankey were the big guns in the PBI attack. AAA Pankey cracked out three singles in four trips and Rob- erts deiivered a double and single and knocked in four runs. Ed Sparkman gave up only two hits in going the distance for PBI. He struck out seven. C.I.O. (!) P.B.I. (11) AS R H AS R H Lupino s$ 2 0 0 Pankey u 4 2 3 Woodmore If 2 0 0 Smith If 3 11 Taylor cf 2 0 1 Tolas If 10 0 Sanch'i rf, p 2 0 1 Sparkman p 3 1 1 Ryan 3b 2 0 0 LaPratt 2b 2 3 2 Barg c 10 0 McO'nakfSb 2 2 2 Moulding 2b 2 0 0 Brannack 3b 0 0 0 R. Heaton N. Roberts c 3 0 2 lb, p 2 0 0 G. Heaton c 0 0 0 Marcoux Greig cf, 3b 3 1 1 p, rf 2 0 0 Blochar rf 2 2 1 Frye rf 0 0 0 Totals 12 0 2 Totals H 13 13 antlac Businass Institute 004 Ox—13 E—None. 2b—McDonald, N. Roberts. RBI—LaPratt, Sparkman 2, N. Roberts 4, Blocher, G. Roberts, Pankey 2, Smith. LQB-C.I.O. 3, P.B.I. 4. Pilchlng-^ar-cbux IH innings. 5 H, 2 W, R-ER 2-7, Sanchez % inning, 6 H, R-ER 5-5, Heston 15s innings, 2 H, i SO, 3 W, R-ER i-l. Winner—^rkman. Loser—Marcoux. tested a wrong score on the ninth hole. The error was uncovered when officials started posting scores and it brought disqualification for Gary. WRONG SCORE The error came when Bill Sroka, who kept Gary’s score, mark^ a four instead of a five for him. Without counting tbe scores, Gary told him he had a 76, which he did, but the card added to 75. AAA Lee Edmundson of Ludington and John Grace of St. Clair Shores paced the qualifiers with 73’s. • Grace was one of four qualifiers last week in the Jaycee sectional tournament at Pontiac Ckiuntry (Hub, a tourney which Balliet paced with a par 72. U.S.O.A. JUNIOR OUALIFYINO ________ ________J) Rkk Brsn- , Alma 7S; William Scolt, Blrmlng-I; Larry WIsnc, Dearborn 79; Kellh . Grand Blanc Coach Pilots Club as Sam Takes a Rest Cleveland Posts 5-0 Verdict Over Birds; White Sox Bumped By Hie Associated Press When Jim Perry made his first big league pitch, Hal Naragon was on the reiving end Perry returned tlie favor Mon day night by presenting Nara gon with his first managerla catch — and left Sam Mele sitting pretty.. Mele, beginning a five-day enforced vacation — the result of a hassle Sunday with Umpire Bill Valentine — watched from the pressbox as his Minnesota Twins, with Naragon in command, whi|^ the Los Angeles Angels 5-2 behind Perry’s four-hitter. AAA The victory kept the Twins 314 games in front in the American League race and gave Perry and Naragon, batterymates at Cleveland six years ago, perfect 1965 records. Perry, who broke in with the Indians in 1959, teaming with catcher Naragon in his first start, shook off early home runs by the Angels’ Joe Adcock and Jim Fregosi Monday night and breezed to his seventh victory without a loss. THREE OF FOUR The tall right-hander, used exclusively iii relief last year, his first full season with the Twins, has won three of four starts since quitting the bullpen July 5. His earned run average is a sparkling 2.05. Naragon, who finished his active career at Minnesota and has been a Twins’ coach since 1963, disclaimed credit for his first success as a pilot. Scolt Koffe, BIrminghom 79; AAark Henrickion, Grand Blanc 79t Marlon (2oode, Grand Blanc M; Mark Day. Do-troll M; Carl Burkemo, Birmingham Ml Kalth Paterion, Royal Oak M; Tarry Nobla, Mount Clemfna Mi Clarenca Pozza, Datrolt II; Rogar Cummings, Bl mingham II; Pala Ewing, Datrolt II. Shotwell Shoots Well Fred Shotwell carded a hole in one at Farmington Country Club Sunday on the par three, 120-yard 12th hole. He used an eight-iron. Yacht Blifzen Sails Home 1st at Mackinac MACKINAC ISLAND (J)-The Blitzen sailed across the finish line today and became the first vessel to finish the 333-mile Chicago - to - Mackinac yacht race. AAA The Blitzen, a 56-foot cutter owned by William and Thomas Schoendorf of Milwaukee’s South Shore Yacht Club, arrived at 3;04 a.m., EST. Its elapsed total time was 60 hours, 49 minutes and 53 seconds. Slightly less than an hour and a half after the Blitzen’s arrival, the Mitena sail^ into harbor at 4:32 a.m. The Mitena, owned by Paul Brown of Macatawa, Mich., had an elapsed total time of 62 hours, 17 minutes and 8 seconds. A A A Final winners in six classifications will not be determined until race officials have had time to complete a statistical analysis based iqainly on handicap times for each vessel. . NARROW ESCAPE-CIeveland’s speedy Vic DavaUUo was trapped off first base in the sixth inning by Baltimore’s Orioles but he eluded the Birds and made it to second for a stolen base. Orioles looking over the sliding Davalillo are (from top) Luis Aparicio, Jerry Adair and Boog PowdL Cleveland won, 54). ‘‘We’ll go right on doing things just like Sam does them,” he said. ‘‘He’s the manager and he’s got this club in first place.” Naragon will spell Mele, who also was fined $^, until the manager returns to uniform at Baltimore Saturday. The Cleveland Indians blanked the Orioles 54) on the four-hit pitching of Lee Stange and moved into second place. Baltimore dropped into a third-place tie with the Chicago White Sox, beaten 6-3 by resurgent Kansas City. YANKEE TAMER Rookie Jim Lonborg of Boston tamed New York 3-1 on five hits for his third victory over the Yankees and Phil Ortega fired a three-hitter as Washington trimmed Detroit 84). Harmon Killebrew’s two-run homer and a two-run single by Jimmie Hall helped Perry out-pitch Los Angeles ace Dean Chance, who has lost six of 12 decisions. Killebrew smashed his 17th homer in the first inning and Hall came through in the seventh. AAA Stange, 5-2,. extended his career hex over Baltimore to nine victories in 11. decisions and ran his scoreless string against the Orioles to 24 innings. Chuck Hinton hit a two-run homer in Cleveland’s three-run first-inning burst against loser Steve Barber and touched off a two-run rally in the sixth with a double. The last-place Athletics, who have won five of their last six, bunched all their runs in the seventh inning, breaking up a scoreless duel between Roland Sheldon and Chicago’? Joe Hor-len. Bill Bryan singled the first two KC runs across and Dick Green capped the rally with a three-run homer. AAA Lonborg boosted his record to 6-10 and knocked in the deciding run with a single in the Red Sox’ two-run second inning. Rico Petrocelli singled home the firot run and Tom Tresh’s throwing error in the fifth, after singles by Frank Malzone and Carl Yastrzemski, accounted for the other. Christ Lutheran Wins Christ Lutheran defeated St. Stevens Lutheran, 14-0, last night in Waterford Township C^ch Softball League action. In a game last Hnirsday, Dcm-elson Baptist downed Crescent Latter Day Saints 5-2. THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1965 FIFTEEN Eye Eighth Place Bosox Need Darning NEW YORK (UPI) - If the Boston Red Sox start moving, they can still finish eighth. Big deal! The prospect of winding up in Wouldn't You Really Rather Own A Buicic? 210 Orchard Lie. Av*. at Wmt. FE 2-9101 OpM Men., Tuct. A Thuis. Night* Air Condition Yonr Car! WE SERVICE ALL CARS! <2 enjoy driving get a cool EATON car air conditioner today from DllfC radiator riHL SERVICE 403 E. Pike St. FE 4-6692 Convenient Bank Term* that positimi is no more appealing to manager Billy Herman than it would be to any other major league manager but IlMra isn't much either he or anyone else can do about it. A ★ A Simply put, Herman is trying to nuike a silk purse out of a sow’s ear and they just don’t make podeetbooks like that anymore. The Red Sox are in ninth place. ’They’ve won only three games of their last 17 and there’s no sense blaming this one because that was done nu-one or that one because that was done numerous times already and it didn’t improve the club one bit. “It’s rough,” said Herman, "danu rough, but you can only do so much with the tools you have. ‘Tm hoping we can play close to .500 ball the second half of the season, which still won’t get us anyplace. We could move up a notch, but that’s the best we could hope for now.” Herman isn’t a defeatist by any means. He’s merely being a realist. NEED HELP Ask him what the Red Sox need and he looks at you as if maybe you’ve been out of the country for the past four months. “We need everything,” he says. It’s a downright honest answer. Like most of the other clubs, the Red Sox have been hard hit by injuries. Whereas assort^ injuries hurt all the other clubs, they dam near killed the Reid Sox. “We’ve played about 20 games this season where we had only one utility man on the bench,” said Herman. “What can any manager do about a thing like that? Nothing. You have to let the pitcher Franklin C. A Club 5 RKhesttr 7, Bloomltold Hill* 0 Pontiac Pollc* *, Bloomfield Hill* 5 Auburn Haight* Boy* Club I, Oxford 1 Rochester 3, Clarkston 3 (Tl»-10 Innings) Cla** F Moose S, Met Club Panthers * Auburn Heights Boys Club 7, McDonald * Yankees *. St. Michael 0 Wldgat-Natlonal Bart's Drugs 14, LeBaron * Yellow Jackets S, Moose 0 I. R.A. MONDAY'S FIGHTS By The Associated Pres* SYDNEY, Australia — Max M I77V4, Australia, outpointed Johnny echon. 127, Australia, 12. SAVINGS I SELECTION I SERVICE I ■ G Comfort-Aire 5500 BTU “ ““ ~ Automatic. Cool* araa up to 375*q.ft. Terms To Suit 'RHAIL PLUMBING & HEATING S 39 Oaklond Av«/3 Baltimore ....... 51 37 .5*0 4>/i Chicago ......... 51 37 .5*0 m Detroit ......... 47 39 .547 7'/i New York ........ 44 48 .478 13'/i Los Angeles . 42 49 .442 15 Washington ...... 38 53 .418 19 Boston .......... 33 54 .379 22 Kansas City 28 54 .333 25V^ Mwiday'* R**«tt* Washington 8, Detroit O Minnesota 5. Los Angeles 2 Cleveland 5, Baltimore 0 Boston 3. New York 1 Kansas City 4, Chicago 3 Today's Games Boston (Monbouquette 7-10) at New York (Stottlemyre V5) Los Angeles (Lopez 9-8) at Minnesota (Pascual V2) Baltimore (McNally 4-4) at Cleveland (Terry 9-3), night Washington (RIchert 54) at Detroit (WIckersham 1-8), night Only games scheduM. Wednesday's Games Chicago at New York, twilight Kansas City at Baltimore, 2, twi-night Cleveland at Detroit, 2, twI-nIght MInnosot* at Boston, 2, twI-nlght Los Angeles at Washington, night NATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lest Pet. Behind Los Angeles .54 38 .594 — Cincinnati 52 39 .571 Milwaukee ... 48 40 .545 5 San Francisco . 47 40 .540 5'-Y Philadelphia .... 47 42 .528 m St. Louis ....... 4S 44 .495 9W PHtsburgh ....... 44 47 .495 9'/t Chicago ......... 42 50 .457 13 Houston ......... 40 48 .455 13 New York 29 42 .319 25V*i Mendw's Resuth Chicago 4, Sen Francisco a Milwaukee 4, New York 0 Pittsburgh 3, Cincinnati 1 Philadelphia 5, St. Louis 2 Los Angeles 8, Houston 3 Tedey's Gaines ^ Pittsburgh (Veele 9-7) ar Cincinnati (Ellis 134) New York (Cisco I S) at Milwaukee (Fischer 3-3) Philadelphia (Bunntng 104) at St. Louis (Simmons 5-9) Chicago (Jackson 8-1) or Paul 0-2) at San Francisco (Shaw 8-4) (Cuollar 1-1) at Los Ar ’‘A’tIdSaU's Games .....—siphia at Chicago Cincinnati at ^n Francisco New York at Pittsburgh, night St. Louis at Houston, night Milwaukee at Los Angeles, night on five walks, an error and a passed ball in raising its record to 11-2. The Merchants are 11-4. L & S Standard’s (3-12) Everett Spence suffered a broken ankle sliding into third in the sixth inning. He batted for Howard Menzie to start the .sixth and doubled. LATE RALLY Idle Time Bar (8-7), trailing 3-2, pushed across two runs in the last of the seventh to trim the Merchants. Jim Smith, the winning pitcher, knocked in the two runs with a single. ★ ★ ★ Gene Hoffman yielded only one hit and fanned four ih pitching Buckner to victory. Ifarry Diehl led the batting attack with three singles. Bud & Lou raked Michigan Bell pitchers for 15 hits in the overtime win. A walk to Frank August, a single by Jim Fields, a double by Dexter Jerit and another single by John Fields produced the winners’ two runs in the ninth. Rich Ewre collected three hits for Bud & Lou and Harold Ambrose banged out three for the losers. Pentlic Merchant* *«« 384 *-3 7 3 Motorcar Trintpert 00* 08- t 1 8 Winner—Hoffman. Loser—Achenbech. Bud 81 Lou's Bar 888 43* IW2-9 14 3 Michigan Bell *83 13* 808-7 II 3 Winner—Jerit. Loser—Carry. Major League Boxes Aparicio s* 4 0 0 I B Snydar rf 4 0 1 0 A1 Brandt cl Adair 2b Barbtr p 4 0 8 0 Colavilo H 4 0 18 Hinton lb 3 8 10 Davallllo < 3 0 0 0 Aku* c SOLO Oonialtz ] ^^OOStangap nOOO Talalt nit MIM J^Wagnar. LOB—Baltimor* S, Cleva-3B—PowalL Hinton. 3B—Alvis. HR— SSSSS**-.” t krang* W, 5-2 . 9 SP-Barb*r. T-2:00. KANSAS CITY** S 5 3 S It Gam* ^ICAG Landis cf 3 110 Hansen ss 4 11 Reynolds H 3 1 1 0 McCraw cf 3 0 0 Bryan c 4 111 NIch'Is'n ph 0 1 0 Sheldon p 2 0 0 0 Romano c 10 1 314 4* Taiah Horlen L, 0-7 . 0 0 0 0 0 HBP—By Horton, Horshbormri Sheldon, Romano. T-3:19. A-17,471. M Al^tlOS 0 0 Oliva rf 1 1 Hall cf 1 0 Kllleb'w 3b : 1 1 Mincher 1b 1 0 Allison If I Angelos 3. LOB— T-2;07. A-23,321. Nightl BOSTON I abrhM Gosger cf 5 0 0 0 1 Maizono 3b 5 12 0 1 Yasfr'skl If 5 0 10 1 Mantilla 2b 10 10 1 Schilling 2b 0 0 0 0 ' Thomas 1b 4 110 1 C'nigl'ro r" - • • - ■ 0 3 1 Bouton p 0 1 1 Gibbs ph 1101 'Tola'is “ E—Mantilla, Tresh. DP—Boston 1. New Cork 1. LOB-Boston 9, New York 4. 2B—Richardson. 3B—Mantilla. IP H R ERBBSO Jack Nicklaus Adds $12/m to PGA Lead PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — Big Jack Nicklaus’ second-place finish and $12,000 in the Canadian Open Sunday boosted his over-all golf earnings for the year to $80,488. Of that, $69,700 was in official PGA tournaments. ★ ★ ★ The standings, reported by the PGA: 1, Jack Nicklaus, $69,700, $80,-488 ; 2, Tony Lema, $56,605, $63-384 ; 3, Bruce Devlin, $55,595, $58,859 ; 4, Gene Littler, $52,638, $56,683 ; 5, Dan Sikes, $48,524, $51,410; 6, Bruce Oampton, $46,-804, $59,004 ; 7, Doug Sanders, $44,978, $55,162 ; 8, Gary Player, $44,776, $45,872 ; 9, Billy Casper, $42,806, $67,764 and 10, Johnny Pott, $33,124, $38,165. Former Golf Star Here Gene Sarazen, one of the former greats in the world of golf, will give a golfing demonstration at Edgewood Country Club today from 5:30 until 7 p.m. The club is located at 8399 Commerce Road. abrbb. **«*"Trba r»|:?(ir”.b iiw 5 111 Dtvl* cf 3 11 1 0 8 0 T'ctwskI 3b I 0 1 0 Gentile, Drysdal*. Oavis, Will*. HR-Wy— WiV*." ---------- . 224 3 1 0 0 Dryidtlt W« 154 t f 3 2 1 Oryid»l«4 Fox. PB-~Brand. -2;31. A-33*7M. PNILADELPHIA***^ ffI"LOUIl Johnson H Wine ss Short p 8 0 0 0 Whit* 1b ................. nil 4 110 Buchek 3b 3 18 0 3 0 10 Wethb'n p 10 10 Boyer 3b 2 0 0 0 Tetab 315II3 Titab »17 1 PMIadaMta ............ 181 0*3 818-5 St. Lavb H8 *01 188-1 E-Gagllano, McCarver. DP-Sf. Louis 1. LOB-Phlladalphit 4. St. Louis 18 2B—Briggs, Shannon. 3B—Shannon. HR -Johnson (S). SB-4rock, Calllson, Phll-ups. S-Shon, “ ! f ’5 PITTSBURGH ab r n Di Bailey 3b 5 0 2 0 Harper It Mot* cf 4 12 0 Rose 2b Clem'nte rf 4 1 2 1 Pinson cf Cl'donon 1b 4 12 1 Robinson r Maz'oskI 2b 4 0 2 1 Johnson 3b siartwii If 4 0 0 0 Peeez 1b 0 0 Edwards c nn Keough i; Totals 3 0 0 1 101 let 118-1 Telib 171II3 Pittsburgh CIncImiall E—Mazeroskl. DP- . .. Pittsburgh 7, Cincinnati 2B-Balley, AAota, Cbmente, Rose. HR —Clendenon (9), HarjMr Lew W, 9-9 ......9 Nuxhall L, 4-3 . . . 0 I R ERBBSO 2 2 1 SAN FRANCISCO M tb r h b 0 J. Alou rf 4 0 11 0 Dovenp't ss 4 0 0 i ’ McCovey 1b 4 0 1 i Mays cf 4 0 1 Hart 3b 3 1 0 i 1 ph 1 0 chroiSr p tan Francisc* I, Kesslnger. LOB-Chl- Jim Butcher Says, “If It’8 Better Service You’re After ... Come ’u Get It! Tluit’s what we’ve got more of than you can get anywhere else I know of. Better service, That’s the foundation on which we’re bufld- ' ing this business. Ten years’ experience has taught me that even though n owner is sold on a certain make and model car, he can buy it from any one A 664* t 28 37>* 3644 : 15 36V* 36 3 12 424* 424* 42H-; Ban GE 1.32 I !05g tl LW BrIsfMy 1.20 Brunswick Bucy Erl* 2 Budd Co .60 32 3346 33 33 CallahM .31t 12 3144 214* 214* -I- 26 35 3444 35 -f 3 324* 3244 3244 + Cancoint .30 Cent SW 1.38 CerroCp 1.60 -.....»ac .2M ChrlsCrft .6« aT pTn 1^ Cities Sv 2.80 ClevEIIII 1.44 15 2*'* 2*1* 1 I 674* 6646 67H + 20 3144 314* 3 32 23V* 2246 2 8 371* 364* 3 9 314* 314* 3 13 54 53 5 38 4644 454* 4 ConElecInd 1 CnNGat 3.30 ContPow 1.80 Contalnr 1J0 I 2.40 32 651* 6 I 7^-^ = k 23H 23W - ^ 6 tVt M m 1 —D— 4 2544 251* 3 2 194* 19'* 1 7 3244 33H 3 49 384* 381* 3 I 8714 87'* —11* Get Steel .60 DIam Aik 2 'limey .40b list Seag 1 DomeMn .80a DougAIr .30d DowCh 1.80b Dresser 1.60 duPont 2.50d Duq Lt 1.40 13 37H 37H 3^4 Tl FaIrCam .50e Fad AAog IJO FerroCorp 1 Flltrol Cp 2 FftChrt 1.411 ^''cp 1 8 334* 334* 331* . 6 131* 13 13-1 18 234* 23V* 2 —P— 527 51H 494* 4 68 84* S'* 6 141* 1414 1 8 201* 20V* 2 18 7344 731* 7 *5 214* ?IH 16 1914 184* 16 4446 444* 13 20 194* I 22 -H * 6744 - 1* .‘“•y’lifV*'!!: 157 52V* 51H 514( D 12 16V* 16 16 GAccept 1.10 Gen Clg 1.20 GenDynam 1 GenElec 2.20 Gen Foods 2 GenMIlls 1.40 GenAAot 1250 GenPrec 1.20 GPubSvc .51 g G PubUt 1 j6 GenTelAEI 1 GerberPd .90 CenTIre .60 GaPacItlc 1b GettyOII .lOg Glllett* 1.10a GlenAM .50a Goodrch 2.20 Goodyr 1.15 .. — — GraceCo 1.20 55 504* 501* 5 34 8144 811* 81'* - 18 621* 61H 63 - 234 96 95'/4 95'/* - 14 29'* 284* 29 -f 17 6 54* 54* - Xl8 36 354* 354* - 87 41 40'/. 40V*- 3 454* 169 224* 29 581* 6 25V* 51 36 i 1244 1_ . 16 564* 564* 5 ^-1 .... 244*-3546 3544 - Granite GtAAP Ry 3 wi men FInl OtWSug IJOa Grayhnd .90 9 26'* : —K— II 384* : 3 35'* : HerePdr .40g Hertz 1.20 Hew Pac .lOg Hott Electron »i’;S I 354* 354* 354* -f .1 I.IO 24 63 k Ch 1.20 II 441* 4 , 17 5344 53V* 531* - I 4 1344 13H 13H - < 5 27 264* 37 . . 7 1844 im 1846 - Inland StI 2 InsurNoAm 2 InterlkSt 1.60 IntBusMch 6 IntHarv 1.50 IntMlnerals I IntNIck 2.50a mil Packers IntPuer 1.30 JonLogan .80 Jone^L 3.50 Joy Mtg 2 —K— 36 364* 3544 36'* .. 11 294* 294* 294*- 33 1054* 10444 10444 -17 594* 5844 5844 - 15 55V* 554* 55'/* . 28 50V* 494* 494's - 5 574* 57'* 57'* - 27 34'* 334* 334* - 10 63 61 61 - LIttonIn li7t LIvIngsO .761 LockhdAIre 2 Loews Theat LonaS Cam 1 LonaSGa 1.12 Long Isl Lt I Loral Corp Lorlllard l50 LTV .50 LuckySt 1.20b Lukens StI 2 Wlaek Trucks MacyRH 1.30 MadFd 1.70g Mad to Gar MagmKop 3 39 9146 904* 904* - 22 25H 25'* 25'/* + 12 34'* 34 34'* - 5 746 7H 744 .. 36 24 231* 231* -I- V* 244 344 244 -1- Marathn 3.20 65 564* 56 56'*- Mar Mid 4.35 6 31'* 31V* 311* Marquar .25g 100 114* 111* 11'* -t- MartlnMar 1 38 19'* 184* 19'* -V MayDStr 1.50 73 60'* 59'* 59'* - McCall .40b 17 21V* 21'* 21'* - McDonA .60b 179 434* 42H 424* -I- McKess 1.70 383 45’A 43'* 44'* - Mead Cp 1.70 1 40 40,, 40 — Merck la 22 5644 56$k 5646 — MerrChag^ .80 6 194* 194* 194* i SUt 1.24 Mohasco .70 .... BIsc 1.80 NatCan .60b NCashR 1.20 ----lalry 2.60 DIst 1.40 .... GenI .20 Na^ps^ 2b "-■**lt**l^ Tea .80 Newberry JJ NJ^'5® i ” NYCant 1.30a Nlag MP 1.10 Norfolk W 6a Northrop 1 NwstAIrl .80 Norton 1.40* Norwch 1.10* OccMentP .60 OhIoEdls 1.06 OlInMath 1.40 OtIsElev 1.80 56 301* 2 47 561* 5 22 is* 7 774* 7 —N— 39 794* 7744 7746 -21* 6 5714 " — 79 27 84 86'* 84 84'* -144 13 39V* 39 391* - ‘ 51 241* 24 3 19 304* 304* 3 36 471* 46H 4 18 454* 4514 4 38 15 144* 1 I 27H 27% 374* .. 1 57 561* 56% -4 Phlla El 1.48 PMIRdg IJO PhllMor 3.60 k 7m 1 ..4 374* 3 (bds.).Hl^ L I Last Chg. 1 " 1 1344 - '* RCA .60a RalstonPur l RayeHe .48 RelchCh ,20a 149 3444 341* 34'* - 107 2244 21% J 6 184* 18'* 1 x3 10'* 10'* 1 36 18'* 18'* 1 RIchfOII 1.80 Rohr Corp I RoyCCola .48 RoyDut I.Olg Ryder Syst SL SanF 1.50 StRegP 1.40b Sanolmp .461 Schenley I Scherng 1.60a Schick SCMCorp .88f ScoltPap .90 Seab AL 1.60 SearIGD 1.30 Scars Roe 1 SIngerCo 3.30 SmlthK 1.60a Socony 2.80 toPRSug .90g SouCalE 1.20 touthnCo 1.80 SouNGas 1.20 SouPac 1.40 South Ry 2.80 Sperry Rand ------>1 1,50 eD 1.60 _____’ 1.35 StBrands 2.40 StO NJ 1.50g StdOllOh 1.80 llan'lSM StauttCh 1.40 SterlDruo .75 StevensJP 2 Studebaker 5 354* 3546 354* .. 3 7% 7% 7% .. 16 19 18'* ISVk -I- 92 3444 34'* 3444 + , 65'* ^.*_ 5 3344 33% 33% -V . ,..i 78% - '* 32 17'* 16% 16% — % 50 72'* 71% 72 -I- % 39 48% 48 4814 114 78% 78'* 78% - 10 54% 54'* 54'* - % 16 9'* 84* 8% 4 31% 31% 31% - % 8 434* 43% 434* -I- '* 37 31'* 30% 30% - '* 51 49% 49 49 - % 11 21%, 21'* 21% Texaco 2.20e TexEasIT .90 TexGSul .40 Texasinstip 1 TexPLd .35g 67 79 78% 78'* - I 39'* : Trans W Air 43 47 45% 45% -1% Transam .80b “ “ Transltron TrI Coot .75g Tyrant C 60b Un Carbide 2 6'* 1 Elec 1.12 1 OH Cal 1 1 Pec 1.80 10 47'* 46% . - 6 27 26% 264* - % 90 60% 60'* 60% . —u— 16 29'* 29 29 - % 86 41% 41% 41'* - % 21 38% 38% 38% 33 74% 1 93 77% ; 74% - '/ I 76% +1 UGasCp 1.70 UnItAAM 1.20 US Lines 2b USPlyyyd 1.20 US Rub 2.20 TO’i?? 13 44% 434* i 24 66'* 66% I —V— 17 2216 21% : 29 47'* 46% 4 —w— If 35% 35% 35% - 4* 21 39% 38% 38% 135 49% 49 49 —1 32 43 42% 43 -h 1 18 37% 37% 37% + ' 18 30'* 30'* 30'* - ' 4 43% 43% 43% 4 40'* 40 40 - ' 74 28% 28% m - ' 42 62% 61 61% -1-1 Y—z— 233 152% 14t% 149% -2' 23 41'*.......... State Guard Is Out in Field Air Support Units Aid in Tactical Training GRAYLING (AP) - Approximately 8,000 men from the Michigan Army National Guard began tactical field training Monday at Camp Grayling. The guardsmen, all vdth the 46th Infantry Division, will work on military problems under artillery, tank and air fire. ★ ★ * They will camp out under camouflage in the heavily-wooded military reservation. They will be sleeping in . pup tents, eating out of mess kits and using tbein steel helmets as wash basins. (Company A of the First Battalion, 2Sth Infantry, from Saginaw took part Monday in a close air-ground support problem. nRED ROCKETS Six Navy Skyhawk jets flew over the guardsmen and fii'ed 2.75 mm. rockets and 20 mm. cannon at junked cars used as make-believe tanks. Earlier, the 2nd Battalion of the 119th Artillery, from Jackson and Albiim, laid down a heavy artillery barrage to soften up the simulated ____________________. .. seml-snnu*l declerallon. Speclel' or extra dividends or peyments not deslg- "wlii* foclnotn. - -Also extra « — - --------- rate plus sM dMdand. c-^lquldstlng dividend, d—Declared or paid In 19u plus stock dividend. *—Paid last year. F-PayabI* In stock during 1965, estimated iSKlared or* mM ____________________live Issue with l... dends In arrears, n—New Issue, p—Paid year, dividand omitted, deferred or - .jctlon taken at last dividend meeting. r-Daclared or paid in 1964 plus stock '• • • ■ ~ - stock during 1964, 'rest equalization isi m si 406.6 150.7 148.9 286.7 The air, infantry and artillery problem will end Thursday when 30 newsmen from all parts of the state are expected to be on hand for press day. Adm. George Koch of Chicago Thursday also will view the air-ground problem. The bulk of the guardsmen will complete their two weeks of summer training Friday. TANKS ARRIVE About 1,500 tankers in armored units from Detroit, Dowagiac, Niles, St. Joseph, Three Rivers, South Haven, Bay (Jity, Cadillac, Alpena and Manistee arrived last Saturday for their two weeks training. They will join with the infantry this week in combined arms training. Guardsmen in the field this week, besides carrying their individual weapons, are carrying gas masks to ward off any chemical attack. Chemical warfare officers plan to throw tear gas and smoke bombs at the men without warning. 6-Month Sales Set Drug Firm Record DETROIT Ifi - Parke, Davis and Co. Monday announced record net sales of $102,562,328 for the first six months of 1965 and net earnings of $14,009,563-second best for any first half in the firm’s 99-year history. Net sales for the first half of this year showed a 9.6 per cent increase over the $93,600,850 reported for the same period in 1964. The previous record was $99, 045,616 in the first six months of 1960. ’The high mark for net earnings was established in the first six months of 1960 mth $15,130,- Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-The cash position of tho Treasury cptnpar—“ —-------- ponding date a yaer ago: July II. INS Balance- Deposits Fiscal Year J • 167,791.90 _________ .'Iscal Year— 5,208,954,2^.81 5; -Total Debt- Stocks of Local Interest Figures efter decimal points are eighths ’ tnter-dealer maHcets Citizens Utilities Cl Diamond Crystal . Ethyl Corp........... Kelly Girt........... Michigan Seamless Tube Co. . 25 N Pioneer Finance .............. *4 7 Safran Printing ..............15.7 16.3 Scripto . . 6 tJ Vernor's Ginger Ale ............ 7J 8 Wehr Corp. 13.7 14J Wyandotte Chemlcat .. 32 32.4 MUTUAL FUNDS Aftlllatad Fund Keystone Growth K-2 Mass. Investors Growth . ----- Investors Trust .. 044 9.56 14.99 M.39 9.31 10.17 . 9.95 10J6 . 5.95 6.50 9J0 10.46 17.10 1169 10.24 11.19 OOW-JONES INDUSTRIALS -PERCENTAGE CHANGES 3KEV INTEWMM3 K MBNB TO BAMMB S44A8S TD B/SB4I6 Dow-Jones Averages - II How Index Figure Computed (Editor’s Note—This » the last of a two-part series on the Dow-Jones Average by Roger E. Spear, business news columnist for The Pontiac Press.) The industrial average is based on 30 stocks, the rail average on 20 issues, and the utility average on the prices of 15 utility company stocks. Originally, the computation consisted simply of adding together the prices of the component stocks, and dividing the Detroit Edison Issues Report for Fiscal Year Detroit Edison Co. today reported its gross revenues were $354,731,802 for the 12 months that ended June 30. Gross revenues for the corresponding period of 1963-64 were $330,092,483. Net earnings of the company for the 12 months through June 30, were $55,583,078, or $1.93 per share on the 28,814,988 shares outstanding at the end of the period. For the previous 12 months, which ended June 30, 1964, net earnings were $48,951,027, or $1.78 per share on 28,801,-540'shares outstanding at the end of that period. In the first six months of 1965, net earnings were $30,306,204, or $1.05 per share on shares outstanding as of June 30. ★ ★ ★ For the first six months of 1964 net earnings were $26,446, 663, or 92 cents per share. News in Brief Waterford Township police are investigating theft $225 in cash and credit cards reported stolen sometime last weekend from Walls Mobil Service, 4695 Elizabeth Lake, Waterford Township. An electric, grinding wheel valued at $200 was stolen from B & B Ready Mix Concrete, Inc., 6127 M59, recently, it was reported to Waterford Township police. MOM’S Rummage: Thnrsday, 9 to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin. Rummage Sale: July 21-24, 10-6. 3955 Suffolk, Waterford, off Dixie. —adv. Rnmmagp: Howarth Methodist Church, Silverbell Rd. July 22-23, 10-2 p.m. —i Rummage Sale: Misc. 80 Pinegrove (garage). All week. —adv. . 15.11 1 tJ1 Grain Futures Tend Toward Firmness CHICAGO (AP) - The grain futures maricet showed a rather general tendency toward firmness today after a rather slow and mixed start on the Board of Trade. Soybeans were 2 cents a bushel higher to Vt lower, shortly bdore the end of the first hour, July $2.83%; new standard grade wheat 14 to W higher, July $1.42; com % higher to Vt lower, July $1.29%; oats H to % higher, July 68 cents; rye unchanged to % higher, July $1.14. total by the number of stocks involved. “The Dow” started with 12 stocks in 1890, grew to 20 in 1914, 30 in 1928. * ★ w However, assume that we are dealing with three stocks selling at $5, $10 and $15. Their average is $10. STOCK SPLITS If we assume that the $15 stock is split 3-for-l and that, on the same day, the split stock advances to $6 and that the $5 stock gains . $1 to $6, and that the $10 stock moves to $11, the “average” is 6 plus 6 plus 11 divided by 3 or 7.67, which is down from the prior day’s average of 10 even though all three issues rose. Until 1928, the technigue used to avoid this obvious distortion was to multiply the price of the split stock by the amount of the split. Thus, our average would he 6 times 3 plus 6 plus 11 divided by 3 or 11.07. But as time passed, it became evident that this method gave undue “weight” to some stocks that were not only high priced but had a habit of spUt- # SuCCBSStUi % I* Investing f By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am 13 years old. I have about $500 of Bar Mitz-vah gifts that I wonid like to invest. Since I want to become a doctor and my parents cannot help me mndh, I would apjpreciate it if you would tell me which stocks to buy to help my future education.” J.L. A) Since $500 represents too small a sum to diversify, I believe you will have to stick to just one stock, which I hope will continue its past remaric-able growth record. My choice would be Avon Products, the great cosmetics firm which sells door-to-door through some 200,000 agents. The nature of its business is such that it has been relatively recession-proof for many years and the shares have risen in: price 1500 per cent over the past decade. We cannot expect such gains in the coining years, but I believe you will find the stock a very sound investment. ★ ★ ★, Q) “Why do yon recommend municipals solely for high-bracket persons? I think that all of ns in the lower brackets would like tax - exempt income.” G. B. A) I am sorry if I seemed to exclude good people like yourself from the purchase of municipals as an inv^ment. If I did so, it was only because this type of bond — in relation to other securities — commands a premium which institutions and high-income investors are willing to pay. Anyone in the 50 per cent bracket who gets a 3.10 tax-exempt yield is doing just as well as if he held a 6.20 p» cent taxable security. But in the 20 per cent bracket tbO taxable equivalent would be only 3.87 per cent. For your consideration, I suggest Cook County, Illinois, Housing Authority SVas of 1987 on a 3.10 basis, secured by pledge of annual contributions payable by the Federal Public Hou^ Administration, and rated AAA. ' ' (Copyright, 1985) For example, the pride of duPont, split three times since 1925 in varying amounts, would not have to be multiplied by 28 before adding it to the prices of other Dow stocks in the calculation of the avei-age. NEAT TRICK A neat little trick gets around this difficulty quite nicely. Nowadays, on the evening before a split or other change, a theoretical computation is made. In the previons example, the $15 stock would be divided by 3 to reflect the forthcoming split and this result, $5, would be added to the prices of the other two stocks, $5 and $10. The total, $20 would then be divided by the day’s actual average of 10 and the result, the figure 2, would be the new “divisor” for purposes of calculating the average the following day. LOWER DIVISORS Thus, in the example, our average is not 23 divided by 3, but 23 divided by 2 or 11.50. But all is not sweetness and light: the current method results in lower divisors every time there is a split. * it -k As a result of numerous splits since 1928, the divisor for the 30 industrials is now down to only 2.278 (during the Depression, it was over 10). ' An unfortunate result is that the Dow daily swings, in term.s of points, are now often wider than those of any of the cohi-ponent issues. Business Notes Armin C. Tufer, 2433 Park Ridge, Bloomfield Township, with the accounting firm of Haskins & Sells, has been elected a director of the National Association of Accountants, Detroit chapter. Dr. Harold H. Alexander, 1028 Joslyn, has returned from Fort Worth, Tex., where he attended the annual Homecoming-Seminar of the Parker Chiropractic Research Foundation, of which he is a member. Marshall Fredericks of 440 Lake Park, Birmingham, will be one of the speakers at the 22nd Annual Midwnuner Conference Of the Michigan Society of Architects, August 5-7 at the Grand llotel, Mackinac Islaiid. An hoiwrary member of the society, Fredericks will discu$s “Sculpture and Architecture” at the conference banquet Aug. 7. Raymond A. Zieske, distribt manager of the Pontiac office of the American National Insurance tip., is among those attending the 1965 Leaders Conference of ANHX) in Las Vegas this week. Others attending the conference from the Pontiac area are Marshall F. O’Shaughnessy and Robert A. Watson, assistant district managers and"Howard W. Rowley, Dario A. DeMasellis, Emmett P. |ieisler, and Bobbie ’D. Hurst, all agents at the Pontiac office. 65 Stock* jos.3s-oj6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1965 SEVENTEEX Won't Let Illness Keep Her Out of Beauty Pageant MIAMI BEACH (UPI) - Miss England, a pert,*'brown-haired Miss Universe contestant, said today she won’t let a bronchial ailment keep her from competing with 29 other lovelies for the title. ★ ★ w Jennifer Gurley, 19, suffered a relapse of the ailment yesterday, beconung the second contestant to be troubled by illness. * * * ★ Miss Argentina, Mable Azen-cena Caffarone, quit the contest and flew home Sunday because of an intestinal infection. Contestants will rehearse today for a nationwide telecast of the p^eant’s finals Saturday night. Fifteen semifinalists will be picked tomorrow. To Lewis ela Louis Graham, father of uid minor child. Petition having been filed In this Court alleging that said child comes within the provisions of Chapter 71IA of the Corn- continued under the lurlsdictlon of this Court. In the Name of People ot the State of Michigan, You are hereby notified that the hearing on Mid petition will be held at the Court House, Oallland County Service Center, In the City of Pontiac In said County, on the ??th day ot July A.D. less, at 10:30 o'clock In the forenoon, and you are hereby commanded to appear personally at said It being Impractical to make personal service hereof, this summons and notice shall be served by 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 R. Barnard, Judge of said Court, In the City ot Pontiac In said County, this 19th day of July A.D. IMS. (Seal) NORMAN R. BARNARD (a true copy) Judge ot Probate TOWNSHIP OF PONTIAC NOTICE TO BIDDERS Sealed bids will be received by the Pontiac Township Board, 30M Opdyke Road. Pontiac, Michigan, for radios, as follows: Sixty (M) 154.43 me receivers ot narrow band operation OB ti •*■/- 40 K.C. bandwidth — one micro-volt sensitivity — compatable with existing Motorola single tone ’equipment. The sixty receivers divided as Twenty (30) receivers on 3400 c.p.>., twenty (30) receivers on 3553 c.p.s., and twenty d attached portable a e (3) separate tones con-sioereo in me total bl^ prices. For any additional Information, contact the Pontiac Township Fire Department, SOM Opdyke Road. Pontiac, Michigan. Bids are to be opened August 9th, 1965 at the Tosynshlp Hall, 30M Opdyke Road. The Township Board reserves the right to rslect any or all bids. GRETA V. BLOCK, Clark July 19, 20 and 31. 1965 . d County Board ot Canvassers do by certify and declare that they mi July I. 1965 as a Board ot Canva for the purpose ot canvassing votes June 14, 1965 on the following question and that the votes cast and tallied L' the Canvassing Boards ot each ot tl constituent school districts comprising tl Oakland County Intermediate School 01 trlct were counted, canvassed and talllt by this Board of Canvassers and that tl total votes duly and properly cast tor and against the following question were OAKLAND COUNTY INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL DISTRICT SPECIAL EDUCATION MILLAGE INCREASE OUESTION "Shall the one-half I'/i) mill limitation on the annual property tax heretofore approved by the school electors ot the Intermediate School District ot Oakland County, Michigan, successor to the School District ot Oakland County, Michigan, tor the education ot handicapped children be Increased by one-helt (Vi) mill?" Votes cast in favor of this question Twenty - Two Thousand and Forty - two (22,042) Votes cast against this question Eleven Election Retmtt ae hbrelnbefare set mrth and as set forth In the Canvassing ANIdavIt of the Oakland County Board ot Canvassars. a copy ot which It at-tachad hereto. It hereby adopted at the canvatt ot the Oakland County Intermediate School District Special Education ....—* -------------------------“■ Mlllage In -...... Board: BE IT RESOLVED I dared and certified tl t of Oakland County, Michigan, tuc-sor to the School Dittrld of Oakland BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED I hereby declared and certified that ------- • Education of the - - — tangible Oakland personal propai^ v Countv intermadlata acnom umnci annual rat* ot one (I) ---------------------------t1,000) ot BOARD OF EDUCATION OF OAKLAND SCHOOI^ AN INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL DISTRICT Herbert ~ ------------------- roe M. Osmun I. A. Ambrote Fred W. Smith Fred J. Beckman WILLIAM J. EMERSON SKrelar: Board ot Education o Oakland Schools Pontiac, Michigan July 20, 1965 STATE ot MICHIGAN — In bate Court tor the County ot Juvenile Division. In the Matter of the Petition Concerning Martha Lynne Dinan, Minor. Cause No. 21053. To Cornelius Patrick and Edna I Dinan, parents ot said minor child. Petition having been filed In this Court alleging that said child comet within the provisions ot Chapter 712A ot the Compiled Laws ot 1948 as amended. In that the present whereabouts ot the parents of said minor child It unknown and said child It dependent upon the public for support and that said child shoul'' placed under the jurisdiction ot Court. in the Name of the People ot the State ot Michigan, You are hereby notified that the hearing on said petition will be held at the Court House, Oakland County Service Center, in the City of Pontiac In said County, on the 29th day of July A.D. 1965, at 1:30 o'clock In the afternoon, and you are hereby commanded lo appear personally 4‘ permanent severance ot all parental rights will be considered. It being Impractical to make personal “prints The Pontiac Press, ( . . and circulated In said County. Witness, the Honorable Nort Barnard, Judge of said c~ (Seal) NORAAAN R. BARNARD I true copy) Judge of Probate DELPHA aVBOUGINE Deputy Probate Register, REPORT OF CONDITION OF THE Community National Bank of Pontiac ot Pontiac in the State ot Michigan, a the close ot business on June 30, 1965 Published In response to call made bi Comptroller ot the Currency, unde: Section 5211, U.S. Revised Statutes. ASSETS Cash, balances with *other banks, and cash items In process ot collection S 16,072,180.9( United States Government obligations, direct and guaranteed (Net of any 46,430.87 11,967) Hundred SIxti Sarah C. Di: Carlos G. Richard Subscribed and sworn to before a Notary Public, this 8th day of INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL DISTRICT SPECIAL EDUCATION MILLAGE INCREASE QUESTION The Oakland County Board of Can- Upon counting ---------------- - votes cast on the Oakland County School District Special Education Mlllage In- Total Assets $163,966,949. LIABILITIES Demand deposits ot Indi- and corporations i Time and savings deposits of individuals, partner-shlps, and corporations 72,129,738.83 Deposits ot United States (Sovernment 4,649,312.05 Deposits ot States and political subdivisions 20,570,207.67 Deposits of banks 5,000.00 Certified and officers' 2,381,584.1 Deposits $151,883,261.59 tnand depositsS 68,337,237.33 Total Liabilities $154,812^555.64 CAPITAL ACCOUNT per share ............. $10.00 No. shares authorized ........... 500,000 outstanding .......... 500,000$ 3,695,000.00 251,750.34 207,643.43 Total Capital Accounts .. $ 9,154,393.77 Total Liabilities and Capital Accounts $163,966,949.41 I, Donald D. Taylor, Cashier, ot the above-named bank do hereby declare that this report of condition Is true and correct lo the best of my knowledge and belief. DONALD D. TAYLOR Cashier We, the undersigned directors attest GOOD SERVICE OCR BUSINESS • LisUd and Unlistwd Stocks • Corporatd and Municipal Bonds • Mutual Funds • Confidantial Portfolio Reviaws • Complat* Finonciql Library For Customor Uso • PrivatB ConforoncB Room • Standard Contmission Rat«t • Stock Transfor Sorvic* for Individuals, Estotos & Trusts • Safoktaping FocilitiBS For Our Cliants • World Wido Nows Tick*r SotyicB o Immodiato Paymont on SoUs INVESTMENT BROKERS AND COUNSELORS FE 2-9117 818 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLDG. IMMEDIATE QUOTATION SERVICE Our FocilitiBS Extondod From Coast to Coast Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS _.. AOS RECEIVED BY I ^ Srauch aiVor Is made b nmt. It artll be assuma» r ad It comet. Tha i of trantM Want Ada la_f a.m. tha day or publication aHar tha first insartlan. Whan eanea^ flona art madt bt aura to Ott F-kill number." No^ nanta will ba given without Cktitag tima for^advartlj^ manta containing typa altoa largar than regular sgato type Is 13 o'cleck noon the day pre- CJLSH WANT AD RATES i-Day 3-Daya 6-Deya 83.00 83.46 S3.S4 9 5.49 9.71 15.11 ID 610 10.SO U.S0 An addBIcoal charge of » Death Notices CHASE, JULY II, 1965, FLDYD A 4406 Rohr Road; age 6' ----- husband ot Virginia ; tawa Park Cemetery. Mr. Chase will lie In state at the Sparks-Grlffln Funeral Home. (Suggested vls(tlng hours 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.)___________ __________ DERBYSHIRE, JULY Ts, 1965, KAY, Saginaw General Hospital, formerly of Anderspnville Rd.: age 23; btloved daughter ot Mr. and Mrs. Episcopal Church, Drayton Plains. Interment In Lakevlew Cemetery, Clarkston. Miss Derbyshire will He In state at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.l of Jimmie Joe, Donald Gene, Billy and Beverly Moring. Funeral arrangements are pending from fhe Sparks - Griffin Funeral Home where Charles will Ha In stale. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.)___________ PRICE, JULY )8, 1965, CHARLES W., 5260 Clarkston Road, Independence Township; age 49; beloved husband of Emma E. Price; July 22, at 3 p.m. at the Stensels Funeral Home, Farmer City, Illinois, with Rev. Ed Armstrong officiating. Interment in Maple Grove Cemetery, Farmer City,. RUSCH, JULY IS, 1965, CARRIE, Royal Oak; age 85; dear cousin of Mrs. John Burris, Mrs. Ruth Groves, Mrs. J. Laldlaw, and Mrs. Harry Barton. Funeral service Funeral Home, Royal Oak._____ SCHAPPE, JULY 19, 19M, ISA- BELLE MARY, 4435 Sashabaw Road, Waterford Township; age 91; beloved wife of the late Isadore Schappe; dear mother of Mrs, Daniel (Evelyn) Collins, Mrs. Fredrick (Julltta) Garneau, Mrs. Clarence (Isadora) Evans and Alex- irandchlldren. Recllatlor Delaney officiating. Holy Sepulchre Cem Schappe will lit In siaie ai me Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains, until 9:30 Wednesday morn-mg. (Sug^te^vHItlng tours 3 to SMITH, JULY 19, 19M, "WALLACE W., 3127 Baldwin Road, OrfonvHle, (Oakwood), Michigan; I. Smith, Mrs. Dorothy Kenneth and Borros :ar brother of Bertha Id Ford Smith; also sur- July 33, at 3 p.m. at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, t35 South Street, OrtonvIHe, with Rev. James Maglott officiating. Interment In , Mt. Pleasant Cemetery, Oakwood, Michigan. Mr. Smith will He In state at fhe C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, OrtonvIHe.______________ THE FAMILY OF ERNEST AN-. drews wish to e«>res$ their sincere gratitude to Or. Bank for his comforting words and to the friends and neighbors for their many axpresslons of sympathy ex- ■MT. IN MEMORY OF CHARLES I GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLAN You Can Afford MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 703 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 84)456 assistance company.______________ LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY WI 1 Dex-A-Dlef Tablets. Only 98 ce At II «.n. today there were replies at The Press Office in the fol- | lowing boxes: I 3, S, I, II, 18, II, 21, I 23, 28, 28, 35, 38, 42, 45, 48, 48, 58, 71, 87, 18,181. CJ OOOHANOT PUNINAL HOSSa 0 Herbix Pf>. I COATS D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOMI Invalid Car Sarvica _______FE 61111___ "Designed tor Funaralt" HUNTOON , FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac tor 30 ytan 79 Oakland Avt._FI I-8II "Thoughtful Sarvica** > VOORHEES-SIPIE FUNERAL HOME FE 3-aj7t Estabilshad Over 48 Years CtiMlary Lots Lakewood Road, Lake BEAUTIFUL 4 3HAVE LOT. PER- _______TWO four-grave lots In Oakland Hills Memerlel. Write Fred Kaufmen, Marine City, Mich. OAKLAND HILLS — 2 (3RAVES. Section 96 Block F-Cesh S4S0. Write Roberl Gallup, 263 W. Sixth St. Consttotine Mlchlgen, 49043. 4-B 'gr6°P.M. PE 4-S537, AFTEI___________________ ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly advfser, phone FE 2-5133 before 5 b.m., or If n6 answer, cell FE 1-S734. Confidentlel. ON AND AFTER THIS DATE JUl 30. 1965, I will tot be responsit for any debts contracted by ai other other than myself. James March, 2300 Shimmons Rd. Po tiac, Michigan. REWARD, S100 FOR INFORMATION »to the arrest and convic-person or persons who removed carpenter tools and Craftsman Radial Saw head and motor from 630 Joslyn, Lake Orion lest FrI. night. 606 Joslyn, MY Lost and Found LOST: DOLLY FOR MOVING, Vicinity Maple, MIddlebelt or Orchard Lake Avr —--------- —" '■*' 4-S463. Reward.__ LOST: P A R A K I . Please call FE ward. FE 8-0717. 5 Manor area. 682- LOST — BRITTANY SPANIEL, VI- LOST: SIAMESE APRICOT MALE POODLE LOST: SPARE TIRE HOLD DOWN lor a 1939 Rolls Royce. Chrome plated. Liberal reward. 3904 Otsego - FE 3-7743.__________ 2 MEN HIRING PART-TIME factory branch 1s taking ap -jons for Immediate evenini i, must ba 21 to 45 years o AAA OPPORTUNITY ! strictly contidentlal. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION t but growing GM Dealership. Experienced with Pontiac and Cadli-tac cars desirable. Apply In person, Lee Osborn Sales Company, 115 East Liberty Street, MlHord^_ Assistant Shoe Manager Career opportunity for experienced shoe salesman to become assistant manager in large volume shoe department. Apply personnel department or write personnel manager at: Montgomery Ward 409 N. Telegraph PONTIAC MALL BRICK LAYERS Wanted for large school building project. Apply 16300 lO'/z Mile Rd., west of Greenfield. 353 5078. F. W. ant personality, we will talk with you about making your future in the Finance Business. Age 35 to 32, High School Graduate have a car. (salary to fit In with past experience). Contact, Mr. Bloom at General Public Loan Cor., 69 W. Huron , Pontiac, Michigan. COOK'S HELPER RELIEF COOK Insurance. Apply COMBINATION PIZZA I CUSTODIAN type Individual. Inquire It qfflce of Trey Na-1613 LIvamqIs, Troy. Restaurant. Miracle Mile. Fine opiiortunitY for advancanwni, aelary open. Reply Pontiac Press Box 98._______________ EXPERIEHCED GAS STATION AT- H»» W—tad Bldg_J EXCELLENT SALES OPPORTUNITY PAID TRAINING PROTECTED TERRITORIES HOSPITALIZATION RETIREMENT PLAN PRESTIGE a ai/^lqpgertunlty EXCEPTIONAL YOUNG MEN WITH drafting ---- a„". Electronics Service Man Excellent opportunity for TV service man. Must be thoroughly experienced, dependable and hove a good work record. Top pay, many company benefits. Apply personnel department. Montgomery Word ■EXPERIENCED HEARING AID salesman, will consider training right man shouM;‘''maka 112.080 first year. Must have own car. FE 5-7569.____________________ EXPERIENCED MECHANIC FOR GENERAL MOTORS CARS. APPLY IN PERSON. SEE MR. BEN-ETTI. AL HANOUTE, INC. 209 N. PARK BLVD., LAKE ORION. lenry Clark, I, /Hlchlgtn EXPERIENCED AUTO MECHANIC ENGINEERING TRAINEE, PREF-erably with stop experlance. Must have completed high school drafting course or equivalent. Apply Birmingham Hydraulic, 1675 E. Maple.^roy, Michigan.______ EVENING-PART-TIME MEN 31^ TO ^ YEARSJJLD^^^^' US who can aarn S50 weekly working part-time for 4 «nd S niuhlx A week. This Is i Information call I guaranti 674-3231 EXPERIENCED LANDSCAPE MEN, permanent work, apply In person Jacobson Flowers, 101 N. Saginaw. =ULL TIME REAL ESTATE SALES-man. Phone for appt. OR 4-2232. Ray O'Neil Realtor Furniture Salesman We need an experienced salesman who knows furniture and needs to make good money. Company benefits: group insurance, profit sharing, and retirement plons. Apply personnel department or write personnel manager at: Montgomery Word 409 N. Telegraph PONTIAC MALL ^^NACE ^n7~E)^ER I ENCfb only, good pay. Steady work. Ap. ply In person. 237 W. Clarkston Rd., Lake Orion between 3 and Foreman, experienced in decorating plastics and metal, paint experience necessary. Excel- GAS station attendant. Experienced. Apply Sunoco. 13600 W. 8 Mile Rd.. Oak Park. _ Big Boy Drive-ln, Telegrai m or Dixie Highway a Lake Rd. insurance agent, collecting and selling on established debit, experience not necessary, 2 weeks paid school, group hospitalization and life Insurance available, dependable car necessaryr potential earnings first year $7,000. 04 Auburn Ave., Room a. 338-4650, Mon-day. Wed., FrI. 8:30-11:30 a.m. LABORERS-SEE MANPOWER 7:30 a.m.-5 p.m. 1330 W. Wide Track making. i Central, n MACHINIST General machine shop work, all machines. Also pneumatic control assemblers. Long program, 58-hour week, fringe benefits. Apply In person Sahlln Supply Company, 750 West Maple Rd., Troy^_ MAN TO MOW LAI^S AND HELP take care of apartment houses. Call 338-4054, ________ MAN WANTED TO TRAIN FOR Supervisors position with I local trucking company must hava ex- Cr Tdhrfal 17 ORtSSMAKIW.^ SEWING AND KluJiTKEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUKSDAV. JULV 20. 1965 IM PIATAMMS. TOnOlU flLL PMIVATI MOOM FOR ELDiRLY iMy, tvtnrthing lumWwd and par-aonallaad aarvlca. a$-va. R^ Fok FATIENTS, iMALE AND Tamalt, prlvata homa. Good ipaclal didla. num. STONirCROFt NUkSINd h6a»^ MeeII End Tryl^ AA MOVING BOB'S VAN SERVICE MOVING ANO STORAGE FREE ESTIMATES ROEERT TOMPKINS *” Ui^T HAULING aND MOVING, chaap. Any fclnd. FE H»S. PlriirtiN|^li DECorstiiii 23 THOMPSON___________FE «4364 A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR, Paaafing. « S-OT43. INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR PAINT- INTERIOR - EXTERIOR I _______I. Ofval Oldcwwh STWH PAINTING, Capering TUPPEP, OR 3-7061 PAINTING AND DECORATING, IN-ferlor and exterior, blacktop patching, and coating, reasonable rates. Ini estimates, FE S-»S3. quality work assured, paint- IF YOU'RE GOING TO CALIFOR-nla, deliver a lata modal car tor MAM Motors, tm Dixie Hwy„ OR ACXII.______________________ ImBraRi^ _ ^ 26 IS PER CENT SAVINGS ARE Possible on homaownar pollcias. In, AA-plus mutual cwnpanlas- Thera W«rtt6 CliiMrta to Um4 2B RELIABLE, LICENSED DAY CARE Baby sit eves., waafcan^ FE Sdseo. WMtod NBtitoliBiiri 29 OR S4ISS, ME T-SIfS. ASH PAID FOR YOUR USED tumllura and appllancat. FE AIMS. Days only, ask for Mr. Grant. Wyman Fumitura. e:>KS, FILES. OFFICE ^kiRNI tore, poHabla and oMIca lyi^it addln^^^^. drafting ta CASH FOR PIANOS, FURNITURt musical Instrumanft, tools, ate. FE Wantod to Rtirt 32 3-ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT ABEOROOM V tSkyear. SZS-iSIS. WITH LEASE 3-BEOROOM FURNISHED HOUSE. Pontiac or Rochestar area. Will pay sue a month. S4»-57se, Estelle. APARTMENTS TO RENT, HOUSES to rant or buy, llstad by Pontiac Board of Education for new teKh-ers moving to Pontiac Area. Call FE MlSIar* COUPLE DESIRES SMALL HOUSE to rant nr antlon to hliv. Ph. S7AWSS. DESPERATELY Of Pontiac. Will give care, ref. avallabN. SIM .....-■ Lanting. _____________ RESPONSIBLE FAMILY OF 3 1 TO 50 WARREN STOUT, ReaRor SW N. Opdyka Rd. FE SdltS Dally 'tit I MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 37 S«lB NoatBS ANNETT NEEDS LISTINGS 3 ROOMS^yP BATH.^ChTlO j^L- 3-ROOM, BATH PRIVATE' IN-‘-xa, 1 child. FE SBsn. Can 4f SeIb IIbebbb - COMMERCE ROAD. B«, ABED-—n rmcK Ipf 300x300, gat h^** Ml, flmsiace, taka trade fSTmlr 3-ROOM FURNISHED fED APARTMENT, sd mattreae. BaBy Norfft Perry. Pen- Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron St. FE IM)466 Open Evenings and Sundays 1-4 near General Howlfal- « T _ 4 ROOMS AND BATH, SIIS MONTH plus ISO dap., no pets. Ill Sui--- MY 3-ltflO after 4 p.m.__________ BACHELOR. PRIVATE ftA+if. MO 4V^% MORTGAGE 3-badroom brick ranch near Drayton Plaint an paved straat. VACANT - Move right In. Taka advaolaga of Nils low bilaratf rafe mortgaga with monthly paymanit . of only $71 Including avarylhing. Takes about $1,000 to pay oN praA ant owners. WARDEN REALTY 434 W. Huron. Pontiac 33SJIS7 ROO/MS, MIXED AREA, BASE mant, gat heat, storms and tcraant -314 S. Alarthall. OR 3G4B0. “ 47-49 CHAPMAN AVE. 3-famlly, S rooms each. Gat heat. DRAYTON AREA — i Gnderwood Real Estate SOU Dixie Hwy., Clarkstan call 4^3413 ELIZABETH LAiar~ M Heebb i __4* MIXED AREA. FERRY AND SAN-lord. Land contract. $$$$ Aown. B» me. Also 3-badroam oqT'rot-pact, full baaement. Mrt/ Flood. OR 3-7»S$. Rap; C. SchueW. MODEL JACK PRESTON BUILT HOMES 4175 Midland - N. of Walton Bhrd. I Sun.. 3-4 OR 3esi1 ^Ib itotiBe ^ 4< FIRST, IN VALUE RENTING $59 Mo. Excludine taxas and inturanca ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLIMTION ASK OUR "SELLERS" WE'VE SOLD THEIRSI t's our "private finance plen' W. H. BASS i s-r6om I'Tsar"’ ^ EQUITIES 4D*AVe”^ CASH BUYERS ... can sail vour oranaii Elwood Realty . BEOROO^ MIDDLE AGED imbERirTBEDROOM, BASEMENT j^rtment. In Pontiac, $B740, svtt. NEW APARTMENTS iroe St., pertect location. Em from city but, walking tanca to churchat, shopping i tert and banks. Exceptionally la comfortable rooms throughout. 1 FOR FAST action CALL OR 3-3473 Dale Hampshire, Frushour-StruMa HAVE BUYERS FOR Ativ i^lNb apartm I. Wa I Saunders $■ Wyatt FE 3-7041 NOTICE! If you have acreage parcels ter tale—small or large - wa have the buyers, cell us Mayl Clorkston Real Estate B14 S. Main___________MA S-SI3I VACANT LOTS WANTED In Pontiac. Wa pay mare. Immediate cloting. REAL VALUE REALTY. 43M175. Mr. OaviL LARGE ROOMS NEAR GENERAL Hospital, aldarly bachelor or lady, clean quiet neighborhood. No drlnk- ers. FE 3-4755 or FE 3-4447. _____ ROOMS AND BATH, CLEAN, PRIVATE BATH, C6U- $140. Miedroom $1$S. comparison. May be ln_^------- time. Phone FE $-3947 or OR 3-3935. DORRIS S SON REALTORS. UNION COURT Apartment, . rooms and bath, hot iwetar and heat furnished, adults *"• - month. FE 5-7$71. I-BEDROOM, NEAT AND CLEAN. $35 week. $54 deposit. Marr'^ couple only. No pets. 442-3477. 1 BEDROOMS, WHITE LAI tront, fireplace, gat heal. I nithed. Permanent, $150 plus curlty. $$7-4300 oi 4B7-4035. LAKE FRONT SPACIOUS, NICELY HURRY ON THIS ONE I BREWER REAL ESTATE wnilam B. Mitchell. Salatmanagar B. Huron St, PE 4-5101 47 MURRAY. CLEAN 2-STDRY bedroom, basamant, excellent coi dltlen. «g0B4790 down. Immadlal eoSSr^ SYLVAN 435-101 It no ans. 3344333 $500 DOWN >uts you In a nice homa I Pontiac or Suburban or 3-bedroom homes. Smalt nenthly paymants. Michaet't. 343-404$, d7-44$5. Detroit WE 3-4300. 630 ARTHUOl Another outstanding bargain. 4-room house In need of tome repairs, plus extra lot. Only $2,135 down, balance $30 par month. NO CLOSING COST AND NO REFINANCING - HURRY! BREWER REAL ESTATE william B. Mitchell, Salatmanagar 94 E. Huron St._______FE 4-5101 3-bedroom ranch, bullt-ln gla^lc range, flraplaca, 2-car gargga, taka prlvUagap. Terms. AL PAULY, Realtor 4514 DIXIE, REAR OR 3-3000___________Eves. ,FE 3-7444 Large lot. Immedlata potsL___ $7500, $500 down. Monthly peymants only $70 Including everything. BREWER REAL ESTATE iNtW 3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL This brick and atumtnum home LAROE DINING AREA has bams, family room, larga kltctian wim bullt-lns, gaa haat, ready to movo Into. Only $14,5*0 with 1* por cint down. WILL ACCEPT Ati APPLICATIONS |redit problems and retir GIROUX REAL ESTATE 4511 Highland Rd. (AASW *73-7137 NEW HOUSE FOR SALE BY OWN- For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 . ANYTIMf SAT. OR SUN. OR COME TO 39* KENNETT, REAl'vaLuV REALTY tr, Wjm. 274* Bucknar, L*ka Orion. my 3-1339. NORTH SIDE INCOME GALE road; 3-BEDROOM, FULL basamant, ivy baths, large M. $14,000. OR 3-3010, GAYLORD $9,990 r w your lo^evs firch cupboards,'oi INSULATED. Detl TWO BEDROOM AUBURN HEIGHTS, good h FE $-9493. LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD NO DOWN PAYMENT NO PAYMENT THE 1ST MONTH Tamoorary model locatad at Lu mATRE^HOME BUILDERS FE $-3743 1:30 TO 5 P.A4. .EVENINGS, LI 3-7337 NORTH SUBURBAN 3-badroom, 104t. living room. .. kitchan, full baaamartt, 75x300 lot. Only $11,900. REAGAN REAL ESTATE 1351 N. Opdyka_____333-0134 3RTONVILLE NEAR ON M15. 40 acres. Large modem 4-bedreom d 3-t»droom home. Cirpet' TRADE YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT RUSSELL YOUNG, 53V3 W. HURON FE 4-3030 AFFORDABLE You-'n'-Honeybug could move In for about $350. Cozy 3-badroom, HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE AREA CITY RANCH Sound construction and good loca-tlon makes this 3-bedroom brick ranch a good buy. Living room, kitchen, full basement and gat heat. Ivy-car garage. Many extras. Call for appf. 166 S, SHIRLEY lohn K. Irwin I dining room, nice 330-93 k fenced, stonw throw poet lot chain to Union ------- . $U,350-$1,435 dowr.. . .. ------ including taxes and Insulance plus neighborhood. $14,900. Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1309 Pontiac State ‘ “ 330-9394 MIXED AREA priced FOR QUICK SALE. 3-bed-' ~xldw, neatly daeoratad, in living room and hall. In badreems. Basamant lien room, gas heat, ge-wlth $750 dOM on land ..JE 3-bedroom, 1-tlory frame. Mahogany paneled walls In living room, carpet In living room CLARK car attached garage, ,gat heat. A real buy at $11,900. WEST SIDE - Family home with 3 bedrooms, 1V5 bents, car-pated living room with ftrapisce, separata dining room, gat heat, remodeled kitchen with dishwasher. 1-car garage. City sewer, water and paved street. Best of neighborhoods. Good pottettlon. EAST OF PONTIAC, 3-badroom rancher on 1 acre wifh lull basament, small bam, fireplace and many other extras. Some CLARK REAL ESTATE 3101 W. HURON ST. FE 3-700$ MULTIPLE LIOTINO SERVICE ALUMINUM SIDING, GUTTERS and roofs. Wa cover anything at the right price. OR 3-0179.__ 1-A ALUMINUM SIDING-STORMS . FE 5-9545. Joo Vallaly, OL 1-4433. KAISER ALC6a aluminum Si6- Cblt^dBj^B CHLORIDE SERVICE CO. RESI- PianB T*Niii|^ Ptostori«g SarvicB SHERRIFF-GOSLIN SIDING ROOFING 54 8. Cats Uka______« BRYAN F. FRENCH CO. ESTI-mates freely given. FE 541973. MBS GUTTER COMPANY NEW HOUSE ANO REMODELING DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST, F 4900, Froa Estimates.________ OURNEN ASPHALT PAVING CO. HBuHilf $B|1|>iiBS RETAIL PLUMBING AND HEATING SUPPLY Repair Parts and Raplacamanti 39 Oakland / - »BHtol EyipoiBiit BROWNIES HARDWARE Floor sanoers - polishers WALL PAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER - POWER SAWS 953 Joslyn Open Sun. FE 4-4105 Wallpaper Steamer t drivawayt fating. OR 3-1' -1957 or FE 3-7371. JOHNSTONE WALL REPAIR Block LnyiRf CARL L. BILLS SR.. NEW AND . Old tioer sanding. FE BJTor____ , JOHN TAYLOR, FUMR LAYING, sanding and flnltmng. 35 years - axperience. 333-4975.______ R. G. SNYPeR, floor LAYING CLARKSTON ROOFING COMPANY, re-roofs and repair. Inturanca work and own In Wayne, Oaklend and Macomb Co's. 473-9397._________ ; NEW ROOFS, REPAIRS, INSURED -i»d guaranteed. Call Tom, 403-4543. ROOFING AND REPAIR. Boots-AcceMoriot STOP DREAMING Let Us Help You Save BOATS-MOTORS-TRAILERS DOCKS Discount prices now m effect Harrington Boat Works "YOUR EVINRUDE DEALER" l«9« 5 Telegraph 333-<033 Building Moi^lzation 3-CAR GARAGES. SO'XIO', M75. WE build any size. Camant work — Free estimates. Pedy-Bullt Garage Co., OR 3-5419.________ SCAR garage, $*99 ADDITIONS Alto Alum, windows, doors, t GRAVES CONTRACTING Free Estimates______OR 4-1511 carpentry and repair wolik _______OL 1-0355______ CARPENTRY AND GENERAL building. Rapid Construction. PAINT AAAILBOX, POST AND RE-box. Rag. *9.95, special now 7. Mailbox Maintenance, P.O. A COMPLETE LANDSCAF iCAH SERV-maintanance. TroB TriiRNiiRg Service BBL TREE TRIMMING, REMOVAL. PEAT MOSS, TOP S-.-.___________ dirt, sand, crushed limestone, gravel, buUdozing. Tall Timbers Nursery, 1*45 S. Telegraph Rd. 333-444$, If no answer, MA 4437$. A-l MERION OR KENTUCKY SOD, < laid or dallvarad. SaadIng or redressing old lawns. Free estimates. No money down. Braece Lent' Ing, FE 3-0141 or FE 5-3303. a; complete LmNOSCAPING, sodding, taeding, dlKlng, plowing, grading, back hoe and 1^—‘ end toadlng, retaining w, Broken 4-Inch sidewalk, sold load. Free estimates. FR 4-3 MERION BLIJE SOD. ftiCK UP OR dallvarad. 3401 Crooks. UL------- PAVING BRICKS FOR PATIOS, garden borders, outside grll' fireplaces. OAKLAND FUEL _________ PAINT, 45 Thomas St. FE 5^159. TrveUEg Reasonable. FE 4-1353. LIGHT ANO HEAVY TRUCKING ■ ........... LIGHT HAULING, GARAGES ANO baaetnants cleaned. 474-1341 TRUCK HAULING, LAWN, rage, basement cleaning. UL HOUSE RAISING AND MOVING, temeni work. R. McCallum, FE 5-454t 0. FE 3-7450.__________ TRENCHING, FOOTINGS, ADD-ONS. A-1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR. state licenced, reasonable. 4*3-0440. CARPENTRY, NEW AND REPAlft Free estimates. 335*901. INTERIOR FINISH. Kl PMlIr^ 40 years axper ROUGH, FINISH, ikLUMINUM 410- and roofing i--- ----- — “ modal work. MY 3;7391._____________ CcNMiit Work TALBOTT LUMBLR Glass Insfalled In doors and wl dimrs. Complete buUdlng sarvlca. PalNtiiig and Dteorotiag A PAINTING - INTERIOR - EX- Trucks to Rent VO-Ton pickupt IVb-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS ANO EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks - SamFTrallars Pontiac Fariu and Industrial Tractor Co. *35 S. WOODWARD FE 441441 FE 4-1443 ___Open Dally including Sunday UiidtrgrMiid SpriHkltrt INSTAI LATION AND SERVICE faction guaranteed. FE 3 1431 WALLS AND WINDOW CLEANING. FE 3-9015. PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING , ^R^BBSBS, Unto^skod 40 2-BEDROOM MODERN. WEST SUB-urban. Refrigerator and stov* tached garage. Adults. Refer $75 monthly. Lavender. 334-351 NINGS OR 34339. Everett Cummings, Realtor 35(3 UNION LAKE ROAD _ . ---- 3»71*1lSEIS QUARTOS EN ROCt-ESiER AREA-WILL TRADE I mx REALTY in 3-3131. UL 3-M75 RdCHESTlFLAKEVILLE ARE A, exclusive ^bedroom colonial with 19 acres, reasonably priced, terms, 1530 Rochester Rd., Broker, B.F. ----- 403-3135. ' ^^1LAZENBY HOLLY - LOCKE STREET. TVifO-bedroom. Carpeted living room. OOxllO-tt. lot. Tiled besemeni, aluminum screens and storms. 434- 4 PISO, ; PE I • AVAILABLE AUGUST 4-BEDROOM LAKEFRONT quXd-levol, car;selad family room. Dining room, garage, beach, 3 baths. 11 miles W. of Pontiac. $350 a moi on laasa. 343-3401. BOULEVARD HEIGHTS Applications now being accapfad Contact Residont AAontger •|4 Bail Blvd. of---------- BARGAIN 4-BEDROOM HOME LOCATED NEAR CASS LAKE-FULL BASEMENT - LIVING ROOM - DINING ROOM - KITCHEN — SUN-PORCH - I'/i-CAR GARAGE -AUTOMATIC HEAT - PRICED TO SELL ----------- HURON GARDENS Vary neat 3-bedroom bungalow, dining room, excellent kRchen, good clean basement with heat, convenient fo phopplng a..,., close to schools and bus Unas. $10,500. Terms arranged. J, J. JOLL, Reoltv FE 3-3400 403-0303 Ml 4-5573 jrrj Ave., CaM J SYLVAN MANOR 3-bedroom, 1'/S both, ranch home. Storms snd screens. Fenced rear yard. ConvenianI to shopping. Shown by appointmont. LESLIE R. TRIPP, Realtor 75 West Huron Strati FE 5-0141 (Evonlngs Ml 7-3379) SMITH COUNTRY LIVING "This homo It lust what th tor erdtrsd." Situated on a large .150x175' lot with fruit trees, lovely shrubs, flovrert galore. Hat 3 bedrooms, large living room, ei ' lent kitchen and full tlla b altachad IVi-car garaga braeztway, front and rear por that you can ralax In. Prici toll $11,950. 10 per cant down. SILVER LAKE AREA cor attached garage, show lower level, brick and alur____________ tiding, beautifully landscaped, lake privileges. Mutt be teen f* — predate. Priced cl $31,400 I HIITER CLARKSTON VILLAGE offer this large icellent condHIon, | - trede-lns accepted ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES - PINE LAKE, 3-BEDROOM BRICK. Eves, i refrigersto 3-0535. ' BRICK RANCH, CLARKSTON AREA, 3-b*droom, basement, family fireplace. $37,950. MA 5-1493. CASS LAKE, CLEAN 2-BEDROOM, BY OWNER, 5400 DOWN, 3 BED rooms, 1'/5-c*r garage, 3 lolt, full price $7,400 at $40 a mo., located at 4I{7 Welland Dr., off Green Lake Rd. ____________ NICI^ 4-BEOROOM COTTAGE AVAILABLE ON L A K Leelanau week of July 24 and I Everything fumlshed Includii beat. $55 par weak. OR 3-5540. r SC^Ihwt* Lake, Drayton NiCETY~FURNISHED' PRT'^TE | bath-entrance, near town. 203 West { Strathmore to see.____________ ROOM AND OR BOARD -w Oakland Avo. PE 4-'— ' BIG BARGAIN 9om, bath, oil heat, with small ached store, on Hqword St., II price $4900-$900 down. $40 a .Munth. Save Auto. FE 5-337* or FE 5-3397._____________________ Birds, Bees, Squirrels and Trees Abound In rugged oaks, surrounding this delightfully clean modern basement, 3»"’• 4 BEDROOMS - i'/i biths. Lergej ROLFE H. SMITH, Realtor ’''IST" s rjlnnSfi™ 344 S. Telegraph Skt- AlumK ?ld^ng"'^ir'.:? 111,750. Terms. CLARKSTON. Brick, 1350 tq. ft. 3 LOTS - With this 4 rooms endj $10,490. ARISTOCRAT BUILDERS, both. Ook floort. Oil furnace. Will « , tv—^ • — t-i—iT^ WEAVER Realtor, 3793 Elizabath Lake Road. FE 3-0179. After 0 p.m. 330-1305. IDEAL FAMILY HOME East suburban, handy to 4 col-legas, 3-bodroom. atudy, modtm kitchan, largo living and dining ' AT ROCHESTER nhouse on 3 acres. Aluminum g, storms and screens, 3 bad- Tao Li IN OXFORD _ MILTON WEAVER INC., REALTOR s. — 3 b< family room. Also** gas t basamant. Carpeted living ---- 3-car garage. Large lot. $31,000. Terms. HUMPHRIES REALTY Oxtord__________________ IN OXFORD Clear Lake Subdivitlon. 3-bedroom cottage with living room, kitchan lakt jM’lvllogos, low e, $4,950. 4tf5403. ROOM FOR 1 OR 3'MEN, SHARE home with college man, every-fhine fufnIshedr-FE 3-5S43. SLEEPING ROOMS FOR RENt Close to 40»^.________________ SLEEPING ROOMS 335-1903_________ Reoffli Wlto^rd 43 GENTLEMEN - LOVELY HOME, Realtor W W. HURON " • IS call OR 3 . $5900 « . ..I 01.000 I contract BIRMINGHAM lUBURN HEIGHTS, OFFICE, RE-tall store or warehouse spact available, new buildings, progressing area, cornre locaflon, front and rear perking. J. W. Nawmyer Con--—UL 3-3340 and Ml 4-**“ WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE 291 S. Woodward BIrmInc 144-4300 PHONES W BLOOMFIELD NEW RANCH MODELS OPEN NOW down. SSOper mor HUMPHRIES REALTY Oxford_______ OA t.2417 "KINZLER OAKLAND LAKE FRONT Apptaling large 2-bedroom bur golow with broezeway and garage, walkout 30-foot paneled recreation < room with bar. Carpeting draperies. Shade trees. Boat d ROY LAZENBY, Realtor 93 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-03 _____Multiple Llating Service_ Val-U-Way Government Representative Pontioc Northern Area 3-bedroom homo with full basement. High lot. A good doming and e llttlt paint will make this honw look like new. Full price ^^^50,950, $350 down, $75 per Extra Lot Goes with this older 3-bedroom home on Willard St. Has full base-mant. Almost now gas haat. Front porch. Dining room. Low taxes and Is In nlcaly kapt condition. Priced under $10,500 with only 1450 Orion Township Ges t remic tiled bath. Locatad on a sized lol. Paved street. walking distance, ling, but .Is a steel vIlT move you In. Schools at 110,500. WE TRADE EQUITIES Over 51,000,000 sold so for In '45 ARRO CASH FOR EQUITY-LAND CONTRACT WE.BUILD-WE TRADE INCOME. Spacious 3-famlly, sep-I mfrancas, baths and heat-units, full basamant, gas aluminum storms and stairs to larga partly TKiorH attic for storagt, 3-car garaga, pavad driva and street, close to schools, bus and shopping, $13,500. Torms. pTng, *13,5*0. Terms. 4JOY SUMMER LIVING, lake front lot with cottages, good boat furnaces, a SPOTLESS HOME, fully Insulated, oak floors, plasftrod walls, 2-bedrooms, tiled both, full basamant, larM boautlfully panolad wall and tiled floor, family room with bar, \ aluminum storms snd screens, well kept fenced yard with soma treat, lake privllagas at prNale beach with picnic area mutt be tern to be appraclalad. BEAUTIFUIa BRICK RANCH, 34-loot living room, full basammt. 2-car garage. Loads of axirat. Sped PUS lol In excellent neighbor hood — Shown by appoinlmenl $4500. Terms. PHONE 682-2211 IRWIN NEAR GMTC - Ibedroom bunga-' with wall-to-wall carpeting in g room, dining room and hall, basamant with gat heal, 1-garaga and conventontly lo-I near Ytilow Truck 4 Coach. NEW AIR-CONDITIONED OFFICES, locatid at 4511 Huron Street. OR M331 or 343-7474. OFnSFSPACirSOb SQUARfTrfT -nodern building, well situated ample parking. Call 330-9344 — garage, landscaped. baseinet,' I. CtoM to SI Clarkston school area. 514,500 i 'JOHN* kTnZLER, Reoltor 1319 Olxlo Hwy. 474-3235 i Across from Packers Store • Multiple Listing Service Dpi KEEGO HARBOR 3-bedroom house. Gas heat, ment. Good locttlon. $7,000. JACK LOVELAND 3100 Cass Lake Road HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri-Level $12,900 as Heat Attached Garage 4 Baths Family Room Dver 1,350 tq. It. of Living Arta Modal Available Immadleta Possession THE ECONO-TRI Btdrooms Lot Included AT $11,000 imlly Room Attached Garage List Here-All Cash for Your Home! R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-353 345 Oaklend Open 9-7 Alter hours PE 4-4407 or FE 1-1344 PRIVILEGES ON SYLVAN LAKE AND FHA TERMS Make this 3 home e gooi living room basement, o landscaped trees, lot s__ _,,v. Reduced. CALL FOR MORE DE- ; DRAYTON WOODS — Hi buy. Large d dining ro FA heat, with tore 100x133 rii I------- TAILSI PRIVILEGES ON ELIZABETH LAKE RORABAUGH ~~-TAkTmw^ 3 STORES, ONE 14'X44', OTHER 19'x5S'x34', Parry Shopping Canter corner Perry, Joslyn and Ivy Sts. across from Krootr Suptr M------------- BOB'S Coney IsTand, Bob 7 X 40' SEVEN-STALL GARAGE, Ir compressor, oqu’ppod tor ' nd Mint or clean-up shop. E ^41, BUI Smith. LOCATE YOUR BUSINESS WHERE action HI BOO to 1400 sq. It. modem office building available. Ill OR 4-3233. Ray O'Nall Realtor Rood location. Leota available. i.aii wr. i-ro OR 4-3131 or OL 14)575. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 190 PMiixr Ik. Rd. Opon 0 .. . MLS OL 1-0S75 BY OWNER NEAR ROCHESTER 2-ttory colonial — 3 yMrt oM, In University Hills, 4 bedrooms, baths, living room, dining room, family room, gat haat. $29,900. 6S1-3150 - BY OWNER - 3-BEDROOM BRICK, ---ga. fenced, basement r e c. t, mixed erne. FE 5-*410. CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR 330 W. WALTON 310-4004 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE LARGE HOUSE, 3 BEDROOMS, 1' baths, 3 fireplaces, with to Im« stote, also another lot for sell BY OWNER, 3-BEDRODM HOME, large M, arxlOl', new gas heat, remodeled, near Drayton shopping center end school. OR 3-143$, OR I LAKE ORION AREA Homo on Long Lake, lirgo good beach, unobstructod vL~ across lake, combination living room, dining room, kitchen, 2 bisu-rooms, bath, 3 unfinished roor up. Oil heat and $15,000. Terms. C. A. WEBSTER, Realtor A 0-3515 J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 343to404 10351 Highland Rd. (Mg TAYLOR MODEL OPEN DAILY 1 to 9 n Cotonlal, family dining ..d 23' living room “ ■ baths. Paneled IlYxl proch, attached 3-cer garage. ' Surrounded by towering shade trees. ONLY 013,900 ON TERMS. SMITH & WIDEMAN LAKE FRONT INCOME - Aluminum and Parmattona colonial ranch. 7 larga rooms and futl bat up with 3 3-room apartments lur-- nithed In lower waBi-out basamant. Fenced lot end attached garage. Lots of storage, plus good-sized besement, 3 bMts, dock and raft with lovaly sandy water front, concrete tea wall. Call today tor further Information. GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 390 W. Vltalton FE 3-7SI3 GLES CLOSE-IN INCOME, I rooms, hardwood floort, plastorod walls, oil heat, full batomoni, IWcar ga-Ideal supplamant Income toro^ngo, NICHOLIE HARRINGTON HILLS laragc ten ly tlMSO. WEST SUBURBAN T h r e e-bodroom b dining area. Kite! 1, ivi ceramic bam, uitposai, _ _ S*«SrV! Less Than Rent ■ ' . $175. Moves You In 7909 Highlond Road (MS9) 5 Miles West of Airport Brick and aluminum tiding, 3 bad- EAST SIDE Two-badroom bungalow. Living dining area. Kitchen and tulllty room. Goraga. Vacant. About GILES REALTY CO- FE 5-4175 331 Baldwin Ave. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE MMPSEN r Neighbor Traded-Why Don't You? HERRINGTON HILLS BY OWNER: 1-BEDROOM BRICK tri-tovel. Ranch with caiport. Largo carpeted living room, custom finished recreation room, m 2-BEDROOM LAKE FRONT Cortege on Round Lake, needs toms work, large living room, In-sulited end tiled oaillngs, M***, 515** down on land contract. 2-BEDROOM BUNGALOW Alunllnum tiding, batamani, new gat tumaca, carpet. 11,5*0, farms FLATTLEY REALTY « Commerce______________34S4WI 1-BEORDOM WITH ATTACHED GA- rage. Lol (1x131, newly ----- ' Intorler. Terms. 474-3735. CLARKSTON SCHOOL AREA l-’bedroom brick vanber bungatos vim 2-car detached garaga, n tontty daeoratad, large lot, S3I CRESCENT LAKE AREA, ^BEO■ room brick, bosemont, garoge. — 4*3-4137.____________ -w at S97 ............. principal, Infaratf, taxes and Inturanca. Take Orcfwrd Lake Rd. to Com-fnerce Rd„ take Commerce to $. Commerce Rd., turn right at (Man-. gary St., left to Loa Arbolat AMERICANAJfOMBS MIXED AREA TUCKER REALTY____________ AM1DERN 4-ROOM, LARGE UTILI-braazaway, attached garaga. .. heat, lot 100x15*, Duck Loko prlvltogo, Immodiato postostlon. CHARLES H. HARMON FE 4^ ZW-^AR GARAGE, S775 DOWN. Mixed Neighborheod UNION LAKE VILLAGE Close h 3 bedrooms, la large aftic tor _____ ________ Full baaamant. 3-car garaga. acre of ground wim fruit traos. AUBURN HEIGHTS 3 badra*mt, 1V5-ttory home. 3lardwoad''f!em Ga-TERMS. Eve. CaH MR. ALTON FE 4-53M III Caiam^, ta^lf^ d lot. This honia car 'BUD' FHA torms, PRICE REDUCED aluminum thtod, four-IW story homa, baaa-:rtatlon room, paneled Id enclosed reer porch, • rage, fencad yard. High Sdtool Otsfrlcf. SYLVAN LAKE PRIVILEGES SEE FOR YOURSELF! LITTLE COST, BIG RESULTS WITH PRESS WANT ADSI ... eatlon room. Carpttod living room, drapot. cyctaia fencing with garaga, paved drive and straat. $15,50). Terms. North Point Realty I 59*4 s. toain . Clarkston, MA 5-2341 If no ans. AAA 5-15*31 ni..—-t ”• BY OWNER - 3-BEDROOM HOUSl. h**fl"7*"oak Hlir *ll*lJ®*GA®*i MU(M SUBS: PONTIAC 31*9 or Ml 4*544 tor «ppolnfmant. h LEWIS REALTY - FE I-: WES fOWN REALTY 3-4477*Ewts BM FA lumM, - acra of im, 3- Low Down Payment an IMS tple and span ^badroon home In handy aatf sMa location corner lot .wim carpttod llvln( room, full baiemonf, got heal and hot water, tndnaralor, an closed' front pordt. IW-car fa rage. Priced at *10,75*: enTi $35* down, plus cleting cotts N quallflod buyer. ' "Bud" Nicholie, Realtor 49 Mt. Clamtm If. FE 5-1201 After^6 P.M. FE 2-3370 mity win enlay. Living room im firoplaco, closad-ln rear vch, two I. PI CLEARANCE SALE Usod Eaay Spin-Ory. Usad Frigid a I r 0 rofrlgaralor, $39. RacondF tianad FrlgWolra waahar. CRUMP ELECTRIC did couch,_________ ______ comploto. FE 54245.__________ DULL GOLD ACRILAN RUG rX9' J^' VP.! claaning. Old ELECTRIC AND GAS RANGES, RCA TV $20; chott of drawers, $15; portabit tawing machine, $15; buftat, $20. Many more mls- ___ 0 Call U _ _ _ GOOD USED REFitlOERAfOR, t3S'. Chrome kltchw set, $15. 593-1259. H|6e-A-BED. REASONABLE. 574-3l4«_ l-FI, BA-rHiNETTB, BiD, HIGH chair, stroller, walker. Call offer 7 P.m., IB7.4455.____________ HOME FREEZER Full Family Size All fasH’rwM diel Bonus storage door CASH AND CARRY 4'xt' Mahogany V-6roovod ... 52.95 4'x7' Mahogany V-Groovod ... 1249 Optn MON. end FrI. DRAYTON PL^'^ OR 34911 CLOSE OUT ON ALL SHOBI $3 pr. also Oropory Moiorlol 19 conti yard. LIborol Bllh Outpost, 3245 Dixie Hwy. OR 34474. ____ COMPLETE itbCK OF Fl>l AND fittings, ploatlc, cojpor snd east Iron lor drains. Ftaitlc. coppor and galvsmliod tor wotor. meek ot, MAtTRBU WITH C(WI!e, 41" rolloway bod — partoet con. DEALBRS INVITBO " right. Hot spot location n LOANS TO $1,000 To consolidate hills Into 57500., S4000. doi on the balance. ------- ... Inventory approximately 3 5033 or OR 4-3232. RAY O'NEIL R 3520 Pontiac Lai OR 34033 or 0 ...,_____ ________$ experienced counselors k, fixtures. Credit life Insurance evelleble -Chased fori Slop In or phone FE 5-1121 J«r^th| home & AUTO LOAN CO. 7 N Perry St. t to S dtUly. Set. 9 LOANS TO $1,00C Commercial GRAMPION HILLS ( With 1 . On 50x159 near Mall, nd St. Benedict's. . family kltchtn. Large Home Ixing up but an ' $12,950, 1'j baths, | m, 15x24 family; it and attached ALUMINUM SIDED BUNGALOW. FRANK SHEPARD ________OL 14503.__________I HI-HILL VILLAGE fine community to build your I own home In North East section, V/t baths, walk4)ut cktie to 1-75. Excellent building 'Ith recreation room, sites, lOCxtOO' and large on paved ^ ------ ...----strMts^^wIth^ go^^drelnege. Low I “ "'“''"ladd*? Tnc. 1 |3$85 N. Lapeer Rd„ Perry (M24) |fe 5-9291 or OR 3-1231 aHer 7:30 family room, |Open daily 10-t___ Sunday 12-5] . garage, n either Gl or FHA ti BIG VALUE - Roomy I, room. h9wly carpet^ I Willioms Lake Front r;??So PINE LAKE WARREN STOUT, Realtor 14S0 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-1155 Multiple Listing Service Dally Til t FE 8-0466 A-l BUYS PONTIAC-NORTH SIDE DRAYTON PLAINS Oew 3-bedroom ranch, aluminum lidlng, full basement, large 12x20 t. kitchen, gas heel. Lake prlvl-eges $12,500 with $1,250 down, mmedlate possession. WHIPPLE LAKE Beautifully landscaped lot. PONTIAC LAKE 3 bedroorr beautiful possession. WHITE LAKE FRONTAGE lure window overlooking lak walk out recreation room with be built-in music aystem, 2'/i-car g TAYLOR AGENCY 7732 Highland Rd. (AAS91 OR 40: WAl TERo LAKE OFFERS 3-bedroom brick, $12,200 Choice hill sites tor ranches M-levels. 5 lots, $1975 total, rectlon:.' Clarkston-Orlon Rd. s north ot 8895 Northern Property 51 -A COMPLETELY MODERN 6 ROOMS and bath, flower. frul‘ ‘ ries, large garden sp seen to appreciate. Wi Boxclaer. Rl. 2, Box vMIe, Michigan. __________ FURNISHED CABIN AND 2 LOTS on Mack Lake near MIo. Key Is at Graham Real Estate, MIo, Michigan. Clorkston Real Estate 55 S. y^ln MA 5-51 OWNER TRANSFERRED. NE GUARANTEED TRADE-IN PLAN No. 68 ROCHESTER-UTICA AREA EXTRA SHARP 3-bedroom brick rancher with 2-cer garage, l'/5 ceramic tile baths, Florida room, lireplace, built-ins and many extras. Spacious well-landscaped lot. Cyclone-fenced, nice trees end area of tine homes. Wonderful suburban area, real convenient to North Detroit working area. Priced to sell quickly at iiS.SK with as llllle « 82,500 down to qualllled purchaser. No. 24 INDIANWOOD LAKE BEAUTIFUL WOODED scenic area, deadend street and private lake. Approximately 235 ft. water frontage, specious brick rancher with 2100 iq. It. of nving area plus large lemlly room with fireplace end to outside petlo. Underground sprinkling system, plenty of ■ " " ■■■"at a wonderful place to live and No. 55 FHA TERMS IN CITYf sharp 3-bcdroom. 2 to everything, fenced yard a down plus costs. This you mus Pontiac School District with suburban taxes. The lot Is big and the house Is spacious and reaionably priced at $23,900 with $3,000 down end no mortgage costs. Credit must be approved by sellers. CALL TODAY. No. 3 NEARLY NEW HOLLY AREA-Cu$toi;n-bullt $24,500 with as little a brick rancher overlooking country settlna. nicely land-h fireplace. ___ any extras. PRICE REDUCED to MODELS YOUR CHOICE OF t In three wonderful locations range from $12,500 to $25,950 plus'lot. Ranchers, Tri-ieveis eno Colonials loaded with extra features and beautifully furnished lor your Inspection. Yuo Will Never Build lor Less. WHY WAIT? Be our guest. Models (Tpen Dally 5 to t. Saturday 2 to 5 and Sunday 2 to t p.m. LAKE ORION HIGHLANDS M-24 to Lake Orion, right on Flint St. to Orion Rd., right ep-proxlmetely 1 mile to Betemen sign. LAKE OAKLAND SHORES Dixie Tlwy. to Seshebew, right to Walton, right to Betemen sign. ULTRA HOMES SUB. M-59 to Whittlar St. opposite City Airport, turn left at Bateman - -----... ---------, Sat. 2 - 5 and Sun. 2 - t p.m. BEAUTIFUL .BUILDING SITES TWO NEW SUBDIVISIONS MODESTLY PRICED YOU CAN TRADE 377 S. Telegraph Open Daily 9-9 Realtor M. L. S. FE 8-7161 Sunday 1-5 Lake prlvilejies llXSOOx Termt. WATERFORD REALTY D. Bryson, Realtor OR 3-1273 4540 Dixie Hwy. Van Welt Bldg. O'NEIL MODELS Open Daily 1 to 9 Westridge of Woterford now has four professionally decorated and furnished model homes In one grouping. Namely, I h e "Elegante," our gracious Colonial, the "Trieste," a charming and spacious raised ranch, the "Le-Grande". a rambling ultra ranch styled end last the "(Sptimum," the handsomest, most attractive design v ■ --- ■ built an and "0... Highway li I ; N^AR WEST BRANCH - RETIRE- oms, garage. Hunting end fish-g area. Stream through property, acres. Write 3192 Stratford St., LE River ^frPn r lot. thdish dree, $1,995, $20 down, $20 —- ——h Bros., OR 3-1295. 54 Lots-Acreoge city I Beautifull" Dixie ........ ;embrook Lane, left to Conne Mara Lane. TRADING IS TERRIFIC 5 ACRES Large Stately Colonial. Antique minded? This will suit your every me fireplace, Old In style. desire! 3 bedroo sDKious dining ro modem for leKISTn,,": >p. $10,000 do n with fireplace, d Large^^ 2-bedroom rwicher, leper- screened "Eree^ay, i<»r 'ga*rm and beautiful landscaped lot. $tS,-. W^wlth $1,500 down plus cloting LADY OF THE LAKES AREA : flaors). Flroplaca In living m. PItstered walls, marble sprinkling rred and only 1 catti. to tall. I l,8Se down ptu% mortgage RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 1530 PONTIAC LK. RD. OPEN 9 OR 44213 MLB OL 14S CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR M W. WALTON 338-401 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Acreage—Homesites ■S - Clerl King l«nd. I___ B potential. $5,500 I. $3,250 to $5,950, I ORTONVILLE High- Underwood Real Estate $555 Dixie Hvn., Clarkslon _________Call 52S.2515_____ John K. Irwin j & SONS REALTORS ' 313 W. Huron - Since 1925 I Phone FE 5-9445 1 Evenings cell_______FE $-1958 LIVE In RESTRICTED CLARKSr Ion Hills Estates. ’/. ml. northwest! of Clarkslon. Only 3 of these 1 and 2 acre sites left. $3900 each. arkston school ( OPERATING PARTY STORE - 30x 50 building plus 2-story income 1 acre corner. In good nelght hood — Auburn Heights er._. $35,000 cash to existing mortgage Underwood Real Estate $555 Dixie Hwy.. Clarkslon Call 525-2515 L ROUTE jmc" Reply* Pontiac Press Box 50. FULL Ok PART “TIME “ BUSINESS kmerlca'i leading credit orgenlza-I reliable man ig malor oil company cards area, swimming pool, Clubhouse, ! fish, boat. No down, take over i p^ments, $19 per mo. Call Chuck FE 4-4509-OR 3-1295. PONTIAC" 10 MINUTES, BALDWIN i Waterford Hill Manor | Just perfect tor your future home — new section now open. i LOIS irom $3,750 j DON WHITE, INC. i 2091 Dixie Hwy. _?i WE HAVE S E V E R A L CHOICE PARCELS LOCATED IN PRIME AREAS. Call for full details - If we TtAAES REaIty, 5754395. '____ Sole Farms 56 2 LARGE FARMS IN OXFORD. ALLY REALTY. 573-9701 MICHIGAN Business Soles, Inc. kNDMESSER __legraph M'dTELS . CHAPIN, Motel Broker or license. GoWer. I be sold. WelF cMuipMva oer end kitchen. Story cement block building. 13 zooms tor rent, plus 3-bedroom apt. for owner. Only $35,000. Substantial down payment. Price includr K. L. Templeton, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lake Road____MH-Vm “ PARTY STORE A sharp^ Baer a^ Wlna slot d wife setup. — WILL I minutes from loa3!®$13,m________ PAUL JONES REALTY FE 4-8550 , 3434 90 ACRE FARM, NORTH BRANCH, 1 $29,700, dtS-3325 or jm-3068. I 1M ACRES "I a,. 3-bedroom home. Full set of good buildings. Priced at $225 per acre. AAore acreage evelleble. Cell to ■ •■ Ideal husband < $11,000 plus stock down. TAKE HOME IN TRADE. WARDEN REALTY V. Huron, Pontiac 3M nsj RESTAURANT Telegraph and Voorhels. Good ment and gross, well estab-l Jlshed, near multip Iriendly. helpful FE 2-9206 Is the number to cell OAKLAND LOAN CO. Pontiac Steto Ben^B^M^. fretter's warehouse outlet 1550 S. Telegraph________« 3-7051 HOUSE FULL OF FURNlfOkS', refrigerator, stova and freezer.— ULJ-3712. ____ HOTPOINT ELECTRIC RANGE.' 35-l^h. Good condlUon, $25. 52S-M13. IDEAL FOR CABIN. GE REFRIGERATOR. $15 ________FE 44^4 ..... kitchen, living room, bed- f room. j[reezer_end mlsc^FE 5-7932. ™ ----- LIVING ROOM SUITE, AND OC- ceslonel chair. FE 5-1795. MAHOGANY DINING ROOM TA-ble with extra leaf end padding, Q >11 c X, $25. FE 4-5739. MUST SELL, MOVING - RAYtAN furniture, tables, chairs, lainpi, etc. Swaps 63 OUTBOARD, 12' PRAM, BRAND tw, 1959 stetiofl wagon ------ sen. 9$ Ftmnce. _ 194rGMC TON TRUCK, h /Siyep tor ?^E 5-7932. 954 PONTIAC EN mission, typewrite small refrigerator. $8. PER SEWING MACHINE, _____________ CABINET MODEL. Embrol buttonholes, bllndhems, s' off accaunSaln 9 MOS. AT______ MONTH OR 871. CASH BALANCE. Guaranteed. Universel Co., FE 4-0905.________________________ !niCE rug, electric STOVE, M, wardrobe, youth bed, crib, ten, radio, miK., OR 3-9544. Cash 0 1965 HOUSETAILER, 35 a piece ot property or ment on a house. FE 8- 8-4175.___ _ FOR SALE OR TRADE 1953 GMC pickup for riding horse. 525-1440. _ RIDING S'/i-HORSEPOWeR ELEC-■ start wheelhorse lawn ranger 32-Inch rotary mower. $275 Salt Clothing I — '«»p- PLASTIC VifALL TtLf' I B8iG Outlet. 1075 W. Huu POR REFRIOBRAfOR, $25. Dryer,' $35. P»t Gas stove, $25. Refrigerator — r rt 1,^ -- a, 1—1. top freezer, $49. 21 Inch TV, $25. SPECIAL 10 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Conslili of: piece living room suite with 1 step-tables, 1 cocktail table end 3 table double clothes. Call after 5, 51 misc. I Blvd. Jayne Helghff. _ Walton Salt HovMhojiT6^1 65 1 GREAT JULY SALE Brand New Furniture MICHIGAN'S GREATEST BUY 3 Rooms New Furniture WITH NICE RANGE AND REFRIG. $317 NO MONEY DOWN VISIT OUR BARGAIN BASEMENT dreutr chtst, f tUt t WYMAN FURNITURE CO. HURON FE 4 4911 ' fe r—- Repossessed Kirby WITH ALL ATTACHMENTS, ONE YEAR OLD. CALL AFTER 5. 551- M24. Kirby Co._ SINGER DIAL-aMATIC,' ZIG~ZAG console^ $54.50 termtp CURTS APPLIANCE. OR 4-110! STOVE, ALSO FACTORY SECONDS BEDROOMS AND LIVING ROOMS AND OTHER FURNITURE, SAVE PLENTY. LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1451 Baldwin at Walton. FE 2-5042 First traffic light south of 1-75 Acres of Free Perking Open Eves, 'til 9-Set, ’ll! 5 _ STOVE AND BEDROOM FURNI-tiw. Can 5024985 after 5 p.m. Is, 1 coffee table, UL 2J9«. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY. 10 A.M. to 5 p.m. 35 used washers, dryers, refrigerators, TV's. No reeagneble offer refused. Dealers welcome. Barton j TWIN BEDt S P R I N 6 i MAT- ......... ses, 57 E. Fairmont.__________ UNCLAIMED LAY-AWAY TAKE OVER PAYMENTS Complete houseful of Ing room, bedroom, _______ end refrigerator. FE 2-022$ ...... Hubb- - I gas range ■ In Barton j TWIN BEDS, best, vanity , tresses, 57 E. »; used oas ----------tt.t----- 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNITURE 3-ROOM OUTFITS $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3 Weekly $478 (Best) $4 Weekly NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS Diece (brand new) living room: im tulle, 2 step te-cotfee table, 2 dec- net3ilng°eo NEW BEDROOM BARGAINS S-plece (brand new) bedrooms: '—‘■'I dresser, bookcase bed end t, box spring ‘--------------'— tress, 2 vanity $1.50 weekly . Newinghom j ___ UL 2-3310 ; ci$ale Busineii Property 57! woods, spring, 2000-loot stream frontage, mile of road Irontege and 5 acre lake site. Herd ' el only $383 per acre will down. Within 8 miles of 1-75. llk|^RE PARCELS. 8^00, i'h ACRES, 155x550, Corner Building Urban development. Has fi floor TtyxO?', Tnd floor ser parking area at rear. B Retail Outlet led with Wl 2-story bldg, v BATEMAN 11 COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 359 S. Telegraph Open 9-5 After 5:-, ..... FE 2-37S9 Sell Mechonic's Tools Earnings high, local territory, ei ply Landmasser's Tool Werehous; 980 S. Cess Like Roed. COUNTRY LIVING New 3-bedroonn Ing area, kitchen with bullt-ins. 2 full beths, full betement-end 2f747. LAKE PUMPS, 30 0ALL6NS PER LAVATORIES, COMPLETE, ........also b.......... s. Irra ilgan f I 1^__ LIONEL ENGINE, I CARS, TRANS-formar, many accataorlai, Ilka new. Cotl 8250. Sail half prica. 525-2521. ______ LUMBER Burmeister's a Delivtr EM 38171 Open 5 days a waak8 a.m. ta 8 p.m. Sundays, 10 to 3 MECHANIC'S TOOL CABINET AN6 testers, h 8.50x15 tli„, — 5405 Dixie Hwy. C NEW AND USED PARTS, MlCHf _gan Appliance. 5738011.__ OVER 1100 CEMENT ELKKS, , *0" cut, exc. condition. I PLUMBING SAROAINS. F R I B - Hi-Fi, TV i Radios ) COLOR TV FROM 8150. -Id black and white frbm |4».*5. Ferula MiKallentaas ^7 1 ELECTRIC 52-GALLON KELVINA- MOVIE* SCREEN WITH STAND Other miK. __________________ 2 ONLY, GAS FORCED AIR FUR-neces, floor models, completely In- ______________■iirC _____________ heater, antique dresser. FE 4-3IO*. rxil- linoleum rugs 83.*5 EACH Plaslk wall tile Ic eo. Ceiling tile - wek ■saneling. cheep. BAG Tile, FE *8*$7, 1075 W. Huron dealer to Insura material only. FHA lo Money O Jaa Valk THINGS HAPPEN WHEN YOU USE PRESS WANT ADS iwater. $47.*5; >plaea I $39 *5. Laundry tray, Ir-shewar italle with i 1*.*5i trim 014.95; 2-opwi snw. ez.nj lovs., tl.*5; tube, $10 and up. Pipe cut end threaded. SAVE PLUMEINO COv $41 Baldwin. FE 4.151$. RAILROAD TIES. WILL DBLIVBE. Alto 3-wheel trailer $50. UL 2-15*2 etter $ p.m.____________________ SAVE ON LUXAIRE AN6 RHEE'M get or oil fumacet. AEH Sale*. MA 5-1581 or MA 5-2537.______________ SHALLOW WELL PUMF, EBLLSAW ------------ —1 mlK. furtiHura. 5PRED-SATIH PAINTS. WARWICK ^^ly. 1571 (Trchard Lako. $82- sTeeiT auiLOiNO~5'x7' utiLTf? house Il0*.|l I0'x7- ullllty house ...... ni*ie IQ'S?' screen haute t23*JB TALBOTT LUMBER .. J4J0 PER MONTH . ... . MOS. OR 241. CASH BALANCE. Guaranttad. UMvartsI Ca., __FB_48*05. ___________________ THE AMAZINd BLUE LUStEE _______ 1 E. Walton. The kALVATiON armV TWRNT^ TUESDAY, JULY 5 WANTED: CEMENT MIXER WAVkH like F6irmi,-uffb M tfHnmtritpr, mutl mN. OR Mwy. OR MW. iW AMR. POWER CRAPT W^Lb-‘ B nwcMiw. $75. 542 Amnd Rd., ---------OL 1-r** HEAVY PRODUCTION /MACHINES, IWTtt Mhn, Brlnders, welder. Punch prte*. die. Pontiac Sleeker, FE M3$$. ClRMfOS-SlinflCE MUST SACRIFICE, AKC EROM7N TOY FEMALE POO- AKC APRICOT FEMALE MINI-t^y^le. IS weeks eW. FE aw”IriTtanV POt^^Itt fXeiL- Keego UUO ANbSU^Lli PET shop: is WILLIAMS CANINE COUNTRY CLUB E. 8. Boule- Ihina eroonr and delivery me. Boarding. Pickup S to 4 Dally. >52-4T4e. C 0 L L I e PUPS. AKC. shots, wormed. t7T-0$3$. ELK HOUND, HUSKIE PU^S, 11430 Davlsburg Rd., or 425-H45. 2 MANUAL ORGANS, 13 PEDALS. $3$>. Music Center, ............. Lake Rd. (In Village). EXPERT PIANO MOVING PIANOS WANTED Ob's Van Service EM T-TSW EVERETT CORD ORGAN. A-1 SHAPE. S500 474-H712 BEFORE 3. ’'reasonable, S24-I2B1. ^GUITARS 6UITARS_GUIT,«S Large stock trom S2S.50. MORRIS MUSIC Across ,r^n? «‘rg!!"^E 24»47 e Rd**”!?VuSee)! PIANO SALE! Kohler and Campbell pianos, spir or consoles, many styles aiM j LEW BETTERLY MUSIC — (Across from Birmingham Theater) Free Perking “• Thomas spinet, like keyboard, S5»5. Gulbranssn lull sin organ, S1,7H. ALSO SAVING ON FLOOR MODELS AND OTHER TRADE INS Jock Hogan Music Center 4i» Ellnbeth Lake Road FE 2-iwe , con- used PIANOS CHOOSE FROM SPINETS SOLES, UPRIGHTS, 6 R .... AND REBUILT PIANOS. UPRIGHTS PRICED FROM $49 GRINNELL'S (Downtown) 27 s. Saginaw PLAYER PIANOS we nave Ihe new attaediment will make any piano Into a pi All elactric, no Mmping, automatic at only $347.50. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. Across from Tel-Huron FE 2-0547 Summer Specials Walnut spinet plano-$4W, new S| Plano $533. Walnut spinet plano-$39e, like Lo^^ Organ, 2 manual—SMS Lovely Lowry Heritaga Organ—built iSoW^ 1T4E tSmE to buy At Gollogher's-18 E. Huron ------— e p.m. FE 4-05M GRINNELL'S (Downtown) 27 S. Saginaw _______ WURLITZER ORGAN, RED RASPBERRIES, CALL $775 FarmaH "A" tractor with plot Farmall Cub tractor with plow $775 AAANY OTHERS KING BROS. THE LARGEST "REAL" FARM service store In Michigan. John Deere and New, Idea parts galore. (Sold Bell stamps wim all mar- 1741 VW CAMPER, WESTPHALIA ^^pment, excellent condition M2 VW CAMPER BUS, UL70S miles. OR 3-5701. Jacobson's. 1745 DETROITER, equipped, must s OR 441311 Ext. 25._____ ___... CAMPER OR 3-3074 bet. >7 p.n PICKUP CAMPErt-T. Dinette, cupboards »■ UL 2-I3T* SOD, PEAT, GRAVEL, TOP SOU. black dirt, flaldstone. 473-1027. TOP SOIL BLACK 6|RT, GRAVEL beach sand, and "" S7573 or FE 54)404. fill dirt. FE TOP SOIL, PEAT, SAND, CLA loam, washed stone. Del. 412-4710. ., PEaY HUMUS, SANDY n, waval, i 1 FE 2-4043. 4-MONTHS43LO PUPS, FREE TO A-l DACHSHUND PUPS, TERMS. Stud dogs. JAHEIMS. FE $2530. AbORABLE SILVER POODLE, male, wMi papers, 5 mos. $75. FE 0-3474._____________ AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES. STUD tSTELHElMS, FE 2-0007. AKC liECISTCREO G E R M A M Sfiaphard pupplas. 330-7732. AKC TOY PbOOLB FUFS- BLACK 'Wnatas.OR MHO.________ ' AKC POODLES 1^ BALI APACHE CAMP TRAILERS few new 1744 models left at used trailer prices. Factory demonstrators and used trailers on display at all times. 0pm dally 7 aJii. to 0 p.m. Sundays 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Apache factory hometown dealer. BILL COLLER, 1 APACHE CAMP TRAILERS JULY SPECIAL: 1965 RAVEN REGULAR PRICE - $525 SALE PRICE $475 EVANS EQUIPMENT 425-1711 4507 Dixie - MARV'S CAMPERS Rent or Buy FE 54)710 3471 N. Joslyn, 2 MUes N. of 1-75 PICK-UP CAMPERS, $345 AND UP PICKUP CAMPERS ew 174:, Wildwood (O' cal pickup campers, compl h?)**lSMter’'!^'!® ^Vr 'l? ... ferent models ol pickup campers on display at all times $177 to $2700. ew 1745 14' coachman travel ISSayS-iX tractor fa<$D'^''HomiSo^ < BILL COLLERe 1 mile • - Rentals standard el. Make your _________________ before It Is too late—Sea. Us— Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 15210 Holly Rd. Holly ME 4-4771 Streamline All 24', 26' anii 31' NOW ON DISPLAY tiu noiry K0.7 nOliy ME 4^1 —Open Deity end Suhdeys— ACCESSORIES omplete line ol travel •rahe accessories otfared . TRAVEL FOR LESS Specializing in One Good Brand of Travel Trailers PLAYMATE Several models on display JOHNSON'S oslyn ^ k camper. Toi-—..t-l _ .rwalton"!’’;^^.^""**'*' up. Also rentals. Jacks, intennms. telMcoping, bumpers. laC' racks. Lowry Campar Sales, I: Hospital Rd. Union Laka. 3-3401.______________ VACATION CAMPER BUS 1743 Ford Bus that sleeps 4 and has a stove, refrigerator, sink and water supply. It has a plug to hook up electricity at a trailer camping park. The top raises up with canopy, lugoaga rack on fop, usm to go to Florida twice, has only 14,000 miles. SAVE will finance, NATIONWIDE AUTO SALES 330-4525._________ 10x45, 2 BEDROOMS, 227 E. ' 10x55 ACTIVE EARLY AMERICAN. Carpeted. 2-bedroom. Auto, washer Disposal. Coppertone kitchen. LI 1757 0x30, ROYRAFT, GOOD CON- n stock. EVERY DAY Complete line of ir also see the new 20' wkn. We garantec a space in a new modem Mobil Home park. REMEMBER, LOW OVERHEAD: SAVE REAL MONEY MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie 330-0772 <3ne block north c STEWARTS 12 wMao, 2 stories, all lengths with new toam-a-wall construction. And new warp proof cabinet donrs. YELUTMTONB WE RENT TRAVEL TRAILERS. MAKE RESIRVATI07IS NOWI Oxford Troiltr SoIm Open 7-7, Cloaed Sun. I mile of Lake Orior on M-S4. ________ MY 24>ni. WANTED TO BUY. GOOD uiiko ' -lers, FE 87702. Auto AccosMriot USED TRUCK TIRES $-22.5, 10 ply OR 3-1724 Used Truck Tires All Sizes Buget terms available FIRESTONE ST0R| 333-7717_____ Meter Sceelers_________^94 SCOOTERS FOR SALE. PHONE 5 ARIAL 500 CC. SINGLE. 0,000 757 HARLEY DAyiDSON, EXCEL-lent condition, sea It tr “ Loaded. 1300 Sugden 1740 HARLEY-DAVIDSON 74 WITH extras, needs generator, otherwise good condltlen, $000, OBfWS. 1744 HONDA 250 SCRAMBLER. AF- U. TH-4 MOTORCYCLE By K»tu Owum 1*40 METROPOLITAN. DEPEND- 1740 VOLVO 2-OOOR ACYL, speed, solid black sharpi Prir to sallll JEROME-FEROUSpN h Rocheeter FORD Dealer, OL 1-7i i’ll tell you why the girls won't dance with you, Lynley! Whoever heard of discussing the internatiimal situation while doing the frug?” Beats—Accetseriet CHRIS CRAFT OWENS Large Selection of Used Boats MAZUREK MARINE SALES Voodward at S. Blvd. FE A7504 COMPLETE LINE OF DORSETTS- flshlng boats - 1745 YAMAHA YD 3, 250 — 250 miles, shield and racks. Forced to sell. 47A1055. _ 1745 HONDA SCRAMBLER. WHITE seat, 1,400 miles. UL 2-3404. 1745 DUCATI 125 BRONCO 174. B S A - NORTON SAl ES 0. SERVICE --- - FE AI077 - DUCATI : 0 M P L E T E LINE OF BRIDGE stone motorcycles starting at $237 with only $25 down. PAUL A. YOUNG INC. 4030 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plaines (on Loon Lake) cycles. Johnson boats and msiars. Many excellent complete }ml?erLGUARANT?^D'an^^ right at only 10 per cent down. Wagontrain campers - Bridgestone motorcycles. PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. 4030 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains (On Loon Lake, MON. THROUGH SAT. 7-4 ________Sunday 10 - 5_______ CENTURY SUN SLED, bEMO. $2,- HONDA-TRIUMPH-NORTON ANOERSON SALES I, SERVICE 1445 S. Telegroph. ----- Century SALES AND SERVICE )45 Models on display. Large ■lection of used boats. Inboaros, JiBiiik ^ JUNK CABS HAULED AWAY WRECKS-JUNKSo }9$9 OR NEWER paying more than |unk prlcr-ROYAL AUTO PARTS FE 4-9580 UsBd Aato-IrKk Parts 102 1757 DESOTO MOTOR, V I clean, alto complete muNlei tern, like new. 6r 3-7004. CHEVY - FORD - COMET - FALCON iPaw^|ii Cars 1M. After 4 p I7«B RENAULT. 0130 machanicel coition makes I compact an outstanding value. $297 NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. Spartan Dixlge 1743 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE, EXCEL-lent condition. 4443044 after 4 p.m. f. TAKE OVER PAYMENTS. VILLAGB RWVIBLBR, #00 O. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMING- HAM, Ml 4-3700. ___________ ■44 VOLVO, 4-OOOR, 4-SPEED very clean. S1475 or best otter. OR 4-3320. .„ ... l^tooElukDiorHiASlE whitewalls, solid blut finish. $1,375. Eoty forms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104 S. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-273S. 1745 RENAULT SEDAN WITH RADIO AND HEATER, NICE BLUE FINISH AND IT'S PRACTICALLY NEW. VILLAGE RAMBLER, 444 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM, Ml i' Repossession 1963 Volkswogen $1195 WANTED IW .PONTIAC MOfOR,l HloRt tAi-carbs and manifold, com-plete, rear and tor 203 327 Chovy. 332-0405. Nbw and Dsod Traeks_^ 1755 GMC TRUCK. CASS LAKE MARINE Cest-Ellzabeth Rd. 17 EL CAMINO. A-1 CONDITIION. No rust. S450. FE 4-5170. 1 1740 FORD DUMP. F-400. 1740 FORD I tandam dump F-000. Good candl- ' -M 3-4373.____________________I rinnn rnniDi-' Volkswagen Center f sedan. Post white f ditional warranty ' SI475 Eye-appoallno mllaago, 100 402-0051 popo panel, (jOOD C K&W CYCLE YAMAHAS I locations to sarva you. 2436 4 wrn, Utica and 7615 Highia SUZUKI OMEGA and WHITE BIG BAD BULTACO LIL' INDIAN MINI BIKES CUSTOM COLOR 230 W. MONTCALM SUZUKI'S TUKO SALES INC. BIKES. SOME NICE ONES "-0. Spoad ------ - Boats—AccBfioriBS trols, battery, cushions, cxcelinn Season dockage Lake - 343-4133. itart. Tilt trollor and ski t,„ Included. S1.000. FE M417. WFOOT FIBERGLASS BOAT^ rtrlc Evl» IS. FE 44 14-FOOT THOMPSON. 45 HORSE-power AAercury. Little Dude freltar-Fully equipped — — 20-FOOT PONTOON BOAT, LIKE 44 DUO, 15-FOOT FIBERGLASS, < horse. $750. FE S-7074. 1741 13' DUNDEE PLYWOOD, I fully after 5. BIG DISCOUNTS Ol tony’s* Mne JOHNSON MOTORS years repair axporlanco. - ) I. 2474 Orchard Lake Rd. BEFORE YOU MAKE ANY DEAL get our price. Koi"# Beats, Motors, 405 W. Clarfcston Rd„ Loko Orion, "" ' ’“** Mercury--------- trollors. BUY OFF BEAT THE HEAl tiow - UP TO 30« 0 .1 BOATS NOW IN STOCI Pontiac's Only Mercury MERCRUISER DEALER FOX SNOWIMOBILES NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS CRUISE OUT, INC. 43 E. Walton FE Dolly ^ HURRY e money you save n. DETRdiTERS Si BOOTH CAMPER num covart and campe.. .. amssT Campers WINNEBAGO WOLVERINE From 11,075 _________ Bi.—.... jonvertiblo campar and Trailers WINNEBAGO PHOENIX D SALES end REN die. FI i-rao. CAMPING SITES Swimmino, safe beech. Fishing. McFecly Resort. 1140 Mti, Ortop-' vine. YES, we re tiethino prices. YES, we lake trade-ins. YES, we have low down ments. YES. wo havo financing 7 yoart. YES, I, 2 or Sbadroom models YES. - ------------------ YES,-------------- -------------- or exceed the rigid Blue Book Standards for hoAlog, plumbing and tiactrical systems. You never gamblo. You alwoyt anioy the ultimate In taftlv, camtart and rasela vatue. YES, you'll leva hundradt ol dollart during our tela. Open dally until 7. Saturday and Sun^ wr" 4. Bob Hutchkison Sotos, 430f Oli Hwy„ Drayton PteMs. Porkhurst Troiler Soles FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING IS T U tool. Feelurlng new MOo Buddy and Nomads LoceM halfway between Orton ar Oxford on MH next to A»i Country Cousin. MY 2-4411. tS HORSEPOWE Jileld, wheel or 5-27S7. BOATING BARGAINS 'HARD TO FIND, BUT EASY TO deal with" RInker; Steury, Chero-kao boats, Keyol pontoons. Evln-•■'"•e motors. Pomco trailers. Take I to W. Highland. Right on kory Ridge Roed to Demode .->-_!o.k!w ^yn.,^,0 JAWSON'S SALES : lake. Phene MAIn 7-: JOHNSON outboard MOTORS meteor boat trailer, fse Must Liquidate Stock ot All Boots, Motors and Trailers to Moke Room tor Our New Building Lone Star-Glasstron MFG Boats—Canoes— Pontoons Large Slock ot Lata AAodel Used Rigs WE NEED TRADES ON 3.7 to 170 h.p. Atercuryt Check our Price 3.7 only $150 with trade Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 44771 Open Dally and Sunday » ford 14 il warranty vtlwM VW "Jfio. - Rochester FORD Deeler, DL AUtODahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER '/■ mile north ol Miracle Mile 1745 S. Telegraph_FE 0-4531 473-3531 after 5 p.m. NEW B 16 FIBERGLAS ------------- abouts, lapstreke, 45 electric motor, 700-lb..trailer, boHory, tpoed-—-xttngulshar, $1,377. ______________,m. Trollors, 1105. UUCJfANAM'S Ihlond Rd._________343-2301 WBattd Cors-Trocla II California Buyers mY M motor' sales ■ Did You Know? VILLAGE RAMBLER 444 S. Woodward MANSFIELD AUTO SALES I buying sharp, laN . .. NOWI See us teds 1104 Baldwin Ave. , FE 5-5900 get me b -IVERILL'-FE 3-7171 3020 Dixie FE 44i7$ HIGHEST PRICED PAID FOR SHARP CARS C0AST-T0<0AST A6ARKET Gale McAnnally't NATIONWIDE AUTO SALES 1304 Baldwin__________3304325 Save up to 5300 on 17' Sea-Roy 1-0, ISO H.P.; 17' Johnson 1-0, IS. r5b%.p”'*?rrponai;!r on*2l' ^rcra?l *^'*1Io’tl^pTw' Thompson Lanctr wim top. Kayaks canoes wim paddle only 5147.50. PINTER'S 1370 GMdyko 7 to 7, Sat. to 4 (1-75 al Oakland Unlvarslty txll) SPECIAL PRICES Paid tor 1757 -1745 cert VAN'S AUTO SALES 4540 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1355 "TOP DOLLAR PAID"' FOR "Cl EAN" USED CARS GLENN'S 753 vyest Huron St. FE 47371 FE 41777 BOATS-BOATS Our annual July claaranca salt Is onl Runabsuts, fishing boats, canoes and pontoon bqits. Over 30 dlittrent modelt to choota from. Open dally 7 ajn. to 1 p.m., Sundays 10 a.m, to 4 p.m. BILL COLLER, 1 mil# aotl Of LapteranM21. WE NEED CARS! TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD, CLEAN CARS Matthews-Hargreoves 431 OAKLAND AVENUE FE 44547 WE NEED 196S TEMPESTS All makes and models Averitl Aufto Sales 2020 Dixie Highway PE 24071 FE 44174 Ci5S LAKE iOAf 66CKAGB. Rtatonabto. 40-2707. CANOES Hwy. CLIPPERCRAFT DELUXE, LARK 40 hp. includlno battory and case. Llttlt-Oo Iroiter, never In water, reel BARGAIN. Ml 4-5117. CORRECT CRAFf“ FIbaratot Inboard speedboats pricedirqm 53075. Set end buy meat quality boalt at OAKLAND MARINE 27) 5. Seglnew FE $4101 1 Dally *HI 4, Sun. ttl 1 pjp. Joak Can-Tr«cb 1B1-A 1-2 AND II JUNK CARS - TRUCICB Fret tow. OR 3-2731. ALWAYS BUYINb JUNK CARS - FREETOWt TOP 5$ - CALL FE 54142 5AMALLENB50N5.uk. , 1962 CHEVY ’A-Ton Pickup with me Fleetslde body, V-0 engine, stick shift, color or rod and white. Only- $1195 Crissman Chevrolet (On Top of Soum Hill) ROCHESTER____________OL 2-772) 1744 ford PICKUP AND CAMPER ' looded. «73-l$77 ettor 5 p.m.___ 1744 FORD M-TON PICKUP, V-$, 4-pfy tiros, lew mllem, like now. Ideal for campar. $1,775. JEROME-FERGUSON Inc., Rochostor FORD 1744 ford pickup, WITH I F(X) box. Coper build-up and It your. for only 11475. JER0ME-FER6U-SON Inc. Rochostor FORD Dealer. -BRAND NBW- 1965 FORD W-Ton Pickup vim me 4-cyl. 150 h.p. engine, tig nets, wethers, heater, defroslarv 5-775x15, 4 ply tires. Servici' ^ 2-yeer werrentyl Only - $1795 Plus Taxes end License Michigan John McAulitfe FORD GMC FACTORY BRANCH New and Used Trucks -- 475 Oeklend LOOK I Inlernatlonol trocto ), practically now I Ml. eir hroket. rood II price, a Mymonl. WE FI- LUCKY AUTO SPtCIAL 1965 Chevy Demo IVton pidcup truck, hat long tu-tone paint, heavy duty springs rear burriper, da.... 5Srjr."*«5S' SSTSlrrSt radio, $1170 plue tax and llcant* plates. Mottnews-Horgreoves', Inc. TRUCK DEPARTMENT 431 Oakland Ave. at Cast FE 54161 TWO Little Money Mokers 1954 Ford V2 Ton Pickup $97-Full Price 1957 Chevy Vi Ton Pickup $347-Full Price Spartan Do< TURNER FORD 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM________Ml 4-7500 New god Used cart 106 ATTENTION!! Our credit manager, back, onca again we bla to help oil our c_ . . have had credit problems, end would likt a good used car "" feature spot dtiTvery. FE 3-7863 LLOYDS 1350 Oakland Avo. LAST LLOYD'S Gontinuetd Clearance 1963 BUICK A really axc^lonoi car. $57 DOWN Up to 36 Months to Pay Lloyd Motors 12KI OAKLAND 333-78A3 FISCHER BUICK wildcat RIvitra BonnavlL-1744 Chavy 4dqer 174SWIIdeaf 3-door . FISCHER BUICK 554 S. Woodward___M7-5400 1744 M560R wHitl Bu(cit~$ise- ....... MraWs"”'- 1964 L «S a b r *"**1295 DOWN NEW CAR FINANCING NEW CAR WARRANTY SEE FRANK STUBBLEFIELD OPEN THURSDAY 'TIL 7 WILSON 1959 CADILLAC I stunning ermino white lerdtpp, that It abtoMaly ondlllisn in avery dttall. Pov irastl^ orfhe*"carof cars.'^ $1297 NOW OPEN Additional Locotion 855 Oakland Ave. Spartan Dodge We Bet You Con't Beat Oakland Chryster-Plymouth's Price on o New or Used Cor FE 2-9150 BUICK ............... OMs 2-door hardtop ... .. Chti^ 2-door, stlS ... 1740 Ford, Ford-O-Mafic . 1740 RamMar 4-door, auto. 1757 Ford Wagon .......... •— Bukk Adoor hardtop .... Falcon ............... Pontiac 4-door ....... HUTCHINSON SALES & SERVICE 3735 Baldwin Rd. FE __________Ometllvllla________ 175$ BUICK 4-OOOR WITH AUTO-matlc transmission, radio neater, and full price $375. NORTHW(X>0 AUTO SALES FE $-7237__________________ For A Groat Deal your now or used P "T(Ew6*P0NTIAC SALES li SERVICE 682-3400 MUST SELL AT ONCE 3 BUICKS. 2-17S5 modelt, $50 to. 1-1757 modal, $125 at It. 17U Cantury meter, $35. 731 $t. Clair «. -ODD 1757 BUICK HARDTOP $177 1757 Marcury horinop 1757 Chavy and 1737 R YW^ TTV or iBTv moovn «nd trucks )NOMY CARS 2335 Dixla Hwy. LLOYD'S Continued Clearance $795 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 S7 BUICK, AUTOA4ATIC $11 CREDIT AUTO SALES 125 Oakland at WMa Track FE 2-9214 MY WIFE SAYS I HAVE TO GE. rid of mis booutiful 1740 LoSabrt Buick eanverftble. Whof a pkk-vPiYou'tl^^m.^^jg.^s^ sunwtloi shades ( ilold and power to go. Call I first $1,275 gats mis bv, ... » tummor. Jim, EM S-3S73 after p.m. or FE sem. Ext. 235 days. AUTO-RITE BUY AETNA CASUALTY odarn hl|i^ ’*^20% TO 40yg L. JjOOUSSM FJJS_ Faraiga Can 1717 FIAT 1I0A GOOD CONDITION, $175, OR S«74. f IMF 1960 Buick 2-Door Hardtop Ith aofomallc, power, oBiolulely I rust, be a proud owner with $8.87 John McAuHffa Ford loQk; ~ 1HI Buick LoSobro 44loor hordfop. fuH power. $1274 full arieo. $S down.^EOIT NO PR^EM; WE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO CADILLAC 1742 Sedan DeVlllt. Full m glass, ^ly 37,000 tetusi miles. $245 DOWN Bank rates on belonco SEE FRANK STUBBLEFIELD OPEN THURSDAY 'TIL 7 WILSON PONTIAC-CADIILAC 1 block south of 14 Mils Birmingham Ml 4-17: FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 WEST MONTCALM CADILLAC 1743 Coupe OeVllle. An extremely sharp, low mllaoge cor. Alpine whItt finish wHh ^"t Interior. Au- WILSON 1753 CHEVY. STICK, 4, BODY IN good condition, OR 3-3332. 1754 CHEVY 2-OOOR bRL AIR, $- cylindor, - - • 1757 BEL AIR, 4-DOOR HaVdTOP, looks abnesl like brand new. $3.70 per week. MARVEL__________251 Oakland Avo. compitt origmal with m. 1959 chevy ■•ways popular V$ engine, eutemeflc, l ate lecfory equipment. ---- one-owner < of cerofroo di $497 Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Just W mile north of Cau Ava.) Spartan Dodge 1737 CHRVy BISCAYNE i-boON, stick, OR 3-200I. 1737 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, BBAU-flful whifo wim black top, powar K’ho*'SloJ5^*1Sin,Y7^?3 watk .Call Mr. Brown. ESTATE STORAGE JMF John McAulHto Ford 1960 Chevy Convertible wdtr Muo finis and Initrlor, ti I No money « waokly peyi $8.87 I960 CHEVY Convertiblo with radio m doubit powtr, automollc Sion, prico $477. State Wide Auto 3400 Elizaboth Lake Road FE 8-7137 1740 CORVETTE, 1744 MOTOR, 4-tpaad, $075, FE S4475.____ 1960 CHEVY Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 84071 JMF John McAuimt Ford 1961 Chevy Station Wagon Vocation Special *im no monay down, drive tt wne today for weekly payments )f only— $6.83 , «c. condltlen, 1773, Repossession 1741 CHEVY Impola Hordfop. No 1941 CORVAIR COUPE WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. .Poymonlt_ of 124.75 1741 CORVAIR 3-DOOR, WITH 4 King Auto 3275 W. Huron $t. FE 84088 1742 CHEVY IMPALA 7-PASSAN- ger station v---- -- auto. 337 ai Ownar. (X. l- 1742 CHEVROLET IMPALA SUPER sport convortilbe, V4, powergllde, power steering, brakes and windows. Black, Wack and black. $1,375. Easy farms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. I1t4 5. WOOO-WARO, BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. . 1. Exc. condition, 41______ I7« COXVA^ W3NZA 2-DO(>R, 4 $1,050. 33M2g. I, 17 down and 17 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 84071 %«•» ••»»■ 7 Tfiivw wiiiqwnivtQ* ®STwiy locks. Hat now haavy duty shocks. 1742 CHEVY IMPALA. 7-PASSENQ: “• wagon. Loaded. $1500. 74$ Lo- 1731 CHEW CONVERTIBLE 5 77 CREDIT AUTO SALES 125 Oakland at WIdt Track FE 2-9214 17SI CHEVY BEL AIR, FE 1-0477.________„ 1751 CHEVY, G(X)0 TRANSPORTA-Hon, rum svell. FE 54337. i7SrcHEVV“i:666R; v4,"fL(5(» ---. FE 44055.___________ lasrCHEVV F-PASS. wagon 5277 CREDIT AUTO SALES 125 Oakland at WMa Track FE 2-9214 1737 CHEVROLET 7-PA$SENGER Khwswood station wagon. -V-i, pow-orgllm, power tfotrlng, radio, hoat-ar. Light grean Hnldi. 5473. Easy forma. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104 $. WOODWARD, BIR- Repossession iR?SJfs '*« CHEW 112-DOOll, *■■-MINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. 1743 CHEW IMPALA 2-0 01 1743 CORVAIR MONZA. FUUV equippad, r"---- 51,230. 447-0 THE 'PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 20, 196g TWENTY-ONE ^ mi <■» , 106 Repossession !8Jfe w5ra><>?Dai.r?" m COKVAIK^ MONZA. lAOOLE ”&aS fM dlivlipijtf'Wala con-------------- !»* >1 T-OMZ. Autobahn Specials Ml Buick Skylark convartlble. •lack llnlih wHh black bucket laali. new tlraa, full power ti.efS y* OMl Super "M.“ Full IMS Cliavrelat convertible. Beautiful Aufumn OeM finlih. Just rlghf for Summer ^vlns FUN. exnllent condiflon ........................ tiefs 1M1 Potfilac Bonneville convertible. Ssrwsi™:" .,s finish. Kyllnd condition 1MI Chavrolaf iiM^f m Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER W mile north of Miracle Mile 17«S S. Telegraph FE 8-4531 INI RED CHEVY IMPALA; 4-DOOR hardtop, V-l, automatic, heater and radio. Excellent condition, 1 owner. $1,480. EM 34ISI. ‘lN3 ttHW AIR V8, AuTO- MMftl.. _' ej IMA mllA. - - - 1N4 CHEVROLET IMPALA J-DOOR hardtap. V-S. powergllde, power (faarlng. radio, heater, white MIdnIgM blue. 8I.7V5. Easy t PATTERSON CHEVROLET _ 1104 S. WOODWARD, BIRMING-HAM. Ml 4-3735.____ Repossession itaarlna, radio, heater, whitewalls. MMni^t blue finish. 83085. Easy fermt. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104. S. WOODWARD, BIR-MINOHAM. Ml 4-3735. _ fM4 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE -fully •^ *0'”*m TmT super SPORT CHEVY~"337, ”* OALAXIE S4300R NORTHWOOO AUTO SALES S°5?#^'Sra KP|o~Ai,Xi»VV.“!85"J,‘SS8: absolutely no MONEY DOWN, Paymonft «f I-- Mbw Ueb< Cm m 1P84 FORD OALAXIE SOB BOB BOR5T ^UfCOI^ERCUF ~ IcoRoOk ~ Wagon, Acyl. iw seat, III.. . ^ . Sava. JERfMAE-FEROUSON, Inc. Rochasfar FORD Dealer, OL 1-8311. i9« ford convertible, V-8 auto., sharp, 8888. PE 4-3433. IMF 1961 Ford Starliner 2-Door Hordtop with V-8 engine, autor—------ showroom condition, $8.87 YOU CAN SAVE HERE 19M FORD angtnau av8amatlc ■ewer farakai and fuRtlER’ FORD BiRMiyoS4!r°^*"°^ii;r-4.»M ItM FORD PAIRLANE -- ' YOU CAN SAVE HERE 1961 T-BIRD Convertible with power brakes and power steering, automatic transmission, radio and heeler and whitewall tires. 878 or your old car down and payments of ”fuRNER FORD 484 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM______Ml 4.7800 a clean 1-owner ci Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 84071 1861 FORD GALAXIB. V-8. POWER steering, power brakes, Crulse-0-Matlc. Very nice condition. Good rubber. 8835. Whitewalls. Black. Pete's Dairy Treat, 831 Baldwin opposite Fisher Body. FE 3-8830, IMF 1962 Ford XL Convertible lutltul black finish, red bucket Its, a real dream. Any old i vn, and Our Price Is Rlghtl Save $$ YOU Morfy bu brakes and power steering, radio and haatar hnd whitewall tires. SAVE UP TO 8800. TURNER FORD 4*4 S. WOODWARD ____ ____ ___! terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIR- MINOHAM. Ml 4-3735._____ na CORVAIR MONZA, 4-DOOR, 140 h«., 4-ipaed, 81,800. OL 1-0438. it*j CORVETTE, 84,000. CALL AFT-TV 4:30, 33M83*. 1885 STINGRAY 4-SPEED, 411 POSI LLOYD'S Continued Clearance 1962 FAIRLANE '500." 8-cyllnder, standard Iran mission, radio, heater, whitewall $35 DOWN $7.80 a Week Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1883' FMD~GAu0nf"16erTi5BOR hardtop. Vinyl upholstery. Radio, Repossession 1963 T-BIRD Landau Hardtop, full power. No Atoney Down, Cell Mr. Nm wrf BtM Cm lot NEED CREDIT? bankrupt, or had credit ,___m? I Ian Nnanoe you and Immadlafa daitvary, call Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 04071 less LlllCbLN CONTINENTAL . 1oor hardtop, autennatlc full pa« ir. Lwxurloui tranapartallen at onl BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY 830 S. woodward EIrmlnsham BEATTIE has just released a few of their Demo's Here is dn Examplel 1965 Ford LTD 2-Door Hardtop $100 DOWN Up to 36 Months to Poy Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 Save $$$ BEATTIE 'ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1830" "Homt of Service After the Sale" OR 3-1291 1857 mercury HARDTOP WAGON, luperb condition, rebuilt motor, lust Instellod. All power. 1450. EM 3-7131. 80^5115 after 8 p.m. .Mf MERCURY CONVEEtl-BLE WITH FULL POWER, RADIO AND HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Peymenta of S3I.18 per —nth. CALL CREDIT A86R. Mr. ks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, 4-7800.__________________________ GUSON, Dealer,_________________________ 1845 FORD LTD 4-OOOR HARD- ‘----tic, power iteer- mllesgel $3,785. DON'S ^ USED CARS SMALL AD-BIG LOT * 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FR06 1885 Pontiac Grand Prix, dc 1841 Krd’^jsfernrMHj,*^^ 1884 Ford Gafexlo 5M 3Kloor hard- 677 S. LAPEER R LAKE ORION MY 2-2041 BEATTIE Has Just Released A Few of Their Demo's Here is on Example! 1965 Ford LTD 2-Door Hardtop with a beetuflul dark blue finish, white vinyl roof, the "353" V8 engine, radio, Chrytlar Imperial 1887 full price, t- -. -CREDIT NO PROBLEM, price, $5 price, -... ......r NO PROBI ■ WE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO; 184B W. Wide Track PE 4-1314 ._or _ FE 3-7854 | 1888 CHRYSLER WINDSOR, 3-DOOR I hardly, excellent condition, 651- I 34S._________ _ - I 1841 CHRYSLER 4-DOOR SEDAN. Full power 8885 with 8135 down. Hunter. Birmingham. Ml 7-0855._ PATTERSON CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-VALIANT July Jamboree 1001 N. Main St. ROCHESTER OL 1-8558 1H3 CHRYSLER 4-D66^rT"TOWER^ lharp, $1385 "— ‘"■— ar, Blrmhigti «i BB , FE 3-4410. LLOYD'S Continued Clearance 1962 T-BIRD Landau. Black with matching vinyl top. Full power. Full price— $2095 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH VALIANT-RAMBLER and JEEPS Saa All 8 in BILL SPENCE 8873 DIxIa Hwy. CLARKSTON_____ MA 5-3835 l88i2 DODGE DART 440 STATION ning In Ifl II quellta VI pc to list lust I that maka tti such a datirable $1097 NOW OPEN Additional Ldcotioiv 855 Oakland Ave. , Spartan Dodge wm^oogboarTToSoSTT^-Indar, automatlb raal . iham. 81188 with 1148 down, Huntar. Blr- ituntar'. KESSLER'S DOOCt CARS AND TRUCKS ...^*^'“0AM4W .. —u CON-r8£oqo”mlN wammL: 1888 FORD, 0006 B6^ gna^lna w«k. .3.8 LUCKY auto 1840 W. wida Track FE 4-3314 or FE 3-7184 ■ IMF 1962 Ford Stotion Wagon With a V*l engine, automatic, garage kept condition. No Money Needed! Assume payments, weekly, of Only - $8.87 LATE 1843 FALCON CONVERTIBLE —Red with white top. Immaculate condition. Automatic tranemieelon. Oversize tiret. Radio and heater. Red Interior plastic trim. "Really a cute Job." 81185. Privet# owner. Lee Brown. Ph. FE 3-4810. 808 E lliabeth Lake Road.________________ Repossession 1843 FORD FAIRLANE 500 3-door Hardtop, No Money Down, Cell — Johnson at MA 5-3804. Peeler. 3 FORD 30TXL, rOOOR HARD-op, auto., power steering, 81,700. 1963’/3 CONVERTIBLE Custom Ford Falcon with ell the extras, r«un,, ^ walls, bucket seats, ell vinyl immaculate condition. 81.185, fercrr'-praira IMF 1963i Ford "Fostbock" steering, hr^ W or yog, e* car down, spot dollvoryl Save John McAwllfM Ford 1884 FORD OALAXIE 800 XL Wifl gine, radio, poww rtwing, bfah» jSSmeTmoubM Inc ■ FORD Doalof. OL 1-mi. Save $$$ BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1830" "Home of Service After the Sale" OR 3-1291 Pretty Ponies 1965 Mustangs 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT AS LOW AS $79 DOWN PAYMENTS OF 818.85 PER WEEK Turner Ford BEATTIE Has Just Released A Few of Their Demo's Here is An Exomplel 1965 Mustang 2-Door Hardtop vith a sparkling red finish, an the "388 V8 engine" radio, heatoi whitewalls end Ford's famous Cn somatic transmission! SAVE $ $ $ BEATTIE IN Dixie hwy. in waterford Your FORD DEALER Since 1830" "Homo of Service After the Sale" OR 3-1291 1962 PONTIAC Catalina convertible, power brakes end power steerliKj, radio and heat er, red finish with white to-" red Interior. $1495 Full Price 1958 CHEVROLET $tarmaduke AT LLOYD'S Continued Clearance 1963 LINCOLN New and Used Care 106 SPECIALIZE IN THE SALES AND SERVICING OF JEEPS DOC'S JEEPLAND Buy-Ront-Loasa-SaH W. Huron at WIda Track 333-8184 AT LLOYD'S Continued Clearance 1962 MERCURY Sedan. 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All members of Tau Aljdui PI, vocational student organization at Boise Junior College, they collected approximately |1JB0 in donatkxis which will for achttotolpa to tending the acbooL Following the tramps met for at Capitol Park. baased mta ai- the Of the 637 murders York City last year, committ^ indoors, an quarter of them the si related to the vktinL in New 06 were in oob-m was LBJ Hosting U.S. Educators Racial Problems Are Likely to Top Agenda WASHINGTON (UPI) - More than 650 educators from across the country today opened a White House conference to discuss school problems. A preview indicated the racial problem would be a major topic. Health, Education and Welfare Secretary Anthony J. Celebrezze and U.S. Education Commissioner Francis Keppel were scheduled as leadoff speakers a^the two-day conference, called by President Johnson “to pool our best ideas about how to stimulate our nation’s adventure in learning.” The session is the Hrst White House meeting on education in 10 years. Although specific legislative proposals are'not expected tO' come out of the talks, Chairman John W. Gardner said “it could be the liveliest education con-1 ference ever held.” • ★ ★ ★ I PoHowing t he o pen lu g jieeches, the delegates’ schedules were filled with panel and group discussions which will be distilled into digests for a re-' port to other educators across the nation. Reports also will go to Johnson. • DE FACTO SEGREGATION In a preview yesterday of topics on the educators’ minds, a Harvard psychologist said in a consultant’s paper that de facto racial segregation in Northern schools has increased to the extent that Southern citijes are beginning tb copy it. Thomas F. Pettigrew, an associate professor of social psychology, said an increase in housing segregation in Northern cities from 1940 to 1960 has had the effect of bringing about a substaatial degree of school segregation in m a n y neighborhoods. He said that many Southern cities, barred by the Supreme court from openly imposing school segregation, were “openly striving” to emidate the Northern cities. ★ w ★ “The de facto school segregation controversy now raging in the North and West will soon erupt in the nominally ‘i gated’ cities of the South, said. FASTER TEMPO Gardner, head of the Carnegie Foundation and leader of a presidential task force on education last year, s«id the various pan-, els would kxdc at problems from the perspective of the “speeded-up tempo of education” under IMPROVE YOUR HOME DEAL DIRECT FREE PLANS and ESTIMATES-NO CHARGE FE 4-4138 Open Daily and Sun,. CALL DAY OR NIGHT ^ADDm0NSi«r FAMILY ROOMS ALUMINUM SIDING REC. ROOMS ROOFING-SIDING WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION WILL COME TO I YOU WITH FREE estimate and I PLANS-NO CHARGE CALL FE 4-4138 6 Months Bufor* First Paymant SAVE MONEY WITH SUMMER INSTALLATION ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING OBEL TV & ItavfcE 3480 Elizabeth Loke Rd. 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Goldberg today to be the new U-S. ambassador,to the United Nations. In a quickly arranged ceremony in the White House rose garden the President, with Goldberg at his side, named his choice to succeed the late Adlai E. Stevenson. Goldberg said in that the message son to the world no- tion to “grant ns pi He promised to bring “the rule of tions between the tions — it is that 0 we all know that, said. a short talk of Steven-must contin-sppi^a- attempt to law to rela-various na-ir doom and Goldberg The selection came as a distinct surprise. SPECULATION^ Speculatim had centered on the idea of a Cabinet reshuffle. Congressidnal informants had said yesterday duit John-gon might offer the U.N. post to Secretary of sstate Dean Rnsk, and they thought Rusk might be receptive. Foster Murder Trial Oven Verdict by Judge Is Due The guilt or innocence of Carl F. Foster in the violent death of his wife was to be decided today. The verdict will be the sole responsibility of Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem, who heard the case with-_____________out a jury on the request Pontiac $oy 1 M \A/ I t fona charge of first degree mur- /Sf Vvaferrorcf der ended this Lake Fatality of defense attorney Jo? seph Hardig. The five-day triai of Foster morning with Assistant Prosecutor Walter D. Schmier rebutting Hardig’s summation. Hardig was appointed by the An 11-year-old Pontiac boy be- court to defend Foster, came Waterford Township’s During his summation yes- ARTHUR J. GOLDBERG first water fatality of the year yesterday afternoon when he drowned in Loon Lake at Sandy Beach, 3412 Dixie. Charles R. L. Moring, son of Mr. and Mrs. WilUam Moring, 228 W. Yale, was pulled out of shallow water at approxi- terday, Hardig attacked the testimony of one of die prosecution’s key witnesses. Dr. Richard E. Olson, pathologist at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. He claimed that Olsen was “too dogmatic” when he said that it was medically impossible for anything other than fingers and a thumb to make the bruises that appeared on the neck of Foster’s wife Angela. Cancer Claims Clyde Beatty Famed Lion Trainer, 61, Dies in California Some of. the talk revolved around the idea of shifting Secretary of Defense Roberts. McNamara to the State Depart- Goldberg was the late President JJohn F. Kennedy’s first appointment to the'' Supreme Court. SECRETARY OF LABOR Before that he served in the Cabinet as secretary of Labor, after a long career as a labor lawyer. Now he will sit in the Cabinet in his new role. Other names had flitted about in speculation on a successor to Stevenson, who died of a heart attack on a London street last Wednesday and was buried yesterday in Bloomington, 111. * R ★ On the plane with Johnson, going to at^ returning from the funeral were Goldberg and his wife. UTTLE UKEUHOOD There was, however, little guessing that he was a probable choice to fill the U.N. vacancy. Johnson said it was at i^ri insistence diat Goldberg had agreed to leave a lifetime job on the nation’s highest court and step into the field of international diplomacy and ne- INSPECTING YANK TROOPS - Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara talks to paratroopers of the 173rd Airborne Brigade during a visit to the Bien Hoa air base in South Viet Nam today. McNamara is on his way back to the U.S. after a tour of the troublespot. Rocket Orbits 3 Satellites to Boost N-Blast Detection mately 4 p. m. by his 14-year- ^hg of the 25-year-old old brother, Billie, and Jay mother of three children was Clarkston, a lifeguard at the originally ruled a suicide by hanging on Feb. 28, 1964, but the case was reopened this public beach. Artificial respiration was adnhinistered by township firemen. The hoy was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital. According to Lt. Frank Ran- spring and her death declared to be the result of manual strangulation. DID AUTOPSY Olson concluded that she had dolph of the Waterford Police not taken her own life after lie Department, the Moring youth performed an autopsy on her was seen floaUng on his back body 14 months ipfter her death, by his brother who was playing Hardig emphasized that the on a dock with other boys. The boy apparently was playing in shallow water near the shore shortly before he was spotted by his brother 60 feet from shore in the bathing area. Randolph theorized that the boy, who was wearing underwater goggles, may have been trying to retrieve a rubber bail testimony of two defense witnesses, Dr. Andrew Climie, chief pathologist at Harper Hospital, Detroit, and Dr. Robert C. Hendrick, pathologist at University Hospital, Ann Arbor, revealed that other things could have caused the marks. Hendrick also said that on the he had bwn seen playing with basis of the pictures presented prmr to the trag^y. to him, he, as a deputy coroner The boy s fatter, wte was Washtenaw County, would workmg at the time, toid Ran- have seen no reason to recom-dolph that he had been instruct- „jend prosecution. ing his son how to swim. In Today's Press Defection Former Chiang aide defects to Peking, blasts U.S. - PAGE 22. Flood Threat Missouri towns threatened after heavy rains — PAGE 3. 'Eye TesT ’ Gemini 5 spacemen to view charts — from 100 mile up — PAGE 4. Area News.......... 13 Astrology ........ 12 Bridge ............ 12 Crossword Puzzle...23 Comics . . . :..... 12 Editorials ........ I Markets .1......... 16 .......... 22 TV ft Radio Programs 23 Wilson, Earl ......23 Women’s Pages .... 9—11 Under cross-examination by Schmier, Hendrick did say that the pathologist who performed the autopsy would be more' qualified to come to a conclusion. I WOULDN’T CHANGE Called to the stand in rebuttal of earlier testimony, Olsen said that there was nothing said by the other two pathologists that would change his mind. Hardig argued that Angela Foster committed suicide because she possibly was in a state of depression resulting from a miscarriage the day before Christmas, 1963. Before ending his 3t4-hour summation, Hardig demonstrated how Mrs. Foster may have hung herself, using an oil can to stand on. VENTURA, Calif. (AP) - “I want people to see me close,” Clyde Beatty used to say. ‘Til give them anything. I’ll give them everything. But not that one thing. I won’t give my life.” ★ ★ ★ The famed wild-animal trainer, his body crisscrossed with claw and fang marks from 40 years of facing death in the ring, lost his battle yesterday to an inner enemy — cancer. He was 61. Beatty, who was mauled more than IM times in his career by lions and tigers, lost most of his stomach in an operation in July 1964. He resumed his wild animal act last April on Long Island, N.Y., with two and three shows a day. The next month he suffered a hemorrhage and returned to his home, but refused to announce his retirement, saying “I’ll nev-ef quit.’’ ★ ★ * He was hospitalized two weeks ago and died at 2:30 p.m. in Community Memorial Hospital. Only a nurse was with him. His wife, Jane, had just left, after he seemed to rally. QUIET END It was a quiet end to a thrill-packed, dangerous career that made Beatty a hero to millions of circus-goers for four decades. ★ ★ ★ His neat handling of the jungle animals, which he said he could train but never quite tame, always brought the audience to its feet. Like Stevenson, Goldberg comes from Illinois. ★ ★ ★ Johnson recalled that while Stevenson’s heritage was from the oldest American lines, Goldberg’s is from osme of the newest. He said his new appointee rose from the city streets to the Cabinet and then the Supreme Court. - He called Goldberg a man of courage, conviction and hu-manitarianism. “Always,” Johnson said, “We strive for a world where all men live in peace under a rule of justice under law. It is fitting that we should ask a member of the highest court to relinquish that position and speak for the United States before the United Nations.” Earnestly, responsible, Goldberg will be the voice not only for an administration but for an entire nation, the President said. EXCHANGES GREETINGS The Goldberg announcement was preceded by another little ceremony in the Rose Garden at which Johnson exchanged greetings with four of his ambassadors, to Dahomey, Niger, Sierra Leone and Togo. ’They were here on home leave and consultation. CAPE KENNEDY. Fla. (Jf) -Two Sentry satellites and a tiny pygmy satellite vaulted skyward today in a step toward development of a system to detect seCTet nuclear explosions anywhere from the surface of the earth to 200 million miles in space. The launch had been scheduled yesterday by delayed by mechanical troubles. The trio of radiation-sensing payloads rode atop an Atlas-Agena rocket which blazed ★ ★ ★ Space Spectacular Looms for Russians MOSCOW (UPI) - Another Russian space spectacular loomed in the not-too-distant future today. ’There was some speculation it might come off as early as next month. In quick succession on Friday, the Russians orbited five satellites with a single rocket and then blasted space history’s heaviest working payload — 12.2 tons — into orbit with a “new powerful booster rocket.” The I2.j-ton rocket indicated the Russians might have the capacity to orbit a larger space bus than ever — possibly carrying nrjore than three persons. The giant booster could also figure in the launching of two space vehicles. brilliantly into the early morning darkness at 3:27 a.m. it * * The Air Force said the three satellites had been drilled into separate egg-shaped orbits with 10 minutes. Preliminary orbital figures showed the satellites were higher than planned, but the Air Force said it still was pleased. HIGHLY ELUPTICAL It said the satellites went into a highly elliptical orbit ranging from 132 miles to 69,570 miles from the earth. The planned orbit was from 121 miles to 63,290 miles. The pygmy satellite was to remain in the elliptical path. The twin sentries were to be jockeyed at high altitude outposts to reinforce America’s space patrol in policing the limited nuclear test-ban treaty. DARTED SKYWARD Within seconds after the Atlas-Agena blasted off, a smaller rocket, launched from the cape, • darted skyward to study the Attas-Agena’s exhaust. Because of a complex flight plan intended to station the twin satelliteis at the high point of the orbit, Air Force officials said they wouldn’t know until about 10:00 a.m. Thursday whetiier the mission was completely successful. Small rockets and jet controls aboard the pair were to arrest them on opposite sides of the glode 63,000 miles up — one about 18 hours after the launching, the second 36 hours later. it it it The nuclear' detection satel-ites, each weighing 524 pounds, were to join four otters already patrolling the skies. They were launched in pairs in 1963 and 1964. New Gl Bill Clears Senate Now Up to H O U S 6; Lacks LBJ Backing Woman 'Agent' in NY Gambling Case Witness Gone News Flash WASHINGTON un-llie Senate Judiciary Committee approved, 11-2, today President Johnson’s nomination of former Mississippi Gov. James P. Coleman to he a judge of the Fifth U8. Ciradt Conrt of An>eals. 'V.', CLYDE BEATTY The star prosecution witness in the Madison Heights Steren Assembly Club gambling case has left the state and may not return to testify. Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson revealed yesterday afternoon that the witness, 29-year-old Margaret Allen, is in New York City. An assistant prosecutor, and two state police officers traveled there after learning Friday that she had departed. The long - postponed Steren trial, involving 21 defendants, is scheduled to begin ’Thursday in Manistee. The trial was transferred there after the defense attorney claimed the case had received too much publicity. ★ * ★ Miss Allen was a stenographer for Democratic members of the state legislature when she assumed an undercover role for the state police in 1963 to secure evidence against the alleged casino. WENT TO CLUB The attractive brunette, pos- ing as a gambler’s girl friend, entered the club on two successive ni^ts before it was raided on October 11,1963. “Her absence was unaiv nounced and unexplained,” “She is a woman who has been subjected to tremendous pressures. A woman of normal stature would have caved in long ago.” it it * Details of her meeting with of- ^ ficials iii New York were not | disclosed. HAS HOPE “I am not overly optimistic ’ that she will appear,” Bronson . noted, “but hopeful that she will. “This is not the first time that she has been reluctant,” Bronson. Bronson said, if necessary, they will try the case without her. He said that if this was done her testimony taken during the preliminary court examina-thm in early 1964 would be read into the court proceedings in Manistee. ★ ★ ★ She was on the stand seven days during the lower court hearing, mostly undergoing cross-examination by d6-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) MARGARETALLEN WASHINGTON (J^-The Senate has passed an administration-opposed “cold war” GI Bill of Rights measure. ’The issue of educational allowances and home loan benefits for post-Korean veterans now is up to the House. The Senate rejected yesterday Republican proposals to restrict the aid to vetm-ans of combat zone service and then passed the biU, 69 to 17. ’The House failed to act on a similar Senate measure in 1959, but Sen. Ralph W. Yarborough, D-Tex., of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, has announced plans to hold early hearings pn the new bill. Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield indicated he expects favorable House action this year, when thousands are serving in Viet Nam. BACKED BILL Mansfield supported the bill, although the Budget Bureau, Defense Department and Veterans Administration opposed it. Sen. John G. Tower, R-Tex., voted for the measure on final passage, expressing hope that the House will convert it “into the Viet Nam GI Bill we so badly need.” He had participated in efforts to restrict the benefits to men who served in areas of hostil- An amendment along these lines, offered by Sen. Leverett Saltonstall of Massachusetts and other Republicans, lost, 52 to 36. EFFECTIVE DA’TES The bill covers all veterans serving from Jan. 31, 1965-tte declared termination date for establishing eligibility under the {H-evious Korean GI Bill — to July 1, 1967, the termination date of the compulsory draft law recently entered by Congress. Eligibilify for education allowances, $110 a month for bachelors, $135 for veterans with one dependent, would be conditioned on more than 180 days of active duty or discharge for service-connected disabili^. Defense Chief Says Sifuation Nof All Black Developments Include Battles and Apparent Attempt to Kill Taylor SAIGON, South Viet Nam — Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara said today the Vietnamese situation has deteriorated in many aspects in the last 15 months, but the picture is not all black. Then he headed home from his five-day survey to report to President Johnson. McNamara said nothing in a news conference statement about expectations that this report will form the basis for a sizable increase in U.S. military strength in Viet Nam. “I can only tell you that our recommendatioiis will be directed t«>ward fnlfillhig the commitment of oar nation to support the people of Viet Nam in their ^t to win their independence,” he said. An apparent attempt to assassinate U.S. Ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor, a savage battle at a garrison post near the Cambodian frontier, and a second Viet Cong attack on the U.S. 1st Infantry Division’s 2nd Brigade at Bien Hoa were among developments of the day. ★ ★ ★ Four suspects, including two boys, were reported arrested after discovery and disarming of a bomb planted at the entrance to a ^ium udiere Taylor and senio* Vietnamese officials were attending a unity day celebration. WITH McNAMARA Returning to Washington with McNamara were Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman the J(dnt Chiefs of Staff; and Ambassador-designate Henry Caboh Lodge, udio is to relieve Taylor in mid-August. “Gen. Wheeler, Ambassador Lodge and I have com|deted our five-day visit to VM Nam,” McNamara said. “During this time we discussed with representatives of the government their plans for countering the intensified attacks of the Viet Cong. We reviewed with Ambassado* Taylor and Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of U.S. forces in Viet Nam, their appraisal of the problem and their recommendations for the future. CONTINUES SERIOUS “Over-all, the situation continues to be serious. As a matter of fact, in many aspects there has been deteriwatkm since I was here last, 15 montiis ago. “The size of the Viet Cong forces has increased; their rate of operations and the intensity of their attacks has been expanded; their disruption of the lines ci communications, both rail and sea and road, is nuich more extensive; and they have intensified their campaign of (Contimied on Page 2, Col. 9) Keep Sweaters Handy, Despite Warming Trend Although temperatures are rising, the weatherman says that you will still need your sweater today and tinnorrow. Seventy-six to 84 was the high predicted far today. Tonic’s low will be 92 to 60. ’Tomorrow will be suapy and slightly warmer with the Ugh, 78 to 96. Winds are east to southeast, 9 to 15 miles per hour. * ★ ♦ Fifty-one was todiy’s low mercury reading prior to 8 aon. By 1 p jn. the ttfn|Mratiirt aeale had readied 71. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 20. 1965 [iS. Denies injent to 'Spy on French WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defenae Department is investigating Firench charges of aerial espionage stemming from the fli^t of an American plane. It says "there was no intent to overfly any prohibited area in France.” Other than that, the Pentagon was keeping mum about the Fruice accused the Unitod States Monday of photograi^g its Pierrelatte nuclear comidex, the site where enriched uranium is produced for its nuclear The incident, the French Defense Ministry said, occurred Friday when a U.S, Air Force RFlOl reconnaissance plane snapped 175 photos, lates surrendered on French demands. DENY INTENT The Defense D^wrUnent first said only that it was investigating the affair. Later it issued a brief statement saying that there was no intent to overfly any prohibited area. Previously, Amaican officials had said first reports indicated the plane had strayed off cc while on a routine training mte-Sion. said they doubted the craft had overflown the Pierrelatte complex. * w * The State Department said only that an official French protest had been received at its Paris embassy. The French said the American plane made four straight photo passes over the plant. A French Vulture fighter intercepted the craft on its second pass and identified it, they said, but the American pitot fised his afterburners to outrun the French plane and make two additional passes. ASKED FOR FILM The French said they determined the American plane’s German base and asked for the film. Jacques Baumel, secretary-general of the GauUist Union for the New Republic party, said 28 of the m photos were excellent. The Frendi said their official protest was handed to Robert H. McBride, the No. 2 U.S. official in the Paris embassy. City Is Expected to Act Tonight on Plan for Industrial Park Site City Ctmunission action is scheduled tonight on a proposal that the city acquire a projected industrial park site on Pon-tia’s southeast side. Essentially, under terms of an expected recommendation from City Manager Joseph A. Warren, the city would take over the project fostered by the Greater Pontiac Industrial Development Corp. (GPIDC). Tile latter group offered its interest in the pnrk site to the city when the corporation decUed enrlier this year that It could not make a go of its industrial park plans. GPIDC plans called for an industrial park made up of small, light industry to locate on a 25-acre parcel on the northeast comer of South and East Boulevards in South Park subdivision. ★ ★ ★ The GPIDC offered to give the city its interest, valued at 1100,000, iiktdhe project. STUDY OKAYED The City Commission informally authorized a study (d the park plan by Geer Associates, city planning consultants. The Geer report was favorable to the city’s taking over the project. The Geer report further proposed that only 19.6 acres or 175 tots should be acquired initially by the city. To do this, the city would have to assume financial commitments on the land made by the GPIDC. * * ■k Development cost of the 19.6 acres was put at |2S8,000 by the Geer report with the cash investment tills year being only a portion of this total price tag. COST DETAILS Warren is expected to detail the city’s cost for the park project in his report tonight. In other business toni^t, City Commissioners will receive a report calling for construction of two pedestrian overpasses in tee city, and tiiat negotiations begin for a third overpass over railroad tracks in the north end. A staff reconunendation will be presented for an overpass on Huron in front of Webster School and on Wide Track at Whittemore. * t * The third overpass would run Sheffield to Walton and span the railroad switching yards there. ■0 ★ ★ City Manager Warren is also to report tonight on the city indebtedness in another ot his reviews of the city’s financial condition. WASHINGTON (AP) - A |1 billion annual pay raise tor 2.6 million unifwmed military personnel was poised for formal and probably unanimous House passage today. Debate on the measure, twice as costly as proposed by the Johnson administration, was concluded Monday with no spoken opposition. Only the fact that some members were in Illinois attending Adlai E. Stevenson’s funeral held up its formal passage. House leaders put off the roll call vote to protect the absentees who want to be on the record in. support of the bill. ★ "tr "ft Because the average 10.7 per cent boost proposed is more than double the 4.7 per cent increase reconunended by a^^n-es-idential panel, congressional leaders privately predicted that the uniformed services could expect a pay hike of between 7 and 8 per cent when Congress finally disposes of the measure, not yet considered by the Senate. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND ViaNITY-Suniiy and slightly warmer today, high 76 to 84. Fair and cool tonight, low 52 to 60. Sunny Wednesday, high 78 to 86. East to southeast winds 5 to IS miles per hour. Tliursday outlook; Partly cloudy and warmer. Lowttf twnptritur* praotdMv I «Jn. SI at 5 ajn. t i ajn.: Wind Velocity 10 m.p.h S p.m. SilS a.m. I 11;SS p.m. at 11:47 pjn. < Lawaat T M *3 MandaiTs Tamparanirt Chart M 34 Duluth 47 47 71 SO Jackionvilla N 74 70 SO Kama* City 7* 71 *4 47 Lo* Angeles 01 S7 77 37 MIemI Seach 00 77 42 47 Milwaukee r ~ PIttiburgh 73 4S 04 40 Salt Laka C. OS SO 79 so S. Pranciico J7 SS „ S. $. _______ „ . S7 Seattle 74 S4 43 Tampa 00 74 AP Phatetax NATTWiAL WEATHER — Weathermen predict showers and thundershowers tonight from the Pacific Northwest to tile northern Rockies, over the upper and middle Mississippi Valley and in parts of the northern and central Plains. It will be cooler in the Pacific Northwest and warmer in the aoutbem Plains and from upper Lakes area to the nmtiimi T%le French said the American plane committod three infractions: overflight of a restricted zone; iriwtograpby without authorization; and pho-togra^y of a restrict^ zone. NOT IN TREATY France is a nonparticipant in the limited nuclear test-ban treaty, a document signed by the United Stotes, the Soviet Union and more than 100 other nations. It prohibits all but underground nuclear explosions. France has successfiilly exploded several atomic bombs and intends to test a hydrogen bomb soon. Military Pay Mike Near OK JOHN C. AUSTIN Will Retire From County Auditor Unit John C. Austin, a member of the Oakland County Board of Auditors since 1938, announced today that he would retire Dec. 31 when his current three-year term expires. Austin’s county service began in 1929 when he was employed by the board of auditors as a member of the accounting staff. He was appointed to the board of auditors in 1938 by the Oakland County Board of Supervisors and is now serving his ninth term on the board. Austin said he was making the announcement now to give the board of supervisors ample time to select a successor. ★ ♦ ★ Appointments to the three-member board of auditix-s generally ace made at the October meeting of the supervisors. * k k There is no mandatory retirement age for appointed officials. Austin is 71. Harriman Is Stretching His Vacation Itinerary WASHINGTON (AP) - The vacation — with diplomatic overtones — that roving Ambassador W. Averell.Harriman is taking has been stretched to include several allied capitals. Harriman has been talking informally with Soviet leaders in Moscow. The State Department said Monday he will leave there probably before the end of this week and go to Brussels, Bonn, London Rmne. dais. WAITS FOR RALLY - Maxwell D. Taylor, U.S. ambassador to South Viet Nam, waits for a government rally to begin in Saigon* today. At right is Satoru Takahashi, Jap- anese ambassador to the guerrilla-tom country. Police said they stopped a Viet Cong attempt to kill Taylor as he left Cong Hoa Stadium, site of the rally. U.S. Helps Rights Tests in Bogalusa BOGALUSA, La. (AP) - Civil rights forces step up public ac-commodatkm tests, picketing and a march today following Justice Department action with suits to halt police offidals and the Ku Klux Klan from interfering with demonstrators. k k k A. Z. Young, president of the Bogalusa Voters League, told a rally Monday night of the plans for widescale public acconuno-dation tests and demonstrations. k k k He said that Asst. U.S. Atty. Gen. John Doar, on a peacemaking mission to the radally torn town, “had brought something to town that we had lost.” LOST CONnDENCE Young said, "We had lost confidence in the federal government and the FBI, k k k At one time, we thought anything could be solved by the FBI. But these Kluxers in Bogalusa were so strong that they had the FBI eating out of their hands.” * ★ * Young did not elaborate alter making the comment at the lass rally. Doar, who heads the civil rights division of the Justice Department, filed suits in U.S. District Court at. New Orleairi' Monday to halt city police officials and the KKK from interfering with civil rights demonstrators. HELD IN CONTEMPT He also asked that Public Safety Ckimmissioner Arnold Spiers and Police Chief Claxton Knight be held in contempt. Doar was on hand Saturday when white bystanders attacked a group of biracial pickets outside a shopping center about a block from the City Hall. There > no city police on duty Doar said Spiers and Knight had failed to provide reasonable protection tor civil rights workers under an injunction issued July 10 by U.S. Dist. Judge Herbert Christenberry in New Orleans. ★ ★ ★ Hike Reward in Slaying ANNISTON,. Ala. (UPD - A $21,000 bounty was posted today for the night riders guilty of the slaying of a Negro factory worker who said on his death bed that he never engaged in the civil rights struggle. k k k Gov. George Wallace added $1,000 to the reward yesterday. Earlier some 300 (Calhoun (Anniston) Ckxinty residents raised $20,000. k k k It will be paid when the night riders who shot 38-year-old Willie Brewster in the back are tried and convicted. k k k Brewster was fatally wounded Thursday night as he returned iHxne from work at a pipe foundry. He died Sunday. A passenger in Brewster’s car said white men did the shooting. terror against the civilian population. "But the picture is not all black by any means. The Vietnamese people continue to be willing to fight and to be. willing to die in their own defense. ‘"The Viet Cong, as you know, are suffering increasingly heavy losses and the U.S. combat forces are adding substantially to the military power of the government. ★ ★ w “Based on my observations and discussions here, we will be making a report to the President at some time within the next few days. I can tell you 'Viet Situation Is Worse’ (Ckmtinued From Page One) DONALD B. BAILUE Missouri Man to Head County Child Clinics A Springfield, Mo. man, Donald B. Bailjie, has been named administrative director of the Oakland Child Guidance Clinics effective Aug. 1, Vernon E. Keye, president, announced today. ★ w ★ Baillie, who will live at Rosemont, Berkley, succeeds Donald J. Kem, who has been named regional consultant for the Michigan Department of Health. * ★ ★ Baillie has headed the Greene County Guidance Clinic in Springfield for almost 14 years and has been a leader in community affairs in Springfield and on a statewide level. He served as chairman of the Missouri Health Agency Executives’ Committee for two years, chairman of the Southwest Missouri Association for Social Work, a director of the Missouri Council on Children and Youth and as a delegate to the 1960 White House Conference on Children and Youth. New Zealand Prison Escape Attempt Fails AUCKLAND, New Zealand (AP) — Rioting prisoners burned out Mount Eden jril today in an attempted break, but ncme of the 293 iimates escaped, police reported. It was the worst prison riot in New Zealand history. k k k Armed guards ringed the outer walls of the jail as police and firemen fou^t the blaze touched off by a hard core of rampaging prisoners. only that our recommendations will be directed toward fulfilling the commitment of our nation to support the people of Viet Nam jn toeir fight to win their inde-jiendence.” ON BATTLE FR^ On the battle front, an outnumbered Vietnamese special forces garrison fought off a powerful Viet Cong attack in a ‘valiant stand” early todaji but suffered "an awful lot of casualties,” a U.S. spokesman reported. He said Americans were among'^tiie dead. Six U.S. special forces advisers and 200 Vietnamese made up the garrison, at Bn Dop, due north of Saigon and five miles from the Cambodian border. The Viet Cong repeatedly assaulted the camp, the spidces-man said, but did not penetrate far into it. ★ w a The biggest as:^ult was launched at 8:30 am., the spokesman said. The Viet Cong hit the north wall of the camp, swarming across a moat and through a mine field. REPELLED The attack was repelled by handful of defenders who held several fortified positions, armed helicopers and fighter-bombers from Bien Hoa airbase. The Viet Cong also hit the 1st Division’s 2nd Brigade near Bien Hoa early today with mortar ahd small arms fire for the second day in a row. U.Si' casualties were described as light. Three Americans were killed hy a Viet Cong attack on the unit yesterday. k k k Sources in Hue, near the border between North and South Viet Nam, reported that North Vietnamese gunners fired across the frontier today at planes of the South Vietnamese air force. It was the first time such antiaircraft f’"*; across the border had been report^. DURING RALLY The firing occurred during a rally of several thousand persons on the southern bank of the Ben Hai River, which forms the border. No casualties were reported and no planes were reported hit. Hie South Vietnamese government staged the raliy on the river bank and the stadium celebration in Saigon to launch a new "National Front for the liberation of North Viet Nam.” The front is being organized by South Viet Nam’s new miU-t^ premier. Brig. Gen. Nguyen Cao Ky, to launch a liberation guerri^ campaign in the (Communist north. W 2b.- W The U.S. Coast Guard joined the other American armed services in the war with the arrival of eight swift patrol boats to help stem the flow of men and supplies by sea from Communist North Viet Nam. The 8^foot boats were tipped to the Philippines and then sailed across the South China Sea to Da Nang, 380 miles northeast Saigon. w w * The boats each have a crew of two officers and 10 men. They can (^lerate in coastal waters that are too shallow for the 7th Fleet ships whidi have been patiriling the Vietnamese coast. BIRMINGHAM - A final determination m the method of financing tiw city^s first parking structure has been delayed four weeks. Hie City Commissirai was scheduled to make the decision last night but action was adjourned after a proposal was made to pay for the $1,174,000 garage entirely with parking revenue. The hearing will be held Aug. 16. (fommissioner Carl Ingraham advocated the plan. The motion failed by a 3-2 vote. After the proposal was rejected, Ingraham asked for the postponement. 5 VOTES REQUIRED Noting that only five of the seven commissioners were present and that at least five votes are required if an assessment is levied, Ingraham said: “I know how important this structure is, but in good faith I could not vote on the structure Witii an assessment.” The commission last month tentatively approved a 10 per cent assessment against property owners ip the downtown district, with the rest of the cost to be covered by parking revenue. ★ k k Last night’s hearing was Scheduled for the final formal action needed — confirmation of the assessment roll. RATE HIKE City Manager Robert Kenning warned the commission that if there was no assessment it would be necessary to hike the rates on all parking meters. Commissioner David Breck said an over-all increase would hhve an adverse effect Birmingham Area News j Financing Left Up in Air on City Parking Facility Gaming Case Witness Gone (Continued From Page One) fense attorney Carlton Roeser of Pontiac. During the 11-day pretrial examination in Farmin^on Township Justice Court, Miss Allen named each ol the defendants and testified about their part in the alleged conspiracy to violate state gambling laws. Two of the defendants, Eddie Guarella and Joseph Brooklier, bad bees MentifM earlier at a Senate investigating committee hearing as members of the Deiroit-area Mafia, a crime syndicate. After her role in the investigation was disclosed. Miss Allen was criticized by some Democratic legislators for not telling them she was helping state police. ★ ★ ★ Later, the Democrats failed 1 rehfre her in tffil new legislative session, and she went to work for the Ford Motor Co. Tractor Division. NO REASONS Bronson refused to reveal where Miss Allen was living in York or the reasons she gave for possibly remaining away. He indicated, however, that Miss Allen and her parents had been threatened. Roeser denied any intimidation by his clients. He labeled Miss Allen’s disappearance “a publicity stunt” and predicted that she would return to testify. ★ ★ ★ “Certainly she had not been contacted by anyone on our side of the case,” said Roeser. 'None of my clients or anyone associated with them would go withip 50 miles of that girl.” FLEW TO NEW Yt^RK Assistant Prosecutor James Finn, State Police Lt. Raymond McC^ell qnd Detective Christopher Swartzengruber contacted Mish Allen after flying to New York late Friday. Fitin has been assigned to head the case in Manfotee, along with two other assistant prosecutors, Patrick Oliver Oakland County Orcult Judge Frederick C, Ziem will officiate at the trial. A panel of 120 prospective jurors has been drawn. Each of the 21 defoidants is allowed five legal challenges. “By doing this we tvouhl be piayhig with fire,” he said. k k k Businessmen have objected to the 10 per cent assessment on the basis that they have been assessed for all the surface parking lots. WOULD BE TESTED Bernard Powell, owner of the Briggs and Birmingham Theater buildings, indicated to the commission .that if a special assessment were approved it would be tested in court. , Fred Pew of Max Broock, Inc., told the commission that the first structure should be built without an assessment as an experiment. "We are tired of assessments,” he said. "But if this doesn’t y/ork I am sure the businessmen of this town will go along with future assessments.” k k k The five-level structure, to be constructed on the existing parking lot fronting on Woodward and Willits, will house 566 cars. Nab Suspect in Canadian Bank Holdup FORT ERIE, Ont. (UPb-Police may have cracked a $1 million Bank of Montreal robbery case today with the arrest oif four men suspected as members of the gang who used diamond drills to open 400 safe deposit boxes last April 11. An alert track cashier at Buffalo Raceway in nearby Hamburg, N. Y., was credited by police with giving the tip-off that led to the arrest of one man in Hamburg and three others at the Fort Erie Hotel where all had checked in yesterday. Police said the men had gone to the raceway last night to play the horses with some of their loot. The suspects were identified as Eugene Radu and Bernard Roser of Montreal, Sam Kroiter of Teaneck, N. J., formerly of Montreal, and Mohshe Nachts-tern of Winnipeg, Man. k k k All were charged with possession of stolen goods with the exception of Nachtstern u4io was booked by U.S. authorities on a second degree forbery charge. nFTH SUSPECT Authorities said a fifth suspect was arrested recently in London, England, but no details were* immediately available. Nachtstern was carrying $1,-150 in stolen travelers checks when arrested and about $4,620 in. checks were found in ,the men’s hotel rooms. 'All Is Well' on Stranded Ocean Liner NEW YORK (AP) - The 12,-500-ton liner Seven Seas, stranded in the Atlantic Ocean 500 miles east of St. John’s, Nfld., r^rted today to a Coast Guard cutter which pulidd alongside: “All is well; no requirements for assistance.” Life for the 400 passengers and 210 crewmen a^ieared normal despite a fire Saturday night whidi disabled the liner’s diesel engines. No one was injured. The Coast Guard cutter Abse-con reached the 49^foot West German motorship just after midnight. The liner’s master, Capt. Helmut Bender, awaited the arrival later today of the Dutch tug lerse Zee. The tug will tow the ship to St. John’s, with arrival expected by Friday. The passengers included 125 American high school students returning home after a year of study abroad. FOOD ABUNDANT Emergency equipment kept Qie ship’s iterations going. Food supplies were abundant. Bender said in a radiogram to The Associated Press that lighting, cooking, water supply and sanitary systems were fimetion-ing properly. He said seas were smooth and the ship was drifting north at about five miles a day. J U THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1965 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN Industrialist Gets OK on Holly Township Mobile Home Pork HOLLY TOWNSHIP - Fred D. BartMi, millionaire indi»-trialist, will be allowed to establish at least one mobile home park in the township. The Township Zoning Board of Appeals yesterday decided to permit Barton to develop a 25-acre site off Grange Hall Road as a trailer park. f Still in the Are aM Barton’s plans to create a mobile home retiremoit village on IN acres he owns at Fish Lake and Knrtx roads. Hearing on rezoning for the larger project will be held before the zoning board of appeals at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. Report Given by Area Airline June Passengers Top May Total; Below '64 Outbound North Central Airlines (NCA) flights carried 27 passengers from Pontiac Municipal Airport last month. This was more than double the passengers for May. In May, outtwund NCA flights carried 12 riders; Inbound passengers last month totaled 28, compared to 13 passengers in May. Total patronage for June was down from that of a year ago. In June 1984, NCA flights brought In 37 passengers and boarded 28. NCA flights to date have carried 120 outbound and 123 inbound passengers this year. In the same six-month period last year, 125 and 108 passengers respectively were carried on NCA flights. AIR MAIL HAUL Departing flights hauled 1,162 pounds of air mail last month, up from 982 pounds in May. Inbound flights carted 960 pounds of air mail, down from 1,036 pounds in May . Outbound air express poundage totaled 402 pounds in June, compared to 839 pounds the month before. There was no air express shipped in for either May or June. In June, NCA flights departed with 1,669 pounds of air freight, while inbound flights landed 5,374 pounds. In May, outbound freight totaled 479 pounds, while inbound totaled 2,921 pounds. 3 Appointed to Committee Posts in Troy TROY - The City Commission last night appointed representatives to three committees. Roy C. Beach of 6248 Livernois w^ named to the Commercial and Industrial Development Study Committee to replace Ed Dyer who moved from the city. James Tracey of 3585 Rochester was appointed to the Liquor Committee and Carl Schorn of 3127 Oakhill was appointed to the Building Authority. The commission is also studying substandard buildings in the city with an eye to either requiring them to be brought up to standard or condemned. City Manager Paul Y6rk said there are about 45 such buildings listed, and more that are unlisted. He said they are mostly vacant houses. The building department will inspect each building and prepare reports for the commission. MurdenSuicide Ruled After 2 Bodies Found FLINT (* — The bodies of Mrs. Pauline Vaughn, 40, and James Berry, 50, were found in the woman’s home in Flint Monday, and investigators indicated it was a murder-suicide case. A rifle lay on the bed next to Berry’s body, police said. Mrs. Vaughn was q widow and Berry a long-time boarder at the house, detectives said. No rezoning was involved, in the approval for the smaller project. NOT COMMERCIAL The property, which lies 400 feet south of Grange Hall Road, carries a commerdal classification. However, the township zoning ordinance requires zoning board of appeals approval before a trailer park can be de- A heated public session on the matter was held a week ago, with the board postooning formal action until yesterday. ★ w w Objections to the proposal centered in the fear that' mobile homes, while housing children who must be educated, do not pay their own way in property taxes. MONTHLY TAX Supervisor Seeley Tinsman noted that the owner of a mobile home pays a tax of $3 a month to the township. In addition, he said, the property value — and consequently the assessment — on tte land will be increased as the site-Is improved. “We thought this was for the best interests of the community,’’ Stanleyq Hanson, appeals l»ard chairman, said today. In noting that the three board members voted unanimously to approve the project, Hanson said opposition was not strong enough to warrant rejection. WEST OF SITE The site for the trailer park is west of the Hawaiian Gardens, also owned by Barton. It is separated from the $1.25-million restaurant-motel-resort complex by three subdivisions in which Barton owns property. Barton earlier this year was thwarted in his plans to build the propos^ mobile home retirement village in the northwest portion of the township. ★ ★ A Development of the $l-million Old Mill Stream Village would require rezoning the 160 acres from agricultural-residential to commercial. IN OPPOSITION Some 200 residents signed petitions in opposition to the move. The Township Board declined changing the classification on the advice of the Oakland County Coordinating, Zoning and Planning Committee. The county group had recommended that the request be turned down because of inadequate roads and the fact that tlw township zoning ordinance contains no provision for regulating trailer parks. Such an ordinance now is being prepared to govern lot sizes, parking areas, recreation areas, garbage disposal, front and back yards and other items. Barton has taken his request to the appeal board, which will hold its public hearing tomorrow night at the Township Hall. ALMOST READY - Utica dty officials plan to move into their new municipal building this weekend and hopefully will be ready for business Monday morning. The 1125,600 buildihg, located on Auburn, opposite the post office will contain city offices, the public library and the police department. Zone Hearing Slated in Troy Auto Agencies Plan - Car Shopping Center TROY — The City Commission will hold a public hearing Aug. 9 on a rezoning request to allow an autoihobile shopping center on Maple east of Cool-idge. ★ * ★ City Manager Paul York said three auto agencies want about 40 acres rezoned from industrial He said there is a possibility that five agencies will eventually build in the area if the rezoning is approved. In other action last night, the commission approved an application to the State Board of Libraries for $15,000 in funds available under the Library Services and Construction Act. ♦ ★ w The first application in March was rejected by the state board because Troy did not meet the requirement that at least .3 mill be allocated to the support of the local library system. NOW ELIGIBLE The new budget allows .772 mill for the library, making Troy eligible. The money is to be used to renovate the present city hall, which will be converted to a library when the new city hall is completed. York said the $15,000 is one-third of the estimated cost of the renovation. * * * The commission set Aug. 12 as the date for a joint meeting with the Birmingham City Commission to discuss a water purchase agreement from the Walker Well. 1962 AGREEMENT Under a 1962 agreement, Troy has purchased, water from the well to service an area on Maple east of Coolidge. * ★ ♦ ★ The agreement gave either party the right to terminate with six months notice. In January Birmingham notified Troy it intended to terminate the agreement as of July 31. ★ ★ w York said there is a “definite need” for Troy to continue purchasing the water. Board Grants Raises to Teachers in Utica unCA — Utica teachers last Inight were granted raises by the board of educaticm ranging from $50 to more than $400. The new salary schedule ranges from $5,650 to $8,551.70 for a bachelor’s degree and from $5,650 to $9,203 for a master’s. Under the old schedule, teachers with a bachelor’s degree received $5,2M at the beginning and $8,470 at the top. The master’s degree schedule ranged from $5,5M to $8,770. This schedule was put into effect in January with the promise that if additional funds from local sources and state aid became available, it would be increased w w ★ Under the new schedule, the doctor’s degree will earn $800 above the master’s degree schedule. ESTRA PAY Extra pay will also be granted for additional education, including $100 after 10 years of experience in the system if a master’s degree has been earned. $200 after 15 years in the system with 10 graduate hours beyond the master’s, and $200 after 20 years if 20 graduate hours are earned beyond the master’s. The principals’ salaries will remain the same until next year. Schools Supt. Phillip E. Runk-ei said the increases were made possible by additional local revenues and an increase in the state aid bill. ★ ★ * The district will receive about $200,000 more in new revenues. About $80,000 will come from the new state aid bill and the rest from local sources. COST TO DISTRICT Runkel said the raises will cost the district about $47,500. ★ ★ ★ In addition, the board approved a single subscriber Blue Cross plan in which the boai^" pays the employe’s Blue Cross. * ★ w Runkel said this will cost the district about $89,000. Lake Orion Takes Home Rule Step LAKE ORION — The Village attorney, however, contendii^ Council took a long-awaited step that Parent! is no longer the toward making Lake Orion a village attorney and cannot rep-home rule village last ni^t by I resent the council, adopting a resolution calling for ^ w ★ # a referendum vote on the mat- j He also maintains that the 1 Swem case will clarify Paren- The resolution was introduced by Councilman William O’Brien and adopted by a vote of 54). Councilman Lewie Rossman abstained from voting. Attorney Robert V. Parenti said a special election will be held in the village in about ' N days. At that time, the people will vote on whether or not they want the present charter revised. At the same time, a five-member charter commission will be elected. * ^e * If revision of the charter is approved, Parenti said, the commission will then proceed to draw up a new charter, which will probably include provisions for i ■11 ----- . ------. 1 nossman agreea uiai me vu- village manager form of ^ charter needs updating, but he is steadfastly opposed to accepting legal advice from Parenti on this or any other matter. ASKED WHY Mrs. Juanita Robbins, vice president^of the Lake Orion Homeowners Association, asked O’Brjen why he would prefer a home rule village to a home rule city. ^ Junior Livestock Judging Slated for First Time aMtie State Fair The youngsters who soon will be running Michigan’s farms and leading the state forward in agriculture will be competitors in judging livestock for the first time at this year’s Michigan State Fair. Robert Zeeb of Bath, State Fair Authority member who is chairman of the premium exhibits committee, said the junior judging contests were added in line with the fair’s policy of continuous expansion to better serve all the people of the state. About 200 rural youths are expected to take part, said Robert McLachlan, agriculture exhibits director. They will compete in judging 12 classes of beef cattle, sheep and swine. ★ ★ ★ Winners will be selected on their ability to judge livestock and to state orally their reasons for the placing of the animals. 82 Million off Market? Cherry Withholding in Crucial Stage TRAVERSE CITY (UPI) -The Cherry Growers Action Group entered the crucial stages of its planned withholding action today witir promises from $44 growers to keep 82-million pounds of red tart cherries off the market. Spokesmen for groups of cherry buyers said that the number of pledges appeared sufficient to force the price of red tart above the 4.8 cents per pound now offered. The only question was how many of the growers' would watch their crop rot rath-than take a noinimal payment, they said. One large buyer, Jamds H. Brian, president of Smeltzer’s Fruit Orchards, said he would announce a price today of “probabiy 5 cents’’ per pound. He said the slight increase was occasioned by crop damage in portions of western Michigan usually tapped for cherries for the orchard. V A check of buyers in the Traverse City-Frankfort-Bear Lake area showed that only a trickle of red tart cherries had reached market yesterday. BEHIND NORMAL However, the crop was a week to 10 days behind normal, they said, and red tarts could not be expected to be ready for sale in any quantity before tomorrow. Mrs. Betty Brey, secretary of the Cherry Growers Action Group, said growers would need at least 5^ cents per pound “to pay the interest on their investment and be able to eat and paint the along with a national red tart Cherry picking holiday called yesteraay by 0. E. Herkner Jr., president of the National Red Cherry Institute and of the Red Cherry Council. Johnson had offered $10 to the grower who caught the largest fish during the holiday, but he had no takers as of late yesterday. HAVE SIGNED A spokesman for the Great Lakes Cherry Producers Marketing Cooperative said 26 cash processors have signed to purchase cherries at 4.8 cents per pound. Eight others have held out and ciui be assumed ready to negotiate a higher price, he said. Paul John^n Mrs^ Brey’s ^rs. Brty sato growers will brother ^ head the group, be held to their withholding had indicted ^that growers pledges for at least anothw might hold out for 6 cents per two days. She said the outlook P®*™- was “bright” for negotiations ^of higher prices within that Most Michigan growers we^periotf. j The contest’s purpose, said McLachlan, is to help ti’ain future agriculture leaders in the fundamentals of sound livestock selection. Members of 4-H clubs and the Future Farmers of America will be among those taking part. However, affiliation with the FFA or the 4-H is not required — any youth 14 to 19 is eligible. Entry forms for the, contest may be obtained by writing to the Department of Animal Husbandry, Michigan State University, East Lansing. * * * Completed forms must be returned to Mr. Robert McLachlan, State Fair, Detroit, Michigan, 48203. Entries must be postmarked no later than Aug. 17. FEE OF $1 A tee of $1 per contestant must accompany each entry. In return, each contestant will receive a gate pass to the fair and a noon lunch on contest day. Sept. 2. , In addition to the individual judging, any FFA chapter or 4-H club may enter one team, consisting of four members. Tha three members with the highest scores will make up the team’s score. Team members, of course, are also eligible for individual awards. ■k -k -k The junior livestock judging is but one of several additions to the agriculture program at the State Fair, which runs from Aug. 27, through Sept. 6 (Labor Day). I Blaze in Lake Orion Damages Garage, Car LAKE ORION — A fire started by burning trash destroyed the roM and damaged a car in a garage at 129 Slater about 1 a.m. today. Fire Chief Jack Caylor said the extent of the damage has not been determined. government. ABOUT A YEAR Preparation of the new charter will require about a year. Parenti said. So any change from the antiquated system now being used to run the village is still nearly a year and a half away. Lake Orion is one of the few villages in Michigan which still operate as general law villages. The statutes providing for this system ^te back to 1895. Compared to the controversy that has resulted from the introduction of relatively trivial matters in recent council meetings, the home rule resolution was passed last night with comparative ease. k k k Village President Clarence Rossman asked that action on the matter be deferred until the Circuit Court rules on a suit brought against the village by Robert J. Swem, but O’Brien received strong support on the resolution. RESIGNATION ACCEPTED Swem was elected assessor last March and submitted his resignation in May. He later attempted to withdraw the resignation, but it was accepted by the council. He is seeking reinstatement to the office. Parenti, who has been relieved of his duties as village attorney by Rossman, has been retained by the council to defend the suit. Rossman has retained another ti’s status, although the attorney is not nanted in the complaint for writ of mandamus submitted by Swem. TO HEAR CASE Circuit Judge James S. Thor-bum is scheduled to hear the case, which has been postponed three times, cm Aug. 9. In introducing the home rule resolution, O’Brien pointed out the need lor a fnlLtime village manager and deplored the “lack of progress in village affairs during the past four months.” “We’re not even earning the $1.40 (per meeting) the village is paying us,” O’Brien said. ★ w ★ Rossman agreed that the vil- Deadlines Nearing for State Fair Entries . Deadlines are nearing for entries in the Michigan State Fair, which runs Aug. 27 through Labor Day. . k k k The first deadline Is July 30 fw baking, canning, sewing and creative craft entries in the community arts division. Livestock, horses, agricultural and art entries are due by Aug. 6. Entries in the new livestock judging contests fw the state’s farm youth close Aug. 17. ★ ★ ★ For the first time in 12 years, the light and heavy horse pulling contests will be featured. k k k Charles Figy of Morenci, chairman of ^e State Fair Authority, said record entries and attendance figures are expected. More than one million persons attended each of the past three fairs. He explained that becoming a city would require lengthy and complicated anaexatioa procedures. A city would also be nMire expensive to operate, the councilman pointed out, citing fire I»\>tection as a major increase in operating expenses. k k k The village paid $2,8W out of $22,000 for fire protection last year. The remainider of the cost was paid by the township. Same Rate for Wool Act Deductions Deductions for financing the wool and lamb producers’ self-help promotion program to be made from payments for the 1965 marketing year under the National Wool Act will continue at the same rates as m the past, Frank Light, chairman, Michigan Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service (ASCS) State CkMiunittee, announced today. Deduction rates will be 1 cent per pound irom shorn wool payments, and 5 cents per hundred pounds of liveweight from unshorn lamb paymehts. These rates are the same as those made from payments received by producers from the start of the program. ' The promotion tprogram is conducted by the Americao Sheep Producers Council, Inc., under an agreement with the secretary of agriculture providing for advertising, sales promotion and related market development activi-' ties on wool and lamb as authorized under the National Wool Act, said Ught. 'The present agreement covering the four years for which the act was extended in 1961 was approved in a producer referendum held in 1962. The original agreement between the councU and the retary of agriculture was entered into upon approval of producers in a referendum in 1955. Under that agreement, deductions were made from the payments for the first four years of the wool payment program of the original National Wool Act. A second agreement was entered into following a referendum in 1959 to cover the three years for which the act was extended in 1958. DAwx mmm 804 IVORTH PERRY Pontiac, Michigan Phone 334-9041 Every Sunriae GULZED DONUTS This Week’s Extra Special! French Donuts Dawn's Delicious Chocolate, Vanilla or Nutty FrostsKl On The Way To Work Or Home From A Party, Yooll Injoy Dawn's Famous Flavor Brewed Coff^ DAWil DONinS mu m 3)iviii THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1965 ShSt Out but -Twins Still Win, 5-2 at Tigers, U Ortega Keeps Detroit Bats Silent; Hamlin Clouts 2 Homers .DETROIT (AP)-Extra hitting practice before the game did nothing to help the Detroit Tigers Monday. Washingtm pitcher Phil Ortega made it look like the Tigers had left aU their hits in the pregame session as he gave up only three hits in an (Ml Senators victory. * ★ # Ortega almost duplicated Mike McCormick’s two-hitter against the Yankees Sunday in giving the Senators two straight shutouts. The triumph was Ortega’s 10th in 18 decisions. Tlie Senators have wm 38 games. “I knew (Mickey) Lolich didn’t have it in the second inning,” Manager (Charlie Dressen said. “But I used my best two long reliefers-Joe Sparma and Lany Sherry — in batting practice. It always seems to backfire.” PACED ATTACK Ken Hamlin, irtio was hitting .281 but had only eight runs batted in going into Ute ifatpe, paced the Senators with four RBIs on two home runs. Woodie Held knocked in three with a three-run homer in the third inning as the Senators did all their scoring in the first four innings. The Tigers have scored only two runs in their last 2P innings of play. Norm Cash singled off Joe Cunningham’s glove in the fourth inning for the first hit off Ortega. * “Lolidi was out M action for two days because he had to train with the Air National Guard,” Dressen explained. 'T guess the layoff hurt him more than I thought because be was missing some qmts by four feet.” FIRST RUN A dngle by Held, Don Lock’s ground rule double and a Jeld-er’s choice gave the Senators their first run in the second inning. Hamlin’s first homer triggered a fouMiin rally in the third which was capped by Held’s homer off reliefer Orlando Pena. Hamlin’s second homer, off Ron Nischwits in the fourth inning, followed singles by Cun-nin^uun and Ed Brinkman. Nischwits settled down after that. He allowed only two hits before giving way to a (dnch-hitter in the eighth. Dave Widkersham, looking for his flrst victory in 97 days, and Pete Rlchert, the most effective of the American League pitchers in the All-Star game, were the scheduled starters for tonight’s windup M the two-game series. M'MuU'n 3b 4 1 0 0 Lump* 3b Howard N 4 1 2 t Ca«h lb Ri^d'?? ^ c 4«goRortbrup rf Cun'ham lb 4 1 1 1 Wart 3b ir'kman m 4 I I 0 Fraaban c Ortaoa p 2 0 10 Lollcb p ;i|ii E—Nona. DP-Datrall 3. . bnton 3, Oatrolt 4. 2B—Lumpa. HR-Hamlln 2 (II). S-Orlagi. IF H R BRO S 5 T-2;I4.' A.^004. Clarkston Golfer Scores Ray Conley of Clarkston aced the 195-yard, No. 5 hole at Highland Hills ^turday using a 5-iron. He shot an 87 for the round. The ace was the first oni the course this season. ★ ★ ★ * -k f Braves' HurlerH^ips Foes Instead of Uniform Pants By The Associated Press ken Johnson, who once ripped a pair of baseball pants in half, is tearing up the National League now that he’s escaped the Texas Trauma. Johnson recorded Milwaukee’s first shutout of the season Monday ni^t as the Braves whipp^ the New York Mets 64) for their seventh straight victory and moved into third place in the National League. * ★ ★ The 32-year-old right-hander has been a different person since Houston traded him to Milwaukee for outfielder Lee Maye last May 23. While with the Astros this season, Johnson posted a 3-2 record with a 4.15 earned run average TAKING A BREATHER^Roberta Albers (left), 18, of Miami, Fla., and her playing partner Barbara Mclntire, 30, of Colorado Springs, (kilo., b^e advantage of the slow play in the qualifying round of the Women’s Western Amateur Golf tournament at Minneapolis and get a few moments of rest. Miss Albers is the reigning Inter-Collegiate champion. Miss Mclntire, former two-time winner of the tourney, fired a 77 yesterday to share medalist honors with Marcella Rose of Jefferson City, Mo. Pro Loses Golf Crown After Switching Courses Special to The Press PORT HURON - They switched courses for the last round of the Michigan Professional Golfers Associatl<« assistants’ tournament here yesterday and in doing so switched to a new champion. Defending champion Bob Nodus of Bloomfield Hills Country Club fired a 72 in the morning round at Port Huron Golf Club to lead the 131 contestants into the final 18 holes during the afternoon at Black River CC, Chuck Knowles of Holland, who went into the second round one stroke behind Nodus, posted a 69 while the Bloomfield assistant slipped to a 74 and lost his title. The 25-year-old Knowles posted 73-M—142 to earn the prize of $289 in the $1,800 Stan Bri(»i of Tam O’Shanter also came on strong at Black It's Worth Your While TO DRIVE THAT EXTRA MILE! ! See the Exciting New OnySLEK - PtYMOUTH ^ Save More Today at BILL SPENCE, INC. M78 Dixie Nvy. OAMSYON Phene 825-1835 ] River, posting a 69 to go w'lh a first round 74, for a 143 total and second place. Nodus was third with 146. Roger Danielski, assistant pro at Rockfield Silver Lake Country Gub, aced the 122-yard 13th hole at Port Huron Golf Club. FAR BEHIND Danielski, however, finished far behind Knowles, ending the round with an 84 and adding an 88 on his second round for a 172. Other t(^ finishers, in order, included Larry Bianco, Franklin Hills CC, 76-71-147; Robert Walsh, Blythesfield CC, 74-73-147; Jim Picard, Tam O’Shanter, 79^147; Dick Bury, Grosse He CC, 76-73-149; Tom Watrous, Oakland Hills CC, 75-75—150; Tom Cosmos, Oakland Hills, 80-70-150, and Ggry Rosely, Cascades CC, 74-76— 150. Mel Mzhickteno of Orchard Lake CC fired a 75-77-152 to win in the caddymasters’^divi-sion and Tom Vanderploew of Green Ridge CC scored 79-74— 153 to win in the sh(^ assistants’ division. UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1001 Baldwin Ave. and no complete games in eight starts. FOURTH STRAIGHT IBs triumph over the Mets was his fourth straight and gave him a 7-2 record with the Braves. In that time he has compiled a 2.79 ERA, completed five of 12 starts and defeated seven of the other nine teams in the league. Johnson never had such fortune with the A^os. it * * When new uniforms were issued prior to the 1964 season, Johnson found Iris pants were too long. He said be wouldn’t wear the pants and, to show he meant it, he ripped them in two and left the pieces on the clubhouse floort Johnson received a new pair of pants and shortly afterward, on April 23, pitched a no-hitter in Houston’s old park. But he lost arid today stands as the only man ever to pitch a no-hitter and lose in nine innings. If he thought his fortune would change when the Astros moved to their new domed stadium this year, he soon discovered how wrong he was. DOME’S GLARE On May 23, in the first inning, San Francisco’s Jim Hart lofted a routine fly toward center field that turned into a three-run, inside-the-park homer when Jim Wynn lost the ball in the dome’s glare. The Giants went on to defeat Johnson and the Astros 5-2. But that traumatic experience was the turning point in Johnson’s career. Just about an hour later, it was announced he had been traded to Milwaukee. ★ ★ ★ In other NL games Monday, Los Angeles knocked off Houston 8-3, Pittsburgh trimmed Cincinnati 3-1, Philadelphia defeated St. Louis 5-2 and Chicago downed San Francisco 6-2. Don Drysdale scattered nine hits, bringing his record to 188 while also collecting a run-scoring single and a double. Los Angeles snapped a 3-3 tie wi' five-run outburst in the sixth inning, Lou Johnson scoring the first run on a wild pickoff throw by Houston starter Don Notte-bart. LAW ARRIVES Vernon Law stopped Cincinnati on four hits, and six Pirates each rapped two hits. Donn Clendenon’s fourth-inning home run broke a 1-1 deadlock, and Pittsburgh added a run in the eighth on consecutive singles by Roberto Clemente, Clendenon and Bill Mazeroski. Philadelphia downed St. Louis as Chris Short scattered seven hits for his 11th victory against seven losses. Dick Stuart and Alex Johnson each knocked in two Phillie runs. Lefty Spahn Joins Giants SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Manager Herman Franks looks to the 44-year-old arm of Warren Spahn to give his San Francisco Giants a winning boost in the National League baseball race. Franks, freshman pilot last Saturday was awarded a hew contract through 1966, went to bat to get the veteran lefthander who was cut loose by the New York Mets a week ago. * ★ ★ “I just have a feeling, he’ll be a tremendous help tar us,” the manago' declared after the Giants announced they had reached a salary agreement with Spahn and that the pitcher will report Wednesday. In the twilight of his great major league career Spahn says he still is in excellent ^ys-ical shape and his arm feels good, adding, “1 think I can help the Giants win the pennant. I am confident I can still pitch nine inning, but I’m ready to do anything the manager wants me to.” * w -a Franks told newsmen, “I just may start him. I just don’t know yet how he’ll be used.” Spain’s 360 games wMMl dbato* 1,350 lb* lt.2IS7.7S; s***mH Wad* ...... eholc* •g'jjJJJJ ■|.Tjoo8'''!to W75-25.7?' ' _^ha*p “ DimOIT UVSITBCK DETROIT (AP)-fUSDA)-C*ttl* ‘ ■^rn'iTlnrt"--------- -«r predomlnaiing lncre**ad *howlnB dtj *tandard and good *t*ar* heltar* In *mall -............ ^ — ilam^r lt.00-1t.75 Iw UP ta •» “ ------ utter cow* 12.SgTt.00. ewes S.OOa.OO. 'Caiam m e Amerion Slods •BM RMBRIOOM II TaTsaliONid 3oS l7an2!{to«*®«i** Amarkan Stadk Excbanga with m prlaas: Aeresatw. \Sn\ AwmerS" ”* to ^tt 1 n« Atlat-Cpart U W ft ft-'- “b3J^Si gSSraJS. CInarama S Bft 3ft 1ft + ft Country «lft Stb 0 Sft Sft Sft-I- ft DataiCont 3 15ft 15ft 15ft + 1" Orapar 1 31 Mft 20 BM-H l.'Sga’* ! S it S::: Gan Pbnsd i nk nk n Giant ^dB* 20 Mft M 14 OoMfleM 4 Oft 1ft 1ft Gulf Am Ld 12 7ft 7 7 imp Oil tdbi 2 4tft 4tft 4M Kdfter ind 102 Oft 0 Oft Martay Air J ,S!3?iSS;r-WBl^*K^iS RIC GtW lilt U Sf Si X- Sbd W 4^ M m m ^ + Signal MA ^ t M M - rn;z&*Sft sr*iXp.. at Pay. •oatrtlaMt Q git gi Q gs gti Maikmt Tiading Mixed, Slow . . ty Aerospace Stocks Advance NEW YOBK ^itP)-dSero6pace issues advanced agefai in a mixed Stadc nuabl early today. HraAng was rtow. Most toy irtDdks dxmed only iractional ehapgej. The dafenae etaelB again ware helped jmapects of greater military spending because of the Vietf Nam conflict. Douglas Mrcraft and United Aircraft rose more than a point, CienBna DynamAcs mal Boeing nearly a point eadi. The parade of excellent second quarter earnings figures condnued Inrt once more there Bepublic atsel showed a frac- tional gain. The company reported a sharp gain ki profits but tte chairman said incoming (HTiers have been steadily declining from the peak levels of the first quarter. U.S. Steel was unchanged, Bethlehem eased and Jones & LaughUn was down slightly. ★ ★ A A mixed pattern prevailed among autos, chemicals, non-ferrous metals and eledrical equipments. Most airlines were firm but a h^. U.S. Smelting lost about Eastern fell about a point and 2. AMONG LOSERS General Motors, American Tobacco and Goodrich were among fractional losers. Up a little were du Pont, Phelps Dodge, Homestake and Xerox. ♦ ★ ♦ May’s Department stores was off ^ at 60 on a block of 4,000 shares. Opening blocks included; General Motors, off V* at 96 on 5,600 shares; American Telephone, unchanged at 67 on 4,601; and Westinghouse Electric, up % at 49T4 on 3,700. ★ * * Monday, the Associated Press average of 60 stocks fell 2 to 324.7. ' Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange. The New York Stock Exchange —A-- Sala* (liB*.) 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' 2 Hft lift lift ... _______ .rjO 4 Mft Wft Mft t ft Rohr Carp I 49 m 25ft Mft 4- ft Ra^ut**1JlB i Mft Mft Mft — ft Ryiar Syat l^4ft Mft 14ft + ft S^lck SCMCorp .Mf ScettPap .90 iTa^l^S V.B Saar* Ro* 1 —■“irg .40 ____ oil 1.70 ShtllTra Jig -rfiarWm 1.70 Sinclair 2 iIngarCo 2.30 imlttiK UOa Socony 3.00 SoPRSw .900 SouCalE IJO SoutbnCo 1.00 SouNGa* 1.20 SouPac 1.40 South Ry 3.00 Sporry Rand Wi.is^ Std Kolltman StOIICal 2.20 StOilInd 1.50* StO NJ IJOg St PacKaobig StanWar T.20 StauHCh 1.40 SterlDrufl .75 StavanUP 2 > LattCho. 45 + ft 3 7ft 7ft m ” 19ft Mft Mft 3 7M4 7|4 79vi 2 Mft ^ ^-ft 4 Mft 39ft 39ft -f 1' 5 44ft Mft Mft ... 3 33ft 33ft 33ft + ' 4 34ft 34 34 -I- < 3 53ft 53ft 53ft- i 21 lift lift lift ... ■ 37ft 37ft 37ft - ' Sun on lb Sunny 1.40 SwHt Co 2 Tamp* El J2 Tenn Ga* lb Texaco 2.30* 43 71ft 71ft 71ft - ft T Ift 9ft Ift + 1 31ft 31ft 31ft-1 43ft 43ft 43ft . 14 31ft Hft Hft 9 49ft 49ft 49ft - ITTTt I 30ft 30ft 30ft -9 10 55ft S5ft 5 35 121ft IM 12 4 41ft 41ft 4 IS 14ft 14ft 1 39ft 39ft 39ft 2 27 n —11— 42 40ft t Un AlrU 1.50 ■ — Alrctt 2 Cp .3Sg ..... FruH UGaiCp 1.70 UMtMM 1.20 US Unas 2b USPlywd 1.20 US Rub 2.30 US Smelt 3 US Steal 2 UnMatch .50 UnIvOPd 1.20 > 29ft 2 t 41ft 4 74ft 74ft 74ft 74ft 75ft 74ft +1 Ift Ift Oft .. 20ft 20ft 20ft + ' 33ft 33ft 33ft - ' 25ft 25ft 23ft - ' 74 74 74 + ' 14 14 14 + ' IP 34ft 34ft - < 40ft 40ft 40ft . 42ft 42ft 43ft + ' 1.10 WOaTal 1... WaatgEl 1.20 Wayerhr 1.30 Whirlpool Cp —w— 43 37ft 37 3 5 31ft Hft 3 4 3Sft 3Sft 3 1 39 39 3 Wilson Co 2 ••"nnOIx 1.32 41 - b 71ft 71ft + 1 47 49ft 3 42ft u-a 4 37ft 37ft 37ft 9 30ft 30ft 30ft 1 43ft 43ft 43ft 1 40ft 40ft 40ft _______________ 23 20ft 2lft 21ft Worth Ingtn 2 9 41ft 41 41ft —X—Y—Z— Xerox Cp .30 35 152ft 153ft 1S2ft + YngstShf 1.00 12............. Zanllb 1.40 3 Salat figures are unaOtIclal. . Uhl*** ohierwlse notM, rates of divn dtndi In ttw foregoing table are annual dlsbursamanta baaed on the last quarterly — ---.------. sp*ti,| or ments not daslg-WenHfled In •— a^Also extra or extras. o-Annuai rat* plus stock dividend. c-LIquidatIng dividend, d—Declared or paid In 1945 plus stock dlvMand. *-P*ld ' ■ ------- t—Payable In stock during 1943. . cash value on oxglividand or .exgllstrlbu-tlon datt. g—Otclarad or paid - year, h—Declared or mW attei ____ _ dend or split up. k—Declared or paid mis year, an accumulative Issue with dividends in arrears, n—New IssuA p—Paid - ....- — ——- -Marred or ______________ _. ____________meeting. r—Declared or paid In 1944 plus stock dlvkftnd. t-Pald in stock during 1944, ostlmatod cash value an exglividtnd or c diitrlbutlon dato cld-Gallad. x-Ex dlvMand. y-Ex Dividend and salat ki full. xJIs-Ex distribution. xr-Ex rights. xw-Wilhout warrants. ww—With warrants. wd-Whan dls- ..... ......... rtcelverthip or being raorganlzad under the Bankruptcy «- securltlat aiaumad hv such com-fn-ForoIgn Ittu* tubitcl to in- Sfocks of Local Interest OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD are n, -----" liar prkat of approxl- InterJaaler markets ______ ___________ the day. Prices do not Include retail markup, markdown or tentative h Braun Engtowarlng ........ CItIzant Utllltlat Class A Diamond Cryatal Ethyl Corp................... Kelly Girl ................. Mohawk Rubber Co............ Mlchlgao Sodmitts Tub* C*. . '65 Car Models Nearly Done Some Plants Already Converting for '66 DETROIT (* — U. S. automakers are in the final weeks of production of 1965 models with some assembly plants already finished with their ’65 work. Four Ford Motor Co. plants and two American Motors plants have completed their assignments for the model year which is nearing its end. In some cases, work has begun on converting the production lines to 1966 models. Another sign that Uie model year is near an end was seen ^ last Saturday’s production schedules. ’They made very little use of the overtime wwk pattern which has prevailed most of the year. F<^ had four of its assembly units on such operation, while General Motors had two. ★ ★ w Operation of 10 Chevrolet truck assembly and manufacturing plants were curtailed last week as aftereffects of a strike which hit Chevy’s Mun-cie, Ind., Transmission plant June 29. WORKERS IDLED Some 8,400 workers were idled. Officials of GM and the United Auto Workers Union sought a solution to the work stai^ard problems which figured in the strike. Three of the 10 plants resumed truck operatious and the remaining seven were scheduled to resume work this week, following settlement of the dispute at Mancie, General Motors said. Auto production for the year neared the 5.5 /nillion mark weekend, abput 15 per cent ahead of the 1964 pace. ★ ★ ♦ ’The record on truck production was equally impressive as the calendar year output of U. S.-built trucks passed the one million mark last week, four full weeks ahead of the pace set last year. PCRCtNr e9UMBC ni099 MNCOIT QtAmBFRG99 BBR JUJ.-Ta« HNHtTO MUBB Brt««B TO SOBtBB BS MOB TO Wr/BB IMHI moM -«0 -10 1 -SO « ’ +10 MJJ9B OHIMKM. MB 1 Bi AIL T9L. B TM. au AiATDoaao* wmmmm ■ ■mt *W9L mmmmm ■ a* PCNT m r mn. ttWTwe 9i aan Moroa* a mZ IIKL HaRW9im H WTT. RWteL [ i'; wl P*PSR B—BI pwRi-iu. gutt 1 1 J- ■ ■ awM.iHauaK a a.aiN.Ai. ' ■■ twiPT B oa aaB9 THUOO MB UMON gaRMBC fli ■ ■■ iiLt^ oran. tmmmsmmmm waVuwNouac *■■ wooLgggrit ■* ogg-jgMB wgtMrmM. avrak 1 OOW'JONES INOUSTRUU -PERCENTAGE CHANGES OVER 3KET INTBMUS Dow-Jones Averages - II How Index Figure Computed (Editor's Note—This is the last of a tvxhpart series on the Dow-Jones Average by Roger E. Spear, business news columrdst for The Pork-tiac Press.) The industrial average is based on 30 stocks, the rail average on 20 issues, and the utility average on the prices of 15 utility company stocks. Originally, the computation consisted simply of adding together the prices of the component stocks, and dividing the 6-Month Sales Set DETROIT - Parke, Davis and Co. Monday announced record net sales of $102,562,328 for the first six months of 1965 and net earnings of $14,009,563-second best for any first half in the firm’s 99-year history. Net sales for the first half of this year showed a 9.6 per cent increase over the $93,600,850 reported for the same period in 1964. * ★ * The previous record was $99,-045,616 in the first six months of 1960. The high mark for net earnings was established in the first six months of 1960 with $15,130,-626. Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-Th* cash position of the Treasury compared with corresponding date a year ago: July 15, 1945 July IA 1944 Balance- $ 9,443,4M,034J1 t 4,449J43,4M.79 Deposits FlKal Year July I- 2JJ2,14r,791.90 2,253,5M,7M.«7 Withdrawals Fiscal Year— 5.209.954.271.31 S,I34,993J49.39 X-Tot*l Oabf- 3I7,497,320JI0.29 311,322,303,327.40 Gold Assets— 13.934.349.714.31 13,443,033,104.45 (X) - includes 9H2,943,594.01 debt not lOND AVERAOES IM by The Assacialtd P 20 10 10 10 Rant M. Util. Fg 01.0 H.4 91.9 Prey. Day I Year Ago** I 1944 Low 90.5 100.9 97.2 90.1 DOW^IONES NOON AVERAGES STOCKS .............................. » Indus ................... 979.99 ... 20 Ralls ..................... 201.43-0.14 IS Utils ..................... 154.79 10 hSmt gradi rails .. T! U.M.:4;6i 10 Sacand grad* rails ........ 91.93+0.04 11 Public utllltlat ........... M.35+0.03 10 Indusirlalt ................ 93.94-0.02 5TOCK AVERAOES CampiM/bu Tho AtmlaM Prsa 19« Low ........... .451.4 .— ___________________ 1944 High ;......... 475J 1M.4 .147.3 312.4 W44 Lew ..............404J 150.7 149.9 2M.7 Detroit Edison Issues Report for Fiscal Year Detroit Edison Co. today reported its gross revenues were $354,731,802 for the 12 months that ended June 30. Gross revenues for the corresponding period of 1963-64 were $330,092,483. ★ ★ ★ Net earnings of the company for the 12 months through June 30, were $55,583,078, <»■ $1.93 per share on the 28,814,988 shares outstanding at the end of the period. For the previous 12 months, which ended June 3$, 1964, net ear^gs were $48,951,027, or $1.76 per share on 28,M1,-540 shares outstanding at the end of that period. In the first six months of 1965, net earnings were $30,306,204, or $1.05 per share on shves outstanding as of June 30. ★ * ★ For the first six months of 1964 net earnings were $26,446,-663, or 92 cents per share. News in Brief Waterford Township police are investigating theft of $225 in cash and credit cards reported stolen sometime last weekend from Walls Mobil Service, 4695 Elizabeth Lake, Waterford Township. An electric grinding wheel valued at $200 was stolen from B & B Ready Mix Concrdte, Inc., 6127 M59, recently, it was reported to Waterford Township police. MOM’S Rummage: Thursday, 9 to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin. —adv. Rummage Sale: July 21-24, 10-6. 3955 Suffolk, Waterford, off Dixie. —adv. Rummage: Howarth Methodist Church, Silverbell Rd. July 22-23, 10-2 p.m. —adv. Rummage Sale: Misc. 86 Pinegrove (garage). All week. total by the number of stocks involved. ^ ‘”1116 Dow” started with 12 stocks in 1896, grew to 26 in 1914,30 in 1928. ★ it * However, assume that we are dealihg with three stocks selling at $5, $10 and $15. Their average is $10. STOCK SPLITS If we assume that the $15 stock is split 3-for-l and that, on the same day, the split stock advances to $6 and that the $5 stock gains $1 to $6, and that the $10 stock moves to $11, the “average” is 6 plus 6 plus 11 divided by 3 or 7.67, which is down from the prior day’s average of 10 even though all three issues rose. Until 1928, the technigne used to avtdd this obviras distortion sha to mnltiply the price of the split stock by the amount of the split. Thus, our average would be 6 times S pius 6 pins 11 divided by 3 or 11.67. But as time passed, it became evident that this method gave undue “weight” to some stocks that were not only high priced but had a habit of splitting. Advance Extended by Wheat Futures CHICAGO (AP) - Wheat futures extended their recent advances but com and soybeans continued steady to easier today at the opening of the Board of Trade. Soybeans were W cent a bushel higher tp % lower, July $2.82-82^; new standard grade wheat Vi to W hi^, July, |1.45V6-Vi; com unchanged to V6 lower, July $1.29V4; oats unchanged to % higher, July 67Vi-68 cents. jSucces^T| By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am 13 yean old. I have about $500 of Bar Mitz-vah gifts that I would like to invest. Since I want to become a doctor and my parents cannot help me much, I would appreciate it if yon would tell me which stocks to buy to help my future education.” J.L. A) Since $500 represents too small a sum to diversify, I believe you will have to stick to just one stock, which I hope will continue its past remart-able growth record. My choice would be Avon Produ^, the great cosmetics firm vdiich sells door-to-door through some 200,000 agents. The nature of its business is such that it has been relatively recession-proof for many years and the shares have rism in price 1500 per cent over the past decade. We cannot expect such gains in the coming years, but I believe you will find the stock a very sound Investment. WWW Q) “Why do you recommend mnnicipals solely for high-bracket persons? I think that all of ns in the lower brackets would like tax - exempt income.” G. B. A) I am sorry if I seemed to exclude good people like yourself from the purchase of municipals as an investment. If I did so, it was only because this type of bond — in relation to other securities — commands a premium which institutions and high-income investors are waling to pay. Anyone in the 50 per cent bracket who gets a 3.10 tax-exempt yield is doing just as well as if Iw held a 6.20 per cent taxable security. But in the 20 per coit bracket the taxable e^valent would be only 3.87 per cent. For your consideration, I suggest Cook County, Illinois, Housing Authority SVas of 1987 on a 3.10 basis, secured by pledge of annual contributions payable by the Federal PubUc Housing Administration, and rated AAA. (Copyr^, 1965) For example, the pride of du-Pont, split three times since 1925 in varying amounts, wovM not have to be multiplied by II before adding it to the prices of other Dow stocks in the calculation of the average. NEAT TRICK A neat little trick gets around this difficulty quite nicely. Nowadays, on tile evening before ■ split or other diange, a theoretical computation is miKie. In the previous eumple, the IIS stock woidd be divided by 3 to rdlect the forthcoming split and thlB lesnlt, $5, wonld be added to the prices of the other two ateckt, |6aBd$ll. The total, $20 would then bo divided by the day's actual average of 10 and the result, the figure 2, would be the new “divisor” for pufpoaea of calculating the average the following day. LOWER DIVISORS Thus, ii) the example, our average is not 23 divided by 3, but 23 divided by 2 or 11.M. But all is not sweetness and light: the current method results in lower divisors every time there is a split. WWW As a result of numerous qilits since 1928, the divistnr for the 30 industrials is now down to 2.278 (during the Depression, it was over 10). An unfortunate result is that the Dow daily swings, in terms of points, are now often wider than those of any of the com- Business Notes - Armin C. Tufer, 2433 Ftork Ridge, Bloomfield Township, with the accounting firm of Hat-kins & Sells, has been elected a director of the National Aa-sociation of Accountants, Detroit chapter. Dr. Ijarold H. Alexander, 1028 Joslyn, has returned from Fort Worth, Tex., where he attended the annual Homecoming-fioni-nar of the Parker Chiropractic Research Foundation, of which be is a member. Marshall Fredericks of 440 Lake Park, Birmingham, will be one of the speakers at the 22nd Annual Midsummer Conference of the Michigan Society of ^rchr itects, August 5-7 at the Grand Hotel, Mackinac Island. An honorary member of the society, Fredericks will discuss “Sculpture and Architecture” at the conference banquet Aug. 7. Raymond A. Zieske, district manager of the Pontiac (dfice of the American National Insurance Co., is anx»g tboie attending the 1965 Leaders Conference of ANICO in Las Vegas this week. Others attending the conference from the Pontiac area aiie Marshall F. O’Shaughnessy and Robert A. Watson, assistant ^ trict managers and Howard w. Rowley, Dario A. DeMaaelUs, Emnwtt P. Heisler, and BobldB D. Hurst, all agents at the Poa-tiac office. May Get Bottled-Up Crouing the Channel DOVER, England (AP) ~ lob Platten, a spedaliit to (rffbeat crossinga of the Engitt Channel, set out for France today in a bottle. ; The bottle, IS feet ln«, la made of steel and la powecM liy an outboard motor. PlattdR previously orosaed by ctoaie, bedstead gad harrd. m 16345625 KU;JttKKN THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. JULY 20. 1965 raiVATC K60M FOR tLOtRLY tmeM «m. m-nw.' • WHWFttA UL MM* ar l» BOB'S VAN SfRViCE MOVINO AND STORAGE FREE ESTIMATES ROEERT TOMFEIWS EM M LIGHT HAULING, Al l^iil A BecewIIi M INTERIOR - EXTERIOR bECOW-•ting — maMtnMK* o* »ny kind -fm «rtltn«M$-FE mis. PAINTING AND FAFERINO. VOO T» nait. Ofv»l OMcwmit STMOi. FAINTING, ^A^ERING TUFFEP, OR S-WSI PAINTING AND DECORATING, lljl- AA^phn 'Huyi*' Mmwnl^ l^id panitt, lli wlpUww^'w5r6ni« ye* WN auctlwt War buy BAB Auction mm DIkla___________OR M*1> ■NILL OUT ANTIOUBt FURWi hira and aaNdaa. Ekiablrd Aiidlan OR MIC, MI Ml**._________ CASH PAID FOR YOUR USED fumlNira Mid aaallancaa. FE AINA Oayt only, aS Nr Mr. ^ant. Wyman Fiimltura. DESKS, FILBA OFF.ICE IWEi^J^Ro«t 32 S4IOOM FURNISHED AFARTASENT ‘“I bath. FE SW71 from S-M 3- OR 4-BEDROOM WITH LEASE lor ona vaar. SSS-S51S. s-beOroom furnished *iou». Board of Education for now laaclv art movins ta Pontiac Area. Call FE S-ftSI ant. »l. _____________ COUPLE tSESIRES SAAALL HOUSi - ^ - — - ■ FAMILY OF S DESPERATELY FE SA*7*. ___________________ riNGINEBR REQUIRES LARGE •a. Waal ol FontlK.,,1^ ----------- --------JjQJ earn, raf. Lanaing. RESPONSIBLE FAMILY wants lakatront homa, 3--------- unfurnislMd. Excallant cradit and 1 TO 50 lOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE, CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PRur-ERTIES AND LAND CONTRACTS ALL CASH FHA Olid Cl EQUTV >11 honiM anywNara, avan H I Ind In paymanta. No listing, ■d tapa, no dalays. Caah I wHaMly. DETROIT. BR 3A44S. ANNETT NEEDS LISTINGS rtlkl. FE SBia Cad aRara, Annott Inc. Reoltors 28 E. Huron St. FE B<^ -ESSLiXE^ „.K OUR "SELLERS'' WE'VE MLD THEIRSI PS our "prlvaN financa plan W. H. BASS "Spaclallzing I EALTOR FE >> ■niO BUILDER LAND CONTRACTS—HOMES EQUITIES 3 OAKLANd'^AvI!*^ FE S^4t CASH BUYERS FOR FAST ACTION CALL OR 3-34T3 DaN Hampshira, Frusliaur-MrubN HAVE BUYERS FOR ANY ICINO VACANT LOTS WANTED In Pontiac. Wa pay mora. imma-dIaN ckMlng. REAL VALUE REALTY. SSMS7S. Mr. OavN. AjMETtEWEti, FEirrisliBB 37 1-ROOM AND BATH, SIS PER waak wllli a SU dv»tH, Inquira at 373 Baldwin Ava., Call 33S-4054. ~^Call FE 44414 or FE 3-0643. 3 ROOMS, BATH, MIXED NEIGH- 3 LARGE ROOMS NEAR GENERAL "ispltal, aldarly bachalor or lady, tan oulat nalghborlwod. No drlnk-I. FE 3-*713 or FE 3-^7. BATH, CLEAN. “Fir'll iklar^e^la or lady only. 3-ROOM,Private bath, cou-ple, rat., SIS dap.. SN wk. TM irE*2t"rfsr.i«K LAKE FRONT 3-BEOAOOM HOME. ALUMINUM SIDING, GUTTERS and roots. Wa covar tha right prica. OR Mt7*._ 1-A ALUMINUM SIDING-STORMS FE 54S4S. Joa vallaly. OL i-asn. KAISER ALUMINUS^ ilO- INO, GUTTERS, STORM WIN DOWS - DOORS, CEILINGS. AWNINGS. SUPERIOR. FE 4G177. SHERRIFF-GOSLIN SIDING ROOFING S4 S. Caaa Laka______FE 34B3I NEW HOUSE AND REMODELING BtpfcEll BwIeb DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST, 4>to, Ftaa Eitlmataa. _ DURNEN ASPHALT PAVING tO. Gat our bid flrtt, traa aatlmalaa SatCTgM^tFTOl.**' TAG ASPHALT PAVING * p|^*73 BESBENiit WEtarproofiiii Block UylM BLOCK LAYING AND CEMENT BBot»~Bc«wstrlB« "" STOP DREAMING Lot Us Help You Sove BOATS-MOTORS-TRAIIERS DOCKS Oltoount pricaa now to) attact Harrington Boot Works "YOUR EVINRUDE DEALER" lit* 5. Talagrapti 3334083 3-CAR GARAGES. 30'X30', SI7S. WE CARPENTRV and GENEkAI Wilding. “ - - ■ - ---‘— EXPERT REMODELING AND AD-ditlons by Cr^attaman. OL 1-37H. House RAISING AND MOVlkG. esmani work. R. McCallum, FE S-tSdt Of FE 3-7*30.____________ TRENCHING, FOOTINGS, ADD4)NS. Building ot ail kkida. MA S-3114. Fraa aatlmataa. 335^1._________ INTERIOR FINISH, KITCHENS, panalbu, 40 yaan axparlanca. — FE 3-tgB. ROUGH, finish, ALUMItiUM Slt>-and roaring crawa. Naw and ro-modal wort. Call Danny Holland. CEMENT WORK, 3S YEARS EX-parlanca. Fraa aat. or 3-4173. CEMENT WORK FE S-9122________ cememt~5*6rk - FRlfTSfl- BRYAN F. FRENCH CO. ESTI-mataa traaty glvan. FE 34*73. AU.S OunER COMPANY a aatlmataa. 431-1700. 6 DRAYTON FENCE CO. ^ PONtlAC FENCE CO*.”^' 3*33 Dhila Hwy.___OR 343*3 PtcET SeeBIr§ PunNKB Rggsrir 34.77. Mailbox ' Maintananca, P.O. A COMPLETE LANDSCAPE SERV-------------------------- V FEAT MOSS, TOP SOIL. FILL A-1 MERION OR KENTUCKY SOD, laid or dallvarad. Saadlng or ro-droaainB old lawna. Fraa aatlmalaa. No monay dawn. Braaca Landacap-Ing, FE 34)141 or FE 33303. COMPLETE LnNOSCAFING. gardwi bordara, outalda grilla aiW firaplacaa. OAKLAND FUEL AND FAINT, 43 Thomaa SI. FE 3-413*. THE COMPLETE SERVICt Stonagata Landacaplng. 4734I0M. TONY'S COMPLETE LANDSCAF-k«G Marlwi bWa or Kanlucky aod. TALBOTT LUMBER IW Oakland Aua. MgeIiii StsrEBi SMITH MOVINO CO. PsiEtiiig nB DbcmeIIni ^^mfted! VaaaoMMa*rS^*M AAA PAINTING AnD DECOltATItiG —■— and extarior. traa —" UL 3-3337 or UL 313*0. ALL AROUND PAINTING SS6 panarbanglng. FE 3G47*._____ PAINTING AND PAPik HANGING - FE 33403. PAINTING AND caulking 30 yaara In Pontiac, FE S- PINE LAKE, 3BEDR00M BRICK. ....----- *“**■ ' UNION LAKE AREA. S ROOMS, ratrlMrr*"—— ---■" 300M. PlEStBriEf ScrviCE CASS LAKE, CLEAN 3BEDR00M, 4 waaka or mora, no pMa. Inquira 3140 Willow Baach, Kaago Harbor. RETAIL PLUMBING AND HEATING SUPPLY Raoalr Farta and Rapiaoamanta CLARKSTON ROOFING COMPANY. ra-roota and rapalr. Im-- aM own In Wayna, l Macomb Co'a. 473aw. lEPAll __________I. call ROOFING _____ ______ 4*3-47*0. OL 1-4441_ ROOFS: NEW, REPAIR Ganaral AMIntananca______4L-„ ~S?A ROOFING. COMPLETELY TrBB THewhei BSiL TREE TRIA4MING, REMOVAL. Fraa aatlmata. FE 3444*, 474G3I0. IxNert TREETtRvicL thuin- E R A L MOVING, HAULING itura. trallara, traab S4 hr lea. Alao Sun. 33447*3. HAULING AND RUBBISH NMiii ■■ B403S. LIGHT TRUCKING AND HAULING ___________4730473 ________ LIGHT AND _hSaVY TRUCKING ^sSSl LIGHT HAULING, garages AND baaamanta dawiad. 474-1S41 tkUCK HAULING, LAWN, GA- Trucks to Rent W-Ton pickupa IVb-Tonistaha TRU^S - TRACTORS 1 AND EQUIPMENT ' Dump Trucka - Samt-Trallara Pontiac Fami ond Industrial Tractor Co. 033 S. WOODWARD FE 44441 FE 41 INSTAI LATION AND SERVICE ■war BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS Walla and wlndawt. Ra*A Sail* FE 31431. agLifg-----' vtyT' nS'^tooM casyw —- 4113 par-- ' ' kforitMtH, UnhirEhliBd 3t 1 BEDROOM, MIDDLE AGED coupla. 33S-3W4.__________ MA 44400.________________ NEW APARTMENTS 1- and 34adr«am aparlmanla la-tatM luat ON *y.. Huron at ^ .T« manl. Carporta, alr-candltlonad, garbw diapoaal. GE ralrlgara-l&a and alovaa, baautltully lanG acaiMd lurroundlnBa. No oilldran/ . 1 .—— aatrlmanta. _____ _____ Wa Invito May ba Inapaclad any- ____ . .—a FE 33H7 or OR 3- 3*33. DORRIS S, SON REALTORS. UNION COURT APARTMENT, RBEt Hbes*^ FErriiM 1-BEDROOM, NEAT AND CLEAN. 435 waak. 430 dapodt. MarrIad coupla only. No pata. 4033477. > LAKE FRONT SPACIOUS, NICELY tumlabad 3-badroom homa. Carpat-•d throughout. Largaporch. 3-car Yaara laai Lavandar Khid g«r« 7S monthly Uvtnder. 334-38If. BEDROOMS, NEEDS REPAIRS, oppoalta Ganaral Hoapital a- “* Huiw. *100 month. FE 5413*. 4-bedroom lakSfront QUAO-■ larpatad T'batS"*'!^ “.'erf^Pontlac. tt5* ' “ a. 3433401. 3BEDROOM, GAS HEAT, S13S PGR -.......--------- "4155 r- rator-atova, laaaa only. EM BRICK RANCH, CLARKSTON AREA, 3-badroom, basamant, tamlly mum. firaplaca. S37,*50. — COTTAGE AVAILABLE ON____________ ------ —k at July 34 and 31. turnip Including waak. OR 3-5540. NICELY FURNISHED. PRIVATE bath-anliianca, naar town. 303 Waat Strathmora ‘--------- ROOM FOR RENT ROOM FOR 1 ORT15?iMr$HARE ‘Yomt with coliMt man* evtry-ihing turnlahad. FE 3-5053. _ SLEEPING ROOMS FOR RENT SLEEPING ROOMS GENTLEMEN - LOVELX HOME, 47440*3 Rsiit WficB Sfmt»_________n AUBURN HEIGHTS, OFFICE, RE- avallablc, naw buUdlnga, prograaa-Ing araa, cornra location, tronl and raar parking. J. W. Nawmyar Con-atructlon, UL 3-3340 and Ml 4470*. CHIROPRACTIC OFFICE ON WEST " tn at., oN atraat parking. 474 NEW AIR-CONDITIONED OFFICES, localad at 4511 Huron StraM. OR 34331 or 343-747A I parking. Call 3344344 RBEt lEsiMss PTBfBrty 47lngl*lt3,'' pIno; 1 IJOV SI „ .. tchoola, but and thop-113,50*. Tarma. ^ *13,5*0. Terms. ENJOY SUMAABR LIVING, lake ■—‘ lot with cottages, good boat and swimming raft, could od summer rantala. S12,**0. SPOTLESS HOME, fully Intulatad, I kept lanced yard BEAUTIFUL BRICK RANCH, 34toOt living room, full baaomont, 3-ctr garage. Loads ol axirat. Spacl- COZY 3-BEOROOM BUNGALOW PHONE 682-2211 5143 Casa-Ellzabalh Road MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICR IRWIN . _ _______jiantly’ lo- Yallow Truck A Coach. Ing room, dining r II batemtnl with . ' gartgt and convenlantly PRIVILEGES ON “ SYLVAN LAKE AND FHA TERMS This Is 1 —- -M, nrm of last long. DRAYTON WOODS — Here la a real nice 3-bedroom brick ranch home with a 3-car alltchad garage and located In tha rolling hint of Drayton Woods. This homo has 2 nice size badrooma, o real large living room and large ullUty. Situated on a real torge lot with shade. This Is an extra nice homa in a LAKE FRONT INCOME - Aluminum and Permastona colonial ranch. 7 large raoms and full bat up with 2 3-room apartments fur-niahad In tower walk-out basamant. buy. Largo carpatad .... .nd dining room. Full batatwenl, oil FA heal. Beautiful landscaped lot with large thada Iraas, lot size. 1*0x123 ft. price Reduce. CALL FOR TmORE DE- PRIVILEGES ON ELIZA'BETH LAKE 4badroom Colonial, family dinino room and 23' llvlh* room. 2 lul baths. Paneled ID'xSD' raat proch, attochad 2-car garaga Surrounded by towering 'shade trees. ONLY tl2,*** ON TERMS. SMITH & WIDEMAN REALTORS FE 4.4S2A 13 W. HURON SI NICHOLIE HARRINGTON HILLS Three-bedroom bungalow living ond dining tree. KItchon. Full btta-monl. Gat HA haat. Vacant. About WEST SUBURBAN room. Carport. Largo k About ^ movoa you In. EAST SIDE bungalow. Living ig area. Kitchen and tuillty I. Garaga. Vacant. About S3S* ............ _nd dining t— rage. Fancad back vartT FHA Oil HA haat. Hardwoso floort. (3a-TERAAS. Eva. Call MR. ALTON FE 45334 NICHOLIE HARDER CO. 'BUD' White Loke Area xs*tjr», s today. Low Down Payment "Bud" Nicholie, Realtor 4* Mt. Ctomtnt St. FE 5-1201 After 6 P.M. FE 2-3370 GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE >6 W. Wilton. FE 3-7113 GILES KENNEDY JR. HIGH AREA, 3- I. ivy-car ga-jmenf Income tor^^ng or ektorly couple. Only SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP, l-room. baaamant. Garaga acraanad-in patio. Yaa, only 5124**. GILES REALTY CO. FE 54175 231 Baldwin Ava. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE KAMPSEN Your Neighbor Tradod*-Why Don't YouT HERRINGTON HILLS homaa in A MIS tizad ba PRICE REDUCED On thii aluminum sidad, foyr bedroom ivy story home, bate man! racreatlon room, panatei and haotad ancMted raar porch ivy-car garage, lanced yard Northern High Sc^l District. SYLVAN LAKE PRIVILEGES pWed II' both bai CALL IT CHARM OR COMFORT porch, Iwoktr attochad garaM. All brick, priced at S17.3D* $1,725 down plua cotta or wo ^11 trade. THINKING OF SELLING? WANT CASHT Wa will gat ft tor yow-glva us a try. Call Ema^ Butlar, Hilda Stewart. Fred Rosavaar, Karr, Rachel Lavaly> or Byron 'lill'; l uN^Ai t iM TLKSDAy, JLLV 20, 1963 on Medicare In Fifth Day of Trying for Compromise Bill WASHINGTON ( AP) - A *ii^ en Oongreia metnbera about twic* 0iat numl^ of! alto flle into • large confer eoce room ott 0» Houm floor j tocbqr and try for the fltt^ day to produce a conqnfomiae medkal. carO'&dal Security bill. They are not likely to finish; today, but when do they I will have ready' for a final! House and Senate vote the most .1 coutordwnsive extension of Social Security slnde the original act was pas^ SO years U ' ,★ ★ a . . I “The administration |a going to pass a bill if it has to knock beads together," said Rep., Thomas B. Curtis, R-Mo., when asked if a deadlock b devel-^ oping,./' ★ ★ ★ Ifealth care for America’s 'Not Enough Freedom' Broadway Is Out for Ethel ' Dolly’ and turned that down. | Art Linkletter, two fellows who ~ ‘ win never need any benefib. The Houston theat«--in-the-round is sbted for an October opening and they want to open it By JAMES BACON AP Movle-TdevlsioB WrHr- should prove something. HfMivwnnn wtiwii to be free to travel HCHXYWWD - Ethel Mer j ^ I man, ^e ^Bro^v’> QU^,' please and live as I please. I’ve «ys^ to th^ forever with ■ years of nS those, --------------- the Big Street. ,ev«i days a week trips be- with a big, loud bang. No show, no matter how good,' tween theater and apartment ‘ ★ c^^^oe ba, she adds with and back again." ; “We’li do it,’’ says Ethel, “if changing scene *®y othw conunit- She will continue to make her ” iKMne in her New York apartment — althouffh she decries finaUty. w » w “I bad a diance to do ‘Hello, "I feel as if I’m Uving on Wall I Street the way they are tearing ' down hotels and putting up of- AP PtMMn BROTHER TAKES OVER-The girl members of the Fischer (Quintuplets keep a discreet distance as the male quint pliiys with ducklings OB their parents’ new 800-acre farm at Aberdeen, S.D. Ihe youngsters are nearing their second birthday. Blasts U.SC on Peking Arrival Former Aide to Chiang Defects tratkm promise in Johnson’s 1964 election campaign and be has pressed , ja bard for it as for any of hisJa-v(»1te legislative programs. The trouble now to that the House bill passed ^iril 8 and the Senate version passed July 7 have major differences. SECONDARY ITEMS i ,pQ,jyQ Tsung-jen, and expanded the war of These, said Ourtto, a House CUna’s vice iresi- aggression in Viet Nam, even conferee, are being set aside d«nt for six years and its acting trying thereby to provoke a war tenqxxarily so that agreen^tLre^nt for one, threw in bis against the Chinese people.’’ (^ be reached on secondary^ ^th the Chinese Commu- ★ w ★ itmns. ... ntots today. He fired a parting y, whose defectkm had been will .mratniunii I hfest at ^tho United Statcs wWch rumored in Taipei and H(tag .IS" him to 1*». Kong newqxpers lor . week. 'Took No Part • r *1 /\|/r'down hotels and putti] inSecurityOK 1“““^ Ethel is not quitting show Ex.Offldol App«.l. Cuban Ca» Finding less than seven months. i WASHINGTON (AP) — An Longest running was "Annie attorney for Otto F. Otepka says I Get Your Gun’’ at '34 months, his client played no part in Her all-time favorite was “Gyp-giving a security clearance to|sy.’’ ' fellow State Department official pujovs ftlm^ , William A. Wieland. ; A Senate Internal Security' fhe’U co^ue movies and subcommittee report disclosed |t«‘«'^‘sion ^11 get the s^ Sunday that Wieland had been ^ cleared twice after charges that | engagements in thealer-in- he helped form U.S. good Will toward^ba’s Fidel Castro. f^s* murical-ta-the-round, “Call Me Madam," opens to- DOWAGIAC m - Stanley E. Makielski, 66, of Soufii Bend, Ind., drowned Monday night while fishing in Rig Crooked Lake about 10 miles northwest of here. PoUce said Makielski was fishing from a boat and was alone. ^kYDETECTWE!; Swoop With'T&uV SniffehTbWhcwB IhcGOODfOODls ^ In Downtown ftnhac is the maximum taxable income — to support the program — the 15.600 voted by the House, the 16.600 voted by the Senate or something in between. it it it Another big cost item still In doubt to the Senate provision for The New China News Agency said Li and his wife arrived 1^ special idane at Peking Airport. They were greeted by Red Chinese Premier Chou En-lai _____ ____rT.o. n.. ■ delegation of 100 high retlrwn^ at 60 wl£ toro^telrds' Communist oHk^ of the Sociai Security benefits' .I'* 74-yeareld for^ s^ that would become available at dier-statesman was the most 65. The two provtoiona for a 7 per cent increase in all cash payments under old age, survivors and disability insurance. HOSPITAL STAX n 90 days of hospitalization under the bill’s basic health insurance plan for peiv sons over 65. Even this agreement was tentative, Curtis said. ★ ★ ★ Another (xmferee. Rep. John important Chinese to go over to the Reds since the Communists drove Chiang Kai-shek from the mainland 16 years ago. Kong newspapers said he had made his chotoe* because he had been impressed by Red China’s two atom bomb tests and “the wise leadership’’ of Communist party Chairman Mao ‘Dte-tung. “I hereby pledge to devote the remaining years of my life to the service of my country, and may heaven and earth Ite witness to my sincerity," he said. ★ it it Appealing to his “comrades’ in CSliang’s Kuomintang party to join him, Li described himself as an exile “with a guilty past.” He said he had always regretted failing to accept the Communist terms for “internal peace" in (Thina in 1949. ANOTHER MISTAKE He said his efforts during the U reportedly left the United States July 15 for Switzerland. In a statement at the airport, he caOed the United States “our foreign enemy” and accused it of “committi^ a series (d sordid crimes against the people of China and of the world in an „ ............ attempt to isolate China and years of his self-exile to dominate the world." ® force" among ------------------ —r-------- „, . the Chinese “added another W. Byrnes, R-Wto., said about STEPPED UP ! mistake to my previous ones.” six to eight hours of hard bar-1 “Especially since Lyndon B. y said he had recenUy felt gaining remains. Then the staff, Johnson came to office,” he there were only two altema-technicians will get together ccmtinued, "the United States ^ves, either to side with the and clear up the details. 'has stepped up its evil doingsj'pjmmunists “or to wallow in the mire with the reactionaries C \ Junior Editors Quiz on— OSTRICHES ' and be discarded along with them by the times." my future political position. My only wish is to discharge my duty as an ordinary citizen and so contribute something to China’s cause of revolution and construction, and to spend the remainder of my life peacefolly in the motherland.” An army commander by the time he was 36, U held key military posts for 20 years and served on China’s National Military Ckxmcil during World, War II. He was dir^r of Cliiang’s headquarters in ~ ' 1945-49. Wieland, now 57, headed the department’s office of Caribbean affairs when Castro took over. Otepka was then the department’s chief security evaluator. He was dismissed in November 1963, accused of turning over classified documents to the I subconunittee. His appeal is pending. The subcommittee report included testimony from closed hearings held between 1963 and 1965. CLEARED TWICE : In it, William J. Crockett, deputy under secretary of state for Peking from' administration, s^ Wieland had been cleai^ twice. Theiirst favorable determina-ti(m, he said, occurred in January of 1962 and was signed by Otepka. The second, he said. ACTING PRE8C1DENT He became vice president in 1948 and held the tiUe until 1954,, although he spent the last five' was by a three-man board, years of the term in the United night at the nearby Valley Music Theater in W(>odland Hills. In the cast with her will be the two male stars who did the show on Broadway with her 13 years ago — Richard Eastham and Russell Nype. ★ ★ An added starter Ethel Six Geary. It’s the first time mother and daughter have ever appeared together. After the two weeks run of “Call Me Madam," Ethel and her son will'inke off on a three weeks around-me-world trip. FREE TO MOVE “That’s vrtiat I like,” she says, “being able to pick up and go v^en I want. You can’t do that when you are tied down to a hit Broadway show." When the (k>mmunists on the verge of victory, U and others clamored for peace negotiations. Chiang abruptly resigned on Jan. 21 and nanied Li acting president to give him a free hand in seeking' a settlement. Li got nowhere and after the mainland was overrun, Chiang resumed the presidency (»i March 1, 1950, on Formosa. Otepka’s attorney, R _ Robb, said in a letter Monday that Otepka did not clear Wieland. Rather, Robb said, Otepka signed the formal notification to the Civil Service Commission of action taken by Ot^ka’s superiors. He said this did not represent Otepka’s views. Li by then had gone to the United States for medical treatment and remained there. He expressed disapproval of many of Chiang’s policies and in 1952 am old and not mindful of the Kuomintang disowned him. World News Briefs Nasser to See Kin Moscow? QUESTION: Do ostriches really bury their heads in the ground in time of trouble? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: This idea is legendary and mistaken one. It probably came from the fact that this huge creature, the largest of all btaxto, has a bulky body but a very l(mg neck, bare of feathers. From a dtotance you see the body, bat not observing the slender nock, yon ihl^t think flie bird had pnt his head down. And not seeing d)e head, might assame he has barfed it Another reason to that to bury one’s bead in time of danger to sbpid, and the ostrich to a stufrid blrd.Jt to a mapificent runner; with strides of 25 feet it can make 50 miles an hour. But the poor old ostrkdi can’t seem to resist the silly idea that it should run in a circle. The resntt to, as oar irictare shows, that hanters can flgnre eat where the ostrich to going to appear, so Uwtv can be there and shoot him with bows and arrows or guns. Ostrkhes live in western Asia and Africa. Once, they were extensively hunted for their beautiful plumes, and today are not common hi their original habitats. But matqr ostriches have been raised on ostrich farms in A^icp and different places in the Americas. . ★ ★ ★ XOR YOU TO DO: Make B scrapbook of Junior Editors efer to it from time to time. CAIRO (AP) - President Gamal Abdel Nasser will meet Nikita Khrushchev during hisi visit to Moscow starting Aug.' 27, informed sources said today. ★ ★ ★ Nasser reportedly asked to see the deposed Soviet premier, i^e sources said a reply from I Moscow arranging the meeting had been delivered to the United Arab Republic president’s office. A Soviet Embassy spokesman declined to confirm or deny the report. SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -The official death toll in floods last week climbed to 207 today as reports came in from isolated areas. Another 89 were reported missing and a total of 221,933 were homeless, the national flood relief committee reported. ★ ★ ★ President Chung Hee Park instructed his administration to submit to the National Assembly a supplementary budget bill to cover flood damages. MOSCOW (AP) - British teacher Gerald Brooke will go on trial Thursday on charges of subversive activities, informed sources said today. BrocAe, 26, teacher of Russian at a Loiidca college, and his wife were arrested April 25 in; the Moscow apartment ot friends. S3w was released after I questioning, but Brooke has been held. it it it Informed sources said the Soviets will charge that Brooke acted as an aaent for emigre Praise for Newsboy Brings Bock Memory LANSING, Mich. (B - Amos W. Keeney, 81, reported to the | State Journal that his {x-esent; newspaper delivery boy is the| best one he has had in the 42 years he has lived at his present address. Carrier Steven P. Maieris immediate supervisor in the circulation department, Don Linn, passed the compliment on to the youth a little sheepishly. Linn served Keeney’s route himself circles and distributed subversive literature. ALMERIA, Spain (AP) -Language difficulties were blamed today for a shoving match involving actors Anthony Quinn and Alain Delim and a Spanish policeman. ★ ★ ★ “Quinn was inside the local bullring Saturday night,” said a spokesman for the actors. “Dekm tried to join him, not understanding that entrance was suspended while a bull was in the ring. He tried to push past the policeman guarding the entrance, and the policeman shoved back. Then <2uinn came out to help. Quinn and everybody shoved.”