The Weather UJ. WMNht SurMU Pucin Fair, Cooler (OMBNt ft* 1) . VOL, 124 — NO. 06 -----8.-- ----!—_ THE PONTIAC PRESS ^ * V ' PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, APRIL 25, 1966 -40 PAGES 10c searcbsrs stumbled on the semi-nude bodies of three children today partly submerged in mud and water near the-spot where their mother’s battered body was discovered yesterday. The three bodies lay 30 feet apart in a triangle in desolate Deputy Coroner Dr. John Le-Blanc said Mrs. Verrett’s body showed signs ^multiple bruises and fractures. She may have been strangled, he said. marsh country, 13 miles south of here. Mrs. Barbara Verrott and her children — a boy and two girls — had been (ought since her common-law husband, Bernnndo Mejia, returned to their home in Berwick, La., a week ago and found the empty house spattered with ROBERT VERRETT Well Stay in Far East' Aid Key to Viet Peace—VP Twisters, Rain Pound Texas KENEDY, Tex. UP) — Tornadoes smashed into two small southern Texas towns early today, leaving 250 homeless and causing heavy property damage, as new torrential downpours hit the water-soaked state. Three persons were injured when one twister demolished virtually all homes on the east side of Kenedy, Pop. 4,235, at about 12:45 a.m. Another tornado hit Runge, Pop. 1,055, located 11 miles north east;of Kenedy, about the same tiipe. Seven inches of rain were dumped on the Corpus tiirizti area when violent thunderstorms raked the southern part of the state early today. np new outbreak of turbulent weather followed in the wake of twoday rains of more than M inches that caused heavy flooding in northeastern Student Strike Enters 4th Day Other Detroit School Boycotts Threatened DETROIT (API - A student At least 10 deaths werefe* blamed on the rains and floods !«tered 8 fourth 88 In and around Longview. j Negro leaders moved to head Kenedy Police Chief Ross off a planned boycott of half of Schuster said' 225 persons hft| Detroit's high schools, homeless by the twister were * * * being housed in a Methodist church, an elementary school and a Junior high school. LEFT HOMELESS The Texas Department of Public Safety said between 2S * and 30 persons were left without homes at Runge. Officers said , a number cf rural homes arouad Kenedy and Ruage were reported destroyed by the twisters and they feared there might be more injuries. Rail and highway traffic was disrupted by the torrential rains in northeastern Tinas. Numerous highway bridges were swept away or weakened. Rail traffic on at least one main Officials at predominantly Negro Northern said “there seem to be more students in classes today than last weak but won't know for -sure until we complete our daily hehd count 'sometime this afternoon." Attendance at the school, which has *a enrollment of 2,-3M, climbed to M4 lost Friday -more than double the number of students who went to clan during (he first two days of the boycott last Wednesday and Thursday. Only hours after some 75 pupils deckled Sunday to foster a boycott of 12 high schools next Wednesday, school board presi- line was halted when a bridge . . _ „ „ .. collapsed, sending a diesel7n-!dent Rcmus G Robtason 8P gine into the swirling water. pealed for a back-to-school EVACUATE AREAS Lowland areas near Long, view, Gtadewater, Kilgore and Marshall have been evacuated and a major flood warning has been issued for the Sabine and Cypress rivers in northeast Tex- The Sabine River was expected to rise II feet above flood stage today at Glade-water, where 18.11 inches of rainfall fell in a 48-hour period. A railroad bridge on the main Texas & Pacific line west of Longview was knocked out Saturday and a diesel engine plunged into the creek. A dam at Devernia Lake, be-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) WASHINGTON (UPI) — Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara, today accused a House Armed Services subcommittee of painting a “shockingly distorted picture” of the Pentagon’s position on the question of manned bombers. • Flanked by his top officials, McNamara held a midday news conference to answer the subcommittee’s weekend claims that he had little support in the Pentagon in his own opposition for swifter development of a new bomb- The 75 youngsters planned the walkout in sympathy with students, who stayed away from classes three days last week at Northern High School*. Northern pupils are protesting alleged substandard education at the predominantly Negro school. They vow to stay away until their principal is removed. * * Robinson, saying “help me get them back in school," pleaded with some 2,500 persons at the Uth annual Fight for Freedom Dinner of the Detroit branch of the National Association ft>r the Advancement ’of Colored People. The Press Pleases In Today's | Outspoken People Press France Doesn’t Want NATO withdrawal to hurt friendship with U. S. - PAGE B-4. Sen. Russell Urges survey of public opinion in South Viet Nam - PAGE A4. ■ Romney Midwest GOP leaders discuss his potential— PAGE B-ll. Area News ......'...A-4 Astrology ......... C-4 Bridge ............ C-4 China Series ...... C-2 Crossword Pazzle .. D41 Comics ..............04 Editorials ..........A4 Markets ............07. Obituaries .........D-4 Sports ........ D-l-D-3 Theaters ........... 08 TV-Radio Programs Ml I Wilson, Earl ......D4I § Women’s Pages B-l—B-J “What do you think, 0 Mighty Chief, about the impressive way The Pontiac Press Is outspoken on major issue*?’’ “Me like *um.” “And the way The Press offers the Tomorrow's “smoke dais" include: • Oakland University to initiate intercollegiate basketball. • Series analyzing pop music. • Plan to raise the level of Orchard Lake. • Report on Waterford board meeting. • Area women make tapes for the blind. TARGET OF THIEVES — An undetermined amount of cash was stolen from this sixfoot vault in the New Hudson branch* of the State Savings Bank of South Lyon over the weekend. A bank employe discovered that the building had berm broken into when he reported for work this morning. (See story, page 2). Says Victory Over Poverty, Disease Vital Talk to AP Newsmen Indicates Long Battle Is faced by the U. S. NEW YORK UH- Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, maintaining the U.S. plans to stay in the Far East, said today peace in Asia depends on victory against “poverty, disease and despair” as well as against “the classic power tactics of communism” in Viet Nam. ‘We must not lose the peace either struggle,” the, vice! president said in a speech j prepared for the annual meeting of the Associated Press today. I Mr ★ ★ That is why we have com-! mitted once more—as we have POSTCOMMENCEMENT DINNER-Chatting with R. Sargent Shriver (right) at a dinner after Oakland University’s commencement Saturday night are OU Chancellor Durward B. Varner and Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson, first lady of the university. Shrivdr, director of the U.S. Office of Economic Opportunity, compared the war on poverty to the war in Viet Nam as he delivered the commencement address at file university. (See related photo on page B-4). Defense C Back on Bombers The subcommittee yesterday expressed its own “shock” at some McNamara decisions and criticized a planned bomber cutback. The nine-man group is headed by Rep. F. Edward Hebert, D-La. McNamara reasserted his own view that there is “do dear need” for developing a new strategic Bomber. Bat he said Ms program provided that such a plane could be built hi the 187Fi “hi the unlikely circumstance” that a need did develop. McNamara said a suggestion by the subcommittee that “ma-jor decisions on the manned bomber program were made against the advice of the joint chiefs of staff is without any foundation whatsoever.’ The Secretary backed up his belief that the Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) Is the foundation of U.S. Strategic Forces, asserting that the Russians could erect no antimissle defense which could stop U.S. missiles in a nuclear war. He was asked about a report that the Russians were planning to deploy an antibalfistic missile defense system. Besides the Hebert subcommittee’s criticism of his bomber views, McNamara’s position on antimissile systems also came in for weekend attack from Congress. Chairman John C. Stennis of the Senate preparedness subcommittee contradicted an assertion by tiie secretary that an antimissile system would be costly and futile. Stennis urged the Senate to tack an extra 8167.9 to the $447 million budgeted for development of the Nike-X system for fiscal 1987. There is “no system on the horizon which could in gay way” prevent U. S. missiles from getting through, McNamara declared. had to do before—men, money, and resources to help the nations of Asia help themselves toward security and independence,”. Humphrey added. CautfMring that “it won’t be easy, it will be frustrating and at times heartbreaking,” Humphrey said: “We must stay and see it through. And the free nations of the world need to know that we have the vision and the endurance to do so. , * ★ * '? ‘Those who threaten their neighbors in Asia should know it too. They should know that we will resist their aggression." HAVE NO HATE Humphrey, who returned two months ago from a nine-nation Asian tour, added, “They should also know that we bear Uq consumptive hate against their people, that we have no design on their sovereignty.” “We only look toward the day when all nations may choose to live in harmony with their neighbors — when they may turn together their energies to building a better life for their peoples,” he said. “For this is after all our second great task before us: the desperate need to narrow the widening gap between the rich and poor nations of the The university, he said, has been awarded an 881,000 grant fer Project Upward Bound which will bring 80.high school students to the OU campus next Humphrey said that it is not possible to preserve lasting peace if glaring economical and social inequality among the peoples of the world exist. HOPE FOR PEACE Tying tiie hopes for peace to helping “tile disinherited and (Continued mi Page 2, Col. 2) Shriver Compares Viet, Poverty Wars Project Head Stall, VISTA, the Job Corps — these are the ‘n^w weapons” of a new typo of war, R. Sargent Shriver said at the Oakland University commencement Saturday night. The director of the UR. Office of Economic Opportunity compared the fight against poverty to jungle warfare in Viet Nam as he addressed the graduates, faculty members and guests. Shriver also referred to an antipoverty battle which will be waged on the Oakland Uai- Ihe war on poverty, Shriver said, is not just a new name for welfare. ‘GREAT VICTORIES’ “We’re not handing out anything. We're winning great victories and strengthening democracy,” he said. The “most obvious victory” is thet the government is will- inf to listen Shriver said. Frost Expected to Nip Area The U.S. Weather Bureau reports that frost may nip at tender buds and blossoms in the Pontiac area tonight. The forecast is fair and cold with a low from 27 to 35. Tuesday will be mostly sunny and cod with high temperatures riding in the 58 to 58 degree range. Others from the area graduating cum laude and receiving departmental honors were Pen-dope B. Smith ef S25 Canal, Milford, area studies; Norma H. Steensma of 3088 Lincolnview, Pontiac Township, history; Nancy M. Weidman of 1901 Meadow Ridge, Commerce' Township, psychology; and John E. Wieczorek of 125 Nawakwa, Avon Township, political sd-nce. Also graduating cum laude were Betty B. Mulder of 1072 Brooklawn, Troy; John R. Copal of Flint; Terry D. Monson of Saint Ignace; and Nancy E. Passarelli of Royal Oak, Recipients ef the annual Wilson Awards, initiated last year, were Ann E. Parkinson d Falls Ghareh, Va., a >41 David B. Lewis of Detroit. Estch received medallions and $100 cash awards for “having made outstanding contributions to the life of the university through scholarship, student leadership and the expression of responsibility in the solution of social problems.” . Highest university scholastic {honors went to Mark R. Allyn, a psychology major from Royal Ode who graduated summa cum laude. Receiving honorary degrees with Shriver were Roger M. Kyes, General Motors Carp, vice president who lives at 945 Cran-''j brook, Bloomfield Hills, and two harvard University biologists, " ~ 'Matthew S. Meselson and Frank- In downtown Pontiac the low-,Un w. Rtnhi est temperature preceding 8j a.m. was 41. The mercury rested on the 67 degree line at 2| p.m. Ha urged everyone in tha audience to help in this passionate war.” "You can put 10 years in a person’s life with one of your »wn,” be told the graduates. “There can be no greater gift.” 178 GRADUATES Receiving diplomas at the end of winter term were 178 grad-lates. Magna cum laude graduates were Glen I. King of 817 Benson, who aiap1 received departmental honors hi physics; Elsa S. Jakob of Richmond; Richard H. Swain /of Rochester, N.Y.; and Phyllis J. Valuer of Mount Clemens. Area residents graduating cum laude included Karin P. Blair of 309 W. Tienken, Avon Township, with departmental honors in modem languages — French; Bruce P. Cameron of 710 Suf-field, Birmingham, department-d honors in Area studies and German; and John MacLqllan of. 1920 Hammond Lake, Bloomfield Township, departmental honors in history. Occasional rain is likely er temperatures. Mother, 3 Children GOLDEN MEADOW, La. (I) -Sheriff's deputies and volunteer semi- Mrs. Verrett's bludgeoned body was found half-buried in a water-filled roadbed by two women who had started out on prahhinc exnedition. • Robert was clad only in a (approximately 700 feet from the I to the Gulf of Mexico from state shirt. His two sisters were place where their mother’s body I highway 1. wearing blouses. • was found. Her body lay in the I of *{** • ! ... # . . . . ... week s search by volunteers, The children’s bodies were ; sandy bed of a road being built {sheriff’s deputies and national guardsmen.' About 100 persons took part in the search yesterday. MULTIPLE BRUISES body was identified by a brother-in-law, Sylvest Verrett of Berwick. WAS DIVORCEE Ferency Raps Gov. George Romney's appointment of Dale A. Feet as state insurance commissioner drew* criticism today from Zol-ton A. Ferency, Democratic candidate for governor. Ferency said Feet’s appointment was “a blow to the hopes of millions of Michigan policy holders.” He said Feet would move the commission toward a posi-of granting insurance iases automat- the higher prem-ms. 'Our Republican governor has now decided to reward a faithful party worker,” Feren- Multipie murder charges have been brought against Mejia's nephew, Roy Mejia, 27, who had been living with the family. Roy Mejia was thought to have fled to Mexico. LUCIE VERRETT A 35-year-old .divorcee, shej^fkid. was dad wily in undergarments He added that Feets back-and a torn blouse. A piece of ground as an accountant indicheesecloth was tied in her | cated Romney was more fa-mouth |U rested in adding up premium . . increases than trying to keep Her cUMren were found premium rates down. ^ about 59 feet off tiie road. Appointment of FeeCof 4280 Their bodies were hidden in shore, Waterford Town-(Continued on Page 2, Col‘2) 'ship, .was announced Saturday ^ A**f PONTIAC 1'KKhS, MONDAY, Al'KIL 29, im "I'''' ;js' BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — A public hearing on the proposed 1066-67 budget is scheduled for toQight at I p.m. at the township board meeting, 4 Included in the budget is i 23 per cent'increase in spending over last year. Proposed expenditures la the budget total 0871,111; this Vaughan, May Lake,May 18. Families with last names beginning with letters A through F should register at 9 ajn.; 0 through L at 10:30 a.m.; M through R at 1 p.m.; and S through Z at 2:30 p.m. Children must accompany their parents. Medical examination forms Ground Fir* Downs Two Yank Fighters (hip police brought to h of break- SAIGON, South Viet Nart (AP) f- US. planes cut deep into North Viet Nam’s vital centers, again attacking a bridge on the main rail link to Communist China, but enemy fighters made no new challenge to U.S, air supremacy Sunday. However, two Air Force F106 Thunderchief jets were shot down by ground fire 30 miles northeast of Hanoi, a U.S. Air Force Spokesman reported today. ea out, and parents are asked to bring their child's birth certificate. .Interviews with the children will be held while tha parents are conferring with school personnel. Early registration will allow for the board of education and its Learning Abilities Laboratory to arrange summer pro- 8714410. Total Income from taxes and other revenue is estimated at $887,480. Hie deficit of $20,680 will be collected in miscellaneous funds including .excess of tax roll, gasoline refund, sale of equipment, and the use of one-half mill from fire and site fund and road fund. the war on poverty. He urged each of in this "compassionate war," which he Township U.S. Jets Attack N. Viet Centers 2 Arrested in Break-In at Kettering Waterford Towns believe they have a halt a recent rasl ins at township schools with arrest of two youths following a burglary at Kettering High School, 2800 Bender, early Saturday morning. Arrested on breaking and entering charges were Paul D. Brewer, 18, of 2271 Carlos and Rodger D. Vandewater, 17, bf 5517 Rowley, both of Waterford Township. \ One of the youths reportedly i toW police he took part in the break-in because he needed ' $19 to pay off a traffic ticket. The suspects both waived ex- amination Saturday before Township Justice Patrick. K. Daly. They will appear for arraignment in Circuit Court at 9 a.m. May h. Brewer and Vandewater are being held in Oakland County Jail in lieu of $2,000 bond'each. PREVIOUS BREAK-INS PREVIOUS BREAK-INS According to township police, ] Brewer admitted being involved, Brewer admitted being in previous break-ins at Crary and Pierce Junior High Schools and at Kettering, in addition to Saturday’s burglary. Vandewater, who when arrested had in his possession a $28 roll of five-cent stamps, denied taking part in the other hreak-ins. The pair was arrested outside the building, apparently on the way to their car. Police had received a "suspicious boys" call from a resident prior to the break-in. BREAK WINDOW According to police, entry to the building was gained by breaking a window in the library. i Police said a desk and filing cabinet in the school’s bookstore were rifled and that they found four pairs of socks, $1.86 in change and two walkie-talkie radios in a box 'inside the school. Sgt. Raymond Wilhelm and •Patrolmen James Webb and Glenn Phelps were instrumental lh making the arrests. Jackie Flies to London After Visit to Spain MADRID, Spain UH — Mrs. John F. Kennedy flew to London en route home today after an eight-day visit to Sevilla fend Madrid. Mrs. Kennedy told newsmen in Madrid she had enjoyed the Sevilla Fair and its bullfights very much, "particularly the rejoneadores (horseback bullfighters).” ADDRESSES OU GRADUATES - R. Sargent Shriver, director of the U.S. Office of Economic Opportunity, stood at the podium in Oakland University's Sports and Recreation Building Saturday night to tell Ougraduates and guests about the victories won in them to participate i said is also furthering peaceful racial integration and cooperation beween religions. Hubert: Well Remain in Asia (Continued From Page One) left-out of this world,” the vice president said: "Today there are families spending their last day on eartir because they haven’t the strength or health to keep go- "But those who remain—and you can be sure of this—those who remain wilKtake to the streets...they will turn to any master...they will tear the fabric of peace to shreds,\unless they have some reason tb. believe there is hope for life ami hope for justice.’’ Humphrey then tied this Idea to President Johnson’s foreign aid request now before Congress and said, “We hear the same doubts and complaints today that we heard 20 years ago." OUR INVESTMENT If someone has a substitute for foreign aid, I’d like to hear about it,’’ he said. "The investment we make in foreign aid-in preventive medicine, if you will—is certainly less than that necessary to treat the symptoms of massive economic crisis and disorder and, yes, of war.’ But Humprey said leadership in SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (AP) — Lots of noise but no violence opened a week of celebrations Sunday of the anniversary of the Dominican revolution last April. An estimated 10,000 demonstrators, most of them youths, massed at Independence Park, repeatedly shouted, “Go home, Yankees,” and cheered loudly at the end bf the three-hour rally .when a big U.S. flag was burned. though we must not be afraid to do so when necessary.” “Leadership today requires understanding of the problems we face—of the resources at hand—and of the objectives we seek,’’ Humphrey said. “It requires the ability, perhaps even more, to lead and inspire others—to lead and inspire in a sense of common enterprise. The Weather Full U& Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Fair this morning, becoming partly cloudy this aftelrnoon, high 86 to 62. Fair and cold tonight with frost interior portions, low 27 to 35. Mostly sunny and cool Tbesday, high SO to 58. North to northeast winds five to 15 miles. Wednesday’s outlook: cloudy and slightly warmer with a chance of'occasional rain. Dominicans Celebrate Police armed with carbines and tear gas bombs kept a careful watch. The army was on the alert. The Inter-American Peace Force, consisting mostly of U.S. troops, stayed in the background. In evidence at the rally, organized by leftist groups, were the green and black banner of the pro-Castro 14th of June Movement and the red and black flags of the country’s two Communist parties. The newspaper EH Caribe praised the demonstrators for being peaceful but expressed concern over "Communist infiltration into Dominican life." The paper added, however, that “many Dominicans may 4 in Family Killed in (Continued From Page One) (Continued From Page One) marsh grass and partially submerged in about three inches of water. St. Mary Parish sheriff’s of- Bar to View OEO Plan for Free Legal Aid NATIONAL WEATHER — Rain is expected tonight from the middle Mississippi Valley east to the Atlantic Coast and south to tha Gulf Const, missing only Florida. Rain, and mow am expecfod in tha northern RocMat. It will be colder .In the Northwest and continued warm in the South. - A plan devised by the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) to provide free- legal aid to impoverished count)*-residents was expected to come under close scrutiny today by the Oakland Count Bar Association. The OEO is asking that the bar association endorse ’the proposal, estimated to cost $451,-210 to put into operation, at its meeting at the Pontiac Elks Temple. It . is expected thfct strong opposition may be voiced toward the -plan because a similar service is now being offered to poor families through the Oakland County Legal Aid Society. The Legal Aid, Society operates an office in Pontiac with funds from the United Fund, United Community Services and tiie bar association. Rs 196& budget totaled $17,660. The OEO proposes to operate eight legal services offices located throughout the county. Two central offices will be lo-at e d in Community Centers now operated by the OEO in Pontiac and-Royal Oak Township. The location of other offices have been tentatively planned for Madison Heights, Ferndate, the Novi-Farmington area. Lake Orion, the Rochestar-Troy-Avon-dale area and the Waterford-Highland area. ficers said there were indications the two girls — Brenda, 15, and Lucie, 13 — were hurried in shallow graves. It appeared that heavy weekend rains washed the dirt away from the bodies. The body of their brother, Robert, 11, was the first spotted by searchers slogging through mud up to their knees. RELIGIOUS CROSS He lay in water and marsh grass, still wearing a religious cross on a chain around his neck. Freighter, Tanker Collide in Docking BEIRA, Mozambique (UPI)-A British freighter collided last night with the oil-laden tanker Ioanna V while trying to alongside her in Beira. The British freighter Treneg-los damaged the stern of the Ioanna while edging toward the dock to tie up. The collision caused an estimated $14,000 damage to the tanker which has been tied up at the Beira dock with 18,000 tons of oil originally destined for Rhodesia. Nationalist Sailors Freed by Red China TOKYO un - Radio Peking announced today the release of 33 crew members of a Nationalist navy ship which it said claimed Was sunk in an engagement last Aug. 6. The broadcast said 11 of the crew who expressed a wish to return to their homes in Formosa have beat permitted to do All the others will return to their homes, the radio said, presumably meaning their original homes on the mainland before they had moved to Formosa. have participated in the demonstrations merely because they shared the feeling for immediate restoration of all aspects of our sovereignty." If the week’s demonstrations come off without any major lence, some observers said, it could mean that citizens of their bitterly divided nation are ready to^yote peacefully in the elections scheduled for June 1. Unconfirmed reports said that conservative presidential candidate Rafael Bonnelly plans to withdraw from the race todays before the elections and throw his support to ex-President Joaquin Balaguer. Balaguer is considered the chief opponent of ex-President Bosch, who commands a leftist following. The four-rebellion that began last April 24 was touched off by efforts to reinstate the constitution and Bosch, who was overthrown by the military in 1963. Mid-April Sales at Pontiac Div. Hit Period Record Pontiac Motor Division today during in April this period the history of the company; Mid-April sales were 26,722, surpassing the previous record of 25,415 cars set in the same period a year ago. "This outstanding perform-continues Pontiac’s record-breaking pace for tiie 1966 model year,” commented E. R. Pettengill, divisional general sales manager. “The spring weather in many sections of' the country has given a definite impetus to our sales.” \ U.S. planes flew a total missions Sdnday against bona Viet Nam, returning to the same areas where they encountered at least 14 Soviet-built MIGs in the first aerial battles with Communist planes, in 10 months on Saturday. The Communists lost two MIG17s to U.S. air-to-air missiles. Two faster MIG21s fought the American planes to a standoff. Hie continued heavy bombardment of targets around Hanoi eclipsed the action in South .Viet. Nam, where American blows at the Communists. Five major U.S. ground operations met little resistance. 399 KILLED Vietnamese - forces reported killing nearly 300 enemy in two big weekend fights. Two Viet-, namese regiments killed 245 Viet Cong and captured 20 weapons along a canal in the Mekong River delta 100 miles southwest of Saigon on Saturday. A government battalion left another 50 guerrillas dead in a road-clearing action north of Nha Trang, on the central coast, a spokesman said. Vietnamese casualties were light. The Viet Cong forced govern-ment troops to abandon at least one outpost south of Saigon in a series of harassments before dawn today. Premier Nguyen Cao Ky’s military government moved a little closer to the national elections it has promised Buddhists in three to five months by announcing it will name a committee of 100 to conduct tiie vote. But not everyone was pleased 'with the prospect of voting under circumstances where the government could not pledge to stop Communist interference. An estimated 10,000 Roman Catholics demonstrated peacefully Sunday in Saigon, while others marched in nearby Thu Due and in the northern city of Da Nang in a display of political strength against the Buddhists. The paraders, showing pro-American sympathies, called on the government to put prime emphasis on prosecuting the war. Birmingham Area News Budget Hearing in Bloomfield Supervisor Homer Case recommended the largest increase in the geheral government spending category. UP ^59,199 Expenditures here are up $50,-100 from this year’s figure of $219,300, making the total for general government $278,400. summer programs in school readiness and ■ speech therapy. Salaries for the supervisor, treasurer, clerk, assessor, clerical workers, and bookkeeping clerks will net $127,-990 of this total. Insurance, maintenance and and supply costs ac< count for the largest chunks outside of salaries in most departments. The police department’s proposed budget accounts for the biggest share of the expenditures with $282,400 allotted, mostly for salaries Which total $212,900. The allowance marks an increase of $47,600 over this year.. FOR SALARIES) The fire department’s proposed expenditures amount to $234,200, with $183400 of this figure going for salaries. This year’s budget allowed $194,900 for the department The building department is given $83,190 under the proposed budget with $$8,999 of this amount for salaries. The allotment during the current fiscal year is $68,199. Estimated (tests for water and sewers are not listed under budget allotment, since they are self-supporting and operated on a revenue basis, not tty property taxes. NEW YORK (AP) - A strike by the Newspaper Guild of New York has shut down the merged World Journal Tribune before the new corporation could start publication which had been scheduled for today. A voluntary shutdown by four other daily newspapers was averted when their publishers decided to keep printing on a day-today basis. In addition, the library budget also is excluded from the figures, since its funds are budgeted by the library board. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Ad vance re entering will be held of May 2 a schedule is: Booth, May 19; Conant, 8; Hickory Lake, May 4; Train Burns After Texas Hit by To (Continued From Page One) tween Gladewater and Long* view, washed away Sunday and rails from tracks .atop the dam knocked off the control valves of an oO well. ■ * High water forced the closing of four major highways and numerous farm-to-market roads In Grdgg, Upshur, Harrison, Wood, Rusk and Marion counties. ' Many sin sere ii r ■ free to i Impassable in Longview stood three feet deep in seme areas. Over 7 inches ef rainfall was record midnight Saturday and A wide area of I__________ was blacked out Sunday night when heavy rains and a thunderstorm swept across the city. An estimated $25,000 damage was caused Saturday night when a tornado whipped through the edge of Winnsboro, northwest of Lqpgview. The twister damaged the city auditorium, and 40 new automobiles on a dealer’s lot. A roof crushed two cars, but no injuries were reported. Lightning struck a power line, causing a brief'fire. Power company officials said the blackout was short and was restricted mainly to the northeast section of the city. Four persons drowned nine miles east of ’fyler Sunday when their car was swept off a farm read and, carried about 600 feet down a flood-swollen creek. 17; and Wing child’s birth with the children while the parents per- Merged Paper Is Hit by Strike 4 Other NY Dailies Continue to Publish Matt Meyer, president of the new corporation, said shortly before midnight that he could not predict when trite merged papers would be published. This was in view of the fact that none of the 10 unions in tiie newspaper industry has a contract with the World Journal Tribune, Inc. Hie , AFL-CIO Newspaper Guild set up picket lines Sunday at the, plants of the Journal-American, the World-Telegram Sun and the Herald Tribune all of which published their last editions as separate entities during the weekend. The pickets signaled the start Inf the third major newspaper strike here in less than four Fears. HAS SUPPORT Officials of the Guild, which has the support of the other unions, said the strike was called* primarily because of a dispute iver who in the merger and over layoff provi- 5,700 union employes of the three papers will lose their jobs. Hw is to lose 904 of its 1,800 Thieves Rob 's branch The New Hudson M>rahrii of-of the State Savihgs Bank South Lyon was brokmi into sometime this weekend, by thieves who jimmied open a safe and escaped with- an undetermined amount of money. Mrs. Ervin Meadows, branch \ manager, said the break-in oc- \ curred some time between the \ bank’s closing time noon Saturday and 9 a.m. today, when she arrived to open the office. Entry to the year-old branch bank at 59461 Grand River was gained by smashing open tiie wooden front door of tiie building- The building was net equipped with an alarm sy* tom, investigators said. Agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation and detectives from the State Police * Brighton post responded to tiie oall after the break-in was discovered by a bank employe. Inside the building, a six-foot high double door vault had been cracked open. One of tiie steel doors was found on the floor behind the counter among a pite of coin boxes, papers, and scattered change. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 98, 19M Soviets Begin Rocket Tests Fight Due on Rural Poverty Bill WASHINGTON (AP) leader Everett M. Dirksen carries ah anti-inflation MOSCOW (UPI) - The Soviet banner into a Senate battle, to-Union today fired the first ofjday in an effort to limit the union today fired tne nrst oi a«y Ul ■*> ant aw ukukom a series of space rockets into scope of a bill to combat rural visions. Re- posed an 'outlay of $285 million. But he said it bad been amended to authorize the “appropriation of such sums as may be necessary" to carry out its pro- the Pacific Ocean in tests designed to take Russians closer to a manned landing oh the moon. But an announcement by the official Tass news agency said the target areas were two 40-mile-diameter circles instead of ones 12 miles across, as first announced. The different diameters appeared due to a misprint rather than a change of plans. The ageaey warned foreign ships and airplanes to keep out of the target areas from noon to midnight during Ihe tests which end July II. poverty. * w Dirksen’s announcement in interview that he plans to oppose what he called an “open-end" authorization for community development programs surprised GOP colleagues who had voted for the measure when it was approved unanimously by the Senate Agriculture Committee. — ★ ★ ★ Chairman Allen J. Ellender, D-La., had predicted speedy approval of the measure. It is designed to carry out President Johnson’s proposal to help farmers and small town residents obtain some of the advantages now limited to cities their suburbs. It was the fourth Pacific Ocean testing series in the last six mqnths. One target was sited west of Midway Island, the other northeast of Wake .Island. Both islands are American-owned, but the target areas were weU out- before the Senate votes"on it. side territorial limits. The legislation would make federal funds available for development planning in rural and farm areas. MANY PROJECTS Projects under the measure But Dirksen said he wants the cost of this program spelled out would include water and sewage systems, health service, educational and teaching facilities, recreational and cultural installations, manpower surveys and training, development of sources and other projects. Water buffalo are used extensively as draft animals by the Vietnamese, especially in the rice paddies. Ul This Week 4 Simms J Complete WATCH OVERHAUL Lb I With PARTS and LABOR at 7 11£ I im» price ...your watch will be • t I f / I disassembled, cleaned and oiled, M J I — adjusted and timed electronl- U I tally, genuine factory parts used and you get full year guarantee I on labor. Parts Include stems, crown, mainspring or balance | «taH at this price idly rusted watches, automatic*, chronos and broken stale at email extra cost. . 5.95 When announcing the three- INFLATION PERIOD? This is an example of howl I month tests April 23, Tass said Congress can open the door to only that “new systems for space objects are being developed." Ike Soviet Union has, hi the past, used parts of the deserted Pacific Ocean hr rocket tests. Bat little infsr-mation Is the Russians known to be carrying out perimenta to develop powerful new rocket boosters essential to its moon program. la Fleer unlimited government spending/’ he said. “We are in a period of inflation and we must face up to that fact squarely. ★ ★ * “This is an entirely new venture. What is it going to cost fat future expenditures at a time when we should be cutting down on domestic programs to help pay for the cost of the Viet Nam war?’ Dirksen said he was Informed that the measure originally pro- Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Sbb More in the Good Ole Summertime With .St. Moritz Binoculars III CASE and STRAPS . Genuine 'St. Moritz' binoculars with coated lenses 'and prisms — you'll enjoy summer's joys more, i vocations, traveling, sports, etc. Small deposit holds in layaway. 17x35 Power 1798 , Center focus—Zeiss type... ■ ■ 7x50 Power OJ98 8x40 Wide Angle QC98 ) Brightest wide angle yet.. W w 9x40 Power 25*** 7x35 Monoculars Q98 V4 binocular,-pocket size. w 1 CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS l500 Watts-Remote Control Slide Projector 'Crestline' model with full remote controti focus, forward and re-I verse. Comes, with 36 capacity tray. Blower cooled. Will take rotb-tray too. Not exactly as shown. $1 holds. Electronics- TRANSISTOR Dept. 9-V Transistor Battery Genuine hl-power Imported radio battery will fit most all transistor radios. 36c value. Limit 10. 24' Fits Most Traasisters Radio Earphone 98c Value s— for private radio Intoning — fits most I transistor radios. Bring radio far correct fit. SIMMS"?,, If Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Summer Wearing Apparel and Household Needs at Cost or Below Cost Prices needs. Aetna! oast ar below east price*. Nr Monday, I tuesday, Wednesday.__________________________________ SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT Quilted Bedspreads Luxurious quilted bedspreads In bright solid colors and prints with heavy quilted filling. 24”x6-Ft. Carpet Runners Hallways Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Come in fe SIMMS new annex store for these specials .. . and H*» tha only placa where you can save on these particular ftfme. All prices good this week only. star* open Ionite Til 9 pan. Tnes. and Weds. 0 nan. t* I p.m. for extra garment storage space portable doilies rack ^ K.D. O heavy 1“ tubular frame O chrome plated e 39" wide, 66" high O rubber tip legs O top shelf holds hats, boxes etc. e for home, office, shop, etc. 0 easy to assemble •. limit !_ per person. 2-deer base cabinet 1 formica top e 2 drqwers • 2 P doors O 36" high O 24" wide O 25* deep O enamel finish • slight flaws • others from $20.88. and while you’re shopping for these specials, check our much lower prices in toys, giftwares, housewares, sports, and automotive depts. 16a • Stabs RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES, • Doorways CARS, GOLF CLUBS... USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. Sava Up to $2.50 Protect your rugs and floors with these runners of heavy carpet with jute, latex or foam backing. Wide variety of colors to choose from. Choice of AAen's Dungarees-Work Pants Save Up to $1.49 159 I 2 for S.0C , _ _________ 1 sip fly and belt loop*, llVk-oz. denim, size 30 to 44, or first-quality twill work pants In green. Broken size rang* from 30 to 38 waist. Aneitoen Made-First Quality " Tennis Oxfords Save Up to 89c I01 Tennis oxfords for children or mlssee with cushion arch and Inner-sol*. Sizes 5 to l3Vh and 1 to 3. Main Floor CLOTHING DEPT. American Mada—First Quality LADIES’ Summer Hay Wear • Blouses a Shorts • Slacks • Knee Knookirs Save Up to $2.00 |97 Chooi* from e largo .election of sew-tucker blou.es, wain V wear cotton blouses, sleeveless blouses, shorts, caprl docks, and mug stretch knee knockers; Good selection of colors In sizes 8 to 18., Ntn •beet SIMMS!?.. smsmB Give Mom the Best Give Her FARBERWARE Mother’s Day-Sunday, May 8 Perfect Coffee Every Time FARBERWARE Automatic 2 to 4 Cup Percdator Exclusive super-fast brewing action assures a rich, perfect brmv every time; Automatic temperature control keeps it piping tot. Crafted In gleaming stainless steel. FARBERWARE Toaster Automatic 99i Simms Price 11 Farborwar* toaster has all features. Nine different sel plus reheat position, quiet elevation of toast, removable ci f, glooming chrome finis FIRMWARE Electric Can Opener end Knife Sharpener . opener opens any shape can smoothly, leaves no sharp edges, magnet holds can lid. Plus a safe, efficient knife sharpener. JC Berth I Saginaw SIMMS!?,. OPEN «y T0HITE IUM TUES. and WEDS. • a.m. to 6 p.m. | Win a Portable All Chaimd Television Set j In SIMMS HURT KPT. . and no purchaeo i* I nacaenaiy — just ask for fie* prizt tickets in our paint I dopt. Grand prim plus 9 other | prizes. Hurry Contest and* April 30th. 2nd Floor PAINT DEPT. DISCOUNTS Paint In Any Weather FORMULA 99 PAINT For Interiors and Exteriors Choice of white and decorator colon — paint In rain or shine 1wRh Formula 99 531 Bungalow Drikote One-Coat Enamel Oil Base White Enamel One-coot paint- for walls, woodwork, etc. Non-yellowing while is quick drying. Limit 4 gallons. Bungalow ‘Drikote Floor Enamel Choice of grey and colors for vwod and concrete floors. Quick drying, oasy to apply enamel with brush or roller. 999 ■H GAL. ‘Addroc’ Masonry Paint 299 10-lb. ccm chemically unites with surfaces. Decorative and protective Addroc stops leaks. In white and colors. 50-Lb. Can lor... ..........*14* Paint Thinner Full gallon can of Paint Thinner for thinning paints, cleaning brushes etc. Limit 2. 661 SHOP SIMMS AUTOMOTIVE DEPT. i Wax Your Car Once-A-Year New Prestone Jet Wax 16•.* ★. Then you might watch for Corn Leaf Aphid, Armyworm, Four-Lined Plant Bug, Spotted Alfalfa Aphid, European Corn Borer, Northern Cora Root-worm, Pea Aphid and Alfalfa Weevil. Especially Alfalfa Weevil But the experts hope you won’t see any of those pests. SPREADING NORTH The weevils are spreading northward, and only a tier of northern Ohio counties separate diem from Michigan now, the MSU report said. "The alfalfa weevil is one of the most damaging insect pests ever, to attack a forage crop," the report adds. • * A A _ It predicts that if Fulton and Williams counties in Ohio la Michigan become infested In 1966 - 67, “which now appears likely, then southeastern Michigan farmers may expect to start spraying alfalfa in 1969-70.” The Cereal Leaf Beetle battle is being fought mainly in laboratories at Michigan State Uhl-versity. But some attacks in the fields are being launched this (week. ' PLANES TO SPRAY Airplanes were scheduled to spray approximately 720,000 acres in southwest Michigan with pesticide in an effort to keep the beetles from spreading. The spray program, however, is not expected to exterminate the pests entirely. ★ A Hr The other approaches include parasites to attack them, sterilization, traps and resistant grains. In another effort to contain the beetles, agricultural authorities have imposed a grain quarantine on all of Lower Michigan south of -a line running through OceanU, Lake, Osceola, Clare, Gladwin and Arenac counties. HUNT EXTERMINATOR The long-range aim is to find a beetle - exterminator before they can spread to the vast grain fields of the Great Plains. MSU scientists reported last reek they have found that ’bristly** wheat varieties repel the beetles—but they also are low-yield and low-quality varieties. To cross-breed them and develop commercially acceptable resistant varieties probably will take around eight years, said MSU’s Dr. Everett Everson, ’but I know we can do it.” arl look- ing for compounds that would attract the . beetles into a trap having baby beetles. or at least into one small area where they could be attacked with spray. They also are checking/pos-sibiiities of using parasites, including a tiny wasp n^wly imported from Europe. / Another plot would be the use of chemicals or spine form of radiation to sterilize adult bee- tles, and prevent them froip beetle Springtime Specials Now! We Sell More Ford* in County Are s— Fwd "Meets" Heosshoch lew HAROLD TURNER £fvr11 Barnes, foreign news analyst for a Detroit paper, and Eh*. John Weiss, associate professor of history at Wayne State University, will speak. A question-and-answer perl- Packy Eckola, 945 Forest Lake, Orion Township, oils; Jennie Ellis! 4521 Justine, Utica, oils, acrylics, watercolors; and Jean Brown of Royal Oak, oils. A feature of this year’s fair will be a display of several drawings by Sosan Bolt of Pleasant Ridge. Also tottered will be art work by Kingsbury School art students. Most items exhibited will be for sale. Proceeds from the fair will be used to fulfill a fellowship goal of the AAUW. * h Sr Tickets are available from AAUW members or at the door. Oxford Area Schools Kindergarten Sign-Up May 6 OXFORD — The annual registration for all children entering kindergarten In the Oxford Area Community Schools in September will be held May 6 in the kindergarten rooms of the Daniel Axford and Lakeville schools. i* Any child who will be five irears old on or before Dec. 1, 1966, is eligible tor Under-purten. Hie Daniel Axford registration will be for children living west of Hosner Road, and those living in the areas of Clear Lake, Thomas, Oxford, Oak-wood and Dryden Township. Those living in Leonard, Lakeville and Oxford Mobile Manor will register at Lakeville. ★ ★ w Sign-up periods will be held from 9 to 11:30 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m. Regular kindergarten classes will be dismissed that day. INFORMATION Information needed' for official enrollment in September will be distributed. Each child must be adequately Immunized against smallpox, diphtheria, tetanus, ‘ potiomy- examination will be necessary this year. Parents are urged to take their prospective kindergarten children to registration to help acquaint them with rooms and school facilities. rofiment. A tuberculin skin test to also required. School officials say there to also a possibility that measles immunization and a physical Resort Site for Reunion WALLED LAKE - The class of 1951 of Walled Lake High School will hold a reunion at Pine Knob Resort near Clarks-ton May 21. „ A social hour at 6:90 p.m. will be followed by a buffet dinner and dance at 7 :10 p.m. ♦ * • Tickets must be purchased by May 1 from David Couture, 6612 Roselawn, Clarkston. RAZLEVi L/ CASH MARKET JL • 78 NORTH SAGINAW STREET SPECIAL TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY Downtown Pontiac Store Onlyt • Grad* #1 lot Dogs • MldCwri Sliced Bacon • Fresh Turkey Drum Sticks WHOLE F0M L0IHS 49$ 3-1 od to planned tor the discussions opened to the public. Barnes graduated from the University of Michigan and has been a European correspondent for 20 years. During World War n, he was director of psychological warfare. Dr. Weiss has written and published books and articles on the history of ideologies. His specialty is European intellec-tural history. A native Detroiter, he received his Ph.D at Columbia. TMR PONTUC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 25, 1868 A-» Penney’s quick-care Arnei* knits go more places more often! The reason? Arnei® triacetate knits are popping up in a bevy of the freshest new looks of the season I You already lUee your wititeifs Charge Account Today! Now! It's Here! Penney's Fobulous Summer ' Dress Festival Thousands of dresses for summer in new fabrics, colors, and styles, fresh from the New York, Los Angeles, Miarni and Dallas markets. No finer collection of dress fashions can be found than at Penney's giant summer fashion festival! Don't miss if! know how easy Arnei® is to care for—just dip and drip dry, don't iron—they're set to go island-hopping, crosstown shopping I Checkerboard patterns, crochet-looks, rib knits, seersucker stripes ... and in sizes for every figure in fashion I Come see this front-page collection in fresh, summer-y pastels. Practical Penney prices, tool Misses' short-sleeve sheath, TO to 20.............10.98 Misses' crochet-look sheath, 10 to 18..10.98 Juniors' braid-edged two-parter, 7 to T3 ..10.98 Women's checkerboard shift, 14% to 24%.11.98 Petites'pleated skimmer, 5 to 11 .,.............. 10.98 Juniors' flounce-sleeve skimmy, 7 to 158.98 oijr fashions never say how much...just how right! PENNY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY THE" PONTIAC PRESS • Wait Huron Street MONDAY, APRIL 8, 1966 Bmeutlw Vte* Prealdent and John W. Ittaanuu Secretary and MnrtHM S It Seems to Me . . . City’s System of Election Gives Good Representation When the current City elections ended, a few people criticized the method. Our procedure is normal. It's quite standard. ★ ★ ★ Each district names two candidates pf its own. No other area has any voice in these. Then the City as a whole votes on the entire ticket and elects One from each district. Yon can’t vote for two candidates from a single location and each district is guaranteed one of its own men. City-wide representation is assured. ★ ★ Hr The Nation elects one President. The State elects one governor. No one ever carries every precinct in . any big election. Johnson lost thousands of precincts — but he’s everyone’s President. Governor Romney lost hundreds of precincts and districts. But he’s everyone's Governor. ★ ★ ★ The current system is employed in Detroit and cities everywhere. In an area as small as a single city, all commissioners must necessarily work for the community as a whole. They , can’t confine their interests to a few square blocks. ★ ★ ★ \ This would be unfair to the City ' as a unit. We used that method once — and found it out. What we do now is quite customary—the accepted American procedure. Citizens’ Recommendations .... Recently a young man who burned his draft card was given a two year suspended sentence. The Inquiring Reporter oil The ffew York News asked six citizens at large whether they approved. Just one did. The other five did not. Opinions of the protesters showed: One favored immediate induction into the Army. Another recommended two years in jail at hard labor. A third favored five years in jail plus a $10,000 fine (the maximum sentence). And a sixth year in jafl if the culprit didn’t pay the fine. President’s Booming Budget . . . If you want to go to bed unhappy and appalled, cogitate briefly on these statistics: , The current Presidential budget of $112 billion is more than ALL THE BUDGETS ADDED TOGETHER FROM 1789 THROUGH 1938. That’s sufficient to shake the very foundations of this great country. The first 144 years of our existence. the Federal budget totaled $111 billion. Further, in 1967, you’ll be paying $12.8 billion in interest. That’s more than the ENTIRE budget of any single year through 1941, except for one war year. And if this provides a sleepless night, don’t Jbuzz me. Call the White House. MorM'. Voice of the People: Readers’ Views Continue* on Viet Nam Involvement In response to the editorial on Viet Nam, war has never been the answer and only brings its own woes to addho the qrginal ones. Let us face the truth that our waf efforts are doing no good in Viet Nam— that our presence there only prevents the possibility of the people settling their problems as they must ulti-. iriately do in their own way. ★ ★ ★ The beginning of our great mistake in Viet Nam was in sending the first military adviser there years ago. They never did need our advice as to how to wage war. Now we are showing the world what poor losers we are and frantically trying to find other countries willing to get, into the stew with us. ★ ★ . ★ How can we be proud of our country so long as our leaders cannot face the truth and are pushing us into the false economy of war with it’s disruptive effect? What a frightening waste of our resources, men and means. How proud we could be to admit our mistake and do the only honorable thing—“back our boys in Viet Nam”—right back home. VICTORIA M. CANFIELD WATERFORD Since The Mountain Won't Budge David Lawrence Says: Monday’s editorial presented an objective view. My opinion: go home! In switching to and Implementing the disavowed Nixon-Goldwater S. E. Asian policy, President Johnson deceived—by perhaps misreading—the popular wiU^ for peace. Congress, too, is blameworthy for respoohg sock unrestricted power in owe human being; which it wedd seem ^ ‘Racial Balance’ Plagues Schools SfSaKSTSr» ★ ★ ★ . “Losing face” is not germane to the issue — only Imperialists could be chagrined. We went there to aid with advice. Re- The last two favored straight five years in jail. ★ ★ ★ • ■ If some of our pantywaist judges across the county could hear the ideas expressed by the man in the street of judicial “foregivness,” it might stiffen their backbones. The idea that “Willie is a good boy” doesn’t register as hard with them as it seems to with many of these jurists. it ’ ★ How about the victims? How about society in general? Don’t they deserve the most consideration and the maximum attention? ' WASHINGTON - Has the Department of Justice begun ' to blink at the racial discrimination being practiced against many white parents? Their children are being forced out of n e ighborhoodj schools unlawfully and are] being transported else- LAWRENCE where with the avowed object of achieving “racial balance.” Orders have been issued by many local boards of education in various Northern states requiring bus transportation of pupils from one school district to another. ' it it 1t This is specifically forbidden by the Civil Rights Act of 1964, but no action has been taken by the federal government, through the courts or otherwise, to enforce the law, which explicitly prohibits die use of any such device to correct “racial imbalance.” FEDERAL FUNDS Nor has any effort .been made here to withhold federal funds from states which are violating “racial imbalance” prohibitions. The ctvfl rights statute provides for the handliig of complaints and the iasfitn-tion of legal proceedings by protests from residents of the invaded areas. lie schools will be giving hereafter. Many of the teachers apparently prefer to be in schools in certain areas and, unlesk they can choose their place of employment, they may give up teaching. It begins to look as if the quality of the teachers available will have an important effect on the kind of education the pub- Bob Considine Says: The basic cause of the crisis in the public schools is the increase in congestion in certain sections of large cities and the movement of white families to the suburbs — a right that has not yet been interfered with by governmental authorities. One-Act Russian Play Entitled The ’ as to “materially further file orderly achievement of desegregation in public edn- And in Conclusion Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: Here’s a little poem that contains every letter in the alphabet except one. Can you spot it? A jovial swain should not cdmplain Of any buxom fair; Who mocks his pain and thinks it gain To quiz his awkward air. ........ Americans home from France are waxing more indignant than ever over the hold-up prices they’re charged......... May 22nd sees the end of Perry Mason. Many win sigh with regret....... ..... A big, beautiful papa pheasant swooped down on backyards in Seminole Hills this past week. ★ ★ Scouts advise me Cindy Rieves deserves mention as' one of the area’s attractive young la- dies____ , I’m amazed at the number * •f Republicans who tell me While the law requires the * • assignment of students to schools or within schools they’re going to take a Demo- “without regard to their race, cratic ballot in the primary so color, religion, or national they can vote for Jerry Cav- origin,” one provision specif- anagh in the Senate struggle. „ ’f* “ ‘<***>*8*- * •• tion’ shall not mean the as- ............ • Israel is exercised signment of students to public over the sale of our F-104 fight- school* to overcome racial i__i ■ _ imbalance.” . era to Jordan............. Over- ^ ^ ^ heard: “Have you noticed how The civil rights statute rec- much smaller they’re making . ognizes the possibility that the eyes of needles?” there might be efforts to cor- ... red “racial imbalance” by * ■ ■ vr ■ w busing pupils from one dis- Kingswood’s own Susan Smith, if*®* *° another and flatly ta-i. % . boos such action, warn an amazing M.7 tree style lap forcible BUSING on her relay team at tha U. 8. Na- to*, a, i* week, the tionals................The way the New York State Legislature- world la going, the best figures for discouraged by lack of fed- girls are 46-22-38. . . ....... eral ac0on endeavored to rmunat.LLi.________.. ,_____’ ‘ ‘ enact a state law to prohibit *>a . * forcible busing of pupils from commercials on Master’s Golf tour- 0n4 school dirtrid tomother. -nament marked the bottom of the Although a bill to this ef-barrel..................Overheard: led was passed in the state wiak,7 wife s driving that a good mechanic . tion will be blocked In the can’t fix.” .......... Dept, of lower house. Cheers and Jeers: the C’s —- the St. Meanwhile, the beard of Joe Hospital drive; the J’s — the education at Hartford, Academy Awards broadcaet which StfrESttS wasn’t quite, as deadly-as usual transportattoa of IN Ne- (thanks to Hops) but still no end gr°e* and Puerto Ricans to dismal. v suburban schools. R was _ . discussed at a public meet- —Harold A, Fitzgerald jng and whs the rafcj*« of NEW YORK - The scene is the office of Prof. Sergei Shu-karev, academician in charge of a vast manned Spacecraft center deep in the Soviet Union. The time is the present. A broad-beamed girl secretary raps and enters. Secretary: / I bear bad news, Comrade Aca: demician. S h ukarev (glancing ner- CONSIDINE vously it portraits of Brezhnev and Kosygin on his walls):. Don’t tell me Khrushchev is back. Why did I bum his picture? Secretary: Worse news than that. * a * Shukarev: Don’t tell me our German technicians have escaped. Secretary: Worser news, Comrade. Some electrical workers have gone on strike in Minsk and Pinsk and the electrical workers here at Cape Lenin have declared a sympathetic strike. Launching of our next space shot, the one that will carry a family of six into polar orbit, will thus be delayed. it . ★ ★ Shukarev: What’s a strike? Secretary: It’s a situation whereby workers refuse to work because of some grievance. Shukarev (wheezing with relief and mopping his brow): Thank God—even though He is dead. 1 thought it was something serious. Have them all shot and get some new ones — Russia’s decision to let the West show it how to build cars for the Soviet masses is certain to interest Detroit — as soon as American League Top 10 Batters Name, Club AB H Pet F. Robinson, Balt. M 14 .417 Robinson, Chicago 35 15 .421 Warner, Cal. 33 13 .4N Alvis, Cleveland . 33 IS .436 B. Robinson, Baft. .37 15 .405 Oliva, Minnesota. 31 12 Ml Colavito, Cleveland 27 13 J7I Etehebarren, Bait .11 11 J56 McGraw, Chicago 35 13 J4! Kaline, Detroit M IS J33 Killebrew, Minn. .33 11 J33 Detroit shakes off its bad case of Naderitis. Fiat and Renault are prepared to expand the Russian car market as far as the Kremlin will permit Can the British, Americans, Swedish and West Germans be far behind? The easing of the car-ownership problem in Russia represents an interesting change in policy. ★ * • * In 1057 Khrushchev snorted impatiently when a member of the Hearst task force commented favorably on the looks of a new Soviet car, the Volga, which had just been released in limited numbers. it it ■ it “We are not interested in automobile- production,” be snapped. “It has no important role in our economy.” E. W. It was ironic that a letter demanding “use the bomb" and voluntarily begin World War III should conclude with “l^t’s end it.” What kind of madness is it when we are led to believe that the only life worth saving is an American life and that it is perfectly just to wipe Red China off the face of the earth before it becomes a threat? This is the kind of insanity that will lead mankind to its own death. - J.C.S. CLARKSTON HIGH SCHOOL Disagrees With Method of City Elections I am writing concerning the outcome of Monday’s election. Why should the people of District 1 put up with someone they don’t want? I am a resident of District 1 and a high school senior, yet I know about the things Mr. Fowler has done. The commissioner serves his district, not the entire city. You want someone in office who will do as you say do. You wanted one for whom the other six commissioners merely pull the strings and he dangles like a puppet. You have a Negro in office but he is a mere follower. Mr. Tucker was the man for the job. His district voted him in, but the City voted him out. TERRY M. LONG 293 CRYSTAL LAKE (EDITOR’S NOTE: Read the editorial in The Press tdhight.) Indian Would Join Pickets at Fire. Station You palefaces pay each Pontiac fireman more than Indiana paid my great-great-great-grahdfather, Chief Pontiac, to boas Six Nations. Chief works N days a month and not sit In tepee and play gin rummy. Worker in store suggest we have picket lines around fire stations to get salaries cut down like other cities. I will join and wave bloody tomahawk instead of paleface sign. CHIEF PONTIAC XIII ^ i What’s that business about sending the addresses of servicemen to The Press? SERVICEMAN’S RELATIVE REPLY No serviceman ever gets enough mad when htfs away from home, so we’re just frying to hdp his morale by providing addresses for shoes who might want to write. Sena names to Viet Nam Letters, Pontiac Press, P. O. 9, Pontiac. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Wilson's Big Chance .! . Life Magazine Buoyed up by a comfortable majority of 97 aeats in Parliament, Harold Wilson now appears almost certain to be Britain’s prime minister for at least the next four years. The size of the Labor party victory is mainly a tribute to the impressive personal qualities he has revealed during the last 17 months. it it * While it meant keeping a tight rein .on his leftwingers, Wilson has faithfully supported UA policy in Viet Nam and maintained east of 'Suez. As “a pragmatist, not a theologian,” he minimized the influence of antediluvian Laborite socialists. Within weeks of taking office he cooty saw Britain through a major pound sterling crisis! With a majority that narrowed at one time to a single vote, he devised a policy meant to break the nerve of a re-belious Rhodesia. It hasn’t worked yet, bat the Tories haven’t come up with a demonstrably bettor one. Wilson will need all his prestige and professionalism. Britain’s economy is •till a grim mess and getting no better: hi 1166, productivity crawled upward only 1 per cent. Iu tike same period average wages rose • per cent. Government policies designed to lever the economy off dead center have so-far been hesitant, misplaced and ineffectual. Industries become less and less competitive in overseas markets. None of the options now open to. Wilson is very appealing. But some decisively deflationary steps must be taken, preferably in conjunction with incentives for industrial investment and boosting exports. Simply restricting * imports is no way to force British industry to be competitive. * :.fr * Of course no government policy can take the place of a wholly fresh attitude on the part of both management and labor. Full employment has made it even easier for unions to snuggle down in featherbedding and work rules. f hi it h ,, |/* f ' While Wilson’s plans for correcting aliases of union power are vague, be is preparing to dial management a blow by renationalizing tha steel industry. Many noo-La-borites were led to vote for him in the first place because of the belief that he, better than the Tories, was in a position to crack down on restrictive labor practices. , a. * it The other great challenge is Europe. President de Gaulle now hints that he will no longer oppose British entry into the Common Market. Whether or not he means to offer new obstructions, it is in Britian’s interest to declare its willingness to join. Wilson may find this awkward; Europe and the Common Market was a plank in toe Tory platform during the campaign. Competition is toe key to Britain’s long-delayed economic renaissance, and Europe is the'first place to seek tt. tap Pontiac Prut It dtffvtrnd by SSStmTSSt, tV&uTi WM-I rtatadtdri In Mlchlata and ■H othar placet In i» United SMm OMO a year. All mail te: gry3sy;-«» «Mm rate at Ptm Member of ABC CINDY A^r THE PQNtlAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 23, 1066 in the News Famous Brands Prices G«orge E. Reedy^ who has worked lot President Johnson tor U years, is leaving the White House staff^ a Reedy, a presidential assistant since he left the office of press secretary last July, will join an engineering firm; it was reported yesterday. Reedy joined Johnson's staff when the President headed the Senate Preparedness subcommittee. He leaves his |90,000-a»year position to become vice president for planning REEDY of the Strothers Wells Corp., which has headquarters in New York. In The Appliance Names You Know hnd Trust! ‘Easy Credit! No Huey Down! Terms To Please Yon! EITHER WAY YOU CHOOSE TO PAY YOU GET LOW SALE PRICES WITH DELIVERY—SERVICE—WARRANTY COLOR TV HEADQUARTERS ZENITH 1966 COldOR Price Buster I 25"TV H •. 9W Per Week GENERAL ELECTRIC “Mobil Model” Deluxe Portable DISHWASHER California Governor Gets Tumping Frog California Gov. Edmund G. Brown was I given a frog over the weekend to enter In !§■» the Calaveras Ceoaty jumping frog contest at Angels Camp next month. * fflflHSI The event is inspired by the Mirk Twain short story “The Celebrated Jump-rfpj§*B ing Prog of Calaveras County." Imm . The governor dubbed his frog “Rough BROWN and Ready." Rolls easily from table to sink! Newest Flush-Away Drain - Built-In Drain Pump — Big 14 place capacity. Easy Terms Slack and white iteas*). Has big 7 by 5” Twincone Speaker (like 2 speakers in one!) Automatic Color Purifier - Illuminated Channel Indicators, ate. with Modem Woodman’s low-cost Mortgage Insurance 90 Deft* I* Cash' largest Cslor TV Selectioi in He Conity WASHINGTON (UPI) - The director of the National Cancer Institute says -that the identification of virus as a cause of j cancer "may be within reach." All Makes, RC^tsy“’ ' All SlZ6S Philco, General Electric •12**, 19**, 21*», 23**, 25” Portable, Table ModeL Console, Combination, Provincial, Traditional, Early American. Dr. Kenneth M. Endicott made the statement in testimony before a House Appropriations subcommittee which was made public today. He also told the panel that deaths from cancer are at a higher rate than ever. Endicott said that daring the past year H has been M. E, DANIELS District Representative NSW. Huron Ftl-Tlli SWEEP! 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Non-Maring Wheels—Sanitized Dust Bag MONTHLY GENERAL ELECTRIC 19” UHF/VHF U2995 ) STAND INCLUDED GIBSON Giut 12” 2-Boor REFRIGERATOR and $19900 Here it is—new 1966 model with all channels including channel 50— up-front controls-lighted station selector. Hideewsy handle, 2 antenna poles. New in boxes and including the stand, too. No Money Down Delivered, Serviced and Warranted NO MONEY DOWN! S6.SS MO. N DAYS SAMI AS CASH HERE’S PROOF OF OUR BIG SAVINGS... new low price on thia long-time favorite 2-door. It boast* 17.8 sq. ft. shelf space-spacious porcelain crisper — deluxe door ■helves with twin egg racks, etc. Remember! GIBSON is famous for dependability and quality—builders of many of America’s finest food-keepers. FILTER FLO WASHER with MINI-BASKET General Elea Deluxe 2-Door 14 Roomy 133-lb. TRUE FREEZER DR0P1NS? BENT A FORD FROM US. (We’re just a few minutes away.) TWO-SPEED General Electric Huge 14-Ib. load capacity or as little as 14b. Lighted top panel. FULL-FEATURED, FULL QUALITY... for which General Electric le famous! This dependable 2-door features 20.4 ft. shelf space — big capacity Porcelain crisper* — refrigerator •action that'NEVER NEEDS DEFROSTING — pine bandy batter keeper, magnetic door closures and space saving tkinline styling. Hurry in now. automatic lint filter. All porce- price. , Bo give us a call. Wall keep you rolling. lain top and tub. The washer for all washable*! No more washing by hand! The Good Housekeeping Shop ot Pontiac 51W. HURON PHONE FE 4-1555 FREE PARKING DOWNTOWN PONTIAC WE'LL STAMP YOUR TICKET John McAuliffo Ford Company 030 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 5 Wash and Rinse Temperatures 4 Position wsterload control AutomsOie Bleach Dispenser Automatic Soak Cycle NO MONEY DOWN A—S THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 28, 1006 House Still Airing Budget Deadline Is Delayed as Committee Drags WASHIGTON (AP) - Sen. Richard B. Russell called today for a thorough survey Krf public opinion in South Viet Nam cities and said if it shows toe majority of them are anti-American "I think we should withdraw now." Russell: Survey Viet Opinions "We can’t possibly win If we attacking targets in the Hanoi are fighting an enemy in front area for a considerable period LANSING (AP) - The House begins its one-week reprieve tonight, for study of half toe state budget—a $540.9 million package of bills loaded with school aid. The Senate,, however, which completed its' initial budget „ work within the originally allocated time, will work a relatively relaxed three days, then take a five-day spring break. * * * Hie House is considering budget bills reported late Friday by its Ways and Means Committee. Combined with $467 million in spending which already has passed the Senate, they could boost Michigan to its first billiondollar general fund budget. Budget proposals currently are running about $64 million above Gov. George Romney’s proposed $944.9 million spending plan. SCHOOL AID School aid increases are using up about $36 million of this difference. But if toe bill passes the House in its present form, the Senate has indicated it will trim the appropriation. The House was supposed - finish its initial budget work by last Friday midnight, bartoad to grant itself a one-week delay when ways and means committee work dragged. Even to get bills from the committee by midnight required a 10-minute "adjustment” of House clocks. In agreeing to House delay, toe Senate gave itself three ex-—tra days to consider money measures that were not included in the main budget. 8ENATE RECESS The Senate will recess after Wednesday’s work until S p m. May 3. Next week, each chamber will begin consideration of bills approved by the other. FinaT adjournment still is set for Jude 10, four diys before the final date for fiHwg for election. Births The following is a list of recent Pontiac area'births as recorded at the Oakland'County Clerk’s! Office (by name of father): Edward E. Fleischmann, Oxford John F. McClusky, 17 Cordlln' -Edward A. Beaver, Union Lakt John M. Cummings, Union Lako Alexander G. Gulls, Birmingham David S. Martin, Lake Orion Howard T. Craig, M Raeburn ----- - Gaylor, Lake Orion ____... Deschalne, 357 Sl Charles T. Hall, Troy Walter f. Marsh, Utica A. VanBuhler,___________ W. Alexander, 17t S. Marshall J. Col km, 240 Going Charles E. Gening, N Willard Richard C. Jonas, 279 Prospect Bennie Karpoicx, TOM Oregon Willie J. Clark, 009 S. Paddock Edward A. f spec. Lake 6 Waller T. Koschke, S12 F Michael P. Morlaiiy, 954 of us while the people we are supposed to be helping are against us and want us out of their country,” said the Georgia Democrat who heads toe Senate Armed Services Committee. * ★ •*.' Russell, in an interview in ll.S. News It World Report, said U.S. forces could be withdrawn from Viet Nam “without great because of U.S. command of the seas and the air. * ★ * Russell also said a majority of toe American public with toe admihistration’s handling of the war. He said most of the people he has met feel that, “if we have the means to get this war over, then we should bring it to a conclusion as speedily as we can.” NO HANOI ATTACK Deputy Secretary of Defense Cyrus R. Vance said Sunday the United States is not going to attack toe North Viet Nam capital of Hanoi. Vance noted on a television-radio program that United States and North Vietnamese fighter planes had clashed near Hanoi. ★ • w But, he added, "we have been of time. It certainly does not mean that we are going in to attack Hanoi.” He said the clos-clash to the North Vietnamese capital was 35 miles from Hanoi. ★ w * ★ House Republican Leader Gerald 1L Ford continued phis criticism of the administration’s handling of the Viet Nam war. In his weekly report Is his Michigan constituents, he charged JOIN THIS SPECIAL GREAT LAKES CRUISE to famed MARTYRS' SHRINE at Midland, Ont., •a the shores of beautiful Georgian lay S.S. SOUTH AMERICAN Sailing from CLEVELAND and DETROIT, June 2. Raturnlng DETROIT, Juno 4. CLEVELAND Juna 5. Come ilwi| on thii epic nl cniitt te Ml lowed Uirtyrt^ Shrin# »t Midlmil, AM for fltwwfur* u’/Mr, 2300->WI* G laku CmiiM darting Jmt IS ST. LAWIENCI SEAWAY CtUISES IN SEPTEMBEI Soo yowr TEAVII AGENT GEORGIAN BAY LINE Net of Weedwwd • J»lrB» 44224 PImmi MS-4740 the administration with mis-lent of the areas of strategy and diplomacy in the war. Japan News Exec Dios TOKYO (AP) - Inosuke Fu-rune, 7$, one of the builders of Japan’s first international news agency, died today. He was president of toe former Domei 'News Agency, forerunner Kyodo News Agency, Japan’s major news agency today. ’That Wasn't My Mother-in-law' GLOUCESTER,' Mass. (AP) - With more than 36,000 names in the Gloucester telephone book to choose from, Sandra J. Au-riccbto picked the wrong ot^, police reported. * Mias Auricchlo faces charges of giving a false name and address while purchasing drugs. She was caught, police say, because she gave the name and address of the druggist’s mother-in-law while trying to fill a prescription. JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED - HIGHEST PRICES PAID -Wb PickUp FE 2-0200 | FONTIAC SCRAFl TRADING BOATS* IS EASY WITH A PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. JUST PHONE 3324111. Mediterranean mgs C. 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Each gives you extra deep comfort, loose pillow back design with the unmistakable high fashion look plus the craftsmanship and value you expect of Thomas Furniture. Ready for immediate delivery or you can special order custom fabrics at the same special prices. What a wonderful way to bring a touch of Spring to your homel *179.95 *249.95 C.97MFuurcushion sofa with am $OQQ OK covers and bolsters includad...r. AvWiWV decorator services Available SfomSSdb* famous Row#\ features include: reversible loose pillow Backs for unmatched comfort, plush .extra-thick Poty^Dacron seat cushions. Protective arm covers a^d bolsters included PONTIAC 361 S. SAGINAW-FE3-7901 W OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY 'TIL 9 DRAYTON 4945 DIXIE HWY • OR 4-0321 OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY; FRIDAY TIL 9 THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC MICHIGAN, MONDAY, APRIL 25, 1966 V Women's Travelers Return and Hold Family Parties By SIGNE KARLSTROM Mrs. M. M. Burgess returned home last week after spending two months at Ocean House in Delray Beach, Fla. Her daughter and son-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. T. S. Torgerson, with’sons Tommy and Richard, spent part of the month of April there also. Dr. and Mrs. Luther R. Leader have also returned from their winter home at Delray. Yesterday, there was a family reunion at the Leader home with daughter and son-in-law, the Bruce Wilsons and Mrs. Leader’s sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Appleford and their young people. In New York, Mrs. Richardson was accompanied by daughter Donna and Diane and Richard Smith. Donna and her former classmate, Kathy Poole, who'is now at Finch College, had a happy reunion at the famous German restaurant Lu-chow’s. Mrs. Jeffrey Peters is particularly happy these days as her husband has been transferred to her home city, St. Louis, Mo. They will be leaving on April 27. International treasurer, Mrs. Dean Monson of Omaha, Neb. (left) looks pleased toith her trip to Michigan and plans to tour a bit of our state on the way home. With her is Mrs. Larry Hartman Of Crosby Lake Road, Springfield Toumship. . Calendar TODAY Pontiac League of Women Voters, 8 p.m., All Saints Episcopal Church. Mrs. Charles Robbins and Mrs. Arthur Pagel on “Water Resources.” Soroptimist Club of Pontiac, 6:30 p.m., The Elks Temple. Mrs. David Saks, president of Pontiac Federation of Women’s Clubs, will speak at the dinner meeting. TUESDAY Waterford Organization for Retarded Children, 8 p.m.„ John D. Pierce Junior High School. The John K. Stevensons who also have an apartment at Ocean Beach have1 returned to their North Glengarry Road home. DINNER PARTY Mrs. John D. Richardson Jr. arrived home from New York just in time for a dinner party in their home entertaining the “Glengarry group” which included the Charles Bauverics, the W. D. MacDonnells, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Paulus, Mr. and Mrs. William M. Packer, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Rakas, the Jack Rineharts, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Walsh, the Henry Forsters and Mesdames: Roy Fruehauf and William Scripps. Epsilon Sigma Alpha Holds State Convention Beta Mu chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha Sorority was the host unit with Beta Chi and Alpha Alpha chapters as cohosts at the state convention which took place this past week-end in the Kingsley Inn. State offices went to Mrs. James Stone, second vice president, Mrs. Hartman, parliamentarian; and Mrs. Jerry Strang, auditor. Mrs. William Kay was appointed senior home board representative and Mrs. David Witt, publicity chairman. Mrs. Lawrence Hartman was chairman of the event that started Friday evening with a mixer and included a tour of Pontiac Motor Division facilities. From Left are Mrs. Calvin Warner of Sunny Beach Boulevard, White Lake Toumship; Mrs. Carl Rose of Silver Circle and Mrs. Wayne Francisco of Crestmore Street, West Bloomfield Toumship. “Wonder if one of us will be a winner,” say these three Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority members. The scene is the dnniial state convention of the group which took place over the weekend in the Kingley Inn. Awards went to Pontiac chapters, Beta Mu and Beta Chi. Congressman Billie S. Far-num gave the welcome address at tiie Saturday luncheon. And members saw a mock fashion show with Mrs. Everett Harris and Mrs. LaVon Ryden taking part. ★ * * The Pontiac Central Junior Girls Ensemble, directed by Mrs. Judith Wade, provided the musical entertainment at the Saturday evening banquet. Readers Disagree on Answers Are Cherubs Neuter Sex? By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Regardless of how an artist may portray cherubs, they are neither male nor female. S e exists only cherubs embracing little girl cherubs unless, that is, someone has defaced the canvas. “OBSERVING” DEAR ABBY: Some years ago while working in a small Presbyterian church, I directed a Christmas pageant. My girl-, friend was performing .the same task for the Baptist church. She had given the role of the angel Gabriel to a man. I gave that part to a woman. Afterward we debated about who was right. I asked opr minister and he replied, “Angels have no sex.” Sinoe cherubs are angels, that should answer your question. M.D.G. DEAR ABBY: You are not likely to find any girl cherubs (or cherubim) since the Hebrew word “cherub” is a noun of masculine gender. According to the Hebrew grammar, a girl ’cherub would not be a cherub at ail, but a "cherubah.” And the plural of “cherubah” is “cheruboth” — not “cberia bim,”—which is the plural oil “cherub.” RABBI LEONARD M. KAPLAN MASON CITY, IA. DEAR ABBY: The art teacher who said all cherubs were male was absolutely correct. A cherub, which is a class of angel, is of the male gender in both the Old and New Testament. All angels are “bes” «— NEVER “shes.” Check your Bible. THEOLOGIAN “Die director of the Oakland County Children’s Village, James Van Leuven, spoke before the group at a brunch Sunday. STATE PROJECT The “Village” has been chosen as the state philanthropic project for the year. Mrs, Hartman and Mrs. Ralph Allen presented the music at this gathering. earth due tol God's com-] mandmentl to “miLltlplyl and fill the! -.>***] sis 1:21). How- JM ever, the angels^H (or cherubs) were created by ABBY God thru Michael the Archangel. Members receiving service pins were Mrs. Allen, Mrs. James George, Mrs. Edgar Plympton, Mrs. William Leigh, Mrs. Fred Mueller, Mrs. Hartman, Mrs. Albert Anselmi, Mrs. Elmer Johnson and Betty Lou. DeGroot. A MINISTER’S WIFE Association for Childhood Education. From the left are Becky Athey, Third Avenue; Jeff Lewis, East Madison Street; and Tracy Pruett, East Mansfield Street. These three Pontiac children are entering some of their creations in. the current art show at The Pontiac Mall. The week-long exhibit in the community room is sponsored by the Noted Ceramist Leaves Long-Time Art Post DEAR ABBY: You ask, “Are there little girl cherubs, or are cherub* only boys?” I am pleased to solve Oils mystery for you. In the National Museum in Stockholm, there hangs a famous masterpiece titM “Sacrifice TO Venus,” painted by Rubens in 1628. It dearly shows little boy Others honored with pins were Mrs. Lacey Schiefler, Mrs. Louis Scarlotti, Mrs. Louis Schaar, Mrs. Peter Neill and Mrs. Forest Fisher. 1938, has announced her resign nation, effective June 30. Miss Grotell was born in Helsingfors, Finland where she was graduated from the Central School of Industrial Art "Atene- Maija Grotell, head of the ceramics department at Cran-brook Academy of Art since According to a spokesman from Cranbrook Institutions, “While warranting it, Miss Grotell has always shunned pub-lidty and interviews. Her policy almost always has been rather to encourage the press to, talk to her best current student.” Among Miss Grotell’s awards are the Founders Medal from The Cranbrook Foundation, the Diploma De Coloborador from the International Exposition in Barcelona and Silver Medal from the Paris International Exposition. She was presented the Award of Merit of the First Class In the Art of Ceramics by the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters from 1949 through 1951 and in 1956. * * * Her works have been acquired for the permanent col-lections of numerous Aft centers, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Detroit Institute of Arts, the Springfield (Mo.) Art Museum, Detroit’s Children's Museum, the Smithsonian Institution and Cranbrook Academy of- Art Galleries. ,\ ACROSS From The MALL 2525 ELIZABETH LAKE HD. FROHT POOR PARKING FE 4-5216 Oped Mon., Th(ni., FrL 9 to 9 Tum., W*d., Set. 9 to 6 l Biooy MAIJA GROTELL — rx«” LINOLEUM $4 qq 1 Citarttto t RUGS...-3e.8 an. Alcohol B—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 23, 1066 ALL PERMANENTS $^95 NONE HIGHER 1 —New Lustre Shampoo 2— Flattering Haircut 3— Lanolin Neutralizing - 4— Smart Style Setting HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY Open Mornings at 8 A.M. 78 N. Saginaw Over Bazley Mkt. 333-9680 Couple Has Reception in Church The newlywed Mr. and Mrs. George H. Williams (Diana Lee Frizzle) left for a northern honeymoon after Saturday vows and reception in the Faith Baptist Church. MRS. G. H. WILLIAMS Rev. Robert Hasten performed the ceremony for the couple whose parents are the Leo J. Frizzles of Sunshine Terrace and Mr. and Mrs. Jay Williams of Croswell Street. if-i 719 W. Huron FE 4-1536 Dad's Big Help to Young Coed LAWRENCE, Kan. (It - The letter sent to parents of University qf Kansas students asking support of the Greater University fund was submitted by Cynthia Hardin, a sophomore at K.U. She admitted that her dad /helped" with the letter as he knew a lot about university needs. He should. He is Clifford Hardin, chancellor of the University of Nebraska. TRADING BOATS IS EASY WITH A PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. JUST PHONE 332-8181. look Lovely lor Spring Witt i New COIFFURE For hair that’s annahino bright, coma in and tea na now. Our expert operators are ready to atyle, cut, set, color or condition your hair for active tunny weather Uviny. Coiffure Par Anne 4666 W. Walton BML, Drayton Special Honrs by Appointment 673-0712 Hlusion tiers fashioned the bride’s veil complementing her gown and train of white satin bordered with Chantilly lace. Her bouquet was comprised of miniature white roses, lilies of the valley, ivy and Stepha-notis. Joyce Kuenser, was maid of honor. Joy and Wanda Frizzle, attended their sister as bridesmaids along with Janet McMorris. Rhonda McCarther and Jeffrey A. Shelski were flower-girl and ring-bearer. On the esquire side, were best man Ronald Hinman, and ushers Rufus Gage, Gary Shrieves and Raymond Williams. Four Cakes Mark Dates Birthday cakes for the four seasons of the year will be featured when Golden Agers of the Pontiac YWCA celebrate all members’ birthdays Tuesday. Mrs. Robert Hines, instructor for the Y’s cake decorating course, will be in charge of. the desserts. Costumed members will bring sandwiches. SINGER CLEARANCE! Touch &Sew sewing machines Dessert and tea will be served by committee members Mrs. Joseph L. Bennett, Mrs. Everett Russell and Mrs. Arthur Sweet, chairman.' The affair begins at noon. Hospital Guild Ha? Luncheon Session A salad luncheon was featured when Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital Guild members met recently at the Niagara Avenue home of Mrs. D. E. Fraser. The vital function of an "Iso-lette” for premature infants, recently purchased by the guild for the hospital’s nursery was demonstrated. mrs. j. a. McKenzie McKenzies Take Trip to Hawaii Flying to Hawaii after their wedding reception, Saturday, in the Kingsley Inn were Jer-rold Albert McKenzie of Detroit and his bride, the former Barbara Lillian Vahlbusch. . The couple exchanged vows and rings before Dr. Harold C.J DeWindt in an afternoon candlelight rite at (he Kirk in the Hills Presbyterian. Their parents are Mr.-and Mrs. Walter C. Vahlbusch df Pine Lake Drive and the James A. McKenzies of Burt Lake. LACE TRAIN s A Watteau train of Chantilly lacb highlighted the bride’s Empire gown of white silk crepe with bodice of matching lace. Completing her ensemble were a short illusion veil with pearl tiara, and a bouquet of white Phalaenopsis orchids and Stephanotis. Priscilla Brabow of R o y a 1 Oak was honor maid with Mrs. Charles C. Vahlbusch of Flint, as bridesmaid. With Ronald McGrew of Indian River, best man, were, ushers Charles C. Vahlbusch, Thomas Webster, David Likins of Fraser and Charles Croteau, Birmingham. The bride is a former Ferris State College student. Her husband attends Wayne State University. They will reside in Detroit. The next meeting will be May 17 at 8 p.m. in the hospital doctors’ dining room. Interested persons may attend. • IB. WASHERS 20 c 12 IB. WASHERS 25< 20 IB. WASHERS 35< ECON-O-WASH msSl&VtSMfSSVL*., Gardener Needs Pocket$ in Apron Sew a straight piece of cloth into an apron, placing two rows of pockets all the way across, Just like shoe bags. Make them out of some sort of strong cloth like denim. If you are a gardner, the pockets will be large enough lor you to carry bulbs, packages of seed and so forth around as you plant. jot Old ? C/OSCPH/NE loWMAM T* spring' Tbs old-fashioned tonics such as sulphur and molasses and sasralras tea have been replaced by newer apd more 'scientific ideas. Modern woman’s spring makeover consists of losing any extra pounds she may have accumulated during, the winter months of less activity and more festivity. She diets and exercises and drinks more fruit and vegetable Juices to cleanse her system. There is no doubt that we are more self-conscious about overweight in warmer weather because the clothes we wear then are more revealing than winter garments. This .is the seventh day of my 9-Day Reducing Diet. I am sure that all of you who have been following the diet are now feeling pretty proud of yourselves. Your belts are much easier and any bulges or roils are gradually disappearing. Don’t weaken at the last minute. send 10 cents and a stamped, self-addresaed - envelope with your request for.it to Josephine Lowman, in care of The Pontiac Press. Tomorrow: “Wise Weight Watcher Hits Fifit Few Pounds Swiftly." rWENWEl CLEAN YOUR CARPCt CARPET CLEANING r get close to parents, try to assess their thinking and be influenced by it.” British Red Paper Now 'Morning Star' LONDON (AP) - The Daily Worker, organ of the British Cofnmunist party, came out today with a' new format and a new title — Morning Star. The changes are part of a campaign to increase party membership, now 33,275 in a nation of 50 million. Tbe revamfred paper wifi have six pages daily instead of disappear or even diminish,” he said. He noted that the conversion of dollar holdings into gold was provided for by the Bretton Woods agreements and said tbe United States had always done this in the same circumstances. France notified its NATO allies last month that U.8. and Canadian forces on its soil must leave within a year and that NATO headquarters to France must withdraw by the same time. The United Statos wants to extend tbe time Uifiit for at least another year. ‘ AT DEMOCRATS’ PARTY - Guests of honor at a $50-a-couple fund-raising party Saturday night were Rep. Billie S. Farnum (left), D-19th District, and R. Sargent Shriver, director of the U.S. Office of Economic Opportunity. More than 250 paeons attended the event at the Pine Knob Inn in Independence Township to raise funds for Farnum and to meet Shriver, who earlier had addressed Oakland Uhhmtiy ,N,tERIOR FLAt ** • washable•wM** THE PONTIAC PRESS,-MONDAY, APRIL 25, 1066 B-3, Resh-Eating Chemical Leads to Quiet Heroism ByTOMTIEDE DA NANO, Viet H (NBA) r Bin Coetello and the rest of Foxtrot Company were moving across a rice paddy when (he Viet Cong opened sprawled in front of him . . . then dramatically let it fall to the ground. “The medic can't help,” he sail Every man lunged instantly for cover. "Why not?” Costello asked. ‘Because he’s dead." Every man but one. He stood up and screeched with pain. His legs were on At diat Costello reached for Is canteen and poured the contents in the sand. Hie Marine had been hit in the side with a sniper shot which, at the instant of penetration, dislodged and discharged a grenade hooked onto die man’s pistol belt. Hie grenade was filled with white phosphorus, a waxen substance which, when ignited, burns with a ferocity that is nearly impossible to extinguish. Small particles lodged in flesh cap eat huge holes through thick legs. Water doesut help. Nothing does. “Oh, no, I'm burning!” the man screamed. WATER, DIRT He kneaded water and dirt together and began to slap die wet results on the twitching legs of his sdll-smoking companion. Then other members of the company began throwing their canteens into the activity. With the additions, the corporal mixed a large bog of mud and continued to pack and repack his patient. * * He turned around a couple of times and then began running down the hill toward the company mass. GNAWS LIMBS When ho moved, the phosphorus drained down his legs and began to hiss and spurt and pop as the chemical n action gnawed at his limbs. "Somebody shoot me!” he yelled uncontrollably. “Help him quick,” shouted. It was wretched work. With each handful of ooze, the casualty would twist in torture, and the movement would knock the compress off, split open more skin, or irritate the bullet wound which bled and festered in the dirt LOB GRENADES Meanwhile, the war closed in. Hie enemy had moved close enough to lob grenades. One fragment ripped a hole in Costello’s shirt. . . hundreds of others whistled overhead. And each time an explosion trembled the ground, so did it also shake tee two young Marines laying there- They remained thus exposed for nearly four hours. “Please shoot me, shoot "Somebody put it out.” “Oh, God, look at him." GRABS BUDDY At that moment, Costello, 19, a lance corporal from La Puente, Calif., grabbed Ids buddy and knocked him to the FtanticaUy, he began to beat at tbs sum's legs, tear off bis dotting, and rod him around in the simd. Hie violent action succeeds ! ed in chipping most of the phosphorus out of the victim’s flesh which, by now, was blackened and smoldering with deeply etched burns. Then, Just before dark, other help arrived. Hie burn victim, nearly incoherent but very much alive, was placed on a litter and evacuated. Costello, bone weary by now, struggled to his feet and, for a moment, watched the war blaze and flame and flash around him. Then he shuffled off toward the battle. "He's still hot,” OosteBo shouted. ‘Tan you put it out?” "I don't know.” "Where’s the corpsman?” MEDIC HIT Costello glanced about for the medic. But a 'short distance. away a sergeant lifted up tiie limp arm of a man TOOTHACHE "‘ora-jel Gunuioghams^c, Time to consolidate bills! prompt service Oneioun.. .one plnce to pay. A consolidation loom can mwiplify your money problems by putting •II your installment debts into one convenient package...with one monthly payment A trained counselor will be happy to review your needs with no obligation. Contact jjAsaodatsa today. A Financing Plan For fwy N—d ASSOCIATES CONSUMER FINANCE CO. j H m PONTIAC ••4 Oakland Avanua.........FI 2-0214 S«9 HarHi Telegraph Road... .6*2-2000 Famine MaB Shopping Contor Wt DRAYTON PLAINS 4476 Dixie Mfltwey.,... .OR ***** M ONTGOMERY WARD 1 DECORATIVE LATEX SALE ENDS WED., APRIL 27th, 9 P.M. Just MV 9 It!” Ref. 3.99 Now, decorate your whole house without straining your, budget! Decorative latex is easy to apply with a brush or roller— dries to a smooth, washable finish in just 30 minutes! Leaves no annoying "pointy" odor—lets you use rooms the day they're painted! EaSy to clean-up with soap and water. Inwhite and colors. DECORATE NbWAT BIG SAVINGS TO YOUI REG. 7.49 ACRYLIC LATEX HOUSE e99 PAINT 3 GUARANTEED 1 COAT, 8 YR. DURABILITY Apply with Dries in fust Clean with Use r brush or roller 30 minutes soap and water day \ \ the 1.39 Ne-Perpese thinner-OOc off! High solvency—thins gjl base paints, enamel or varnish. Use it to dean tools and hands. Best quality. Antique it yourself whh a Wards kit! It's easy and fun! Just apply base coat, glaze, wipe artd the job is done. Includes base coat, glaze and instruction booklet. LADDIR Ladder and FREE stabilizer FANTASTIC! SO STRONG ITS TWIST-PROOF! 19? Pivoting safety feet—-another Wards safety footer#! with stabilizer Hydro-locked rung joints make this the twistproof ladder at any heightl Safer, spring-load design assures sure locking action on both sides... ail the way up! .Interlocking extensions fit tightly into wide side rails assuring safety. Made of rugged, lightweight aluminum for easy handling and storage. 20' size...................24.99 24'size . ................ 29.99 28' size...................34.99 STABILIZER VALUE . . .5.89 OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. Pontiac Mall TELEGRAPH ROAD CORNER ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD TELEPHONE 682-4940 f B-« THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 28, 1PM Today's Collegians Deeply Committed By WHITNEYM. YOUNG Jr. .[difficult work in voter registra-Executive Director, tion projects in Alabama, tike National Urban League {part in the retraining programs r1 w:FAMIUARTOUs Mm m3 So «. M»ta nd com.; *n mitment of the young are STdSnrighU fanftohUs ^ause 01X cause than to ™k- havf done- fven tt any other issue. stm P^68 *** The survey 1%ere is a great gulf be* was conducted tween the generations. Often, by the Educa* after giving a talk to business tional Testing! groups, some businessmen will Service, which; come up to talk to me about queried -college their children. deans in 850 colleges' and uni-j ^ ^ disturbed 8nd ' ■ vprcitipc An ctnnpnt oMivism * ... YOUNG jcerned that they cannot seeml versifies on student activism. Thirty-eight per c»nt of tiie:^ communicate with these kids,, deans sald timt locaichrU rights]^ ^ have apart! iswn had led to campus dem- the youngsters just don’t onsfrations at their schools tat ^ ^ ^ ^re to thelargercoUegM-those with uttle communication any 1,000 or more students — 56 perjg^ cent hidwcfc demonsb-ations. j They are disturbed by this be-, 2 siptificant that no other icauge ^ feel m ^ years issue caused as much concern * ^ have been spent to accumulate that wealth which will among students. This is nothing new to those of us in the civil rights movement. We have known all along that the goldfish - eaters' of past generations and the “silent generation" of the 1950s have given way to a new kind of youth — deeply concerned With the great moral questions of the day and deeply committed tc right past wrongs. Hie response to the Peace Corps, to Vista, to all the other projects demanding sacrifice and discipline, is indicative of this. For most of America, the first awareness of the civil rights! The movement came in the early — ’60s when young college students began sit-ins at segregated lunch counters and took part in “freedom rides” into the South. give their children more luxurious lives. ROLL UP SLEEVES Yet their children turn their backs on it and prefer to roll up their sleeves and take part in the hard, difficult social problems facing the nation. The glory of this is tint the young have adopted the right values and are living by them. Their lives, because of this, are truly moral and diverse, and interesting; after aH they are helping to change the Today, it is these concerned young people who do the hard, eye. _____in all this is, that tiie pain of separation between the generations is so senseless. If parents acted the way they spoke, this gap would not exist. If they weren’t so conformist, they would regain the respect of their children and could once again lode themselves in the SALE ENDS WEDNESDAY APRIL 27-9 P.M. Ovr most powerful Riverside batteries 34-MONTH HEAVY DUTY 18s* ■ w/trade, 1 Riverside bulk ell sale—save today! Fill up with Riverside Heavy Duty in your own container today and save! Meets API class, MS, DG, DM. SAE 10W, 20-20W, 30, 40. W' I QUART 28c If You Don't Buy From 0s, We Both Lose Money TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! AUTO AIR CONDITIONING... NOW, WHISPER-QUIET FOR COOL, FRESH SUMMER DRIVING Now, more than ever, people know the value of auto air conditioning. Driving is a pleasure if you arrive cool and fresh, ready for a fun-filled summer holiday. No more sticky, pollen-filled air for you—just cool air geintly circulating as you drive. The attractive main unit takes up little footspace. PS • • • your generator will hardly know you have one! $20999 PLUS INST. NO MONIY DOWN Wards Rivferside Utility Cover w/trede, 12-volt, 24S OUTRIGHT 24.88 Wards Heavy Duly gives you 10% more starting power than most new-car batteries. 50-MONTH SUPREME POWER, Wards finest ...gives you up to 50% faster starts. 12-volt, 24S. Outright32.99 With trade.. 24.98 OR UH AS A 259’’ 0 Lightweight —won't reduce pay-load, easy to Install O Totally weather-proof construction Week-day,worker, week-end camperl Big loads slide easily through wide-access doors. Four windows furnish plenty of visibility and ventilation. Custom-made to fit all pick-ups, '50-'65. Save ea ref. 3.49 £6* 10,000 psi wffli bufr or cartridge grease. ALP. lithium Grease-box of 10, 14ft*az. cartridges only. 2.44 RIVERSIDE SHOCKS ONLY SHOCKS WITH THUI S IMPORTANT FIATUHU 1. Exclusive O-rhg Mcrf knaps constant working pressure under all road conditions. • 44% greater working capacity from IMt piston... more sta-bitty I 9. 25% greater oil reserve from operation. 4. Nylon piston ring provides •von control at all temperatures. 5. Aluminum cooling ribs reduce heat build-up that shortens life. Tests proved Supreme actually reduces tire wear up to 17%! And a larger piston—producing 44% greater working capacity—provides more stability... reduces dangerous highway bounce and sway I You’ll feel the difference when Rivenlde Supreme helps you control your carl OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. Pontiac Mall TELEGRAPH ROAD CORNER ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD TELEPHONE 682-4940 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, APRIL 96, 1960 Get extra power, extra performance with Wards all-new EP-271 It has a tough, full 4-ply nylon cord body to resist impacts, moisture damage and protect against blowouts. R/V-SYN tread gives extra mileage. Safety-tested atl 40 mph by champion Mario Andretti. Guaranteed 27 months againsttreadweprout,road hazards. fr Riverside LJU^W' , SIEP UP TO ONE OF OUR FINEST TIRES FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORS! ibis tire was built for top performance at modem turnpike speeds! More R/V-SYN tread gives longer mileage and life.. • rugged, fell 4-ply nylon cord redlis high-speed impact damage. Tested by Pamelli Jones at blistering speeds of over 140 mph! Guaranteed 30 months against tread wearout, road hazards. 775/8.70-15 us/*jrar Sale Ends Saturday, April 30, 9 PM. Riverside X-L-T CHOOSE WHITEWALL, BLACKWALL AA ONTQOMERY WARD 1 WHEN YOU BUY YOUR TIRES ON CREDIT AT WARDS PHONE 682-4940 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. 6J0-13 . 2130* P* 7 J0-13 U5/U0-M SUP ST 7J5-15 MO/UO-15 NJB* ft* 7-18/7JS-H Z7J5* $»• 1 *r\m IxdmTax. | WMww*ttMuuHrSm NO TRADE-IN PMGI 1ST THE 2ND HRS 1 ONLY NO TRADS-M 1 PRKB 1ST IMS 2ND TIRE ONLY 650*13 2170* $•* 1 I 175/100*14 1 1 8.15/7.10-15 | | 29.95* $4* 775/TJS0-T4 775/470.15 2773* 1 875/8^0-14 1 | 345/770*15 1 1 3275* 1 $#* 1 B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. APRIL 85, I«M 1965 Income Per Capita Is a State High WASHINGTON (AP) - Michigan’s per capita income rose to a reconi $3,009 in 1965, the Commerce Department reports ★ * * The state’s nine per cent boost in per capita Income from |S,764 in 1964 outstripped the six per cent rise reported for the nation as a whole. ★ * Per capita income is figured by dividing total income by the population. Hie government figured Michigan's per capita income at 110 per cent of the national average of $1,724. BOEDER STATES Michigan’s bordering states Ohio, Indiana and Wisconsin also reported record per capita incomes, although not as high as Michigan’s. Ohio rose seven per cent from $2,641 in 1964 to $2,816 last year, or 103 per cent of the national average. • ★ ★ ★ Indiana went up nine per cent from $2,588 to $2,827, or 104 per cent. Wisconsin rose seven per cent from $2,507 to $2,682, or 96 per cent Cavanagh Hit. for Viet Stand Oklahoma Plane Crash Probe "SUPER-RIGHT SHOP A&P N Tho Store that Ccwts... abort you! Continues; Death Toll Is at 82 BEEF ARDMORE, Okla. (AP) — the airport’s east-west runway rivMtiffatnra continued to comb and was bankina into a left turn ml Am 1 a muddy hillside area today for clues to a plane crash that claimed 82 lives. An American Flyers charter plane carrying 98 persons plunged to earth here Friday night, killing the 6 civilian crewmen and 74 of the 92 young Army recruits on board. Two other soldiers died later in hospitals. ★ ★ * Investigators hope the 16 remaining survivors vyill provide information on the crash if the plane, piloted by a man who had logged 5,000 hours in the air. The plane, investigators said, had failed to make a landing on for another landing when it struck the ground, bursting into Driving rain forced an early halt Saturday to the search of the wreckage spread over a quarter-mile of hillside four miles from the end of the runway. * ★ ★ ★ It was the first crash of an American Flyers airplane since the company was founded in 1939. In three states, New Jersey, North Dakota, and South Dakota, suicide attempts are punishable by law. ALL HERBS NO FINEST SPRING TONIC AVAILABLE ANYWHERE Hr Mm 50th Spring**, O-JIb-Wo Bitten b the best teele yea cob buyl O-Jib-Wo eeetelea ae henefat dopes oad drags os It b and# from aetares ewe barbs. It has prevea effective la brief lag better health to safforers all ever the ceaatry, eftaa where ether treat-meats aad medicines have felled. Moay of ear customers have Mid, "Theak bed for O-Jib-We Bitters." ^XVV INSIST ON THI GENUINE. V?T\ FEATURED AT ALL DRUG STORES TRy 0 JIB WA BITTERS FREE Area-Wide DELIVERY SERVICE MIDLAND (AP) - Deane, Baker, a candidate for Repub-, lican nomination to the U.S. Senate, said Sunday “an incredible viewpoint was voiced by Detroit’s Mayor Jerome Cavanagh in a recent statement on Viet Nam.” ★ * * Baker said Cavanagh “seems to recommend that the United States abandon Southeast Asia, asks neutralization of VIat Nam, recognition of Communist China and its admission into the United Nations and seating on the Security Council.” ★ * ★ Cavanagh seeks the Democratic nomination to the Senate. The mayor was in Rome Sunday to press DdtroiVs bid for the 1972 Olympics and unavailable for comment. “It is unbelievable to me that a serious candidate for the U.S. Senate would propose a policy to* the United States of retreat and abandonment,” Baker, t a Grand Rapiils businessman, told the Republican Breakfast Club. RAMIFICATIONS Baker said, ramifications of such policies would , include abandonment of attempts to prevent a takeover of Asian countries by the Communist Chinese, retreat to an isolationist position for Angelica in an age when isolationism is impos-. stole, and could mean eventual destruction of the United Na- PHARMACY, INC. _ 889 WOODWARD-Medical Building _ i •SStST FE 2-8383 FE 4-9915 8 MJi—BNRlr Springtime Specials Now! We Sell More Fords in Oakland County Because We fin Lowest in Pries! see Jack Loop HAROLD TURNER C Oakland County’s Largest Ford Doalor There Must Be a Reason ! 464 $. 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SIZE 39 ■ 1 " ----: \ Hot Noose Tomatoes 39: the Season .Rad, Ripe A UAL VALUit Bananas 2* 29* THE PONTIAC I'KKhS, MONDAY, APRIL 25, 1966 B—9 a 'Prison' in Georgia a Lesson to Airmen HINESVILLE, Ga. (AP) -An officer stood in a prison compound and surveyed the thatched huts about him. Ha was a veteran of Viet Nam. To Mm, this was very real. It was meant to be realistic. IMs is the Combat and Survival School of the Air Force 4th Mo-bile * Communications Group. The Air Force believes that if an airman is captured to timeof war, he ought to know how to escape. And if he eacapes, he should have every chance of surviving the rigors Of the jungles of Viet Nam. a prisoner who wants to escape. If he doesn't take advantage of it,4he gets a mark against Mm. Another instructor acting as a sentinel will lower his guard deliberately, giving a prisoner the opportunity to overpower him and escape. If the prisoner doesn't seize the opportunity, he gets a mark against Mm. The course lasts 10 days. More than 600 men have passed through, the camp sinca March MANDATORY The training is mandatory for members of the communications group, because they may be called on to establish communication units for ground forces in Viet Nam. There was a day when the Amy and the Marines provided protection to Air Force communications mbn. But under new Air Force concepts, this now is up to the communications men. " *' ★ ★ Sr For the first four days, when the airmen attend classes at Hunter, they learn about weapons and study theory of survival. They study mips, learn to use the compass, and study the theory of guerrilla warfare. val begin in the classrooms at Hunter Air Force Base at Savannah and shift to classrooms at Ft. Stewart. But the real testa come in the prison compound and the surrounding swamps and piney woods of coastal Georgia. PRISON GUARDS The classroom instructors become prison guards. The students become prisoners of war. Frequently, an instructor purposely will make a miscount of prisoners assigned to a work detail. This is a key situation for NOSE COUNTMJnder the cyd of an Air Forcs| Instructor acting as h prison guard, trainees from the Air Force 4th Mobile Communications Group line up for a head count at tha mock prison compound in Fort Stew- art, Ga. Prisoners must keep alert for any opportunity to escape and then uae survival training to swamps surrounding the compound. ’• TOD SATE *38.50 15 MONTHS TO PAY Pontiac Stato Bank PAYS YOU ANNUM. INTEREST Here’s your year-round wardrobe-ready for everything—business, social and leisure activity. Enjoy "mixing ’em and matching ’em”-discover for yourself the many possibilities and great variety-out- e We will pay Five Percent Annual Interett on our new Time Saving* Certificate* in amounti of $1,000 or more On deposit tor twelve months or more. Interest will be paid semi-annually if yew deeire. # The new Time Savings Certificates ore available to individuals and non-profit corporations. •'Five Percent Interest will automatically apply to our existing One-Year Savings Certificate*. No exchange is nee- • Any Tima Savings Certificate may be redeemed prior to its maturity on 30 days written notice but will earn a lower. For, complata details stop in any of our 10 officot. Let Your Savings start oaming tha Big 5% INTEREST tomorrow. Bring in your past book from any othor institution or othor funds. Wo will handlo all tha datails for you in a fow minutos. Pontiac State Bank Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. MAIN OFFICE SAGINAW AT LAWRENCE-OPtN 9 AM. DAILY AUBURN HEIGHTS • BALDWIN AT YALE * DRAYTON PLAINS • MIRACLE MILE • 970 W. LONG LAKE ROAD O M-59 PLAZA • CLARKSTON O OPDYKE-WALTON • EAST HIGHLAND (M-S9 and DUCK LAKE RD.) / fit ftor, outfit. The cnrroct. rnmhinafann far every nccaninn. ANn_ RIGHT NOW, the added excitement of substantial savings., YOU GET ALL THIS- you select from our entire stock of following: ★ Any $65 Spring Worsted "Style Manor" 2-Trouser Suit.. *65.00 ★ Any $65 Tropical "Style Manor" 2-Trouser Suit.*65.00 ★ Any $34.50 “Royal York” Sport Coat. Spring or Tropical.. *34.80 ★ Any $14.00 Proportioned-fit Spring Slacks..... *14.00 ★ Any $14.00 Proportioned-fit Tropical Slacks........ *14.00 ToUU. Regularly *192.8C You pay *184.00 you save All alterations without charge *38.50 BOND'S THE PONTIAC MALL B—10 THE PONTIAC PRKSS. MONDAY, APRIL 15, 1060 Bombed India Train Hunted for Bodies CALCUTTA, Mia (UPI) -Polk* probed the twisted wreckage of a passenger train today In aearch far more victims of die time-bomb explosion that killed St persons and injured 100 otters at a station in the troubled northeastern Indian state of Assam. ★ it h An explosion last Saturday night pitched the whole Diphu Station area into darkness, scattering mutilated bodies about. ★ ★ ★ It was the second case of sabotage of Indian trains since Wednesday. The two bombs, believed planted by rebellious Nags tribesmen, have claimed a total of M lives with more than 200 others injured. Indian to Head Indian HAIR CURLERS? — What appears to be hair curlers on the heads of statues pre insulating poets holding an antistarling wiring system on marble figures on the upper cornices of the District Building in Washington. A? Photon* A small amount of electrical current runs through the wires to keep the birds away. The statues represent (from left) Statesmanship, Painting and Sculpture. WASHINGTON (AP) - Robert LaFollette Bennett is an Indian who firmly believes Indians should be doing more to shape their own destiny. He says hell work toward that goal—and the lessening of government supervision that it would bring—after he takes over this week as head of the federal government’s Bureau of Indian Affairs. it it * When he is sworn in Wednesday as Indian commissioner, he will become the first Indian in Marly a century—and only the second in history—to hold that position. He succeeds Philleo Nash, who resigned. The commissioner-designate, born mi the Oneida Indian reservation in Wisconsin, started this government career on the Uta Indian , reservation in Utah S3 years ago after graduating from an Indian boarding school in Kansas. STEADY CUMB His steady climb up through the bureau was climaxed last month when President Johnson nominated him for the agency’s top Job. Of the nation’s S50-,000 Indians, some 380,000 still live on reservations, many , in squalor arid abject poverty, and Bennett plans to ask the Indians what can be done to improve their tot. * * * He disclosed in an interview tat he will hold a series of meetings with Indians this summer. The sessions probably will be held, he said, in the South- Northwest and northern Plains—where most tions are located. 'We need their contributions...!. expect them to make more of their own decisions,” Bemtett said. "Where we, feel we need legislation to give the tribes more authority, we will go to Congress and ask for that M^dation.0 • What about moving the Indians off the reservations? 'We will have to consider each reservation as a separate problem...If a reservation has large enough resources to sup- port the people I don't think it is*,, necessary that everybody has to move away. I think it could be a matter of choice." 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Weekdays 10 HI 9 p.m 3 Pontiac Locations To Serve You HOME FURNISHINGS INC. • NORTH SIDE DIXIE AND TELEGRAPH • WEST SIDE MIRACLE MILE • EAST SIDE NEXT TO K mart-Closed Sunday MICHIGAN'S LARGEST FURNITURE CHAIN-21 STORES Studies Cited Cancer Causa Fears 'Appear Groundless' WASHINGTON (AP) - Fun that long-term use of the controversial oral .birth control pills put out by levers! firms might causa cancer or other advene side effects appear groundless so far, the original davslopar of the pills said today. Indeed, declared Dr. Gregory Pincui of Worcester, Maas., an evaluation of new and put studies of the use of the oral contraceptives i* being taken by more than five million women In the United Statu alone — indicates: 1. Aside from apparently producing no major advene effects on the reproductive end other endocrine-gland-regulated systems of the female body, the pills have achieved “apparent correction of certain abnormality statu” in the womb, cervix (entrance to the womb) and breasts of some women. 2. There’s justification plore the possibility that longterm use of the pills may have the added beneficial effect of helping protect women from developing atherosclerosis the form of hardening of the arteries under suspicion by many doctors as being a possible contributor to heart attacks. VIEWS OFFERED Dr. Pincus, a cofounder of the Worcester Foundation for Experimental Biology, gave his views in a “progress report” on investigations into long-term use of “Hie P1U,” prepared for the spring meeting of the National Academy of Sciences. Drinking to Be Legal on Stanford U. Campus STANFORD, Calif. (AP) - If they ere 21 or more, Stanford University students will be allowed to drink alcoholic beverages in campus residences starting May 10. President Wallace Sterling,! announcing that policy Sunday, j said that no alcoholic beverages will be sold on the campus, how- i ever. tribute to Gen. Lucius Clay over the put weekend turned into a political assessment of Gefirge lomney for I960. Hie Midwestern Republican Chairmen's Association held its annual two-day muting In Lansing—coinciding with • fundraising 10th birthday dinner for Clay, GOP national “---------- Romney Main Topic at GOP Fund Affair LANSING (AP)-r-A birthday oral Romney speeches have lluit* in n*n I .Axiiia Plev over generated “surnrisins enthusi- Romney and his chances in the 1108 presidential race, however, were chief topics of coo-—at tout outside the ctoaad sessions of Ri_ chairmen from nine mldweetern states. An Informal poll of six chairmen showed that former Vice President Richard Nixon still leads the popularity race among Midwest party members, but that Romney is second and gaining. KANSAS ENTHUSIASM In Kansu, for example, uv- “YOUR HEALTH” “NERVES” generated “surprising enthusiasm,” Mkj State Chairman Oliver Hughes. In Missouri, Romney toads in Kansu City and ~t. Louis, ad a result of several , e r ■ o H a 1 appearances, said Chairman Ethan Campbell. Wisconsin Chairman Ody Fish and Minnesota Chief George Thin were reluctant to talk of 1968—determined to concentrate on this year's races—but made it elder that the two most fre-potential ites ere Nixon end Romney. Nixon leads in Iowa, said Chairman Robert Ray, who also is chairman of the association, but Romney has made an impression. But in North Dakota only party leaders know the Michigan governor, said Chairman Thomas Secreat Chairmen said apparent failure of tiie administration to bring the War in Viet Nam to any sort of conclusion in the foreseeable future and mounting inflation would be election issues. HEARD SPEECHES Some 5,000 party faithful paid $25 to $100 each to attend Clay birthday dinners in eight Michigan cities and hear, via a telephone hootaip, speeches from former President Dwight D. senhower, from his retreat in Indio, Calif., his son, Lt. Col. John Eisenhower in Lansing, Clay and Romney. The Eisenhowers limited their speeches primarily -to state- Poor Plans Blamod in Fatal Air Crash WASHINGTON (AP) - Inadequate flight preparation vu meats of tribute to the retired Army general, his roto in the Beriin airlift and in the party.! Clay, in turn, paid tribute Wk, probawTcauaTof the crash Romney and predicted that hej* - m ^ ^ would win a third term in No-j^ >lndf ^ Harbor, “and take (congress-! j^., u«t Nov. 7 in which the man) Bob Griffin with him,” j pilot was Wiled, the Civil Aero-nautics Board reported today. Tormenting Rectal Itch Stopped In Minutes Sdeuoo Finds New Healing Substance That Promptly Stops Itching and Pain of Piles Griffin is a Republican candidate for U. S. Senate. Romney informally endorsed Griffin-despite the party’s official- neutrality in a primary race between the congressman and Grand Rapids businessman Deane Baker. Hie Republic of Viet Nam is ghapdd on the map somewhat like California, although only half u large. Pilot John C. Kelley, 23, of Winchester, Ind., lost his life and two passengers, Shawn M. Spil-lane of Toledo, Ohio, and Larry L, Wortinger of Goshen, Ind., were injured. ' jj * * ,* The CAB said the pilot failed to get a weather briefing before leaving Benton Harbor on a return flight to South Bend and the plane was caught in a fog. One of the moot common tions is n condition known as “itching piles.” It is mest ember raising far the victim daring the day and especially aggravating at night. No matter what you’ve used without results-here'e good news. For the first time, sciei ability to promptly stop thi burning itch and pain. It acta- to ni , itch iy shrinks hemorrhoids without surgery. Medical science has proved this substance produces a remarkably effective rate of healing. Its germ-killing properties also help prevent infection. In one hemerrhoid cess after another “very striking improve- ment” was reported and verified by a doctor’s observations. This improvement was maintained in cases where a doctor's observation* wore continued over a period of mouths! Among these sufferers were a wide variety of hemorrhoid conditions, some of 10 to 20 ysers’ duration. The secret is this new healing substane* (Bio-Dyne*) — discovery ef n world-famous research institution. This substance is now obtainable in oimt-ment or mppoiitory form known as Preparation fi*. Ask for Preparation H Suppositories (convenient to carry if nwev' HOME FURNISHINGS LET WORLB WIRE SOLVE Y0BR MOWING MINS iiebcgpgwERm \rKtEmmm USE TSUI CREDIT rswEi Dr. 1.1. Alexuier Chiropractic Physician 1028 JoslynAve. FE 2-0111 ^ 2-PIECE COLONIAL UVING ROOM SUITE i sets end chattels eehslsteiodln per dates ef • tonhno twoad that will give yean #t wear. Attached pillow backs and lavorsiblo foe** seat cooMen* add extra comfort te the safe and chair. Bath have wine-back Wyi- BRAND NEW WHITE Full tin Hggd 20 Cams EXACTLY AS mtd t B—18 THE PONTI AC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 23, 1W Three R's Still Key facets in Education % LESLIE J. NASON, EDJL A child who fails to ouster any one of the 3 R’s may do . badly in all subjects as a result. It is often just one area1 that needs bolstering. An example of the problems faced I ter, showing interest in his puts on his popern, I have never work bet not pnsUig him. His seen a paper on' any subject interest lessened rather than that he did everything ' cor-Increased. rectly, even if it were only to The real key to this boy's in-00^ something, adequate performance is found ‘GOOD SPELLER’ in the following quote from his «He spells simply terribly on mother’s letter: paper. Aloud he is a good spell- “He makes ^passing grades, er. He knows Us multiplication but it is not because of what he tables perfectly. • "This should be his easiest subject, ’yet . he Just passes li.ifb handwriting is not even legibfe niost of the time." v It should be evident from the above (hat the boy failed to master the middle "R”; that is, handwriting! by pupils and parents in this respect follows: A reader{ reports that DR. NASON her M-yenr- oM has never shown any great interest in learning. His only interests are playing, sports, banting; in short, having fun. His parents were divorced just as he was starting school, which may have had some effect on his getting off to a poor start I. Q. tests show him to be above average in faitelii-gence. At the beginning of the fifth grade, his mother remarried and she reports that home life Is now congenial and happy for all involved, including the boy. LESS INTEREST However, even with a happier home life, he shows still less interest in learning. The school psychologist suggested die mother leave his study habits up to him. 8he did this for one semes- Man Held in Killing of Wife's Sailor PORT HURON (BPI) - Pth lice today were holding Anthony Alger Menkel, 21, for investigh* -tion Of murder in the shooting death early yesterday of Richard Leo DeLnrme, 22, Algonac, at Marine City. Officers said DeLorme had just driven Menkel’s estranged wife, Hanna, 22, to her parent’! home at Marine City when the shooting occurred. TOKYO (API - Government ministers conferred with union leaders today in an llth-hour attempt to avert a nationwide railway, postal and telecommunications strike to last 3% to 24 hours Tuesday. DeLorme was shot in the head as he tot with Mrs. Menkel In a car parked in front of the home. Cooking in steam that Is trapped and held in a covered container or foiled wrapping is called braising. Tree ferhs, which are most common in damp mountainous regions of the topics, may grow to a height of 40 feet. Japanese Seek to Avert Strike df Public Service* Without handwriting skill, it is impossible for him to spell as he writes'or to keep his mind on the arithmetic problem he is attempting to solve on paper — even though he has mastered ,these operations as separate1 skills. ' CONCENTRATE No amount of urging that ha concentrate’ on his work and pay attention to his spelling will be of avail until he learns write. Strike orders went out at noon to nine labor unions of three public corporations and five The unions want pay hikes ranging from $8.33 to (23.80 a month. Management has countered with offers ranging from (5.(3 to (7.22. Rather than dwell upon his emotional upset at the beginning of his school life or upon the school’s failure to insist' that he practice handwriting, he should be given sufficient exercises in writing to remedy the situation once and for all. This boy should be shown how to improve his handwriting, and home and school should coop-, erate in seeing that he works at it diligently. uhhdsl 17-19 $. Saginaw Sfc, Opufl Monday, Thura., Fri.» - A chartered plane left today with eight tons of medicine for South Viet Nam. It was the first installment of a gift of medicine from the West German government. The gift will total $4.37 million in value. The bulk of it will go by sea in mid-May. pP^y|e4>^i^131|Applianc^2 «fi^^fv.’s]a»d^M:Stere«; ■til waaMftsn.taSSM'tfsrfsHMs.wy* ef me* atasMsV Dm.* Im JnI tmfl I 2-SPEED AIR CONDITIONER Pluft Mi houiihold sutfsf *159 |M 1 DR. 14.1 CU. FT. Automatic Rafrigaratar • II, fully ■!>«, with IM*. frsswr • Exctpt Whirlpool frottoft Irond Now Low Moo Iptclol Hr This Mo *198 PORTABLE " DISHWASHER * 2 washes • 4 rinses - * Top loading *124**: Worry ■ Oily ■ fowl1 rrottor’o tow. tow oolo yrtoo PORTABLE IV ew-vw mm m tin. Campon It* • Auto. 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DELUXE 2-BOOR REFRI6ERAT0R FREE DELIVERY, SERVICE AND INSTALLATION *198 FREE DELIVERY, SET-UP AND 90-DAY SERVICE POLICY fev/r/f 1900 HANDCRAFTED COLOR TV 25" RECTANGULAR TUBE Tbo Dovonthira. Now 1966. Now compact (limmor cabinet. Now larger picture area. Now rate earth phosphor* for pMlw picture brightness of tods, blues and groansl Super-gold video guard tuner. UHF/vHF. Handcrafted chassis. Smart, contemporary styled owed cabinet. \ SALE PRICED AT HIGHLAND TO SELL ON SIGHT! ' All prices F.0.1. wsrehouss unltss free delivery is indicated •24”, DAILY 9 to 9 NO MONEY DOWN • 3-YEARS TO PAY I MOTORIZED | 24” B.B.Q. | 24“ od|u«toblu gHI SET ^ J $(99 $599 C—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 25, 1C66 Jacoby on Bridge NORTH M ftQl VAQII ♦ Void ♦ KJ 10 9843 WEST (D) EAST ft 1096IS AAK8742 VXJltll VI Xi* ♦ 983 ftQVS BOOTH ♦ Void V 764 ♦ AKQJ10752 • II Worth-South vulnerable Was* North Boat South Ass 1ft 1ft *♦ «ft Pass Pass S ft Pass Pass 8ft f ft Pass Pass Past Opening lead—V J. By JACOBY ft SON Sherlock Holmes was making one of his rard appearances at the card table. He sat V with Or. Wat- and ruffed a spade to get toi his hand. He played several rounds of trumps before leading a club. Holmes took his ace and led the king of hearts to knock out the ace. The two heart leads had destroyed South's re-entry to dummy and he had to go down one. “Marvelous, marvelous!’ gasped Watson. The second marvelous showW double awe for the master’s genius. I “Elementary, my dear Wat-Ison,” said Holmes. “It was a! simple matter for me to deduce that South wasn’t bidding I six diamonds without some expectation of making it. That meant he would be void of monds I had an entirely different defense worked out. “My plan was to open the ace of dubs and lead a spade to you whereupon you could lead back a club for me to ruff.” Then, your five spades and South’s six-diamond bid caused me to believe that South was void of spades and to deduce that a heart lead was the winning defense against six.’ V*CHRD Sen*** South finessed dummy’s queen “In any event I did not risk much by my heart lead. I felt sure that I could get in with the ace of clubs and would still have time to lead a spade if necessary." “Doesn’t Scotland Yard get any credit for my five-spade bid that pushed them to the' slam?” asked Inspector Le-strade who sat East. I “A great deal of credit,” re-: plied Holmes. “As a matter of j fact, when I passed to five dia- Pass 1 ♦ Pass 2 * Pass Ift Pass 2 A Pass 4ft Pass t You, South, hold: ftKQJ7< VAX *2 ftAQIMS What do you dot A—Bid tour uo-trnmp. You shoald be wfflhw to play six If Williams Asks More Registrars for Dixie Voting Detroit — Former Gov. G. Mennen Wiliams, campaigning far Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate, told a meeting of union workers Sunday he has asked for more federal registrars “in areas where Negroes are systematically denied their right to vote.” Williams told the meeting of Ford Local 000 of the United Auto Workers he asked Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach to supplement the present staff of 40 registrars in an effort to' counter “the consistent efforts by segregationists in the South BEN CABBY aries (Mar. ll-Apr. 19) r You may hsvrto uttttis psrsuwflw gcwtrt get nothing for nothing today, you put forth full effort* .. . . yt lot down. Know this — go full TAURUS (Apr. 10-May IB): fart ol what you havo born* ... to "J Load may appear llghttr, but noi. ... have to decide how to utllla extra energy. Short loumey could bo beneficial. GEMINI (May Iklune 10): Excellent tor starting project. Friends who chatter could prove nerve-wracking. your I____ . toi*. Don't LEO (July BAug. 11)1 Your desire* can bo fulfilled. Y—' — *- —*» DO SOMETHING. Reason Is you car efforts are apprecl VIRGO (Aug. U-Sept. 11): - aontrtouf- —**’*—--* -*“• cling « iry » „ok to . LIBRA (Sept. 13-Oct. 11): It you nag-loot details ... you arc called back to retrace steps. Taka special care wl legal papers enter picture. Consult part taka nothing for granted. Key Is SCORPIO (Oct. U-Nov. 11): Favorable Petition Drive Eyed on Lawmakers' Pay BERKLEY <«PD - Mayor George W. Kuhn said here yesterday he intends to poll members of the Vigilance Tax Committee of Michigan this week to sound out feelings on a petition drive to force a public vote on constitutional amendment to return the power of legislative pay raises to the people. > “It is extremely regretful that some of our lawmakers have placed the greed of money ahead of dedication to public service,” he said. , it it . it He said that if the poll of/the 75 members of the committee shows “solid support” for the idea, a meeting will be held to set up “the machinery to carry out the program.” / ' A hurricane itself/is a huge cone of twirling air/ The center of the cone is calm; it is called the “eye of the si mmmm Leaping Teen Wins His Bet but Dad's Mad / ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) /— Tom Daubney, 15, won his bet Saturday by plunging more than 80 feet from the Ford bridge-into the Mississippi River., The boy’s father, former St Paul Mayor John Daubney, called the jump “an act of sheer stupidity,” adding: “This may look good to his friends, but he’s no hero in (his house.” V * * * Young Daubney won nearly 0150 raised by about a dozen classmates for. the test Tom showed no immediate ill effects from his dhre, but later complained of a headache and spent Aa night hi a hospital. h ■ ' RH ~, - > : f 1 kimmi 1 njbi rUiN 1A AC MUiM UA1, Ail niL, Xb, 1900 t—0 Jailed Briton Fears Switch to Siberia MOSCOW (UP!) — British college teacher Gerald Brooke began his second .year of fan* pdsqnment today fearful of being transferred to a Siberian labor camp on a trip he has said/“amid drive one to suicide.”: ' " 'Z te’ . \ The 27-year-old teacher, sentenced to five years last July for allegedly distributing anti' Soviet propaganda, waa due to leave soon from Jail in Vladimir, about 100 miles northeast of here, for the Mbrdovskaya labor camp, about 900 miles southeast of Moscow. “He is afraid of the two-day train journey with the likelihood of getting mined up with criminals,” his wife Barbara told newsmen after her latest visit to Brooke. She said the recent death of American Newcomb Mott, during a similar jail transfer, “has preyed pretty mOch on his mind.” "He understands such a trip could drive one to suicide,” she said. W W W Mott, a 27-year-old Sheffield, Mass., book salesman, alleged- ly slashed his throat in a fit of despair aboard a prison train taking him to a labor camp east of Modcow Jan. 96. W- w w The United States demanded and received a Soviet investigation Into the circumstances surrounding Mott’s death. But, so far it has neither accepted nor rejected the Soviet suicide claim. Oshkosh, Wls., originally was named Athens but, in 1840, was renamed Oshkosh in honor of a friendly Menominee chief. E. Germans Shoot Man at the Border BERLIN (AP) - East German border guards shot a man early today just as he reached the third and last Communist barbed wire entanglement along the West Berlin border, police reported. The police said the border guards fired 40 to SO shots at the man, who was attempting to flee into the southeastern section of West Berlin. He was either seriously wounded or killed and lay where he fell for 40 minutes before an East German army ambulance took away, police said. Near-Severed Arm Rejoined LOUISVOJLft, Ky. (AP) — An operation that started seven hours after an Owensboro, Ky., boy had his arm almost severed fit an accident is expected to restore full use of the limb.. John Robert Thomas, S, crashed into a glass door at his home late Saturday afternoon. The, blood vessels and most of the nerves and mnscles of the boy’s left arm were cut, the surgeon who performed the operation said yesterday. , After a three-hour operation pt an Owensboro hospital, the boy was brought tbs 118 miles to Louisville in an ambulance with his arm packed in ice. WWW A second operation began at midnight and lasted four hours. The surgeon said John’s arm will be in a cast about a month and that the arm should be normal in a year. KROGER-PRICED MEANS LOWER-PRICED ■PLUSTOPVALUESTAMPS! SERVE N’ SAVE SLICED FRESH TASTY UNITED HOME OUTFITTING GIVES AWAY 69 FROZEN ALL BEEP-CUBED, SHAPED FAMILY STEAKS.........lOi-inw**1 CENTER CUT-RIB PORK FRESH SPARE CHOPS 79 RIBS E7 # w. yf SAUERKRAUT vl SAVE ZU-KROGER BRAND nun COCKTAIL______________________J“SS^I SAVE Uf-AVONDALB SWEET PEAS........................*“&!-*! KROGER-WHOLE KERNEL 1 — SAVE 16f-AVONDALE CUT “------------------ - $| SAVE 32f-7 VARIETIES ...__ KROGER PRfSERVSS 4^*1 size mm............“tf e* SAVE UP TO 174-KROGER FRESH RAISIN OR VIENNA BREAD..............BmM SAVE UP TO UN-BORDEN'S SKINNED, BUTTERNILK OR CHOCOLATE MILK_______________sW U.S.NO.1 R MICHIGAN* potatoes! 2099 I 125 SIZE EXTRA FANCY WASH. STATE RED ■ DELICIOUS APPLES TEA ROSES VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON ■ n i—ii »"• *.fJ D limit | MMffrfM. 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Mich. 13 A NATIONALLY ADVERTISED PORTABLE TELEVISION SET ' WITH ANY COMPLETE LIVING ROOM BEDROOM-DINING ROOM OR HOUSEFUL OF FURNITURE GREATEST FURNITURE DEALS IN FOR THE BEST DEAL IN TOWN) AND THE BEST SERVICE AROUND f OPEN NITES Til 9 P.M. SUN. 12 P.M. Til 6 P.M. j HOME OUTFITTING rayton Plains Shopping Center 5050 DIXIE HWY. UNITED C-~fi THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 23, 1066 Varied Docket for Congress WASHINGTON CAP) '2- Mis-1 Equal Employment Oppor-siles, rural poverty, job rights'tunities Commission created by for minorities, protection fori the 1964 Civil Rights Act. cats and dogs and another The animal bill is designed to round in the battle of the budget protect cats and dogs from give Congress a diversified pro- being stolen for sale to purchas-gram this week. ers who in turn sell them for # v * * research purposes. It would The House floor action startslmake it a federal offense to Tuesday with consideration of a transport or handle the animals 969-billion appropriation bill fori in interstate commerce, the Department of Agriculture | * ★ ★ for the 1967 fiscal year. What The Senate concentrates little controversy is expected will center on the addition of about 9128 million in funds President Johnson didn’t request. ★ * * Most of the extra money would be used to keep the school lunch program and the special milk program for children operating at 1966 levels despite the President’s proposal to trim them down. The appropriations committee______balked over- whejxpingly To 11 owing the -'PFeirident’s recommendations. On Wednesday and Thursday, the House will consider the job day on a bill aimed at fighting rural poverty. The measure would make federal funds available for development planning in farm and rural areas. Thursday the Senate b< debate on a 917-billion military procurement bill. Included in the total Is 9167 million to push development of an antimissile missile designed to knock enemy missiles out of the sky before they could reach their tar-. MAJOR BILLS Major bills will hold the atten- — . . . ._____titfn of committees in both rights and animal protection branches measures. The Senate Foreign Relations j Result of Fall Skull Is a Noise Box OUT OF HIGH SCHOOL - Crown Prince Carl Gustav of Sweden dances with schoolmate Ebba Curmaii at a weekend graduation ball at Sigtuna High School in Stockholm. They are wearing the traditional "white cap" given them when they graduated. ENFORCEMENT The former would strengthen enforcement powers of the Detailing Ills of Churchill Defended Committee will continue hear-, ings on foreign aid programs,! with. Secretary of State Dean Rusk scheduled to make another of his almost weekly visits to the Capitol Tuesday. The Senate Post Office and Civil Service Committee continues consideration of a House-passed bill to raise the pay of federal civilian employes. Dixie Railroad Strike Widens LONDON (AP) - Lord Moran said today that he is publishing details of Sir Winston Churchill's illness because they are necessary for an understanding of the statesman’.s last 25 years; In a totter to the Times of London, Moran, Churchill's physician, answered criticism from] I1MrmmnT, v the Lancet, a leading British! JACKSONV^LE medical journal, that publics- aJ . ^ tion of his memoirs violated the!way faced new toborjroubto convention that what passes today as tratoen firemen and between patient and doctor ^conductors struck to protest , lover new pay and work rules. ' The operating unions went out More Unions Join Walkotft in Florida (AP) ™l— The Florida East Coast Rall- “In Sir Winston’s case," his doctor wrote, “this convention must be balanced against other considerations regarding his reputation: that it is not possible to Mow the last 25 years of Sir Winston’s life without a knowledge of his medical background. at 12:01 a.m. Sunday, joining 11 nonoperating unions which have been on strike against the 366-mito Jacksonville-Miami line since Jan. 23, 1963. "nils is a concerted movement of the nonoperating and operating crafts from the top chiefs to the rank and file,’’ said '‘It was exhaustion of mind R*y Moore of Cleveland, repre-and body that accounted for anting the Brothertood of Rail-much that is otherwise inexpli- road Trainmen, cable in the last year of the) “The brotherhood expects, to war, for instance the deteriora-juse every legal weapoh under tion in his relations with Presi-lthe Railway Labor Act, and we dent Roosevelt. j will call on railroad workers all over the country to support ua” 'trains running Ray W. Wyckoff, FEC vice OLD AGE “It is certain that the onset of old age and a succession of strokes explain to part why he was not more effective as a leader of the opposition during toe 1945-51 Labor government and later as first minister of the crown. “While Churchill counted politically these details are part of history," and in justice to him ought not to be left out of his Hie FEC now operates four story.” i freight and one passenger train both ways each weekday but president, said three freight trains operated each way between Jacksonville and Miami Sunday, as usual. “We expect normal operations will continue,” he said, “using regular employes. Quite a number of them didn’t go out.” Stockholm Film to Reunite Von Sydow, Swede Directo By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD - Notes and comment on tiie Hollywood scene: A reunion of Max Von Sydow and Ingmar Bergman will take place Oils summer. T he film: “Day of| the Wolf.”" Von Sydow re-| ported the gagement t ____________ brief trip here THOMAS to dub his lines to “Hawaii” and attend the Academy Awards. ★ * ’* The new film. will be his eighth for the famed Swedish director, their first together since 1962. - * * * ‘It is a most unusual script, and Bergman himself wrote it,” reported Von Sydow. “I can’t describe it, except to say that I play a painter who goes mad.” ★, * W The actor will start the film to Stockholm next month, then report to London for the “The Quiller Memorandum,” to he plays a Nazi. He‘ will then return to finish with Bergman. “Why don’t you go US Viet Nam with me?” Eddie Fisher [friends, but they really aren’t] his friend Alain Delon, that close. The French actor said he would v have gone - “except that ll »ctuf^ know Tory bet-. * . ... Jter,” exclaimed Mss Christie have nothing to do - I.can’tL, ^ ^ here. ae refemd sing, dance or tell jokes.” to Tbny Walton, Miss Andrews’ * ’*> •* ’■ husband. “Julie was kind But Delon remarked that be!enough to invite me to her house woukLlike to return to the em-|[0r Christmas when I was here battled land. He spent two years last year, and we became there as a French marine dur- friendly.” ing the bitter period that led to' * * the current war. ~1' Miss C h r i s t i e said she * * * j wouldn’t object to working in Except for the fighting, I'Hollywood, but there’s have many pleasant memories chance for at least two years, of the country and the people,” MIAMI, Fla. (AP)L-Somp-times the noises inside Dorian Figueroa’s head sound like frogs down on the pond, some-: times like a siren, sometimes | like the wind being forced through a crack in a car wto-! dow. * * * “To me,” says the man on whom surgeons have operated three times to* try to still ! the noises, “it Is the sound ' of a dying puppy dog.” Figueroa, 39, fell 20 feet from a ladder May 28, 1964, and fractured Us skull and four vertebrae, broke his ' right collar bone and lost hearing to Ms right ear. Then the. noises started. His wife, Margie, didn't believe him when he told her. ★ ★ * “We had cross words one day,” she said, “and I put my arms around him to make up and I heard for myself. I said, ‘My God, forgive me'.” VARIED NOISES His wife said the noises vary to volume, pace, and intensity. “But the loudest is always at night,” she said. “It sounds like a siren.” A brain surgeon said the noises may originate from an abnormal blood vessel connection. The surgeon said this could possibly be within the skull, possibly from the shoulder injury. * . ♦ W W----------- “There is an answer to -this,” the surgeon said. “We intend to find it. The condition is quite unusual,” he said, “but not unheard of.” * HAS HEADACHES Figueroa, who is going back to the hospital for more tests, said he has headaches and not much sense of balance. “My brain feels on. fire sometimes,” he! said, “i am lucky to be alive.” . “I only wish someone could stop the noise. This is drigjng me insane.” raKEECO A MOSS HUNTER Production LANA TURNER. "Ataifc^A w * Technicolor* BUY, SELL, TRADE---USE IPONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! NOW! EAGLE: “DIE, MONSTER, DIE” “PLANENT of VAMPIRES” TUESDAY LADIES’ DAY TOES.-WED.-TNURS. if *Ss Sidney uke muiBum —mu i THE SPY "FI tea JHu i WHO CAME III 1 I FROM IKE I T ^ar I I COLD IKFifcl RIEUflEDIUDlin he says. The two Oscar-contehding Julies — Christie and Andrews — reported to be the best of She is committed to other projects, including a. film with Richard Lester to be filmed to San Francisco. Two Paintings Stolen KALAMAZOO (UP!) - Kellogg Community College has reported to police that two oil] paintings valued at a total of! 9325 have disappeared from thel college’s art studio. DORIS MY 110D TAYLOR DO NOT DISTURB In linn Rosmbcrg Martin MelcHir Pnlytlinn hnimkm HERMIONEIAD0ELET HURON IJH wed. demi Martin iwSilencers Tuesday Only Special! 3rd and FINAL WEEK! mr POPULAR PRICES ram WINNER OF 8 &ACADEMY AWARDS TONIGHT AT 8:00 PM. ONLYI ianr Lord Moran said historian G. M. Trevelyan had advised him to publish his diaries and he had told Churchill of his intention to do so» His memoirs are being serialized to England and the United States. They are to be published to book form next month. Ex-Head of AMA Dies NORFOLK, Va. (AP) Water B. Martin, 78, former president of the American Medical Association, died Saturday.]“featherbedding. has no Sunday passenger serv-j ice. Wyckoff said under the i wage scale a yard service foreman who had been making 923.20 for eight hours work would make 926.80 compared with th^ national standard of 826.55. , He said, about 100 men, one third of the current'operating force, were involved to the latest strike. • The hew work rules, he added, were designed to eliminate' • STARTING FRIDAY • “LORD of “DAVID and the FLIES” LISA” Wide Track Drive at W. Huron, FE 2-1170 DINING and COCKTAILS 1 MONDAY NIGHT “BRING A FRIEND” SPECIAL! One- Dinner Full. Price—One Half-Price! Special Prices—Cocktails 4 to 6 Daily ' KMMRM IIKMI HUIIR1 MIRACLE MILE ’ SO. TELEGRAPH AT SO. UKI *0. I MILE W. WOODWARD CmtSitN PURER 11 ESEE | FIRST RUN ! &CINDEF BEUGFITaUn JiT 1 BLUE SET TAKE ITS TO MT. CLEMENS R0 OPOVKE RD. AT WALTON ILV0. CMILWEa UNatt u TREE FIRST RUN- sMiraaOTNOR OR fj f ‘aSSff MONEY' PICTURE OF THE YEAR! § JIMn Oarbws i G&wnSyfr VFT>P I IMMIW-HONIMGE E -,™l 'iuk - ^ • ». n1 s BURT LOVE LANCASTER Waterford'k WMS‘. LAKE NO. AT AIRPORT RO. MILE WEST OF DIXIE- HCWY. (U.S. IQ) CHILDREN UNDER IS FREE i ■Nl" CHMSTOPHER lit ; I5*amj—_|W| ■ 1PLACF\ I YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART I - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct answer. 1 Secretary of State Rusk last week attended the annual Foreign Ministers meeting of the 11-year-old CENTO alliance. This alliance was formed mainly to protect...... a-South East Asia b-the Middle East c-Western Europe 2 Talks were begun 4o decide what can be done to permit French troops to remain in ..... after France withdraws Its soldiers from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. a-Spain ^Switzerland c-Weat Germany 3 The Senate’ Foreign Relations Committee held hearings on President Johnson’s 1967 foreign aid program, which would provide about 9.billion in military and economic aid. a-1.2 b-3.4 0-5.7 4 The Corcoran Gallery in Washington, D.C. is wvhihiting American art works done from 1718 to 1966. Which of the following artists was NOT an American? a-Maxy Cassatt b-Paul Klee o-Grandma Moses 5 A new deadline of May 6 was set for those schools which must submit plana for ending segregation in order to receive federal aid. Right now, about ..... per cent of the Negro students In 11 southern states are attending schools with whites. a-7 b-20 c-46 ' PART 11 - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. l.....ooooluslve a-stlr, shake up , 2 assail j b-agreement 3-... agitate o-attack 4 consensus d-final 5 strategic e-lmportant in military planning PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. 1...Wladyalaw Gomul- a-new President, Iraq ka 2.. ...Lee Marvin 8.. .. Jtbdel Rahman Aref 4 ..Tri Quang 5 ..Ludwig Erhard Vel. XV, No. 31 b-West German Chan-oellor o-First Secretary, Fol-Ish Communist Party d-won “Oscar” as best actor In 1965 s-a South Vietnamese Buddhist leader The Pontiac Press Monday, April 25,1966 Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct anewer. 1„... our ties with this country are honored this 1mm* Thomas Stafford will be pilot In May flight opera company looks ^forward to new home eonsumsr organl- GROUP rations meet in Wash- OF TEN ington, D.C. Arnold Palmer won H Tournament of Champions 6..... Communist China said It wlU halt aid to this nation May 1 Is Law Day width of flight corridors a safety issue trading nations discussed world money -problems 10..... BUI Russell, a Negro, J to be ooaoh of the Celtics FAMILY DISCUSSION QUESTION Whet conditions, if any, should be met by nations receiving our foreign aid? This Quiz Id part of the Educational Program which Thli Newipspor furnishes to School* in this area to Mandate fcitomt in National and World Affairs as an aid to Dovoloplng Good Cltisonshlp. ”H^"|>6YOUTRATiV““ (Seem Each Side of Quit Separately) yi 60 pojnh - Good. - 91 to idfpotnts - TOP SCORE! 61 to 70 points - Fair. It to 90 points - Excel lent. 40 or Uhdir???- If am! 4 VEC, Inc., Madison, Wisconsin Save This Practice Examination! STUDENTS Valuable Reference Material For Exam*. ■" JOHN TKANKtUHtmnS ANSWERS TO TODAY’S NEWS QUIZ HI U*f *H l«H IH i+1 «P*t If* lf-1 izinb lOflWAt N fp-I l®*l i||| iRVd e-9 |q-» |»-« !p*l :|| mw I ity» i« lo-t iq-i n HUM THE 1‘ONTlAC l'HKSS. MONDAY. APH1L 24, 1W6 | MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Product FRUITS Applet, Deliclout, Golden, bi ADD 1*1, Dtlicloui. Golden, C. Apploi, Dtlicloui, Rod, bu. .' Applos, Delicious Rod, C.O., Apploi, JonOthon, bu. „ Apploi, Jonathan, C.A., bu. Apploi, Moclntoih, CA„ bu. Apploi, Macintosh, C.A., bu. Apploi, Northern Spy, bu. Apploi, Northern Spy, C.A., Applet, Stool Rod. bu. .. Applet, elder, 4-oal. com • VIORTARLCS Bools, topped, bu..... Celery, Root, dx. ........ Chivoi, dx. bch.............. .... Hor»#radl»lw>k. btkt............1.1* Union’*, dl' Onions, m Trading Slackens ,' J MineR Strike Mart Moves Irregularly Lower! Starts to Crack Tax? Profit Outlooks Push Mart Swings By SAM DAWSON [Gross National Product, the to-jstill more plants and equipment. NEW YORK (AP) — The stock market moved irregularly lower early this afternoon as trading slackened well below last week’s average level New credit restrictions imposed by the major exchanges went into effect, putting a crimp into the operations of the small speculator and the daylight trader. J.»j Coppers showed a flash n.M strength following the move by Zambia which, In effect, moved up Us price in line with the recent price hike by Chile. The strength in coppers soon turned into irregularity, however. Steels backed away fractionally following reports that orders for steel were being cut by the auto manufacturers. A published report that the Federal Reserve Board may be on the verge of deeding to tighten credit further was another dampener. The Associated Press average, of 60 stocks at noon was off .2 at 351.2 with industrials off .7, rails .2 and utilities unchanged. The Dow Jones Industrial avj erage at noon was off 1.51 at 948.32. Coal Operators' Unit Approves New Pact NEW YORK (AP) -Tax and profit prospects, alternately blowing hot and cold, probably Ihave had even more to do with the favored trading and price swings on stock markets than have the speculative earnings PITTSBURGH (UPI) - The,-,-- --------------^ 15-day soft coal strike began Inf amateur incracking today when more thanjvestors. ... 115,000 West Virginia miners re- But whatever Prices were irregularly high-;turned to their jobs and the’ig the cau9e er in fairly active trading on the Bituminous Coal Operators As-American Stock Exchange, gelation (BCOA) ratified a new DolJn Corporate bonds were mostly (contract. • an<* Washington nchangec **“ Ml ' declined. tal output of goods and serv-j An outlay of $60 billion, or 16 ices, put it at an annual rate of per cent above last year, had $714 billion and foreshadowed a been predicted, adding that gain for the year as a whole of 6 much more zest to economic per cent over 1965. growth. But first, President WWW Johnson asked businessmen to But stock traders were also postpone port of this, outlay to looking at profit margins - andj hold back inflation; ■ and then, productivity. Both seemed shortages of labor and some brighter than they had just almaterials, plus higher interest few weeks ago. charges for financing the expan- Manufacturers were making |Ston, slowed the time schedules about the same profit on each!for many growth-minded corpo-dollar of sales as in the final rations, months of 1965,.although a drop * * * had been predicted. Sales were Still( with almost one million rising in most industries. Back-more persons with jobs now l. bag .. Rhubgrb. hothouse, 5-lb. box .. Rhubarb, hothouie, dx. bcht.... Turnlpi, topped, bu.... ...... Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT(AP) Prlcei paid oar po tor No. 1 live poultry heavy typo i jr s-M; light top# ham not roai heavy typo 28-28W; brolltri and lr] 1-4IN. whites 2*to-2l. ORTROIT ROOt iPirisS *------- dozen by tint racatveri - Chicago MiircoittUo ---- - Buttor steady to flrmj buying prices unchanged; 03 __________42to; 02 A 42Vt; 00 B Otto; 00 C <0W) Cora 00 RE «tto) 00 C MVS. Eggs easy; wholeale buying prl lower; 70 par cant or batter Gri__ .. White* 37H; mixed 37to; mediums 34to standards 3S; dirties unquoted; checks 10.' AmBrk S (ids.) Hlfh LOW Last Ckg. FrueRcp 1.50 071 4H4 40VS 40VS —Ito . 42 3140 MW 3*4* — 'A 3 E ** ► 4h Gam Ska 1,20 ‘ % G Accept 1.20 “ GenAnilF .40 Gan.Cig 1.20 "-iDyaam 1 , i Elec 2.40 ___I FdS 2.20 ■ GenMIlls 1.40 Gen Mol .05o MMc 1.20 GPubSvc .420 enwf jar GTel El 1.12 Gen Tire .00 GaFacHlc lb GerberPd .00 . Getty Oil .tod hds.) Hloh Law Lad Chg. (hds-; 2 105s lots l*to ...... Pennxoll 1.40 20 [100 504S 4»to 50 — 4S PepsiCo 1.40 11 10 2S8* 254S 25VS — V* PlixerC 1.20a . 27 5 MW M 82V* + *A PhOlpD 3.40a 71 1 41 VS 41 Va 41 VS + V* I Phlla El 1.41 41 01 21VS' 31VS 314S . ... I Phil Rdg 1.20 23 | PhilMor 4.20 4 Edward G. Fox, president of the BCOA, said in a terse statement that toe organization’* board of directors had authorized him to “execute toe agrement upon its ratifies- ! economy is tion” by toe UMW. PRODUCTIVITY Prospects of increased taxes can dim the corporate profit outlook, and make stocks less alluring. Taxes are tied closely to fears of inflation. When government statistics indicate the I lion in the first quarter of 1966, and with consumers cutting back on toe percentage of disposable income to be saved rather than spent — the outlook for increased sales and still higher profits looks good to many in-, vestors. , „ , ,, . -ziiuzc cuiLitm iHvuubwni, BP But then there s always the handle both guns aiui bf“^ setting rising labor and materi-'chance of a hike in taxes and a without strain, inflation fears[k, JJ. w (real clamp on spending to be- Productivity — the unit labor cost in manufacturing — was a bit more favorable than the average of both 1964 and 1965. Business spending for plant and equipment in the last two years o beginning to bear fruit in ® • more efficient production, off-1 I 31to 3 , Can 2JO 1 AmCrySug 1 ' ‘ iCypti 2.50 , .-itybtiTwT AmEIPw 1.32 CHICAGO POULTRY A Enka UOa CHICAGO (AP)- 354*aA35Vk —r 4k I 13V*n31* — to I S54k 54Vi J4Vk - VI I 7t'A m S'* + 44 I 544* 534* *4to + to I 27 244S 244k — 1* 3* 384* 38to 38to + 13 3544 35to 35to - 23 42to 4144 414* - 2* S4to $4to *4to - 48 SOto 48to 48to — 2 St S» 18 -t 33 214k » 21 to — 27 424k 42 424k . V 374* 374* 374* . 144* IS 1454* 14444 4 % 'Ik *tto - (3 524k 51 to 52to 4 80 4*to 45to 4Jtk 4 impact aside fro|n West Vir- expected inflaUon ]ears tax increase predictions — rise. I _ ., . I Profit ibrospects are tied just Beckley area of West Virginia | ag doselyP as Ses to the growth in the economy. Profit gains are —union officers said nearly 100 per cent of the 9,000 work force was working. Another 6,500 in district 31 went back. At least 6.000 remained off the job in West Virginia. 31.000 WORKERS dependent, too, upon the ability of industry to cope with rising production costs. But traders also are wary of the inroads of 'higher taxes on corporate prof-jits. — § i * . ! By midmoming, an estimated,profit OUTLOOK M 4 v* 31,000 workers in Pennsylvania,: %itti toy ore* Successfuhlnvestmg^ 4*’ a % By ROGER E. SPEAR TQ) ‘‘I have $10,000 to invest n air line stock. I see that Kentucky, West Virginia, Ohio’l Wb»tever the future of toxj Eastern is n bigger company lair l bp i » Saar* Roe la Sckburg .40 14 28to 2Mk Mto -___ 70 71l 7to 7to- ^ Sit L # ?! $ 174* |74k 174k -5 8to 8Vk 8to —, 273 784k 77 Tito -1 SlnoerCo SmlthK 1. Socony SouPR -SouCalE m . u IHCen Inturl 3 33 32% ji - JJ Sparry Vtn0 13t2 23 241, • ’»'* 2^ t ^iK./eO^lM » m* 77 . S S . + 13°! ^ Illinois and Alabama were stili rates; “f 'Profit. oulk)ok - gff the job now is pleasing to many inves- ts1 In the rich western Pennsyl- tors- ^ b°°min8 economy is a - ?;!vania coal fields all but 18 ofiP™16 reason. the 6,000 miners shunned a I Total consumer spending rose union back-to-work directive and adopted a wait-and-see attitude. Only a handful of Kentucky’s estimated 11,500 striking miners returned to work. Pickets showed up at six mines of the Peabody Coal Co., closing operations which had resumed late yesterday and early today. Terms of the new contract were not spelled out. than Delta and earned more per share by latest reports, but Delta is higher priced. What would you suggest?” H. A. 3,per cent to an annual rate of $452.6 billion in the first three months of the year. The gain in industrial output since last fall was at an annual rate of 13 per cent. The $17 billion surge of the (A) One reason why Eastern’s 1 1965 earnings reached $7.05 a share is that they were not subject to Federal tax — due to deficits recorded in prior years. News in Brief. highly leveraged. Eastern has a huge debt which — when earnings and margins are increasing — exerts a strong up- ey. I cannot afford to lose because I have nothing else.”— O.W. (A) I advise you to see a representative of a major life insurance company and ask what return you can get on a $15,000 investment in a. guaranteed straight life annuity without death benefit. You should keep $5,000 in savings, but toe monthly return on the balance of your capital placed in a straight Ufa annuity contract should solve your cost of Uving problem. (Copyright, 1966) Backman .so CHICAOO LIVESTOCK BatchAr .70b CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) - Hogj Bfll How A0 4,500; butchers steady to 35 higher; IJiBendix 2.40 180420 lb 23.50-23.75; 00 haad sorted I Benguet OSe Is et 34.00; mixed 1-3 180-230 lbs 23.50-1 Beth SI I 130 23.S0J 2-3 250-200 lbs 10.5031.25; 1-3 350- BlgelowS l.M 783030.0*1 high choke end prime 1,050-1,400 tbs 2030-2830; choice 100-1450 lb 24.25-2000; high choice — prime 825-1,075 lb slaughter heifers ' 27357 choke 500■— SIMM 500; supply . 25.25-24.50. mM shorn sliughh ewes steedy; deck chric* tw’l^'shem slaughter lembs with He. 1 pells 25.71. BristMy 1J0* Brunswick Bucy Er 130 Americqn Stock Exch. noon AMERICAN NEW YORK — joRgwIna la a III at selected stack transactions an th American Stock Exchange with noo price*: (hda.) Hiah Law Last (S A era |*l .50* 2t 32to 22 324k+ 1 “— .10a 31 IS 14to IS +1 4 .J#2 8 8to —X1 , 35V* 354* — [ |Uto 1044 f tto • ** 17 721* 7 S3 18fi 1 . Am PetrolA ■ ArkLe Gas 1.2jT 13 44to 44to 44to+ Asamara 1221 JS-lt 3 IS-lt 315-1A41-U Cel Pack .80 Cakim Htc 1 iCcmpRL .45* Camp Soup 1 Can Dry 1 CdnPac 1.50a Canteen f.Mw CerterW .40a Caa* Jl . CatarTr 1 3* 38to 304k 3f l; »to m m 8 M 374* 371k , 2S 484* 484k -48*k — to | 70 70'/i **to 70'* _ : . ■.. . . . ward influence on common Took and other items, WW share earnings. Eastern is a - S The Southern Coal Producers Ig^len from the Soft^jrayAutor*11^ good 8peculati°" pro" » 3! A ss “V ! Accnviaiinn vktod you can assume the con- I Packers M 12V* T2H 1 i SWOll Ohk> 2 ^ESsis -"staiittCb 1.40 SterlOrue 30 —StevensJP 2 8, 2S 5k m + *k|Assoc,atMm, , “W^ Wash, 6986 Cooley Late, Water- * S 2JJ "H - to'a meeting for today inCharies-lford Township, yesterday, 4i tjto f]to m + to|ton, W-V*-. to discuss the agree-; di to towngh, u > sow » so + ^ ment. The SCPA, which employs' 8 I 354* 35to 35to4-344 17 27V* 37to 27Vk— i mt Oil .1IR Tiger 1J« 1 Devel 1 Plywd int Yel .40* » Mfg 44 3to 3 3-14 Sto+s-l* S8 lOto 84* 104*8-M 424* 42 424b- 2B4 04k Ito »to+ 78 214* ttVk 31to+ 8k 8 tiw Tm Tito a 134k 124k 124b8- 1 244k }»B 264k-f . It 178b 174* 178k+ to t Mfk SOto 808*4- Vk 18 12 118k TTCto— 2 13to I3to 13to... asr.a Ch!MII°SIP 1 ChlPnau 130 Oit Oti P*P ChrlsCft 1.1*8 Chrysler 2 - CIT Fin 130 CltlasSvc 150 CHiy|iHI \M CocaCola 1.80 Sotedh Colnnl w Kt . McfiSry < wi n, -i Mead John .40 71 28to 28 Mich Sugar .10* Molybden 11 0S8b 428k 43V*.: R 1C Group S 24b 34b rib... Scurry Rain m 2lto 074b 278b- _ Sbd W Air 48 254b 25 251b- to Signal Oil A 1 50 118b 314* 314*8- to Syntax Cp .40 12S loeto 107 107to+ Sperry Rut 455 11 to 11 11 4- Statham Ip 5 J8to 38to 381b— TaMMCdl .75 31 174* 174b ITtot Un Control .20 40 48k 44k_ 44*..... Copyrighted by The Alsoclated Press 1844 Mgnday's 1st ptviDRNDl declared Lubrlzol Corp | Lubrlxoi new ... BOND AVRRAOES _ Cpmoiled by The Associated ^Pn Rath lad. UHL Pro. Lira nr. Day 77.1 843 J4.J 82A 88. W AGO 77.0 86.2 04.8 fu 08. nth Ago 748 NA . 04.1 82J U7 ir Ago 03.5 1013 JUS 845 ■ ■r Ago 13.5 1013- 003 843 | High 783 101.4 84.1 82.7 80.7 Instructor's Death Is Termed Suicide | 27to 27V* 27Vk 8- 2 18to Wto J3Vb - 47 2144 tito 314* J Mto 38 21 ■ Mto 54 Mto + 15 23 WO 324b ... *1 |7\* 07 27 , +to jST.’5# Lira 32 tfto 444* 4446 ..... Mfg .135 148 48to 47to 47V* 8-lto ar At 1 38 » 514k |14b 8- 4* »fRo .40 7 3Fto 184k 188k — to wcott « 48 131 to 12844 131 +lto iCLd 2.40 34 76to 75to 7Sto + to ■Me 1.30 *3 77 74 74to + to bClark 2 10 54 5544 54 + to Mrs wl 3 314k 31to 3140 + 4b retie 1M 23 Mto 228b - to 1 7*4* J5JJ + v? imor^ the*15,686 men, normally Mto 3*4k - 4* follows the pattern set by the ; 25 m5 I to! BCOA and the UMW: Texeslnslm J Texaslnst wl TokPLd .35* Taxirsn t TMokol -25* IDS . $ Mto as aj» • lllpf 31 04* Slto *24* +14* “ M 7fl* T 528k Sto «* M 21 174* 274* 24 258k 2S8k - 284k Mto 28to . Mill MacyRH tS* MegmeC1^ Coni Oil 2.40 Control Data Com P d 1.40 ComgGWk 2o CoxBdcas AO CrowCol 1381 Crown Cork Crown Zell i Cruc Stl 1.20 .’! te us ifil | . §3 flk 4Ub t __________ , ,/t Con* 310 02 328b 32Vk Mto — >k Cwn lb 8 If W 158. ■■■ 35 111* 1084 104* - 0 318b 314b Slto + 17 57 Sib Mb + 25 13Vk l3to 13to + fd SK Sto S« + j* a PS? l Sto'iSt sSi . 1,100 tito 084k 70 +1tt J 444k Stf ,44to + to V 50 401* ’4»to.-m —M— Unit Aire UnitCorp Un Fruit - UnttM^ \ USBorax J— USGypom 3b UStndsf .11* Of Una* 2b USSmelt 30* US Steal 2 • Unit Wholan MS MayDSIr I McCall .408 McOanA A McKess 1.) 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White of Cleveland was found Fstaj* \x in |ner room ai t residence hall fio *5 u yesterday morning. F)Scrip lfi 14 31 3Mk 304* - to 34 3444 34 34 — jl *4 37to Mto 37to 42 2058k 2044* 205V, 10 311* 31 31to 44 158k ISto 154b ■ E— 812 108 1074* 1074* —Ito if4®®** " 58 204k- 204* 204k + to § wsr sMT Ito*-4* I El - El! .. EngEI 1.20 NYCent 2.01* b*...... « T1■’ ■ »4b + 330 37 Slto I NwstAIrl 130 OPap LI* rd Pop wl « 434k _ 41 524* 1144 fi - 1 213 224* |84k Mto +V ■ S "ML S. c. + ’ „ 174V* 172 1724*... _ 108 204* Hto Wto —.lb PacG El 48 33to 2) 9. MM iS 101 154k ISto 1SV* — 4* Pac Pot 24 4S4k 45 65 , — 8k P.cTLT WO 3Stk ISto 3Sto + to. Pan Am « Slto 11 ,|1V* + to Panh EP S Mto Mto Mto — to ParamPI 111 4Ht 414b Sto t to ParbaO* a 1441 14to 14JB + to $ a its r j# 8 80S 711* .Mto 70' -14b 40 13 344* Mto 3484 + to I 22 00 Mb 78_ — to i 87 SOto Wit 371k......... _________ f M M Ml 9..:^^ PonnDixlo A0 5 178* .12to 12to Penney UOa 12 U 42to Mto . _ 21 344b 34 —D— 101 434* 43'* 14 258k 254k 2 S2 The biggest return to wo r k this morning was at the Hanna Coal Co. Fttnklin Jtfine near Cadiz, Ohio, where about miners were back on the job. Electricians Picket All Five Mrs. Adren Short, 4450 Sedum record. A t tvt •% AS 2W* 283 a 21% f F £ Mto + to i 314* 404* +1V, i m TMk-to ,wy Tto *! 88 8»SSS:: 8 7544 75 75 —V— 24 «to ito%tT-^ —W— ' 7 14to 1444 144* - to *; St 8% M+l i-lfa rrS 30 45_ 444* 444* -1| (1H 41% —X-Y4S- sftoures ■sk othery I dlvl- otherwlse noted, ratn __ „. tho toronotnq fnbt art disbursements kasH on the lost «u»rt< * -mi-annuel declaration Spedol _____ dividends or' payntonto. not de noted as regular ,ar# identified In following footnotes - . - .Also extra or exfrei. o—Annual plus stock dividend. c-Liquidatina lend, d—Declared or paid, m 1845 stock dlvldeod^.^e-jtocls ^MMM| Ing lMs!* es/lmated otsK year, h—Declared or paid after stock ( dand or split up: k-Decl»red or paid year, an accumulative een fined $50 by the Michigan Liquor Control Commission fpr conduct (fighting) on the premises. Another gigantic dish and rummage sale. C.A.L Bldg., Tues. 28, 9:30. -rAdv, Rummage — Tuesday, April 26, lp to 11 Amvets Hall, 570 Oakland. A.R.S. Ani Chapter. . —Adv. (Q) “I am an elderly widow on Social Security. I sold my home for $20,000 and don’t know how to invest the mon- Business Notes 1 Found Dead, 3 Missing in Saginaw Bay STANDISH (UPI) - The body of one of four persons missing on a fishing trip was found floating in the frigid waters of Saginaw Bay today near the heart function and circulation.’ Heart Patient Is Improving Mechanical Device Keeping Man Alive HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) - Marcel DeRudder’s surgeons reported some improvement today in a kidney malfunction that has caused new' concern for the patient with a partial artificial heart. ★ * ★ “Although the patient has not,, regained consciousness there are further signs of improvement in the central nervous system with additional return of certain reflexes,” the day’s first medical bulletin said. + * it 'There is also some improvement of the decreased kidney function reported yesterday.” The final bulletin Sunday had reported “some decrease of kidney function” but said laboratory tests indicated the condition was "potentially reversible.” Neither bulletin elaborated on the condition. GENERAL IMPROVEMENT The first advisory today also said DeRudder, 65, continues to show general improvement, particularly to this status of his swamped boat. Police said' (there was little hope for the( DeRudder underwent a *ix-The board of directors of Win-other three. (hour operation Thursday in Cape Kennedy. The rest work atikelman Brothers Apparel, Inc., The Coast Guard and officers i which a mechanical pump was United Technology facilities at has declared a cash dividend of1 from ^ Arenac County sher-! attached to his heart and as-Sunnyvale, Coyote and Redwood|20 cents per share.’ jIff’s office searched the bay for cending aorta to provide a tem- City, Calif. j The dividend goes to common jhe other three persons, appar-iporary bypass of his damaged MAIN ISSUE stock holders of record at the j6nj victims of an accident dur-J left ventricle. A main issue in the strike, 2?uiv'T**8 *'** °Ul* —-------------------- " which began last week iab,e May 19' board motorboat. United Technology, a division of United Aircraft Corp., is wages. Treasury Position In bankruptcy or receivership .. being reorganized unddr the Bankruptcy Act. or aecurltlei aaigiPI * •——— —— pantea. tn—Foreign STOCK AVRRAOIS CtnepUed *y Tto» AteecUM 8 Ind. Ralls UN H changt .;.... —,7 +3 . . . S*2.1 2*1.7 ISM 34*. r. 523.3 184J 117*3 1 The body of Mrs. Levi Foco was found floatifig alongside the swamped IV- foot beat about two miles from shore. Stocks of Local Interest Figure* alter decimal point* are eighths Include retail Undersheriff Thomas Logan ■" said she was wearing a life jacket but had no chance to Associated1' Truck survive in the 40-degree water. 113.247A75.I82.42 100.213,554,W5.52 tal OaM- ^320344.835,P11A8 31S.9B.187^#8 AU IHinoiS. 14,411,554,385 57 I—Include* 278.445.315.7i debt 'r DOW-JONHS AVERAORS IS Higher r*da r< IB Saiind grad* rail It PiAllc utllitlp* . IB Induidrlat* - J..-- Ross S. Campbell, 5770 Raven, Birmingham, vice president of sales for the Thompson-Brown Birmingham a n d Detroij builders has been named to the five-man executive council of the National Association of Home Builders marketing committee. .Campbell is chairman of the in,, other thrro neraonf wwJSSrtrf”"*' A,sKi,;ion;!,.tegy7 .hid, ’£!«? SSZ.* dudes Michigan, Indiana and band Edwa^.<1 Zfalknik,ZwZ , owner of the boat, and Joseph Gln^r; Al# , Oberman, all of Standish. Their'^^ir^irnna. Lodge Calendar ages were nd known.. . - . 7 mutual . ■ Logan said the four left Stan- Fund Pontiac Shrine number 22 Or- dish Sunday afternoon, 'tbhinrfjgM^^g*' der of the White Shrine of Jeru- Zinknik’s new boat for a fishing gg’jg} salem Pot LudC Dinner, 6.30, excursion. Rescue workers&ro« Ceremonial, 8 p.m., Wed„ April launched the search Sunday] J”"' 27, 22 State Ste Florence Schin- night when the boat did not gru?rtr0">c* gectwHP. W . I IWJJ3T..;;: C—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 25, ,1966 Foreign News Commentary Tense Era Foreseen Over NATO Pullout By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign New* Analyst Allied officials in Paris pre-diet a long period of tension with France over President Charles de Gaulle’s NATO pull* out* The other 14] countries have] decided not to] let be stampeded] by deadlines. The “ fear the others] may be playing] a delayin _______ game. NEWSOM Serious negotiations are not expected to start until after the June 6-8 Brussels NATO foreign! ministers meeting. CHINESE VISIT: Some sources In the key listening post of Hong Kong believe Red Chinese President Liu Shao-chi is angling for a vist to North Viet Nam — and they believe Hanoi is resisting the Idea. They note Uu has visited Burma, Afghanistan and Pakistan recently and that a Viet Nam visit is politically desirable. It not only would reassert bat It also might help regain some of the influence Peking is believed to have lost to the Russians in Hanoi There is no hard evidence to support reports of Hanoi opposition, but observers are keeping a close watch for signs. OLD FASHIONED IMAGE: The opening session of the NATO Treaty Council session in Brussels in June will be held in the mediaeval city hall despite a plea by some members this will give NATO jin old-fashioned image. Some members want the session to be held in the ultra-! modern Palais de Congress where the working sessions are planned but those members were overruled by the historically minded school. LOCAL AUTONOMY: The South Korean government ended locail autonomy after the 1961 military coup. Restoration figures to be a key issue in next year’s general election if the government keeps opposing the change. President Park Chung Hee told newsmen last week the subject was not ripe for discussion because provincial governments get 70 to 80 per cent of their funds from the contral government in Seoul The opposition Minjoong party i ready to offer a bill demanding reestablishment of an least provincial councils. Continued goverameht refusal could touch off an uproar. THANT — DE GAULLE: United Nations Secretary General U Thant will lunch with President de Gaulle in Paris Saturday en route to Strasbourg address the council of Europe’s consulative assembly May 2. WWW They are expected to discuss Viet Nam as well as UJ4. problems — particularly France’s continued refusal to pay Its share of the Congo operation. Geology Research Key to Curb Volcano Havoc By Science Service LONDON—Needless destruction of lives and property from erupting volcanoes could be prevented if governments would, spend more money and take heed of geologists’ research. Many chains of seemingly Inactive but potentially dangerous volcanoes could be guarded by a few men and inexpensive equipment, believes. Dr. Alexander R. McBimey, director of the Center for Volcanology at the -University of Oregon, Eugene. This constant watch would greatly reduce the possibility of nnforseen eruptions of '‘sleeping’’ volcanoes, commonly the most violent and destructive kind, Dr. Me-Birnev reports in 2 recent publications. Volcanoes with no tecent record of activity are difficult to study. Because piey seem so quiet, they are considered harmless by people living nearby and by governments who therefore d6 not wish to spend money on their observation. ★ ★ ★ For days, months, sometimes yean before a volcano erupts, shock waves may jolt the area, the volcano’s magnetic field may grow stronger or weaker, and the ground may swell and tilt in preparation for the “big blowup.’’ WARNING SIGNAL’S These warning signals emitted by the rumbling volcano could be interpreted as indications of the volcano’s next eruption, and enable thousands of people to be saved from death. Three instruments are especially useful for keeping a watchful lookout on volcanic activities, said Dr. McBirney. They are seismographs for measuring shifting rocks, magnetometers for measuring changes in magnetic fields and tiltmeters for measuring any changes around the crater as the rising magma or molten rock pushes out the volcano’s sides. The seismograph is by far the reliable and widely used tool for forecasting eruptions, said Dr. McBimey. Nearly all volcanic eruptions are preceded by seismic shocks or earthquakes. If. the pattern of such earthquakes could be determined for each volcano, geologists might be able estimate ac-rately when a volcano is ready to erupt. Take a Close 'Look at FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS ACCOUNTS -BUY, SELL, TRADE ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 25, 1966 D—1 Tigers Find Early Success in Twin Bills Bengals Dump Senators, 4-1, 4-0, Sunday Monbouquette Blanks Washington in,First; Cash Nightcap Star DETROIT (AP)—Home for a two-night stand against the American League champion Minnesota Twins, the Detroit Tigers could brag today. Hiey have accomplished twice what it took them all the way to July 27th of last season to do once. They have swept two double-headers. No. 2 came against the Senators at Washington Sunday, 4-0 and 4-1. The first sweep was against the New York Yankees. The Tigers dropped both games of their first five double-headers in 1945, split the sixth and fell back into their losing ways. Their first double victory was-registered against Cleveland July 21.' TIGERS FAN Pitcher Bill Monbouquette, acquired from Boston in a winter [ trade, blanked Washington .4-0 ■ in Sunday’s opener, a game, incidentally, in which Senator pitcher Pete Richert tied the league record by striking out seven Tigers ih a row. Richert tot tha first 11 men to face him, nine on strikes. His seven strikeouts in a row equaled the league mark held Jointly by Ryne Duren, of Los Angeles, and Denny McLain. McLain is Detroit Manager Charlie Dressen’s choice for night’s opener against •Twins. Richert departed in the seventh, after Don Demeter doubled and scored on Ken McMullen’s error. A1 Kaline had snapped the strikeout string with a leadoffj double in the fifth and then had scored on Demeter’s single. Orlando McFarlane’s single got Demeter around to the-plate. The Washington hurler started his streak by fanning Demeter Baltimore won, 2-1. to rad the second inning. He . struck out Ray Oyier, McFar-lane and Monbouquette in the! third and Dick Tracewskf, Don Wert and Norm Cash in the) fourth. Oyier got his first homer of. the year in the ninth off reliefer Buster Narum. GETS TRIPLE Cash was Detroit’s second-game hero, tripling across a run, scoring himself in a three-run third inning and clouting a homer in the eighth. Joe Sparma had a one-hit shutout for six innings. But after he walked leadoff batter Jim King in the seventh and gave up a stogie to Dick Nen, Dressen called in Larry Sherry. Detroit got to Jim Duckworth to the third inning of the second game. Duckworth hit Dick Mc-Auliffe to the back atid McAu-liffe stole second. Jerry Lumpe blooped a single into left and McAuliffe scored. Cash tttort tripled to the centerfieid fence to score Lumpe and canurhome on Horton’s tong sacrifice fly to crater. / Decision Due Tuesday Olympic Bids Heard ROME (AP) — The International Olympic Committee turned today to the crucial Job of its meeting the make-or-break study of city bids for the sites of the 1972 games. The IOC had SO other items on its agenda, ranging from the apartheid issue of the South African government to Mexico’! preparations for the 1968 Olympics and recognition of the international federations for bowling, water skiing and skibob. But the big question is who will be the hosts for the summer and winter Games in 1971 ★ ★ a The four contenders for the summer site were summoned to make their presentations this afternoon. The delegations were ready with glossy brochures and /Washington I'M!! SMS NEAR FOUL UP - Catcher Elston Howard of toe New York Yankees reaches for a pop foul and meets a young fan with the same idea during yesterday’s game. Howard, however, had a longer reach and made the catch. But Orioles Duo Hurts Yankees By the Associated Press If the New York Yankees are having trouble sleeping tome nights, you can be s^etoy*re not counting RobidSoqs. /' Frank and Brooks dkhrt clear any fences Sunday, bttt they did figure in both of; Baltimore’s runs as the prioles edg?d the hapless, £ Yankees- ’ 2-1 stretched, a pair qf fctreaks to what they hoped would be convincing arguments. DETROIT FIRST Detroit made' its pitch first and Gov. George Romney of Michigan was on hand to boost the city’s presentation. Madrid, Munich and Montreal followed, with 45 minutes allotted to each delegation. The committe scheduled similar presentations Tuesday morning for the winter site hopefuls — Banff, Canada, Salt Lake City, Utah, Sapporo, Japan, and Lahti, Finland. The selections will be announced Tuesday afternoon. Gossip during the days of intensive lobbying that proceeded the opening of the IOC meeting pointed to Banff and Munich as the favorites. The IOC, however, is notorious for defying toe odds. It was generally conceded that Madrid would drop out of the running because of financial limitations ana would set its sights on 1976. It also was widely assumed that Lahti had real chance because some of its games would have to be held to NCAA Certifies No New Bowls Okays Grid Game*/ Studies All-Star Tilts SAN FRANCISCO I^No new football bowl games won certification by the National Collegiate A t h 1 e il c Association which announced today it was holding toe Jtoe with nine established post-season tilts. Ellmtodtion of its all-star football certification program was alsa taken under consideration by the NCAA to its sessions to Ban Francisco. Hie Extra Events Committee lad seven new bowl game requests — two from Atlanta -and one each from Tampa, Fla., Raleigh, N.C., Pheonix, Ariz., San Diego, Calif., and Arlington, Tex. In addition the committee received a number of feelers for other games. Certified were: Nov. It — Mineral Water Bowl. E*-elsior Springe, Mo. Dec. It — Liberty Bowl, Memphis, neighboring Sweden because of terrain problems. Sapporo's delegation came armed with material showing an impressive city and spectacular installations plans. But Sapporo’s mayor, Yosuka Hara-da, has admitted fears that Japan would not win the right to stage another Olympics only eight years after toe 1964 Tokyo Games. Emotions ran highest among the Canadians and Americans, whose competition carried toe poignancy of a family struggle. DOUBLE INDEMNITY - Don Demeter of the Detroit Tigers overran second base after doubling in toe seventh inning of the first game against' Washington yesterday, but got back safely. Second baseman Don Blasingame tries to tag Demeter who has both hands on the bag. Detroit won both games, 4-6, ami 4-1. BIG MOMENT - Detroit’s BiU Gadsby fires toe puck past Montreal goalie Gump Worsley in yesterday’s opening game of the #Stanly Cap finals in Montreal. The Red AP Phofbfbx Wings won, 3-2. Gadsby, a veteran defense-man, has never played on a Stanley Cup championship team. Lakers Force Return to LA ___ McMullen, DP—Detroit 1, Washington Detroit 7, Washington f. . Demeter, B.Chance. HR—Oyier Wert. s—Cyler, * ----- Monbqt (W.I-l)- . Richert (LNI . Koplltz ......... Total 34 0 7 ’ LOB- Upset Celtics by 4, Now Down 1 Game . BOSTON* (AP) - The Bostori SjCeltics move back to Los An-geles with a feeling of forebdd-tog today about the sixth game of the National Basketball Association’s championship playoffs. The Orioles now have won six Straight and are 8-1 over-all while toe Yankees have droped six in a row and are 1-9 over-all. Of toe Yankees’ 10 games, five have been against Baltimore. And to those five.-- ohs victory ami four defeats — the Robfcqpns' have been a night-mgrtLpItow York* GET’ M HJTS ' Against ,the Yankees, they collewtiljWhave rapped 16 hits in 34 thmddt bat for a .471 average, socked six doubles and two homers, scored seven runs and driven in 12. The Yankees have scored only 13 runs to the five games, w In other American League games Minnesota defeated California 5-3, Detroit swept Washington 4-0 and 4-1 and Chicago edged Kansas City 4-3 in 10 innings. Rain wasted out a doubleheader between Cleveland and Boston. r hbl WASHINOTON „ , . j 0 Valetlne cf 4 • 0 0 .Iff 3 Lock ah 1000 14 0 11 McMutn 3b 3 0 0 0 1*00 OFHowrd If 3 0 1 0 4 0* OKing rf 3110 4 o a ONn lb 4010 f 3 0 0 OBrkmen u 4 * * • >300 OCamllll c 4 v 1 0 0 0 Dukwth p 0 Savrlne pti 1 i I [ “They’ll be at their best with the crowd behind them and knowing there’s no tomorrow,’ said John Havlicek of the Celtics after toe defending chdmpi-put on their worst performance of the series to lose the fifth game 121-117 Sunday at Boston Garden. o outf- it was a combination of poor Boston shooting and a stronger Los Angeles defense that gave _ the Lakers-the fifth game victo-#!ry, slicing Boston’s lead to 3-2. Sen Frencisco . PWladJtohf* ft Orange Bowl, Miami, Fla. Raaa Bowl, Paiadana, Calif. Draper Opens Norffy-Sovik Golf Defense FINEHURST, N.C. (AP) -Tom Draper Of Birmingham, opened defense af/liis North and South Amateur IGrolf'Championship today against a field laden with talent but tacking three-time winner Billy Joe rat-ton. Patton, whose game hasn’t teen sharp this spring, is passing up this 66th annual renewal, to which all 16 who made it to last year’s fourth round have returned. Brooks Robinson doubled in 'fa, the field of 128 Were six the Orioles’ first run in the firstother former champions, Bill inning, then teamed with Frank (Campbell, Dale Morey, Bill for consecutive doubles and thejHyndman, Charlie Smith, Dick decisive ran in toe sixth. Chapman and Frank Strafad. Red Wings Script Familiar Detroit Defeats Montreal, 32 Henderson, Crozier Again Keys to Win MONTREAL (AP) - It ip-pears toe Detroit Red Wings will rely on an old script to their quest for toe Stanley Cup. w ★ ★ 4 The script — which has Paul Henderson scoring toe winning goal and goalie Roger Crozier making the big saves — was used again .Sunday as the Red Wings edged Montreal 3-2 to the first game of the Cup finals. Henderson, who scored nine game-winners among his 22 regular season goals and two mere to the semifinal series against Chicago, potted the winner early in the third period Sunday and Crozier made it stand up. $r ★ . ★ Henderson’s goal, at 2:14 of the final period, was matched 22 seconds later by tjfcrry Harper, who beat Crozier with a 40-foot shot. After that, the Red Wings tried to keep the play to the Montreal end. But the tactic didn’t work to perfection as Crozier still had to make 14 saves. He finished with 33. TURNING POINT Montreal Coach Toe Blake said the turning point to the game was Floyd Smith’s goal late to the first period. “Until that time, we had three or four pretty good chances but couldn’t make the most of them,” he explained. Blake didn’t think the ltday rest the Canadiens had after thumping ., Toronto ir four straight games, made a difference. ★ ★ ★ “I think it helped us. Detroit’s a pretty good team. We were outplayed and outscored. I’m not disappointed. We didn’t play bad.” Crozier’s biggest save came in the first period when he stopped J. C. Tremblay on a breakaway attempt while Detroit bad the man advantage. ★ .* * I tried to let him make the first move — and then I Just did my best,” Crozier explained. Bill Gadsby put the Red Wings back into the lead to the second period 51 seconds after Ralph Backstrom had tied TOOAY’I - NATIONAL LSAOVE *.385 Chicago .......... 3 8 473 SW Cincinnati ........ * 7 .3*2 5V4 Saturday'! Results Chicago 2, Lot Angeles 0 Atlanta S. Now York 4 \ Pittsburgh 5, St. LbUla 4. Houston 4.1, (an Francisco 0-3. Philadelphia ^ J — Chicago 1, Los Angrtto 0 II. Louie 5, Pittsburgh * San Francisco 4, Houston s Cincinnati 3, Phlladalphla 2, called M Innings, 2nd gams postponed, Atlanta 5-3, New York 14 Tliar's Gamas Atlanta (Johnson 1-1) at San Francisco Shaw 1-1) St. Louis (Jaster 1-1) at MCanM). night Phlladalphla (Short 1-1 or I 'Crozier Fa Team Sensational' MONTREAL (AP) r- As might be expected, Detroit goalie Roger Crozier got most of the credit for the Red Wings’ 3-2 victory over • Montreal in the first game of toe. Stanley Cup finals Sunday. ‘Crozier was fantastic and the team was sensational,” an elated Manager-Coach Sid Abel said- “He was terrific in Chicago but was even better in this (game.” j Crozier, who made 33 saves, AMERICAN LEAGUE • won liir.TCt. sums Washington 5. Detroit 3 Minnesota 5," California 3 Chicago 4, Kansas City 3, t Detroit 4-4, Washington 0-1 Bottimort Z New York 1 Cleveland at Boston, 2, pos Today's Oamts Unknowns Tie for 1st Place in Dallas Golf DALLAS (XP) - The $85,000 Dallas Open rolls into its final mud-splattered round today with (wo golfers wh5 never won a . PGA tournament closely pursued by two who were supposed to fight for it to the first place. said the Canadiens were tough, not Only because of their skating but also because of their play-“They are really fast and always seem to be open for breakaways,” he said. GIVEN CREDIT Coach Toe Blake of Montreal also gave Crozier credit, but added: When you come right down to it, he just made one more .stop than our boy Gump Wors-lley. But that was toe difference.” I The best chance the Canadiens had in the first period came when J.C. Tremblay, who later assisted on one Montreal goal, broke in atone while Detroit had a man advantage. ” • . Crozier stayed with him, however, and kicked out toe shot Hillsdale Thindads Invitational Champs Minnesota stopped its five-game losing streak behind the totting of Don Mincher. Mtocher tot a two-run homer in the third and drove to another run with a single in the fourth. Rick Reic-hardt’s two-run homer drove Twins’ starter Camilo Pascual from the mound in toe seventh. Also present were five members of last year’s Walker Cup team, Campbell, Morey, Don Allen, Dr. Ed Updegraff and Ed Tutwiler. Hay is over the 7,000-yard, par-72 No. 2 course of toe Pine-hurst Country Club. Total 3S 4ll 4 Total _ . I Detroit ... 11,3 Oil 01 0- 4 Bay It .Washington . 1 0 0 10 0 1 0 0»- I fills _ E—Sparma. DP—Washington *, LOB— West Detroit 9, Washington 10. 2B—Freshen tGoodric (I), McAullfto. 3B—Cash. HR-Cash (2).f«fno SB—McAuliffe, Nortnrup. SF—W.Horton. L'r'sso II “ R ER BB SO HOZS'd LOS AN6ELKS • JO. T 1315-17 41 M3-3T7 landers faVI'I Ken Berry led off top 10th toning with a triple and trotted home with . Chicago’s vanning run on Tom McCraw’s stogie. Kansas City tied toe game to toe ninth when Dick Green singled, stole second and scored on s o-o vsja single by Ed Charles. V 34 2 HOCKEY FLAYOFF! Pff -juT 7 2*3 •16 NATIONAL > LEAGUE .•MSS*!’’ (McDowell 2-0), night BIG RAPIDS (AP)—Hillsdale continues its reign as Ferris \ I_______________ _____ State Invitational Track s Harold Henning, a South Afri-1 champiot*. Hillsdale, scoring .77.jp—___ — .can who has won a lot of touma-jP°*n*s> repeated its 1965 victory things up. .r' ments around the world but by overcoming eight rivals Sat-| Henderson, explaining his sHend’o-i'j^11’8" Wl •* N#w Y“* never in the United States, and!u™ay- twinning goal, said: Minnesota (Botweii o-i) ot Detroit (Me- John Lotz, who professes to be Wisconsin - Milwaukee w a s “Gump Worsley came out aft-M,J" c]lyht(sheidon o-i) «t cievoiandin awe of the big names of thejsecond with 66, followed by Fer- er me and I just shot the puck Chicago at Washing Tiger Averages Tlgar Averages Individual Batting layer ab R h Ht RBI Pc Final Softball Meeting Tonight in Township The final managers’ meeting FiSiian . . . . . . . » for teams interested in playing Tracewski'1 men’s softball in the Waterford.NortiuV ... ... i Township recreation program is'w^ , ; . . . 7:30 p.B»> today, Room 103,j *-T*»** Schoolcraft School. * Program director Bill Woodi^ouquette 2 has announced that the deadline j for entering teams is 8:30 p.m. ^y, Waited Lake, Lamphere. Tima: . Dash — Webb (Ferndale), Palmer -ndate), Bork (Barkley). Read (Fern-, Radpatb (Barkley). Tima: 11.1 I Distance Medley Relay — Walled Lake, ,,__.. , . . Ferndale, Kettering, Bloomfield Hills, Pontiac Northern finished;Berktey. Tima: m.o iird In the Birmingham Broth-lwiSCTLf^i&A1frrlfclk «y; ZJ™ Dash - Webb (Parndate), Palmar Brother Rice was first with (Ferndale), Bork (Berkley), Radpatb 41 points followed by Ecorse ^"w^ur^11-^*!^ wth a and PNH with 27. Northern’s four-mile relay! Lake,' team of Mark Cook, Mark3” J«w^"*i*i«r|Miner. Iowa and Wisconsin split Kay wtr in 18-57.5. So did jjjggwgV"* v«* - Ha-twin bill, Wisconsin taking the ' By the Associated Press opener 6-1 and Iowa winning the Illinois and Minnesota climbed into a first place tie in the opening weekend of the Big Ten baseball race, while defending champion Ohio State and always powerful Michigan ran into rain problems. / Illinois swept a three - game! set from Purdue, including 6-3 and 2-1 triumphs Saturday, and Minnesota slugged _ Wisconsin Friday and came back with pair of 11-4 victories over Northwestern Saturday. Both Ohio State and Michigan won Friday but their scheduled doubleheader Saturday was rained out. These four teams were the only ones to escape without a defeat in the first weekend of conference competition. Indiana scored a 12-inning 2-1 triumph over Michigan State Saturday on a homer by r (Waterford), 10-4. Ford Nearly Wins Race MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP) - Catch aj| Tiger games on WIR/M ® VO* / on your dial IgOH / on your dial CmlB Harwtll and Gena Osborn cover every f»me-d*y, night, at home and away-on your power atation tor sporta jump quartet of Nick Ochao1' (18-2), Mel Cole (194) and Bob Harris (21-8) for a meet record total of 59-6: ! Another Huskie victory was chalked up in the high-jump relay. Harris (5-3), Dave Gib- . . - A. -r . son (5-6| and Cole (54) com- (The ****** *«**«? the Fbrds bined for 15-9. !for ti»e Virginia 500 stock car race, and, according to the final The two-miie relay team was j scoring sheet, they wereright. second and the 440 and shuttle , .< u«zL [fojth. The meet was run in ^dsmith, of Munster, Ind., i« Cranbrook took the 440, cen-a J965 and“'hatf tral, mile and two-mile relays N * of1(J^len,a": NC* and the mile run (Tom Kerner, another 1966 Ylymnlh.-4:49.5) to successfully defend| The story of .Sunday’s race its Class B title in the Marys- was, in many ways, the story of yille Relays with 74 points. Ox- a Ford driver, Tiger Tom Pis-ford was second with 67. tone, a 5-foot-3 mechanic from University School of Mil-Charlotte,N.C. waukee won the Country Day When the Ford factory with-Invitational with 45 points, drew its support from the Na-Country Day was sixth with Rational Association for Stock Car Mays' Homer Ties Record Set by Oft By the Associated Press second game 24 on the one-hit! One basebali, slightly scuffed, pitching of Donn Haugen. ;|5o. DOUBLE WIN ‘ Herman Franks may have an Illinois came from behind | interesting time explaining that twice for its double victory over Hem on the next expense ac-Purdue. Jerry Saikaia smashed | count he hands the San Franqis-a grand-slam homei; in thelco Giants, eighth inning of the opener and] * * ★ ★ Wal Walters singled Mme the But it’s legitimate. So was the winning run in the eighth inning cause _ the 511th homer of Wil-of the scheduled seven^nning|ije Mays’ career, a 420-foot shot second game. A jin the eighth inning that tied Minnesota outran Northwest-Mel Ott’s National League ern by stealing 12 bases in their j career record and triggered* the doubleheader while the Wildcats | Giants to a 4-2 victory over were committing a total of 11 Houston Sunday, errors, six in the second game. I Mays came to the nlato with Illinois and Minnesota will re-jthe Giants trailing JwTtook aim solve their first place tie thisjat Jim Owen’s 24 pitch and weekend when they meet Friday!drilled a belt-high fastball Into at Illinois. Ward Wins Damp'150' the Astrodome’s left center field I seats, where H. V. Smith of Palestine, Tex., pounced on the baseball. \ All Prices Reduced 5 DAYS LEFT WE’RE MOVING - HELP US MOVE - HELP YOURSELF SAVE 228 USED TIRES 12 MONTH GUARANTEE COMPLETE INVENTORY MUST BE SOLD 3 PRICES ONLY $350“*500-$60& Carry Out Only NEW TIRES at DEALERS PRICES ELECTRIC FANS 20” ROLL AROUND *16“ WINDOW FANS PRICES SLASHED. AIR CONDITIONERS WA", FREEZERS, REFRIGERATORS PRICES SLASHED, COLOR TV STARTING AT W, CONSOLE STEREOS STARTING AT *128“, WRINGER WASHERS FRP, *66°V No Changes in Credit Terms - Up to 3 Years to Pay firestone 140 N. SAGINAW STREET HOURS: 9 to 6 P-AA. MON., THURS., FRI. 'til 9 P.M. HP GETS REWARD Smith eventually got his reward, and Mays his trophy when Franks popped into the dressing room after game and ; TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - Rog- walked up totiis $125,000 center er Ward, 20-year racing veter-1 fielder with the ball sitting in Auto Racing (NASCAR), Pi- an- 8 comeback Sunday! the palm of his hand. . stone didn’t really care. He had1?. winmn8 ,his champion-( Here, said Franks. I_ paid never had factory backing any-jsh,P Ta<* in f"0? *ha" Hthe man “ but** fo;thir wav years in the rain-shortened .150- . * * * But Pistone saw something event at Ttenton Speed j t0^hiI* else in the rules change. For the w*y- e* th n,i^^ rsif* first time NASCAR was permit- Ward, of Indianapolis, held • SSL}* ting the use of two carburetors quarter lap lead over G°rd°n | on "the older. Ford wedge en-'Johncock of Hastings, MichJjf * " a gines when a steady rain halted ac-game. lnnirtgs 5uica. ___j ' Ihv rain miu4 Ailnnio iIa-wibJ aU« He was convinced his 1964 Ford could be competitive with the new carburation set-up. Starting from 20th place, he passed Petty, then Sam Me-Quagg’s Dodge Charger, then Goldsmith and Paschal. As the crowd of 10,500 cheered !m on, the Tiger led the race for 42 laps. A pit stop to cool a flaming rear grease seal cost him three laps but he knew he still could win. Then a rod snapped on lap 361 and his run for the money was over. tion in the 102nd lap on the slip-j pery One mile asphalt course. by rain and Atlanta downed the New York Mets 5-2 before losing the nightcap 3-2 Ward, 45, twice Indianapolis; hJtJ,°usrJ°N„[ 10 champion, said afterward hejjjunjfcv iWjj* is now ready to challenge for vjgr® the S00 crown May 30. !”? He won at Indianapolis in 1959 j’g and 1962. f ||*g •••• Ward collected about $10,000:i»»............. Sunday from a total purse gffiMt ; $40,303. He was timed for'the:”# -102-mile distance in one. hour jjg one minute and 15.51 seconds — jjwj an average sped oef 89.904 miles' 1*45 an hour. I1%gi*'.V Is it fair to smoke Kentucky Club Mixture around a man whtfsquit his pipe? Not unless you want him to reach for K again. That aroma brings to mind a taste . no pip# smoker can resist. So if you do smoke Kentucky Club Mixture arpund a man who’s quit, better do it near a tobacco -counter. Unless you’re feeling generous with your own supply. THE PONTIAC PRESS; MONDAY, APRIL 2fl, 1966, D—t: Cqrol Mann Has Touch on Links In 2 Carolinas SPARTANBURG, 8.C. (AP) — Carol Mum has found Carolina golf courses very much to her liking. / The Towson, Md., blonde was $1,557 richer, thanks to Sunday’s victory In the Betsy Rawls-Peach Blossom Women’s Tournament at the Spartanburg Country dub. Last week she. won the Raleigh, N.C., Women’s Open. Miss Mann shot a one-under par 71 Sunday for a 54-hole total of 216. That was one stroke better than Marlene Hagge, who missed a 25-foot birdie putt on the final green. Major League Boxes MINNBSOTA CALIFORNIA 1 UM* ji H MMeherlki f.'l | • Kotco el J 0 I 1 Stabern lb * 1 j ? I •Alim 2b 4 Total S Total Mill .... 002 201 000—' Californio ..... 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 —- I—Slobom, VoraollM. DP—MinnMotl , LOB—Minnesota 13, Cilltornli I. 2B- W* Riooooo Ptscual (W#2*1) ...(Ifj I (I Worthington 124*1 1 1 •.<>^..2. „ i.n 33.3 AAA n-3 2 firunct ....... 2 2 J j MPNjE OXhanee (Oily*; Zimmerman). WP-rPa*cual. J—3:0f ELECTRONICS DArond EVENING CUSSES IVou Forming Send coupon, call or vlilt Regietrar'* office today, •tart a new career tomorrow. ■ Jta utctaoNici . a INSTITUTt Of TfCHNOlOCT H>3> «srs i mm m 0IT 4,301 nr WO 2 5660 NAME . STREET . PHONE . CITY .. 1 0 Warner rl 0 2 6 1 Ml 3 0 2 0 m*\\ 1 •roniTr WSmlth PITTSBURGH ST. LOUIS . ..ata cf . *4 ^ 1 *4irodr rf ail Clendon lb 4 0 0 OMCarvr c A 0 1 Pagllonl i III Olmltti 3b 3 1 2 j.May e Iff f —bta| Mazoakl 2b 4 i 1 •_ •allay lb 3 0 0 || Rodgers n 3 0 0 1 Ml Cardwal p 1 0 0 ffl K ■ * * i p ___ _ ..10 Median patio LOB—Plttaburgh McCervar (2), A CHICAOO „ KANSAS CITY •h r h bl abrn 0 2 OCpanrli i 1 t 0 OChavrla p E—Suarez, McCraw. LOB—Chicago ansa* City 7. 2B—Agee. Charles. 3 erry. SB—O.Oraen.S—Talbot. IP H RERBBSO .Paler* .„....•• 111 j j ■•-JSOTa .iit ia urkay. DP-1, St.Loul 32 *fl I 1 0 0 0-2 IAN FRANCISCO •b r h bl ab r bt anlar 2b 4 0 0 OMorgin 2b J if] andrm ph 1 0 0 OSJcksn I* 2 0 1 ilbbon p 0 0 0 0 Lilli* •* 2 0 0 May* cf 4 1 1 1 Staub If ^ t McCov lb All 0 Nlchlsn rf A 0 2 0 1b It. 1 Atprota *0 4 0 2 0 e 3 10 Ofatamn e 3 0 0 0 rf 10 1 ODiarker p 3 0 0 0 rt ha 0 1 1 Owen* p 0 0 0 0 p 2 0 0 OMaye pn no 0 I Capada ph 10 0 0 'chofld **1100 Tbtal 5TH TOW. *.*11 1 San franclsco 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 2 1 — A Houston 0 0 1 I 0 0 0 0 0-2 E—SJackten, darker. OW—Sen Francisco 1, Houaton 1. LOB—San Pranettea 7, Houston f. 2B—Staub (2), Wynn. 3B—Llnxy. HR—Wynn (3), May* (A), Hart (3). SB-S.Jack*on, Llllta. Gibbon (W, 1-0) . Fr.Rbsn rf 3 1 B.Rban lb 4 o I Powell lb A 0 ’ DJhnan 2b A 0 1 Blair cf • 4 0 I farbar p » 0 ” Barber (W, 1-SI 11 Stotmra (L, 0-2) . llerTar i 0 O I <■.......a ie a I - j ,._.W) . . *24 I * » I : 14. A-a0.tf7. la if a a t a Manta *a s i j ____pi lb 3 M 1 0 Mathaw *301 Grata c All 0 Alomar tali 0 MGraw P I 1 0 OWoodwd 2b 3 0 0 ____ OP-ittai t York 7, Atlanta S. la. HR—F.AIou 2 (3)1 Sports Calendar TODAlf Milford at Clartatan , IMMirirt ltHeily ■MM Panidale . Brighton at Bloomfield Hills RO Kimball at |r Wait Bk»------- rkley at Haz trthvllla at H it Bloomfield ta Orion at Oi B. Grove* at Wayne Glenn Farmington __■ | I „_______dKattarlng Flint SW at Bay City Cantral (2) tauaa^af*' — •ranch"" Track Haml Park at Royal Oak Kimball Avondale at Madsen Southfield at Birmingham Sea holm DotrplJ Cathedral at -Srlmingham Waterford Our Lady of Lake* at Utica ’ at Orchard Lake St. Pontiac Northern, Waterford, Farm USSR Takes Lead in Basketball Play VALPARAISO, Chile (AP) Russia took over first place from the idle United States In the World Basketball Championships Sunday by beating Chile t-59. In Sunday’s other game, Yugoslavia whipped Bulgaria 85-60. Hie victory was Russia’s third straight and moved the unbeaten Soviets one point ahead of the U.S. which has won both of its starts. Birmingham Grove* i ilenn . Bloomfield Hll_______— Oak Park at North Farmington Kmlgy at H azel Park Holly at Clartatan Royal Oak Kimball at Southfield TUESDAY Walled Lata at "Pontiac Northern Troy at M st. Rita at. St. Gregory at Ferndale St. J St. Cecelia at St. Benedict OL St. Mary at St. Andrew Farmington OLS at St. I Birmingham Brother MC Holy Croia at St. Michael Dundee at South Lyon Mount Clemen* at Port Huron I Pontiac Northern at Cranbrook -Sacred Heart. State Women's Meet I Has Four New Leaden KALAMAZOO (AP) - Leadership changed handrf in the ac-! tual doubles division of the. Women’s State Bowling Tournament and two women moved! into a tie for first place in the handicap singles event over thei weekend. * r* .★ — Mary Kilgore and Lavolina Brown, both of Detroit, took over the doubles lead with a 1226 series. Mary Allen of Inkster and Marlene Rowley of Addison each held a share of first place In singles with 736. I said, “Show pi* a filter cigarette that really delivers taste and I’ll eat my hat!” IRING YOUR CAR TO GOODYEAR I , K ’ COMPLETE INSURANCES WDavli oh "enady t* hyidw p 0 Backert lb 2 0 ( • 0 0 0 Htzman pill $ l 1 j Total 31 6 f 0 Total O* Angelas ... 000 03 Kennedy ( SB—B.Wtllli Irysdale (L tollmen •(« Abernathy I^TB^GHundley, ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) r Larry Bell, a 23-year-old University of Oregon student, won the singles and all-events titles Successfully' Defends KALAMAZOO (AP) - Wake-ield of New Jersey retained Its .earn championship in the 39th annual YMCA swimming and diving tourney Saturday night, nosing out runner-up Hunting-ton, Ind., 298Mi to 275. Springtime Specials Now! Sell Mora Fords in Oakland County Because We Are Lowest in Price! See Mr. fiino Pellieei Now HAROLD TURNER Oregon U. Student Wins Keg Titles Class A Tryouts Slated Hie Talbott Lumber teem of the Pontiac recreation department’s baseball program for men will have tryouts on the Aaron-Perry Park No. 2 diamond at 5 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. Sunday in the eighth annual Intercollegiate Bowling Championships. Bell compiled 592 in singles and a six-game total of 1,172 to top 15 other college bowlers cm lanes at the American Bowling Congress Tournament. Dan Van Wohrelaere of Northern Michigan University and Gerald Heverly of Gettysburg College, Pa., won the doubles championship with 1,125. Wolvelaere shot 563 in a three-game series, while Heverly had 562. Cranbrook Teams Split Two Saturday Contests Crknbrook’s Cranes topped Ferndale, 7-0, winning every set, for their third win in four tennis matches; but they remained winless in baseball by dropping |a 3-1 decision to Birmingham Groves, Saturday. Lane Brown, a lanky sophomore, limited the Cranes’ hitters to three safeties as Groves its .second in two tries. Oakland County’s Largest Ford Oaalar There Must Be a Reason! 464 S. Woodward BIRMINGHAM JO 4-6266 ___________ Ml 4-7500 MICHIGAN COLLROE SCOREBOARD Indiana 1 Michigan ftata 1, 12 In. nlngt; aacond game cancelled, darkness North wood M, Hillsdale 44 Toledo at Wtitam Michigan, eancallad, Ohio Slat* at Michigan 2, eancallad, Ml TENNIS Northern Illinois Cantral Mlchl Indiana 74*. Michigan StataHS HOLD IT! WE HAVE NOT BROKEN SALES RECORDS IN APRIL BUT WE’RE STILL TRYING /COME IN AND BUY BEFORE ' THE MONTH END S AND MAKE TREMENDOUS SAVINGS NO DEALERS, PLEASE , Jtuaa Downey** VILLAGE RAMBLER ^ 666 SI Woodward, Birmingham • MI 6-3900 Saginaw Arthur Hill at Flint Cantral Mount Cloinoni at Port Huron Northtrn ■ Flint Northern at Pontiac Central _______l g .TODAY! DON___ S NICHOLIE 53V* West Huron FE ?-9194 FE 4-0581 RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES, CARS, GOLF CLUBS... USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL DRIVE IR NOW Saturate CM SEimOES and SMB Tu.«day-Widn,idiy-Tliur*aiy-Friday m Motor Tune-Up 16S— m Yon Gat: Spark Rtags. Potnm Rotor, and Condenm Installed- AH Newt Other pitta extra. If needed, te qwetioa of Ignition and Fmd Systems to makasnxayowr motor ta to top traveling condition. FOR EASY TERMS.. Ji/sfwy/CHARGE IT! MM Special Kas Steering Ento Saves Tire Wav Cbrrect camber, caiter, toe-is. Aliga front and. Add «| tot FOLDING ALUMINUM AWNINGS stationary aluminum awnings Aluminum SIDING aad TRIM SLIGHTLY USED ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT GOODYEAR TIRES ANY SIZE one low price! t Famous Ragon Custom Suptr*Cuskioiu. ixptrtlg ttconditUmsi! 1S% or mon ertfiiuU tmi dtptk rmslsfy WHITEWALLS «* *1*° MORE NO MONEY DOWN-NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED Buy 4 tor *8 little as <1.25 wuekly M W. PIKE ST. OPEN DAILY 8:30 AM. (• 6 PiA Pii. 'HI 7:30 — Sot, 'til 2:30 FE 5-6123 m 13-4 THE PONTIAC PR£SS, MONDAY, APRIL 25, 1966 Deaths irr Pontiac, Nearby Areas CATHERINE M. DONNELLEY I will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at I Motor Division employe, died. Service for Catherine M. Don- Dqnelson-Johns Funeral Home, yesterday, nalley, 80, of 44)59 Windiate with burial in White Chapel | Surviving are a daughter, Park, Waterford Township, will Cemetery. Mrs. Evelyn Majors of Pontile, be 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Mrs. Hartt died Saturday aft-'three sisters; five grandchil-Sharpe-Goyette Funeral H o mle er a long illness. She was aidren; and three great-grand-toiClarkston with burial in, Wind-member of Bethany Baptist i children. sor Grove Cemetery, Windsor, Church------- Ont. Surviving besides her husband Miss Donnelley died Saturday | are three sons, Warren J. of following a long illness. She was a member of St. An* draw’s Episcopal Church and was formerly a secretary to the chief of staff at Montreal General Hospital. MRS. NORMAN DYER Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Norman (Eva) Dyer, 78, will be 11 a.m. Wednesday in All Saints Episcopal Church With burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy, by the Sparks-Grif-fin Funeral Home. Mrs. Dyer, the only woman to receive the medal-of the Order of the British Empire for bravery and. courage, died in California Friday after a long illness. MRS. WALTER SEYLER Service for Mrs. Walter (Pro- Pontiac, Fred B. ^N^rthviUelJ"0® Hetena> «• and Harold of Troy; four sis- J39 ?** J*«j. Waterford ters; a brother; and foqr grand- SftSS- ? phiiHpan the Courtney Funeral Home in cmar . Galatia, 111., with burial in MAXWELL MOTZ Webers Cemetery, Galatia. Service for Maxwell Motz, 17, Mrs. Seyler died Saturday, of 3270 W. Huron, Waterford She was a housewife and a Township, will be 2 p.m. tomor-! Prac6cal nurse, row at the Pursley Funeral Surviving are three daugh-Home. Eagles Lodge No. 1230 ters, Mrs. Bobby Starkey of will conduct a memorial servicei Waterford Township, Mrs. John at the funeral home at 8 p.m. Cain of Kankakee, 111., and Mrs. today. . [Gerald Stratbucker of Los An- Mr.’ Motz, an employe of18fles= * son, Charles of Phoe-Simiqs Bros., Inc., died Satur- nJ*». one s,ster! e*8ht grand-day after a three-month illness.[children; and one great-grand-He was a member of the Eagles i [ HOWARD BODEN 'Did Strangling orAxKillf Question Is Posed m Moors Murder Trial CHESTER, England UPI)-A pathologist testified in the “bodies on the moor" case today that 17-year-old Edward Evans might have already been dead from ax wounds when an attempt was made to strangle him. Dr. Charles Edward St. Hill, a Crown witness, told of examining the body of Evans which Book Gives Insults for Use Abroad ADVERTISEMENT WRECKING AND REMOVAL OR BUILDINGS BIRMINGHAM, MICHIGAN City of Blrmtoeham requests bids ... he on-illo wracking if two II) from* residences located Michigan. wreckage will be accepted at I of the City Clerk, City of Bln IS) Martin Street, until I p.m • LONDON (AP) - British publisher Peter Wolfe is bringing out a dictionary of insults so British and American tourists can be abusive in four languages. “It’s an entirely new weapon for the English-speaking traveler abroad who does not naturally possess the gift of tongues," said Wolfe. —_______jsssssu _ ____________Centred forma are available at the office ot the City Clark, IS) Martin street, Birmingham, Michigan. The City reaervei the right to reject “It’s the means by which he was- found last Oct. 6 in the [may speak his mind, giving home of Ian Brady, 28, and My- back a hard word for a hard ra Hindley, 23, both of whom |deed. It provides him witl\ a are charged with three mur-[cutting edge to every complaint ders. k — a term of abuse for every The point is important to jstrongfelt need, the defense which contends |A SAMPLING that Brady killed Evans with I Here is a sampling: the ax in an unpremeditated j For use in a bad restaurant -quarrel. ["Do you serve indigestion tab- Emlyn Hooson, counsel for1^ with every course?’’. Brady,-asked the witness: * * * "It is conceivable that the German — Geben sie zu Jp-body was just dead when it dem gang verdauungstabletten? (a ligature) was applied, that French- Vous divriez sery.r the heart had ceased beating entre cha(lue Mdes pilules la very short time, a matter[' IRENE E. MANLE , City Clei April JJ, IB NOTICE OR RUBLIC HEARING Notice it hereby given that a publ -hearlng will be bald by tha Pontiac City Commlaeion In tba Commission Cham bars. City Hall, 450-Wide Track Drive, East, on Tuesday, May It, 1744 at I o'clock p.m., E-S.t. for tha purpose of ——■* Ing the toning map of Ordinance jeontre les max d’estomaC' Italian — Con ogni porta ta | Surviving are two brothers, WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP-Victor of Pontiac and Walter for Howard ^en, 79, She was a member of All of V?.nc0ll!5r* ^8h -,a"d » ^ of 5114 Jackson will be 3 p.m. Saints Episcopal Church and ter' Mrs'Edna Bss of P°nUac' tomorrow at the Richardson- Wolverine Chapter of Michigan FREDERICK REICH Bird Funeral Home, Milford. 1HUian _ M uulutut Bell Telephone Co. Pioneers, a Service for Frederick Reich, ®ur,a[ wiU be in White h® fl€X Iservite ahebe delle pasticche past president of the church’s n, ot 44 N. Merrimac will be V j jwasappuea. [digestive? Guild Seven and a past presi- i;30 p.m. Wednesday* at the1 Mr> Boden died Saturday aft-i< just POSSIBLE’ j Spanish — Sirven pastilles dentof the Pontiac Business and Huntoon Funeral Home with" a lo"g rCw' "It is just possible,’" the wit-; digestivas con cada comida? Professional Womens’ Club. burial in White Chapel Memor-I JFJJv *® 1 *'^JJjJjliiesstepUed. RESTAURANT REMARK ial Cemetery, Troy. MS** " - Mr. Reich, a retired Pontiac surviving is a sister, Mrs. Ethel Freund of Davisburg. A masonic memorial service will be hejd at 8 tonight at the funeral home. e\ a City Commission. MRS. JAMES DEVAULT Service for Mrs. James (Ida R,) DeVault, 57, of 246 S. Jessie will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the First Church of the Brethren with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery by Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Mrs. DeVault died Saturday. She was a member of the First Church of the Brethren. . Surviving besides her husband are her mother, Mrs. George Bittinger of Grantsville, Md.; and nine children, James L. with the U. S. Army stationed in Texas, Mrs. Vera Girtman of Milford, Linda at home and Albert W., Galy W., Norman R., Sterley, Mrs. Lottie Greene and Mrs. Phyllis Spence, all of Pontiac. Also surviving are 26 grandchildren, three brothers and a sister. MRS. BASIL HARTT Service for Mrs. Basil (Florence A.) Hartt, 73, of 84 Stout Neighborhood Business Center Business zone districts. Plees# teke further notice City Council will meet et thb City Hell In seid City on Wedneeday, May 11, IMd. at 1:00 o'clock n.m. tor the purpose objection ROSALIND WILDGEN, to ouch an amendment. Past Defense Chief Is Dead MRS. SAMUEL B. FRIAR WOLVERINE LAKE - Service for Mrs. Samuel B. (Bernice) Friar, 43, ot 2628 Oakview [will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the iRichardson-Bird Funeral Home, Brady, a slender clerk, and Affronted by a dirty res-Miss Hindley, a tall, poker- taurant, the tourist should ask: faced, silver-blonde, are also “Do you keep pigs in here be- tween meal times?" If the service is slow, ask: “When did the waiters start their strike?" accused of murdering 18-year-old Lesley Ann Downey and 12-year-old John Kilbride. Both children were allegedly squally molested before their For use ^ drivers; .. Circuit Judge William J. Beer approved the psychiatric examination for Barrie S. Moody and has scheduled a hearing on the results for May 3. Moody is accused of the March 25 stabbing of Albert S. Smith, 43, of 22572 N. Bell-wood daring a robbery. Dr. Jerome Fink and Dr. William Gordon were named by Beer to examine Moody. > ★ The sanity hearing was requested, shortly after Moody was bound over to Circuit Court following his preliminary examination Friday in Southfield Municipal Court. Woman Pilot Forgets' Trip Refuses to Discuss Atlantic Emergency Death Notices )unurul homu. DONNELLEY. APRIL 23. IfM. CATHERINE M.. 44S» Wlndlutu Purk Drlvu. ugu Ml duur uunt of Cur roll and Lovolu Nuuuv. Funeral sorvlco will bu hold Tuesday, April M. at 11 a.m. at tha Sharpa-Goyatta Funeral Homo, Clarkston. Informant in Windsor Grove Camatory, Windsor, Ontario. Canada. Mwi George Blttlngori Mrs. Paul (vara) Girtman, Mri. Lottie Green. Mrs. Phyllis Spent*. Jamas L.. Albert Wesley, Gary William, Norman Ray, Sterley and Linda DeVault; dear sister ot Mrs. Dorothy Fazonbakor, Gorman Lee, Simon and McKinley Bittingert ------------J M grandehlldrr- *iii be r-j m J Church ot tt i 3 to S i d Tues- ' Park visiting Dyer, April a, ins, eva, California, tormorly of Pontiac; ago 13i Mrs. Dvar Is survived by several nlacas and naphaws. Funeral service will ba held Wednesday, April 17, at )1 a.m. at All Saints Episcopal Church. Interment In White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Oyer will Ha (In state at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home altar MRS. HOWARD LEET Hundreds Hunt Missing Boy in Cats kill Wilds swamps today for a lost boy jr temporary ab- Ross Davis, 7, of nearby , r ... h, Z J...,. ersink, was last seen Saturday! afternoon in the back yard ofl®"® his grandparents’ home at Di-' vine Corners near here. Service for Mrs. Howard (RoseJ Leet, 77, of 836 Farnsworth wijl be 10 a.m. Wednesday at St.! Patrick’s Catholic Church. Burial will be in Holy Cross Cemetery, Detroit. Rosaries will be said at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. tomorrow at Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Mrs. Leet died Saturday after a long illness. She was a member, of St. Jude Society, Altar Society and 50-Up Club. Surviving besides her husband are a son, Jerome of Buffalo, N.Y., and two grandchildren. MRS. LUTHER SIMMONS HOLLY TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Luther (Bethel) Simmons, 40, of 2336 Houser will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Dryer Funeral Home, Holly,. Burial will be in Lakeside Cemetery.... Mrs.: Simmons died Saturday after a short illness. Surviving besides her husband Wallet Reported Stolen are two daughters, Mrs, Harvey r Clark of Fenton and Sharon at Dale DeHaven, 1230 Taylor, home; a son, Johnny of Holiy; Pontiac Township, reported to her mother, Mrs- Mary Atwell | Waterford Township police yes-of Bradshaw, W. Va.; five broth-[terday theft of -his wallet, con-ers; 'five sisters; and four taining $12 and a $13 check, grandchildren. [from the IAC, 80 N. Tilden. SHANNON. Ireland (AP) Veteran American pilot Louise Sacchi today : refused to talk about her solo flight of the Atlantic in which she had to call for help. “I don’t want to talk about this trip,’’ said Miss Sacchi. "I want to forget all about it." * ★ ★ The pilot — who has flown the Atlantic 45 times and the Pacific once in small planes — is delivering a small American-made plane to a buyer in Germany. Shannon airport officials said they were alerted just before midnight that Miss Sacchi’s plane was in trouble about 1,000 miles off the Irish coast. PRESSURE DOWN Flying eastward from St. Pierre, Newfoundland, she signalled that the plane’s oil pressure was down and the engine heated up. Shannon officials said she then circled the weather ship Charlie for about an hour. After her report, a Hercules plane of the U.S. Air Force’s 67th Air Rescue Section, based at Prestwick Scotland, flew to her assistance and escorted her to Shannon, where she made a perfect landing after 14 hours in age 43; I B. Friar; oeioveo oaugnrar Mrs. Florence Myers; dear mot of Mrs. Allco Hawkins, N Dreama Peterson, Billy $., Jo W . Larry S.. Johnny R , end M Kathryn Friar; door sister ot M Vergie Norton, Mrs. Ruby l born, Mrs. Bgfty Steadman, V Horn Ray and Marlon Frar ■I Homo, walled Lake, with f, G. W. Gray officiating, tenant in Walled Lake Carnal ary. i. Friar will lie to state at tha i ot Basil Hartt, daar mother or Warren J., Fred B, and Harold Hartt; daar sister ot Mrs. WIHIam Jilbert, Mrs. Howard McCdll, Mrs. Irwin Williams, Miss Oliva, and Richard McDonald; also survived by four grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, April M at 11 a.m. at the Oonelson-Johns Funeral Home. In- BURGH,JN.Y. (APT mud^hu^i^b^o^vofontwL 0nJa,!d.*n®’ searchers covered .10 square h'd miles of Catskill woodP and corrected ,tself- She M,d she had not asked for help, but had normal condition 6f the plane’s His disappearance was reported that night, and an all-day search Sunday was fruitless. State and local police, soldiers from West Point, airmen from Stewart Air Force Base and other volunteers joined the search. Planes w.ere being sent by a New York City Civil Air Patrol unit. • Police said the boy is a shy child who might be avoiding his would-be rescuers,, Dollar's Gas Cost Too Much Luther Crane, 57, of 15 Cross pulled into l service station at 382 Orchard Lake yesterday, dered one dollar’s worth of gas and gave the man who pumped it a $20 bill. When the man didn't return, [Crane investigated,and, with tha assistance of station employes, determined that his “attendant" | was evidently in business for himself. The man, described as wearing a blue work Shirt end blue jeans, is sought by Pontiac police. ~ Howard Leaf; daar mother et Jerome Leaf; also survived by two grandchildren. Recitation ot" tha 50-Up Club rosary wHI ba Tuesday, April 24 at 2 p.m. at tha Elton Black Funeral Homo, 1233 Union Lake Road, Union Lake. ' Recitation of tha pariah rosary MOTZ, APRIL 23, 1*44, MAXWELL, 3270 West Huron Straet; age 571 dear brother of Mrs. Edna Bliss,* Victor and Walter Motz. Eagles memorial service will be held today at l p.m. at tha D. E. Pursley Funeral Home. Funeral service Rev. Theodora Altorbach offklat- the funeral home. (Suggested visfl-Ing hours »:30 a.m. to *:3S p.m.) REICH, APRIL 24, 1744, FREDERICK, 44 North Merrimac Street, age 72; beloved husband of Mary Reich; daar father at Mrs. Evelyn Majors; dear brother of Mrs. Ids Pie tow, Mrs. Martha Ptotew and Mrs. Bertha Buhr; also survived by five grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Funeral service will ba held Wednesday, April V, at 1:30 p.m. at Huntoon Fo- SIVLER, APRIL 23, 1744, PRUDENCE HELENA, 3437 Percy King Court, Waterford, age 43; daar . mother ot Mrs. Bobby (Beatrice) Starkey, Mrs. - John (Thorateah) Cato, Mra, Gerald (Patricia) Stratbucker, and Charles Seyler; dear sister of Mrs. Mile (Opal) Ctosterhoff; also survived by eight grandchildren and ana great-grandchild. Funeral service will ba held Wednesday, April 27 at Courtney Funeral Home, Galatia, Illinois. Interment - in Webers Cafnetery, SMITH, APRIL 22. 1744; JOHN J* 4)100 14 Mila Read, Walled Lika; ego 74; dear brother aI Mrs. Prank (Nina) KHng; else survived by several ntocee a—* ■ Funeral oorvMfWM I 10 BIG TRUCKLOADS turnlture. French. Provin nlel, Modern—elj tc t NEW I AUCTION LAND April 23 and (25.-Sale starts^el^t Ck? Rd. Financing* available. _ $50 CASH to schools, churches, clubs, organizations for selling 50 bottles at Watkins vanilla and 50 cans ot Watkins pepper. CaJL 332-3053 8 to 10 a.m. and 4 to 5mo. ANNOUNCING ANOTHER DEBT AID INC. office. 7.8 RUcer Building; branch ot Detroit's well Pentlec Community. GET OUT OF DEBT — AVOID GARNISHMENTS. BANKRUPTCY, REPOSSESSIONS, BAD CREDIT AND HARASSMENT. with one low paynwnt ... .... . lent. No limit as to amount owed end number of creditors. For these’ that realize, "YOU CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF OUT OF DEBT." Heme eppototmanMirranged^tnytlme *'FELMtlt * (BONDED AND LICENSED) RENT. RECEPTIONS t. OR 3-5202. )HT SAFELY WITH r j BOX REPLIES j At 10 a.m. today there I were replies at The {Press Office in the following boxes: 4, 15, 17, 21, 28, 38. 43,12, 19, 79, 71, 72, 81, 98, 100, 102, 103 Funtrnl Directors___, COATS ' FUNERAL HOMI DRAYTON mUMME I OONELSON-JOHNe Funeral Homo ealgnad tor Funeral BLACK FUNERAL .AKl .__________ 7 SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME “Thoughtful Servlet" FE HMI Huntoon FUNERAL HOMI Serving Pontiac tor 50 years » Oakland Avt-__PE MIN Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME. FE 2-8374 Established Over 40 Years Camtary Lots , WHITE CHAPEL. Personals ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phone FE 1*5122 Oatora 5 p.m., sr H no an-swar. celt PE <0734. Cantidantlal. DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES 737 Venom tore PE 5-7105 4|t0UT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BU-----— YOU Ct TAILORED TU ____________ SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELOI SUNDAY VISITS ONLY i, chicks,, rob-i cad. Again n tour giving i Farm admission 25c Lost Md Fawid____.____JS POUND. APRICOT COLORS^ MIN- LOST: B E A G L E, VICINITY OF Cadi Hoc St. II anyone has Information leading to tha dag. please call 402-4757. LOST: BROWN MALE POODLE, vicinity Elizabeth'' Lake Rd., and Airport Rd. Child's pat, reward. 442-0422 after 5 p.m. ^thb 1*44 civil Nights law prohibits, with X; u-: C E RT A I N EXCEPTIONS. X; r:; DISCRIMINATION EE- f:-: cause op sex. since x SOME OCCUPATIONS ARB -X X CONSIDERED MMl AT-« X TRACTIVE TO PERSONS X; •S OP ONI SIX THAN THE X OTHER, ADVERTISE- f? X-FEMALE COLUMNS FOR X ;X CONVENIENCE OP READ-X ERS. SUCH LISTINGS ARB X Help Wanted Mala 6 I MEN FOR LAWN CVttiflGt Goad pay. OR 3-11,0. r $6oo 1 MONTHLY GUARANTEED SALARY o PLUS BONUS ANO’CO. CAR r - Far Right Man strBNt gr layoffs. Must be neat. Wo train. Personal interview only. CM47Um,4 7Jlte- n Color. 2w w. Monlcaltn.. A PART-flAAE JbB married man, 21^4,’to work 4 urs par evanlng. Call 474-2222. ».m.-7 p.m. tonight. _$200 PER MONTH ARC WiLOfT ATTENTION 1 collage studei sm.r rrr overtime. Apply IIS SCHOOL aN6 arastad to sum-Variety at 2 si .75-13.00, j ATTENTION STUDENTS Wa Hava soma openings for high school or collage students to work aach afternoon approximately 5 hours starting ot 12t1S p.m. Must ba 16 to 19 ■' years of aga. Apply in Parson tos BERT FALKNER CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT THE PONTIAC PRESS AUfO" SALESMAN: GOOD FLOOR traHIc. East pay plan with fringe benefits. Free dame. Jain tha Dodge Rebellion today! Hunter Dado*. Harm Millar, 447-0755 _ AUTOMATIC CHUCKING MACHINE operator, Sat, up and operate. Paid Blue Cross, life Insurance, Holiday pay, else pension plan. Contact M. Coon, 2441 Loach Rd., Auburn Haights 452-3400. 5 R 1C It LAY 1 k O CONTRACTOR Call La'nting,"eras "c 4300, collect. BRIDGE PORT OPERATOR Prototype and teal work. Highest wages tor qualified man. New.alr-condltlon plan. Sevakls. Tool and Enolnoerlna Inc. 12473 Marlin. Detroit. KE >4740. Batch and School-craff area. ________ .Building Maintenance Engineer We need a .mature man; who is completely familiar with all phosas of ‘ building mainta-nanca. Must have boiler operator's license and refrigerator or air conditioning license or be capable of obtaining such a license. Executive obiiity. is important, excellent salary, plus many company benefits. Apply personnel office daily between 9:30 a.m. and 9i00 p.m. Montgomery Ward __ PQNTIAC MALI _ BUS BOY Day and ngIM shift. Apply Ellas Bros. Restaurant, Telegraph and I replies confidential. Reply t CARPENTERS AND HELPERS, steady work, call attar 4. 332-4134. CAR WASHERS, DAYBRS.GRtV-ars. full or par time. 147 W. "^CHECKER - SENIOR DRAFTSMAN Steady employment and overtime, a years experience an amall me-chanislms desirable. Growing company, many fringe bane- M. c. MEG. CO. LAKE ORION Phana MY Mill An equal opportunity employer CONTRACT SALES REPRESENTATIVE A R. JU DIE DESIGNER AND OETAILER with lamination' and progressiva die experience. Overtime, fringe benefits and excellent working ditions. Hydro - Cam Enginei 1700 E. Maple, W. ot J™ ■ 4-2700, Trey. _____________ _ DIE SETTER LEADER Days, good fringe benefits, tap rata, steady |ab tor right man. 31740 Stephenson. JO *4205.____ DRILL PRESS OPERATORS Must ba able to read micrometers and sharpen drills. 50 hours, days. Apply to parson, Joda Industries, 570 Wide Track Drive E. . Driver fDe established okv cleaning route. * Lake Cleaners, 3 DRIVER - OLDER MAN PRE-tarred for .part-timo work. Sea Pearce Floral Co., 557 Orchard Orchard Lake._. kb'5 MARATHON SERVICE-FIRST, class jnachanlc. No tools required. 7555 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. EM 3-40Q3. JESTIMATOR Must read blut prlnta West Detroit Glass at Pontiac. 711 Auburn, FE 2-0242. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY,, APRIL 25, 1066 Haig W«rt*4 Mold ft IXPlRIiNClb LANbsCAPERS -• Apply Mmn M *“ - ■ mu Elizabeth Like Rd. Help Wanted Male______________* ■OY Scrip, OISTOI FIXTURES BUILDERS OVIRTIMB Paid Holidays — Blue Croat - Vo-catloni — Pensions. PROGRESSIVE WELDERS *1* OAKLAND (U.S. IP) PONTIAC FE 4-9518 AN fOUAL. OPPORTUNITY RAW-OYER'__________ POLL tlME OFFICE* POSTflOB, general clerical work. Write Pon- 5;.ci.;cX,.bo'p.i?' Siorta: morlttol nolle, aalary expected. | PULL OR PART TIME, STOCK'oi INSPECTORS CITY OF TROY -.ujppi NT ED #OR TRACTOR nd general forming. North (star, tin Rochester OLDER MAN ABLE BODIED. ABLE lo do Hght work. Alto ft--------- with plant malarial. 3G35 hr wk. Phone PE 54711, 1sx Impaction. Him school grad- q'neil pea i. soma expanence required. ,>0Tr|,n ST, ' w».C.!r.,,oIi Pfr«lwnnJli i < vtoui ricortt' - vour Inca i Wattles Troy. MUIborry tpntlal U unlimited. *Ca Proksch, salat manager f It OFFICE BUILDtNO.' tonal In FURNITURE SALESMAN Must Pbe tamlllar'^th^.O.^syp tern and have expedience In mad. lum priced furntture tales. Un-llifilted Opportunity for the right "man, Call qr write Mr. D. Beyer, 494*6237. G. 4434 Oort Highway, Grand Blanc, Mich. Sa$ STATION ^TENDANTr-Experienced, mechanically Inclined, local rgf.. Tull or part time, Gull, -Telegraph and Maple. *OOD MAN FOR LANDSCAPING. .............. Social Secrulty 3520 Pontlec Lake Rood but tired of doing nothing. Job1______OR 4-2222________ pays limit you can earn under,OPENING FOR SERVICE REPRE-Soclai Security, which It 6125 par, tentative, exparlanca required. Con-month'. Greater part of work mint tact Champion Heme Bulldert Co., be done afttr^l p.PL AjjjMjt ^n Dryden, Mich. TOdTlO) • .. . . ... OUTSIDE SALESMEN IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR MEN APPOINTED With Local Area, having ability to meat people To Sell Building Supplies EXCELLENT ADVANCEMENT F OPPORTUNITY PERMANENT EMPLOYMENT LEASE OR EXPERIENCED TO manege roedtlde market, on MSI oppotlfe airport, known at Apple Land. 429-— JANITORS - ORDERLIES ! ontlac General Hospital hat Immediate openings for full or part time ianitori. 8T.I7 per hr. —IIP. - 61.69 per hr. Apply In PERSONNEL DEPT. PONTIAC GENERAL HOSPITAL PRODUCTION WORKERS also ; Millwrights Electricians Pipefitters Maintenance Welders • Machine Repair Toolmakers • Painters & Glaziers Help Waited Female_____7 ARE YOU A GOOD EXPERIENCED* TYPIST WE NEED YOU AND S MORE .FOR TEMPORARY ASSIGNMENTS Call manpower fe eni4 451-6646. i. cell b n 5-7 p Growing Plastic Mfg. HAS OPENINGS FOR IlSECOND SHIFT, ASSEMBLERS AND FABRICATORS. Only men^ with general thop expert- Alto opening! for material handler!, no experience nacettary. Excellent fringe benefit!. CALL PER-SONNEL OFFICE. Ml J-1203. ftANOYMAN TO WOfcK ON PRl-vale estate, year around. It dr — ,,---, .---.---------------- ana rxpanaing Lompiny Machine Operators Several openlngt, permanent pool- In existence Over 111 yeors lions. Some- previous milling, lathe ' surface or OD grlndlnfl experience . preferred. Must be reliable and 1 tBdifiina try Uam New factory, 2921. Troy# between 14 ff Coolldge. Phone r FRINGE BENEFITS Including S49-2151. MAINTENANCE ,x 166. Pontle MANAGER TRAINEE Ambitious young married mechanically Inclined, .for |----‘ -- Opportunity •- ____ organize___ tnee helpful but will -t nan. Starting salary of S ly plus bonus. Chanco for oncomont. Call1 Mr. Rl WICKES Lumber & Bldg. Supply Co.] d. P.O. Box No. Sit ;j0£' GRANO BLANC; MICH — NO. 46439 OLDER MAN, PREFERABLY SeMI-rotlrod for shlpolna room and llohl delivery. 3432 IMp WoUd Female 7 OSITION AVAILABLE FOR BOTH a day bar —‘ ' |-- — ATTENTION RN's AND LPN's Openings. Call 336-7114 loving i <44^777r«(ter BABY SITTER, 6 TO 5, MUST '~gni|inrtatlon. 4SI-""|B BABY SITTER. MATURE. OVER 3K BABY SITTER. 1-6:30, HARRINO- B.ABY SITTER TO LIVE IN OR out. FE 2-3426 after 4 p.m. BEAUTICIAN, EXCELLENT OPPDft-tunlty, salary, commissions, hospitalization. pd. vacation, bonus plan. Advance training It you qualify. Cell Mist Grace for emit. Ml 7-3033, Bernard Heir Stylist. BAKERY HELPER, PART TIME. ■ .m. to noon. Apply mornings ish Pastry Shop, 2523 W. Help Waittod M. bt F. t [ ARE GETTING READY TO ton the now Eofmoro Restaurant, la need cooks, waltrassas and l Apply m parse- RECORD AND SHEET -MUSK •ales girl. Full time, 40 hour weak Hours 12-9 p,m, Apply Grlnnall's PenfiacMaii. RESPONSIBLE LADY TO live In from May 1st to May 6th. Complete charge of house ' ‘10.00 per day. >.m„ 474-0854.' Complete ___I children.I Mutt furnish n Call after 7 , RESPONSIBLE WOMAN FOR GEN-‘ homework, 5-dey week, SI .50 hour.. Vicinity Telegroph-Quar-pleasant lake-front heme. Cdll ■ 4 p.m. 444-0137.___ RETIRED RN FOR CRIB'TftjOM In Church In ilrml ' day Mornings, S-1, a Ml 4-2040 between 9-S. RN'S AND LPN'S, 7 TO 3 AND T1 to 7 shift, small general hospital, Rochester, Mich, OL 1-9361.__ SALESLADY] STxTe Cl E ME Donuts. OR 3-S4I0. SALESLADIES * Expor Soles Help, Mole-Female 8-A I SHOW YOU HOW TO FE 2-m2P*f Y*>r' Work Wanted Male 11 A-l CARPENTERS. ____887-5053, OR 4-1674 YOUNG ELDERLY MAjTWlfH Drive • van truck what have to oiler? Reply to Pontiac Pi Box 105. CARPENTER WORK, ADDITION OR small lobs. FE 8-219S. DRUMMER AVAILABLE FOR’ ANY " ■ ' Mtflfi OR 4-6131. MAINTl- BEELINE FASHIONS Manager in your area how cepting new stylists to train . Full time or part tlma. BLOOMFIELD FASHION SHOP PONTIAC MALL I SALESLADY FOR DRY CLEANING c‘i Plant, no experlenct necessary. 6 r day. Janet Davis Dry B*,n JT f Cltinrs# Lahsar at Mgple, you quality?0plus#commissions. Q$n 335-9191, OR 3-4422,_462-5243._ *$3jp BOOKKEEPER - THRU TRIAL| ence. Coll 338-4553. WAITRESS office Tt^G-oodhousekeeping Shop. ill Fo • TOP * it of Pontiac and 0 BUS GIRL Day and night shift. Apply Ellas Bros. Restaurant, Telegraph ond PERMANENT POSITION mediately If you aro over 21, CASHIER AND GENERAL OFFICE 1 girl. Hours 5 to 9 and Sof-12 to 9. Apply OrlnnpH's, P Inn. 3461 Eltoabotli Loko Rd. Waitress, weekend, niohi In Rochester. 144-2437, Warren. WAITRESSES. SATURDAY NIGHTS. n. 3461 Elizabeth Lake Rd, TRESS, OAKLAND COUNTY at Club. 2336 FcmdalO. 462-9670 CASH »s Homs- LAND CONTRACTS—HOMES WRIGHT 362 Oakland Avt. FE 2-9141 CASH BUYERS 463-2416 I 019*16 i. of Pontiac, last dee s. FE 4-6742. ME FG 206 LIST INGS LANDSCAPING. ....... nance. FE 4-2309 otter S_ .AWN WORK, HAND DIGGING and light trucking. 334-7344. I(M3T HAULING, PAINTING, Windows washed, 336-3570. aan desires .work as CUST0-FES-oTt*? WINDOW CLEANING. ALUMINUM ses washed, painting. FE 14363. Work Wanted Female 12 IRONING|, EXPERIENCED j BABY SITTING fN—MY HOME, j Ray O'Neil, Realtor 3520 Pontlec Loke Rd. OR 4-2222 or OR 3-202S PRIVATE PARTY WOULD L . — II house to buy, reasonable. RETIRED OM COUPLE NEED neat 2 or 3 bedroom brick ‘— Pay 85,000 down. Dorris 6 Plains. Full bosomont, roe room, got heel, fireptoco. fenced yard. $11.95(L make offer on down poy- S. 425-4254 or 425-1453 DALE HAMPSHIRE OR 3-3473 . rep. Frushour S Struble ROOM HOUSE - 1 ACRE LOt with 3 large garages. Only 07950 on land eontrag. . REAGAN REAL ESTATE HI N. Opdyke_________33SBIS4 BEDROOMS, BASEMENT, BRICK, used. S14400, Ally 473-9701._ 1. 116,925—10 p FLATTLEY REALTY OR 4-0324._____ spot Cash orRoth°eurR *AUoyicxAction---------------------------------- CALL NOW. HAOSTROM REAL- S _BEpROOM. POSS ELE INCOME. TOR, OR 4-0358 OR EVENINGS Pontiac, Ally Realty — 473-9701. SOUTH MERRIMAC . contract, 2 or a Deo room anoi_____________FE S-S9S0. . basement FE 2-H49. _______ 431 FERRY STREET WE CAN SELL OR BUILD YOUR 2 bedroom, ' “ ^--------------- 2191. Building Services-Suppliss 13 FENCING CONTRACTOR, IS YEARS In Pontiac, pat our a ' for complato land contract. Hava buyers to any type property. Call us to Information or free appraisal. A. JOHNSON & SON REAL ESTATE Si INSURANCE 1704-S. Telegraph ___________FE 4-2533________ ____ .. . „_____ condition. Only 64,5001 11,600 down, land contract. , K. L. TEMPLETON, REALTOR 2339 Orchard Lake Rd. 462-0900 Apartments, Fninishid 37 3 Baldwin Avt. 5 Lake > fERTiOF )w sSSmSTpo? week HS INCLUDES^^ ^ AIRY ROOMS IN INDIAN V|L-f 2 c,r °SEE MODEL A CRESCENT LAKE R AMERICAN HERITAGE VOMAN FOR COUNTER AN O p marking department. Apply Fox -Clapntra# 719 W. >F— WOMAN FOR INSFECTION 61-; partmant. Steady job. Good pay. Will train, Apply Fox *■■-" 1 Tupper. OR 3-7061 s. 719 W. Huron. !3Siw >N 3 ROOMS FOR COUPLE. ___O Auto — FE 5-3271 MIXfcfi NEIGHBORHOOD. SINGLE we nave 75*X140* ton. ic. SCHUETT Ml 6-8500 BY OWNER - 3 BEOROOM, ALU-mlnum stohg,^ ^erage. Northern BY OWNER, ^BEDROOM WlgK fenced, oarage, mlxad. FE 5-6410. !. No chlldrtn. Clean, f WOMAN NEEDED. FULL OR TrEnSPETtltlM part-tlmp — llfetlma security. Ex-1_-Z.--------- perlence Sunday School, mir helpful. Earn $100 weekly am No competition. Write John Rudin M&M"MotorsT IMS Oakland Go ** | Madison St., Chicago' .338-9241 _2S| GOING TO CALIFOR-] ROCHESTER AREA Now 1- and 2-bedroom opts. carpeted, alr-condltloned, swln. pool. Rochester. Manor Apts., Call L TYPES, KNIT! » OR 3-7193. . . 930 V Sheetrocking, finishing, plaster re- GAS-pair, 16 yrs. experience, work guer- as, enteed. 332-1339 L---- InvEstroEghing j ELDERLY LADY TO LIVE I { ored family. FE S-29S3. FE rair 'fflMM-BSTaRBirqat nu* - i Having for ashville. may Proporty MEnagtHwnt 40-A B—RHWPI ■.,9?L WOMAN WANTED TO LIVE IN TO % take lady, ret. exchanged, EL --------A basement, oarage. 812,200. Call ■",4" 1 tor2 cBIMron. OL 1-4703. | ui29t* ! euiiiewe vacatiom I OR341». Oriwon dr“ L FURNACES.OIEAT I S.WIEl .. ______ 5-1501—5-2537. RETAIL PLUMEINO AND HEATING SUPPLY . Repair Parts and F--------------- SERVICE .STATION PART . WAITRESS^ DE-1 WOMAN FOR. GENERAL OFFICE.: PASSENGERS t6 HARRISBURG, Apt. sIw^^/bMUtHu? grounds, CITY OF KEEGO HARBOfc ^«-v.unl, 4900 N. Rochas- work. Some bookkeeping, must be Illinois. Leaving Frl. afternoon. Re- boat-float, swimming, swing and: year around h- I -ter Rd., Rochester. ______nea* in appearance., and have turning Sun. FE 5-3934. slides tor children, 175 per wk. Sylvan .Lake. • EXPERIENCED RETAIL CLERK Pgsonollfy;.!^ day week. ... . .. . ,, > ; Anl 682-2744, for June, July and Au- 64500, 731-4S25. and cashier, kionetito. Hard-j Reply to Pontiac Press. Box No. Wanted Household Goods 2v gust._______________________________—! CLARK1 T EXPERIENCED TELEPHONE OP-WOMAN TO BABY SIT IN MY CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP- R6ltt Lake Cottages 41 Century-old r -1 erotor-receptionlst between 2S ond I home. Days. FE 4-9200.___j pllances. 1 Piece or houseful Pear - --------------------------~| situated on 5 E [ 35. Must be good typist and hiwe WOMEN OR GIRLS FOR PLEAS-1 son's. FE 4-76SI. _________ | fl«>r ays.l»ts_ °* moster ^rym ! Pjeasent Personality. 5.day.week, ant telephone yiork from oUr office,11 piece OR HOUSEHOLD. PIANOS.; lSU«“fR.VACATION wlth CLARKST0N AREA 3'D CONSTRUCTION I PARKING LOtS DRIVEWAYS Landscaping Frta Estimates 152-4210 . Open til 9 ‘ - ASPHALT PAVING ] Tog Asphalt Paving ~ Residential & Commercial FE $-1573. - C. B. ASPHALT SEAL COATING. Fret estimate. FE S-3909.____ DRIVEWAY SPECIALtSl 1 Call new. Froa estimate. FE 54910 Parking lots, tennis courts, - driveways. ASPHALT APPLICA-TQRS ASSOC., FE 2-2414, j WALT id IEER ASPHALT PAVIHO, me. FE »W43 4f FE M6S2. I lassuRt Wot«rpro«fing j IPAIR M 674-1492( ( j vicinity of Pontiac Alrn time. Salary. Apply: I. 673-4466 Excavating Restaurants -------------------------public and 1 BIG BOY DRIVE-IN, DIXIE AT Machanlcal 1 --------".aka-Tatograph at Huron. 2-1252. '[RETAIL SALESMEN - FULL AND 1L FUR-: Ply to P.O. Box 508 stating qiloli- Broadmoor Asaoctotos. CommunityL”" " 1LT «qqp ri"e/M’ used GROUNDS, BOAT, FLOAT, SWIM-i brary, flcatlens and salary expected.--1 National Bank Bldg. Room 761. rSP° H»ii'1ANAuc?innD MING, SWING AND SLIDES FOR ^In experienced, gHWT^FiNgRIg we are taking appucatiqns 3-^ or MV S4i4iu ' children, vs per week. p;~w • EE AND DRV ClK^G.INSFEC | for . toOy .wto, w«to. to *^1hEAR BEFORE^ | FOR JUNE^V. or aonllenoK and what have vou. _:------— fireplace, paneled .. - breakfast bar. BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMERS :lrep^ace^ Racialist BniltBag MBdtmiinti#n l-A S CAR GARAGES. 20*x22’ S675. Cement work. Free estimates. Sprlgfleld Building Co. MA 5-2126. Scar oarages, it'xao', s$75. we era local bulMart and build any. tlza. Cement work. Free estimates. -Pady-Bullt Oarage Co. OR 3-5419. " SCAR GARAGE, f*“ LEONARD'S FLOOR SERVICE Old HoOrs made like new Floor Loying "" "rs. experience. 427-3775 Collect Garden Plowing______~ Tree Trimming Service |.... _ ____________ ■ CASHIER, J I Excellent advancement, 1 VS ^usTnc^i^^ioW! FINAL INSPECTOR stone Tire and Rubber Co., 144 . W. Huron.------- ------------------ — ---- ---- SURFACE GRINDER ON TOOL ROOM WORK iotion Tool 81 Gauge 24490 TELEGRAPH " Southfield 444-4077] HOUSEKEEPER. LIVE IN. SC ____s= H—age children- Ml 4-5762. — iSMALL COMPANY SOON MOVING HOUSEKEEPER WANTED, to Howell area, seeks shop fore-1 in phone 332-4456. man in locality. Minimum 2 ve< recent supervisory experience p ferrably In electrical line. Fi figure salary to right men. Sena: Mr and have ref. Sat. and ! resume to Pontiac Press box 20. at 5201 Hillsboro Rd., Clarkston. y^ wStilma rrol^Vt‘e HOUSEWIVES-—~f^THERS'TURN I area tf wining to reiocaie. I - mornings, afternoons applies ir lettei appliances and 1 available at our Pontiac j We'll *ue«Pn ir orouy ... 1 Day shift, including some B & B Auction ds and holidays. Only writ- _. . n. ilication considered. Address iiow °lxla--—------------ ...............- - " Wanted Miscellaneous 30 AUGUST Inanity_______^___ I 2 ATTRACTIVE ROOMS large bedrooms ond bath. Grounds well landscaped plus • variety ol fruit frets. Call today tor details. ROLFE H. SMITH, Realtor , 244 S. Tetograph E 3-764S EVES. FE 3-7362 M. C. MFG. CO. 116 Indtonwood Rd. Lake Orion An equal opportunity employer , Birmingham. Telephone _____J~V_______ _____ ..._____ i time. Apply In person. Burger Chet1 I Dnve-ln, ill N. Perry. ______ , i YOUNG WOMEN oritofi^c.otaembnswt. International corporation will em-GERMAN WAR_.RELICS WANTED .... .......... CLEAN QUIET LADY, KITCHEN basement,'Tear garage?^on’ll nrlollaaM, PE 1-26*4. I Ini. WOR to SChOOlS and Sh( trade for smaller house < "i-e"'2 ' ', • ...... ,....1 on land contract with S3,501 CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM, LADIES.] gJ°4r Pow»11 Ctrp ‘ *M'rnt » 247 N. Saylnaw. FE_M70t.--------- ( ^ rA7V ' x147' DOUiLC ito^TMich' OCCUPANCY, weex. JMaid service, telephone, peted, TV. Sagamore Motel. 7 o typing required. Must be -jceady I o start work Hnmedietely.--- SALARY" I BUSINESSMAN WOULD vasslng. Can 336-31)1 t GRAVES CONTnACTfNO roe Esllmotos OR 4-IS1 _ _ Ali Types of Remodeling Lookkeeping and income tax! Lakes Tree Co., Trimming Kitchen cupboards. |*66IIIom attte[ sorvlco. SS par .hour. OR 3-0267. • |. Plantings - removals - flreplac I, roofing.' Free est _ _ “ TREES REMOVED. No down payml- G & M Construction Co. 64 N. Soglnow FE 2-1211! CARPENTRY AND REMODELING OL 1-6255 HOME OR BUSINESS. ROOFING. SIDING, PLUMBING, CARPEN-! TRY, HEATING, ELECTRICAL, CEMENT AND BLOCK WORK. HOUSE OF TRADES________332-9840 landscaping k-l COMPLETE LANOSCAPING, sodding, seeding, grading. Broken Concrete,- retaining waits. Top toil sold by load. Free Estimates. FE M314. TURRET LATHE HARDINGS OPERATOR TOOL LATHE HAND fringe1 benefits? steady employment and overtime. M. C MFG. CO. $385 PER M0. PHONE PERSONNEL MANAGER, 9-1 p.m. 332-9137 or 332-9138 mice Sagamore________________________ ......< tele- ROOM FOR LADY, KITCHEN USE, pnone connections. Control locale I “ ’* " preferred. References. Write Pon-“TC Press Box* No. IS. telephone, ^ __________AOY, Kl o smoking, dote-ln. ROOM AND OR BOARD, 135M> I CHILDLESS COUPLE^ URGENT^LYI ^EE^Ne ,gpy TOR , iDROOM* BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED RH Positive *4.00 RH Nag. 87.00, 810.00 - 812.00 DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE ___________ _______________I| SINGLE PRIVATE ROOM, FAMILY OF 3 DESIRE 1- OR 2-| Bo^1* "t?*' Hom* *’ —------ ■---Waterford, Dray- mMls M PoDlar st- Oakland U. Con bo had an contract a) $8,500 with 62,000 d WARDEN" 1434 W. Huron, Pontiac 333 3M BUILT sting, firep FIRST IN VALUE « RENTING ■ $59 Mo, DEPENDABLE LAWN CUTTING SERVICE HAULING AND RUBBISH, NAME I. McCollum, FE,5-4543—FE 4-0043 delivered. 2401 Crooks. 626-2000 SERVICE, CABINETS. ADDITIONS, YARD AND DRIVEWAY GRADING concreto work, brick, block, toun- FE 5-35™ dstlonl, alum., siding For details—Earl Klin -OR *3-31S2. ills—Earl KlTne-OR 3-1921 rjjx LIGHT HAULING, BASEMENTS, I garages cleaned, 674-1242. FE S-3004. LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING. ‘ 1111 dirt, grading and grav- s license. West Oetr: WANTED STOCK~ BOV. 14 YEARS ■Po">l*c Prw* E?x21 , . . I TALBOTT LUMBER" Carpentry I Glass service, wood or ale —-----------— ■— ------------- Building' and Hardware I A-l Interior and exterior “attic 10>5 Oakland , ______pE *-45951 basement, recreation room, kitchen Mnvina and Storaae and bathrooms my specialty. State I m0T,n3 . ,,u licensed. Reas. 4*2-0441. | ... ........... dARPENTRY, NEW AND REPAIR.' SMITH MOVING CO I LAUNDRY HELP, EXPERIENCE not necessary. Pontiac Lountf-540 s. Tetograph, LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSE ptiyslclan spec 335-7121. CABINETS, RECREATION ROOMS panoMd. *74-3527. ______■ FOR CUPBOARDS AND NU-TONE oppllancaa. call FE 3- HOUSE PAINTING GUARANTEED. Cement and Block Work Guinn's Construction Co. FE 4-7477 Evas. FE STlg CEMENT WORK - FREE jSTI-mates. OR 4-23S6. call anytime ►ourBo WALLS AND FOUNDA-l!SrviceFrFE *MsS^er Of^'e-SS! Painting and Decorating ____Thiek Dental Trucks to Rent •X-Ton pickups lVk-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS . AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Semi-Trailers Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD 4-0441 FE 4-1442 Open Dolly Including * I ROOM "HELPERS, EXPERI e not necessary, full or j>ert ' one i. Pontiac Laundry, 540 S. foie* Ml ph._________ ,____________LPN, PAINTING, PAPERING, CAULKING real, rates. Tom 343-4660--------- 349-0622. QUALITY PAINTING individuar Interested in restau-1 Shore Living Quarters d bar management. Exp. In -— -----i lc^sary;.,c^T,h* Ro,u?d.a lady wishes to share her ’ Inn, *52 0600 for appoint- with employed lady at 740 ! mant- -_____________ _! E. Beverly. FE 3-7441._____•__ DETROIT NEWS MOTOR ROUTE; mA(_e WISHES TO SHARE HIS' ( driver, 2 needed, Waterford Tootn-, ro,rtment with same. - 549-0477. .-ship -and White Lake Township.! oTwal Oak **»*■ _______________ ' 334-5273, or FE 2-0921. 1 Roral oax: PNs. AND CQMPANION NURS; DISHWASHER. 1:15 A. Must have transp. and good mu. thrnitnh r-a AJJCounty Nurror REGISTRY., ^ ^Xus GROCERY EXPERIENCED ^COOK, DCLISA'S ..*^arC . Restaurant, 4980 N Rochester Rd., { Wanted Real Estate LADY TO WORK store. 9405 Dixie H „ . - .. | YOU WO lauY wants to share TO 5 P:M. apartment with same. Unwed moth-I. Good wages, er or children welcome. FE 0-4423.1 Snack Bar. 8 ,0 YOUNG LADY DESIRES SAME TO ' of Pontiac * ‘chandler HEATING CO. ____OR 3-5432 y NE OFFICE FOR RENT II -■ Clarkston. TV Antennas 6 TYPING AND GENER- Rocheste ________ i work. Please send lob and | EXPERIENCED COOK, PAID VA-! iformation, age, education catkma, holiday pay, life Insurance. mjly .«**<“» *» Poet Office I Apply 114 Orchard Lake, Pontiac. - KITCHEN HELP. OELISA'S RES-1 HOMES, i -------z ---- z. Rochester Rd.] CEL^J ... DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. OR COME TO 290 KENNETT near BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5 3676 626-957$ HAYDEN NEW HOMES 1 TO 50 MACHINE OPERATORS-GIRLS n person. Burger Chef Exc. opportunl lory positions, conditions. Soi exp. prefern ‘ 2921 Industrt tauront, 491 Rochester. St S“iorkrii|MAN OR WOMAN TO CARE FOR metal working r Quadraplegic young man. Pleasant M Troy factory,! surroundings, own room and bath. ___i between 14-I5I character rets. Call OL 1-444). off Coolldge, Phono 549- MAN AND- HIS WIFE TO WORK I — trucking service. Ugi **—1 Irgontty need tor Immediate WARREN STOUt Realtor Sb N. Opdyke Rd. Rent Business Property 47-A 12,000 SQUARE FEET OF OFFICE space in newly remodeled building. Air conditioned, ample perk-,------ T- ........ ----- Ino Call evenings and weekends, and proven 3 bedroom plan. Fam-427-2506 ,| ily room. Attached garage. Com- j f1>m toiisbe-cesT of OFFICE| PKtne.s combined with efficiency. 1--------------— --------- Latoet styling. ’ OR LIVE ___ill chlldran. 41 Ret., Birmingham ai Good MATURE W06AAN TO HANDLE rental of TVs in Pontiac hospi" ' Hourly, rpte. S' days, Immediately. SALARY: $164.50 WEEKLY PHONE PERSONNEL MANAGER 332-0137 or 332Q3S Help Wanted Female J 2 WAITRESSES FOR FULL TIME cioslng. ’servicing, e work. 1 relief girl. 1, 4 p.m. rolorlol skMJs. AppI] to It p.m. Good working conditions. Paid vacations. Starting wage tor experience. 51.30 per hr. Apply , TOP must 7-0363.| pay A^p " mioolE-AGEOI2 OR 3 BEDROOM HOUSE:, PARITY ipartment caretakers, part time. •«» •» W *» "IsfoL uniform Give references and t ' Reply to Pontiac Press Bi 1 NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS ' «*- for fountain girls, waitress, dlsf * Rd n Lk, Rd, S., of Com- ends. only. Send brief resume. WULTILITM OPERATOR PREFER-giving age end phone number to ably with some experience but Pontiac Press Box 3J. - ' not necessary. 3432 W. Huron. MORTGAGE SECRETARY Excellent opportunity for girl perienced In oil phases of n™, ■- wasners, cooks, porrer. nppiy nan loan operation-applications, ard ' Johnson's Restaurant. 3650 Iclng^ etc. Good_sec- oixie Hwy., Orayton Plains. I M ‘ ■ PART TIME, PONTIAC LAKE area. Mel's Sport Shop. 673-1534. .. motel maid ovlR iirixPERT- SURGICAL TECHNICIANS j " >nced aob dependable. 330-4061._l i Applicants must have NURSE AIDE WITH EXPERIENCE, education, 2 yearn | 7-3 shift. Avon . Cantor Hospital, routine patient Rochester, Mich. OL 1-9311. * ! training In SL..—___________ --------------------------------- - - ---- S339.S3 - per ALL CASH It MINUTES en if behind in payments, or u r foreclosure. Agent. 527-6400 ALL CASH | 2 BEDROOM HOME Harbor. $7,500 cash or 54,500 existing mortgage. 602-1406. 2 BEDROOMS. CRAWL SPACE. — — ^ 1- y r . ford, 5400 down,*ny 673-9701. V/ f v l J IX * 3 BEDROOMS. 51000 OOWN. N YUnK i&g&sm ,Tg.- -r....P J. C HAYDEN, Realtor K.E. Brooklyn, 620-I4M.----1363-6604 10715 Highland Rd. (MS9I ■eoroom cqttag|9 water-Uqq^isi HOUSES! new:! All NEW beoroOm ranches 5-3271 FE 5-2397.; ____________ , R 4 BEDROOM BRICK. COR- , SUBURB An'TjV I NG - - 300 BOWL iimrnrrrrf S4fASITCn 1 PART-TIME WORK FOR FULL- y"- I WAITRESSES WANTED ' time pay. « to work the Stanley *PPlV ALBERT'S SUBURBAN HAIR FASH- Way. M2-2273 tram 3 * Ions, 1984 W. Walton, Drayton {PACKAGE SORTING, LIGHT DE-1 ~*-* rz- — " tton it AI- ^~13 ““ — " . LEYELS- bedroom Ranches -1 EXPANDING COMPANY NEEDS if-'........ PROPERTY NOW IN DRAYTON *, _ _ ROUNDiNG* areasRprompt?Uno * b^JJ^i*s“hSk‘!x VILLA HOMES, INC. ^1S.S3 oer m5:l jfcERuAlJ EVERYTHING SEEMS TO Altan'‘ Coon,rv ANTFEO SALES PLAN CALL I tykxtol phono 430-1145 OR 44)363 I GO RIGHT WHtN YOU USE Iin'Welson school area' t BUYERS TOR SMALL farms OR I nodrooms and Bolt) down, 2 bod- ....... Bl PRESS WANT ADS! | Ve®': By , PERSONNEL DEPT. PONTIAC GENERAL HOSPITAL D—rfl THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 23, 1966 - Mb Nmmm ' "• #9' HIITER ' • INCOME PROPERTY - 2 house on ono lot. One 7 room with bothi, 1 vo cor garage. Ono rooms and bath.. Hi,too, terms. NEAR UNION LAKE SPRING TIME IS TIME TO MOVE the young.family who hi slum. siding. BUILD — 3 bedroom ranchers on your lot. Larye kitchens, lull base- S! 1,400, terms. To see model call B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3701 I THE VILLAGE OF OXFORD - HAGSTROM, Realtor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 4900 W.‘ HURON OR 4-035 EVE. OR 3-6329 UNION LAKE - NEW 3 BED ' ^room. Kite' 3 BEDROOM BRICK. Full basement. Fenced and land- ‘CaP*GRABLESPREALTY 664-2045' or 684-2481 t. OA H417, Oxford, I LAZENBY Immediate Possession Nice 3-bedroom older home with full basement, large bright kitchen. WATERFORD VILLAGE 3 bedrooms. 114 baths, kitchen bullt-ins, large, living lot. Lake privileges. 3-6774, WEAVER AT ROCHESTER AVON TWP. HOME — on 2 acre . brick 2 ^ bedroom, Qa^hea^ fu Waterford GAYLORD Family room, I c ufSoo. BRICK RANCHER sdrooms. Large famliy kl i built-ins. 15' by W W0. Term RETIREE SPECIAL WATERFORD REALTY vsis* vM vffit w V CITY OF TROY HOME - 3 bed- ROY LAZENBY, Realtor 4393 Dixie Hwy. OR 44301 Multiple Listing Service LAKE PRIVILEGES, 3 BEDROOM tri-level, enclosed porch, rocroa-l Non room,- garage and breeze-1 way. $31,900; coir OA 0-3001 fori appointment.-------- ----------, Model » $Vb b mg area, attached 3 car gara This home can be built on your 41 lot lor as low as $14,950. Open Saturday and Sunday from 3 to I 4 p.m. Directions: Vi mile north at Walton Blvd. on M-34. GLENN M. WARD Builder - :■ ■ • ~ 6934334 Mixed Neighborhood $t?,500, terms. MILTON WEAVER Inc., REALTORS in the Village of Rochester til W. University__*51-3141 Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT . RUSSELL YOUNG, S3V> W. HURON ! HAYDEN !« IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. Builders: I family room, tw baths. Gas heat. I I 2 car attached garage. S3' lot.1 i $15,900. Terms. VON VETERANS AFTER 1955 Congratulations! You are how ol Bible to purchase a home with n - visit our "Display of Homes” 1 Sli NORTH OF PONTIAC. Ranch " “ “ lot. oas hoot. 1 vs I for 19900 terms. W FE 0-9693. FARMS, FARMS, wo have 40 to 100 acres of land In Oakland County. Parcels close to 1-71 r pressway. Call fori details. A 2-2S21 or FE 8-9693. Lawrence W. Gaylord Sab Heaeae _ ■ 1 • ,. RHODES 3 FAMILY INC0MI - KENT Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2300 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph FE 1-0133 or MA 5-1741 GILES d Q01.„. —. ________ IdaM location. Only ______ ______ down. Balance *375 per month. Land contract. NICE 3 BEDROOM HOMS IN PERRY PARK - only 4 years old. 1 owner. Excellent condition. Gas hoot. Comer lot. I10.3S0. Only SI,. 870 down. Cash to existing mort- SUBURBAN — 3 ACRES — with 4 IRWIN VAN NORMAN LAKE avoly laks front homo with fire-ilace and o large living room, arpetlng, recreation —' Overlooking the nice family home with S3S0 down and move In. Big living room, dining room, kitchen, 3 bedrooms and both. Basement, gas n with flnptoco. Dining room, MbH—eae PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE' CLOSE IN, LIKE NEW Walking distance to ConBiSoiyjroBm. m H_____ beauty with extra largo gar Is on axcgattonol homo. lntigo out It's llko now. You must I a look at this tor S3.0W down. WATKINS LAKEFRONT. Wont a big trap, shaded loft Want It ftnvd In tor safety of chi’-— and ddgst Wont It ot the end court street away from oil trs Wont over go ft. ot lake front boot dock* This 3-bedroom I gives you all this plus i more and only 133.300. , SIX BEDROOMS 11 acre 'rf'^land wPlhh°leke * a gel would you ballavo wo It? Would you believe the rooms have large walk-ln clo Would you beifvs 3V? b Would you bottom a 12x24'd '3 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE GEORGE IRWIN, REALTY . MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE “ FE 3-78831 ting Inot mo room, would ft. at lake front-bolleve It's priced MILLER pICHOLIE XV 111 11 111 ll L WEST SUBURBAN DRAYTON AREA voly asbestoes . rge living rom shingled ranch. . Dining room i 2 bedrooms. IVk cor garage. til eric* .I! 1,500*0 n ooSsy tarmlf**' I Auburn ave. - i In good condition, rooms, hardwood flo It was so Immaculate stay there* T bungalow with ?*B,Thon? MNI rgSm1 AAR0N BAU($fY REALTOR J with basement is lustCIT.Te, J is ovsHaSIs. IT It trees. S4JtO. tiding si , SUN. Sislock & Kent, life. ‘ 1309 Pontiac State Bonk Bldg. 6204 - _________ 336-925 lor them Property 51-A LAKE DEVELOPMENT. ANTIQUE, «td hand store. Modem ranch ntol homo on block top and n of tokos water front lots. r camper. 363-9429. Retirement Special 11 Barnes Lake — It ml. north < Lapeer. 3 lots. 10 booring tru trees. 3W room homo. Oil furnoei Basement. 1 car garage. Fence lot. Root sharp .— only Stl.K STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE Ml S. Lapeer Rd., Lake Orlo ______ 33S-0000___ lOd-ACKE MMM Comlortabla 4 bedroom homo and large bam, nice' rolling acres and dost te now propooid expressway. 1399 par aert. Terms. C. Pangus Inc., Reamr OPEN 7 DAYS 630 M-IS Ortonvllla CALL COLLECT NA 7-3*15 ^15,7^0 CASH ~ LOCATED 13 MILES NORTH OF ROCHESTER ON ROCHESTER RD„ 10 ACRES WITH SMALL MODEN HOME. 3-CAR OARAGE , AND BARN, PARTLY FENCED. CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR 331 W. WALTON 330-4016 MULTIPLE LUTINO BERVICE HUNt CluE AREA C. A. WEBSTER, Realtor 6863511 _____________692-2291 Sab laelnett Property 57 DESIRABLE BUSINESS FRON1 tarage. C 113,000. -t r garage on 2 I Lett—Acreage EAST SIDE Ij LOT ON DEWEY NEAR FISHER !■ Throe bedroom bungalow. Living Body, paved street, $1600 cosh and dining area. Kitchen. Full base- only. 630-1430. _________ ' "wjt YjKS'Jli'sw to bo acre parcels-rBs- Arn> VKrhan. I . NEW MODEL HOME FEATURING 3 BEDROOMS. ( petad living rr'MMMMr’ both, near schools ai IO quad-level w ...d attached ga-j Ufurn s n exterior. Selling;—I.. 1^. WMlWigi forT.' .. nter«t* SSSJii . Located ndar rlth lull basement, fenced yard. IdeaT home "dV|7m COUNTRY LIVING with City conveniences. Oft 10 ROLLING SCENIC ACRES wIYh ...............ns crook, woods end young /over- custom features,! greensi sandy toll, close to US-23 oncx ono aluminum construe- Expressway Livingston County, lion, propertytaneed, born 20”x30* mMO^Ifh sl0|(P,r c*nt down. small "Toko Pc^'pond weshei. dishwashers, refrigerator PHILCO FE 5- '• extra lamp. >35. Call 493-6*01. ' Musical Goods 3045, Royal Oak. .. E r“ WANftfb, 5 YARD-DUMP TKuCk, VJiJT have cfiavy pickup to trade. FE ol*'* h*rtr“m 4-MSS. . _ Will + r a d «4 family . larger Income. Pontiac Press Box Hollywood b 14.45 B A L b CAM OPERATED Zlg-zagger with Singer In cabinet. Makes buttonholes, designs ' * and' all practical sawing, sacrlflca for S4S.45 cash o monthly accepted. 5-year ■ and lessons. Call credit manager, 5700.'___________________ ---------_----------- *NG*SnVA'CHMAN Bko»- «*■ i BALDWIN ' OROASONIC . 6TTOAN. • NECCHI CLEANINGEST CARPET CLEARER DELUXE AUTOMATIC j TlitoFkwII a'S8rk°ihSS ztg sewing machine — cabinet; pooer ti. Hudson4! Hardwares 41 ___ ALL PET SHOP, 55 WILLIAMS. FE 4-6433. Tropical fish and supplies. 71 AMERICAN ESKIMO TOY PUP- V nidtc A waalrc. IK fall altmr 4.1 ra lumper, call after 5 p. Hay—Grain—Feed VIN ACROSONIC SPINET ,____ mahogany, exc. condition. 5700. OR 3-6537. peer. Buy new 1065 Apache ' trailers at used trailer pn» Chiefs, Ravens, Eagles and Buffalos M60 up, Apache Factory I hometown dealer. Our new hours* are Open dally 0 a.In. to 7.-30 pjn., Sundays 10 a ~ “ * — JOHNSON MOTOR! Ahlb i, also MIm tmtiSfl Geneva boats and canoes. Bln aunt on 1*4* *0*9*. motors OM toe. 30 yrs. Repair Expartanaa. TONY'S MARINE Orchard Lake Rd. 662-3660 -------oio ThI ItUiH---------- phases Ol boat bwMMS, ____I___I PMiup and OilkNry. American Boat works, 135 Broadway. Lake Orion. 6*3-6401 Anytime, FE 3-74M. BiAUTIPUL 16' OWBNS INBOARD ski boat, tea h.p., gray, marine ...... ....... up trailer, complete with cover """* — 482-4057. CLEARANCE I 1965 Models Now On DM ay Pontiac Only MERCURY-MERCRUISER DEALER CRUISE-OUT, INC. 63 E. Walton Open 9-6 PE 0-4405 INDOOR SHOWROOM (out of the weather) MF6 and Lone Star Chrysler, Glastron BOATS Like new aula) Mercury Outboard* 3-0 up to 110 h.p. —SPECIAL— Mercury 1.0 - $208 NOW ONLY 114*JO See the New RIVIERA CRUISER^ 15210 Holly Rd. Heby^ME^DT1 te 3—1*50 SQUARE POUR ARIBL«, v~"* %£*'* * " !fS&c 0r ° StRrY -l^U&^YO-T ’TOSETgjMig ^rT^DAWW^LEl A-l condition. 4463 miles. 623-2*81., AT TIPSICO LAKE, phons MAIn 1*64 BSA 500 CC. LIKE NgVV. 8050. *-217*. Con bp seen at 374 W. Grand! I Traverse, Commerce. j J milOs, j . ■ Larson, Inboo rd-outl 1*65 HONDA 300, 305 CC......... 8600. 626-372* otter 4, i Larson to 1*65 HARLEY DAVISON 74, LOA6-1 ed. OR 3-0135. - ! bocks—wood ...11145 Save on 1*65 14 10 : (965 HONDA, SUPER' HAWK, , 8775. 6*2-5824. Sale Clothing 64 — embroiders, .............. buttonholes, etc. 1*43 model. Taka over payments ol SS.*0 PER MO. 4 FORMAL*. LAVENDER. PINK, rose, blue. Vary good condition. Roaaonabl*. 3354)733.___________. UNIVERSAL CO. COINS—COINS—COINS -- - -.- l_ nu.un at Henderson. Weekdays, 5 fEWOsfc1-^-1 ... .. ' sumrr* ring. Oppor NEW 1*44 DETROIT JEWEL 30" deluxe gaa range, glaaa oven door. Instant - on Mon, slightly _ marred. Now 811*. S3 down, OTwk., CHRIST CHURCH K »a PRETER S WAREHOUSE OUTLET . LATaI/" ° TO WARM 1450 S. Telegraph - PE 3-7051 CRANBR00K ,S*rsDHnn REFRIGERATOR $50. ELECTRIC SPRING RUMMAGE SALE r Shop SL range $50. 54 N. Johnson. Thurs., Oct. 20, * a.m. to 2 p m Aanl./hlr- PFFBIC.PBATOR-ANO PREEZggf Lune Pine Rd., Bk>omH*ld H'11- Complete line of fender And Olbeon Guitars and | DeRAE MUSIC 130 Dixie Hwy. IAT rlAIRil..-... 'lANOS^WANTED^ EooiT Jsmes Chur VellSw FLOOR LENGTH RBPOSSESSE6. Ion dross, size 13. FE OOD USED SPINET PIANO $350. Tuned and delivered. MORRIS MUSIC 14 S. Telegraph Rd. 1 ■c, Mich. PE MS Across from Tol-Huron CANINE _ SECOND CUTTING Of* HA Y,! COUNTRY CLUB Frank. Halsty, 10270 Andersonvill* Introducing Canine photography by! Rd., Oavisburg. appointment. CMh, comlortoblo, ——■—:-----------!— ----------------------1 convenient, be thing, grooming, _ - . boarding, collies available. 525 Farm Produce 86 E. S. Blvd., Rochester. ♦ to 4 ——- ----- dolly. 052-4740. CERTIFIED SEED POTATOES, COLLIE PUPPIES, AKC. SABLE-I Jock Cqehran-LekO Orion - MY and white, shots, wormed, SSO-SWfll 2-0*31. ________ actual mi. 807-4635, Milford. M41. . PIONEER CAMPER SALES ' PICKUP CAMPERS BY Travel Quean • Overland • Ovana Concord tralleri, MERIT FIBERGLASS TRUCK COVERS VACATION RENTALS OF bOBERfllAN PINSCHER fNP 6iftGj ‘ * »$i$ Farm Equipment 1-2702 Salt Household Goods 6S Vi WHAT YOU’D EXPECT TO PAY 3 . ROOM ’OUTFIT $317 * PIECE LIVING ROOM ___ DOG HOUSES ALL SIZES, INSU-I RCA COLORED leted; kiddies furniture. 741 Or-...... .w—, console. Balance chard Lake Ave. due. $20*. Take over payments, DRUGGIST. REFRIGERATED SIS monthly. Firestone Stores, 140 candy cabinet, $50. Large chest N. Saginaw. PE «-**7».________ freezer, $50. Gas and Electric) SINGER co"Vfe ii»*An37ulE. iKahst!Aov,n®! DIAL-A-MATIC em * walnut ,'?ab!n«?'lr^ "^."'dt: wSdlttoS; algru, appliques, buttonholes, etc.) ReprjiJMij^. Pay oh $54 cash or UNIVERSAL TT-FE 4-09051 GERMAN SHEPHERD. OR 3-5004. SHEPHERD, Pt a. Call 6254)18*. eu>f j| IP-dil. Many mere at bargain prices, a us before you buy — no mo Sown — no payments till June. Gallagher's Music 1710 S. Telegraph South of Orchard Lake Rd. FE 44546 — Open Eve*. *111 * p.rr Sat. 5:30 P.“ MANY OTHERS KING BROS. -1443 PI Pontiac Rd. at Opdyki SPECIAL SALEI 2 Travel Trailers and 1 Truck Camper These are new units and must be sold. Both trailers —are self-contained Also on display: CENTURY, MALLARD, SAGE and the new teg-e-loru, 16' 965 HONDA SCRAMBLER, EXC. condition, >400. Call 343414). I65V4 HONDA; 25C SCRAMBLER, excellent condition, 56*5, UL 2-44)6. 1*U SUZUKI, PINTER'S Slarcraft — MPG - Weeres Panloon* and Water Bike* "Double AA Motor Repair Rating" 1370 Opdirlip — Open Mr S*t 94 (1-75 at Oakland Unlvaraity Exit) 1*46 TRIUMPH TR6-R 450CC, MUST r wit — *52-1306, ! .. SAILBOATS 9'-20' WAYFARER, WINGLASS, 5-OJ, ir CRUtSING SLOOP. AQUACAT, D- ’ MINIATURE ENGLISH SETTER1 AUTOMATIC HAX puppies, SIS each, 730 E. Beverly. I ^JP^*y^rL— 636-1177. 1 MINIATURE SCHNAUZERS, 4 perms only 1141 SPECIAL $20 A MON’H BUYS 3 ROOMS OF ! FURNITURE Consist* at: 2-piece living room suite with J step DIVING BOARDS B'-l O'-l 2'. AND 14' FACTORY DEFECTS Vt PRICES HOUSEBROKEN INSTRUMENTS OP PLEASURE . DISHES 32 PC. SET E-Z TERMS LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE Bektwln^et ^ Weston ^ FE| 24442 ’-piece7 brt,room suite W dresser, chest, full stte innersprlng mattress )ol Supply Co. n. > 47347! ESK-BOREAU COA I condition. Reesoi le preferred. SS, FE 4-7741. Drayton Pool 4743 DIXIE HWY. EARLY 1*00 OESK- . blnstion. Good cry__... able. 240 E. Rundell between 5 and H,mnr1ln!5ln,,mX’'L.r' many IM. LEW BETTERLY PERSONALIZED GROOMING poeoLfumFUM HOUSE OP POODLES SilO Dixie OR 34*20 POODLE CUPPING, 03 AND UP. ; S-piece dinette set 4 chromt formica top table, I bool t'xif rug Included. All i WYMAN _________________FURNITURE CO. >|ECE BEDROOM COMPLETE 17 E. HURON FL _ _ ; Maytag washer like new IS*; »rw. PIKE ' FE 2-llta mala by Pioneer Drum. Reason-! 1 •>. ME 7-2' - HORSE TRAILERS NEW-USED-REPAIR SERVICE LEHA TRAILER CO. I REGISTERED TOY FOX TERRIER INTERNATIONAL puppies. Chihuahua and Toy Pox, $400. will accept ! Terrier stud service. FE 2-14*7. payment, MA S-174 "THE RED BARN" Jacobson Trailer Sales PONTIAC! 54*0 Williams Lake Rd. OR 34*0) Vacation Time Is Here | FREE-FREE ihlna you con wear. CUSTOM COLOR 23* w. Montcalm HONDA!! World's liiggest seller No mixer ga^et^nooded Ivor 200 Machines to choose f SPRING HERE SEE US FOR: CORRECT CRAFT SPEED BOATS TURBOCRAFT JET BOATS INTERCEPTOR ENGINES EVINRUOi MOTORS SYLVAN PONTOONS SKI BARGE SILVBRLlWl SALES—STORAGE—SERVICE BOAT HAULINO We Buy and Sell Used Boats and Motors Michigan Turbocraft Sales, Inc. f SKUNK, DEODRIZEO MALE, • et WMIon. Fr>4042 f^tj_rm»-! HReoT*4l4 WUNoms I r ONLY, PHILCO COLOR LOW-! or 4.1101. ?.ydi^TV6f'r !Z55m?' tm■ °*lbV THRTE...PiiCE~CrRCULAR SEC-IFORD PICKUP BOX TRAILER, Reoio-TV, PR ewern.------;— 1 tionel, good Kalamazoo go> range. | SSQ, OR 345IS, ES 2-2135.____________________ FREE LUMBER TO TV SET. S25. REFRIGERATOR. S3S, garage. FE .5-9571_____________ bunk** beds *SmlK#C*FE ‘Ivti u ®LASS BATH fUB ENCLOSURE Hammond organ. * Excellent speaker with' self ™wr«h/c«njK' contained reverberation- ^ $475. Private owner. ■ 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNITURE 3-R00M OUTFITS HP $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly *50, OR 345)5, _________________ REE LUMBER TO TEAR DOWN! 8»r*ae. , 135.11 OR 3-9517. SEE THe WURLITZER ORGANS ____________________________ 1 and Pie not and Thomas organs Tny TERRIER — FOX with (Color-Glo). Guitars S21 .S^w: pupa will hold, shots, sed organs, Lowrey Holiday, t*S0.1 Thomas Symphonette. Was S149S, now *12*5. Hammond IS p«dal -------—Tr, fB»S. STUD SERVICE. IRISH SETTER, 2 MIMMld. Obodi------ —I ||W 624-3134. Ih Lea lie Speaker, $12*5. $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly u^itt0'0* sS.*?N£oU^ H?™eNR Le"‘.*5. Chanplef Heating. OR 3-5432, k-Selvinator REFRIGERATOR $50. GRINNELL'S DOWNTOWN S5.»5 _ 1 Demonstrator Houseful $3 a week, No Money Down Complete houseful furniture, sol . end chair, 2 end tables. I coffee table. 2 table lamps, V pole lamp. 1 9'x12' rug, 4 piece bedroom out-' fit. 5 piece dinette, with ranae end refrigerator. FE 2-251S. Johnson. World Wide Home * PJW. |I4" elec, range l.*f' K I T C SZV.95 S3».»5 139*5 S4*.*5 PE 2-2158; 42" model. 889 v ______________________________N MOWERS SHARPENED, LO- WBSTINGHOUSE REFRIGERATOR I cel pick-up, Horb'*, FE. tm am lavatories comPlOte, «4jo S. Telegraph " PE~ 3-~7Wl SdSrd l5TfE «442:~ f OfcWliA CENTER ^ED-, LAWN MOWER. 'TtUM-LT I S-4357.1 65-A ^ Fur' ANTIQUE WALNUT . 3 DRAWER - 27 S. SAGINAW Music lesions 71-A ACCORDION. GUITAR LESSONS. Seles-Servlce Pulaneckl OR 3-55*4 .. DRUM LESSONS given In home. OR 84131. Office Equipment J? STEEL ’SECRETARIES DESK chair. Conference table, safe, talk. Intercom system and Items. FE 44713. AND Tele- Sporting Goods 74 L BOX POSTS - INSTALLED. ,S IS—houseful I. PLUMBING BARGAINS. . --------------l^jSIGNEO ART GLASS,. 2 GRAN dinette. Stove end refrigerator, $275 father clocks, 2_ dry sinks, 2 klti comp let*. Terms? Call Mr. Adams, *{2!qu*’' FE 44*04, World Wide, (next to OakhlH, Holly. ME 7-51*8.____________ K-Mart). - SPECIAL ANTIQUE AUCTION 1966 NIMROD CAMPERS CRUISE OUT, INC. 1 E. Walton dolly *5 FE t-4402 *t Archery, 714 W- Huron I. SAVE PLUMBING CO-win. FE 4-1S16 F PAPER CUTTER, GUNB-BUY-SEL-L-TRADE j BURR-SHELL. 37S S. Ttloeroph Sand-Grovel—Dirt 76 *45 10* CABOVER--------- camper. Gat rafrlparator, lacks, 1966 NIMROD CAMPERS CRUISE OUT, INC. *S E. Walton, dally r* * ^et^ a dtrmnstrar .......... ,,.jn to loin on* oi Wally Byam's exciting caravans). ^’’"bIb'aucti JOB* Dlxla Hwy--------- OR 3-27)?i NEW FURNITURE STORE GOING out of business to be sold to highest bidders. Set. night April 23ra and Mon. 25th « 7 p.m. both nights. French Provincial, Modem, rJ“i«i• it hi eg room*, dining . TOP NAME APACHE CHIEF/ 1ML CLEAN, excellent tires, <2»S, FE 5-2074. BRADLEY CAMPER. ALUMINUM cover* tor eny plckup. OR 3-**— 1673-1442 PR1C HELMET—HURRY Also authorliod dealer for ™ BSA—-TRIUMPH—NORTON MOTO-GUZZIE - 5 SPEED DUCATI ANDERSON BMJBl B SERVICE. 1441 S~Teloei * m JOHNSON'S VACATION TRAVEL TRAILERS 517 E. Walton PE 4-S4S3 or FE 444 WANTED USED TRAILERS fa will *ell any IS'40' travel i mobile homo, on our largo lo Buyer* waiting nowl Call u* I day! 11 Holly Travel Coach Inc. LOOKING o used Suzuki? Suzuki o satisfied, they would I (than twitch. CUSTOM COLOR USED BOATS OWENS 1** Flbergla* cruiser I/O, 110 Interceptor, completely equipped, trailer/ toilet, like new OWENS 16' Flbergla*, fuil tepTra h.p. Evlnrud*, Gator trailer tt,1*S THOMPSON W otf-shoro. full canva* WOLVERINE fjkUCK CAMPERS Union Lake. OSSA Is here and she's a boar 175-21 h.p. here now. SM MOTO—CROSS AND WO - 40 HP SCRAMBLER ON THE WAY - COMING SOON. TUX0 SALES INC. 872 E. AUBURN—ROCHESTER- CAMPER, PICK-UP, SLEEPS gat, water, electricity and box, M45. Comping trollor. SPECIAL ANTIQUE AUCTION Widnoaday, April 27, 7 p.m. Wo an now accepting antiques HALL'S AUCTION 788 wTCterMon Rd. ■aka Orion MY 3-1871 or MY >4141 Te' CAMPING SITES 100 acres, private lake, sate I_I modern facilities, McFeely Retort, CANVAS BACK TRAILER BY MALLARD Y foTOW AND SET UP P$895°m TOM STACHLER 423-9400 AUTO and mobile sales PE 3-4*21 Planti-Trees-Shrabs 81 -A I campers and travel trail- ---"—ZZZZZ——7- -V ers. Sol* priced, 332-8828. Family IVEROREINS. UPRIGHTS,! _?!!!!!E!a___________ »0P0 P'« UP CAMPED oflyjsr a 9 PIECE . room ’•ft, denza, 6 paooea cnoirs* i ex-j tension leaves, good condition. FE 9x < 2 Linoleum Rugs Calling flip ....... 'V* C5.I i Floor Shop - 3255 Elizabeth Lak "Across From the Mall" kMNCH ELECTRIC RANGE, WITH hood fan Ilka now. Refrigerator, ------■ ■ ■■ tin, 338-48*0. antlqu* chandeliers. FE; RESPONSIBLE PARTY S&mrursair Jg^|C?i£M5f>eve*Tm'l^. iSw" *U°dPrt^^TREES, LOCUSt, SHAbi MAST**,I 5-year guarantee. Call ' jSP rFRTIFIFD SEWING CEMfgC IOTO TILLIR. NOW CLINTON BN-Bine plus English raker. Reason- 3347547. 'll biRirANO top soil oE-j Hobbies & Supplies llvered. FE 2-756/. ________1 :eego coins ano stamps ■HiHiavr sales Rear 3345 Auburn Rd. 451-3357 Anytime AT COLONIAL "Navar Knowllngly Undersold" —IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 1)1 OUR NEW ULTRA MODERN PAR ’*66 Models on Display Every Price Range In Ivory Prl< At winter D (Comer of M5» at Opdyko) DETROITER—PONTIAC CHIEF Top trade allowance on your present mobile homo. Yes, all Detroiter product* meet or exceed the rigid Blue Book stand-aros for hooting, plumbing md electrical systems. You never t bargain t 7 Day* • W SUZUKI_ BETTER GET 'IM NOW 12 MOB. - 12,000 MILE WARRANTY TUK0 SALES INC 172 E. AUBURN - ROCHESTER •1)L 24283 cheap. 673-8833. SUZUKI CYCLES. 50CC-250CC. RUPP Minlblke* as low a* 8129.95. Taka MJ* to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Loft,, and follow -slgna te DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone MAht *-217*. __________ PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. Dixie Hwy. at Loop Lake Drayton Plains OR 444 man dally * AM to 4 PM Sunday H AM to 4 PM ' Bicycles Bb 24, 26 II li UP. Ti __________ USED BIKES _ TO CHOOSE FROM. BRING THE KIDS AND. LOOK MOUND. SPEED SAVILLE 258 Osmun BOB HUTCHINSON SALES.______ 4301 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1202 Drayton OXraRD TRAILER SALES 13 to 40 ft. Sco the nawoit In Mai lettes, Stewart*, and famous Wlnm bago travel trailers. Beoli - Acceiiotlee 97 8' HYDRO PLANi,. CHAMPION MO- "10 HORSEPOWER JOHNSON, 89*. Look Out I YARDS OF COTTON SANDLE- ' ELECTRIC R f B5-20W.E A REPOSSESSED S-month-old dl«l-a-stlfch a_____ In lovely cabinet. Just dial for buttonholes, hams, overcasting, designs, etc. Must collect delinqur— account ¥ 85S.5S cash or n contract payment* of S5.S5 i month will handle It yeer guer te« end lesson*. Call 3UJ622. CE TIF1EP SEWING CENTER. AUCTION OF NEW FURNITURE. All name brands at AUCTION-LAND this Sat. night the 23rd and Monday night, April 25 at 7 p.m. Crescent Lk. Rd. t Auctlonland. 1300 I buffet. 8S8. Cell 4H- c.p. CITI FdNE 99 RADIOS, Maple, Birmingham._____________ Pontiac LAKE BUILDERS base and mobll antennas — 2 Pii*am*rp sale—ST ANDREWS, P*y- Sand, gravel, nil din m£th_s_<*L Coat *279 must mli;"^!!**®6^*1-^; RgghSter5 .±J*L_________ ............... Friday. April 28-2*, SAND, GRAVEL, FILL DIRT, IO-A •» .i stone, mason Wttm “ fk cavatlnq. OR ParkhursT Trailer tales :iNEST IN MOBILE LIVING IS 40 ft. Faaturing Naw Moon WE ARE KICKING OFF 0URlL3*5'V7ET t Country Cousin. MY 2-4411. SPRING SEASON IN OURi 2‘ ALUMINUM BOATS 18*. TRAIL-er* 8118. 15' canoes $11*. 900 lb. tralters S1«*. New »> nbergtas boat, 40 H.P. Johnson etectrte, 900, lb. trailer, battery-box *1299. BUCHANAN'S *44* Highland Rd. 343-23Q11 !’ FIBEROLAS BOAT, 25 HORSE power. Mercury and trailer. *425.! OR 345)4. MANY OTHERS LAKE & SEA MARINA Authorized dealer OWENS CHRIS-CRAFT South Blvd. at Woodward PE 44517 SMALL UTILITY HYDRO PLANE. -J3S^CaMW4e2Wr----——----- Why buy in the dork? Wo have • lino selection of used complete outfits of boat, motor, trailer, mostly Johnsons and Evtn-rudet with full season'* guarantee. Each boat chacksd out In tha water before delivery, 10 per cant Wanted Cars-Tnicks_____Jt California Buyers For sharp cars, coll . . . M & M MOTOR SALES EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid EXTRA Sharp Car "Chock Ih* rest, than got th* bast" at Averill MORE :h USED TV S2». 1 speed phonognphs S4. Walton TV PE 2-2257 Open 1 21" SYLVANIA, PICTURE TUBE, “ Johnson TV — FI l woHon pair Baldwin. baKGaiiII ITT- '« 24*41 TAPE R|CORDERS, f OR B to 4A widths, SS.fS^to I JIM'S OUTLET 2301 Dixie Hwy. W FE 4-8205 I OlVING +ANK WITH REoO- LSO FiMnlhg Pegs 79 l-A POODLE TRIMMING, SHAA4-pooinq, reesoneble. 425-2875. b, AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPS.^STUD rf pioneer seeekers. 338-4859. ...... ....... gS'Srar; moved—for Information cell Devon,- —i^LES, 2VS MONTHS, 850 61 6-3709, Water Sefteaers WATER SOFTENERS. NEW. USED «] and rebuilt. Auto, o 8150. Limited • TALBOTT LUMBER For Sale MispHaneoas •st bidder by J TIONLANO, 1181-------------- ---- Sat. 7 p.m., Monday, 28th at 1 p.m. All lop names M One furniture. Couches, chairs, swivels, roex- vlAKC SILVER POODLE PUPPIES. Will _ accept any reasonable otter. 334-7736.\ AKC CHAMPION ST. BERNARO pup. *175. OR 6-1635. AKC APRICOT MINI-TOY POODLE stud service, Also, poodto ming. very reas. 334-1413, AKC 9JWDNTH-OLD DALMATION feme It. Apartment dweller must iiiiWM.capffi4«M, ' AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES. RED Uwtodi 13 1 CHESTNUT GELDING, 4 YEARS old, 1 Palomln* gelding « yrs llffi 1 bay mara * yrs old, gentle. OLb MAR# AND t YEAR IAY MARE, QUARTER TYPE, iplrlfad# sound* 10 yoort old. FE S-7409. lEAUtlPVL SORREL GELDING y quiet, 5350. OA 8 CREAM COLORED GELDING, yrs. old. 15.3 hands high, gentle well broken lumper,, English c GOLDEN H CORRAL UNDER NEW i V. CARPENTER I O R S E 5 P®) JalK grades, wHI sr” ——id quai irter horse mara In NEW SHOWROOM. COM-' PLETE APACHE CAMPING TRAILERS ON DISPLAY, j SPECIAL OF THE WEEK IS A 1965 SILVER BUFFALO WITH oiNETTE, STOVE, SINK, ICE BOX ASSEMBLY, heater, SPARE TIRE,] OVERSIZED TIRES AND BOTTLE GAS ASSEMBLY. I WE HAVE 3 OF THESEj LEFT IN STOCK. SPECIALIsiSSmom: PRICE IS $975. Housetrailera 19 1*54 ALMA, 1 BEDROOM, rx41‘ 12 VOLT PORTBLE TV, • stereo systems. Also Motet i 6 PM cir or boot radios, Dalby ! Radio-TV, PE 4-9*02. !14' HOLIDAY FIBEROLAS, 1963 12X60 NEW MOON,. UUCB 1*63 10X50, ON LOT, RRMHIPW.......... $300. FE 54736. S' TRAVELED. 75 HORSEPOWER Evlnrude, OR 3-76*5._______ S' PARTEi BOAT W|TH ELEC trie 35 Itors* Evinrud* Motor end trailer. All accessories In perfect condition. Beet otter. 6*24370. S e.m.4 p.m. Man. thru Prt. t OJB.-5 p.m. Saturday 12 p.m.-S p.m. Sunday. EVANS EQUIPMENT UK DixteHwjr.^Ck Immediate Occupancy” - SALE WE PAY YOUR FIRST 2 Mos. Park Rent With tlw purchase of any i following examples. . 12'wide, turn *4,1*51 If WM*. turn $3,695 Other bargains *- MONEY Paid For Sharp Cars need hundreds of sharp cars to fill out-atote orders, and to stock my lot, that Is a full city block In slzo. GM GALE McANNALLY'S '' .Auto Sales M4 Baldwin PB 8-652! cover, wlnsnleld 1 and *lec. sterter, wl most anything In BILL SPENGE Chrysler-Plymouth-VaMant ^ Rambler-Jeep 6673 Dixie Hwy., Clarlcflon A 5»H3i ctejjii_.., _ Mercury motors and ti dr. *10 Pina Trie. Lake Orton, HELP! We need 100 there Cadillacs.- Pen, flics. Olds and Bulcks for out-oh state market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS RIVER BANK MOBILE VILLAGE 395 S. Telegraph Pontiac, Michigan Open Mon-Tuoa-Thurt 124 Prl.-Sot.4un. 124, Cteood on Wod. TT' ■ W4W •• I 36' SPEED BOAT, 145 HORSEPOW- . ____________ *r Chrysler, needs refIplshlng. $750. VJT. OR 34514. ; I ; _ 1*61 14* WOLVERINE FIBEROLAS run-about. 15 horsowowor Scott eloc-trlc moter. S650. OL 1-4418. „ GLENN'S PB 6-7371 16' DORSITT door with hood, 7S h ..._ ti trollor. C4H 674-37*4 after 4:X WANTED GOOD USED CM Adkins Ante Sale*. PB 24230. WANTE D“—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, APRIL 25,, 1966 flu/hi Cm-Tnscb IOIINbw «Ed Uwi Ttyta jfejS&SiBLD USED CAMS I tsoi tildvln,^blocks N. of Walton Jmfc leSabre 4-door with automatic Irens- i more mission, radio and heater, power 'brakes and steering, white-, i wall tires. Full price 51095, i STATE WIDE AUTO OUTLET 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road FE 8-7137 loss CHEVROLET TRACTOR. AIR and vacuum brakes. Low mileage. I Good condition. OR 3-2037. J 4*56 CHEVROLET 1 TON WRECK-!1 r FE ***!??•------------ brakes. Also equipped with vacuum! 1957 FORD PICK-UP, GOOD CON-i pancakes and reservoir tor use with dltlon, 66 W, Princeton. FE 5-6979. vacuum brakes. Both trailers are| 1*58 MC Vk TON PICK UP, $350. equipped with Holland hitches tor 570 E. Tennyson. FE 5-1091. Mf 8 rwf“'»r l*8*-**'. ■ *«•»"- Rfi ECONO-VAN, GOOD CONDI-' Bin. tlon, FE $-$421. ---------------;----- 1962 CHEVROLET V» TON PANEL. -Used Trucks-. - Stakes - f»*2 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT JEROME '"FORD* VRdC??ESTBR ' — SPECIAL — DEALER. 651-9711. I960 RENAULT Von, dend : Vk ON PICK-1 penters, cleaners, painter Buick ; Ask For Norm Danielson WILSON Cadillac Mwr mi Ik* tm IN Ntw E«d Omi Cm i—jl 1*1$ FORD 6, VERY OOOD CON-dttlon. Auto. $175 6*54041. 1*5* F0R6^4^^OR I^PAN. REA- men SXKK S n uanMhii MUST DISPOSE OF THTIS 1064 T-Blrd, hardtop. No money down, $14.0 weekly. Call Mr. Murphy at 33M1$1, McAulItte. ... FORD 4-DOOR* V condition, original ow - —fg. 1961 FORD CLUB SEDAN WITH VS ENGINE, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RA- SPECIAL 196^ Ford Convertible. V-B aut lc, radio, heater, $495 full price. King AUTO SALES { 6695 Dixie Hwy. (2 blks. S of M151 I CLARKSTON MA 5-26711 FORD STATION WAG&N, 1961. 5450 PONTIAC'S NEW and ONLY AUTHORIZED OLDS DEALER 1965 MUSTANG two door hardtop. V-a, power steering, automatic, radio, hooter. $1895 DOWNEY r 550 OAKLAND FE 2-8101 REPOSSESSION, 1962 FORD 9 PAS- “That’s the very reason I turned oft the lights, Dad! You said you didn’t want to-see any smooching!” FECIAL 1962 FORD SJDAN, KEEGO Pontiac—GMC—Tempest “Same Location 50 Years" .. —KEEOO HARBOR— New and Used Caw 1061 New and Used Cars 1MI 1l BANKRUPT? SHORT EMPLOYMENT? giftr top. radio, heater. KING 1964 CHEVY PICKUP 19S9 CHEVY Vb TON PICKUP , These can ell be purchased with no money down. They are all Fleetside boxes. LUCKY AUTO Ml 4-1930 , 1966 BUICK CONVERTIBLE, 5PE- 1957 FORD F-600 12' grain and cattle del, power brakes, steering, SI,-1* .. .. reek, 2 speed, V$ engine, $25 tires,! 600. OR 3-5704. ■ AUTO SALES TkMi^.ICKAM%J?^.'"«;lM59 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. 1962 FORD FAIRLANE, SPORTS coupe,’ V-0 260, automatic, good It, vinyl In- condition, l owner. $750. FE 5-0869. res, 13.000 )MJ F0R0 y., CONVERTIBLE. EX- ----------- cellent throughout, beige with white IP top, 55 Orion Ro$d. 625-0451.___ d trensmis- THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS I'rernJ Smy S fords '56 to '61 147 to 1375 , nium.ni, 4 Pontlocs %S4 to '62 *47 to 11097 1 payments 4 p|ymoufh| lnd_ Dodges. *14 uo 959 GMC Heavy Duty 450 IS' platform, 302 engine, 5 speed transmission 900x20x10 ply tires. $995. bidder Cell before rx 1964 CHEVY Vs TON CUSTOM V-$, stick, $1290, 625-3346.____________ 1964 FORD 64 CHEW PICK-UP ■ . ■ 51250-j ohessIs. tJ 164 FORD P-600 3x5 heavy duly, VO eng $25,10 ply tiros. 4 wb. Cob and! custoin cab,' radio end heater. Excellent condition. UL.2-2792. 1*44 DODGE PICKUP. LIOHt BLUE| finish, 6 cylinder standard transmission. Big fleet side box that Is seedy to go. Only $995 PATTERSON CHEVROLET 1104 S. Woodward Ave. BTrmlhgham. Ml 4-2735. . - '| 1966 GMC i-Ton Pickup Heater, defrosters, backup lights, seat belts, 2-speed wipers, washers, inside rear view mirror $1779 including ail taxes TRUCKS ARE OUR ONLY BUSINESS GMC Factory Branch ]ii Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 U NEW LOW L-PRICE 1966 GMC r i-Ton Pickup f Heater, defrosters, back- > up lights, seat belts, 2-1 speed wipers, washers,! __inside rear view mirror. [ $1777 including .all taxes Houghten FACTORY OUTLET 528 N. Main Rochester! 01 1-9761 Trucks Are Our Business! | 1965 Ford 1963-1964-1965 FOROS-CHEVYS eight to choose from, end m wl" top allowances PONTIAC'S NEW and ONLY AUTHORIZED OLDS DEALER : i BUICK ictre" four door .hardtop. Full. I power, air conditioning. Vinyl roof. 18 plY|’_-______• $313*1 a DOWNEY!' 0LDSM0BILE, INC. X| 550 OAKLAND FE 2-8101 FE 84088 HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-7500 0 Fqrd ai ECONOMY C A Lincoln 197 each 5 Dixie Hwy. CHEVROLET 1106 S. Woodward Ave,, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735.- 161^ CHEVY ^ WAGON, PARK WOOD 1965 CORVAIR MONZA, • 140 H.P., 12,000 ml., Ilf" 2-0613 Of FE 2-9101, ask CHEVROLET 1965 transmiss?on, brakes and ree 332-5650. $1666 "It only lakes • minute h Get e "BETTER DEAL" I John McAuiiffe Ford 1964 FALCON or with automatic, radio, heel-) blue finish with matching In-r, A Weekly Special. Small I oown payment will nandla. Bank —..... $1095 ' I BIRMINGHAM | CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 060 S. Woodward_Ml 7-3214 1965 MUSTANG V-0 SEDAN WITH I power steering & brakes, radio, heater, vinyl roof llko Ntw. See at JEROME FORD Rochester Ford Peeler. 6S1-9711. ___! Pretty Ponies 1965 MUSTANGS 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS* 2 PLUS 2't FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $49. Down, and $49 Per Month HAROLD' TURNER FORD, INC. j 363 S. WOODWARD AVE. 1 BIRMINGHAM • Ml 4-7500 j Compare Our New Car Trades 1965 Mustang Fastback s-4101 1965 Rambler Convertible Classic 1965 Marlin Fastback 1965 Rambler Demos (3) Save 1964 Dodge Dart Sharp 1963 Ford Big VBs (3) 1963 Ramblers, Nice (3) 1962 T-Birds (2) 1962 Corvair Monzas (2) (2) 1964 Rambler Classics 1962 Ford Wagon No Fair Offer Refused Easy Financing at Bank R4tes Superior New Location 890 Oakland Ave. radio, heatar, $ ’ brakas and! $1395 P2rS| Lloyd Motors 19*3 CHRYSLER NEWPORT. EX-TTocjS QiAKLAND cellent condition. 51395. *24-3*14. | ■l«3U WjRLAINU CHR ‘Sn’tIAC Bonneville ditlan. 5650. FE 24631. 2K?BCT m ROCHESTER DODGE utiful blue with matching in- Drive Away—Save More Pay Of.- This Is Hk# New. BANK 6S1*1*S ............' cellent rendition. 51305. 426-3014. _____________________________ CHRYSLER 4 DOOR LOW' 1963 FALCON FUTURA CONVERT!-55 dos ! “* | "D In trucks. ASK FOR TRUCK DEPT. FE. 54101 John McAuiiffe Ford 277 West Montcalm Ave. (1 black E. ot Oakland Ave.) KING $995 , BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Auto Financing CHEVY-FOnD-PI Credit problems? -TIC Core. MONZA CONVERTIBLE. 'RED . ..th black top. Sharp. S89S AUTO SALES- .... MS9 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. H FE 84088 door hard- AUTO SALES !M59 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. 1965 Chryslers i to choose from.i Newports and! 100's, all still In factory warranty. From 02295. OAKLAND 1963 FORD STATION WAGON WITH V$ ENGINE, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HESTER, WHITEWALL TIRES, AB SOLUTELY no money DOWN, Assume weekly payments of $1.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Park* at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7S$t. KING k good car AND COM-piete the Deal with Pontiac CoHtp Federal Credit Union. FE 1 Foreign Cars 105 1961 MGA ROADSTER, GOOD CON-| 195$ CADILLAC 4 top. $695 Oscars F ! I960 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE " i with full factory equipment. Th! is in wonderful condition. 11045! ‘ BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY " 520 S. Woodward. Birmingham ________646-4530 it!■ Cadillac 1961 Sedan $197 SPECIALS d transportation cars t_____, ... m, stick shift end automatlc,1943i* Inu, « rfnwn and 12 00 r ‘ FORD FALCON BUS-------------- tr with standard transmission, and 3rd stats. Like Now 15 at JEROME FORD, Rochas-—Td Peeler. OL 1-9711. >64 MGB CONVERTIBLE^ EXCj Can be seen at 1919 Ansal Or Rochester. Call OL 1-B1S* before! 6Vp.m. OL 1-1006 alter 6 p.m. GREEN. EXCEL-| ape, 01275, FE 5 f CONVERTIBLE. Ask Fqr • Norm Danielson WILSON-. Cadillac Ml 4-1930 FE 84088 IMF 1962 Chevy Bel Air 2-Door finish, thfs little one owner bea $991 we handle and arrange all ft nancing. Call Mr. Dan at: FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM ______ 2 DOOR HARDTOP. Superior condition, best after, 731- Rochester Ford O JEROME FORD McComb Phone Me! CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ii IMPERIAL OL 1*551 10*1 N. Mai j______ROCHESTER . 1959 DODGE CORONET, $65 ■j________ $52-4370 _____ 1960 Dodge. I"BETTER DEAL"! 1961 DODGE 2 DOOR HARDTO Tutone blue with matching InterU Radio, heater, automatic* whi f wail tires. A real dean car or $495. Full Price with It low GEORGE MILNE Ml 4-7500 or LI 9-1630 AND SAVE TIME ^ CREDIT CHECKED BY PHONE Your old car or nothing at all down. Your choice tram 100 late model used cars and alio '66 Ford, T-Bird, Mustangs with vary low monthly payments. i HAROLD' 1 TURNER GO! HAUPT PONTIAC N. MAIN ST. CLARKSTON 1966 Pontiac 1962 Pontiac CATALINA HARDTOP 2-door, automatic, double power, CATALINA 4-DOOR Sedan, with power steering, Wh"*W,"sayB $654 K' . $995 1966 Pontiac 1963 Chevy 1 CATALINA SEDAN 4-door with power steering. IMPALA HARDTOP 2-door with automatic. V-l, and wells, radio. Save $648 a, full prlcp ot only — $1395 1966 Pontiac 1964 Pontiac 1 BONNEVILLE VISTA With ' power steering, brakes. CUSTOM WAGON With automatic, rodio. hooter, i air conditioning, power win- $958 and a lull price of only — . < $1595 1966 Pontiac CUSTOM. 2-DOOR 1965 Pontiac | CUSTOM SPORTS COUPE " With V-$ engine, redlo^heeter, , Sport Coupe. 6-cyl, radio, whltewelts. Decore group. Sava $405 $1895 1966 Pontiac 1964 Pontiac | LoMANS HARDTOP 2-door with the Sprint option. /T, CATALINA S-DOOR Sports Coupe, automatic, power j radio, whitewalls, 4-speed trans-,/ wells. Sava $510 , $1695 HAUPT PONTIAC' i /ou EXPECT MORE - AND GET MORE . i FROM THIS PONTIAC DEALERSHIP- MA 5-5566 KING 964 VOLKSWAGEN 2 DOOR SE- _______________mi H-ITJV 1962 CHEVROLET IMPALA SPORT dan. Bright red finish with match-REPOSSESSION, 19*2 CADILLAC *•*»«, autumn Geld finish wlttl Ing interior. 4 speed of course. No money down, $13.07 weekly matchtno interior. Powerglide, V$, nlce*$!19*5*PATTERSON C^tEVRO- KlOLMcAuflfe! Mf' M“°n^' j v^rei FATTERSOnJchEVROLETI AIITfl CAIK LET 1104 S. Woodwatd, Btrmlng- ■ ■ v.-,.,. ----------'-------- >194 S. Woodwprd Ave. Brimln*- AUIU 9ALC3 hem. Ml 4-2735. 1962 CADILLAC--------------— ham. Mi 6-2735.__.. at Elizabeth take F 1964 VW *1*00 DeVIII* two door hardtop. V-0, 1962 CHEVY SUPER SPORT CON- U B ° 330-7211 Ext. 2U5^Da^s. autpmatle^full jgwef;, factory air, vertlbla, full power, Ilka new. ULj Attar 5 P.M., 332- FE E AUTHORIZED DEALER Exclusively For Triumph — MGs Austin Healy - Sunbeam . Fiat r-Morgan Complete Parts — Service Choice of Over 50 New or Used Sports Cars Grimaldi ! IMPORTED CAR CO. •90 Oakland Ava. FE 5*421__ {PORSCHE POWER VW. MANY EX- $19951* Lloyd Motors condition* $700. I LATE MODEL CADILLACS ON HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME 333-78631’TwcoevAie mon^a c°upe.^ma- d transmission, radio, heat- SPECIAL 3 Dodgo Dart* with stick cylinder angina* $095 full | King./ TERSON CHEVROLET 1104 S. 6695 Dixie Hwy. Woodward, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. j CLaRKSTON AC CONVERTI- I $2995. BOB BORST , WHY NOT OWN AN “OK” USED,CAR? Shop the Big Lot at MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 OAKLAND AVENUE FE 44547 ege, nearer* signals, only $1595 1962 GMC - 2-Ton 12' Stake 1* ply. Mrei?%ly- $1195 1964 Ford ' F-100 Pickup • IS Ion styleside pickup, heatar, signals, t ft. box. Only— $1595-1 1963 Ford P‘350 1(7 Stake money down, $9.97 weakly i ments. Call Mr. Mason at 5 4101, McAuiiffe. __________ 65 VW'S TO CHOOSE FROM; 4 Autobahn Motors, Inc* AUTHORIZED VW DEALER V? mile north of Miracle Mila !*5 Telegraph__L FE M5i IMF John McAuiiffe Ford 1965 VW 1964 CADILLAC, 4 DOOR HARD-glttoritng> 21,0*6 milts, 53,88*. PEP Cadillac^ 1965 Converti^kf ish, factory air conditioning and all the goodies. Enjoy the standard of the world tar $395 Down Ask For Norm Danielson WILSON Cadillac 1963 CHEVROLET' ML AIR SEA* tlon wagon, saddle tan with matching trim, V*^ powerglide, radio, heater, jwhlte«Mirtires. *1295. PATTERSON /CHEVROLET 1104 S. Woodward, Birmingham. Ml 6-2735. REPOSSESSION Must tall now. 1943 4 door* VI — Clark, KESSLER'S - Sales and Service ABSOLUTELY MONEY DOWN, Assu weekly payments of $S I ” rmA 1955 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR HARO- .......I ^.o.^ rSL;'hSft: y> r New -Car Warranty. Only — 1957 \» balance of Oi^y— Bucket eaatal 673442*. II around. 363-2230, $1695 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 19*3 CHEVY IMPALA 2 DOOR hardtop, v-8, auto, power steering and power brakes,, a sharp little LUCKY AUTO I960 W. Wide Track FE 4-1006 or FE 3-7056 1963 CHEVY 6 DOOR > ,go6d HAROLD TURNER $1295 BEATTIE $1488 * BETTER DEAL" 11951 CHEVY. REBUILT 4. STICK. ! Cleon Inside oiid out. Ml 6-1627. ‘ } REPOSSESSED CARS 1959 Chevrolet 2-door 1961 Chevrolet station wnoon I 1959 Buick 2-dr. hard) 1960 Falcon 2-dr. 1961 Ford 4-dr. 196* Pontiac* _ 1 FORD, INC. rYailiac St! 332-'_ 464 S WOOOWARD AVE. i.m! ______ BIRMINGHAM___________ Ml 4-75*0 New and Used Coro King Plan Financing. Call Mr. SELL OR TRADE FOR MOTOR-cycle. Devin body sports car, Clwvy angina an, Iran*. Wire wheels, new ___Pontiac _______ __________ Call OR l-tztl Bucher Finance i960 CHEVROLET 'Corvair" 2 door, tlx cylinder, $595 Lloyd Motors LUCKY -AUTO j, 194* W. Wide Track 19*4 CHEVY < 1964 CHEVROLET IMPALA CON-vertible. Solid yellow with VS. automatic whitewall tires. Sharp $1695. 1962 CHEVROLET B*l plr 9 pis 354 Main MU 6-1025 MILFORD KING AUTO SALES M59 at Elizabeth Lak* Rd. FE 84088 SPECIAL SALE offered by the BIRMINGHAM - BLOOMFIELD BANK These Cars Usually Offered to Dealers Only 1966 FORD Fastback with e ranty. Sliver Mink finish, excel- 1965 FALCON n wagon, automatic ti 1965 OLDSMOBILE Convertible. Automatic power steering, power brakes, radio, heatar, air conditioned. 1964 FORD Falrlan* "SO*" hardtop. Auto-matlc transmission, V4, radio, heater. Very nice. 1964 GT0 Ihle. This PnntU 1964 CORVETTE i Stingray has a 4-sp 1963 OLDSMOBILE foor hardtop. Automatic trar 1963 FALCON Station wagon. I mission, nice I 1960 MERCURY Convartlbta. Powder blue \ This Is Your Chance to Save Plenty But Don't Wait—All Cars Sold oh a First Come, Fii^t Serve Basis*Only •Phone This Number Only Call 6824412 Only fc / . v Ask for ; * Fried Rendell—Ren Backus—Bob Johns 2635 Orchard Laka Rtf. — 1 Milt West of Telegraph WE’ SELL THE BEST USED CARS 1963 Ford Sedan, with a lovely navy blue finish, snappy VS, standard transmission. Spotless In-lids end out. Only - $697 L PRICE 1964 Dodge "440" Sedan, torquefllte wilt VI, power steering, brakes Ready lor many happy milt! ot carefraa driving. $1397 '65 Plymouth Station Wagon, A Passenger, full* factory aquipmant. $1197. 1964 Pontiac A597- FULL PRICE 1961 Chevy yne Sedan Soft graa -cylinder. Powerglide $497 1964 Olds $1397 1965 Ford power altering end $1997 1961 VW $697 FULL PRICE 1962 Chevy impel# 2-Door Hardtop. Lovoly turquoise and white flnlih, "2S3" V-$, Powerglide. Only- $987 - FULL PRICE 1963 Plym. Belvedere Sadeiv^Tukada blai Factory warranty Mtn"C!e.,r $1097 1960 Pontiac Catalina 2-Door Hardtop. Rust tree white finish, and excellen mechanical condition. Only— $697 ' FULL -PRICE s p A R D T O A DeN. G E 855 Oakland FE 8-4528 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 25, 1966 1km mi Vmi Can 114 MUST DISPOSE OP THIS 1765 FORD PHY AT US-4101 McAULIFFE. 1745 FORD ♦ PASSENGER WAGON, peed buy. OR 44140. mustang ifnnt u-i, cltan, aitro wheals. Cal) after 1 p.m. MY HH1. He car*Itm full price, 15 down. LUCKY AUTO 1741 W. Wide Track NewendUsed Cars 106 MERCURY ... white ylny II. Going Into >irwiaMTCrtw»wvi*i-». 5 FORD LTD 4-DOOR WITH VS. •ttoring, brake*. many *x_ low M 1*175. JEROME FORD Rechastar FORD Ooaltr, OL 14711. MUST DISPOSE OF THIS IMS MUS-lang hardtop. No money down, SI1SF weekly. Call Mr. Murphy at I3MISI, McAulltfe. 1*65 FOftD "Mustang" I plu> I, v-l, 4 apaad, radio, haatar, whltawalla. $1895 Lloyd Motors Lincoln Mercury Comat 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 ■ IMS musUno, like new. MS MSI. Repossession - ims mustang 1 plua 1 Faitback, No monay CUt Sl3.tr weakly payments. Call Mason at PR M171 McAulltfe. Has ford fairlanb wagon. vs with automgtic. pen— ■— and power brohai, LL. — .. JEROME FORD, Rochaater Ford Dealer. OL l-WII. 1744 MUSTANO. VlltYL ROOF -Power brakes. Fewer (tearing. Automatic. Deluxe Interior. Wirt wheals. Other extras. Low mile ago. Lika now. SSHMS. IMS MUSTANG, W, MS, 4 SPEED rad, taka aver payments US-0117 alter 4. NOW IMA FORD GALAXIE -— ‘■"dtop. Full fit 1135 with SI* d snow.~T~l. C mT44170. m8'___ Now IMS MUSTANG HARDTOP, 1941 OLDS DYNAMIC S malic, power steering at 12,SOS miles, new motor, no rust. A-l. *725. *42*761 1941 OLDS * 1943 OLbS LUCKY AUTO ,1 condition. , „—------ . shat you ora looking tori ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP fist LINCOLN PREMIER otter. 482-1204. _ Nst Li'sSmOs. OOOO CONDITION, Reasonable. OR 3-3447. whitg finish. GM proving fro oHiclal car gricad to soin 1 TV Stomps with purchase. VAN CAMP CHEVY tt4 MAIN REPOSSESS 1941 COMET 1 DOOR SE OAN WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, .RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITE-WALL TIRES ASMLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of .65.72, CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7SS1 1944 'MlRCURY «40NTflfY~l door hardtop, tastback, automatic radio, heater, power steering am brakes. A real nice one ter only $1595 BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY Now and Used Ceri 104 NO MONEY DOWN-WB FINANCE . CREDIT CONVERHILE. 1109 462-2934. boOR, Rio, ir trade Ir PONTIAC'S NEW and ONLY AUTHORIZED OLDS DEALER $1995 DOWNEY OLDSMOBILE, INC. 550 OAKLAND Ft 2-8101 1 door hardtop, power steerln green fln1sh*w Top quality _ _____ _ owner Birmingham trade; Only. $1895 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLBR-PLYMOUTH MARMADUKE 1944 BARRACUDA _ I cyl. engine, standard shit. .... twneri 12,000 actual mllet, Pull trice 11495. OAKLAND 3 1945 VALIANTS. 2-DOORS OAKLAND , 1944 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR, stick, radio, heater,whitewall tl turquoise finish. Excellent C«___ lion, Owner leaving ter service. Best offer! FE 4-3963. 1945 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE Maawf lop with radio, hoai ng, brakes, beige v. .. trier. $149 down. Will ran Hendlel- OAKLAND MUST SELL. 1945 VALIANT 1 DoGR --------$1.200. 493-4571. 1941 VALIANT. LIKE NEW. 4 473-4443 after 4:30 p.m. 1945 SPORTS FtlRY, STICK St 363^engine, 4-berrel, vinyl top, FE2-1371.' 1964 OLDS : $5 station Wagon with p brakes end power steering, dlo and haatar, automatic ti mission, whitewall fires. Only * PLYMOUTH FURY II OAKLAND By Anderson and L—mitllif mi HeedCm lid New mi Ihad Cm i BONNEVILLE [^H- KEEGO Pon*iac-GMC-T empest "Same Location 50 Year*" -KEEGO HARSOR-1945 PONTIAC 1 PLUS 2. BEST O* ‘ over 62300. FE 2-4055. 45 TEMPEST CONvERTIBCT" OR 34H15. 1910 Airport Rd. RUSS JOHNSON Pontioc-Rombier 'On MS4 In Lake Orion MY 3-6266 1965 PONTIAC 10 convertible with I---- iment, automatic trantmls-radio and heater and white- 1963- RAMBLER Eeulpped with V-4 engine, euti matlc transmission. This le.a -doer. Special at only 5695. ROSE RAMBLERJEEP EM 3-4155 1965 FORE5S 1? TO CHOOSE FROM All Modflt FULLY lOUI^FtO New CAR WARRANTY! AS LOW AS $49 DOWN Poymtnts os low as , $11.95 HAROLD TURNER Niw mi Used Cart * 186 I RAMBLER^ 440 CLASSIC. ^2 riven less than 3 years. 1 own-r. Call Ml 4-1994 after 7 p.m. DON'S USED CfRS SMALL AD-BIG LOT 77 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM * ^' BIRMINGHAM 1941 EUICK Convertible, auto., double po with air conditioning, light I with "iMkWjJ p^TIAC Catalina 2-door hardtop,, auto., i bla power, gold. 194) BUICK -Skylark 2-door hardtop, auto., i 677 S. LAPEER RD. taka Orion MY 2-2041 “Stop laughing and get the camera! ! Our lawyer will need a picture!" New and Used dan 106 New and Used Can PONTIAC CATALINA t SIS S. Woodward, Elrmlnghar 1945 AlktURV c6lonV~>ark t pasaangar station wagon geld save1 , Just Your Old Car Down. BOB BORST UNCOUSMSCUSy tm S. Woodwerd^girmlnghem ItxV mercurT m5nTerey door with automatic, radio, hrat-power steering and brakes. Showroom (rath. Only $2145 HAROLD TURNER EE it plVmouTIh sTATiGn wac OAKLAND- 4 matching Interior, Nil ■s a rosi sharp car and are her la llnd. A goo| Mw at only . BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH It S. Windward Ml 7-321 4-SPEED TRANSMISSION 383-4 Barrel J CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH j 724 Oakland Avp. 332 9150 | CLEAN V57 FONT I AC WAGON I with air conditioning; thorp 1952 Chevy tram Aril. 1940 Olds convertible. 482-5725. _ 140 PONTIAC - $275 - CALL after 3:30, 332-1003. 1040 BONNEVILLE 2 DOOR HARD-lop. 0993 Qtceri FE 2-2541. 1940 PONTIAC CATALINA. SEDAN SPECIAL 1942 Pontiac' 9 passenger Wagon, power altering, brakes. Full price King ' AUTO SALES 4495 Dixie Hwy. (2 Mki. S. of M15) CLARK5T0N MA 5-2671 942 . CATALINA 2-DOOR SEDAN-Power steering. Power brakes. Whitewalls. Good condition. Can — at 344 Nelson. Pontiac. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVB. BIRMINGHAM ‘“ Sharp. >1495, FE 4-2711. SPEED, POW-er, extra nice. 426-1363. 943 PONTIAC 2-DOOR HARbTOP, auto., power steering and brakes, 61,395. First clast condition. 425-1615 or 425-2334. ... 944 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. •xMflgMraatMMIMII— lion cell 474-2791 , For informa- 4 CATALINA 4 PAS- GTO AUTOMATIC. FoWbrI steering. Power brakes. $2,400 — 425-2159. ■ 145 P O N T I A C BONNEVILLE! Broughm, air conditioning, automatic. power steering and brakes. Vinyl top. 53195. OL 1-0443 efter Hearing, bra gins, *100 n lion. 52300. Ux a-ajw. _ Tempest $1595 Lloyd Motors 1 Slliobath Lake! J963 PONTIAC automatic. White w KEEGO Pontiac-GMC-TtmpBSt -'ke EGO* HAREOR^* 1744 fONTIAC, HARDTOP, POWER ‘taring, brakat, whitewalls. 0.3254317. _______ Pontiac 1964 Bonmvills >r a young couple. $295 Sown Ask For Norm Daniilson BOB BORST UNCOLN-MRCIMY 120 S. Woodward. Birmingham ______444-4620 __ t|Chargers Hunter Dodge BIRMINGHAM ONE- OWNER New Car. Trades 1965 Rambltr Ambassador 990 9 passenger station wagon, 11,000 actual milts new car guarantee, 8 cylinder, automatic, radio, Motor, power . steering and brakes, whitewall tires. $95 down will handle with bank rates. 1965 Rambler Ambassador 990, convertible, red with black vinyl interior, V8, automatic, power steering and brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tires, $95 down With bank rates on the balance. 1964 Rambler 2 door hardtop, console 3 speed with overdrive, radio, haatar, whitewall tires, $1095 full price with bank fihqncina. 1964 Rambler 660 4 door with overdrive, very sharp car with black finish and whitewall tires, etc. $1095 full price with bank rates on the balance. 1963 Rambler 660 4 door sedan, radio, heater, white-wall tires, $595 full price. No money down. | 1963 Mercury Comet convertible, blue with white top and blue interior, automatic, radio, heater, whitewall tires. $95 down wiHi bank rates. 19$4 Chevrolet Bel Air 4 door sedan. 6 cylinder, radio, heater, power glide, whitewall tires. $1295 full price. Bank rotes. Many more te choose ! from. All makes, all models, a 11 prices. Crwdit no problem at VILLAGE RAMBLER 666. Woodward Birmingham Ml 6-3900 1962 Pontiac Tempest LeMons Coupe automatic, radio. wMtawalh. candy “l rad finlih. 549 DOWN, FI-a Balance of Only— $791 Get a BETTER DiAL” at John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Ava.______F» e-4101 - 1942 TRMFEST LeMANS COUPE WITH AUT06AATIC TRANSMISSION, R A O I O AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, AOMCUtl-LY NO MQNEY DOWN, At-tuma weakly paymantt of 55.00. CALL CRE6lT_MOR. 550 OAKLAND FE 2-81011 Pontiac 1964 Catalina hgrdtop. . Light blue ftnlih, V-l engine, power stearin*. A rear nice car. Bnloy It Milt turnmtr for only— $295 Down - Ask For Nqrm Oonielson WILSON Cadillac • ___Ml 4-1930 Transportation Specials able factory warranty. Mutt _ to appreciate. Bank Rate*, weekly tpoclit. $1295 BIRMINGHAM . CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 46 5, Woodward Ml 7-321. READ THIS 11 a N. E. edge of Pen- ir talesmen, extremely Onto i plainly marked for nlonce. O CASH NEEDED—BANK RATES ] FULL PRICE 17 Chevy wagon . . J9 Chow wagon .... I960 Chevy 2 dr....... 1941 Chevy 4 dr. _____ ■*“ Chevy t dr.... ■ Bulek Lalabra .. 1*91 Cadillac DeVllie 1969 Pontiac Catalina I960 Pontiac Catalina . 1941 Pontiac Catalina 1942 Pontiac Convert. 1943 Pontiac Catalina 1940 Falcon auto. 1040 Ford wagon Mustang Coral 8 - Lively Mustangs In Our Corral for Your CHoicol . $49 Dn. end Only $58 Monthly JMF John McAuliffe Ford r^unJvl WILSON DOWNEY r*fl(jiiiac OLDSMOBILE, INC. I GaUlliClU Ml 4-1930 945 GTO CORDOVAN TOP. MANY extra*, exc. FE 5*179. _ M TIMPI6V 4 bOOR CUSTOM. 324, auto., radio and power brake*. W-4040.___________. OLIVER BUICK Double Checked -Used Cors- 943 PONTIAC Cotglkw 2 door automatic, radio, hooter, white-walls. Ready to Go and hot a sparkling while tlnlth. Only 6129$ 19^IC£ $pecl^Deto- 4 1942 CORVAIR. I 1954 PONTIAC 1963 RAMBLER. Sedan **“ 'IHEVY, Impale ...•■ - --5J MV rlpRD. 2-door ...... WT 62.75 ifii KYMOUfir.Sdoar wt u.]5 1961 CORVAIR, Stick •" 1956 CHEVY, 2-door I 54 TO 7 66.35 M4 BUICK Special Deluxe 4 radio, ha alar, power *H brakat, < 1942 BUICK Electrt 225 Conrart-“■ radio, haatar. power steering, ir brakat, poww wlndowt. , with a black, top and MddH 6497 67.25 _ __ 6597 64.20 1942 CORVAIRi AdOOf ■ 0497 54.20 1940 PLYMOUTH Moor *397 64.10 ISSSK-S K!gS SMALL°WEEKLY PAYMENTS MAN^^g^ROM WE HANDLE AND ARRANOB ALL FINANCING CALL R. DAN AT FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM I BUICK Riviera radio, hooter, ower 1141 BUICKSpecie 1945 CORVAIR Mania, 4 speed. 140 HP. Dual axhautt. Ready . - 1174* OLIVER BUICK mmmm mm BIRMINGHAM TRADES 1964 OLDS 88 Convertible, all power. A sharp Birmingham trade. SAVE ..............$1995 1965 OLDS 98 luxury sedan with full power. A sharp Birmingham trade...............$2895 1963 jDLDS 98 Convertible with full power. Metalic blue with matching interior. 1- owner. ..............:........$1795 1965 OLDS 9B 2-door hardtop. Full power. Like npw. --$2895 1963 OLDSMOBILE Station wagon. Maroon finish, power steering and brakes, automatic .................................... SAVE 1962 OLDS 98 4-door hardtop. Full power and priced to sail.'. .... ■ • $1295 2 YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 ESTATE STORAGE We Finance! $5 Dn. FE 3-7161 $5 Dn. Ask For Norm Danielson WILSON Cadillac Ml 4-1930 GOME TO • THE PONTIAC • RETAIL STORE 100 Top Quality, one-owner new car trades to c;hoose from WHERE YOU EXPECT MORE . . . AND GET IT 65 Mt. Clemens , at Wlda Track FE B7954 5th ANNIVERSARY SALE COME AND SEE THESE LATE MODEL BIRMINGHAM TRADES $1988 $2588 " Convertible — Etftra Clean $2488 ,$1888 $1788 $2688 . $ 988 554 S. Woodward -DOUBLE CHECK-—USED CARS— $397 64.31 Weakly 1961 LANCER $297 - 63,11 Weakly 1961 FORD Maor Galaxle hardlep. Mack with pewter. Only— $397 14» Weakly 1962 CHEVY $79 7 1961 VALIANT door, blue, stick. Only— $197 63,36 Weekly 1959 PONTIAC 4-doer hardtop. Only— $297 63,16 Weekly 1959 CADILLAC 2-door hardtop. Only— $497 likB Waekly 1961 PLYMOUTH agon, 7 pasaangar. Only— $497 I^JI weekly , All Credit Applicxrtions Accepted 109 S. East Blvd. Pontiac FE 3-7161 GUARANTEED TODAY'S SPECIAL $1695 14 FORD CUSTOM Sedan, t ............. 11365 TIAC BONNEVILLE 1741 PONTIAC GRAND FRIX. 1744 BUICK SPECIAL 2-door sedan. Power steering and brakes, automatic transmission. 17.000 1742 FORD GALAXIE 300 2-deer hardtop. Automatic transmission, V* angina, white finish with blue leather trim . . :......1075 1744 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4-Doer Hardtop. Factory air conditioning, full power, tilt wheal, cordovan top, etc. List at 55320, new big discount ......save 1743 KARMANN GHIA Coupe. 1745 PONTIAC CATALINA Convertible with power brakei and power steering, radio, haatar, ratify, almost Ilka new — S2575 1743 PONTIAC CATALINA Sedan. Folks, this car has 32,700 guaranteed actual miles. Need I say mere? ..................... 0107S 1744 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-Ooor. Beautiful white finish with blue interior. Bought now here; now car trada*ln. Priced right .. $1471 1757 BUICK LelABRI 2-door hardtop. Power steering and brakes, Dy inflow transmission. 1743 CHEVROLET Sugar Sport Convertible. 7,000 guaranteed ae-power steering, V-0, 1744 BONNEVILLE CONVERT-IBLE. Power Ityeratwglw, t (ring end br. 1744 CHEVROLET IMPALA I Door Hardtop. Power steerlm v-l engine, automatic, radio an 16*1 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2-door hardtop. Automatic transmission. 1714 TEMPEST CUSTOM 4-Ooor Sedan. Automatic, radio, haatar, whitewalls. 15,000 guaranteed actual miles. Only ............ *1575 1744 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-Door 1742 CHEVROLET IMPALA Hard- wlth rad Intorier. wow 11175 1742 POI4TIAC CATALINA Sadan. Power steerlna and brakas. Hv-dramatlc 1745 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4-Door Hardtop. Power steering and brakes, Hydrametlc, only 21,707 actual miles ....... ... 71775 1745 MUSTANG 2 4 with "277'' engine MMIMHII transmission. New car warranty. HURRY FOR THIS ONE .. *2275 1744 PONTIAC BONNEVILLR t Door Hardtop. Factory air car dttlonlng and tuH power. Yet folks. It's leaded . 6237 1757 FORD 2-Door Sedan. Polka, this is ona of ths sharpest 1757s In the State at Michigan. Saalng It believing , . *675 Ask fori John Donl#y-Win Hopp-Ed Broadway-Torn Tracy-Lysl# Basinger Gary Cecora—Dan Paloseh-Dewey Petiprin-Joe Galardi—Tommy Thompson . PONTIAC - BUICK 651-9911 , 855 5. Rochester Rd., Vi Mile South of Downtown Rochester STAR Auto Sales No Money Down BUY HEREX PAY HERE Over 50 Cars to Choose From Transportation Special PRICE WEEK $79 $1.01 1960 MERCURY Transportation Special PRICI WICK $79 $1.01 Goad. Transportation PRICE WEBK $79 ' $1.01 1959 CHEVROLET Ideal 2nd Car 1952 MORRIS MINOR Convertible Excellent condition PRICI WBiK $395 $4.04 1961 MERCURY . Convertible PRICE WEEK $795 $8.08 $895 STAR Auto Sales 60 S. TELEGRAPH (2 Blocks South at Huren) FE 8-9661 I t B_10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, APRIL 2ff, 1966 TWO COLORS WBBMWWMIBMIBMMWBIM8BBB W NO. w. - 1,/ . • • ' W NO. Vjl My) CHEVROLET Iftl W DOUBLE W | DIVIDEND DAYS! J Only 5 more days to cash in on the Double Dividend Buys! CsBelfoP Station Wagon, radio, heat- *2495 Duality^ Waraty ms 1965 Pontiac OMn Station Wagon, wd._,__, or, powor steering, bra bra, Only- 1964 Buick Wildcat Convortfbls, radio, haator, # A%*1 M* automatic, firepower, yollow with a 1963 Olds Cosnorttfais, with radio, hector, powor #« •ion, rod and white finish. I4T tow 1963 Chevy Bol Air wagon, 9 passenger, with i» d-ra ra/to ira die, hooter, power steering, brakes r l/IUS and automatic transmission. . I™/•# S Pontiac 2-door hardtop, with power *1845 1963 Pontiac ••MMWtlte, 2-door hardtop, wMi to- & w M mm dim, heater, automatic full power and t I /! UK extrai. See this beauty today! |*TFlr 1965 Chevy ... .... J^2295 hae power stealing, broker and Is oety JmMm A'to# 1965 Dodge Convratiblo, radio, heater, automatic, A\ #• fufi power,and ha* a |et black finish, T /|UK Sharp throughout! 4*is ■ 4T to# 1963 Chevy 1964 Chevy Convertible, Soper Sport with radio, Chevy6 cylinder origine, radio, heel- $11 Q K or, green finish, and it only— I I *1795 *1395 *1495 1964 dwv, Bel-Air 24eer V8, out new throughout, New Only— 1963 Chevy 1965 Chevy 1962 Greenbrier This unit it ready for your tporting event. Are you going fishing, hunting or almost anything. This it itt Only HOMER HIGHT CHEVROLET 160S. Washington 620-2328 OXFORD Quality^ Warranty cars 1965 Chevy 1 ' VB .£j&$2345 *1995 *1995 *1895 *1645 ‘1395 *1395 *1395 *1395 Impple 2-deer hardtop, V8 angina, automatic, power tteertng, brakes heater, radio and whitewalls, yours for 1965 Ford Galaxie "500" 2-door haifltop, V8, •tick shift, heater, radio and white-walls, sparkling white finish. Only— 1964 Olds *98" 4-door hardtop with a.VB engine, automatic, power steering, brakes, heater, radio, whitewalls and a sharp light blue finish, only— 1964 Chevy Impala 4-door hardtop, VB, automatic, foil powor, only— 1965 Chevy Ik ton pick-up with the Flootside body, and an outstanding 6 cylinder angina 1964 Corvair Mania 2-door, with 6-cylindor angina, 4-spead, heater, radio, whitewalls and an outstanding maroon finish, now only— 1964 Chevy Mi ton pick-up, stopsido body with 6 cylinder angina, standard transmission, and a dazzling dark bluo finish. Yours for only— 1964 VW 2-door sedan, for tho parson with economy in mind,, this 4 speed will 1963 Chevy 4962 Chevy 9 pqsseng.r wagon, V8, automatic, poweKrteering, brakns, hoatsr, radio, whfiowaiifc 1963 0—v *1295 i tho famous V8 _____„__________. footer and anout- standing turquoise finish, whitewalls ▼ I M ^ lie. Only— 1963 Corvair Monza with the 4-speed transir 4-door, heater, whitewalls, onl) 1963 Rambler Classic 4-deor with fwoMms A fcyL— economy engine, stick shift and a snowshoe white finish. This one is yours for only— *1095 ~*1645"“ = IV/ 1 hr yours for i 1961 Falcon *695 4-door with a 6 cylinder engine, stick i transmission, heater, radio and white-walls. Economy for the wife to use for •hoppingt Only— *695 *495 CRISSMAN CHEVROLET 755 S. Rochester 652-9721 ROCHESTER Quality^ Warranty eats f2195 1965 Buick Skyfadk 2-door, «nd this unit has fWI 1963 Chevy II Neva 2-deer dport coupe, i. . blue finish with 6 eyl., Foworglldo, *1195 *1395 196. Cl—y lb-ton pick-up, this unit wffl trick—Setj it! 1962 Chevy snne Mi ten pfehup, • beautiful rad finish, *'j*j*) • 1965 Chevy bnpafo Super Xpert, has 300 H.P. VI engine, 4 speed and lots of ether «, midnight blue finish. *1795 *795 1962Clwvy II Nova 4-door sedan, fawn col . matching trim, 6-cyl. with Peworglide. 1965 Buick 41QQC wails. 4,000 miles. I 7 7V 1962! Cadillac 4-daer hardtop, and this unit fc ft ra ra loaded throughout! See this outstand- ▼ I "toi big car today! I her A her 1963 Buick *1395 *1695 mietlen, power steering, brakes, radio. 1964 Chevy 2-door hardtop, raw sharp, I rad finish, double powor, VI, P glhfo, F-Z eye glass, i 1962 VW Bus THIS one is raid sharp throughout, dt&kdtkjP*--end Is reedy to go to work for you vMUK right newl Only— V7hd 1964 Pontiac Catalina 2-door hardtop, with Ventura trim, power steering, brakes.. djra Ajfik'fis radio, heater, whitewalls, silver end ^ IUUS black Interior. I 7 7h A 1964 Buick- and it years for Only- i, with powor steering, £ *1 fw^tojp