THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1966 B—1 Viet Nam, Draft Among Topics Student Congress: Where the Action Is By PAUL DANISH CHAMPAIGN, 111.—(NBA) Students from all over the country are here this week because this is where the action is. But the local residents aren’t worried If any collegian starts to get out of hand, Hie student chairman will pound the gavel for order. And he’ll get it. Rather than beer and bikinis, the chid objects of attention are Viet Nam, academic freedom, tuition, Hie grading system, the draft and the war on poverty. If Hie Beatles showed up, they would have to vie for attention with Sen. Paul Douglas, Viet Nam expert Bernard Fall, Walter Reuther and the presidents of several universities. The students — more than 1,000 of them from nearly 300 colleges and universities throughout the country — are delegates to the 19th National Student Congress of the United States National Student Association (NSA). FOR TWO WEEKS For two weeks they are studying and debating current issues in higher educaUon and national affairs. The congress, which started August 21 and runs to September 1, is the oldest, larg- est, and probably .most representative student meeting in the country. It is also the most dramaHc and exciting. High point will come during the three days of legislaHve plenaries, when delegates will discuss and vote on resoluHons concerning the American commitment in Viet Nam, the d^aft, the use of psychedelic drugs and the quality of higher educaUon. * * ★ If things run true to form, at least one of these will spark an allnight debate. TAKEN SERIOUSLY The debates are taken' as seriously as any in Congress,” NSA vice president Jim Johnson said, “In some ways they are more exciting, because students are apt to be more candid than politicians.” On the whole, delegates seem to have few illusions about what they can and cannot accomplish, but that does not seem to temper the enthusiasm. “Whatever we finally decide on Viet Nam probably won’ have much direct influence on national policy,” one delegate said, “But in the course of the discussion the issue should become much clearer in our own minds. If it does, it’s time well-spent. Ifouth Beat0 THE NATIONAL REPORT ON WHAT'S HAPPENING More than 15 million of you will sit behind desks in more than 25,000 high and junior high schools (80 per cent of them public), where some 700,000 teachers will preside. THIS FALL YOU’RE GOING BACK TO SCHOOL BY THE MILLIONS. You number 24 million! You’re the tallest, richest and best-educated students America has ever had . . . Here are some highlights about your world this fall: YOU’RE BUYING A MOUNTAIN OF THINGS AND you’re important to business. Teenaged girls will spend close to half a billion dollars this year and teen men nearly a third as much, for grooming. Together, you will pay for well over $300 million worth of records, buy more than $400 million in food snacks, and treat yourselves to $1.5 billion worth of entertainment. You’re* a sizable segment of the economy, with the total $15 billion you spend this year and the additional $30 billion of your family’s purchases that you will influence. BUT, YOU’RE BIG EARNERS, TOO. Much more than your your fathers’ or mothers’ generation. Two-third of you work . . . part-time or year-round. So, it’s no wonder your earnings are running over $20 billion a year and—right now—they’re edging higher each month. JOBS: THINGS ARE LOOKING UP FOR WORK THIS FALL. Teen-agers employed now number more than eight million. Though there are also some 1,800,000 who are unemployed, the rate is down around 12 per cent, against 14 per cent last year. It’s the lowest in a long time in the teen job market. But the unemployment rate is still three times as high for teens as for all unemployed—and for high school dropouts it’s double the over-all teen rate. So, if you want a job, the looking is pretty good ... but you’re better off staying in school. SPORTS: SCHOOL SPORT TO GO OUT FOR. Though historians say the game started when ancient.armies kicked, around the heads of enemies they’d executed, today soccer is the leading spectator sport in Hie world. This fall it will he the ieeteet-grewing school sport in the United States. For en as not, a man who won't offer an opinion is a man who hasn’t taken the trouble to form one.” DE-ESCALATION URGED Last year NSA adopted a resolution “recognizing the need for an American military presence in Viet Nam at this time,” but urging a de-escalation of the war and a beginning of nego-tiations. This year’s stand is apt to be more forthright, but whetb-. er it will support the Johnson administraHon or denounce it is a mystery. Closely linked to Viet Nam is the draft, and here, too, there are ambivalent feelings, lot of kids are worried about their deferments,” according to Steve Aarons, a NSA staff worker, “but a lot of them think the whole deferment system is rotten and would prefer a lottery, even though they m i g h t get burned in the process.” A LOT MORE EFFECT On campus-related issues, however, NSA can expect to have a lot more effect. A good deal of attenHon will be devoted to such questions as student stress and the quality of education. Over the past two years, the organization has received more than a quarter-million dollars from foundations and the government — much of it to study educational conditions at the nation’s colleges and universities. Roland Liebert, NSA’s director of campus environmental studies, said that “in the long run, student stress and campus POINT OF ORDER — Delegates to the National Student Association congress, going on this week in Champaign, 111., are eager to get the floor. The debate is often noisy, but a gavel quiets it down. climates might be the most significant issues facing the congress.” DRUGS ON CAMPUS Drugs on the campus will also be a bone of contention and, with moderator campus report it, the whole question of student mental health. “Marijuana has, in a real sense, become the bathtub gin of the current college generation,” Lielprt said. “Only the penalties for its consumption are far more damaging.” “With such an a g e n d a, one might wonder if the congress will attract the nation’s radicals. The answer is they’H show up, but they will be a frustrated nority. WRITTEN INTO LAW “Some of our proposals which were denounced as radical at the time,” NSA President Philip Sherburne said, “have been written into law in recent sessions of the NSA congress. “Some of the delegates who helped pass them are now in government. “When we get outside of the mainstream, it’s usually b e-cause we’re a little ahead of it like when we supported the test-ban treaty in 1961,” he said. Scepticism, in fact, seems to be the association’s watchword. “I guess it’s true I don’t trust anybody over 30,” one delegate commented. “But on the other hand, I don’t trust anybody under 30, either.” Youth Shows Way at Center D. C. Schoolchildren Do Murals on Fence Gilbert Youth Service WASHINGTON - Artists have already performed in the John Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, although it is not due to be finished until 1968. ★ ★ it These artists are Washington schoolchildren who volunteered to paint murals on the fence that surrounds the excavation for the building. Some 40 of the 60,000 school children w h o are enrolled in the Widening Horizons inm-mer school program did the job. “All were volunteers,” Roger Selby of the Corcoran Gallery jor Art said. "Nearly all have taken the arts courses provided in the schoo 1 s, the normal i- amount of art.” mm U.S. Is Caught Up in Putt-Putt Boom By BOB COCHNAR and DAVE BURGIN ^Newspaper Enterprise Assn. NEW YORK - When the Rev. James Campbell, a 35-year-old Wisconsin clergyman, painted cresses onhissafety helmet, kick-started his 175-cc Japanese bike and scooted off to visit his flock, motorcycples became respectable. Teens Sound Off Viewers call their work interesting. PASSING MOTORISTS Part of the daily audience is made up of motorists d r i v ing past the site, on the edge of the Potomac River near the Lincoln Memorial. Inspiration for the project came from an exhibit at the Corcoran gallery of murals painted by schoolchildren in and around Ames City, Iowa, Selby siad. Widening Horizons officials visited the Corcoran in search of ideas for a summer program and this turned out to be one. The Iowa children favored scenes of flowers, people, butterflies, bees, and other items of nature. CITY SCENES The Washington children, considerably older at 10-17, favored city scenes, buildings, cars, billboards and signs. Dutch Treats Risky Respectablility didn’t com£ at that precise moment, of course. It took a long time. For years an assortment of leather-jackeied, tatooed, unshaven, pimply faced slobs were able to depress the motorcycle industry simply by screeching around town on hulking brutish cycles. Japan changed everything, jfl few years ago it began exporting lightweight motorcycles which sold in the United States for around $300 and the boom started. U.S. manufacturers quickly jumped aboard. Motorcycling, revolutionized, is startling the country and has already won young Americans i its side. Some five million people now ride bikes or scooters. About 540.0000 were sold last year and cyclemakers expect sales of 750.000 in 1966. Behind the trend is a number of factors: easier parking at no cost, inexpensive maintenance, low insurance, no need for a garage. Talk to a cyclist and you’l hear “I beat traffic jams” . . . “I jet 160 miles to a gallon” ... “It’s convenient.” More and more college and high schoolaged people are finding out there’s no percentage in buying a used car for, say, $500 — only to pay three times that to make it roadworthy. For $500, they can buy a brand-new, lightweight bike and have enough money left to feed it gas for a year. Aside from competition, which is a growing sport, the young rider chooses his bike for weekend romps and for short daily hops around the campus or to school. Turnpike driving isn’t much fun; it's also dangerous. The smallest machine, 50-cc, has a top speed of around 45 m.p.h. and will run 200 miles on j a gallon of gas. One step up is the 90-cc model which can top 50 m.p.h. and still get about 160 miles to a gallon. Sizes, prices, gas consumption and speed increase proportionately. ACCIDENTS UP the number of motorized two-wheelers on the road increases so does the number of accidents. Cycle manufacturers as well as state safety officials are concerned. A National Safety Council study of motorcycles shows that 1,580 cyclists were killed last year, up from 1,118 in 1964 and 882 in 1963. The- council 'also determined that in many states motorcycle deaths range between 20 and 40 per 100 million miles of travel, compared with a 5.6 death rate for automobiles. Head injuries account for most deaths, reports show, which is reason enough to be sure you never ride without an approved safety helmet bn your head. Gilbert Youth Service Take heed, young man. Every time you ask a girl out on a Dutch treat date, you are risking the possibility that she will change her opinion of you. As for you, young lady, know your boy friend well before you accept a date requiring you to pay your own way. While the majority of boys won’t think any less of you, more than one in every four will — even though he proposed the date in the first place. This advice is based on the results of a survey we conducted among 1215 teen-agers in different parts of Hie country. Thirty two per cent of those went »-for Dutch' most guys (and there are soccer teams for girls, too) it’s a new sport. You don’t have to be one of those football or basketball giants . . . just quick and well co-ordinated, especially with your feet and legs . . . and a fast and durable runner. STYLE NOTE FOR GIRLS: THE NEWEST ABOUT KNEES. Fall and winter skirts reveal knees are here to stay. Despite older voices complaining about skirts hiking up when wearers sit down, the two-year old trend of hemlines going even higher will continue. A sampling of observers’ comments: ‘‘Knees are not attractive,” “knees are no uglier than elbows,” “pretty legs are pleasing, ugly ones-amusing.” But the clothing monutecturers say, "Legs are lags, they've been around a long time and, in this year's designs, they're the focal point of the feminine body." For girls who maybe have the "amusing" kind of legs: Liven them up with patterned stockings or tights or that cosmetic wrinkle—painted knees. For Instance, circle your kneecaps with alternative stripes of eye liner and eye shadow,, till you look as if you're wearing a piece of 1190's bathing suit. Warning. Some of this winter's shert short skirts will be thigh-length ... but they're really for skiing with knitted tights worn underneath. ■treats."".. __ ^ _★ gV? Forty eight per cent of the girls saw no reason to change their opinion of a young man who suggested a pay-your-own way date, but a sizable 42 per cent would think less of the boy. The remainder skipped replying to this question. BOYS’. STYLE NOTE: PERFUME???—Maybe girls copy ftoyw-ipaatol) ? maybe boys copy girls (longer hair!) to^much ... But the latest copy-cat style note in ay seem much too much^-real he-men are dousing with perfume. Previously the grown-up boys hid under their shaving lotions and “skin bracers,” but now they openly buy full perfume. YOU’RE GROWING BIGGER and maybe better-Teen men entering college this fall stand three to four inches taller and weigh 30 to 40 pounds more than half a century ago while girls are two inches taller and about 10 pounds heavier ... But nutritionists deplore that some IS per cent of you skip one meal ... yet you qverconsume sweets so that 84 per cent of you need filling! . . . and doctors finds that 10 to 15 per cent of teens nationally are too fat. Rumors Fly of Pending Beatle Vows Among the boys, 27 per cent would change their opinion of a girl who accepts a Dutch treat date. Most of those would think less of a girl, but a few would think more of her. The most common reason given for a lowering opinion of a girl was that she might be having a tough time getting a date any other way. Stuart Grodanz, 15, of Camden, N.J., put it this way: “X would think she was really hard up.” On the other hand, Bill Hodgeman, 16, of Viola, Wis., would look at the girl in a new. light. “It would show,” he said, “that the girl Hiinks enough of you to pay her own way.” HEART OF THE‘MATTER A 16-year-old girl from Rock Creqk, Ohio — Roseanna Houser — got right to the heart of the matter in explaining why she wouldn’t feel fooliadly about a boy who proposed a Dutch treat date. She said: “Because if a boy asks a girl out, he should be able to Lake Orion Still Lacks Teachers pay for her as well as himself — and if he wasn’t able to do so, he shouldn’t have asked her out in the first place.” Sara Mason, 17, of Silver Spring, Md., would give a boy an alternative. “I think,” she said, “if a boy doesn’t have the money for a date, he shouldn’t take the girl out or he should take her somewhere that doesn’t cost anything.” SEATTLE, Wash. (UPI) The Beatles, with Paul McCartney’s bachelor status still intact, left here Thursday night after giving two performances. Any expectation that the Beaties’ visit here would be normal were pactured with reports that McCartney would marry actress Jane Asher Thursday night. During a news conference between performances, McCartney took a'tongue-in-cheek attitude in trying to spike the rumors. But even McCartney’s words foiled to convince some and to* mors and tips flew until the mop-topped foursome returned to their chartered plane. * * * “I just got in today and found out I was getting married,” McCartney told newsmen. Then he asked: “How did this get started anyway?” LAKE ORION - School officials may have to hire substitutes when school opens Sept. 8 if eight teachers aren’t found by then. Schools Supt. Lewis Mundy said he is having a hard time finding five elementary school teachers, a chemistry and school, an industrial arts teacher for the high school and an English and French teacher for the high school. “We ll just have to open school with substitutes if we can't find the teachers,” he said. He said this has been one of Hie most difficult years for hiring teachers. Many teachers, are leaving the classroom, he said, to work in federally supported programs. “I’m not opposing federal programs,” he said, “but they do seem to be creating a tea ' shortage.” Bikesters Are Taking To America's Highways In Droves HAGGERTY HAS IT! win! pick Hie 5 best selling ceilings by @rm strong REDWOOD FENCE HEADQUARTERS Contest clous Novsmb for mw-filing btauty (Armstrong SPECIAL SALE ON ODD SIZES % 25% to 50% OFF. 5'x5' BOARD ON BOARD ............ $9.95 Built Up 6'x4' BASKET WEAVE...............$7.95 Built Up These are ALL Radwood With 1 Post Included—And Treated With Red-weed Stain. Many Gates In Stock At Sal# Pricos. [DON'T BOTHER WITH MESSY OLD R.R. TIES. USE 4"xB" or 3"x8" SOLID ROUGH SAWN REDWOOD. LOOKS BETTER—LASTS LONGER. 4"x6"—8' $2.89 Ea. 3"x8"-8'.....$3.19 Aluminum SELF STORING STORMS AND SCREENS ONLY $11.75 PONDEROSA PINE SCREEN DOORS | T’x4”-8 m* tr 75 o-xg'r—i H' $8.93 0n|r CASH AND CARRY Cedar Posts Top 7' long 59c en. 4” Top 7' long 85c en. Top 8’ long 79c ea. 4* Top 8* long 95c ea. Metal Clothes Posts With X arm A Hooks Sueoid,-po4 like the backfire of a car or the ,jce said ” boom of a shotgun. - ____________ Raining Cats and—Straw?- IPSWICH, England (UPI) II btbwbbb is m mm AND LANDSCAPING TIME IS NOW RAISED FLOWER BEDS Build them with decay-resistant CAUFOr" H Inviting Garden Benches BUILT-T0-LAST WITH CALIF0RN1 OUTDOOR STRUCTURES call for decay-resistant miEQRNIA REDWOOD DO IT FOR LESS with REDWOOD FROM BURKE Expand your Living Space with a deck of CRA Quality CALIFORNIA REDWOOD Neighbors, then the police, land finally the Navy gatheredi around the empty tot. The Navy! r bomb. Sure enough, it was onlyj opened and straw rained down abQUt 10 incfi*s long on the city^H The mystery was explained by weathermen who discovered a whirlwind had plucked the straw from a farm field and carried] it 12 miles to this coastal city. weighed 25 pounds. Yard Switcher Killed by Boxcar Actor Sues Wife GRAND RAPIDS (AF)-A 23-| year-old railroad yard switcher died Thursday from injuries SANTA MONICA, Calif. — received when he was hit by a Actor Rory Calhoun has sued moving boxcar at a railroad for divorce from Lita Baron, his yard in Grand Rapids. Wit-wife of 18 years, and asked cus- nesses said David Dill of Grand tody of their three! daughters. Rapids stepped off a switch The 43-year-old performer al- engine and into the path of a! leges extreme mental cruelty. !car on another track. Just Beatle Guards A Heavenly Chorus? LOS ANGELES^ (UPI) — vate security firm contracted to Watching over the Beatles when protect the Beatles during their they stage a rock ’n' roll don- stay. cert at Dodger Stadium Sunday * * * I will be Moses and Christ. The Beatles recently caused; * * * an international furor when one Jackson A. Moses and James'member remarked the group K. 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NIGHTS ’TIL 9-PARK FREE IN WKC’S PRIVATE LOT AT REAR OF STORE THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1966 B—« Romney Trying to Distort Facts on 1-696, Say Dems LANSING (AP) — Democratic legislative leaders have accused Republican Gov. George Romney of trying to distort facts surrounding the controversial I 696 freeway. “The governor only Thursday told legislators that Congress would provide no extension of time for states to seek grants to take advantage of federal funds and that if nothing were done immediately the entire 1696 program would collapse,” Speaker Joseph Kowalski and Senate Majority Leader Raymond Dzend-zel, both of Detroit, said in a joint statement Thursday. Before a meeting with Oakland and Macomb County legislators Wednesday Romney said, “I’ve talked with State Highway Director Howard Hill, and find that there isn’t anybody who can tell you with certainty what the time limit is.” Romney is afraid that if action Isn’t taken soon to end the stalemate over the route of the 18.1-mile freeway through 15 suburbs the state could lose $140 12-Year Term for High Court Is Proposed WASHINGTON (UPI) - Rep. Edward Hutchinson, R-Mich., yesterday proposed 12-y ear terms for the chief justice and associate justices of the Supreme Court. They now serve for life. * ★ ★ U n d e r the constitutional amendment he proposed in the House, the justices would be eligible for reappointment at the end of their 12-year terms. “In recent years, the court has penetrated so far into the political thicket that it has become snarled therein," Hutchinson said. “The political, economic, and social beliefs of the justices of the Supreme Court become, the lavy of the land.” Under his proposal, Hutchinson said, the President-and the Senate would have periodic chances to pass upon the quantifications and performance of the judges. million in federal highway funds. . LOSE MONEY — NO . Sen. Sander Levin, D-Berkley, said that at the meeting he asked Hill whether a delay of several weeks would lose the money. He quoted Hill as saying “no.” Today,” Kowalski and Dzend-zel said, “we find that Congress will almost certainly adopt legislation providing another year tor states to seek grants—the opposite of what the governor said." * * * Romney has proposed legislation to set up compulsory arbitration in disputes over interstate freeway routes. A community through whose boundaries a freeway runs may veto the proposed route. Thirteen of the Oakland and Macomb Suburbs say they will submit to binding arbitration. Chief dissidents are Roseville and Pleasant Ridge. The Senate Highway Committee, meanwhile, has scheduled a Monday meeting with Roseville city officials—part of the Democrats’ last ditch attempt at solving the disputes before resorting to arbitration. Nevada’s gambling casinos yielded the sta{e a record $15.1-million in revenues for the 1964-65 fiscal year. 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The patrolman, Frank Zugal and Colacasides, 67, had been indicted by the Piggins grand jury, Zugal on a charge of accepting a bribe to omit his duty. Rock says he dismissed the charges. for lack of sufficient evidence. The grand jury’s chief witness in the case was vice bureau patrolman James Malaeske. * * * Colacasides is the owner of Grecian Gardens restaurant, which police raided lart January. Cite Records of Motorists TUB PONTIAC PKKSS FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1966 B— f M&VK2KR 1967 Color TV 19" 21" 25" BUY ONE NOW! DONT WAIT AND BE DISAPPOINTED! • 1 YEAR PARTS AND. PICTURE TUBE « WARRANTY FREE DELIVERY-HOME SET-UP AND SERVICE! IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IF YOU BUY NOW! ff Z g^sosw 267 $q. In. Pit PRICED FROM 39«f ooodsilectioi W TO CHOOSE FROI RCA VICTOR "Pick of the Portables” 19” ALL CHANNEL BLACK AND WHITE 1 YEAR PICTURE TUBE WARRANTY 90 - DAY SERVICE! 20,000-VOLT CHASSIS “A Best Buy** *129“ OPTIONAL HOLLABOUT STANO 2 YEARS Closes Wed. After- 90 DAYS TO PAY noon During August SAME AS CASH M 121 N. SAGINAW - FE 5-6189 Your Applianca Specialists OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY NIOHTS UNTIL I P.M. July 4 Fatal Mishaps Pose Fitness Question “Nearly a thirjl of the 29 drivers involved in auto fatalities on July 4 weekend had records which leave questions as to their fitness to drive,” Automobile Club of Michigan’s genera] manager Fred N. Rehm said today. * * ★ Almost half had bad driving records and drinking was involved in more than 50 per cent of the fatal accidents. Yet the rest of the 3,300,060 motorists who drove on July 4 weekend did a much better driving job than over Memorial weekend. With 10 per cent more traffic on the roads, they recorded 50 per cent less injury accidents July 4 weekend than over the first summer holiday. Each contained 78 driving hours. * ★ ★ These findings are contained ih an 18-page report titled “Portrait of a Holiday — Part 2” compiled by Auto Club following an on-the-spot study of each of the 27 fatal accidents over the holiday. They parallel findings of a similar Memorial weekend study. WORST DRIVERS The 10 worst drivers had an average of 16 points, two above Memorial weekend average. One had 36 points and another had three drunk driving convictions. Two who had been drinking were under 21 years old. Almost half of the drivers involved in fatalities also had these common characteristics: driving too fast, drinking too much, not wearing seat belts, within 25 miles of home, not on holiday, driving cars less than four years old with no obvious mechanical defects, male and under age 30. Only one of the 29 was a woman. OTHER FINDINGS: Driver failure was the proximate cause of all but a handful of the deaths, which were caused by pedestrian or motorcyclist miscalculation. ★ ★ ★ Young and inexperienced drivers are involved in far more fatals than they should be in proportion to their numbers. Five of the 29 fatal accident drivers were age 20 or under. 2-LANE HIGHWAYS Fifteen of the 22 fatal accidents happened on two-lane blacktop highways, with two on freeways, one on gravel, two on city streets, two on two-lane concrete. None seem to have been caused by highway of signing deficiencies. No obvious mechanical defects were found in any of the vehicles involved in fatal crashes, a repetition of Memorial weekend findings. JEDW00D BASKETWEAVE FENCE SECTIONS 4’x8’______*98# 6’x8’......s1250 PLYWOOD Vi—4x8.........$2.95 ^Nufrrmrrrn. $4.19 1/2-4x8........$5.39 %-4x8..........$6.95 PLYSCORE Vs—4x8.........$2.85 1/2—4x8........$3.75 %-4x8..........$4.80 flack, lin. ft ALL SIZES AVAI^ABLE^ ZONOUTE FOIL-FACE INSULATION IVk* Thick, 16" Wide *3” 2 Vi” Thick, 16" Wide *3” 3%” Thick, 16” Wido $317 24" Width in Stock Also Steel Clothes Poles 9 Foot m 4 Hooks PANELING SALE A BEAUTIFUL PANEL IE MAHOGANY , )R YOUR FINISH REDWOOD OATES and POSTS IN STOCK ALSO FLAKEB0ARD ____-92.24 %”.........$2.75 W'.........$3.49 5/s”.... .$3.95 .$5.95 FIBERGLAS PANELS $360 26^*96* Other Sites in Steek NEW RAILROAD TIES S450 lie SC iro FT. PICNIC TABLE $14.50kd FREE DELIVERY 8:30-5:30, SAT. TIL 5 ----- SUN. 10-3 LUMBER CO. 7374 HIGHLAND RD. AT WILLIAMS LAKE RD. One Mila. Wait of Pontioc Airport ... _ n _ OR 4-0316- inM-SVPW- OPEN SUN. 10-3 2x4x8 2x4x8 REDWOOD . . .*13> 30” MAHOGANY DOORS a . . .$4H Ve"«4x8 UNDERLAYMENT f117 Study Of Holiday Motoring Fatalities Griffin Stays in Capitol for 'Wage' Votes DETROIT (AP) - U.S. Sen. Robert P. Griffin canceled his scheduled campaign plans for Thursday night and today to remain in Washington on Senate business. A number of Important votes on amendments ,to the minimum wage bill were given as the reason. Griffin said he would vote in favor of the bill which he calls “one of the most important pieces of legislation Congress has considered this year.*’ Griffin said the minimum wage must be raised to keep up with what he called “the inflationary spiral in the economy.” AT STATE FAIR Griffin was to have appeared in Thursday night’s State Fair parade in Detroit and planned to spend today in the Flint area where he was to confer with Genesee County Negro leaders. INITIAL OFFERING! BEVERLY HILLS FINEST NEW SUBDIVISION A rolling, wooded colony of 38 fine homesites suitable for Colonial, multi-level or one floor homes. Several of the ravine sites have the sparkling waters of the Rouge as a backdrop. All sites have paving, water and sewer. Priced from *12,500 Favorable Terms Just South of 13 Mile Rd. on the East Side of Lahser SALESMEN ON PREMISES-3 P.M. TO 7:30 P.M. DAILY GORDON WALKER 325 S. Woodward ASSOCIATES Ml 4-4700 The onlything we can say about the lest time , oya new Chevrolet is: svS 1t-Vr MlHP'’ ” ill V * . / 3 ' 'r % \ i , /\. c;? jpi mEBBm ala mmm w**** MMMM—d Wm&T'E ... this is the month. August is the month you can get a beautiful deal on a new Chevrolet. Because August is the month your Chevrolet dealer has, right in stock, a wide selection of models, colors and extra equipment you’ll like ... at a price you’ll love. Pick out the Chevrolet you want and drive it home the same day. And drive it while warm August days are still with us. Take Chevy n, for example, a great value in any month. Its steering lets you zip around in areas you never thought possible. Brakes are self-adjusting. The ride is smooth, seats are foam cushioned and the instrument panel is thickly padded for extra safety. Reasons enough for buying Chevy II. And now that August is here, you’ve got the best reason of all. ■ rtf’* Chavr6l«t • Chevelle • Chevy □ - Corvair * Corvette % * I » _ IohbMbS See the man who can save you the most-your Chevrolet dealer Aotfc orbed Chevrolet Dealer ia Pontiac MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES. INC. 691 Oakland Ava. 995-4161 Clarksten HASKINS CHEVROLET, IRC. 6751 DM# Hwy. <25-5071 21-6912 Lain Orion AL HAHOCTE, QIC. 209 N. Park Blvd. <92-2411 Oxford HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, INC. 160 5. Washington 629-2529 CRISSMAN CHEVROLET COMPANY 755 S. Rochastar <52-9721 THE PONTJ^C PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1966 Instruct Boy to Behave at the Party Good Question for Lawyer Mrs. George T. Trumbull (left) and Mrs. Alfred C. Girard, cochairmen of the Sept. 7 fashion show, pose in the Baldwin Memorial Pavilwn>'on Meadow Brook Festival grounds. They are hoping to fill the more than 2,000 seats for the 2:30 p. m. presentation of “Woman as a Decoration.” Tea on Trumbull Terrace will precede the showing of clothes by Julie. Tickets are available at the Community National Bank. Proceeds go to the scholarship fund at Oakland University. Fashion, Tea to Aid OU Scholars Faced with the necessity of raising $75,000" for the scholarship fund at Oakland University, the scholarship committee had to do some hard thinking. They no longer had the Hunt Fair. They no longer had the Meadow Brook Ball. They had decided not to sponsor a lecture series. ★ w w But the need for scholarship money increases each year as the University grows. This year the big push comes early in September when the committee is sponsoring a glamorous fashion show out at Meadow Brook Festival grounds. * * w The Baldwin Memorial Pavilion holds 2,200 people. Women ■ love fashion shows. Trumbull Terrace is available for serving tea. There’s lots and lots for free parking space. For weeks, Mrs. George T, Trumbull and Mrs. Alfred C. Girard cochairmen, have spent hours and hours coordinating plans for the event which will feature clothes by Julie. They’re even prepared for rain. Should Sept. 7 be anything but sunny and warm, Trumbull Terrace will be covered with t^nts for the 1:30 p.m. tea. Baldwin Pavilion is roofed. Numerous area women have assisted the chairmen in their work. Mrs. Howard Barker is tea chairman. Mrs. Noel Buckner has headed the ticket committee. Inyitations went out under the guidance of Mrs. Harold How-lett and Mrs. Carl Bolten. Mrs. C. T. Ekelund and Mrs. Arthur Young are Pontiac area chairmen. Taking over prosaic duties at the gates will be Mrs. Ralph Norvell and Mrs. D. B. Eames. Others helping are Mrs. Norman Cheal, Mrs. William Shunck, Mrs. Edmund Windeler and Mrs. Franklin Read. Tickets ($25 for patronesses and $5 for general admission) are available from committee members, from Oakland University or at the Community National Bank in Pontiac. Benson Fords to Join New Theater Project: Mr. and Mrs. Benson Ford have joined four other prominent Detroit area couples as cochairmen of the newly organized Meadow Brook Theater of Oakland University. The announcement was made by chairman Charles F. Adams. With his wife, Ruth, he will direct a blue-ribbon committee of area civic and community leaders to augment Oakland University’s mounting reputation as a leader in the world of the performing arts — a position already enhanced by tile sensational success of Oakland’s Meadow Brook Music Festival. The new theater leaped into BENSON FORD CHARLES ADAMS public focus last month when it was announced that John Fern-aid, an outstanding British theatrical director and former head of England’s famed Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, plans to open a professional resident theater company there this year. JANUARY PRODUCTION To be known formally as the John Femald Company of the Meadow Brook Theater, the company has set a target date of early January for its first production, and will begin rehearsals in mid-November. Fernald will also head the Oakland Academy of Drqpiatic Art which will begin operations in the fall of 1967 as a TiifjhTy-selective program for training professional actors and accesses. Previously announced as co-chairmen were Mr. and Mrs; John Z. DeLorean and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Anderson of Birmingham; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Z. Nederlander of Southfield, and Mr. and Mrs. Alan E. Schwartz of Detroit. In announcing the Fords’ acceptance, Adams said: “Chancellor Varner, Mr. Fernald and I are delighted by the enthusiasm and cooperation we are receiving from civic and community leaders throughout the area. “It proves conclusively that our community wants and is ready to support serious theater. We are moving rapidly and will disclose our plans shortly.” Ticket Should Show Rules By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Last month our church auxiliary held its annual luncheon and tickets were sold for $2.50. At the bottom of eachji .ticket was! printed I) O 6 Ra PRIZE I sold t w tickets to all member w h opH said she wouldf be unable to at-f tend, but quested that I drop her stubs into the box for the door prize. I did. Her number was drawn and when I stepped forward to claim the prize for her, a burst of objection went up in the crowd! Some women insisted that in order to win the door prize the holder of the number had to be present. Not wishing to create a worse scene, I sat down and let them draw another number. The second number was held by a woman who was present so she got the prize. In your opinion was this fair? Do you think a person has to be present in order to win the door prize? TOO REFINED TO FIGHT DEAR TOO REFINED: When a door prize is offered, it should be clearly stated on the ticket whether or not the holder of the number drawn need be present to win. I personally would assume that in order to win I would have to be present. But I’m sure there are an equal number of people who would assume the opposite. This is a good question for a lawyer. w w w DEAR ABBY: I met a very attractive divorcee at the home of a mutual friend the other evening. She is a very lively and amusing type, and I liked her immediately. Before I had an opportunity to ask her if I could see her again she said to me, ‘“I am giving a cocktail party at my apartment tomorrow night at seven, would you care to come?” Area Artists Exhibiting at State Fair Represented at the Michigan State Fair art exhibit will be six area residents whose work was among 50 paintings chosen out of a group of 250 possible entries. ★ w * Included is a watercolor, “Color Serenade” by Joseph Franz of Desmond Street, and oils “Composition — Red and Green” by Richard Pascucci of Brunswick Street; “Enigma III” by Evelyn Kring, Pine Heights; “Untitled” by Lillian Richardson, Allendale Street and “Don Quixote” Linda Cum-mens, Union Lake. During the fair, Aug, 26 to Sept. 5, visitors will vote on their favorite works and the winner will receive the Popular Prize Award of $200. This award is in addition to the various prizes given by the jury. W W w The art exhibition is held in the Community Arts Building on the Fairgrounds. JOHN Z. DeLOREAN ROBERT ANbERSON ALAN E. SCHWARTZ Miss Shirley Is Honored at Shower Mrs. William D. Shirley of Bloomfield Terrace honored her sister-in-law, Karen Ann Shirley at a family shower on Wednes- bride-elect, daughter of the W. R. Shirleys of Chippewa Road will wed Richard Lawrence Mordaunt, Sept. 10, in the Bethany Baptist Church. His parents, the Theodore M. Mordaunts of Birmingham will host the rehearsal dinner Sept. 9 fnlHeirs. Birmingham friends of Mrs. Mordaunt, also the bride-elect’s maternal grandmother, Mrs. William L. Criger of Davisburg were among the guests at a recent shower iir Mrs. Paul D. Carter’s Birmingham home. Mrs. Raymond Morgan was co-I hostess. Naturally I accepted on the spot. When I got there I found her all alone. And she hadn’t invited anyone else. What do you think she had in mind? RON DEAR RON: You. DEAR ABBY: Would you be kind enough to advise me as to the following: Is it customary to give a gift to the bride and groom after they have been married for the second time—to EACH OTHER? I was not invited to the wedding. A RELATIVE DEAR RELATIVE: I think The LaRue E. Gulletts of Dick Avenue announce the betrothal of their daughter; Karen Gertrude, to Patrick James Keavy, son of the George B. Keavys of Sylvan Lake. The bride-elect is an Oakland University graduate. not. It is difficult to that one would be expected. W ★ * CONFIDENTIAL TO GARY IN LUBBOCK: Work is the yeast that raises the kind of dough you’re looking for. Troubled? Write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped self-addressed envelope. w w w For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1.00 to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. KAREN GERTRUDE GULLETT Even Youngsters Affected by High Hemline Fashion By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK-Here and there in the women’s world: Those mini-skirts, some of them as high in hemline as middle thigh, are creating any number of problems, not the least of which involves the tiny set. An associate tells of the harassed supermarket manager who kept retrieving a lost little boy and returning him to his mother as she wheeled z cart around doing the week’s grocery shopping. F i n a 11 y, the manager’s patience wore thin and when again the small boy got lost, he suggested, “Sonny, why don’t you just hang onto your mother’s skirt? Said the tearful child, “I would, but I can't reach it.” wonder how long she’ll be over there?” And the man said he didn’t rightfully know — “she’s been over there more than 10 years so far.” w w * My husband figures New York City dogs are so sophisticated, so removed from their natural instincts, that “a beagle here would run from a rabbit.” Thought for today, quoted from the Newsletter of the National Family Opinion, Inc., a consumer market research firm in Toledo, Ohio: “Oh Lord, through all life's varied toil “Till earth’s machine I quit. “Help me to be a drop of oil “And not a piece of grit.” By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: My 7-year-old son will be having a birth-1 day party next week and we plan to have several games with prizes. He is rather stubborn and it occurred to me that if he, as host, wins a prize, we may have quite a scene if be is not allowed to keep it. Should we allow him to keep a prize if he should win one, and if not, how should we handle the situation?—Mrs. G. S- Dear Mrs. G. S.: Don’t start . giving in to your stubborn son on this sort of issue now, or you’ll' have trouble with him forever! Explain to him, before the partji, that hosts and hostesses don’t keep prizes in their own homes and in any case, the birthday presents he will receive will more than make up for his loss. DON’T RETURN Dear Mrs. Post: The other night a group of friends gathered at our house and several of the girls contributed a dish for the dinner. One brought a salad, another brought home-baked rolls and a third made pies, while I provided the rest. There were half a dozen rolls left over and one of the pies was almost untouched. I insisted that the girls who had made them take the leftovers home but I have been told that was not the right thing to do. Was I correct?— Mrs. Laurie Light. * w * Dear Mrs. Light: No, you were not correct. When food Is contributed at this sort of party it is given as a gift and the hostess should keep the remainder. The only exception would be if you were going away and could not possibly use it. WRITE Dear Mrs. Post: I enjoy cooking as a hobby and I am always trying to discover new and different dishes, especially desserts. The other day I enjoyed a most unusual dessert in a restaurant. I was tempted to inquire if I could obtain a copy of the recipe, but I did not. Would it have been in bad taste to do so?—Kathy S, Dear Kathy: Any chef would be delighted to know how much you appreciated a dish he had prepared and it is never out of place to send him your compliments via your waiter. However, rather than asking for the recipe at the ^me, it would be in better taste to write the restaurant, describe the dish and request that, if possible, they send you the recipe. The correct marking of linens and the amounts a bride-to-be will need in furnishing her future house, are included in the booklet, “The Bride’s Trousseau.” For a copy, send a dime and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Elizabeth L. Post, in care of The Pontiac Press. my brother-in-law figures that his golfing average is at least stable. It stays in a slump. A friend suggests that “Ba-' bles are angels whose wings grow shorter as their legs grow longer.” Another friend tells of her small son, gathered up by the family each Sunday after Sunday school class. One morning, he clutched something tightly in his fist and when his mother asked what he had, he spread the palm to show a handful of coins. WWW “Where,” asked the mother, “did you get those?” Candidly, the child answered that he reached into the plate that was passed around. He explained, “I’d been giving to Jesus so long, I thought it was time he gave to me.” Jim Comstock, editor and co-publisher of the weekly West Virginia Hillbilly, Richwood, W. Va., sees that our family which "nrlHliuHal In Jli^ sUte fete-*-—-copy of his often highly amusing publication. I don’t think James would mind if I relayed one of his hillbilly yarns. This peddler went to a man’s house and asked him if his wife was there and the man said, no, she «asin. **She went to the cemetery,” the husband said. The peddler asked if he expected her back soon, and the man said not particularly. The peddler then asked if he could wait and the man said he could. After the peddler had waited maybe two or three hours, he said to the map, “I Celebrating their golden wedding anniversary with their family Saturday at the Botsford Inn, South-field, will be Mr. and Mrs. Morris W. Kollin of Dunght Street. Their children are Mrs. Leo Ittigson, of South-field and Arthur W. Kollin of Dutton Road, Avon Township. The couple who urn married on Aug. 27, 1916 has seven grandchildrenv THE PONTIAC PKKSS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 2&, 1866 3-9 Canadian Honeymoon! for John Meylands At home on Lingor Drive, Independence Township after a Montreal honeymoon are the John Christian Meylands (Freda Maitland Findlay). Officiating at the recent family ceremony in Sts. Charles and Helena Catholic Church in Munising were the pastor, Rev. Frederick Horton and Rev. Paul Pumphrey of the Bethany Methodist Church, Clio. JXeumode SALE / FIBERLOCK RUNLESS or WHITE COLLAR GIRL regular knit with NO-BIND TOPS. With reinforced heels and toes.. 774 pairs $1.50 Seasonable Shades 82 N. Saginaw St. ittngsltp 3nn rmrrmTnnrmvjTs; • Superb % 0 facilities for ' “ 1 WEDDINGS m “ Engagement Parties ° “ Bachelor Dinners o tiUULmJULpjLmJUUUL xTnfmrnrhnnmnmrs I Incomparable “ atmosphere for II BIRTHDAY PARTIES a Wedding Anniversaries ° Family Celebrations Reception followed in the Bavarian Inn, Frankenmuth. A shoulder-1 e n g t h illusion veil complemented a street-length gown of Schiffli-em- j broidered white silk organza taffeta for the daughter of Fred W. Findlay of CUo and the late Mrs. Findlay. Her bouquet held pink and white roses with white heather sent from Scotland by her uncle. Mrs. G. L. Townsend of Livonia was her cousin’s matron of honor. The bridegroom, recently of Monroe Street, is the son of Mrs. Walter Meyland of Munising and the late Mr. Meyland. David Kenney of Oxford was best man. The couple are graduates of Michigan State University. Licensed Tot Nursery to Begin Soon Children enrolled in Temple Beth Jacob Nursery School will begin classes on Sept. 19. The schedule runs from 9 a.m. until 11:80 a.m. five days a week with three-year olds attending Tuesdays and Thursdays and the older children on Mondays, Wednesday and Fridays. At a recent orientation gathering, children and mothers had a chance to inspect the school’s facilities and meet with teachers Mrs. Herman Stenbuck, Mrs. Bryant Grant and nursery school director, Mrs. Melvin Eller. Mrs. Rob er t Gash, president, welcomed new members and explained how the cooperative nursery school operates, The school is licensed by the Michigan State Board oi Education through the Department of Social Welfare and a member of the Greater Detroit Cooperative Nursery School Association for the State of Michigan. There will be a special dinner on Oct. 1 at 7:30 p.m. in the Holiday Inn for parents of children enrolled in the nonprofit and nonsectarian school. The engagement of Suzanne Marie Munsee to Marine Pfc. Robert Lee Jennings is announced by her parents, the , Stuart Munsees of Waldon Road, Independence Township. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Jennings also of Waldon Road, currently serving aboard the USS Oklahoma City m the Philippines. March vows are being planned by Kristine Helen Knaus, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilson L. Knaus of North Edith Street, and Kenneth Eugene Karns-Jr., son of the senior Mr. and Mrs. Karns of North Lake Angelus Road. He attended Oakland University and Oakland Community College. Spring vows are being planned by Laura Gene Sanders, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall 0. Sanders of Lakeview Drive, Highland Township, and Douglas Alan Snyder, son of the Ross Snyders of Cadillac. Both will attend Prairie Bible Institute, Calgary, Alberta, this fall. Soak in Soda To remove brown spots from heart-resistant glass cookware be sure the dish is Cool. Then soak in a solution of baking soda and water (3 tablespoons soda to one quart of water.). Alcohol Is Smoke Screen Couple United In Petoskey From Oden Island, Petoskey, comes the announcement of the recent marriage of Jane Lynn Bryans, formerly of Lake Orion, to Leon D. Murray of Kalamazoo, in the Parr Memorial Baptist Church. Parents of the couple who are on a Great Lakes cruise, are Mr. and Mrs. Carson Kibbe of Oden Island, Mrs. Leonard Murray of Petoskey and the late Mr. Murray. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE A-513: Fred Z., aged 39, should awaken all you complacent women. “Dr. Crane," his worried wife protested, “I don’t know what has come over my husband, “He used to be devoted to me and ardent in his love-making. | “Then he got active in the Boy Scouts-and used to go on long hikes with them. AAA “That was while our two sons were still in high school. “But this past year he has begun to drink heavily, al-I though he never touched alco-I hoi before. 1 “And now he stays out till late at night, often staggering | home at 2 a.m. “When sober, he scolds me ! terribly and seems to have no j use for me at all, so I am at my wit’s end. What’s wrong with him, Dr. Crane?’ ! SMOKE SCREEN i To be very blunt, I shall | warn you wives that alcohol is a very common “smoke screen" used by platonic husbands. Since you are not very ardent creatures, as measured by the usual masculine viewpoint, you ignore many telltale little signs of your husband’s growing sex panic. Fred’s trouble began even before he first became active in Boy Seoul work. For a husband who is growing impotent often rushes into civic, church, YMCA and Scouting activities. He thus evokes public praise for his generous donation of time and energy to such worthy projects. So he is doubly happy at this public acclaim, since he secretly feels belittled or humiliated in his own sight at the thought that he is growing platonic. Those civic projects often serve as wholesome sexual “smoke screens.” For they excuse his lack of ardor when he reaches home and faces his devoted wife. “He’s just too tired for romancing," she then will think. Alcohol may become the next smoke screen. For if he stays out till late at night and then staggers home half drunk at 2 a.m., his wife will figure his lack of affection is just due to his intoxicated condition. We medics can employ drugs to nauseate a drinker so he can’t stand the taste or smell of whisky . A A A But unless the basic dilemma is remedied, he may then rush into dope addiction or even suicide. So you wives can solve this problem quickly by sending for the booklet “How to Prevent Platonic Husbands," ‘enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents. (Always write to Dr. Crane in care of The Pontiac Press enclosing a long stamped, addressed envelope and 20 cents to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one of his booklets.) KINNEY'S SHOES For I hr Whole Family PONTIAC MALL MIRACLE MILE Enroll NOW! Enrollments Taken Daily at Your Convenience PONTIAC BEAUTY COLLEGE 16Y2 E. Huron Phone FE 4-1854 Study the latest techniques and hair fashions. Call Miss Wilson for further information OMA Florentine for the Bride and Groom for the Lady $67-5® for the Gentleman $110-00 The Store Where Quality Counts FEED N^pGuli ~CO. Pontiac's Oldest Jewelry Store 28 West Huron St. FE 2-7257 r SCHIPF SHOES Back to School Special 3 DAYS ONLY! Engagement Is Announced fee John B. McMullens of East Grand Rapids announce, the engagement of their daughter, Mary Jeanne, tp Hugh Thomas Gingell, son of the Gregory W. Gingells of Dearborn, formerly of Birmingham. His grandparents are the William R. Gingells of Barrington Road. A December wedding is planned by the couple who is attending Michigan State University. We feature Accutron* the most accurate timepiece in the world Fri Sat, and Mon. On Our Own Exclusive ^BLUEBIRD Shoes for Children! $ Aceutron’s tuning fork replaces the outdated bal* "~MW WtW i!jBBM&afc" watches. Stop by so wa can tell you more. Storting with the right time of day. Accutron by Bulova. From $125.00 THURSDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS JEWELRY COMPANY IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Here’s your opportunity to make substantial savings on better quality shoes for children. Bluebird offers the newest styling, fine craftsmanship, and ... They’re guaranteed to fit. D=ao rHE ENTIRE FAMILY! BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE j SHOPPING CENTER LAST SEVEN DAYS of Our SUMMER SALE SAVE 10%! NIGHT STAND $69.75 Regularly 77.50 Touraine by Drexer &\n exciting rendezvous with beautiful decorating Touraine creates room beauty effortlessly . . . and elegantly! Look for fashionable flexibility, too, in this favorite French classic. All the romance of the most famous French period is yours in this complete selection 1 for dining, living and bedrooms. Choose yours in hand-rubbed Bordeaux walnut or custom brushed white with gold and pearl-gray striping. 10% SAVINGS on These FAMOUS NAMES: • DUNBAR • GLOBE • DREXEL • BAKER • DUX • HERMAN MILLER • KNOLL • THOMASVILLE • PENNSYLVANIA HOUSE and MORE All tha above brands may ba special ordered at 10% savings in your detired fabric and finish. Let our imaginative decorators help you. MANY DISPLAY PIECES at 25% to 50% SAVINGS Budget T8TWS Of GotffW 1 Decorators at Your Service Plenty of Free Parking Open Friday Evenings FURNITURE S. Sstbiaw St at Orchard Laka Am. FEMiH PONTIAC J B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26,1966 Open Tonight Until 9 Alvin's Fur Collared Motor trr SH An ideal, smart looking, .warm, serviceable coat for the college set; The shell is all wool plaid with a borg pile lining, and the collar is mouton. The Lightest Moc The softest kidskin uppers —— that ever cradled your foot —and an even cuddlier feeling with that silky soft, foam-backed liningl Try on the lightest moc of the season—the one with lovely Unimoc construction! Size* 5 to 10 AAA to B widths Block, Brown $12 HURON at TELEGRAPH Mr, and Mrs. Berkley Lewis of Flatrock, announce the engagement of his daughter, Linda Kay, to Michael Timothy McDonald, son of Mrs. R. C. Simons of Lynsue Lane and the late George P. McDonald. A February wedding is being planned. The Solomon L. Smiths of Orchid Street announce the engagement of their daughter, Vicki Lyn, to Pvt. Daryl Eugene Clement of Fort Knox, Ky. He is the son of the Louis W. Clements of North Cass Lake Road and has attended Ferris State College. A Jan. 27 wedding date has been set by Sharon Frances Sherby, daughter of the John Sherbys of Rochester and Michael Comps, son of Mrs. George A. Comps of Silver Bell Road, Oakland Township, and the late Mr. Comps. ‘ ,1 The Edward C. Wilkes of Robert Court,'Avon Township announce the engagement of their daughter, Kathy Carol, to Pvt. Ralph Howard Jr. now stationed at Fort Sill, Okla. He is the son of Mrs. Ralph Howard of Stoneyfork, Ky. and the late Mr. Howard. jkay vows are being planned by Kathleen Marie Harbert and Pvt. James Martin Donley of the Union Lake Nike Site. Their parents are the Michael R. Harberts of Caterham Drive and the John E. Donleys of East Columbia Avenue. Her fiance has attended Oakland Community College. Pontiac Mall | Hearing Center i Our Services Include : e Hearing instruments prescription fitted : e All makes of hearing instruments serviced and repaired ; • Ear molds custom fitted : e Fresh batteries available for mast aids ; Thos. B. Appleton ; ; Certified Hearing Aid Audiologist j III! A.M. te 111* AM. DAILY 682-1113 Twins Share Twin Awards FORT WORTH, Tex. UP> -Identical 15-year-old twins Carol and Coral Nuckols won identical awards at the Tarrant County 4-H Council food show. Carol won the senior division in the bread and cereal group with a rice dish and Coral won in the milk group with a custard-type drink. Klimesh-Butt Vows Exchanged St. Benedict’s Catholic Church was the setting for the recent marriage of Mary Ann Butt of North Cass Lake Road to Donald James Llimesh of Maple Leaf Road. The newlyweds left for a wedding-trip to northern Michigan and Canada after the morning rite. Their parents are the Rev. and Mrs. William J. Butt, Cambridge City, Ind. and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Klimesh, Spillville, Iowa. White organza over taffeta with Alencon lace applique fashioned the bride’s Empire gown and Watteau train. She wore an illusion veil and carried Shasta daisies and carnations. xToeeiroocaoi t ibtooa oTeTrinrrirrrnyririrsTrgTriniTSTrrinnrB^^ ^ WANTED Customers During Our Grand Opening August4 26 - Sept. 3 Come In - Get Acquainted CDirriAl I One Week Only!! 10c for Every Second OlLUIMLI Item of the Same Cleaning Value: Suit, Dress or Coat...$1.80 Second lOc-Total $1.90 Slacks, Skirt or Sweater.$ .85 Second 10c—Total $ .95 Exception.: Furs, Suedei, Leathers and Formats— 10c Offer Does Not Apply 673-7996 Tower Shopping Center Mon.-Sat. M59—Airport Rd., Waterford 7:30 a.m.—8 p.m. . QmmummtttmteftHUBeoooooeoeoeeeeooeeoooooooooBoey, Kathleen Butt was her cousin’s honor maid Karen Klimesh and Jaun Ramos were bridesmaids. ★ ★ ★ Charles Klimesh was his brother’s best man, with Gordon Butt and Robert Petrof of Dearborn seating the guests. ★ * ★ The bride is an alumna of Wittenberg University and her husband was graduated from Iowa State College. Luncheon Served to Golf Leaguers Some 37 members attended the Fairway Golf League monthly luncheon Thursday at the Pontiac Country Club. ★ ★ ★ Chairman of the meeting was Mrs. Charles Barker, assisted by Mrs. Robert Meikle, Mrs. Steven Condon, Mj-^John Condon, Mrs. Richard Kincaid and Mrs. Carl Rose. ★ ★ ★ A final party Is scheduled for Sept. 22. Former league members are welcome to make reservations. fanning. jewelry. C^liridtmad? ^Jlien Mead Oil 16 »Sp0ciat edda.ge e^J'rowi (^.onnoti We Urge You To Come In Soon And Look Over Our Fine Selection Of Diamonds, Rings, Watches, Silver, etc. But Most Important Of All, Make Your Decision On What You Want Early And Put It In Lay-Away. We Feel It Is Our Obligation To You To Make Known The Fact That... There Is An Extreme Shortage Of Skilled Labor In The Jewelry Business! Wo Do* Not Want To Disappoint You On That Unusual Or Make-To-Order Request . . And We Do Not Want To Bo "Out-of-Stock" Of Tho Item You Want At Gift-Tlma Glvlngl So We Urflft TfeOft Make Your Selection As Soon A* Possible. We Do Know There Is jdolng To Be A Shortage In Many Fine Jewelry Hems This Yeah One of the finest lines of diamond rings is already oversold! We will always have diamond rings bat don’t be disappointed .. . select yours now! Special orders, re-mountings and special designing will be extremely difficult to process this Christmas. Make your plans now and we can put it in Lay-Away for you. Small Deposit Holds Any Item Change • Layaway Michigan Bankard For example, a national publication has already predicted the Pearl yield this year will be extremely short We have placed a large order of Accu-tron watches ... and we will be fortunate if we receive 75% of our order! Rolex and all fine watches will be in great demand. Put yours in Lay-\Away nowl Registered Jewelets f A i American , Gem Society THREE LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU: DOWNTOWN PONTIAC BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE BIRMINGHAM 16 West Huron 2203 South Telegraph 162 North Woodward FE 2-0294 FE 2-8391 Ml 6-4293 Open Friday *Hl 9 Open Evening* Til 9 Open Friday Evenings THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AtJGUST 26, 1966 B—n Rochester Newlyweds in Smoky Mountains A reception in the Rochester Elks Temple followed the recent marriage of the Donald Lynn Pratts trate on their prime function—keeping a building and its equipment clean. Boiler room attendants are not a requirement DEPEND- J Electric heat reduces the possibility of buhd-■ nil itu i in8 freeze-ups; eliminates boiler breakdowns AdILH I during unattended hours. With a boiler failure, the whole school most close down. If an electric heating unit fails, only the one room involved need be closed. 1C3V FLEXIBILITY mm UNSCHEDULED, OFF-HOURS USE OF SCHOOL ROOM CLEANLI- NESS Electric heating equipment can be used Just in the room or rooms where heat is required, completely independent of and without affecting any other part of the heating system. On a cool but sunny autumn day, for example, the heat may be on in rooms on the shady side of a school, off in rooms on the sunny side of the building. Even with the briefest advance notice, supplying off-hours heat creates no problem. Electric heat reacts quickly and, again, there can be selective, ons-room-only use. Sinee there is no combustion, electric heat does not create smoke, soot or ashes to add to cleaning chores. EFFICIENCY With electrid heat, there are no long, laborious heating up or cooling down cycles. The JjA equipment is ready to furnish heat at the moment of need and there is no wasteful heat carryover when the equipment is shut down. WARM WEATHER BENEFITS With more efficient and effective building insulation, a school will be cooler and more comfortable in warm weather—a decided advantage to students and teachers. Air conditioning is also simplified and made more economical since the electrical wiring installed for the heating system can also epergize air conditioners. EDISON CUT ELECTRIfiRATE FDR TOTAL ELECTRIC SCHOOLS TWICE IN 1965 Detroit Edison has twice voluntarily reduced the electric service charge to schools in its service area which are all electric, including the heating. School administrators, school board members, architects and consulting engineers are invited to inquire at any Edison office concerning the details of downward rate adjustments and riders. AH IHYESTOR OWHED, TAX PAYIHG ELECTRIC COMPAMY DETROIT EDISON 2000 SECOND • DETROIT. MICHIGAN 40220 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1066 C-l Pontiac Motor GM, DfcLorean, Among Purchasers AFL San Diego Chargers Sold for $10 Million SAN DIEGO — A record $10 million was paid for the San Diego franchise of the American Football League and among 21 partners headed by Eugene Klein, aSouthern California businessman, is John Z. DeLorean, General manager of Pontiac Motor Division, and a vice-president of General Motors. Klein, 45, president of National General Corp., and his group purchased the franchise from Barron Hilton, who said he sold the team “to devote more time to the Hilton Hotel chain he operates with his father, Conrad.” Hilton and his father will retain 20 per cent along with Klein and Samuel Schulmao, National General Executive Vice President. The Hilton’s previously owned 65 per cent interest. DeLorean, of Bingham Farms near Birmingham, will hold 10 per cent control. DeLorean, who at the age of 40 became the youngest GM at Pontiac Motor Division in Jane of 1065, is a native of Dfctrqit and was graduated from Lawrence Institute of Technology in IMS. He also holds master’s degrees in automotive engineering from Chrysler Institute and in business administration from the University of Michigan. Negotiations, which began six months ago were completed Thursday, according to Hilton. HIGHEST EVER The $10 million selling price is the highest ever paid fot_a professional football team, surpassing the $7.1 million paid for the Los Angeles Rams in 1962. Before the recent merger of the AFL and NFL, the Chargers had been quoted as worth between $6 and $8 million. Despite their success on the field, figures circulated to the buyers indicated the team had suffered heavy financial losses until last year. The losses ranged from $382,00 in 1961 to $645,-000 in 1964. Profits totaled $300,000 in 1965. There have been rumors for several years that' the Chargers might leave San Diego, but Klein noted that the team will “remain exactly where it is and will play in the 50,000-seat Mission Valley Sta- dium, currently under construction.” The stadium is scheduled for completion by the 1967 season. “I’ve been trying for at least seven years to buy an interest in a Los Angeles or San Diego ball club,” Klein said. Coach and General Manager of the club, Sid Gillman, will retain his posts. In the six-year history of the team in the AFL, Gillman has posted 54 victories and five divisional titles. Among others in the 21-man group involve^ in the purchase are Pierre Salinger, vice-president of Continental Air Lines; Eugene Wyman, attorney and National Democratic Committeeman; Irving Levin, National General executive vice president. Newspaper owner James Copley and restuaranteur George Pernfcano will each retain the five per cent interest they held with Hilton. JOHN Z. DeLOREAN Early Runs Give Denny McLain Easy Wi TOUGH DAY —Jack Nicklaus, defending champion of the Philadelphia Golf Classic, tosses his club toward his golf bag after blasting out of a trap on the 10th fairway Play Cowboys at Tulsa yesterday. Jack finished well down the list with an opening round 72, six strokes off the pace set by Tom Weiskopf. Lions Cul Four Off Roster, Add One United Press International The Detroit Loins did some roster juggling Thursday as they trimmed to the 49 player limit and prepared for their fourth exhibition game of the season. The Lions acquired centerline-backer Mike Alford from the St. Louis Cardinals in exchange for an undisclosed future draft choice. In order to keep at the roster limit they then asked waivers on Joe Wellborn, a center they picked up from the New York Giants about three weeks ago. The Lions also announced the names of the three players who were placed on waivers last Tuesday. None of the three players, defensive back Frank Marsh of Oregon State, Don Weatherspoon from Michigan State and defensive tackle Frank Pennie from Florida State, were claimed by other teams and will be released. Alford, who was the 14th draft choice of St. Louis last year, stands 6-foot-3 and weighs 230 pounds. He played his college football at Auburn. The Lions were scheduled to fly to Tulsa for their fourth exhibition game of the season this afternoon. In meeting the Dallas Cowboys, the Lions will be facing their fourth straight undefeated opponent, also. The Cowboys last week sur-prised the Western Division Green Bay Packers, 21-3, for their third straight win in preseason play. ROOKIE MAY START Jerry Rhone, who set a score of collegiate passing records while at the University of Tulsa, Will probably get a chance to face the Lions in the game Saturday night before a friendly home town crowd. The Lions have yet to win a game. They tied their first contest, 6-6, with Minnesota and Browns Rated Underdogs in Twinbill at Cleveland CLEVELAND (AP) — Cleve-i believes that Jim Ninowski, No. land Browns and ex-Browns may dominate the playing field in numbers for tonight’s pro football doubleheader here, but the Browns are being billed as underdogs in the fifth annual tilt. Part'of the lack of confidence in the Browns is the retirement of fullbacjc Jim Brown and need for reshaping of the team’ backfield. Another big question is the throwing arm of quarterback Frank Ryan. Ryan has had his Sore right elbow treated all week. He reported some improvement Thursday during the final workout before the Browns closed their Hiram, Ohio, training camp. Coach Blanton Collier said he is counting on Ryan to start against the Baltimore Colts, but IsiflfarRuns ANN ARBOR (AP) - Jim Detwiler, who suffered an injured knee last year, ran without limping Thursday as the University of Michigan football Wolverines opened two-a-day practices. Detwiler ran in a backfield that had Dick Vidmer and Rick Volk alternating at quarterback. Volk is a converted defensive halfback. There Was no contact as the squad started the rugged training grind. 2 quarterback, will pilot the club most of the game. NEW COACH Otto Graham, former Browns quarterback and now coach of tiie Washington Redskins, takes his battered team to the field tonight against the Minnesota Vikings in the first game at 6:30 p.m. (EDT). The doubleheader is a sellout, and those willing to pay for standing room may push the crowd to 83,000. Baltimore, coached by Brown Don Shula, has scored points in winning its three exhibition games this year over Washington, Philadelphia and St. Louis. Shula’s aides include John Sandusky and Chuck Noll who played for the Browns in the 1950s. AIDS COACH Helping Coach Norm Van Brocklin mastermind the Vikings will be Lew Carpenter, who ’50s. Minnesota is undefeated in its, last 14 exhibition pH fn thejNFL Saturday, New York plays Philadelphia at Princeton, N.J., in the afternoon and Pittsburgh is at Green Bay, St. Louis is at Los Angeles, Atlanta meets San Francisco at Columbia, S.C., and Dallas plays Detroit at Tulsa, Okla., at night. Houston plays at Kansas Ci|y, oston is at San Diego and New York takes on Buffalo at Allentown, Pa., Saturday night and Oakland is at Denver Sunday in American League exhibitions. then lost 28-14 to St. Louis and 17-7 to the New York Giants. Most of the Lions regulars who have been sidelined with injuries are expected to be ready for Saturday night game with Dallas. Captain Alex Karras was back in uniform for the practice ses-sion Thursday and should be ready to play at the starting defensive tackle position. Jim Gibbons has recovered from a knee injury and halfback-kick return specialist Tommy Watkins and rookie linebacker Bill Cody will also be available. Coach Harry Gilmer is hoping the Lions offense will finally get in motion after scoring only 27 points in the first three games anemic nine-points per game average. 5 Ex-Champs in City Meet 37th Annual Tourney Thit Weekend 'Two of the first champions and three other ex-champs will tee off in the 37th annual Men's Medal Play golf championship at Municipal course Saturday. Kip Inman who won the title lii its second year lii 1029 and Fonce Fowler who followed as champion in 1930 are the vet* erans of the fie,d of 39 who will play in the 36-hole finale Saturday and Sunday. Other champions in the field which went through qualifying weekend, are Paul 1965 champion and four time winner; Dick Robertson, 1964 titlist and Butler Cooper, winner in 1958. Bada and Robertson are in the same threesome teeing off at 12:48 Saturday. Fowler goes out at 1:12 p.m. with one of the youngest challengers in the field Gary Balliet, 17 year old Avondale High student. The Sunday starting times will have the low Saturday scores going out in the final threesomes. -ik»WigriFagl«wH» 00—Pete McClain, A"-— George Hammett Young Pro Could Be Golf Seer WHITEMARSH, Pa. (AP) -Tom Weiskopf may not realize it, but he could be a prophet as well as one of the pro golf tour’s most promising young newcoqn- After shooting a six-under-par 66 to take a two-stroke first round lead in the $110,000 Philadelphia Golf Classic Thursday, Weiskopf said: * * * I’m pleased with the 66, but leading after the first round is a long way from winning. There are three rounds to go. In the previous three years of this tournament at Whitemarsh Valley County Club, the first round leader had fallen by the walside by the time the 72-hole test was over. LOOKS SHARP Weiskopf showed his versatility in conquering Whitemarsh’s 6,708 yards of tight fairways and well-guarded greens. Using a borrowed mallet-head putter for the first time — he decided his was too short for his fall frame — Weiskopf had nine one-putt greens in scoring seven birdies and an eagle. He missed hole-in-one by a fraction when his two-iron tee shot curled around the cup of the 235-yard par 3 fourth hole and stopped on the lip. He borrowed the putter from Eddie Griffith of Fort Meyers, Fla. Weiskopf said he had been using one made for him by Palmer, but left it Wednesday night in Palmer's locker with a note to make it longer. Two strokes behind Weiskopf came Bob Goalby and Dan Sikes, each with 68. Veteran Julius Boros led a contingent of seven at 69, including Roger Ginsburg, Jay Hebert, Butch Baird, John Cook, Don January and M. C. Fitts. At 70 were Bob Charles, Tommy Jacobs, Terry Dill and Bill Martindale. Tom Weiskopf .... —■Goalby ’ . Julius Soros Roger Ginsburg .. ..... .........*'• LOW BRIDGE-Fred StoUe of Australia ducks behind the net as Dick Leach of El Monte, Calif., drives the ball over his head for a point in the third round of the National Doubles Tennis Tournament yesterday at AP Wlrephofo Brookline, Mass. StoUe and his partner, Roy Emerson, defeated Leach and Sherwood Stewart of Bay Town, Tex., 6-4, 8-6, 10-12, 6-4. (See story on Page C-4.) Club Owners Okay Players Rep Salary Burgiorf, 12:12—Avery Bur Bab* .Allen / | 12: IB—starter's Time 12:24—Paul Wine, Buzz Weaver, Jim 1T:30—Clyde Skinner, James McMillan, oe Kellis 12:34—Chef Singleton, Tom Mltzelfeld, Columbus Burton 11:42—Open 12:44—Alex Kinder, Dick Childress, utler Cooper 12:S4—Julian Catlett, Dick Robertson. 1:04—Glenn Valtenee, Carl Cerr, Mike urphy 1:12—Ponce Fowler, Gary Balliet, Ray Allen :!(—{. kfyd Syron, Ken McClintock, M Harry Don January .. Bill MartinOals , «« ‘ ’■#« Ken Still .................. 36-35-71 l Gross ................. 35-36-71 HBples Slfford ............. 36-35-71 Chuck Courtney ............. 34“ fig Dudley Wysong .............. 36 Paul Bondeson .... ......... 36 Bob McAllister ..... ....... 36 Bill Collins ............... 37 Bert Yancey ................. 36 Rodgers Jack Rule Jr.* Chi Chi Rodriquez . . 37-34—71 35- 37-72 36- 36-72 37- 35-72 36-36-72 36-34—72 36- 36-72 37- 35—72 Bob Batdorf ... Dev?Stockton r 'Chufers Compete The 2nd annual Michigan sport parachuting championship will be held Saturday and Sunday at the Tecumseh Airport. The jumpers will deplane starting at 10:00 a.m. each day, and at 3:00 p.m. Suinday the Bat-Wing Man will jump from 14,000 feet. CHICAGO (AP) —The major leagues apparently have cleared the way for the controversial matter of paying the annual' $50,000 salary of Marvin Miller, new executive director of the Major League Players Association. But the 48-year-old former steel union official said he was disappointed in the club owners’ Only — ________________ Kansas City (Blanco 1-3) at Callfdri (Coafas 1-1 or M. Lopez 5-12), night (Merritt 2-12) at Chicago t 5-7), night IHHmid (Hargon 10-7) at We ((McCormick 7-11), night Boston (Stonge 4-7 or Lonborg Baltimore (J. Miller 3-7), night Detroit (Wilson 15-2) at Nai (Downing l-t). night Saturday's Gamas Kansas City kt California, nigh: Cleveland at Washington Boston at Baltim Detrol it New Y night oit »t New York National League Won Lost Pet. I ranclsco .. 75 52 .591 Pittsburgh . 74 52 .587 Los Angeles ... 72 53 .574 Philadelphia .49 59 .539 St. Louis ........ 45 41 .514 Cincinnati ...... 41 45 .484 . Atlanta .......... 59 44 .472 15 BwTbrk" —. U If'" .fit 194** hicago 44 II .352 30 Thursday's Results Chicago 3, New York 2 Philadelphia 4, Pittsburgh 1 Only games scheduled. 1 Today's Gamas1 New York r (McGrow 2-5) at Atlanh (Lemaster 11-8), night Le|ldiadelphfa (Culp 5-4 or Buhl 5-8) a nnatl (O'Toole 4-4). night I tsburah (Fryman 9-1) at St, Louii (Jackson 12-10). night '"-icago (Roberts 4-8) at Houston (G! —■ 13-10), night-to be preceded by com blOtiOff of suspended game'CLO* /-irvi (Taylor 2-2) Los Angeles (Koufax 20-7) at San Fran Iscd (Bolin 7-8), night Saturday's Gamas New York at Atlanta Philadelphia, at Cincinnati, 2, day-night Pittsburgh it St. Louis Chicago at Houston • Los Angeles at San Francisco Sunday's Gamas New York a (Atlanta Philadelphia at Cincinnati Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 2 Chicago a (Houston Los Angelo* at San Francisco rejection of three proposals by the players association for fi-j nancing their affairs. The owners voted Thursday to relieve the players of a $2 per day contribution to the pension fund, now totalling $33 million, with .the thought that this money could be diverted to paying Miller. ★ * * They also voted to increase the players’ pension fund share by 55 per cqnt, or $4 million annually, from television receipts from the World Series and All-Star games in 1967 and 1968. DISAGREE Miller and commission William Eckert apparently—disagreed over dropping the $2 per day item. “Three proposals offered by the players association were rejected and I am disappointed.,’' said Miller.'“My meeting with the player relation committee headed by president Joe Cronin and Warren Giles of the American and National leagues was not a hostile one. I asked for basic thinking in their objection to my points. My next step will be to report' back to the player representatives. Miller’s suggested proposals were: 1. Joint sponsorship of the All-Star game by the association and owners to get the income for the $150,000 association operating expenses, including Miller’s salary. 2. A proposed careful study of the time and expense of the 'Draft' Aids U.S. Tankers Cager, Diver Assist in Relay Triumph Bengal Hurler Stops Chisox on Two-Hitter Detroit Starts Fast $ in 8-0 Win; Homer Hit by McAuliffe DETROIT (AP) - There’s j nothing wrong with Denny McLain that a big early lead can’t [Jcure. “Boy, I welcomed those early runs . . . you don’t know how bad,” McLain said after besting the Chicago White Sox 8-0 on a two-hitter Thursday night for |P only his second triumph since ?*’ the All-Star break. ★ ★ ★ | McLain, who once boasted that he pitched best in the tight games, admitted he needed this game to help him regain some of his confidence. “I was down and against my-ilf,” he said. “I just couldn't get anyone out. “I was throwing a lot of bad pitches and on top of that, when I did throw the good ones, they’d hit it. NOTHING SPECIAL “I didn’t talk over anything special with (catcher) BiHTFree-han tonight. We just decided that I’d throw hard from the start . . . something I haven’t been doing lately.’,’’ ’ SAG PALO, Brazil (AP) -A basketball player and a diver were drafted to help America’ male-shy swimming ieam, and the result was another gold medal for the United States in the Pan American Maccabiah Games. There are only two male members of the U.S. team—16-year-old Mark Spitz of Santa Dlara, Calif., and Paul Katz, also 16, of New York—so Coach Richard Fetters of Michigan State had to look elsewhere to omplele a '409-meter freestyle relay team Thursday. Ill drafted Howard Schwartz of the junior basketball team from Cincinnati, and diver Jay Moses of Cornell and Great Neck, N.Y., and they comBThed with Spitz and Kitz to beat runner-up Argentina by 22 meters in 4:09.2. can’t believe it,” said Spitz of the performances turned in by Schwartz and Share First in Pentathlon SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) -Jim Kerr of Waukesha, Wis., and Dr. Robert Beck, a former champion now residing in San Diego, Calif., shared first place in the National Modern Pentathlon Championships with 2,146 point totals after Thursday’s fencing competition at Ft. Sam Houston. sociation in administering tbe| Defending champion Paul pension, fund with the prospect of tapping the fund for that share of the association’s bud-....... 3. A suggestion that the players be permitted to authorize either deduction, of $2 a day for association operations dr have the option of continuing (o contribute to the pension fund. Eckert said that “in vjew of the great increase (of the players’ TV money), the clubs further aided the players by relieving them of the requirement pay the $2 dues to thd pension fund, although I would like to emphasize that the action mil be entirely voluntary on the players part.” Pesthy, in third place, was top scorer in this second event. Falcons, Bears ^Fai'l on 'Trade BLACK MOUNTAIN, N. C. W) —Club owner Rankin Smith announced Thursday night that the Atlanta Falcons are terminating negotiations with the Chicago Bears for the services of ex-Georgia Tech linebacker Larry Morris. Smith said Bear owner George Halas flatly refused the Falcons’ latest offer "of two top future draft choices. “That’s it, as far as I can go,” Smith sajcL McLain had lost seven times since the All-Star game when he breezed through the first three innings as the American League’s starting pitcher. Both of his victories since have come over the White Sox and both have been shutouts. He blanked them on four hits on Aug. 2. The Tigers wasted no time staking McLain to the early lead. Dick McAuliffe, Jerry Lumpe and Norm Cash — the first three batters against Chicago starter Joe HoiTen — singled. A couple of Chicago errors contributed to the three-run raHy.......... ~ A1 Kaline’s bases - loaded single, fallowing a single hr Bit*-MeAullffe, a double hy LuMJMT and an intentional walk to Cash, added two more rafts in the sec-,i«nd. -........ McAuliffe cracked his third hit, a ihrmyn homer* in Jhe fifth to close out the scoring. Ken Berry doubled leading off the fourth inning and Jerry Adair beat out a roller to short in the eighth for the only hits off McLain. * ★ a McLain was in charge all the w a y,” chirped Manager Frank Skaff. “I just hope this starts him on a long winning streak.” i Skaff also pointed out that while McLain has beeft off the beam in a couple of games, he hasn’t been getting too much support. The Tigers scored more than three runs in only three of McLain’s nine previous starts. And one of them was in the 54) whitewashing of the White Sox. Detroit closed the home stand with a 7-2 record and opens a 12-game road trip with a night*. gamein^iwY©i¥T«ttght. CHICAGO DETROIT Buford ^3b FRoblrfiW rf 0 0 0 McLain p in ■*— .... Total 29 0 2 0 Total 3511*7 :Mcago ..........on 11# ooo—o Jetreit.........Ill *1* t 0 x— * E-Adelr, Walt. . LOB-Chlcogo 4, Jotrolt 4. 2B—Lump*, Barry. HR— ACAulirt* (15). IP H RERBB50 McLain (W, 15-11) 9 I 6' 6 J.f WP—McLain. T—til*. A" .M$m, J 4 3 3 If'. • Vi 0 16333238 XT' C-*& THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 2g, 1866 —»MUFFLERS PIPES • SHOCKS MIDAS built the best MUFFLER reputation in America by being squrniE We re SQUARE SHOOTERS... with a SQUARE DEAL. We guarantee Midas Mufflers, in writing, for as long as you own your car against rust, corrosion, blow-out, even normal wear-out. Replacement for a service charge only (the muffler itself is free!) at over 500 Midas Shops, coast to coast, U.S.and Canada. FAST, EXPERT SERVICE... FREE INSTALLATION 435 SOUTH SAGINAW 3 Blocks South of Wide Track Drive Open Fridays 8:30 A.M. to 7 P.M. BUY, SELL, TRADE . . . USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * HUNTING “"SEVEN STAR AMERICA’S LIGHTEST WHISKEY SCOTCH LIGHTNESS-CANADIAN QUALITY A smooth American Blend at a money saving price $285 ®3SC 6^52 */5QT. $f Q85 HALF BALLON BLENDED WHISKEY, 86 PROOF, 40% STRAIGHT WHISKEY-60% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. G00DERHAM & WORTS LTD, PEORIA, ILL GARY PLAYER’S GOLF CLASS: A little dirt harms nobody...golfers^ 8-26 This 'Flakey' Phillie Not Pirates' Brand® GOOD LUCK CHARM-Dick Schneider, catcher for the Houston Little League team, poses the team’s lucky toad on top of a ball before yesterday’s Little League World Se- ries games against Sacramento in Williamsport, Pa. Houston won, 4-0, to advance to the finals tomorrow against West New York, N. J. Grand America Handicap Climaxes Trapshooi Today VANDALIA, Ohio UR - They say you never know who might win the Grand American Handicap, climax event of the Grand American Trapshoot, and unheralded contestants in that big one today had only ot look back one day for added encouragement. Karroll Hillebrand of Vandal-ia, Mo., in his first Grand American ever, arrived Thursday by private plane at 2 p.m. EST, took no practice, and went out and won the Preliminary Handicap championship. Hillebrand, a 27-year-old insurance man, said coming from one Vandalia to another, “I guess I shot so well because it sounded like home.” He was one of 2,774 entrants, a record, in the Preliminary. And a record 3,500 were expected fur the Grand American Handicap today ih which Dan .Pautter 20, of Aktau,: H* is defending champion — But which never has been won twice Greek Five Out DAMASCUS (AP) - Italy eliminated Greece from the World Military Basketball Championships by beating the Greeks Thursday night, 77-63. mwi ■ tpedalf! ■! American Mini-Cube Compacted Water Softener Salt. • No fouling retin bed or Control* e Free of Residue e 99.9% Pure Salt • Totally Soluble SO Pound 8160 Bat | STOPS WATER! 1 TH0R0SEAL « $780 1 Come, in 7 color. Lta. | ■ WATERPLUG taK, 1 Stop. Active jgj 'A®* 1 Wotor Immediately ■ 1 QUICKSEAL «$1l| Smooth FiniihCoot U,< 1 1 HI FANTASTIC PRICE RE0UCTI0NS! 40—4x8 Oak Prefinished 50—4x8 Cherry Prefinished 30—4x8 Teak Prefinished 30 — 4x8 Walnut Prefinished _ Cash and Party Priced to Sell! DUST CONTROL CALCIUM CHLORIDE for dirt drivawovt, roods, and unpavad parking lots. 100-lb. Bag $3.00 E Blanket Insulation 1% Inch... $86 per M 2 Inch $41 per M 3 Inch $60 per M 1xG”-8”-10,r-and 12” CLEAR RE0W000 , Ve” 4x8 Particle Bobrd $448 Plastic Coated Irregulars ■* i * P0NDER0SA PINI 1x6x6 - 27c aa. 1x6x8 - 36c aa. HEATING and COOLING DIVISION SALES Toridheel SERVICE LICENSED CONTRACTORS. ALL MAKES OF FURNACES, BOILERS AND CONVERSION UNITS INSTALLED AND SERVICED. 24-HOUR SERVICE 856 North Saginaw FE 3-7171 BENSON LUMBER 00. Building and Remodeling Supplies and Materials 549 North Saginaw Street Open 0-5 - Sat. 8-12 FE 4-2521 by the same person nor by any ‘name” shooter. James O’Hara of West Jefferson, Ohio; Oliver F. Feinour of New Tripoli, Pa., and Cpl Chuck Jenson of Challis, Idaho, and Ft. Benning, Ga., tied Hille-brand’s 99 but one 25-target shootoff eliminated O’Hara and Feinour and Hillebrand beat Jenson 24-22 in a second shootoff. O’Hara and Feinour, like Hillebrand,- won $2,000 each, but Jenson, of the U.S. Army trapshooting squad, was not allowed to win money. In other divisions of the Preliminary Handicap, it was a different story, with well-known shooters winning. Mrs. Mary Ann Crabbe of Springfield, 111., won the women’s title with 96 of 100 from 21 Ms yards but needed a shootoff to beat 15-year-old Deborah'Ann. Heyl, Pittsburgh, Pa., an 18-yafa' haridicabper. Mrs. Crabbe herself lost in shootoffs in I960 and 1961 and is a perennial winner of Illinois-Indiana titles. Claude Tatum, 14, of Lubbock, Tex., won the junior laurels with 97 from 22 yards. He is fresh from a record 100 straight in doubles in the Texas Juniors Fred Kearsey of Cobourg, Ont., Canada, won the professional championship with 96 from 21 yards, and F. E. Hansen, 78, of Lakewood, Ohio, edged Dr. J. W. Stanton, 82, of Chicago 97-96 for the veterans title for marksmen age 70 and up. It was the fifth triumph in Name Hurlers for Title Tilt in Little Loop WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (API-Right handers Mike Robinett of Houston, Tex., and Mario Ruiz of West New York, N.J. were named today to pitch for their hometown teams in the final game of the 20th annual Little League Baseball World Series. The two teams, victorious in semifinal games played here Thursday, are scheduled to face one another for the championship at 2 p.m. Saturday. k k k Both pitchers have won one game apiece in the series. Robinett shutout Monterrey, Mex., 64), in a first round game on Tuesday. Ruiz led West New York to a first round victory over Kankakee, III, 3-0, on Wednesday. OFF DAY Today Ja ap? off day, .except fdr two consolation games between Monterrey and Kankakee, and Windsor, Ontario, and Rhein U Main Air Force Base, Germany. West New York won a shot at the championship by defeating a determined team from ~ ’ Japan, 4-0. By the Associated Press Associated Press Sports Writer When the Philadelphia Phillies talk about flakes, they don’t mean the breakfast variety. Jackie Brandt, Philadelphia’s journeyman outfielder, is the Phillies’ own personal one-man show. He was one man too many for the Pittsburgh Pirates Thursday night. Brandt drove in two runs with a single and double as the Phillies downed Pittsburgh 4-1 behind Jim Bunning’s eight-hitter. The defeat dropped the Pirates into second place in the National League, one half game behind the idle San Francisco Giants. * * ★ In baseball parlance, a flake it an off-beat player who is somewhat eccentric. Brandt fills the bill perfectly. Take the ice cream incident in spring training, for example. Brandt and a teammate decided they’d like a snack after dinner. ICE CREAM “Okay,” said the teammate, there’s an ice cream place down the block.” No, no,’ insisted Brandt, want to go to that 28-flavor place.” BIG ORDER When they reached their destination, 30 miles away, the other player ordered something scrumptious — the kind of treat you’d find in a 28-flavor spot. And Brandt? “I’ll take vanilla,” he dead-panned. Now that’s a flake. The Pirates didn’t think he was very funny though. His U.S. Cager Scores 30 FRANCA, Brazil (AP) -Warren Armstrong threw in 30 points and led the touring Wichita State University basketball team from the United States to a 67-57 victory over the Dos Bagres team Thursday night. Wichita led 41-27 at halftime in this provincial city, 240 miles from Sao Paulo. fourth Inning double brought Dick Groat home with Philadelphia’s second run of the inning. Johnny Callison had singled and scored on Groat’s double. k k k In the sixth, Richie Allen singled, moved up on a sacrifice, and rode home on Brandt’s second hit of the night. k \ k k In the only other National League game played Thursday, Chicago nipped New York 3-2. The victory was the fourth in five starts against the Pirates for Bunning this season. NO EXPLANATION B‘i dop’t know how to account for it,” the Phillies’ ace said. "I just sort of accept it. I have to beat someone.” The Pirates had whacked 55 hits in their last four games before Bunning handcuffed them. Whitey Ford Has Shoulder Surgery HOUSTON (AP) - Whitey Ford, New York Yankees veteran pitcher, was reported in good condition today after a shoulder operation his surgeon described as successful. The left-hander, had gone on baseball’s disabled list earlier In the week after complaining of cramps in his pitchmg arm. A St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital bulletin said tests and examinations disclosed a blockage tn a shoulder artery that supplies blood to the left hand. A six-inch vein was taken from one of Ford’s legs Thursday and grafted to the shoulder area to form a bypass of the blocked area. Distance Races Set Saturday at OU Course The second of two U. S. Track and Field Federation Distance Races scheduled for the Oakland University campus cross country course will be held at 6:30 p. m. Saturday. ★ ★ ★ The events are the junior four-mile run for June high school graduates and under and the senior six-mile run open to all others. ★ ★ ★ In the previous July 19 races, Mike Koerner, a junior at Cran-brook, from Birmingham won the junior four-mile in 23:49 and John Bennett, a freshman at Western University, from St. Clair Shores won the senior six-mile run. ★ . * ★ The locker room in the Oakland University Sports and Recreation Building will be open at p.m. on Saturday to accommodate competitors. 2U.S.Yachts ih Top Spots YERBERG. Sweden.. (AP) -Dingo and North Star, two American boats, finished first second Thursday in the opening race of the European Star Boat Sailing Championships. k k k James N. Schoonmaker sailed Dingo and Lowell North the North Star. k k k Another U. S. boat, Goldstar, sailed by Joseph R. Duplin, finished fourth. Kathleen, sailed by H. P. Williams was eighth. . ^ HAVE A BALL T1 BOWUno* telephone FE 5-2513 and FE 5-2525 -J [ BOWLING SEASON j IS ALMOST HERE GET IN PRACTICE NOW OPEN BOWLING DAILY 9 A.M.-1 A.M. A few openings for teams and individuals still available. MEN-TUES. 6:30 P.M. LADIES—THURS. 6:30 P.M. MIXED LEADUE-MON. 9:86 P.M. , Come in and register now. GET YOUR UNIFORMS ( EARLY i i Complete line of bowling apparel for’ men and ladies. / Shirts by Munsinger wear, Hilton, .Olympian & Kins Louie, HURON BOWL 2525 Elizabeth Lake M. PONTIAC From *495« id dresses From *495«P Blouses, skirts and dress** by Brunner & Hess. J EXTRA! lEXTRA! EXTRA Special Savings on our remaining ’66 Pontiacs STILL A GOOD SELECTION OF STYLES AND COLORS! ’66 Ramblers at Unbelievable Savings! Russ Johnson MOTOR SALES 89 on M-24 in LAKE ORION 693-6266 TIIE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1966 r—n BALTIMORE (AP) - Motor Mouth, Clank and Bullet pulled " big job after dark in Baltimore Thursday night that could lead to a lot of money. It was a team effort by a club-carrying bunch bent on beating off attempts by other gangs to muscle in on their territory. •k-klr All it was, really, was an 11- Slug Out-of-Town Visitor Baltimore's i Hood Pull Job inning 4-3 baseball victory scored by the Baltimore Orioles over the Cleveland Indians. It ended a three-game losing streak for the Oriole!, who maintained their llVfe-game lead and moved closer to their first American League pennant and a slice of World Series loot. When the Orioles take the field, their nicknames sound like something from the underworld instead of the dugout. ★ * * Baltimore was on the verge of losing its fifth game in six starts when Curt Blefary socked a homer leading off the ninth to tie the score 3-3. Blefary is called Clank by teammates who think his glove sometimes resembles a piece of STOPS LINE DRIVE—Yankee leftfielder Tom Tresh runs in to catch California shortstop Jim Fregosi’s line drive in the fourth inning of yesterday’s game. He held the ball despite going into the tumbling routine shown above. California won, 5-1. Major League Boxes CLEVELAND 1 BJohnson 2b 4 0 1 5 0 2 0 Blair H r 2b 0 0 0 0 McNally p Total 31 3 6 2 Total 35 4 9 3 Cleveland ...100 200 000 00—3 Baltimore ...101 000 001 0 1—4 . J£rF«Pobln,on' Tlant- DP—Cleveland 2. LOB—Cleveland i —— - — Wagner, McNalli Whitfield. HR—Bierary SF—Hinton, B.Robinson. PHILADELPHIA PITTSBURGH olas If 4 0 10 MAlou cf 4 01 allison rf 4 12 0 Alley ss 4 0 1 Groat ss 4 12 1 Mota If 4 01 Allen 3b 4 110 Stargell rf 4 0 1 1 0 Veale p 0 0 Lynch ph 1 0 Cardwell p . S—Blefary. R ER BB SO ODonoghue Tlant (L, 7-8) McNally HBP—By ' S..... McNally, Radatz. T—3:05. CALIFORNIA : ,2 ' : .Brown). WP— 4 2 3 0 Tresh If 4 4 12 2 Rlchrdsn 2b 4 4 0 11 Whitaker cf 3 2 0 0 1 Pepltone lb 4 4 0 2 0 Boyer 3b 4 4 110 Clinton rf 4 4 110 Clarke ss 4 4 0 0 0 Stotlmyre p 2 Hamilton p 0 HLopez ph 1 •w York ....... 013 000 00 0 — E-Johnstone, Fregosl. DP—New Yorl -. LOB—California 4, New York 7. 2B-Tresh, E.Howard (2), Fregosl. Schaal Clarke. 3B—Johnstone. SB—Fregosl. SF- T—2il0. A—12.273. German Breaks Freestyle Mark Frank Wiegand of East Germany bettered the world record in the 400-meter freestyle swim held by Don Schollander of Lake Oswego, Ore., Thursday night. Wiegand finished in 4:11.1, below Schollander’s official record of 4:12.2 and bettering the pending record of 4:11.6 which the Yale student set last Thursday at the AAU championships. 3B—Mazeroskl, SB—T.Taylor (3). Veale (L, 13-8) .g 113 3 « Cardwell ........ 1 0 1 0 0 ’—Veale. PB—Gonder (2). T—2:. Swsboda ph 1 Hepler p^ 0 w York 0 0 3 1 3 — .0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 DP—New York ■MHRINIRPL „ Chicago 3. 2B—Elliot. HR—Boccabella (5), Elliot 'Jones. S—Fisher. IP H R ER BB SO ...... t 4 2 2 0 * Hepler (L»3-3)hh|||&MM| Simmons ( WP-HepI 2 4 1.5-3) . 2-3 0 T—2:31. A— 0,765. 99$ * HANK NEWMAN’S HPAkTAtt Dodge YES... 99$ WE'LL SELL YOU A USED CAR, WITH THE PURCHASE OF A NEW DODGE, FOR ONLY: 99$ NO GIMMICKS! JUST LOOK AT THESE SPECIALS! kDART .... . . .1795.00 • CORONET . . .1995.00 • POLARA . . . .2295.00 |» CHARGER - . .2695.00 CREDIT NO PROBLEM! FINANCING ON-THE-SPOT THESE PRICES GOOD ONLY AT... HANK NEWMAN’S 5PAATAN Dodge 855 OAKLAND AVE. FE 84222 \ iron when he goes after a fly ball in the outfield. Blefary’s 18th homer, incidentally, came off Dick Radatz —who is known by members of his Cleveland gang as The Monster. Brooks Robinson, known as The Head because of his receding hairline, walked to open the Baltimore 11th. You might say he triggered the rally. Clank then dropped a bunt in front of the plate and pitcher Luis Tiant heaved the ball into center field for a two-base error. ISSUES WALK With runners on third and second, with no outs, the Indians ordered an intentional walk for The Rock—the nickname for Bob Johnson because of his facial resemblance to Rocky Cola-vito of Cleveland. That loaded the bases and set the stage for Paul Blair, whose! vocal cords have earned him! the name of Motor Mouth. With the outfield playing] close, Motor Mouth rifled a sin-1 gle to deep center to score‘The Head. The victory went to Stu Miller —named Bullet because of his tantilizing slow pitches. He hurled four hitless innings in relief, striking out six. OTHER GAMES In other American League games, California beat New York, 5-1, Detroit skunked Chicago 8-0, and Boston won a doubleheader from Kansas City, 8-6 and 4-1. Jim Fregosi and Jay John-sttfne knocked in a pair of runs behind George Brunet’s six-hitter for the Angels. It was Brunet’s 12th triumph of the season. Mel Stottlemyre, 11-15, was the loser. Joe Foy hit a two-run homer in the bottom of the ninth in the first game and Hank Fischer, former National Leaguer, went all the way in the nightcap in the Red Sox’ double victory. Foy’s homer came with two out off reliever Ken Sanders. Tony Conigliaro hit a two-run homer in the nightcap as Fischer allowed just eight hits in his first start with the Red Sox. r'YOU ARE WARMLY INVITED^ TO RELAX IN A PRIVATE n BATH. H 2 0-i-Hot snun WATERFORD HILL SAUNA 6110 Dixie Hwy. Call 614-2830 Mi t SEETHE NEW’67 MODELTR’S NOW AT OAKLAND COUNTY’S SPORTS CAR CENTER OVER 50 NEW AND USED SPORT CARS TO CHOOSE FROM GtimaCdl Imported Co* Co. 890 OAKLAND (US 10) FES-9421 BOWung SATURDAY, AUG. 27 at the 300 BOWL ONLY! FREE BOWLING INSTRUCTIONS AT OUR OPEN HOUSE 6 P.M. to 12 P.M.-THIS SATURDAY FREE REFRESHMENTS LOOK FOR THE GUYS IN THE WHITE HATS Complete Line of Brunswick, AmFlite and Ebonite Balls. Also, Bags and Shoes 300 BOWL “where the action — 100 SOUTH CASS LAKE RD. Phone: 682-6300 C—4 THE PONTIAC PRJE&S, FRfDAY, AtJGUST 26, 1966 Jerre Maynard Says, We Are Having a Special Close-Out SALE! August 26, 27, 29/ LOWEST PRICES Ever 217 New Fords SALES MANAGER OAKLAND COUNTY'S LARGEST FORD DEALER “There Must Be A Reason” 464 S. Woodward Are., Birmingham Ml 4-7500 CHEV-OLDS BONUS For On all new or used cars sold during this sale, a gift certificate to the store, of your choice will be presented. Bring the coupon below upon delivery of your new or used car and a twenty five (*2500) gift certificate will be yours. j------------- COUPON- -------------j i Check Our Competitive Deals and | i Get Your Bonus when you Buy With This i 1-------------coupon--------------- V-8 Engine, Powerglidw transmission, full factory equipment. Not a stripped down car. . ' *" T - 1966T0R0NAD0 Official's Car loaded with equipment, ind. air conditioning. S DON’T BE A DUNCE! COLLECT YOUR BONUS CHEV-OLDS 1966IMPALA SPORT COUPE *2489?! SAVE 1500°° Elder I LeajMnUGA goCAGO (AP) - Lee Elder ^/Washington, D. C. fired a par 72 over the Chevy Chase course Thursday to continue his lead at thef 64-hole juncture with 215 in the United Golfers Association-| National Tournament | ★ A dr i Second in the pro division was Calvin Tanner, Chicago, with for 219, followed by Howard Brown, Detroit, 75—220; Rufus James, Los Angeles, 76—223; and Ned Starks, Atlanta, and Bill Bishop, Philadelphia, 75 and 77 for 224 each. * * * Brian Kotzin of Wilmette, HI., won the 36-hole junior buys title with 80-70—150 with Milton Carswell, Toledo, second at 152. The junior girls crown, based on 27 holes, went to Toya Jack-son, Gary, Ind., with 97-50—147. Topping the third round of the men’s amateur bracket was Dave Brown of Detroit with 75— 221. Curtis Walker was second with 78-225. >751 DIXIE HWY. US at US 10, Clarkitou HA 5-5D71 World Records Broken in Tank Centennial Meet VANCOUVER, BC. (II -Three teen-agers bettered world records Thursday in the British Columbia Centennial swimming meet, two of them representing the United States and the third |s|jand youngest — competing for South Africa. AAA Thirteen-year-old Karen Muir of Kimberley, South Africa* swam the 20-yard backstroke in 2:28.2. Tlte recognized record of 2:27.9 is held jointly by Sa-toko Tanaka of Japan and Linda Ludgrove of England. AAA Sue Jones, 18, of Palo Alto, Calif., sliced nine-tenths second from the world mark for women in the 110-yard breastroke, winning a preliminary in 1:18.3. AAA Zac Zorn, 19, of Los Angeles, swam the 110-yard freestyle final in 53.6, one-tenth faster than the record. MEN WANTED! Yes... We Still Have A Few Openings For TEAMS and INDIVIDUALS In The Orchard Lanes SENIOR HOUSE LEAGUE *1,000—1st *750-2nd *500-3rd STOP IN OR CALL: 654 OPDYKE 335-9293 * PHONE 335.92QA BLUE COAT PAIRINGS—Dick McMillan (left), official scorer and Tom Bramson, general chairman erf the Blue Coat tournament at Orchard Lake Country Club, mark up first round scores after yesterday’s play. The three day tournament ends Saturday at OLCC. Orchard Lake Tourney Starts 1965 Blue Coat Winners Advance The Blue Coat champions of Orchard Lake Country Club picked up where they left off yesterday in the opening round of the second annual edition of the tournament. Peter Green of Franklin and John Collinson of M i d 1 breezed through their first match yesterday with a 6 and 5 triumph over Pete Whitelaw of Orchard Lake and Jack Moses of Pine Lake. The champs headed into the second round today against the team of W. B. Bachman and Clem Jensen, who posted a 4 and 3 decision over James Fox and Ken Vandenburg in their opener. :$ Jerome Motor Sales \\ 1980 Wide Track Dr. FE 3-7021 < Thistle Lead Extended in National Sail Races S A Y V ij/L E, N. Y. (AP)-. Walter Stubner of East Hartford, Conn., stretched his lead in tiie Thistle Class national sailing championships by winning again Thursday on Great South Bay. It was the fourth victory in five races for Stub-ner’s Endeavor. The only other strong contender in the six-race series, which ends Friday, is Tom Wilson of New York, formerly of Cincinnati. Wilson, sailing Wat-erlook, finished fourth to mall 4% points behind Stubner. Stubner has eight points over-'aU to Wilson’s 12%. Half of the 112 teams were knocked out of action in the first round and the field will be cut in half again today. AAA The semifinals and finals are slated for tomorrow. HOAGY HERE A celebrity- in the field, singer and composer Hoagy Carmichael, managed a 1 up victory playing with John Quirk of Or- FIRST FLIGHT RESULTS First RmiimI Stev. Stubbs and Bill Albright del N. Iselac and L. McLeod, 1 up 19 holes; Hague and J. W. Collins del Taylor aisley and Doug Coxen, 2 and l. Allen Aerivan and Tom Chisholm del I. F. Greenawalt and C. Livingston, and- 3; Joe Wellman and Tom' Neal del John Judd and Richard Stickland, Pater Green and John Collinson del •eter Whitelaw and Jack Moses, a and ; W. B. Bachman and Clem Jensen let James Fox and Kan Vandenberg, and 3. George Spehn end Hunter McDonald at Harry Anderson and Charles Kelly, up; Carl Roth and Ralph EUstrom ef Fritz Adams and Joseph Reed, 6 - Chisholm Green • Collinson vs Spehn - McDonald vs chard Lake in third flight action. Carmichael and Quirk downed Carl Abbott and M. S. Robson, 1 up. 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BROOKLINE, Mass. (API-Two short sticks of Mexican dynamite exploded on the grass of Longwood Cricket Club Thursday and killed the chances of one of the top-seeded teams of winning the >U.S. national doubles tennis title. Joaquin Loyo-Mayo, who is 5-foot-4, and Marcela Lara, only about an inch taller, cut down the rugged Manuel Santana of Spain and Luis Garcia of Mexico 10-12, 24-22, 11-9, 3-6, 6-2. The Mexican team volleyed with speed, power and precision to win what Longwood officials believe was the longest match tn the history of the tournament. The 105 games took 2 hours and 42 minutes to play.----------- Defending champions Roy Emerson and Fred Stolle, the 1 American challengers, Dennis Ralston and Clark Graebner, and the five other seeded teams won convincing, though not always easy, victories in moving into the quarterfinal round. I 2.79 %CD.. P*r Shot 7.25 2.55 3.08 Vi CD.. 3.05 4.17 5.20 % CD.. ; 3.80 6.16 7.75 %CD. . . 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SEE THESE AND OTHER VINTAGE CARS AT STEED ON THE I V* Mill COURSE SI.OO SAT $2.00 SUN. Children under It FRIf 'RIF barking A REAR-VIEW OF THE AUSTIN HEALEY 3081 [iT ONE VWT THAT HOST DRIVERS GET) Calch e Mark MHeefey when it’s grounded. Take particular note df Ms appointments-L large. carpeted cockpit, highly-polished walnut dash, roll-up windows, side vents, foam padded bucket seats, rear lump seats (the backs of which pull down to provide a flat surface storage area.) Notice the powerful six cylinder engine—turns out 150 bhp at 5250 rpm, goes to 80 in 15.5, truises around 100, easily tope 125. And for no-nonsense stopping, eleven inch, servoessisted disc brakes up front and oversized drums in the rear. AnovwaUviFMrof thft&ustinHealay * .. 3000 awaits you at: AUSTIN HEALEY 3000 UK. M J, ni See Them Today At — PONTIAC SPORTS CAR, INC. ’ 467 Auburn Avenue 335-1511 — PHONE — 335-1138 / THE PONTIAC PitKSS,-FRIDAY. AtJt.UST 2# w>6- C—5- "Jf EEING By FLETCHER SPEARS There s nothing like the first golf tournament vie-tory. A player may come up with the second, third, etc., but that first one is the one he’ll remember. That’s the one 58-year-old Jim Stephens remembers. " Nearfy 38 years ago—in 1928—Jim posted his first victory on the golf course and it turned out to be his biggest. Jim’s triumph came in the Pontiac Men’s Medal Championship, the first one held at the city course. Tomorrow, a field of more than 100 will be trying for the 37th championship in the series. The tournament has been held each year with the exception of World War n years of 1943-44. Jim played in others after the ’28 event, but he failed, to find the route to the winner’s circle. kkk He’ll miss the tournament this year. Jim’s a bartender at the V.F.W. Post 1370 in Pontiac, a job he’s had for the past 15i years, and thep rush of week-® end business leaves little STEPHENS time for golf. ROUSING FINISH s Along with being his only tournament triumph — outside of club titles— Jim took the crown in Hollywood-like fashion with a rousing come-from-behind on the final round. “They (city) had only nine holes at the time,” Jim said, “so you had to play it four times for the 36 holes.” “I had 37 the first nine, 41 the second, 38 the third and 30 on the final nine. I can still remember that last one. I had seven :3s in a row and then a 4 and a 5 for the 30.” Jim started that final nine holes six shots behind coleaders Jim Zeller and Val Croteau. While Jim was carding a 30, Zeller and Croteau carded respectable 37s, just enough to let Jim slip in and take the . championship. ‘WASN’T GOOD’ Jim, married and father of children, entered the city tournament four years ago — his most recent. “I wasn’t very good, though,” he laughed. ★ ★ ★ While Jim will be missing from the field, a couple of other champs from the early days will be on hand, Clifford ‘Kip’ Inman, 60, who won in 1929 will be swinging the clubs as will Fonce Fowler, the 1930 champion. Will Induct 10 Into NHL'Hall' NEW YORK (UPI)—Clarence S. Campbell, president of the National Hockey League for the past 20 years, and Hector (Toe) Blake, who has coached the Montreal Canadiens to six Stanley Cup championships, are among 10 men who wiH be inducted Saturday into the Hockey Hall of Fame. Others to be inducted Saturday include former players Max Bentley, Emile Bouchard, Frankie Brimsek, Ted Kennedy, Elmer Lach, Ted, Lindsay, Walter Pratt and Ken Reardon. Clay Must Post $50,000 Bond MIAMI (UPI) — It appears that Cassius Clay will avoid a jail sentence for contempt of court. But it is costing him $50,000. The heavyweight champion was ordered by a judge to come up with $50,000 as Bond for his alimony payments before Aug. 28 nr face a 30nday sentence. 69 Caps Golf Victory BATON ROUGE, La, (AP) ~-Dick Parvino of Morgan Citj shot a final round 69 Thursday and won the Louisiana Oper Golf Tournament with a 10-under-par 206 for the 54-hole tournament. TORONTO (AP) - Scotty Morrison, referee-in-chief of the National Hockey Laague, announced only one major rule change after he and his officials met team coaches and general managers here Thursay, The change, Morrison said, will allow players sitting out major penalties to be replaced. However, teams will continue to play shorthanded during minor penalties. ★ * k ' ‘We want to avoid a repetition of what happened in that game last season when three players on each team drew double majdrs,” Morrison said. “A double major of course also meant an automatic misconduct penalty, so the teams played two mien short for a minimum of 10 minutes.” , DRAFT PROCEDURE In NHL business Friday, Sam Pollock, general manager of the Montreal Canadiens,. will introduce a formula for a draft procedure to aid the owners of six new NHL franchises in stocking' their teams. Owners of the six new clubs located in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, St. Louis and Minneapolis — have each paid $2,000,000 for a franchise. The price includes the right to 20 players, drafted from the rosters of the established NHL teams. The expanded league opens in 1968. Mercury Outboards and Stern Drives • STARCRAFT • SHELL LAKE • IMP BOATS m boaTcente! "Booting's One Port of Colt" 1265 S. Woodward at Adams Road JO MT21 Ml 1-0U1 Mon., Thors., Fri. I - 9 Savoy Lanes AT LAST WE ARE OPEN FOR ROWLING 24 New Brunswick Lanes and A-2 Automatic Wnsetters Scrib's SAVOY LAMES and LOUNGE 130 S, Telegraph Phono FE1-1121 for Reservations FE 4-6981 - DINING ROOM and COCKTAIL LOUNGE Overlooking Holly Greens You'll enjoy the excellent food served on the patio overlooking ["Beautiful -Holly" Greens Public Golf Course. Reservations ... 037-7041 About 17 Miles North of Pontioe Located at 1-75 and HOLLY B^AP EXIT Major Change in NML Rule Thinclads in Jaycee Meet DENVER, Colo W — More tan 400 athletes from 48 states began competition today in the fourth annual National Junior Champ Track and Field Meet at University of Denver Stadium. Preliminaries and semifinals took place today with the finals starting Saturday at noon. Several young stars who may qualify for the 1968 Olympics at Mexico City are in the field. The meet is ah official age group developmental program of the National Junior Chamber of Commerce and the U.S. Track and Field Federation. Pontiac hardier Bill Tipton, pole vaalter Ron Shortt of Farmington and shotputter Mike Lantry of Oxford are competing. Prospects appear bright for a ligh jump of more than seven feet and perhaps the second long shotput in prdp history. Don Pjerce of Pittsburgh, Calif., is shooting for the 7-foot leap and Stu Voight of Madison, Wis., already has pushed the shot more than 67 feet. He needs 67-9 to become second best in prep hhnals. The entry list includes nation- al prep leaders in four other events. Rick Mesmer of Spo-kanp, Wash., has run the 880 in 1:51.4; Wayne Collette of Gardena, Calif., has turned in 47.2 seconds in the 440: Bruce Grid-ley of Covina, Calif., has run the high hurdles in 13.7 and George Farmer of La Puente, Calif.; has an 185 in the low hurdles. Sets 2-Wheel Mark BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS, Utah (UPI) - Daring Bob Leppan, a Detroit motorcycle dealer, streaked across Western Utah’s salt flats at 24S miles an hour Thursday to establish a record for two-wheel vehicles. World Senior Golf in Quarter-Finals COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. UFi — Cecil Dees of Glendale, Calif., defeated Donald Case of Llano, Calif., 3 and 2 Thursday in the quarter-finals of .the World Senior Golf Championships at Broadmoor. Dees will meet Ward Watson of La Mesa, Calif.f in Friday’s semifinals. Watson advanced by downing John Pashall of Chicago, 6 and 4. Merrill Carlsmith of Hilo, Hawaii, gained the other semifinal berth with a 6 and 5 victory over Henry Siegenthaler of Dayton, Ohio. Carlsmith’s opponent will be Walter Dowejl of Walnut Ridge, Ark., who edged David Goldman of Dallas, Tex. Rams Waive Rookie QB | ORANGE, Calif. (AP) - The Los Angeles Rams waived six players Thursday, including rookie quarterback Billy Guy Anderson from Tulsa, who set nine national passing records last year as a collegian. BUILDER’S SUPPLIES Need a a complete package of quality material Wo specialize in Garage materials — our large quantity buying makes these values possible. ALL KILN DRIED LUMBER INCLUDES: e Plates • Rafters o All Ext. Trim * Nails • No. 1 Kiln Dried Douglas Fir Studs * Roof Boards • Premium Grade No. 106 Siding • Shingles • Cross Ties e Window ALL STUDS 18" ON CENTER GABLE ROOF All tiie Materials for a 20x20 2-CAR GARAGE $29949 Price Doss Not Include Door or Ccmont LUMBER 2495 Orchard Lake Rd., 682-1600 HOURS: 8 A.M. to 5:30 PjM. Saturday 8 A.M. to Out Co AN '66 Dwnw! The Greatest Gar Values You Have Ever Seen! You’ll Have to Hurry to Get One of These Deals! SPECIAL SALE on Pontiocs and Buicks All Gars Wear These Tags Ullfflffl HHD0I - EEB0E 855 S. ROCHESTER RD. Half Wto South ef Downtown Open Mon., TMb., Thun. Til 9 651-9911 -•N.4h TsSr THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1W6 PRACTICAL POLITICS - Two area students discuss politics with Rep. William S. Broomfield (center), R-Royal Oak, after spending the summer working in his Wash- In W. Bloomfield District ington office. The government students are John E. Wieczorek (left) of 125 Nawakwa, Avon Township, and William A. Calhoun, 4316 Pine Tree, Bloomfield Hills. Farmington Twp. War Hero to Get Award Fair Six Get School Posts WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Schools Supt. Dr. Leif A. Hougen this week announced appointments of six new administrators for the district schools. Rex Austin, West Bloomfield High School principal for the past five years, has been appointed administrative assistant in the board of education office, Roger Garvelink, former assistant principal at G r o s s e lie High School and Grosse He Junior High School principal, has been namctt to replace Austin as principal of West Bloomfield High School. Garvelink is a graduate of Hope College and the University of Michigan and is presently working on his doctoral degree at the U. of M. ^Donald Kenney, principal of Green School last year, will be principal at the new Gertrude Ealy Elementary School on Maple. REPLACEMENT Replacing Kenney at G r School will be Mrs. Kathleen Kjolhede, a former elementary supervisor in the Walled Lake schools and teacher in the Farmington school district. Bonds Approved OXFORD — General obligation and special assessment bonds in the amount of $70,000 have been approved for the village by the Municipal Finance Commission. The money will be used to finance construction of a new! municipal building. James Hoeh, former assistant principal at West Bloomfield Junior High School, will beprincipalat Roosevelt School. Acting principal at Scotch School this year will be William Whitney, a teacher at the school last year. Raymond Young, school principal last year, is on sabbatical leave, attending Michigan State University to complete work on his doctoral degree. A Farmington Township Con-ressional Medal of Honor winner is pne of four war heroes who will receive special awards tomorrow in Armed Forces Day ceremonies at the 117th annual Michigan State Fair. Robert E. Simanek of 35395 Edythe, top decorated veteran! of the Korean conflict, will be honored in ceremonies beginning at 1:30 p.m. in the Music Shell at the fairgrounds. Simanek won the nation’s highest military honor when he threw himself on a live grenade to save the lives of six buddies sharing the same foxhole. He spent several months in Fair Launches Its 117th Run Gala 8-Mile Parade Marks Initial Event DETROIT '(U,PI) ;- Millions of dollars worth of exhibits wrapped up in countless colored lights waited behind an uncut ribbon today as the Michigan State Fair began its 117th run. ★ ★ ★ Music, high-wire acts, horse shows, electronic miracle ex-j hibits and $3.12 million worth of livestock—the ingredients which helped make the exhibition the oldest state fair in the nation— were readied for the first of thousands of visitors. Gov. George Romney was to snip the ribbon for the show’s official sendoff. An eight-mile parade drummed its way from Cobo Hall north to the fairgrounds last night as the first official event of the fair which will run until Labor Day. the hospital recovering from wounds. He also received two purple hearts and other awards. ★ * ★ Sharing the spotlight with Simanek will be Peter T. Setcoski of St. Clair Stores, most decorated veteran of World War n; Frank Kaulsky of Detroit most decorated veteran of World War I; and William M. Quinlan, 96, of Grand Rapids, oldest atoned forces veteran in Michigan. PRINCIPAL SPEAKER Principal speaker for the Armed Fences Day observance wifi be Gen. Bruce K. Holloway, vich chief of staff of the U.S. Air Force. His topic will be “The Role of the Military in Keeping Peace.” * ★ ★ The program will include marching band and drill team exhibitions, demonstrations of modern weaponry and a parade from the Coliseum to the Veterans Monument, followed by a 3 p.m. memorial service and a flyover salute from the Michigan Air National Guard. Frantic Search for Help Apple Pickers Badly Needed Anyone who wants to get to the top the first day on the job should contact Richard Weage in the farm placement section of the Michigan Employment Security Commission, 242 Oakland. Apple harvest will begin next week in Oakland County and there is a serious shortage of apple pickers, according to Weage. Hiis year’s crop is an abundant one, Weage said, despite adverse weather earlier in the growing season, and area orchard men are searching frantically for apple pickers. The qualifications are minimal—anyone agile enough to climb a ladder and strong enough to lift about 50 pounds can do the job. ★ ★ ★ The average picker can earn about $1.90 an hour, Weage said. Putting Emphasis on Weeds Teacher Viewing Vermont 'Greenery' Fair officials estimate visitors will spend $2.3 million touring this year’s exhibition. The State Fair Authority will lay out $900, i; 000, the auto companies $400, I ooo, farmers $300,000 and other , advertisers $200,000. I VALUABLE ANIMALS I The stock barns contain 1,400 I [horses valued at $1.5 million and 1:950 dairy cattle worth $1.05 mil-|! lion in addition to breeding stock II and market animals. 1 Free entertainment will be t. j provided by the Baja Marimba p Band and the Kingsmen in addi-| tion to singer Darrell Banks.. | There will also be auto racing -land cicus acts plus square ‘' dancing and an intricate mid-? way. Troy Schools List Times for Opening Day TROY — Schools will open for grades one through 12, for a morning session only on Sept. An^vondale High School t£!cH6r is'KInbinTng 'sluay' wifi) pleasure this summer. While studying weeds on Vermont golf courses, Rose Ella Bowman is also managing to get in a little golf as well. Miss Bowman is one of seven teachers attending the seventh annual summer research program for science teachers being conducted at the University of Vermont. Her job is to determine which weeds are the greatest pests on the fairways and greens. She must count the number of weeds on a small section of each green, identify them, collect a sample of each weed and photograph the test section. ‘GREATEST PEST’ “The greatest pest on Vermont greens is the mouse-eared duckweed,” she says with the feeling of a golfer whose ball „ has failed to drop unto the hole • for a birdie because of a mouseeared duckweed. \ Agronomists at the University of Vermont will use her data to find a grass suitable for greens that is strong enough to crowd out the unwanted weeds. Miss Bowman admits to taking her clubs along on her explorations. ★ * * As a result, she says, she has chopped 20 strokes off her nine-boie score and is down to about . niffiiliiii linli ii According to Dr. Kenneth D. Fisher, assistant professor of botany and director of the pro-] research laboratory, where fa- ffam, the teachers Have......alsotcillfies and materials are pro- gained a “refreshing period out vided and where specialists in of the classroom and an oppor- many fields offer stimulating tunity to work in a university!guidance.” Troy High School classes will start at 7:59 a.m. Baker Junior High School, Big Beaver and Colerain elementaries will start at 8:20 a.m. Popple-ton, Leonard, Troy Union, Morse and Nile elementary schools will start at 8:50 a.m. All elementary students entering Troy schools for the first time should register next week at their respective schools any time from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. kkk Junior and senior high school students entering Troy schools for the first time are urged to register at the proper school as soon as possible. Kindergartners who have not registered should do so next week. WEED WATCHER — Rose Ella Bowman, a science teacher' at Avondafe High School, fathers samples of weeds on a Vermont golf course as part of her project to determine which weeds are the greatest pests on the fairways. She is studying at the University of Vermont under a grant from the National Sdehce Foundation. 2 Women Die rash |NORTH BRANCH h- A.two-car collision six miles west lof here yesterday claimed the lives of two Clifford women. Lapeer County Sheriff’s deputies said Donna Harland, 23, of of M24 and M90 one driven by'Mrs. Judy1 Knox, 23, of 2451 E. Castle. * ★ ★ The accident occurred at 11:15 a.m. when, according to sheriff’s deputies, Miss Harland failed to stop at the intersection.! for sink or swim with an electric water heater you get all the hot water you need for you get your money back} I SATISFACTION I GUARANTEED jj) DETROIT EDISON You’re completely satisfied... or you’re completely reimbursed by Edison. Any 'installation cost included. And it doesn’t matter where you buy your electric water heater; if it’s Edison-approved, ~thel2d»ohg^^ What size heater will you" need? Give us a call. We’ll send out a specialist who can point out the proper heater size and the beet location for it. He can also tell you about its economical operating cost. As little as $3.88 a month, for example, for a big 50-gallon electric water heater. Get all the hot water you need—guaranteed. Call your Edison Office or see the Qualified Retailer who displays the Edison Satisfaction Guaranteed sign. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1966 Despite Rioters c~r DeGaulle Keeps Cool DJIBOUTI, French Soihali-land (AP) ** French police today hurled tear gas grenades into a mo.b shouting for independence as President Charles de Gaulle toured the city. Pro- and anti-French factions among the African residents of this steaming Red Sea port exchanged volleys of rocks and broken bottles. Troop reinforcements in steel helmets, and holding their guns at the ready, rushed up in a score of personnel carriers to form a line across one side of the Place Rimbeau, main square of the city . Djibouti was like a city under siege. The crowd shouted abuse at soldiers and police. Security forces held steady. Neither side advanced or retreated. Hundreds of troops were at action stations throughout the city. 14 HURT Streets were still littered with rocks and broken glass from violence which broke out shortly alter De Gaulle’s arrival Thursday night. At least 14 persons, including eight policemen, were injured in the clashes. A huge mob gathered around the body of a youth laid out on a litter in the main square of the African quarter. He had a head wound and it seemed he had been beaten to death. De Gaulle went around the ige of the African sections and avoided the greatest concentrations of demonstrators. The tall, aloof president smiled and waved to the crowd and seemed to take no notice of the hostile elements. Student's Fall off Hotel Roof Baffles Police MACKINAC ISLAND (UPI)-Police said today they were baffled by the death of an Iowa college student who fell from the roof of the Grand Hotel during a fraternity convention. The victim, Jeffrey Gray, 21, Emington, 111., apparently climbed alone to the hotel root before dawn yesterday and fell 100 feet to’the ground, State Police Sgt. William France said. His glasses were found on the roof. “We have nothing to indicate foul play or suicide,” France said. Erhard, Aides to Mull Military Shake-Up BONN, Germany Iff — Chancellor Ludwig Erhard has called a Cabinet meeting today at which he is expected to discuss the top-level shakeup irt the armed forces that brought West Germany to 'the verge of political crisis. .Erhard, under pressure to remove Defense Minister Kai-Uwe von Hassel, also is scheduled to confer with Rainer Barzel, the parliamentary floor leader of his Christian Democratic party. He is worried about cracks in the ruling coalition traceable to the military row. Erhard returned from vacation yesterday and approved Von Hassel’s decision to name a new chief for the 430,000-man armed forces and replace the head of the air force. Von Hassel retired Gen. Heinz Trettner ancTappoihted Army Chief Gen. Ulrich De Maiziere iriispector-general t the tohntry’s top military post. Simultaneously, Von Hassel advanced Lt. Gen. Josef Moll, deputy army chief, to De Maiziere’s old job. ★ ★ ★ The minister also accepted the request for* retirement tendered by the head of the air force. Lt. Gen. Werner Panitski, who had been temporarily suspended from duty after criticizing the Defense Ministry in a newspaper interview. A third general officer who has asked to leave the army, Maj. Gen. Guenther Pape, commander of the 3rd Military Region, was asked to report to Von Hassel next week. The two army generals asked to quit over Von Hasdel’s authorization for a labor union has not yet accepted. Flavor! Tired of flat-tMting cigarettes? Try the rich taste and aroma of pipe tobacco in a filter cigarette. WORLD WIDE OR SHOTGUN FREE! THATS RIGHT WORLD WILL GIVE YOU A FREE GUN WITH ANY LIVING ROOM , DINNING ROOM, BEDROOM, HOUSEFUL AND MOST MAJOR PURCHASES! TAKE YOUR PICK! 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Ill Srd — 1/-4' inn 1369 GUN TONIGHT MICHIGAN’S LARGEST FURNITURE CHAIN OPEN TIL 9 PM rWOMO WIDE DELIVERS ANYWHERE IN MICHIGAN East Side North Side _________________NEXT TO K MART f DIXIE and TELEGRAPH [HOME FURNISHINGS BUY W)TH NO MONEY DOWN AND NO PAYMENTS TIL OCTOBER FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE YOUB.DOLLAR BUYS MORE AT YOUR WORLD WIDE STORE T TliEl*ONTl AC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, Jctcoby on Bridge WEST 4KQJ6 NORTH (D) 26 4 A * 8764. 4Q64 f AKQ62 EAST 49874-3 * 10 4 K 10 5 . 4J972 493 4875 SOUTH 410 5 2 * AKQ2 * A83 4 J 10 4 North-South vulnerable West North East South 1 4 Pass 1 * Pass 3 * Pass 4 4 Pass 4* Pass 4 N T. Pass 5* Pass 5 N.T. Pass 6 4 Pass 6 * Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—4 K from his gallop to a complete stop. The stop did him no good. He was not going to make seven. In fact he was not even going to make his contract. He did give the hand a try by winning that trick with the king of tramps; raffing his last spade in dummy coming to his own hand with a club and playing ace and deuce of trumps. I This play would have worked If West had started with only three spades but West had a ! fourth spade which he promptly | took as the setting trick. J Usually we don’t sympathize with declarers, who talk when they should be thinking but this time we feel that South was slightly unlucky. He would have made a grand slam if trumps By OSWALD & JAMES JACOBY I had only broken 3-2. Newspaper Enterprise Assn. . -;v.V;-- ■ i.i '*•» - ...I South looked over dummy, - °" & othf “and we used happily and remarked, "It looks as if we didn’t bid enough.” Pet«-P«e always , , , , ° urnrp hnth cnsnpnners and a Then South played dummy s ace spades; let' both his losing spades in dummy; draw trumps and eventually discard his losing diamonds on duhuny’s clubs. Q—The bidding has been: West North East South 14 Dble 2 4 2 4 Pass 3 4 Pass 3 * Pass ? You, South, hold: 4K J 6 5 *A Q 4 3 42 4A K 9 4 What do you do? A—Bid four spades. This will tell your partner that you eould have bid four spades directly over two spades but that your hand was ev-If I should invest, what stocks should I buy?” M.K. A) The advice has merit. Well-positioned real estate and common stocks both offer a good hedge against inflation, particularly at this time as rising prices for goods continue to chip away the dollar’s buying power. Yet, in your circumstances, I do not feel you are in a position take on any great risk. As funds are received, I suggest placement of about half to add to your savings account and the balance in some better-quality stocks, Texaco, Inc., International Paper, Com Products, Owens-Illinois Glass and Borden all of which offer, I feel, some degree of inflation protection. Q) We own 50 shares of Standard Oil of Indiana and 25 Comsat. I also believe that I carry enough insurance and we have a $1,500 emergency reserve. We will soon have a $10,000 inheritance and would appreciate some suggestions ment of this money.” W.D. A) Standard of Indiana has reported seven consecutive years of higher sales and earnings -L-this stock I feel should be held. Comsat is more speculative but if you can forego income and have patienee it should work out. I’d suggest that you build your reserves higher. For moderate growth and income you might consider as suitable purchases Montana Power, Wanijer-Lam-bert and General Telephone. t^-10 TIIK I'ONTIACTKKSS; FRIDA V, ArGtTST 1-75 Bid Reportedi LANSING (AP) - A 06-nullion low bid was announced by the highway Department TTiursday for a 1.2-mile section of 1-75 in Detroit and Ham-i tramck. The bid came from Greenfield Construction Co., Livonia. The palace of the Dalai Lama of Tibet is known as the Potala. DALE LEWI? of WEXL RADIO From 6 'til 9 Tonight at WORLD WIDE 2111 Dixit Hwy., Corntr of Ttltpaph FREE GIFTS LBJ Already Standing on GOP Plank WASHINGTON (AP) -I Congressional Republicans h^ve chosen their, election-year plat- j form to deal with the war in Viet Nam—and found 'President | Johnson already standing there. Sen* Jack R. Miller, R-Iowa,l who suggested an Asian confer-! ence to the Senate sii months! ago, said it was an example of| bipartisan foreign policy at its best. "I think it's important that the United States be on recordl in favor of this thing,” Miller said in ah interview. “This is something that did: President Johnson had Said aj have a Republican origin," said 1 earlier his administration! Miller, who seeks re-election f?vorrnsuch 8 conference: this year. “When we got a good u But the IU,n0ls sf^tor said: one we naturally like to talk hf 001 certain °f the details about it.” °f Johnson s plan. We knowj __ ^ generally of course that he’s DIRKSEN SPEAKS ! embraced such a ’proposal,”! Senate Republican Leader1 Dirksen said. Everett M. Dirksen talked about: When a reporter asked wheth-it at a news conference Thurs-jer the GOP endorsement was anj day. “Our encouragement andattempt to inject some dove! endorsement of the proposal of into the Republican hawk, Dirk-all-Asian peace conference rep-'sen replied that all Americans! resents, in one respect, a newjwant peace, and important Republican for- But Dirksen also said th£j eign policy position,” he said, i United States would not neces-l sarily be bound by any coocju-J sions reached on Viet Nam at a! conference of Asian leaders. j . In a pair of other develop-! ments Thursday: —Secretary of Defense Robert! S. McNamara told a Cabinet! meeting the United States is “better prepared today to fulfill j our worldwide commitments] than at any time in recent years.” Talking with newsmen] after the session, McNamara] said his statement applies to both Viet Nam and Europe. j —U.S. officials reported! American air strikes have had! very substantial and very serious effects on North Viet Nahi’s oil supplies. They said no major tanker has discharged petroleum into shore facilities since the , first US. attacks on fuel facilities in the HanoirHaiphong areas in June. CLARKSTON i APPLIANCE 1-6 N. Main St. 625-2700 -GUARDS SON—A Vietnamese father shelters his son’s head with a protective gesture after troops of the U.S. First Infantry Division raided their village in search of Viet Cong snipers. The troops encountered sniper fire as they entered the village near a rubber plantation 35 miles northwest of Saigon. About 30 Vietnamese civilians were rounded up and taken away for questioning. 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Complete with trainer wheels. 22(6 YANKEE STORES IN THE PONTIAC AREA * MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER * CORNER OF PERRY AND MONTCALM STREETS THE FONtlAC Pit ESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1966 D-l " Summertime Fosters Bugs For an Instant La With Sod “hot Control Borer Chemically If you are troubled with iris borer, which is sometimes destructive to German or Japanese iris and some lilies, dust with a 3 per cent concentration of en-dosulfjtn. The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station said a 4 per cent dust of malathion was almost as effective. Some plots were dusted several times at weekly intervals, starting at mid-April, bnt one application was reported as effective as four. Five weekly applications of a 5 per cent DDT dust, beginning late in April, also controlled the boref. Controls without chemicals include burning all dead leaves and other debris on the iris bed 5 in early spring. DESTROY EGGS This destroys many eggs laid in the fall by the adult borer moth. The station reported that when young larvae are feeding in iris leaves they cause a tell-tale, water-soaked streak. At this stage they can be found and crushed. Infested rhizomes, the fleshly underground stem of iris, also may be dug in early August. ★ ★ * By then, the single generation of borers is mature. Light infestations may be controlled by killing borers before replacing"the rhizomes. Heavily infested rhizomes should be destroyed. Grow Plants Both Useful, Ornamental Do you like to grow plants both useful and ornamental? Your own hickory tree or hazelnut bushes on your home gounds gives you food as well as landscape interest. Edible nut production is a new correspondence course offering of The Pennsylvania State University. Walter Haldeman, of the university, says it’s not aimed for commercial nut growers, but is intended for you growing a few nut trees or shrubs. Chestnuts, walnuts,' llcko-ries, hazels and filberts are dealt with. You learn soft and fertilizer needs, and disease and insect controls. Improved varieties are listed and described to suit your grow-ing conditions. There’s a lesson on propagation and grafting. ★ * * Author of the course is Wil- liam S. Clarke, Jr., Professor of Pomology at the University and secretary of the Northern Nut Growers Association. To enroll, send your name and address with $2.75 to Edible Nuts* Box 5000, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802. You'll receive a complete course copy by return mail. Tint Bouquets For special occasions when you want colorful flowers to decorate your home and the fall flowers are all white, give them the color you want by swishing them through 3 dye tint after the solution has cooled. Cut Maintenance Keep Yard Neat Be on the alert for bugs.” “Hot bugs” is a term for an abnormal infestation by sect in a certain area. For instance, last year sections of Texas were overrun with aphids and tent caterpillars. Despite the drought, areas of New York and Philadelphia were 'bothered by cinch bugs. The Pacific Northwest reported large numbers at the pine shoot moth, and Indiana had webworms. ★ ★ No one seems to know just why a certain insect converges on a given locality: COMPANY INTERESTED One chemical company wants to know about it if an insect should invade your section in heavier-than-normal numbers, his distributed self-ad-stal cards to help make reports. The chart\is designed to help you identify \ome of the more common insects, as follows: CHINCH BUG\- About 1/6 of an inch long, sucks plant juices. Telltale sign is yellowish spots in the lawn where grass browns and dies. Spray with it chemical such as Spectracide\ or use granular substance. x ★ * LAWN MOTH - (also known as Sod Webworm) Causes irregular brown dry spots in lai They are night feeders. 1 caterpillars, % of an inch long, usually are found in silken webs. The adults are small whitish-gray moths. Spray entire lawn. BERMUDA MITE — These pests of southern lawns suck sap from grass, causing wilting and stunting. Spray lawn regularly. APHID — These are soft-bodied insects of many colors, under '/a inch long and often called plant lice. They infest most garden plants, feeding by sucking plant juices. Spray entire plant. BILLBUG — These grubs of the snout beetle feed on roots and crowns of grass plants. They are black or brown, V4 to Ms inch long. Spray or spread granular form: ARMYWORM — This insect, which can appear suddenly in hoards, attacks vegetables, lawns and flowers. It is about I?4 inches long. Spray promptly at first sight. To reduce maintenance work and keep your yard neat: Avoid mowing close to trees by using surrounding beds of gravel, bluestone or ground cov- Eliminate trimming and speed mowing by using brick mowing Replace sharp corners with gentle curves. How about a do - it - yourself Instant lawn” this year? You can do it, you know. But first you have to start with sod, not seed. Paul Rieke, Michigan State | University soil scientist and turf grass specialist, outlines this step by step process for establishing a sodded lawn: • Buy good sod. Rieke says look for sod that is free of weeds and weedy grasses and contains those species of grasses recommended for the location yon want to sod. Merlon blue-grass sod, for example, should not be used in shady areas or on very sandy soils. On the other hand, red fescues are desirable under shaded conditions or on droughty sandy soils. However, sod which contains a high per cent of red fescues is often difficult to handle because of its poor sod forming characteristics. it it it Mixtures of desirable, species of grasses have been found to be more disease resistant than single species,” contends Rieke. • Prepare the soil. If the soil surrounds *a new building or excavation site, it is important to allow it to settle before establishing the turf area. Many sodded lawns have had to be repaired because of settling over dewer lines, for example. SANDY SOIL If the soil is very sandy, it may be well to add loam and/or peat and work them into depth of about 5 to 6 indies. If the soil is very high in clay, sand and peat should be mixed Rieke says soil which is to be sodded should be tilled in much the same way as you would prepare a garden/ This means a breaking up of large clods, removing sticks, stones and other debris and smoothing the soil. x f Fertilize the soil. Fertilizer and lime should be applied according to soil needs. Rieke points out that soil tests can be obtained by taking soil samples to the county Cooperative Extension Office or to a private soil testing laboratory. At the time you wish to establish a lawn, lime should be applied if the pH (acidity) is below 5.5 to 6.0. A complete fertilizer containing nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash — such as 12-12-12 fertilizer—can be applied at the Repotting Hints for Gardeners When repotting plants to larger clay pots, be sure that top soil is below the lower portion of the pot rims, and that at least an inch of soil covers the tops of the plant roots. Then if watering should wash some of the soil to one side, the roots will still be covered. Horn* Grown — Froth Daily Including Sunday peac&¥ctcorn0®* HONEY ROCKS RITTER’S FtutMuhfi >228 West Huron 8884 Dixie Highway Only 4 Days Left to Save on SCOTTS Pre-Season Sale for August Only! $8.95 Turf Builder— si- Ft. 5,000 $4.95 Turf Builder— Sq. Ft. 2£00 $4.95 Family Seed— Sq.rt. $3.95 Windsor Blend Seed $8.93 Windsor Blend Seed $7.95 E-Z Spreaded— combination $19.95 Spreader^ • *7.95, *4.45 *4.45 *3.45 *7.95 *6.95 combination *14.95 -WE DELIVER- REGAL FEED AND LAWN SUPPLY Pontiac Store-2690 Woodward-FE 2-0481 Drayton Store-4266 Dixie Hwy.-OR 3-2441 rate of 15 to 25 pounds per 1,000 square-feet as a general recommendation if soil tests are no( available. If the soil, is subsoil, you should continue to use this complete fertilizer for one or two years before using higher analysis nitrogen fertilizers, says Rieke. • Lay the sod. Sod should not be laid on dry soil. Sprinkling the Soil before sodding allows the new, small roots to become established. LAYING SOD In laying the strips of sod, stagger the ends in order to prevent lines across the lawn. Make sure that the edges of the sod are in good contact with each other, but not overlapping. After the sod is laid, roll lightly to be sure the roots are in contact with the soil. “New roots sent out by the grass plants will dry out rapidly jif air pockets are leftMH tends Rieke. • Water that lawn! H A very important step m sod-j ding a new lawn is regular! Early blossoms of squash, 1 watering so the roots can “knit" j tomatoes and cucumbers often readily into the soil below. A! drop off before setting fruit, thorough job of watering isi long a problem disturbing to gardeners. Most cucumbers and squash frequently produce only male flowers at the start of the sea- Blossom Fall Old Problem lished, says Rieke, watering can be reduced to once a week or less. Rieke notes that sod can bo laid nearly any time during the year if the soil is not covered with snow. But special problems may exist with late fall sodding, since the grass may dry out and die as the roots do not have an opportunity to establish before the ground freezes. ★» ★ ★ During other seasons, sod can be laid any time the soil is dry enough to allow soil preparation. Fruit does not set until both female and male flowers are present, later in the season. Sometimes early cucumbers have poor results even when there are male and female needed just after the sod has seen rolled. Depending upon the time of year, subsequent watering may have to be done in one to two days to keep the sod moist until the roots have grown into the soil. Once they are well estab- DOUBLE LIFE V A hobby greenhouse that can be converted into a screened patio is offered by a southern manufacturer. A steel-frame, self-supporting structure, it can be erected in less than uiree hours. The patio-greenhouse features an exclusive one-piece cover of extra-heavy industrial grade polyethyelene that fits like a slipcover on a sofa. In summer, you simply replace the slipcover with aluminum or plastic screen. Further information may be obtained from Patio Greenhouses, Opelika', Ala., 36801. This is due to poor pollination because of insufficient numbers of pollinating insects early in the season. Lack of female flowers is not the problem with tomatoes as it is with cucumbers. Each tomato flower has male and female elements. And because tomatoes are self-pollinating, lack of pollinating insects is not vital. Low night temperatures early in the season are a major reason for poor tomato fruit then. AUTHORIZED SERVICE CENTER Parts and Service Reo Lawnboy Yardman Moto Mower Briggs & Stratton Clinton Tecumseh Kohler McNABB SAW SERVICE 1345 Baldwin FE 2-6382 Large Size RED BARBERRY Freshlydugand potted for planting right now. Use as hedge, barrier, accent or foundation planting. 79c Reg. »p Oofes NURSERY AND LANDSCAPE 3820 W. Auburn Rd., 2 Blocks East of Adams Pontiac '852-2310 MEMBER MICHIGAN BANKARD s p E G I A L Hardware lESAIERSi Formerly Big 4 HARDWARE STORES KEEG0 Keego Hardware No. 1 3041 Orchard Lake Road 682-2660 PONTIAC Tom’s Hardware 905 Orchard Laka Av«. FE 5-2424 RENT 'EM! • Floor Sanders • Floor Edgors • Hand Sandors • Floor Polishors 1 OPEN SUNDAY 1 9 JLM.-2 P.M. s p E G I A L SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE TOM’S HARDWARE SPECIAL m - “itfr $ 2.66 20-10-5 Lawn Food..............$ 1.99 10.95 Chaise Lounges................. 3.88 21.00 Greenfield Spreaders.......... 10.99 25.45 Cyclone Spreader.............. 19.99 : 79.95 Char-broil Bar-B-Q Grill.... 59.95 All models Ames Hose Reels .....25% Off 149.95 Springfield Roto Tiller...... 119.88 WHEEL HORSE ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE In stock 6 H.P.- 8 H.P.-10 H.P.- and 12 H.P. tractors. Up to $150.00 allowance for your old unit - on a new 1966 wheel horse tractor. KEEG0 HARDWARE TA" Black and Decker Drill... L........ 9.88 rsrwwaefrBifi^..... ......... ....tttt?;??^"™^*- 5.95 Lawn Chairs............................. 3.88 10^95 Lawn Chaise Lounges) ......j .... .T« 7.88 79.95 Charcoal Grill...... L......i....?j£im 59.95 9.95 6'xl 5" Wading Pool.... .............. 5.95 15.00 8'xl5"Wading Pool..... ............. 8.95 Water Skis.............................50% Off ~20-95"Rod and Reel Combination-.....; ;v.. ;vrT_r T&88 25.95 Sleeping Bag.......................... 17.95 43.95 Swing Set................;........... 29.88 2.95 (5 Only) Wood Deck Chairs.......... 1.00 Ball Gloves..... ..................... .25% Off 6.95 Full Clear Rear Car Floor Mats... .... 3.95 8.95 Full Clear Front Car Floor Mats.*.... 4.95. 149.95 Roto Tiller.. ..................... 119.88 D—2 T11E PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 3jj, 1966 PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER IMw—Inwwfl •pm Mm m mi s«2-iiis First Turn-Down Leads to Humphrey Nuptials Theatre MAPI! ROAD (1$ ML) «nd COOUDGf, AT JOMBQIT PARK • IW 642-WU FrM Paved, Lighted Parking Now Showing—I Weak Only OPEN 6:30 P.M. A hilarious romantic misadventui MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP)| — The stunning, blue-eyed] blond4 from a small town who; turned down Robert Humphrey’s! first request for a date will marry the son of the vice president Saturday. Miss Donna Erickson and her college sweetheart will be married at St. Olaf’s Roman Catholic Church. The wedding bells will resound in the city’s downtown buildings only a few blocks away. ■k * * Donna, 21, and the handsome, dark-haired Robert, 22, met while students at Mankato State College but her interest in' a i beauty contest led to a turndown for her future fiance, j Miss Erickson had been Miss ; Hastings in 1963 and competed in the Miss Minnesota contest.! I She Wanted to watch the televised Miss America Pageant onj | the night Humphrey asked her1 j to go out. ANOTHER DATE I It was about a year after that before Humphrey asked for another date. Miss Erickson is impressed with the family.she’s marrying, into, noting that Vice President, Hubert H, Humphrey always ■ finds time for his family even though he is very busy. And she describes her future mother-in-law as a mother first and a ‘second lady’ second. ★ ★ ★ The vice president and his wife have two other sons and a daughter."Mrs. Raymond Erickson, a widow, has another daughter besides Donna and two sons. * * * A choir of 35 young men will sing for the Nuptial Mass. The! St. John’s University Men’s | Choir from Collegeville, Minn., will sing a work entitled “Mass | in Honor of Vatican Council II,” composed by Gerhard Track, the choir director. The choir will be -under its assistant I director, Donald Hart. Even in Divorce , HEADS FOR COURT—Canada’s most wanted fugitive, Georges Lemay (center), is marched to his arraignment yesterday in Las Vegas Justice Court on a Florida fugitive warrant. He is handcuffed to fellow Clark County Jail prisoner Istvan Micsko. Lemay has been sought on charges of looting a Montreal bank of between $500,000 and $3 million. A Florida sheriff says Lemay bought his way out of Dade County Jail. WOODY MARTENS King of the Twin Keyboards with Floyd Rana on the Drums FOR THE REST IN ENTERTAINMENT! AtoiDoy LottH 4825 W. Huron (M-59) Phone 674-0425 FIRST RUN! fg> I CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE I AlfE PONTIAC TRAIL 624-3980 LMIVk WALLED LAKE FRI.-SAT.-SUN. Paramount pictures is prouoto announce the return of McCollum Always Stays Cool gullies Che Cm Commandments (INTACT! UNCUT!* CONTINUOUS Viil/Kd PERFORMANCES AT / mWW POPULAR PRICES! 2ECIL BMILLE’S... -THE TEN COMMANDMENTS HESTON BRYNNER BAXTER : HOMNSOW OECARLD PAGET DEREK HmramSS»nkkon«oe .ft**!* * FRI. EVE.—SAT. ALL DAY-SUN. MATINEE ONLY) ' RUN ARPAL00SA RUN at 1:00-3:45-6:30-9:12 LT. ROBIN CRUSOE at 1:48—4:33—7:18—10:03 Pontiac’s POPULAR THEATER I* u . , „ . M Wnk Days: Continuous II i.m. I* 11 ».n. | SAT. IMS A.M. t» 1:M P.M. I Sundays: Continuous II i.m. to 12 p.m. ■ .___________________ * EAGLE a 1 KIDS 25c T' 1 9 I With This Coupon D SHAKES THE SCREEN LIKE CANNON THUNDER! JAMES STEWART By BOB THOMAS j AP Movie-TV Writer HOLLYWOOD—David McCal-lum did not seem like a man who had just been sued for divorce. He remained calm and not at all bitter, but then, that’s the ;type of chap he is; highly unflappable. Concerning the I suit by actress' Jill Ireland, who charged' extreme cruel- THOMAS ty, he commented . “If there is anything I have learned about human relation-j ships, it is that there is folly in' trying to apply the word blame, i Life is so complex, so governed by a variety of motivations that it is useless to blame either party when things go bad.” OTHER CHANGES The change of marital status is not the only alteration in Mc-Callum’s life. He has also been having talks with MGM concerning his contractual status. ★ A* Don’t worry, Iliya fans, he has no plans to abandon “The Man from U.N.C.L;E.” j “Oh, I wouldn’t give that up,”, he mused. “After all, it’s a< pleasant little game between the studio on one side and Bob Vaughn and me on the other. “The purpose of the game Is ee how long the two of us jean survive. Last month I de-j stroyed my rib cage (it was in-] | jured in a fall into a cement barrel) and last week Bob lost a' hand (burned when he grasped an exhaust pipe).’’ But while McCallum concedes Mishap Is Fatal j SAGINAW (AP)~Tha .victim I of a motorcycle accident Tues-: jday, Paul T. Nuerminger, 21, of i .Saginaw, died in St. Luke’s. (Hospital Saginaw Thursday. He| was thrown from the motor-; cycle on Hospital Road, six miles northwest of Saginaw. that he enjoys this “game,” he has his own ideas about how it should be played. 'This has been the subject of his negotiations with MGM. “I wanted to clarify certain matters,” he explained. “One of them concerns my relations with ‘The Girl from U.N.C.L.E.’ Hie studio wanted me to be in the new series every now and then, but I had some reluctance about overdoing the U.N.C.L.E. identification. “We came to, an agreement that I would have script approval on ‘The Girl from U.N.C.L.E.’ So far I haven’t been asked to do one, and I frankly would be happy to wait and see what the public acceptance is.” , D R I V E • I N COME SPY WITHYOIJR FAVORITE \ U.N.C.L.E. s! i (on the big screen in coion) ■THE spy ■ WITH MY FACE Ml »<■ SEWTABEROER DAVID McCALLUM AmTWtIllHiTHMITFROMTHCn ml ■ rami J AAiaiRPIlAP I UNI0N UI{E AT PflllllEDPE I HAGGERTY ROAD Phone 363-0661 LIMITED ENGAGEMENT! chiid™^** Fr.. BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 7:00 P.M. Paramount pictures is proud to announce the return OF THE GREATEST MOTION PICTURE OF ALLTIME! ^ production”. ~ Ctufei QRnCMMW What a story it tells! What mafesty it encompasses! What hues it unueils! What drama it unfolds! 8| if anyone can handle three men... ift Loren! J\ SOPHIA LOREN PAUL NEWMAN DAVID NIVEN ELIZABETH TAYLOR! RICHARD BURTON = EVA MARIE SAINT I _______ A-VraiON* AMD M JROC0L0R R HiiiihimtiiiGlANT FREE PLAYGROUNDSimniin panavjsion'and metrocolors MIRACLE MILE-' DRIVE TELEGRAPH AT SO. LAKE RD. MllE W, WOODWAPP first = aUDRCY = HCPBURH = ano = pereR A = o'TooLe pMi Z WILLIAM = WYLER’S HOW § .TO i STcm | a i min ion # i ZlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllGIANT FI FIRST RUN! BLUE SKY CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE *** * * ■■■ ■ I fean Connery | | Joanne Woodward'• I Jean Seberg | iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiT. INTACT! UNCUT! ONE PERFORMANCE NIQHTLY! CECIL B.DeMILLE’S THE TEN COMMANDMENTS heston brynner BAXTER ROBINSON DE CARLO PAGET DEREKmS ^ f(we wshould all 1be _ hjiruwi'"" so crazy.. J nillllllllllllllllllllllllGIANT FREE PLAYGROUNDS I «A.ftne i IBBpH SIDNEY POITIER ! RUSS TAMBLYN ) ROSANNA SCHIAFFINO = ||||||1 r|^atBr lordly llillllllfllllllllllllllllllllllll- 1800 0 R I V E I N •s R0 i VWIST C» PJXi wM MEMBERS OF HELLS ANGELS OF VENICE, CAUFORNM BUY, SELL, TRADE ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST26,~1066 - D—3 BREAKFAST TWO LARGE EGOS, ANY STYLE WITN sausage, BACON OR NAM, ^ASH BROWNS 89c OW OPEN-6 A.M. • 10 P.M. DINE IN COMFORT CLARK’S restaurant 1 OPEN-6 A.M. • 10 P.M. MON. thru SAT. Ghoul Takes Body From Cemetery Lot PORT HURON ^UPD—Police searched today for a ghoul who robbed a grave in Lakeport Cemetery. A groundskeeper at the ceme-j tery came upon the open grave Thursday and looked inside to find an empty casket. Sheriffs deputies and state police used a tracking dog in an unsuccessful hunt for the body and the person who violated the grave. The body of an 85-year-old man was buried in the grave last March. | NOW OPEN 0 IT|py Phone 1*887-5959 \ KINGSTON INN STEAK HOUSE Fine Food Cocktail Lounge Businessmen's Luncheon DANCING FRIDAY and SATURDAY to THE LEONARD T. COMBO on the Chordovox Don on tho D.v LUNCHEON CHAT-Dr. James M. McHugh (left) of Beverly Hills, Mr. and Mrs. George R. Hilliker (center) and Mrs. May-ford Roark of 5595 Raven, Bloomfield Township, discuss Hilliker’s future plans at a Devon Gables luncheon honoring Hilliker Wednesday. He retired this week as assistant administrator of the Children’s Psychiatric Department at Pontiac State Hospital. SUNDAY SPECIAL! hss PARTIES-BANQUETS Privote Dining Room Sooting Up to 70 Pot 3 Phone FE 5-9941 Entertainment Every Fri. and Sat. Night! Dance to the Music of the Suburban-ittes SUNDAY AFTERNOON SPECIAL The Banjo Pals Sunday Afternoon, 6 to 10:30 P.M. CHARBO-INN 2435 Bonstoin Rd. V/2 Milos N, of W. Maple Rd. Walled Lako MA 4-9898 Fine/ Foods oud Liqum SEAFOOD SMORGASBORD ¥ FRIDAY, 7:00 P.M. to 11:00 P.M. CHILDREN UNDER 12 82.95 SEAFOOD SELECTION: Stuffed Salmon, Lobster Newburg, Shrimp Creole, Smoked Oysters, Herring, Scallops, Frog Legs, One Meat Dish, Salad Bar. International Smorgasbord *3" SATURDAY 7:00 P M. to 11:00 P.M. CHILDREN UNDER 12 82.50 Children Bid Adieu to a'Pal' Scientists to Search Bay for Indian Community Hail Concert Conducted by Ehrling INTERLOCHEN (AP)-Before a crowd of some 3,000 delegates and guests, Sixten Ehrling conducted the Detroit Symphony Orchestra Thursday night in a stirring performance at the Kresge Auditorium of the National Music Camp here. Most of the delegates here said they felt the performance of I Ulysses Kay’s “markings” and Boris Papandopulo’s “Sinfoniet-ta for String Orchestra” was the finest they have witnessed on - this continent. In the second portion of the concert Ehrling led the symphony in ‘“The Rite of Spring” by Igor Stravinsky. Most delegates to the International Society for Music Education said they felt the rendition of Stravinsky’s work was “unexcelled in modern music.” DEDICATED TO FOUNDER The concert was held in the i Kresge open-air auditorium at j the National Music Camp, and dedicated to Dr. Joseph E. Maddy, founder of the National Music Camp, who died last year. jg Clover Leaf Inn ^ DANCING Every Friday and Saturday Night to Fine Dining Every Night FRIDAY NIGHT FISH FRY L.U__________$1,25 »fo» Keego Harbor 1967 CASS LAKE ROAD Tl* Qandbwi WITH THE SKEE BROTHERS and TWO OTHERS Tuesday, Friday and Saturday, ON SUNDAY THE VARIATIONS PONTIAC'S OWN TERRIFIC NEW GROUP FEATURING THE VOCAL SOUNDS OF STEVE McDANIALS M-59 and ELIZABETH LAKE Roads 338-7879 George R. Hilliker insisted that he’d help set up a children’s ward at Pontiac State, Hospital, but somebody else would have to take the job permanently. That was 11 years ago. Ibis week he stepped aside to let somebody else take the job. Hilliker retired as assistant administrator of the hospital’s Children’s Psychiatric Department. * * * Hilliker stuck around to see the children’s division grow from an eight bed ward to four large wards and a new eighty bed building which should open in! 1.967. j He started in 1931 as a dining room attendant but, a short time later, had become ward super-1 visor of the only open ward in the hospital. SUPERVISOR From 1936 to 1955, excluding three years with Fisher Body Division and a two year army leave, Hilliker was attendant nurse supervisor of the receiving ward. In September 1953, the hospital began accepting child patients. “At first, 6V4-year-old boys an 97-year-old men were placed in the same ward” recalled Hil-I liker. SAULT STE. MARIE (AP)^„ Anthropologists are going fishing for ruins of an ancient Indian community in Whitefish Bay in the Upper Peninsula. . Dr. James Fitting, curator of the University of Michigan Museum of Anthropology’s Great Lakes Division, says evidence shows an ancient community once existed on Maomi-king Point jutting into Whitefish Bay. Fitting has explored the area for two summers. The land is part of the j Hiawatha National Forest which borders on Lake Superior. Artifacts discovered a few years ago have led to digging in Fitting says once he gets more information, he will feed it to a computer to “get a pretty fair picture as to the extent of the communities that stood here.” According to Fitting, civiliza-l tion on the point dates from the beginning of Christianity to the Iroquoian era in the 17th cen-| tury. * * * Fitting says patterns on pieces of pottery found in the area should help to determine the tribal customs of the Indians who lived there. TWO PREMISES „ j This is possible, says Fitting, In 1955, this hard-driving man and Dr. James M. McHugh, then Director of Child Psychology at the hospital, took eight children and started a new open ward. DID EVERYTHING As supervisor of the children’s ward, Hilliker did everything from “begging the community’1 for clothes, to establishing,8 program so each child receives 50c weekly for spending money. A father image to many .-. under two premises—that the the sand dunes and the lake,women made all the pottery and region _________that each family had its own I pattern, Flint scrapers found in the area had evidently been in wide use as fish scalers and scraping the hides of animals. “This area was good for fishing,” said Fitting/‘Indians from all over the Great Lakes came here to fish,’’ Fire-cracked rocks, pieces of buildings, clay-pipes, fish hooks and a copper fish gouge indicate the area was a commercial fishing center,' The last village was wiped out, by a smallpox epidemic 100 J years ago. Up until that time, claims Fitting, the area may I have been the longest continu-1 ously inhabited Indian village in! North America. Fitting says he hopes to be back in the area next summer to continue his studies. | Astronauts Hail Flight by Apollo wrtieitriyHiUiker was named program. r .......... . THa rnr»lrof ♦ CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) - “It was a great flight and we’re looking forward to flying on the vehicle ourselves on Apollo 1.” Speaking, in a joint statement, were the astronauts who may be circling the globe next Christmas in a three-man Apollo moonship. The three are Air Force Lt. Col. Virgil I. Grissom, who traveled into space in both the Mercury and Gemini programs; Aur Force Lt. Col. Edward H. White! II, America’s first space walk-! er, and Navy Lt. Roger B. Chaffee. i The trio watched Thursday as. a mammoth Saturn T' rocket blazed into the sky on the start of a -flight that apparently a significant milestone jin the U.S. Apollo man-to-the-! assistant administrator a few months ago and already misses the continual direct contact with the patients. “My retirement will give me a chance to work with the children again if I’m needed” he said. “Its a terrific challenge.” Eleven thousand U.S. - medical students must be graduated each year to supply the 330,000 physiciartS the nation will need by 1975, it is estimated. The rocket, the nation's most1 powerful, hurled an unmanned Apollo moonship over a blister-! ing suborbital course that carried it three-quarters of the way around the world to a safe parachute landing in the Pacific Ocean. The flight was intended to qualify the spacecraft and the Saturn 1 for launching Grissom, White and Chaffee into earth orbit in December to start an I all-out drive to land astronauts) on the moon in 1968. Sotiirdoy Only FRIED CHICKEN With Salad. Potatoes. Bolt and Batter Only at CLARK’S RESTAURANT Acroii from Northern High School NOW OPEN 6 g.m-10 p.m. MON. THRU SAT. 10-HI BAR Presents "The Invaders” Denny ............Drums Larry .......Bass Guitar Denny......Rhythm Guitar Dick ............Organ Live Entertainment Friday and Saturday, 9 to 2 Dancing 7 Nights a Week Sill Dido Hwy. at M-ll IU S-1S8I NOW APPEARING Ronnie Wolfe and the RUN-A-WAYS . Sat. and Sun. Introducing THE FINDERS KEEPERS Wed. and Thurs. Along with Go-Go Girls 5 Nights Keg & Anchor 4195 Dixie Hwy.. Drayton Plains EVERY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY AT THE PIANO KEYBOARD TUES^ Bob Lawson -QUARTET- With The Hllerlout You'll Enjoy Dining On Our Delightful New Lakefront Terrace COMPLETE MENU SELECTION PONTIAC LAKE INN 7890-M59 On Pontiac Lake mm Bring the Family Out for a Buffet Lunch or Dinner (Breakfast, too) And Enjoy Watching the Planes Take Of j and Land Buffet Lunch SI25 Catering to Special Parties and Dinners, f Room to Serve 125 People. THE SKY ROOM wim vimatmHm Hours 7 A.M. to $ P.M. UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT By the Prophet Co. 6500 Highland Road Phone 673-0932 House of Seafoods • Live Lobster Tank r * FROG LEGS Roadhouse Style k French Fried Gulf SHRIMP W Golden Fried Maryland SCALLOPS JK'ligmil lOBBTIB YAKS ~ k Broiled WHITEFISH ★ LOBSTER Newburg k OYSTERS on the Half Shell Try Our Special Steak Dinner Also Sefeclions From Our Regular Menu 27 Championship Golf Holas, A real golfers dream. Not exaggerated yardage or a putt-putt course. MOREY’S SSA CLUB 22M Unien Lsks Rssd off Commerce Read Phone 363-4102 McDouble Cheeseburger Served with 2 slices of Cheddar cheese end 2 slices of pure tysh ground beef. McDonald’s Filet-O’-Fish Served with plenty of tartar sauce. A rnal deep sea treat the whole-family will enjoy. , bSk HSfVtfSSMSi' 'Aiitti'** il* McDonald's OPEN 11 to 11 810 N. PERRY at EAST BLYD. W BOWLING' Day and Evening THE VARIATIONS featuring M-STEVEMeDAfttAW EVERY WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY IN THE FRENCH CELLAR HOWE’S LANES 6697 Dixie Hwy. 625-5011 D—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST i LOANS *1,000 to *5,000 Cash when needed! 1st or 5 HOME J : KORTGftOE | pMMEKTV. ★ CHE0lU»« »0'”w f*m «. t. jjgg IMSURWCE ""cwT SPECIAL VOSS and BUCMER 209 NATIONAL BUILDING - 334-3267 BUY, SELL, TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Break Sought in Coed Killing INDIAN SAND PAINTER-Fred Stevens, art gallery of Interior Department in Wash- Navajo sand painter, nears completion of ington. He worked during exhibition of Gil- ceremonial design titled “Father Sky,” in bert Maxwell collection of 1 Yank's Murder Trial to Begin ttMi-wnowjc WATER SOFTENER Avoid Hard, Rusty Water! ★ 10-YEAR WARRANTY * Now Specially Priced! You can have the con-venience of Soft Water ONLY A FEW CENTS PER DAY Have a whiter wash softer clothes, lovelier complexion and even savo up to 50% on soap. WHY RENT A WATER SOFTENER? MWANZA, Tanzania (AP) -The trial of an American Peace Corps volunteer charged with - murdering his wife opens today I with two of the three persons I who will hear the case as yet I unnamed. * it ★ Bill Haywood Kinsey, 24, I Washington, D.C., is accused of murdering his wife Beverley, 23, Riverside, Conn., on March * 27 while they were on a picnic two miles from Maswa, both were teachers. ★ ★ * It was still uncertain on eve of the trial whether Bril Judge Harold G. Plattior or gerian acting Judge Anthony O. Erokwu would try the ct ★ ★ ★ Two assessors also hear the Mrs. Morris, 35, a plywood case and render a verdict but worker, was suspended Tuesday i iitti« ; l» Area Man, 60, Killed by Train Sadness over the recent death of his convalescent home roommate may have caused 60-year-old Leo Carr to step into the path of an oncoming train in Lapeer yesterday, according to Lapeer County authorities. * ★ * They said Carr was killed when he stepped onto the tracks near the Ferguson Convalescent Home and turned his back to the train. They said the engineer was unable to stop in time. under Tanzanian law the judge *>y_ may disregard their vert" Only one of the assessors, Gail Bagley, an American” conservation expert who arrh here in June with the U.S. Agency for International Development, has been named. COMPLIANCE The other assessor also is pected to be white, compl; with Tanzanian law which the accused is to be judged by members of his own tribe. An African farmer told a preliminary hearing that he Kinsey stfike Mrs. Kinsey something. Kinsey mainl she was fatally injured in a h The couple was married shortly before coming to Tanzania al- £ most two years ago. ★ ★ ★ The maximum penalty I murder is death by hanging. Strike Over 'Tight Pants' * 5 Brings Suit iict. tight sweaters and stretch pants 0f Dr. Albert S. Reibstein, urol-Gail distracted male workers. ogist at Metropolitan Hospital soil The suspension led to the here and a member of the staff Thursday ^"u.^msftictCourt in Portland asking damages of the union’s contract, the Theft Nets $450 in Equipment at Home in Area The union says it has tried ti Hi R3 Bs it NO MONEY DOWN it Come In Today or Phono FE 4-3573 Atm Distributor for Rtynoldt Water Conditioning Equipment 1 CRUMP 1 3465 Auburn Rd. UL 2-3000 Electric Incorporated FE 4-3513 j CORRECTION In PIERRE'S ORCHARD Ad in Thursday's Pontiac Press the Price on Wealthy Apples Should Have Read $1.25 for Vi Bushel The Pontiac Press r would be no meeting until the told Oakland County Shei Six other women work with covered the burglary v Mrs. Morris on the overnight they returned to their h about 3 p.m. after being | Mrs. Morris said she also wears most of the day. a big leather apron and works behind a nile nf pmiinmpnt included S two ^adfo^la* n uenina a pue or equipment. projector and slide’proje 1 Gas Stations Report Thefts The burglary followed by two sM days another attempt to break ;clol Death Notices Can’t jet the talked about safety features at cleanup prices? Meet theMind-Changer. f HotnKW n.Mi. \ ^ ( Rambler Classic ) Systems engineer and wife went new-car shopping And the 232-cube Six, largest standard Six * and met a Mind-Changer strong on style, sizzle, and safety. The car; our bigger,' bolder Rambler Classic 77Q. The salesman mentioned built-in quality like our Double-Safety brake system aitti Geramic-Artwreett exhaust . system. Touched on the expensive coil spring seats. ’ in its class. Another surprise: the Classic’s ample interior room, both front and rear. The clincher? A cleanup deal so terrific, they decided to add safety headrests, reclining seats, and wire wheel -eovefS: Gan we deal yo« in? American Motors ,.» where quality is built in, not added on. Motors/Rambler Russ Johnson Motor Sales 89 Park. Bird. M-24 Lake Orion; Mich. Rose Rambler 8145 Commerce Rd., Rt. 5 ^ Union Laka, Mich. At 10 a.m. tod fere replies 3, 4, 10, 20, 21, 28, 30, &REVJ£*> The Pontiac Pres* FROM ■ AM. TO S PM. THIS ruiN TiAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26. 1966 In Memoriam -You' waisy uion, who •w»v August M, 1905 Sadly missed by Ivy "LWiNG MEMORY OF WALTER I S! pa,ied *W,V | That ot tay; , «TNI 1044 CIVIL MOMTS « ffi law mtomem, with a X CERTAIN EXCEPTIONS. S£ >' ^discrimination be- # * i K CAUSE 0* SUL SINCE-X - v, SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE -X »CONSIDERED MORE AT- % X TRACTIVE TO PERSONS X I v. OP ONE SEX THAN THE X-[ -X OTHER, ADVERTISE-// , M E N T S ARE PLACED -X \ X; UNDER THE MALE OR 1 :::: FEMALE COLUMNS FOR *• X; CONVENIENCE OF READ- X-;X ERS. SUCH LISTINGS ARE << •X NOT INTENOED TO EX- cheery' smile'and'"?*wjjve' of the hand. Love of there as the love of here. Think of him still as the same, Aryl say, ha Is not dead, ha Is lust away. Sadly missed by Wlta Teen, "CLERK, part TIME, 5-M P Tues. and Thors. Noon-11 i S*1 Mills Pharmacy, Blrmlngh DELIVERY MAN, NIOHTS, 5-1 3 to 4 nights a week, exc. salary. DISHWASHERS, II OR OVER, F |— Apply Biff's, SH * Hi Birmingham. DIE SETTERS Small stamping plant ne setters for progressiva d automatic feeds. Steady wi.___.... overtime and fringe benefits. Day pr night shift. Automatic ^^aa HUSKY YOUNG MAN TO SERVICE lange^ tYpe^water^softener --------- SERVICE^STATION MEN, GOOD necessary. 6242646. 4-PIECE BAND FOR ALL OCCA- AA MECHANIC, ALL FRINGE benefits, excellent flat ------ ?f, work. See Tom I *00 Oakland, Pontiac Building, branch ot Detroit's known Debt Aid. Inc. It Pontiac Community. GET OUT OF DEBT - AVOID GARNISHMENTS, BANKRUPTCY REPOSSESSIONS, BAD CREDIT AND HARASSMENT. We have helped ai _ sands of people with credit problems. Let us consolidate is to amount o ford. No limit _________________ ______ and number of creditors. For those "YOU CAN'T BORROW confidential. Contact Warren 1450 N. Opdyke Rd., Pontiac........ Igan. Member Multiple Listing AIRCRAFT LINEMEN. $2 TO start. Full or part time. Fif— benefits. Apply ADI Pontiac nicipal Airport, A PART TIME JOB married man, 21-34, to „PI hours /Per evening. Call 474-2231, $200 PER MONTH right men. Apply 421 W. Lincoln, APPRENTICE (BONDED AND LICENSED) LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY W Dex-A-Dlet Tablets. Only 26 c at Simms Bros. Drugs.___________ !5 Highland Rd. Funeral Directors COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS "Designed tor Funerals" ASSISTANT MANAGER NATIONAL PAINT MFG. Working knowledge of bookkeeping, credit and collections, back ground. Salary (HPVPHIR benefits, vacation. Insurance and retirement plan. Acne Quality Paint, Ml 4-650" Huntoon FUNERAL HOME ervlyi^Pontlac for 50 yi SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME ghtful Service"_FI_ Voorhees-Siple ATTENTION Opening tor distributor. ________ known beverage. Established route, Pontiac area. Experience not necei sary. Must be young and aggrei slve. Call collect, Mr. Shaffer, — , — KE 7-7100, Detroit. ATTENTION Start Immediately Mechanically Inclined Man NEW CAR FURNISHED Cemetery Lots AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHINE trainee, high school graduate, must have mechanical ability. Lyon Manufacturing. 23441 Telegraph, call FE 2-6734. Confidential. T OUT OF DEBT ON A TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME permanent. Call OR 4 BARTENDER, 6 P.M. TO CLOS-Ing. Paid hospitalization, paid ~ cation, good salary to riant n North Oakland County. Write ... ing qualifications and references to Pontiac Press Box No. 73. BUS AND PIZZA BOY Full and part time. Apply In ... son. Franks Restaurant, Keego BRIDGEPORT OPERATORS AND Special Machine Builders Opening with 24-year-old company, r working ' condition, pension, wages, top benefits. Steady year around work with overtime. Opportunity to become skilled In all phases of automation assembly equipment with leading company In this field. Clyde Corporation, 1600 W, Maple, Tr— BUS BOYS e preferred, but not necessai r or evening shift. Full tin >ly Ellas Bros. Big Boy, CARPENTERS Field'Engineers athan L. Tope, 3273 G CHIEF DRAFTSMEN DESIGNERS DETAILERS APPRENTICE DETAILERS Permanent position on special rr ChiTHE GANGLER C0RP. 4223 Edgeland, Royal Oak 542-4200 Days 625-1062 Evenings Lost and Found LOST: GERMAN SHORT-HAIRI pointer, liver and white ticked, re- - ^I^Man^0hlontaLW1vlde everything. 6100 a ek draw while training, r newest salesman made i, normal weight and height flop as well as the physical re- tre«rcrdVt R^*'*..£ r Aviation, Pontiac Mu- Help Wanted Female ART TIME tooMAN, SMALL niflh,$-A9e rLE GIRLS NEED LOVABLE sitter or Grandma, ufiijw imy and Daddy work. ‘ Ml * -n. 3344421. INO LAOY OVER 55 VI ds a permanent home, to i a lady of 73. Food, lighti t and auto furnished. FE 6-221! SITTER DRAYTON. OWN transportation, 6-8:30 OR 3-7492. GABY -ftfriNGr CRESCENT LAKE ...»m». <62-6337. ............. SITTER FOR I II children 2 and 3 f cleaning, meals li ' 2757 Mott sfter ’ SITTER WANTED IN OUR attar 7:00 p.m. — 3344440. ABY SITTER' mM?3^ small children, 3 to 11 pm have own transportation. PE 5-0222. BABY SITTER AND LIGHT HOUSE- Help Wanted Female FOR LOAN AND PIN, pany office, exp. not nact_ must ba able to taka dicta-and type. This Is a perm*-lob tor the right person. See Hl/fton, 202 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Of phone FE ■2-2204.___ GIRL FOR COUNTER WORK AND Y SITTER, LIGHT HOUSEHOLD Y SALESWOMAN P HOUSEKEEPER, 4 DAYS AND ■Itetot. night, 630. 424-423) ■ :. 6122 Highland Rd. ip answer call FE 2-8734. CASHIER aid h°ospitHatloPn,mn Help Wanted Female LAOY FOR WAITING ON CUB-tomers, Marking and aer-wt*. Ogg Cleaners. 372 E. Ptfca St LIVE-IN HOUSEKEEPER, 2 CHIL-dren. Bloomfield -area. TR 47266, Ext. 5546, 6:)t a.m.-5 p.m„ 444-evenings. HELP ! ! J HOUSEKEEPER 368-2158.____ HOUSEKEEPER - LOUNGE ANO FOOD WAITRESS HOUSEKEEPING care. Live in. 33? Vicinity._____ Housewives COLLEGE GIRLS We have excellent part-time openings in sales for neat, businesslike women. No experience necessary, we will train you. If you would like to work evenings and weekends after school starts, come in for an interview now. Apply P e r s o n net Dept., second floor. Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL MATURE WOMAN TO BABY-SIT, rages. Call after 3 p.fa. 682-1823. Post Office Bo WHO ENJOYS MEETING veek. For appoinl 646-7982. S ALTERATIONS. LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING, ? IL 2-3416. MAID WANTED. flee doctor's family soaks axemen! cleaning lady to assume all louse cleaning and Ironing tasks, i days, no weekends. Ltvd In or iwn transportation. Private room. Personnel Dept., Pontiac MOTEL MAID, OVER 25, EXPEW- ienced preferred. 336-4041._______ MATURE SITTER, LIGHT HOUSE-keeplng. 2 school ago girls, 8 a.m. to S pm? Monday thru Friday. Own transportation. Highland Estates area, 673-4758. __________ dd, weekdays before NOW REPLACING SUMMER HELP Apply In person Elios Big Boy Restaurant Telegraph at Huron Dixie Hwy. at Silver Lake Rd. ly Toy Chest Dealer ' Quick Reference and qualification iANft! id marital status to Pontiac P figures and ba abla to type 40 w.p.m. Hours 8 to 5, Mon. through Frl. Salary ranga >4.176 to $5,004. Apply Personnel Office, Municipal Bldg. 151 Martin St., Birmingham, COUNTER AND OFFICE GIRL. " I do typing. Apply Berg Clean-4700 Dixie Hwy. Clarkston. COUNTER GIRLS, PAID HOLIDAYS and vacations, full train. Douglas Cleaners, Woodward Birmingham. COUNTER, OFFICE GIRL, AIR-conditioned, good salary. Blrming- CURB GIRLS KITCHEN HELP No experience necessary, will tr — Full time. Day or evening sh — Paid hospitalization, Insurar vacation and pension plan. Ap. . Ellas Bros. Big Boy, 20 S. Tele DENTAL ASSISTANT, EXPERI resume to Pontiac Pi , Blue Cron, and othei Apply Pontiac Press DENTAL ASSISTANT—NO EXPERI- o Pontiac Pren Box No, 20. BRICK, BLOCK, AND FIREPLACE DENTAL ASSISTANT. EXPERI- enced. Looking for employment In a new and progressive dental office. Good salary with unlimited opportunity. Call FE 2-311S. DENTAL ASSISTANT PONTIAC area. Must ba neat and personable. Reply Pontiac Press Box 41. Dining Room Waitresses Ted's Restaurant has openings tor dining room waitresses both day and night shuts. Full time. Insurance benefits, paid vacation, Apply In person only. TED'S WOODWARD AT SQUARE LK. RD OTTO'fl1 ANft" gffSWETie "CLBWT. full or pari time. Russ's Country Drugs. 4500 Elizabeth Lake Rd. DRY CLEANING INSPECTOR, Experienced only. Bob White Clean-er», Birmingham Ml 4-6733. (Cleaning, wool presser, air condition plant, good salary, Birmingham Cleaners. 1253 S. Woodward. Ml 4-4420. EXPERIENCED HOSTESS WANTED lor afternoon shift. Apply attar S p.m. Harvey's Colonial House. Dixie Hwy„ Waterford. EXPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER MUST LIKE CHILDREN, BE MATURE TND DEPENDABLE. HAVE OWN TRANSPORTATION. VICINITY OF WATKINS LAKE, $35-640 WEEK TO START, DEPENDING UPON EXPERIENCE. 3342224 Bfi FORE 5. EXPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER working mother, Pontiac Twp. , 5 days, 7:30 to 5:30. Own XPERIENCED BEAUTI-clan. Anna Maria Hair Fashions. 2141 N. Opdyke Rd. across from Blue Sky Drlva-ln. Phone 3345052. EXPERIENCED WOMAN TO DO cleaning, ironing, and care for baby.—Must have transp. 447-0246. EXPERIENCED RECEPTIONIST aSwttel*e#f*epwator,#or twins I m wwi toMpitoit-eopim «•* essary. Call Mrs. Hausman 651-KMhlBir1' days before 3 - ~ EXPERIENCED KEY PUNCH OP^ —torsi all shifts, top pay, end ius, Kelly Services, 12S N. Sagl-k FE 47287, Mlts Randall. "«l Opportunity Employer. FEMALE CLERKS, DAYS, EXCEL-lent salary, paid vacation. Apply Sherman Prescription, Maple and Lahser Rd., Birmingham._________________ PULL- OR PART-TIME WAITRESS ■ad mto — Apply In person, UMS Sr'-—- am GIRL FOR LIGHT CLEANING AND stock work In gift shop, 11 *.m. to 4 p.m. Apply In ponoo. La-Bellas 137 W. Maple Birmingham. GIRL OR WOMAN TO CARE FOR OIRL AGE 22 to 40 TO WORK i dry cleaning plant. 447-1743/ Aluminum Bldg. Items A ALUMINUM-VINYL SIDING ‘ • i. Storm Windows vnings, Storr 15 JOE VAL Cement Work ALL TYPES OF CEMENT WORK VALLELY OL 1 SIDING INSTALLED CEMENT WORK. PATIOS AND Architectural Drawing PLANS DRAWN Asphalt Paving 3-D CONSTRUCTION PARKING LOT DRIVE-WAYS Landscaping Free Estimates 652-4210 Open 'til 2 p.m. ASPHALT AND SEAL COATING ES-tlmatet. FE 4-1230. ASPHALT DISCOUNT PAVING 1 Hurryl Hurry! Free Estimates________ FE 5-7 PARKING LOTS, TENNIS COURTS, driveways. Reliable Contractors, Inc. 3442423. _____________________ QUALITY ASPHALT SEAL COAT-’ ' Drives. Repairs. 474 TAG ASPHALT PAVING ■T SEIBER ASPHALT PAVING, c. FE 5-7543 or FE 5-8482. Brick & Block Service BLOCK BASEMENTS - CEMENT work. Licensed contractor. 462-4233. BRICKWORK, NEW AND REPAIR. Specialize in fireplaces. 482-5205, call anytime. Building Modernization ■A 2-CAR GARAGES. 20-X22', 68.. Cement work. Free estimates — Springfield Building Co. MA 5-2176 CAR GARAGES, 20'X20‘, 6675. WE are local .BllUflari JP.O build any size. Cement work. Free esHWiteS: Pady-Bullt Garage Co. OR 3-5412. - - 1-CAR OARAGE, 6622 * ADDITIONS Also Alum, windows, doors, siding. GRAVES CONTRACTING Pree_E ^HTTypesef- Remodeling^ Kitchen cupboards, additions, attic ■MM ‘TeTsr ANY TYPE OF REMODELING Large or small lobs. Local work. Fair prices. 27 years experience. All work guaranteed In writing. BIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION-JERRY 732 N. Perry____FE 47633 CARPENTRY AND REMODELING OL 1-62S5________________ Cabinet Making^ CUSTOM CABINETS AND FORMICA censed. Rees. 482-0446. CARPENTRY, NEW AND REPAIR. CEMENT CONTRACTOR CEMENT WORK FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE. BERT C0M-MINS. FE 8-0245. ' FE 43362. ( FE 5-5364. Call after Ceramic. Tiling Dressmaking, Tailoring Eavestroughing ElectricalServices Excavating BULLDOZING. FINISH BULLDOZING, BACKHOE WORK, excavating, landscaping, llg' I er, water service, basemt... ________ septic field, trucking. FE 42555 evenings. Fencing Floor Sanding LEONARD'S FLOOR SERVICE experience. 627-3775 Collect Floor Tiling House Raising .-J46USfe- RAISING..!FLOOR --LEVELING FREE ESTIMATES Irrigation d Insured. 674-0520. Landscaping_______ 1 MERION BLUE SOD. SODDING, seeding and grading. No money In. Breece Landscaping. FE 2-0141 ,1 COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, specializing In broken concrete retaining walls. FE 46314. J. H. •A TOUCH BF IRELAND" Specializing In fleldstone, sodding, landscaping. Free es>. FE 42005. nate. 072-0243.___ COMMERCIAL AND RESIDENTIAL landscaping Dozing, grading, top-solllng and sodding. 474-0520. TALBOTT LUMBER and Stor>H>#.... SMITH MOVING C Cement and Biock Work 's Construction Co. Eves. PE 5-2124 )RK. NOTHING TOO ... „ .. small. 25 years axp. Free estimates. OR 3-6172. Painting and Decorating AAA PAINTING AND DECORATING Axp., free est. UL 41321 A-l PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING THOMPSON FE Painting and Decorating 1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR painting, free estimates, work guaranteed. Reasonable rates. 682- __PAINTING — OR 3-1430 Piano Tuning WALLPAPER STEAMERS IUG CLEANER - POWER SAWS I Joslyn Open Sun. FE 4d10S ROOFS: NEW, REPAIR General Maintenance,______482-4440 ROOFING AND REPAIR Shingles 482-4720 Hot asphalt Septic Tank Bldg. SEPTIC TANKS, DRAIN AND Tree Trimming Service ». Free Est. 624-0772. Landscaping ana ALL KINDS OF LIGHT DRUCKING ‘ uw time. 338-4828. LIGHT HAULING AND MOVING OF — kind. Reas, PE 47443. LIGHT MOVING, TRASH HAULED reasonable. FE 4-1353. LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, rubbish, fill dirt, grading and grav-el and front-end loading, FE 2-0403. Trucks to Rent r both for 875; d Ira » LEAF EXTENSION TABLE » Dibs. 4 chain. (4" - buffet, mahogany. Good condition. $70. FIRST $29 CASH Claims little used Singer IrffjHH cabinet. Zlg-zagger for designs, buttonholes, hems, etc. Small monthly payments easily arranged 60-month guarantee. Call 335-7283, RICHMAN BROS. SEWING CEN- TER. Freezer, ctiEST type, tv - baby buggy. FE 2-7012. French provincial d i n French provincial dining room furniture, drop leaf tr‘~,~ chairs and hutch. $225. 363-2130, ^RIGIDAIRE FROST - FREE $20. Lawn and garden tools. 3518 Percy King Dr., Waterford. 67" Nrigidaire ELECTRIC RANGE. GE 36" STOVE, GOOD CONDITION. Reasonable. 673-2338. GE REFRIGERATOR, FRE top; Hamilton gas dryer; be suite; mlsc. household item 5961 — 363-4685. HILLTOP ANTIQUE SHOP “ unusual — I-- — IOTPOINT REFRIGERATOR. __j , FE 8-3785. > '■ HOME I ..... E FREEZER SALi Full family size, holds 36 All fast-freeze shelves In original factory carton. No 12 down, 82 per week FRETTER'S WAREHOUSE OUTLET ISO S. Telegraph______________FE 3-7051 M 5147 HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL •20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOM FURNITURE - Consists of: •-piece living room outfit with 2 living room suite, 2 step tab coektaN table, 2 table tempi (1) rxlj* rug Included. 7-Piece bedroom suite with < dresser, chest, full size bed Innersprlng mattress and matching box spring and 2 vanity lamps *-place dinette set with 4 ch chairs and table. All tor 8397. credit Is good at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. SIGNATURE 15 CUBIC FOO SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC tag tewing machine. En rs, appliques, buttonhole FE 4-0905 HH LARGE CIRCLE FLUORESCENT LIGHTS. ' lights for kitchens, 812.75 factory M Samuel. UL 2-2507. QUEEN AUTOMATIC FOR DUSTY CONCRETE FLOORS Use Liquid Floor Hardener imple Inexpensive Application e Builders Supply FE 541186 WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At our 18 W. Pike Store Only ___igerator dryer .............$49.95 -* - Good At Wyman's FE 2-2150 E WEDNESDAY, AU- GARAGE SALE: 4324 DERRY Bloomfield Hills (2nd block from Long Lake Rd., off Franklin). MA 6-6367. Ladles' dress, 16-20V5; fur- ---------1U0J, RoMfnt b)k6 Thursday-Sunday. PEDESTAL, DROP- GARAGE SALE AUGUST 26 Eldrldge St., off Elizabeth ' Lake Rd., Waterford. GARAGE SALE. SAT. 10-5. 1482 Sodon Ct., Bloomfield. Off Franklin between Long Lake end Lone ---------- OFF ON ANY HEATING JOB >r at least 10 per cent. Reason: MOW operating from home wltt •" eizMI.IC.PjPf. S3~66~ PER 11 1" plasTfc pipe, fjUTper )W. ra'»firfflefip»;ii.ST w fo#’. . OWE ST POSSIBL^ PRICES Buy Direct From FE 5-7545 JOE VALLELY OL (Satisfied customers art my Salesmen) 8 HOUSE JACKS :12‘ LINOLEUM RUGS S3.7S astic Wall tile 1 Celling tile — wall paneling; i BAG Tile. FE 4-7757, 1— — $8.50; MULTI-COLOR books. 682-4317. 21 CUBIC FOOT UPRIGHT FREEZ- VANITY LAVATORY, Thompson, 7005 IX COMMERCIAL Hr SECTION . TOP , o(w. cooler case Reasonable (nr J quick sale. 332-9592 or 674-2004. iiseay^l.G 5-GaLlON FUEL ( I rrmtmfi 1966 CLEAN UP CAMPAIGN starting. Fully auto., 5777.75. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 6507 DIxle^Hw^ Garkston Bottle Gas Installation Two 100 pound cylinders end squlp-ment. Prompt and courteous serv Ice, Call Great Plains Gas Co- L PIPE, NO LEAD ■ds, $30. OR 3-6003. aft. DIVING BOARDS 8'-10'-12' AND 14' FACTORY DEFECTS washed wiping rags. 17 cent YOUR WELDW00D HEADQUARTERS DRAYTON PLYWOOD 4112 W. Walton___OR 2 » Marlon oft Elizabeth Lk. GARAGE SALE BOOKS-FURNITURE CLOTHING—DISHES All In exc. condition Sat. Aug. 27, Sun. Aug. 28 Stirling off Walton FE S-! HwdTiwIs^aehliiBr^M E THICKNESS PLANER, 10" Del sew. 400 amp. ore we_ Aisc. small hand tools. Phone after IARAGE SALE: 154 AUGUSTA YOU name It — wa have it, also oak library table and other antiques. • "“I. Frl., end Set. end mlsc. 9 R U bee i _ SALE. ---- Comer of May- eath Rd. In Drayton end Sat., KKK * * j LOWBOY TRAILER SI ______________887-5207___________ USED SPOT WELDERS, COAA-pletely rebuilt and guaranteed. 24 East Hickory Grov Woodward betwee Cameras • Service Friday through Monday, Aug. 26-29. Anytime. Antiques. Women's clothes size 18-20. Maternity clothes, size 18-20. Tires, wheels, tools, water pump. Mlsc. Items, ends.'Sat. Auo/27, 9:30-2 p.m. 17 Birmingham Blvd„ Birmingham. GARAGE SALE, THURSDAY, FRI-day and Saturday. Bargains for all. 835 Melroaa off N. Perry, GAS INCINERATOR, 600 POWER • cope. Phone atter 5. GR f -GE DELUXE ELECTRIC CLOTHES rshifis tifar GEWASHErTsUDS SAVER. ELEC. dryer. Bird cage, stand. 651-8601. GREAT BOOKS OF tHE We£TO|W World, complete set, never" with bookcase, 5350. 693-2946 HEAVY DUTY ARBOR PRESS, steel windows with gloss, 1 steel door with glass, bench grinder with stand, key machine, lawn r sharpener, ’ platform scales-1,(flP0H capacity, saw filer and Devilblss spray gun, 1960 Ford Vi ton-needs same bumping. 335-7601. 2690 Pon- IOT WATER HEATER, 30-GAL., gas. Consumers approved, $89.50 value, 537.95 and $49.95. Marred. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard id duct work. 625-4376. JIM'S OUTLET I DEERE TRACTOR, B MOD- $200. OR 3-0351.__________ : BOX AND WELSH PONEY. KEEP ON SWIMMING - HEAT pool — own your LP * "*" lowest LP gas price. GIRL'S AND LAVATORIES. COMPLETE, $24,50 ' e, 514.75, also bathtubs, shower stalls. Irregulars, values. Michigan Fluorescent, Ironer, Hawaiian steel guitar, wool braided rugs, curtains and drapes, cedar chest, portable tubs mlsc. clothing. Sat. through IEW GREETING CARD STORE: ample parking. Greeting cards personal stationary, .wedding I SEWING MACHINE. NEVER NICE r POOL TABLE, S150 PICNIC TABLES, FIVE SIZES, ------------------" gifts. Liberal Dixie I THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meat your needs Clothing, Furniture, Appliances TRY AND BEAT OUR PRICE - 25 years exp. In seme locality. | •ire and Rheem furnaces — mlnum skiing — windows — emization. Immediate Installation. A «, H Salas. MA S-1501 — * „ ____________ ..wn*2W miles • w*w la 8766 Clear Lake --------- Starting at — — “That was nice of Mr. Higgins, not making you pay for the window I broke, wasn’t it, Pop?" 4500 Dixie, Waterford. OR 3-7767. RAILROAD TIES, HARD- ORGAN, PIANO AND ACCORDION, popular, classical, 673-5071. 5835 Mill St., Waterford, June Peering. Office Equipment SEVERAL LIKE - NEW MODERN desks, electric Royal typewriter* Clary alec, adding machine. Many office chairs. Reasonable! Grlmai-dl. FE 5-7421.-_______________________ Store Equipment EAUTIFUL SCOTCH 5-10 ft., sheared 6 or m... ..... prem. quality, easy access truck H HH *’** roadside, quantity Sporting Goods bination, S3S5. Power-craft 15' bi saw, 8115. Walter Turner d press, S85. 682-5707 af ----- NEW REMINGTON AUTOMATIC Modal 1100 — 12: ______ .7.. 12 gauge over and under, Stevens 77C — 16 gauge pump. Collectors Items — Baker 12 gauge double with Damasques Barrel. Forbes 4500 Dixie Hwy, OR 3-7767. mmm -PIECE ROGERS DRUM SET PLUS 16" cymbal, S150. Electric guitar, 2 pick ups with waver bar, cord. WINCHESTER MODEL 50, AUTO- 6 USED PIANOS S. of Orchard Lake Rd. condition. Will aacrlfica < i, $695 V llvarad. ' MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. — ABY'G RAN D PIANO, EXCEL-lent condition, $350. Lake Angelus 5hofes.m4377. ~ ■ > dealers. MA 6- tkLDWiN CHAPEL ORGAN MOD ' j|C floor Model. Large Disand terms. Calbl Music Co. ■ Saginaw. FE 5-8222. BUNDY CLARINET, EVERETTE SPINET PIANO Lika new, Sava LEW BETTE RLY EXPERT PIANO MOVING FENDER JAGUAR GUITAR WITH of a fine piano or organ yoc ____ both In the Comblnette by Starck. Beautiful French Walnut. Bench and external Leslie speaker included. Terms. Calbl Music Co. 117 N. SAglnaw, FE 5-8222. GRAND PIANO, 8175. UPRIGHT piano, reconditioned, 8125. Wr~* ward upright cabinet grand pi; real nice, 875. A golden oak right piano, 875. Restyled ml piano, 860. Smith Moving Co., E. Pike 5t„ FE 6-4864, LOWREY SPINET ORGAN Walnut, almost Ilka new LEW BETTERLY IEW CONSOLE]PIANO, V FINISH, BElM INCLUDE Calbl Music Co. 117 N. i FE 5-8222.__________^ 2-5846. UPRIGHT PIANO — NEW KEY! • -------- .OB.,3M36,.,....,..,M USED JESSIE FRENCH CONSOLI piano. 10 pec cent down. Balanc like rent. Calbl Music Co. 117 h Saginaw. FE 5-8222, USED PIANO SPECIALS Grlnnell Spinet, almost lit mahogany finish . Milton Grand, small GRINNELL'S (DOWNTOWN) 27 S. SAGINAW SUMMER CLEARANCE Sea our special on floor m and used Gulbransen, Thomas, ..V Wurlltzer organs. Wurlltzar electric piano. Was S423, now 33T Westbrook pianos from S437 JACK HAGAN MUSIC 467 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 332-0500 72)6 Cooley Lk. Rd. 363-5500 BRITTANY1, 2-YEAR-OLD MALE. AKC registered 673-1703. COLLIES, PUPS, AKC, SHOTS, SA-* ................. 336-7641. COLLIE PUPS, . Needs adjustment. 835 or best 1966 NIMROD CAMPERS CRUISE OUT, INC HOUSE OF POODLES GROOMING AND SUPPLIES OSTER CLIPPERS AND BLADES 5810 Dixie Hwy.___OR 3-8920 IRISH SETTER PUPPIES, AKC, championship bloodlines, UL 2-3941, /MALE ENGLISH POINTER, . years, S85. Female Irish Setter, . years, ISO. Both good hunters. FE factory hometown dealer. Bill Coll- GUNS Dispersal sale — ell shotgur____ rifles. Burr-Shell, 37S 5. Telegraph. (MATCHED HUNTING ARROWS Gene's Archary, 714...... RIFLES FOR RENT OR SALE Sand—Gravel—Dirt A BLACK DIRT, TOP SOIL crushed limestone, etc. FE 8-I49S. -1 BLACK DIRT, PEAT AND FILL, pickup or del. Cheap. I TOPSOIL, PEAT, SAND, GRAV- ASPHALT, I soil, black ain, o beaches. OR 30403. GRAVEL, TOP SCOTT LAKE s.nd, asm# Dbeach is and builders supplies. OR 3-5773. BULLtfallNG. riNI&M GRADES. 4-6588. PONTIAC LAKE BUILDMi”IUP-— • Sand, gravel, fill dirt. OR TOP SOIL, DOZING AND BACK-Ifaij work, specializing In smaller . Ken's dirt and dozing, Clarka- Wood-Cool-Coke-Fuel Pats—Hunting Dogs 6 MONTHS OLD FEMALE. BROWN E>2-l52l9UP E POODLE, H AKC APRICOT TOY POODLES. OR SHEPHERD PUPS, AKC POODLE PUPPIES, LOV-ing and full of personality. MM 3-6775. AKC BLACK MINIATURE POODLES la pup, 845, FE 4-8076. AKC ENGLISH SPRINGER SPAN-lels, liver and write, 7 wkr '* MA 6-1507, ___________ AKC DACHSHUND PUPS, TERMS, champion stud service. ESTEL-HEIhJS - FE 2-08(7. Pets—Hunting Dogs 79 Plants-Troas-Slirabs SI -A ______ ____ You dig, your tools. 2722 Sleeth, 3 ml. west of Com-Vlllage. 684-0635. FEMALE, 2 APPALOOSAS, QUARTER HORSES, stered. Stud service and board-Call Lazy P, 628-30)5.__ HERD OF REGISTERED ANGUS cows with calf by side, also bull 7>2392 yearl*n® heifers. Holly ME POODLE BEAUTY SALON Clippings—AKC Pups—Stud Service Pet Supplies—682-6401 or 682-0927 Hay—Grain—Feoa available. $150. bred with natural stub tall. Beautiful black, brown and white. Weighs 12 pounds. 602-2176. REGISTERED TOY FOX TERRIER and Chihuahua puppies, alsr ' * I service tor same. FE 2-1497. 1 SECOND CUT ALFALFA IN FIELD, " cents a bale. Ready Thurs. and Frl. 2422 Hosner Rd., 3-SPECIAL END OF THE MONTH CLEARANCE AUCTIONS FRI„ 7:30 P.M. SAT., 7:30 P.M. SUN., 2:00 P.M. Army surplus, groceries, alec, lot — new and used furniture, guara teed appliances; - 2-wheel trsltai deep freezers, blcyeles, lawn mo ers, wheelbarrows, TVs and r dies, bunk beds dnd antiques, Hundreds of other articles too n merous to mention. * ANTIQUE SALE WEDNESDAY, gust 21, 7 p.m. Wa ara now IP ceptlng consignments for this sale. Hall's Auction, 70S W. Clarkstsn Rd„ Lake Orion. MY 3-1871 ANTIQUE AUCTION: HAVING DE-dded to close my business, will sell at public auction contents of my store at 1241 North Milford Rd., Highland, WMjjj^ miniature furniture, ble and chairs, spinning w round oak table, dolls, doll .. Hundreds of Items too numerous to mention. Barbara Antczak—owner. Edward H. Murto Auctioneer— Detroit VE 7-4444. CLOCK COLLECTORS Frl., Aug. 26. Starting at 7:3 Also antiques and tools. _. _. Smart Sale Farm. 338 W. Tlenken Rd. Rochester.___________________ ELECTRIC GRAND PLAYER . . ano, 50 rolls and stand, plays beautifully. Flint, 234-6171. EVERY SUNDAY ........ 2:00 P. Sporting Goods — Alt Types Door Prizes Every Auction Wa Buy — Sail — Trade, Retail 7 ( auction, refrigerators, plastic Gotham wear, desk seats and many r________ _______ JIM'S OUTLET. FE 4(205. Dixie near Telegraph. Every Friday, ’ ** PublicAuction UUCLAIMED IMPOUNDED CARS BY The Pontiac Polka Dept. 117 Lake St., Pontiac, Michigan The above cars will be sold pu suant to Section 2S2 of Acts 300 Of Pyblk _Act of 1747 (C.L. ■*“ SATURDAY, 7:3ft PM. I Bird Auettr- B— 637-5173. SATURDAY 7 P.M. HALL'S AUCTION SALE 705 W. Clarkston Rd., Lake Orion 3-place sectional, 2 Maytag wasl ers, roll-a-way bed, dreslars. ches . automatic washers, Vi and full size hods complete, odd Stef * chairs, platform rocker, deep * pump, TVs, a few antiques, n hair couch, love seat, smokl stand, 8-plece dining room set. SPECIAL SUNDAY 3 P.M. Scratched and slightly damaged Fishing and sporting --- Consignments m ceprea aatiy. jack W. Hail, i tionecr. MY 3-1871 or MY 3-6141. SATURDAY, AUGUST 27 - 10 A. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31-10 A./ Mark Kristek Farm Estate 9397 Henderson Rd., Goodrich Details here Monday STAN PERKINS AUCTIONEER H 635-9400______Swartz Creek Truck Campers 2 Mackinaw Self Contained IES. SPOTTED (MARE, stud, spotted gelding with 2 young hunting dogs. 625- NEW LOCATION For Stuchlers (1 mile west of our old address) 21.888 sq. ft. blacktop (no muddy feet) Modern service facilities Up to date access. Display INSPECT CENTURY - MALLARD SAGE-TAG-A-L0NG All self contained. 16' to 28' four and eight sleepers. REDUCED TO SELL HOURS: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY YEAR OLD REGISTERED QUAR-ter gelding, by three bars. Well broke, very gentle, E.M.H.A. rib bon winner. 1761 2-horse trailer. Exc. condition. 682-5754. ALL DAY SUNDAY. .... CHANCE OF 1766 ..HM cheap horses and ponies. Young mares, with cott?"POA ponies llrivi a mile and save a pile of dough. Y. B. Rancho 1573 W. Sutton Rd. at Baldwin, Metamor Saturday. t YEARS OLD 258. Call * DUCHESS APPLES. YOU PICK, Farm Equipment pi . 87 CORN PICKER, 1 WAGON. FE demo., $4,895. , _ _ 40 other tractors, will trade I northern property or what ha you. Clark's Tractors, 1 mil* ei -*—-*~ "*,7-9374. CLEARANCE SALE! BOLENS, 4 H.P. WITH BLADE, 55 P. WITH MOW- WHEELHORSE, 4 H.P. WITH MOWER, 8225. WHEELHORSE, 5V4 H.P. WITH gmagfi) S325. BURNS, 4 H.P., ELECTRIC START WITH MOWER, TILLER * ** “ BLADE, 5425. -EY Rl ELECT :R, 3695 KING BROS. 1-1662 F Pontiac at Qpdyke Ri hitch, $950. Also 48" I good condition. Ust for < INTERNATIONAL H TRACTOR, IN-' -national Baler 45T, Oliver d aal mower. 693-1855. Call IEW AND USED HAY TOOLS. Davis Machinery, Ortonvllle, NA 7-3292.__________________________ Travel Trailers 1966 NIMROD CAMPERS CRUISE OUT, INC. * ~ Walton, dally 9-9 FE ~ AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932. Guaranteed for Ilf.. See them and get a demonstra- s exciting caravans). BOOTH CAMPER CAMEO CAMPERS FOR RENT — TRAVEL AND LIVE In new motor he— sleeps 6. 363-2081. Travel T-^iri ATTENTION HUNTERS IT'S GETTING CLOSE TO THAT flME 16 custom * camper. 1 Johnson's Vacation Travel Trailers 517 E. WALTON BLVD. PRICES FROM 8875 '66s 3 Franklins 1 r-ZT MOBILE HOME BY OWNER. FE Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 15210 Holly Rd. Holly ME 4(771 —Open Dally—and Sundays— Motorcycles 650 BSA. EXCELLENT CONDITION. TOM STACHLER PRICES SCALPED ON LAST 3 1966 APACHE CAMPERS LEFT ON RESERVATION Buffalo Mesa hardtop. Ideal for camping, fishing and hunting, (Includes dinette). Converts Into third bad. Sink and stova (Including cabinet). Combination screen and storm door. Bottle gas assembly, EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 6507 Dlxle^tfwy.^ Clarkston RENTALS — IS FT. AND 16 FT. Brand new self contained — All models ot travel trailers. Holly Travel Coach, Inc., 15210 N. Holly Rd., Holly, ME 4-6771. Open 7 days 1964 HONDA SCRAMBLER. 1965 HONDA SUPER SCRAMBLER 90, great condition. 646-2284. >65 DUCATI. 250 CC. EXCELLENT 1965 HONDA 305 SCRAMBLER, 2,000 -" a, 8600, or trad# on tractor-»r comb. Ml 4(108, 38 p 1966 HONDA 305 SCRAMBLER, 8685. SEE GMC STATE FAIR EXHIBIT HOBO PICK-UP CAMPERS Dally 9 to 7 Incl. Sundays HOBO SALES ml. E. of Adams, rear of L 8, S Plastics at 334S Auburn Rd. Save Pickup campers, convertible, 15' a SEE THE NEW 1766 CORSAIRS 14 to 23 ft. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 6577 Dixie Hwy.________MA 5-1400 TRAVEL WITH THESE QUALITY LINES— Luxury In a BOLES AERO. 20-35' FROLIC, 1424'—BEE LINE, 13-26' YUKON DELTA, 17-24' “THE PED-BARN" Jacobson Trailer Sales 5470 Williams Lake Rd. OR 5-5781 TRAILER STORAGE, SS MONTH Your own Ireurance, 100 acres moCM^p627-3820 OrtorndMa McFEELY RESORT telescoping, bumpers, I_______________ racks. Lowry Camper Salas, 1325 S. Hospital Road, Union Laka. EM 3-3601. Spate tire carriers. 10'x55' ROYCRAFT IN PARK, NEAR Pontiac, completely turn., Iipmedl-ytr possession. 776-3480. JO-MONTH-OLD U'XOO' ROY-CRAFT — All set up on the shore local lake. Turn key living piano, storage, shed, good ture. Quiet location. Cash i sary. 673-2772. Are In full swing at Hutchli_________ King size values are In waiting tor you. You get more home In a Detroiter mobile home, 12 wldes, 3 bedrooms as little as $58.12 per month. A wide selection ot different sizes and floor plans. Also a huge selection of pre-owned 8 and 10 and Spano wldes. Ideal lake cottages at 88 Sale Prices. Yes, If you want to save hundreds Bob Hutchinson Mobile Homes 4301 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains OR 3-12 1764 AMERICAN MOBILE HOME, fully carpeted. Good, dean condition. Furnished. Occupancy Labor Day. Fuel tank, utility Included. Set up In park, S3,87S cash. Phone: 6»2-113S. FORESTPARK PARKWOOD HOLLYPARK All at reduced prices. mnvpimpj.. 20«. wm* Wa hava parking spaces. Open 7 to 7 —7 days a weak MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie Hwy. 3388772 1 block north of Telegraph AT COLONIAL P Jur new Madam Pi— richardTOn—hillcrest ACTIVE—HAMPTON—HOMETTE i Opdyke Rd. 332-1457 (Comer ot M-59 at Opdyke) 08 Dixie Hwy. 474181ft (Vs milt South ot Waterford) FOR;SALE-1758 TRAILER HOUSE after 5:38. 335-7717. Space available In 4 Star Park, no txfra charge. Alto see the famous light wolght Winnebago Trailer. OXFORD TRAILER SALES OPEN 78, CLOSED SUNDAYS milt south ot Laka Orton on M24 rw Parkhurst Trailer Sales INEST IN MOBILE LIVING 15 to 40 ft. Featuring New Moon — Buddy and Nomads. .ocatad halfway between Orion and Oxford on M24, next to Alban Country Cousin, MY 2-6611. 16 to 60 ft. long, 8 to 20 ft Hwy. 338-0772 Ih ot Telegrapl Pontiac Mobile t FINANCING AT ONLY 4 PER CENT . TRIUMPH 650 CC, CUSTOM-e. Exc. running condition. S5S0 r best otter. MA 42242. d 250 CC Endures rr . GOOD CONDI- 1966 SUZUKI ISO, 8100 AND TAKE overpayments. Call attar 1 p.m. August Clearance SALE \ Mark II, now 81375 Wm LIGHTNING, now $1325 NORTON 750 SCRAMBLER, N *’289 (TON 750 ATLAS, now 5128 UMPH, 500 comp., now $115 WHILE THEY LAST!! EASY TERMS — HURRY IAVE IN STOCK BIG BEAR Scramblers and 305 models and 100 CC Twins. New, Don Wilson’s Yamaha, 7615 Highland Rd„ and 1947 S. Telegraph Rd„ Pontiac. HONDA” 1766, S90, LIKE NSW. "-■"net. Insurance, warranty, 8350. 43217;- LIKE NEW 1966 BSA LIGHTNING. Reasonable. OR 3-9647. MOVE THEMOUT* —BEL OW Suzuki ISO ......... Suzuki 00 Trail .. Yamaha 80 .......... Bridgestone 70 (2) . Rates cheaper than owning: RIDA-RENTA CYCLE 84 S. Woodward, Bgham. 647-7480 SPECIAL SALE 50 New Vesta Scooters I new MB motorcycles from 50CC to 1I0CC The largest selling 2 wheel vehicle. No money down needed. Easy Financing Terms. Grimaldi TOO Oakland A FE 5-7421 SUZUKI CYCLES, 50CC-2S0CC. RUPP Mlnlblkes as low as 5137.75 Taka M59 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Rldgo Rd. to Domodo Rd. Left and follow signs to DAW- PhoS MAlif 9-2179 T,PS,C0 LAKE- SUZUKI DEMOS 8, USED CYCLES 8150 AND UP TUK0 SALES INC. 72 E. AUBURN - ROCHESTER UL 2-5363 TRIUMPH 500 CC, 1743, S$S0. “ ISED too CC TWINS AND YG-1, 80 CC. Street models. Don Wilson's Y4m6ha. 7415 Highland Rd. and ||U| ■ Telegraph «d., Fenffat. - WANTED: USED FRONT WHEEL &2S**. ffc^m*1”*1 M Bicycles USED BIKES SPEED SAVILLE - 250 OSMUN i 1J' ALUMINUM BOATS, m. tr, tit*. IS' cenoea, $169 trailer*. $1*9. BIS IS* ru trail-. 900-lb. ■ Troda m PAYMENTS TOO HIGH? m s .^^SleocAR*' *n S. Lapeer Rg. Lake Qrk 14 FT. RUNABOUT, A 14' ALUMINUM LONE STAR, 14' SWITZERCRAFT RUNABOUT Large, electric dart meter, trade tkl equipment. Must sail Immec ately. 332-4991. N BOAT, ne: 682-11 15' FIBER6LAS, 40 HORSE JOHN son, skis and tan», $500. OR 3-9104. 17' CHRIS CRAFT, 220 HORSEPOW- , 5006 Lercy, Cass L 17' CHRIS CRAFT INBOARD SPEED boat. Completely reflnlihed. Only 7 hrs on motor. 145 h.p. Including trailer and cover. $1400. Call! Holly ME 7-7326 --------| Tr------ 1*' CHRIS CRAFT KIT CRUISER. Gaiter trailer, 35 h.p. Johnson Phone OR 3-39S6. 22-Ft. Cruis-Along Ideal tor couple or small family, complete sleeping, eetlng and toilet facilities. Many extras Including custom made trailer, 135 h.p. Grey Marine engine, fast enough ter water skiing and very seaworthy. Excellent condition. $4,200, terms. 1965 BRONCO engine, red and white' finish, black bucket seats. This 1 tiger of boats 11 Like new! Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Oakland Ave.___FE 2-9150 1965 16' /MARINER, TRAILER, horse Johnson. $1295. 332-2585. 1965 20' BADGER CAMPER, horsepower, 1.0 c n m n I # t equipped and $6,500. New, $5,1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1966 STOP here last th#rP' lat* ™ ei cars. Corvettes needed. M&M £ * CLEAN CARS OR ruck*, i Economy. Cars, rm oi>l WANTED GOOD USED CLEAN Opdyke - -Mrs V.LC9M1 USED CARS GLENN'S •~wi\ iuuk USED CAR I CREDIT Junk Can-Trucks 101-A k cars - trucks tandem trailer, 0. Call FE 4-9513. ALUMINUM GUARANTEED BOATS, $56.60; also flat bottoms, V's, canoes, prams. All at wholesale prices. 3660 Dixie Hwy. midnight. OR 3-1544, CLEARANCE! 1965 Models Now on Display Pontiac Only MERCURY-MERCRUISER DEALER CRUISE-OUT, INC. 43 E. Walton Open 9-6 FE 8-4402 CHRIS CRAFT 17', 120 HORSE-power, double plank mahogany $700. 647-6551. tHRIS CRAFT 10', 250 HORSE-power, $900. 682-1893. bAWSON'S SPECIALS - USED Larson boat, full top, 1963 75 h. Evlnrude with generator, $10! _ CLEARANCE PRICES ON ALL 1966 MERCHANDISE. Glasspar Steury, Mlrro Craft boats, Evln 1 rude boats end motors, Grumman '&.... JNMHMiMM Right on Hickory Ridge - Demode Rd.. left end follow signs ldgeH,^d.,atb END OF SEASON CLEARANCE on all boats and motors. Biggest value* of the ytar PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. MICHIGAN TURBOCRAFT SALES, INC. 2527 Dixie Hwy. — Pontiac 673-2442 MUST SELL - 12* MYERS ALUMI- OWENS ALL NEW 1967 Models on Display TRADE NOW FALL DISCOUNT Lake & Sea Marina Woodward 8. South Blvd. FE 4-958 SEA RAY SRV 170 WITH 60 H.F Evlnrude motor and boat trallei Extras. 693-2723. RUN-A-B0UTS Only 4 Lor.. ---- . ---------- — MFG Boat. Big Discounts on i malnlng Boats! Alum, and Flberglas Canoes, $159. 19' CENTURY with Gray Marli 160 outboard. Save $$. CLIFF DREYERS (Marina Division) 15210 Holly Rd. M|ffl|g|j TERRIFIC DISCOUNT QN ALL boats, eanees, pontoons And used motors. 30 years repair experience. TRADIN' DAYS Trade up to the boat of dreams! Choose your new craft, MFG, or Johnson Boat Motor now. Easy terms. PINTER'S WINTER STORAGE SERVICE Motors tuned, boats repaired Phone In your reservation todayl HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Your Evlnrude Dealer" 1899 S. Telegraph 332-0033 towing, OR 3-0039. AND TRUCKS. FREE «d Used Tracks 103 PICKUPS 1940 44-ton, green finish 1951 Ford 66-tan Both priced to nil) ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-415S TRUCKS All Series In Stock JEROME FORD AutaFiMRdRf 104. A FIND A GOOD CAR AND pwt« the Deal with Pontiac Cog Federal Credit UnlorL FE Foreign Cars 1959 AUSTIN HEALY Equipped with 4-speed transmission. Real Sharp! Only $49 down and weekly payments of $1144. HAROLD TURNER 1959 VW KARMANN GHIA, EXCELLENT MECHANICAL CONDITION. EULL PRICE, $197. SPARTAN g°D.GE INC., $55 OAKLAND AVE. Used Auto Truck Parts 102 CHEU I Tims* 1— ■■ hiiw ,1,11 I, of 8x25xl4'~sllckf. FE 0-2B3 4-BARREL 195$ C glne. Clean, exc. com 5-5544. j ,^neJBtransmissloCKED' EXC' 1 Other parts. 674-0235._______' CHEVY - FORD - COMET • FALCON fS factory rebuilt motors. — Install. Terms. Other m Priced. 537-1117. New and Used Trucks 103 TON 1960 STUDEBAKER PICK-P. $185. OR 3-8106, 1953 INTERNATIONAL mr 1959 FORD 6 PANEL. NEED fender repair*. Good motor an Tires. $150. 693-2883. ___________ W0 CHEVY 1V4 TON PANEL. $175. Inquire Nye Dairy. 333-7979. >61 CHEVY Va — $600. 682-6913. r The Dodge Good Guys Spartan Dodge LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track REPOSSESSION 1963 BUICK 4 DOOR HARDTOP. NO MONEY DOWN. LOW WEEKLY PAYMENTS. FULL BALANCE I DOOR HARDTOP. 1940 W. Wide Track >64 BUICK WILDCAT CONVERTI-ble with power steering, power brakes, whitewall tires, good white finish and automatic transmission, $1,795. Autorama MOTOR SALES 2635 Orchard Lake Rd. 602-4410 | — West of Telegraph IUST DISPOSE OF — 1965 BUICK Gran Sport Hardtop, VO, Turquoise, Black Vinyl top. No money Dow* $16.87 weakly Call Mr. Murphy FE 5-4101, McAullffe. FISCHER BUICK 554 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 MUST SELL 1965 V /V 1965. LIKE NEW ' 1964 SUNROOF. CLEAN, Ra- Ized dealer for TRIUMPH, MG. AUSTIN HEALEY, SUNBEA" FIAT and MORGAN. 50 New and Used Ready For Immediate Delivery NEW MG Midget Roadster, wire Uj*fl>. heater. Tonneau. Factory Car Warranty. Full ddM N$i588 FIAT s,ation Wagon, Only BANK FINANCING EASY TERMS Grimaldi New and Used Cart 106 —ALWAYS FINE CARS— ESTATE STORAGE 1961 CADILLAC COUPE DeVILLE, BEEN BANKRUPT? NEED A . . th as low as $5 down? Try ig Plan Financing. Call “~ ■H< 3384088____________________ 75 NEW FORDS In Stock Must Be Sold You'll Never Buy a New Ford for Less! TuynoW^: Before the Price Increase our New Models! ' Try Us First—Try us Last— We Will Never Be Undersold AllModels All Colors BEATTIE 1965 BUICK SKYLARK SPORTS coupe, real sharp. Gone Into serv-Ice. Take over payments. OR 3-7001 SILVER BUICK >66 BUICK SKYLARK 2 DOOR hardtop. Blue mist. Power steering, old. Mus^II.mImsIIl By Kate Osann Mow god Used Cor» 106 OUTSTANDING CARS $1895 1960 CHEVY Bel-Air 4-door, V8, automatic, heater, i dio, whitewalls. Now only — $695 Crissman Chevrolet (On Top of South Hill) ROCHESTER OL 2-9! "SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET 1)04 South Woodward Birmingham | Ml 4-2275 — Ml 4-7889 REPOSSESSION - 1965 CHEVY 2- “They could have made that picnic scene a lot more realistic—I mean, it didn’t rain, there were no ants, and they weren’t chased by a bull!” New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Can 106 1956 CHEVY 6. REBUILT ENGINE. 1959 CHEVY WAGON, GOOD TRANS-portation, $145. Mazurek Mot '*'*■ pr 1*'" | Blvd. Eai I960 CHEVY 6 full price $297. Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Ave. AUTOMATIC, I CHEVROLET 9 PASSENGER "SOMETHfNG NEW" MIKE SAVOIE CORVAIR 4-DOOR, RADIO. DODGE INC., 855 OAKLAND AVE. AUGUST Transportation Specials BUY HERE-PAY HERE No Application Refused 1960 CHEVY 2-door .$297 $3.1 1961 COMET, auto ... $197 $2.: 1960 PONTIAC Catalina $297 $3.1 1960 DODGE, auto .... $ 97 $1.! 1959 MERCURY convert $197 $2.! 1960 FORD Wagon .. $397 I960 MERCURY 2-door *M7 1960 FALCON wagon $297 $3.05 ■Mi ".05 .95 1957 CHEVY 2-door ■ '961 CHEVY, 8-cyl . $597 961 TEMPEST, auto . $397 ... NO MONEY DOWN SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING CALL MR. DAN AT FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto JEROME REPOSSESSION T BE SOLD TODAY. NO A DILL AC 1960 .SEDAN. ___________ mileage. Factory air-conditioned. Full power. 6 way seats. Excellent condition, 1 owner. 32435 Wing Lake Rd. Franklin. 626-9216. LLOYD Fiwtwoea. Extra sharp. Power brakes, windows, seat ml air - conditioning, delivered ter-ever **,. $1497 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR AUTO-italic, radio, haatar, whitewr" Ire*. Rune and took* good. $595. “SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET GLENN'S 1964 Cadillac Convertible. DeVllle. Full power. 21,880 actual milt L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. E 4-7371 FE 4-1797 Many more to choose '— CADILLAC 1966 Coupe D* Vllle. GM executive's. Red and black. Padded roof. Air. Garaged day and night. Per-■ipt condition. 33B-3773. CADILLAC 1966 COUPE DEVILLE, one I Only $595 (town. SEE NORM DANIELSON (USED CADILLAC SPECIALIST) WILSON CADILLAC OF BIRMINGHAM RED TAG SALE Now in 'effect at Matthews-Hargreaves "Chevy-land" 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547 A1 Hanoute Inc. Chevrolet-Buick Lake Orion MY 2-2411 I CHEVY. RUNS GOOD. $485? Fui?midge*?' $4 1961 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR WITH RADIO AND HEATER, ECONOMY! ENGINE, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY n?nt^'ofA$4U8?*CALL CRE*D- CHEVY 1961 STATION WAGON, dk>, heater, whitewalls, p______ (tearing,_ auto, trans. $595. 338- 1961 CORVAIR STATION WAGON. ‘ ' condition. Chevy mechanic's Like new tires, mechanically id. 1625 W. Hamlin Rd. 152- >61 CHEVY 9-PASSENGER WAG-DODGE INC., IS5 OAKLAND AVE. FE 1961 CHEVY IMPALA 2 hardtop, whit* with red Ir full price $497. Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Av*. ___________FE 8-4879 powergllde, real clean. r,0r; 4 SPEED. BUCKET 1962 CORVAIR SPYDER CONVERT-Exc. condition. 626-3960. SHEV., 2-DOOR BEL AIR, I d, stick, beautiful Mint. A ig man's car, $800. FE 5-1554. Autorama MOTORS SALES 135 Orchard Lake Rd. 682-4410 1 Mila West of Telegraph Autobahn MOTORS. INC. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER .... W mite north of Miracle Mil*' 174S S. Telegrbph FE 0-4531 1942 < : I R MONZA WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payment of $6.1*. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml/4-7500. 1963 CHEVROLET IMPALA, 1-OWN-*r car, *900. 1953 Pontiac, stoo. reasonable. FE M609. ’•swEssysjaMgs MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET 1104 South Woodward Birmingham 1963 CORVAIR MONZA CONVERTI- 3 CHEVY WAGON, AUTOMATIC, 3 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2 DOOR tardtop, radio, heater, whitewall Ires, 27,000 actual miles. $95 Down "SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET 1104 South Woodward Birmingham CHEVY IMPALA 1964 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE 1964 CHEVY IMPALA 1964 CORVAIR COUPE, LOW N GLENN'S L. C. Williams, Salesman payment*, $31 a mo. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track ;E 4-1006________or________FE 3-7054 GLENN'S 1964 Super Sport Chayy Impale. Radio, heater, tinted glass, 4-speed, 327, cordovan top. L. C. Willjams, Salesman 1964 CHEVROLET IMPALA SPORTS Coupe, V-8, one owner. Good co dltion. $1295. 338-8389 after 6. LLOYD 1964 CHEVROLET Impale convertible, V8, mldnlgl blue, white top. SS9- down. Ft $1459 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 CORVETTE 1964, 327 ENGINE, 4 --d, tinted windows, tap* deck, 'Ilent, $2500, Call 624-4266. DOWNEY New Used Car Location 1084 Oakland 1965 CORVAIR C0RSA Convertible, radio, heater, 4-speed, 10,000 actual miles. Only Downey gives two-year warranty on cars $1695 DOWNEY Oldsmobile Inc. GLENN'S 1965 Corvalr Corse convertible, speed. Rad with whit* top. L. C. Williams, Salesman IMF 1965 Chevy 2-Door Sedan chrome wheels, V$' engine, Only $99 Down, Finance Balance Only— $1488 "It only fakes a minute to Get a 'BETTER DEAL' *t" John McAufiffe Ford 610 Oakland Av*. FE S-4101 1965 CHEVY BISCAYNE, 2 DOOR, (town, *49 Month. Bill Smith, 6. Perry, FE 44141. » New and Used Cars 106 $1897 Spartan Dodge "SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE JMF John McAullffe Ford 1965 Chevy ^ CORVAIR 2-Door j .. town, Finance Balance of Snly - $1145 'SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE 8500 miles, $1850, 852-1950. 1964 MONZA ............ $1 1944 PLYMOUTH Satellite *2 1965 FORD llkpassenger S t a 11 “toaon ................ $2 DODGE Stake D-300 ... 81 ROCHESTER DODGE Now and fcad &W FAIRLANfe. * i. I passenger, 7H engine, gBaape «. 1963 FORD STATION WAGIN' 4 KESSLER'S JOIN THE DODGE REBELLION Prices slashed all 66's now i 15 ML, Birmingham, 647-0955. $2097 "Ask for The Dodge G Spartan Dodge 55 Oakland Ave. Fine Selection TRUDELL FORD 1947 FORD, CADOY POWERED, ;ood'shape. Call EM 3-3765, r. twimi *qtm GLENN'S factory air conditioning, bucket seats, 31,000 actual miles. Ford Executive. Just Ilk* new. L. C. Williams, Salesman 4 DOOR FORD STATION VI . VI, STICK, *700 4 Pretty Ponies 1965 MUSTANGS 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDT0PS m 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $49 Down and $49 Per Month HAROLD TURNER 1950 FORD, RUNS GOOD . , CLEAN. $175. 7 FORD FAIRLANE 500. 2 DOOR !958 FORD SKYLINER HARDTOP, condition. 674-0235. 1958 FORD FAIRLANE 500, RADIO, heater, auto. Clean. 3 WAGON, RUNS GOOD. 1959 THUNDERBIRD hardtop. Beautiful metalli|,R)^ “ ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 I960 T-BIRD HARDTOP. 2 REPOSSESSION, 19*8 T-BIRD, SIL-.87 weekly * Ca 11n M r™ Meson,°F E 1455 Rosedale. 682-25 1968 THUNDERBIRD, VERY GOOD jHHgHtagif -■ uvi rr t Trrn STANDARD. 334-7983. 1966 CHEVROLET CAPRICE, 4-door hardtop, power steering and brakes, V-8, AM-FM radio, dual exhaust, 4 barrel carburetor. S2795. 673-1528._________________ __________ MUST SELL 1960 FORD COUNTRY dlo, heater, runsSgood. 49,oS) miles. First $325. 673-1314. "SOMETHING NEW' MIKE SAVOIE >0 THUNDERBIRD CONVERT!-. Beautiful Sea Blue finis! Autobahn MOTORS, INC AUTHORIZED VW DEALER V2 mile north of Miracle Mile 1765 S. Telegraph ||- Autobahn MOTORS, INC-AUTHORIZED VW DEALER W mile north of Miracle Mile 1765 5. Telegraph — - ... CHEVROLET CAPRICE. DOU-bit power, whlewalls, low mil., many extras. Must sell. $2600 FE 4-4442 after 5 - 1966 STINGRAY. "427" HIGH PER-i$nce engine, 4-speed transmls-AM-FM radio, premium Tiger tires, yellow finish with NSMHhbik? MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET 1960 T-Bird 2-door Hardtop liver gray finish, only $99 down, inance balance of only— $645 Get a 'BETTER DEAL' at' John McAufiffe ford 630 Oakland Ave. fe S-4ioi Kessler-Hahn OAKLAND COUNTY'S NEWEST CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Dealer On Dlxla In Clarktton MA 5-2635 MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-2735 McComb CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH IMPERIAL R V8, FC E 8-8218. 1964 CHRYSLER NEWPORT 4-DOOR — automatic, radio, heator, white-walls, power steering, brakes, auto, pilot. Beautiful light blue finish, matching Interior, $1,695. Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth «4 Oakland Axe. . . FJLBJ1P TwrtHmtf* Newport 4-door hardtop. Rosewood with matching Interior. Automatic transmission, radio, heater, power steering end brakes. A very clean one-owner car tor only $1495 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH k) S. Woodward , Ml 7-3214 brakes, steering a * 388 WITH POWER BOB BORST >61 DODGE 4-DOOR HARDTOP. SPARTANWDODGE,7 OAKLAND AVE. PE $-452*. 1960 FORD. V-8 352. POWER STEER-IBEEI. Stick. $250. 651-1847. IMF John McAullffe I REPOSSESSION 1961 RED FAIRLANE 500 2-DOOR. VI, AUTOMATIC, MUST SELL TODAY. NO $ DOWN. FULL PRICE ONLY S197. CALL MR. CASH, 338-4528.____________ dlo, heater. Ml 4-4572. JMF John McAullffa Ford 1962 T-Bird 2-Door Hardtop night'blue finish, only—1pow*r' 01 $100 down, flnanco balance of oi $1195 1962 PORD WAGON, AUTOMATIC good i Highwi $850, 3130 Dixie REPOSSESSION—1963 F , VI, automatic 1963 FORD 2 DOOR SEDAN WITH V-l ENGINE, AUTOMAT 1C TRANSMISSION, POWER STEERING, RADIO, HEATER AND WHITEWALL. TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of 19.36. CALL CREDIT Mgr. Mr. Parka at HAROLD TURNER FORD, AM 4-7500. jrquoise leather ^ STATE WIDE AUTO OUTLET 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road FE 8-7137 4 FORD FAIRLANE 6 PASSEN-er station wagon, power steering-nd power brakes. Very clean *1295 JEROME FORD Rochester* Ford Peak L 1-9711. 1964 FORD 4-DOOR. V-S ENGINE, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, POWER STEER-I N G. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payment! of $12.88. ..CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7588. 1?64 GALAX IE {88 CONVERTIBLE, FORD FAIRLANE 500, 1964 - 9 passenger wagon, V-8, auto., power steering, radio, haatar, 20,000 DON'S USED CARS SMALL AD-BIG LOT 70 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM Falcon 4-door Future, auto., radio, heator, maroon. Sharp. 1963 KARMANN GHIA VW, radio, haatar, whitewall*, red. ^ 1964 TEMPEST Wagon, auto. 6-eyl., radio, heator, whitewalls, gold. 1962 BUICK Special wagoiv*auto. S, double bio, heater. IMPALA - $, double whitewalls, 677^f LAPEER RD. Lake Orion ^ MY 2-2041 $1897 ir The Dodge Good Guy* Spartan Dodge 15 Oakland Av*. Mile N. of Cast Ave) FE 8-4528 1964 FORD 8, 4 DOOR GALAX IE 588. Power steering, good clean car with good rubbar, $1095. FE 1964 FORD CUSTOM 500 SEDAN. ‘Aetalllc blue finish, low mileage Autobahn «im, mmrtust*--- >4 Mile north of Miracle Mite !?« 5. Telegraph FE $-4531 Private. 852-1015. 1965 FORD GALAX IE 588, Auto-tires. Like new $1895. Autorama MOTOR SALES 2635 Orchard Laka Rd. 682-4410, 1 Mile West of Telegraph 75 NEW FORDS You'll Never Buy a New Ford for Less! Before the Price Increase our New Models! Try U* First—Try u* L**t— We Will Never Be Undersold All Models -All Colors BEATTIE ? * OR S-IW&J? D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, lfr 106 MARMADUKE 75 NEW FORDS You'll Never Buy a New Ford for Less! BUY NOW 1965 Mustang 2+2 Hardtop $1899 Grimaldi LLOYD $2095 Lloyd Motors ^rBETTERoeAL?.r' 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 GLENN'S FE 47371 ' “ FE 4-17*7 M»ny more to choose «rom IPSSSSE MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET 1965 Mustang...... $1895 1964 Chevrolet ... All Models All Colors BEATTIE r“ TURNER j m .$1395 *5££S 4ALC TAYLOR'S CHEVY-OLDS Spartan Dodge -"“-i 666 W00°WARD- LLOYD BOb0rBU^'AJn*rBs^nOW‘ky ssaJSSSiSfBr' $1195 Lloyd Motors ! CHEVY-OLDS J 1084 Oakland 1965 PONTIAC LeMANS NEW CAR TRADES $m§Mm $)Mq Buy With Confidence bob'bo'] LINCOLN-MERCURY IpiSS $497 I one is well cared for c Spartan Dodge ‘ SiS3 m HOUGH’TEN OLDS OL 1-9761 ' Rochester "GOT Demos - .Brand New Executive Cars - Used Cars GLENN'S MBttfe *4s£‘™ 1966 Bonneville Save $727.45 MO ..1966 Catalina Save $674.00 Executive Car 1966 Bonneville 1966 -LeMans Sr"2 Save $531 ;ed Tempest $1995 cutive Car 1966 Pontiac ,,,1966.%.-, GTO Save $539.26 Used......'. 1964 Catalina $16 DEMO 1966 Catalina Save $6 Used 1962 Tempest Custom WPW SAVOIE CHEVROLET .J*i r *-™9 amm $1195 DOWNEY Oldsmobile Inc. WHO WANTS TO SAVEpMONEY mmm mm « $1497 •""s HggggSj !an Dodge $1995 DOWNEY Oldsmobile Inc. .$1750 1966 MUSTANG, Convertible, ai er, red with black top, radio, t 1964 CHEVY %-fon Pickup. Re —H $1595 wrumc iviu l ul\j FJLJ±m Plymouth' tsaSisI $1897 pgKSSsSBSg^ S Spartan Dodge HAUPT PONTIAC N. Main Street Clarkston MA 5-5566 1966 TRADE-INS ARE FLOODING OUR LOT - MUST SELL $2595 $2095 SSk---- *1995 '”^795 mV $1795 $2995 COME TO THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 100 .TON HAROLD TURNER E YOU EXPECT . . AND GET IT BiiMi tton. 65 Mt. Clemens — FET795T 1964 GTO Wm9S$ HAROLD TURNER -►MIKE SAVOIE 1966 Skylark Hpa $2894 1966 LeSabre HBWi $3205 1964 Buick $1995 1962 Cadillac $1795 1963 Ford X'rJ'XZI**'"*-$795 1962 Buick SS3 1963 Buick 1964 Olds $1595 1962 Buick $1295 1964 Chevy $1595 1964 Opel $695 1963 Pontiac $1095 RUSS JOHNSON CHECKED USED CARS smmma BIRMINGHAM TRADES OLIVER BUICK 196-210 ORCHARD LAKE FE 2-9165 •962 OAKLAND ALL APPLICATIONS AS LOW AS $5 BUY HERE —Jam 1964 PONTIAC 1966 PONTIAC Catalina Wagon. Brand new, light full power. 9-Passenger. Buy thl uvi *w trm— - - - ■ bob teste f power seat, S4 HOMER HIGHT ' Motors Iric. ON M24 IN OXFORD 0A 8-253 1963 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille, loaded with all _tha-«xti^igcluding.fi£tQiY.flir:CpnditiQ!v fAKtH mg, 6-way power seat. Only............. $2495 ‘ .... $895 $9.09 1960 PONTIAC .... ... $595 $6.06 .... !$295 $3.03 1?61| CHEVY, ... $595 $6.06 .... $495 $5.05 1960 CHEVY .... $195 42-62 ... $795 $8.08 1961 PONTIAC ... ... $595 $6.06 .... $895 $9.09 1961 Valiant .... ... $295 $3.03 BBS*** ^04 ■S1MCA,,-,, $2.02. .... $795 $8.08 1962 RAMBLER ... ... $395 $4.04 2 YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 STEADY JOB REQUIRED 1# WE FINANCE # CALL CREDIT MGR. 338-9661 NO ONE WALKS HOME CREDIT NO PROBLEM THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26 ~ 1966 D^ll Nurses Aided 'III'Professor Camouflages Protest During LBJ Speech KINGSTON, I R.I. (AP)-A nurse at the University of Rhode Island says “a White House man” asked her and another nurse to caniouflage protest by a professor who walked out of ceremonies for President Johnson on the campus last Saturday. “those were the orders—to act as if he were ill,” Mrs. Daniel W. Beaton told the Providence Journal Thursday night ★ ★ ★ • Dr. Elton Rayack, an associate professor of economics, had said publicly before the ceremony that he would walk, out as a protest against the visit and against American policy in Viet Nam. While the President was receiving an honorary degree, Rayack rose from his chair on the platform in the front row of a group of faculty members in academic robes and left. DURING SPEECH Mrs. Beaton said that earlier, during the President’s speech, “a chap came down—from the White House—to speak to us. She said the man told her Rayack would leave during the speech and told the two nurses to escort him because his walkout “would be very embarrassing to the President.” ★. ★ ★ “We had orders and I was very happy to do it,” Mrs. Beaton said. Hie other nurse has not been identified, and the identity of the “White House man” could not be learned. ★ ★ ★ Rayack said he told the nurse: “Lady, I’m not ill, Pm just walking out because I can’ stand what’s going on on the platform.” Mrs. Beaton confirmed his remarks, —Television Programs— Programs furnished by stations listed in this column ara subject to change without notice ChowWUi 2-WJK-TV, 4—WWJ-TV, fr-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, S0-WKSP-TVS6—WTVS Go-Go Girls Go WARREN, R.I. (AP) ~ Following the recommendation of the police chief, the Town Council has banned “go-go’ girls from all the towns taverns. The dancing girls in gilded cages also were banned in nearby Pawtucket. TVTECHNCIAN NEEDED IMMEDIATELY | SWEETS RADIO and TELEVISION : 422 Wait Huron FE4-56TT : TONIGHT «:« (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (7) Movie: (Color) “Se Devil” (1953) Yvonne De-Carlo, Rock Hudson. (9) Dennis the Menace (50) Superman (56) Americans at Work •:I5 (56) Christopher Program 8:30 (2) (4) (Color) Network News (9) Marshal Dillon (50) Little Rascals (56) Big Picture 7:06 (2) Baseball: Detroit vs. New York (4) Traffic Court (9) Movie: “Jump Into Hell” (1955) Jacques Sernas, Kurt Kasznar. (50) Soupy Sales (56) U. S. A. 7:39 (4) (ColorfcCamp Runamuck (7) (Color) Flintstones (50) View* at Sea (56) LocalXssue 6:09 (4) (Color) Hank *■ (7) (Color) Summer Fun (50) Silent Service (56) Festival of the Arts 8:30 (4) (Color) Sing Along With Mitch (7) Addams Family (50) Merv Griffin 8:55 (9) News 9:00 (7) Honey West (9) Telescope 9:30 (2) (Special) Pro Football: Baltimore vs. Cleveland (4) (Color) Mister Roberts 1 (7) (Color) Farmer’s Daughter (9)Singalong Jubilee 10:00 (4) (Color) Man From U.N.CJLE. (7) Court-Martial (9) 12 for-Summer (50) Paul Winter 10:30 (9) Canada at War 11:00 (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports (50) Horse Racing 11:30 (4) (Color) Tonight (7) Movies: 1. (Color) “Bengal Brigade” (1954) Rock Hudson, Arlene , ‘ Dahl, Dan O’Herlihy. 2. “Son of Frankenstein” (1939) Basil Rathbone, Boris Karloff. (9) Movie: “La Belle Americaine” (1961) Rob-• ert Dhery. 12:30 (2) News, Weather, Sports 1:00 (2) Movies: 1. "Father Was a Fullback” (1949) Fred MacMurray, Maureen O’Hara, Thelma Ritter. 2. “Las Vegas Nights” (1941) Phil Regan, Pamela March. 3. “Ambush” (1939) Gladys Swarthout, TV Features Colts Meet Browns BASEBALL, 7:00 p.m. (2) Detroit vs. New York at Yankee Stadium. SUMMER FUN, 8:00 p.m. (7) Young Barnaby Kidd, grandson of Infamous pirate, hopes to carry on family tradition. FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS, 8:00 p.m. (56) Pabl Casals conducts his oratorio “El Pessebre.” PRO FOOTBALL, 9:30 p.m. (2) Colts vs. Browns i NFL exhibition game telecast from Cleveland. The Sony Sterecorder 660 Has Incredible E.S.P....World’s First Totally Automatic Tape-Reversel Electronic Sensory' Perception is exclusive to Sony’s solid-state 660 Sterecorder. Here’s a tape-reverse with no buttons to push, no metal strips to apply. Ten seconds of silence on all four tracks makes ft work, period! In addition to ESP, the Sony 660 has XL-4 Quadradial Sound, a four-speaker system that produces Living Stereo in your living room , or den. The 660 has 3 motors, push-button solenoid operation, specifications to please the audiophile and marvelous Sony operating simplicity. SONY AMIfRtC^'SjHRST CHOICE IN TAPP RECORDERS PONTIAC NUSIC AND SOUND 8101 W#«» Huron Phona 332-4161 Acrott From AIR-STREAM Trailer Sale* FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL Lloyd Nolan. 4. “Ride, a Crooked Mile” (1938) Akim Tamiroff, Leif Erickson, Frances Palmer. (4) Beat the Champ 1:30 (4) News, Weather 2:30 (7) All-Night Show SATURDAY MORNING 1:10 (2) News 6:15 (2) Farm Scene 6:30 (2) Summer Semester (7) Americans at Work 6:45 (7) Wheelsville, U.S.A. 7:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (4) Country Lhring (7) Making of Music 7:30 (4) (Color) Bozo the Clown (7) Junior Sports Club 8:00 (2) Happyland (7) Musicade 8:30 (7) Three Stooges 0:00 (2) (Color) Heckle and Jeckle (4) Jetsons 9:30 (2) (Color) Tennessee Tuxedo (4) (Color) Atom Ant 10:00 (2) (Color) Mighty Mouse (4) (Color) 8ecret Squirrel (7) (Color) Porky Pig (9) Wizard of Oz 10:30 (2) Lassie (4) (Color) Underdog (7) (Color) Beatles (9) Hawkeye 11:00 (2) (Color) Tom and Jerry (4) (Color) Top Cat (7) (Color) Casper (9) Tides and Trails 11:39 (2) Quick Draw McGraw (4) Fury (7) (Color) Magilla Gorilla (9) Life and Land SATURDAY AFTERNOON 12:90 (2) Sky King (4) Beat the Champ (7) (Color) Bugs Bunny (9) Nature of Things (50) Yoga for Health 12:30 (2) Linus (7) (Color) Milton the Monster . (9) Country Calendar (50) People are Funny 1:09 (2) Sea Hunt (4) March of Time . (7) (Color) Hoppity Hopper (9) Championship Series t(50) Movie: “The Feathered Serpent” (1949) Roland Winters ’ (7) American Bandstand 2:19 (2) Amateur Hour (A) (Color) George Pierrot for. Adventure 2:30 (2) Movie: “The Secret Garden” (1949) Margaret O’Brien, Herbert Marshall, Dean Stock well (4) Movie: “Horse Feathers” (1932) G roue ho, , ROME (UPI) — Actress Cath-What young people think are the top records of the week as erine Spaak told police yesterday compiled by Gilbert Youth Research, Inc. [that $24,000 in jewels and furs Harpo, Chico and Zeppo Marx (7) Club 1270 (50) Roller Derby 2:55 (4) S.L.A. Marshall 3:09 (4) Baseball: Los Angeles Dodgers vs-Giants (9) Wrestling 3:30 (7) Movie: “The Day the Sky Exploded” (1961) Bill Hubschmidt (50) Horse Race 4:00 (9) Stagecoach West (50) Wrestling 5:99 (7) Wide World of Sports (9) Lieutenant (50) Country and Western Time 5:30 (2) News, Weather, Sports (50) Forrest Seen Show Old-Timer Laments passing of Old-Time Practical Joke By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Whatever happened to practical jokes? Are we all taking ourselves too seriously? Must gags have | sortie social-consciousness message? Is it gauche to do something nonsensical simply to be .nonsensical without a sermon around it? “I guess our sons don't know what practical jokes are,” Fred Waring remarked yonder afternoon. “Do you remember ‘the College Widow’ joke?” he asked. “Ah, one of our most famous composers fell for it once.” A very wolfish male was tipped off that a local girl was notoriously amorous — but | she had to be wooed with a special gift WILSON of a huge watermelon (or cheesecake or hot cherry pie). 1 “Carrying the big watermelon, he would sneak up a dark 1 II stairway for his rendezvous with the amorous lady,” Waring ||said. 1 I “As he opened the door, a man’s voice would roar, ‘So you’re i 11 the rat who’s after my wife!’ A shot would be heard. Blood (catsup) would gush out on the floor. “The wolfish male would bolt downstairs—afraid to drop the watermelon which he thought could be evidence against him. “His friends, who were in on the joke, would be lined up on tte street, hissing, yelling, breaking lightbulbs, as he ran the gantlet, still trying to hold the watermelon . . . , ★ ★ ★ Previous Pu»Mo 56 Stripped at. I nme vegetation 13 SmaU chapel 57 14 Scene of action <1££),worthy 16 (Mindrirll 58 Poeti^ ,onn* « Urge on (Scot.) 19 Reverend (ab.) DOWN 20Body of water , _ ... 22 Sardinia (ab) * Terrible 25 Newt gatherers 2 European river 22 Cicatrix 30 Projection on a 3 Person beyond 23 British harquebus 32 Country in 33 Julie----, 36 Biblical ani« 37 Produces help (coll.] 4 Society (ab.) 5 Golf teacher 6 Rodent 7 Repeated 8 Ibsen heroine 28 Anger (eolL) 9 Smile L.cadly 29 Chemical 10 Moslem title compound (var.) 31 Hot----- 11 Thai temple (bakery item) 38 Extraaenaory zusun perception (ab.) 21 Unit of energy. 39 Black dafijeeiagM substance* '43 Body politic 44 Cushions 45 OU (comb, tom) 46 American educator 48 River in Siberia 49 American president 50 German composer. composer 24 Hot -itf§ (jalopies). 26 Time gc~ 27 Ireland Carl - 34 Compass point S3 Pratt drink “When he found out he was victim of a practical joke, it had a very calming effect on his wolfishness.” ★ ★ ★ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Bobby Goldsboro heard of a young girl who ran her hand through a rock ’n’ roll idol’s hair—and couldn’t find her way out. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “If a fellow loses his key to success, the most likely place to find it is in his work pants.”—Pic Larmour. EARL’S PEARLS: A local fellow says his insomnia’s so bad he keeps waking up even during the TV summer reruns. Jack Jones was asked to sing “Donkey Serenade,” his father’s hit tune. “I’d like to do another one first,” he said, “and I think you’ll like it—it has a lot of the same notes.” M. . That’s earl, brother. (Tha Hall Syndicate, Inc.) r- r U r- 3 8" rj i 9 10 fr 12 13“ iT~ L 15" re- z IT 18" 1 K 20 21 1 YT mm E z 26 27 28 2 * -mmi » u* bud* a tie- * I termined “inside job.” g ft The £jSjc^pia_t—a 35-. p pound snapping turtle — 7 $ was caught by township I | patrolmen and company | ® president Robert Arm- f 1 strong on a window ledge I at A1 Hilde Taxidermy, § | 1920 S. Telegraph. 1 He crawled all the | | way from the front of $ the store up over a pile $ ••• of mounted African tro- | : phies to get at the win- « j dow,” said William ’ ^ Huffman, vice presi- | Huffman said the turtle had been placed in a metal tub with a lid that | was “weighted by anything we could find.” * ★ * The husky captive pushed aside the obstacle however, and made tor the lighted window at toe back. In £ A—g THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1966 To Protect Cicero Marchers 'Shoot to Kill/ Guard Told CHICAGO (AP) - The commander of the minds National Guard says Out Guardsmen will shoot to kill if they are fired upon during Sunday’s planned march of 3,000 opemhousing demonstrators in suburban Cicero. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and other dvil rights leaders meet today with city and clerical leaders in an attempt to reach an agreement on the housing conflict which would halt the Cicero march. King said Thursday he would suspend protest parades if a satisfactory agreement is reached. a a a A civil rights march Thursday night drew little attention. Three weeks ago in the same neighborhood, a similar demonstration brought out white hecklers who stoned and screamed at the marchers. The marchers, escorted by 150 police, made three stops Thursday night at real estate agencies in Chicago’s Cragin section where they held brief prayer and song vigils. There was no trouble. 4TH MARCH The fourth twilight march of the week is scheduled today in Gage Park, a Southwest Side neighborhood where demonstrations have been held twice previously. Violent white reaction reached a peak three weeks ago in Chicago Lawn, adjacent to Gage Park, when King led a protest parade. King, who will not lead today’s march, was felled by a thrown stone. Several persons were arrested. ★ * A Maj. Gen. Francis Kane said Thursday night after a meeting with law officers that about 3,-000 Guardsmen will be mobilized to prevent outbreaks during the Sunday demonstration in Cicero, an all-white community of 70,000 persons. Kane said his men will be fully armed. He said his men will be ordered, “If fired upon, fire bade, and shoot to kill.” Gov. Otto Kerner will announce today the exact number of troops and the unit designations of those who will be mobil- ising told a rally of 2,000 persons Thursday night that he was hopeful the conference today, convened by the Chicago Conference on Religion and Race, will take steps to make Chicago an open city. The attempt to resolve the open occupancy problem started Aug. 17 when King, Mayor Richard J. Daley and others discussed the problems. City officials proposed a moratorium on the marches and civil rights proponents demanded that Daley enforce vigorously the city’s fair housing ordinance. A subcommittee was empaneled to propose specific suggestions. The subcommittee met Thursday but there was comment on what suggestions would be reported to today’s full meeting. on the racial Elsewhere scene: A . In New Haven, Conn., two Negro aldermen urged Mayor Richard C. Lee to establish a civilian police review board. They said the appointment of a Negro to a post of community relations officer within the Police Department was token- In Newark, N.J., the chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, Stoke-ly Carmichael, called for unity among black people everywhere. He spoke at a housing project and an antipoverty office. He received repeated applause as he urged “black power” and attacked the United States and its foreign policies. Canada Braces for Rail Strike OTTAWA (AP) - Railway and union negotiators scheduled their first face-to-face negotiations in more than five months today as Canadian lines began shutting down for a nationwide strike. No one expected to avert the strjke — scheduled to begin at noon. The goal of negotiations was to get the trains rolling again. a a A Leaders of four union groups, representing 116,000 workers of the Canadian Pacific and Canadian National railways, and management officials were to begin separate, secre three horn's ahead of the strike deadline. An hour was allotted for each union group meeting with CNR Vice President W. T. Wilson, CPR Vice President Duncan McNeill and two top mediators. BARGAIN DIRECTLY Unless the two sides were prepared to bargain directly or give the mediators something to work with there would be no point in going on, said Bernard Wilson, the government’s top labor relations expert. A spokesman for three of the labor groups said Thursday there was -a good chance of weekend negotiations. AAA The Canadian Parliament is scheduled to bpen a special ses-sios Monday and government sources said two bills were being prepared for immediate introduction. One deals directly with the strike and presumably would order the strikers back to work. The second would be a com- prehensive revision of the Rail- Throughout Canada, industries dependent on rail transportation predicted large-scale layoffs if the strike is prolonged. Some said layoffs would begin Monday. way Act and related law. It is expected to give the railways greater freedom to set freight rates to compete with other forms of transportation and abandon money-losing lines and services, sources said. COMMUTERS IN BIND The strike left commuters in a bind. In Montreal alone 42,000 had to find alternate ways of getting to work and home again. Chief Elected for GM Branch A Bloomfield Township man, Oscar A. Lundin, treasurer of General Motors Corp., yesterday was elected president and director of the firm’s General Motors Acceptance Corp. subsidiary. A A A Lundin of 1475 Tottenham succeeds Thomas W. Towell, who is retiring. Lundin has been treasurer of the corporation since 1960. He joined GM in 1933 as an employe in the payroll department at Chevrolet G e a r & Axle. He was transferred to the corporation’s comptrollers staff five years later. In 1952 Lundin was named general auditor of GM and 1954 appointed comptroller of Allison Division in Indianapolis, Ind., a position he held until his promotion to treasurer. Fruit growers of Ontario Province are in the midst of harvest with no trains to move their produce. The premier of Prince Edward Island declared a state of emergency as the Canadian National Railway ferries — the island’s economic lifeline — repared to shut down. In Winnipeg, the wheat capital, officials said there was enough grain at Great Lakes and Pacific ports to keep the export program running for up to two weeks. ★ A * Emerging from a meeting Thursday with Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson, John G. Die-fenbaker, leader of the opposition Conservatives, said the strike would be a disaster to the economy if prolonged. N-Peace Effort Urged by LBJ Claims 300 Million Would Die in Conflict TheWeather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mostly sunny and a little warmer today, high 75 to 83. Fair tonight, low 54 to 62. Sunny Saturday and slightly warmer, high 77 to 85. Southwest winds 7 to 16 miles. Sunday’s outlook: fair and warm. Percentage precipitation probability today, tonight and Saturday less than 5. Temperatures will average near the normal high of 77 to 81 and the normal low of 54 to 61. Cooler Monday and Tuesday. Rainfall will total one-quarter to one-half inch. Chance of showers Monday to Wednesday. yTn ’ftntiic .* At > a ft! Whw Vtucnr 1 rtrWTV Direction: Northwesterly Sun sett Friday -* — ARCO, Idaho (AP) —5. President Johnson said today the United States and the Soviet Union face the common task of searching for every possible area of agreement to lessen the chances of a nuclear war. Johnson said that a full-scale nuclear exchange between the East and the West, caused “by design or by ffiartcef* would km almost 306 million people! He said U.S. objectives in Viet Nam do not threaten the vital interests of the Soviet Union or the territory of any of her allies and that the Soviets have a very large stake in the peace security of Southeast Asia. Johnson's speech Assault Eyed on Hurricane Iodide Bombardment Set to Greet 'Faith7 MIAMI, Fla. (AP) — Hurricane Faith, smashing across the northern fringes of the Leeward Islands, edged closer today toward a target area where man may make the first sustained effort to tame the terror of the tropics. Scientists from Washington and California began converging on Florida, ready to bombard Faith with silver iodide crystals if she thrashes into a selected target area sprawling across the Atlantic just north of the storm’s present position. AAA northward swing already had taken the lower Leeward Islands out of the area of great-danger, lessened the peril to Puerto Rico, and increased the chance that Faith would become a historic guinea pig. “There’s n outside chance that we can seed her tomorrow,” said Dr. Cecil Gentry, alternate director of the U.S. government’s Project Storm-fury.” The chances will be better Sunday. Our forces are being assembled in Florida, ready to go if we get the required cooperation from Faith.” ROBS ENERGY Past experiments in the 10-year did project have indicated that a silver iodide bombardment may rob a hurricane of some of the energy it draws from heat and moisture. Water forms around the particles, freezes and falls, releasing the heat fueling the hurricane’s engine. whether At 8 a.in., the hurricane was near the British island of An-guilla in the Leewards, mtts eaBriir Sfln Juan, the Puerto Rican capital, and about 1,300 miles east-southeast of the nearest U.S. mainland city, Miami. Birmingham Area News Motorcycle Firm Owner Is Determined to Remain JET AIRLINER CRASHES — A Convair 880 commercial jetliner belonging to Japanese Domestic Airline crashes as it attempts to take off from Tokyo International Airport today. The plane was carrying a crew of five on a training, flight. All five were reported dead. Pictures were made by amateur Japanese photographers Kunio Hara and Akiro Matsumoto. State GOP Braces for Right-Wing Front more than 150 votes by our account,” the party sources said. Durant has engineered moves to embarrass Romney in the past. ’65 CONVENTION In the 1965 state convention he forced Romney to mount the rostrum and deliver an passioned speech to block a conservative move to put the party on record as opposing a state-wide income tax. k 'fit. This track would take the hurricane’s eye 50 to 75 miles to the north of San Juan. Since hurricane-force winds reached out GOV. ROMNEY Gov. Romney Visits Pontiac GOP Candidate Tour Two City Plants 1 Page One) Romney and Durant have feuded constantly since the time the conservative leader quit the Birch Society at the governor’s insistence. AAA Party sources say said they thought Durant would launch an attack on Lt. Gov. William Mil-liken because he cannot attack Romney directly. AAA In order for Durant’s bid to be taken seriously, however, he would have to capture a jority of the 1,508 delegates of the state convention. WON NOMINATION Romney has won his party’s gubernatorial nomination for third term in the August primary. Aside from a Durant challenge, Milliken appears unopposed for the renomination. AAA A top-ranked Negro Republi-in in state government, George Washington, apparently will be unopposed in his bid for the secretary of state nomination. Washington, named last January as State Director of Administration, would have the task of trying to keep Democrat James Hare from winning record seventh consecutive term. tor his visit to l*1” np- mites in the weak south- tional reactor testing station ond consecutive weekend of personal appearances, He visited five Northeastern states last )day he was scheduled in Denver, Colo., and in what the White nonpoliti- DRAMA’ he President said peaceful uses of gy has “merely a promising drama in a long journey to a better life.”, , y is another — and ie of the nuclear cannot forget,” he ern side ot Hie stormTitap! peered that San J fflpraflBrtgerous____ The greater peril there and through the upper Leewards would come from 8-to 10-foot tides pounding over the coasts and heavy rains expected to drench the islands in the wake of the storm. NATIONAL WEATHER—Tonight’s weather will be rainy OVer parts of the Texas Guff coast Temperatures will be wanner in file middle Mississippi Valley, Ohio "Valley and fito Great Lakes. It wifi be cooler in the New England * - r— -----.................... they have helped to spread of Communist expansion in much of the world. “True, they have permitted to rebuild their na-edom. isy is the peace that wears a nuclear crown.-And we cannot be satisfied with a situation in which the world is capa-bte of extinction in a moment of error, or madness, oi^nger.” Thieves Steal $100,000 in Cut Diamonds Gov. Romney and three other Republican candidates visited two PontlacpTaifils'ln'a"^!^ ilflf, ^tyr^^afternflon With the governor were Jack H. McDonald, candidate for U S. representative in the 19th District; Harvey Lodge, 17th District candidate tor the State Senate; and Loren Anderson, state representative candidate in the 61st District. The candidates arrived in Pontiac at 2 p.m. after stopping in Redford Township. DETROIT (UPI) - Two dapper thieves stole $100,000 worth of cut diamonds from a downtown store Thursday while clerks were busy with customers. Police said the diamonds were in a rectangular, green lizard skin case. The two men were seen in the store, andi were noticed to have left about the same time the jewels disappeared. AAA Employes said the pair, both well dressed, had been seen in the store several times earlier in the week. Hie store owner estimated the loss at ‘tot least $100,006.” ------4 Their first visit was to the Pontiac Varnish Co. plant at 30 Brush where they greeted workers while topring the plant. SHOOK HANDS The candidates also shoo hands with several shoppers an other passersby near the plant. Hie next stop was the GMC gate at 660 E. South Blvd. at 2:10 p.m. Candidates greeted and shook hands with several of the plant’ employes as well as other persons in the area. AAA The group was forced to cancel a third stop at the Progressive Welder and Machine Co. plant at 915 Oakland, because the governor had to return Detroit where he was scheduled to participate in the annual State Fair Parade. BIRMINGHAM - The owner of the only motorcycle agency In Birmingham intends to stay in business at his present location despite the city commission’s announced' intentions of moving himoutqext January. Donald Gonczy, owner of the Vigon Rida Renta cycle agency at 784 S. Woodward, said that on advice of legal counsel, he will take to court any effort by the city to force him out of business. The City Commission on Aug.s I passed an ordinance banning motorcycle agencies from operating within 500 feet of a residential district. The action was directed at the Vigon agency since it is the only one in the city. Gonczy said his business is located about 80 feet from ai housing section and has been there since last March. LICENSE EXPIRES No action can be taken against the agency before January, according to city attorneys, since city license is not due to expire before then. Gonczy said the city is reacting to a problem residents in areas outside Birmingham have been having with motorcycles. “We’ve had no such problems here,” said Gonczy. “all of our cycles are off the streets by 8 I m. and they’re no more noisy than automobiles.” A A A He said residents in the Birmingham area should remember that all motorcycles in the vicinity are not rentals from his agency. TWO ACCIDENTS of his OCC Board Names Three as Provosts (Continued From Page One) A Central Michigan University graduate, he holds a master’s degree from the Uni- Bis working on a doctorate (immunity college administration. Hergcnroadcr, 780 Edgewood, Rochester, was dean of instruction at Lake Michigan College, Benton Harbor, before joining the OCC staff. From 1951-61, he served in top administrative capacities with U. S. Army dependents’ schools in Western Europe and Africa. , AAA Whited, 40, will come to OCC from Foothill College, Los Altos, CalU. JACKSON NAHVE A , native (of Jackson, he holds masker’s and doctor’s 'degrees from the University of Michigan, where he is presently doing postdoctoral work in high education. Wilson, 33, now is OCC dean of instruction. His appointment as provost of the campus, which is under construction, will become effective Jan. 1, 1967. The other two provosts will begin their new duties Sept. 1. voived in accidents, both with cars and in each case the motorcyclist was found to be not at fault. A A A No court action is planned by his firm, he said, unfit file city actually orders him to leave. A A A We have a long term lease here, and a lot of money in- vested in the building and the cycles. The City Commission has no right to move us out.” BEA, Board Reach Accord MarathOfl Session Results in Agreement Negotiating teams\ for the Birmingham Board oK Education and the BirminghamEduca-tion Association (BEA) reached a tentative agreement this morning on a teacher contract for me coming school year. The accord came at the conclusion of a 12-hour marathon bargaining session which ended at 4 a.m. Leonard Bennett, a member of the Michigan Labor Relations Board presided. The mediator had been sent into the negotiations early this week by Gov. George .Romney after more than seven months of contract talks had failed to produce a settlement. Dog Drive Warnings Hit 1,469 Oakland County’s Animal Welfare Division, in an intensive campaign this summer, has issued 167 violation tickets and 1,469 coifftesy complaints to owners of unlicensed dogs. Tickets are being issued by three-man team of investigators making a door to door survey, according to Dr. Frank R. Bates, division director. Purpose of this effort is both to enforce licensing and to provide greater control over rabies, Dr. Bates said. The investigators follow up on courtesy complaints and, if persons fail to obtain a license, they receive a violation ticket. Tbes«. tickets to ~ justice-court-where average fine plus cost assessment of $10 is levied. The violator must also produce his pet license in court. Dr. Bates said that 22,000 licenses have been sold to dog owners this year to date compared to 16,734 for all of last year. It was the third marathon ses-on this week for the two „ ... ...» , , aides: They had met Monday H®:.P°,.nt_e!,..0Ut^.at “I with the mediator for eigh t have been in- mui 1 9 _______hours and on Wednesday for nine hours. RATIFICATION Bennett said the contract will remain tentative until it has been formally ratified by the board of education and the BEA membership. He said details of the accord will not be released until they have won- final approval from the two groups. The settlement ends a dispute that began early this year. Between 450 and 500 school system teachers staged a demonstration in the rain at a May school board meeting to emphasize their support for their contract demands. On Aug. 18 the teachers gathered at Groves High School and reiterated a warning to the board made earlier this summer that they would not return to school this fall without a master contract. DOORS OPEN The Birmingham school doors are scheduled to open Sept. 8. BEA president Phyllis Hass-berger said the teachers wifi he iaw.nl meet Sept. 1 to decide on rafi-«rm .-isia.ru. •» Schools Supt. Dr, John B. Smith said it was “a very good contract and one that I’m sure both the teachers and the board will approve,” ★ ★ ★ ' He said the board would meet sometime over the Labor Day weekend to ratify the pact. Wilson holds a master’s degree from Southern Illinois University and earned his doctorate in high education and sociology at MichiganeState University. — - --------. Simms, 98 H* Saginaw St, [SIMMS Smoker’s Specials [for Fri. and Sat. Shoppers SAVE On FRESH TOBACCOS 50 ‘Ben Franklin’ 5C Cigars $2.50 value. Box of 50 Ben Franklin cigars. New and ,■ | good. Tax included. m 13 Oz. ‘LIKE ’EM’ Mixed Nuts 79c value. Delicious mixed nut* with peanuts in JAq 13-oz. tin. Makes delicious snack. R0NS0N Butane Refill 59* 6-In. Texas Size Ask Tray SIMMS.'* 22* { : Good Question for Lawyer Ticket Should Show Rules Mrs. George T. Trumbull (left) and Mrs. Alfred C. Girard, cochairmen of the Sept. 7 fashion show, pose in the Baldwin Memorial Pavilion on Meadow Brook Festival grounds. They are hoping td fill the more than 2,000 seats for the 2:30 p.m. presentation of “Woman as a Decoration.” Tea on Trumbull Terrace uriU precede the showing of clothes by Julie. Tickets are available at the Community National Bank. Proceeds go to the scholarship fund at Oakland University. Fashion, Tea to Aid Oil Scholars Faced with the necessity of' raising $75,000 for the scholar-; ship fund at Oakland University, the scholarship committee had to do some hard thinking. they no longer had the Hunt Fair, they no longer had the Meadow Brook Ball, they had decided not to- sponsor a lecture But the need for scholarship money increases each year as the University grows. This year the big push comes early in September when the committee is sponsoring a glamorous fashion show out at Meadow Brook Festival grounds. . ★ ★ ★ ' The Baldwin Manorial Pavilion holds 2,200 people. Women love fashion shows. Trumbull Terrace is available for serving tea. There’s lots and lots for free parking space. For weeks, Mrs. George T. Trumbull and Mrs. Alfred C. Girard cochairmen, have spent hours and hours coordinating plans for the event which will feature clothes by Julie. They’re even prepared for rain. Should Sept. 7 be anything but sunny and warm, Trumbull Terrace will be covered with tents for the 1:30 p.m. tea. Baldwin Pavilion is roofed. Numerous area "'maim have assisted the chairmen in their work. Mrs. Howard Barked is lea chairman. Mrs. Noel Buckner has headed the ticket committee. Invitations went out under the guidance of Mm. Harold How-lett and Mrs. Carl Bolten. Mrs. C. T. Ekelund and Mrs. Arthur. Young are Pontiac area chairmen. Taking over prosaic duties at the gates will be Mrs. Ralph Norvell and Mrs. D. B. Eames. Others helping are Mrs. Norman Cheal, Mrs. William Shunck, Mrs. Edmund Windeler and Mrs. Franklin Read. Tickets ($25 for patronesses and $5 for general admission) are available from committee members, from Oakland University or at the Community National Bank in Pontiac. Benson Fords to Join New Theater Project Mr. and Mrs. Benson Ford have joined four other prominent Detroit area couples as cochairmen of the newly organized Meadow Brook Theater of Oakland University. The announcement was made by chairman Charles F. Adams. With Us wife, Ruth, he will direct a blue-ribbon committee of area civic and community leaders to augment Oakland University’s mounting reputation as a leader in the world of the performing arts — a position already enhanced by the sensational success of Oakland’s Mea-dow Brook Music Festival The new theater leaped into BENSON FORD CHARLES ADAMS public focus last month when it was announced that John Fern-aid, an outstanding British theatrical director and former head of England’s famed Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, plans to open a professional resident theater company there .this year. JANUARY PRODUCTION To be known formally as the John Fernald Company of the Meadow Brook Theater, the company has set a target date of early January for its first production, and will begin rehearsals in mid-November. Fernald will also head the J^the faU flt. selective progn professional actors and actresses. Previously announced as co-chairmen were Mr. and Mrs. John Z. DeLorean and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Anderson of Birmingham; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Z. Nederlander of Southfield, and Mr. and Mrs. Alan E. Schwartz uf BcHtr mmmm In announcing the Fords’ ac- cellor Varner, Mr. Fernald and I are delighted by the enthusiasm and cooperation we are receiving from civic and community leaders throughout the area. “It proves conclusively that our community wants and is ready to support serious theater. We are moving rapidly and will disclose our plans shortly.” By ABIGAIL VANBUREN DEAR ABBY: Last month our church auxiliary held its annual luncheon and tickets were sold for $2.50. At the bottom of eachflHMH^HR ticket was^^^H|H| printed D O O Rjj^^H I sold twoB^P^mBK tickets to member w h said she would|||flH^^B be unable to at-|^H tend, r e-flHH quested that I ABBY drop her stubs into the box for the door prize. I did. Her number was drawn and when I stepped forward to claim the prize for her, a burst of objection went up in the crowd! Some women insisted that in order to win the door prize the holder of the number had to be present. Not wishing "to create a worse scene, I sat down and let them draw another number. The second number was held by a woman who was present so she got the prize. In your opinion was this fair? Do you think a person has to be present in order to win the door prize? TOO REFINED TO FIGHT DEAR TOO REFINED: When a door prize is offered, it should be clearly stated on the ticket whether or not the holder of the number drawn need be present to win. I personally would assume that in order to win I would have to be present. But I’m sure there are an equal number of people who would assume the opposite. This is a good question for a lawyer. ★ * * DEAR ABBY: I met a very attractive divorcee at the home of a mutual friend the other evening. She is a very lively and amusing type, and I liked her immediately. Before I had an opportunity to ask her if I could see her again shq said to me, "‘I am giving a cocktail party at my apartmept tomorrow night at seven, would you care to come?” Area Artists Exhibiting at State Fair Naturally I accepted on the spot When I got there I found ter all alone. And she hadn’t invited anyone else. What do you think she had in mind? RON DEAR RON: You. DEAR ABBY: Would you be kind enough to advise me as to the following: Is it customary to give a gift to the bride and groom after they have been married for the second time—to EACH OTHER? I was not invited to the wedding. A RELATIVE DEAR RELATIVE: I think The LaRue E. Gulletts of Dick Avenue announce the betrothal of their daughter, Karen Gertrude, to Patrick James Keavy, son of the George B. Keavys of Sylvan Lake. The bride-elect is an Oakland University gradmte. not. It is difficult to imagine that one would be expected. * ★ ★ CONFIDENTIAL TO GARY IN LUBBOCK: Work is the yeast that raises the kihd of dough you’re looking for. Troubled? Write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped self - addressed envelope. ★ ★ * For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1.00 to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. KAREN GERTRUDE GULLETT Even Youngsters Affected by High Hemline Fashion JOHN Z. DeLOREAN ROBERT, ANDERSON ALAN E. SCHWARTZ Represented at the Michigan State Fair art exhibit will be six area residents whose work was among 50 paintings chosen out of a group of 250 possible entries. ★ ★ * Included is a watercolor, “Color Serenade” by Joseph Franz of Desmond Street, and oils “Composition — Red and Green” 1 "'Un i B mens, Union Lake. During the fair, Aug. 20 to Sept. 5, visitors will vote on their favorite works and the winner win receive the Popular Prize Award of $200. This award is in addition to the various prizes given by the -**—*-1..........■«... Mbmfci Community Arts Building on the Fairgrounds. Miss Sh Is Honored at Shower Mrs. WUliam D. Shirley of Bloomfield Terrace honored her sister-in-law, Karen Ann Shirley at a family shower on Wednesday. The hride-elect, daughter of theW. R. Shirleys of ChippeWa Road will wed Richard Lawrence Mordaunt, Sept. 10, in the Bethany Baptist Church. His parents, the Theodore M. Mordaunts of Birmingham will host the rehearsal dinner Sept 9 in Bedell’s. Birmingham friends of Mrs. Mordaunt, also the bride-elect’s maternal grandmother, Mrs. William L. Criger of Davisburg were among the guests at a recent shower in Mbs. Paid D. Carter’s. Birmingham home. Mrs. Raymond Morgan was cohostess. By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK—Here and there in the women’s world: Those mini-skirts, some of them as high in hemline as middle thigh, are -creating any number of problems, not the least of which involves the tiny set. An associate tells of the harassed supermarket manager who kept retrieving a lost little boy and returning him to his mother as she wheeled a cart around doing the week’s grocery shopping. F i n a 11 y, the manager’s patience wore thin and when again the small boy got lost, he suggested, “Sonny, why don’t you just hang onto your mother’s skirt? Said the tearful child, “I wonder how long she’ll be over there?” And the man said he didn’t rightfully know — “she’s been over there more than 10 years so far.” ★ ★ * My husband figures New York City dogs are so sophisticated, so removed from their natural instincts, that “a beagle here would run from a rabbit.” Thought for 'today, quoted from the Newsletter of the National Family Opinion, Inc., a consumer market research firm in Toledo, Ohio: “Oh Lord, through all life’s varied toil “Tin earth’s machine I quit. “Help me to be a drop of oil “And not a piece of grit." By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: My 7-year-old son will be having a birthday party not week and we plan to have several games with prizes. He is rather stubborn and it occurred to me that if he, as host, wins a prize, we may have quite a scene if he is not allowed to keep it. Should we allow him to keep a prize if he should win one, and if not, how should we handle the situation?—Mrs. G. S. Dear Mrs. G. S.: Don’t start giving in to your stubborn son on this sort of issue now, op you'll have trouble with him forever! Explain to him, before the party, that hosts and hostesses don’t keep prizes in their own homes and in any case, the birthday presents he will receive will more than make up for his loss. DON’T RETURN Dear Mrs. Post: The other night a group of friends gathered at our house and several of the girls contributed a dish for tiie dinner. One brought a salad, another brought home-baked rolls and a third made pies, while I provided the rest. There were half a dozen rolls left over and one of the pies was almost untouched. I insisted that the girls who had made them take the leftovers home but I have been told that was not the right thing to do. Was I correct?— Mrs. Laurie Light. ★ ★ ★ Dear Mrs. Light: No, you were not correct. When food is contributed arthis sort of party it is given as a gift and the hostess should keep the remainder. The only exception would be if you were going away and could not possibly use it. WRI'gE Dear Mrs. Post: I enjoy cooking as a hobby and I am always trying to discover new and different dishes, especially desserts. The other day I enjoyed a most unusual dessert In a restaurant I was tempted to Inquire if I could obtain a copy of the recipe, but I did not Would it have been in bad taste to do so?—Kathy S. Dear Kathy: Any chef would be delighted to know bow much you appreciated a dish he had prepared and it is never out of place to send him your compliments via your waiter. However, rather than asking for the recipe at the time, it would be hi better taste to write the restaurant, describe the dish mid request that, if possible, they send you the recipe. The correct marking of linens and the amounts a bride-to-be will need in furnishing her future bouse, are included in the booklet, “The Bride’s Trousseau.” For a copy, send a dime and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Elizabeth L. Post, in care of The Pontiac Press. A friend suggests that “Babies are angels whose wings grow shorter as their legs grow longer.” Another friend tells of her^-small son, gathered family each thy sdrort chnsr. he clutched something tightly in mMfier asked what he had, he spread Hie palm to show a handful of coins. * * * “Where,” asked the mother, “did you get those?” Candidly, the child anafered that he reached into the plate that was passed around. He explained, “I’d been giving to Jesus so long, I thought it was time he gaVe to me.” Jim Comstock, editor and co-publisher of toe weekly West Virginia Hillbilly, Richwood, W. , Va., sees that our family which originated in the state gets a , copy of his often highly amusing publication. , I don’t think James would mind if I relayed one of his hillbilly yarns. This peddler went to a man’s house and asked him if his wife was there and toe man said, no, she wasn’t. “She wait to the cemetery,” the husband said. The peddler asked if he expected her back soon, and the man said not particularly. The peddler then asked if he could wait and the man said he could. After toe peddler had waited maybe two nadu won the orofes-sional championship with 96 01 I— sen, 78, of Lakewood, Ohio, edged Dr. J. W. Stanton, 82, of Chicago 97-96 for the veterans title for marksmen age 70 and up. It was the fifth triumph in Hansen’s nine tries in this event, event. American Mini-Cube Compacted Water Softener Salt. • No fouling rosin bad or Control* • Fro* of Residua • 99.9% Pur. Salt • Totally Soluble 80 Pound eg 8« 1 DUST CONTROL CALCIUM CHLORIDE For dirt driveway., rood., and unpavod parking lot.. 100-lb. Bat $3.08 STOPS WATER! TH0R0SEAL « $700 Como, in 7 color. ***• ■ WATERPLUG - s ... Stop. Activo Wator Immodiotoly ■ This 'Flakey Phillie Not Pirates' Brand® WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (API-Right handers Mike Robinett of Houston, Tex., and Mario Ruiz of West New York, N.J., were named today to pitch for their hometown teams in the final game of the 20th annual Little League Baseball World Series. The two teams, victorious in semifinal games played here Thursday, are scheduled to face one another for the championship at 2 p.m. Saturday. Both pitchers have won one game apiece in the series. Robinett shutout Monterrey, Mex., 6-0, in a first round game Tuesday. Ruiz led West New York to a first round victory over Kankakee, 111., Wednesday. OFF DAY Today is an off day, exeept for two consolation games between Monterrey and Kankakee, and Windsor, Ontario, and Rhein Main Air Force Base, Germany. West New York won a shot at the championship by defeating a determined team from Osaka, Japan, 4-0. By the Associated Press Associated Press Sports Writer When the Philadelphia Phillies talk about flakes, they don’t mean the breakfast variety. Jackie Brandt, Philadelphia’s journeyman outfielder, is the Phillies’ own personal one-man show. He was one man too many for the Pittsburgh Pirates Thursday night. Brandt drove in two runs with a single and double as the Phillies downed. Pittsburgh 4-1 behind Jim Bunning’s eight-hitter. The defeat dropped the Pirates into second place in the National League, one half game behind the idle San Francisco Giants. ★ * ■ ★ In baseball parlance, a flake is an off-beat player who is somewhat eccentric. Brandt fills the bill perfectly. Take the ice cream incident in spring training, for example. Brandt and a teammate decided they’d like a snack after dinner. ICE CREAM “Okay,” said the teammate, “there’s an ice cream place down the block.” “No, no,’ insisted Brandt. “I want to' go to that 28-flavor place.” BIG ORDER When they reached their destination, 30 miles away, the other player ordered something scrumptious — the kind of treat you’d find in a 28-flavor spot. And Brandt? “I’ll take vanilla,” he dead-panned. Now that’s a flake. The Pirates didn’t think he was very funny though. His fourth inning double broug. Dick Groat home with Philadt phia’s second run of the innin Johnny Callison had singled ar scored on Groat’s double. ★ ★ ★ In the sixth, Richie Allen si gled, moved up on a sacrific and rode home on Brandt’s se (Hid hit of the night. ★ ★ -Ar In the only other Nation League game played Tbursda Chicago nipped New York 3-2. The victory was the fourth five starts ^against the Pirat for Bunning this season. NO EXPLANATION I don’t know how to accou for it,” the Phillies’ ace said, just sort of accept it. I have beat someone.” The Pirates had whacked hits in their last four games b fore Bunning handcuffed thez U.S. Cager Scores 30 FRANCA. Brazil (AP) Warren ArmsIFor^ tffew TiTIJir points U?iJ the touri *"* 1 itas5t^jniversit^& team from the United States to a 67-57 victory over the Dos Bagres team Thursday night. Wichita led 41-27 at halftime in this provincial city, 240 miles from Sao Paulo. Whitey Ford Has Shoulder Surgery Distance Races Set Saturday at Oil Course The second of two U. S. Tra and Field Federation Distan Races scheduled for the Oa land University campus cro country course will be held 6:30 p. m. Saturday. * ★ ★ The events are the junior foi mile run for June high scho graduates and under and tl senior six-mile run open to ; others. ★ ★ ★ In the previous July 19 race Mike Koerner, a junior at Cra brook, from Birmingham w> the junior four-mile in 23:49 ai John Bennett, a freshman Western. University, from IS Clair Shores won the senior si mile run. * * ★ The locker room in the Oa land University Sports and Re reation Building will be open p.m. on Saturday to a commodate competitors. 2 U.S, Yochf: in TopSpots VERBERG, Sweden (AP) Dingo and-N ajr th &tar, t\ American boats, finished fit and second Thursday in*! opening race of the Europe Star Boat Sailing Champic ships. . HHHHi James N. Schoonmaker sail 1 HIWWl ■ ■ ■ » ■ nnmmmmm North Star. ....A__£___£....... Another U. S. boat, GoldsU sailed by Joseph R. Duplin, f ished fourth. Kathleen,’ sail by H. P. Williams was eight HOUSTON (AP) — Whitey Ford, New York Yankees veter-pitcher, was reported in good condition today after a shoulder operation his surgeon described as successful. The left-hander, had gone on baseball’s disabled list earlier In'WweeFaffer complalfflnf of cramps in his pitching arm. A St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital bulletin said tests and examinations disclosed a blockage in a shoulder artery that supplies blood to the left hand. A six-inch vein was taken from one of Ford’s legs Thursday and grafted to the shoulder area to form A frvp^s of the blocked area. THURSDAY** FIGHTS joklyn, outpointed jy/t. New York, T“ TOKYO—Takeshi—wu-...... knocked out Shigeru Qgiwara. 137vi, Ji- wfton, iMPm LOS ANGELES—Jesus F _3, Xooiked out tfMH J«kw John's, N.B., 4, bantamweights. QUICKSEAL Smooth Finith Coat &$11 Blanket1 Insulation 1 1% Inch... , $36 per M 1 2 Inch...., .$47 per M 1 3 Inch . $60 par M | titui - tie ... HEATING and COOLING DIVISION SALES Toridheet SERVICE LICENSED CONTRACTORS. ALL MAKES OF FURNACES. BOILERS AND CONVERSION UNITS INSTALLED ANrf SERVICED. 24-HOUR SERVICE IN North Saginaw .FE 3-7111 BENSON LUMBER GO. Building and Remodeling Supplies and Materials 540 North Saginaw Street Open 8-5 - Sat. 8-12 FE 4-2521 Z “ HAVE A BOWlins [ BOWLING SEASON j IS ALMOST HERE GET IN PRACTICE NOW OPEN BOWLING DAILY 9A.M.-1 A.M. A few openings for teams and individuals still available. MEN-TUES. 6:30 P.M. LADIES—THURS. 6:30 P.M. MIXED LEAGUE-MON. 9:08 P.M. Com* In and register now. HURON BOWL 2525 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Telephone FE 5-2513 and FE 5-2525 GET YOUR UNIFORMS EARLY l Complete line of bowling apparel for, men and ladies. Shirts by Munsinger wear, Hilton, Olympion & King Louie. From ^j?®ep \ Blouses, skirts and dresses by Brunner & Hess. *4% PONTIAC THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1966 C—9 The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and aold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Thursday. Produce Glamor Stocks Are Hard Hit Applet, Dutchess, bu......... Applet, Astrecsn, bu......... Applet, Weelthy, bu. ........ Blueberries, 1 J-qt. crt..... Cantaloupe* bu............... Peaches, Hale Haven, bu. . . Peaches, Redhaven, bu........ Pears, Clapps, bu. .......... Plums, Burbank, V4 bu........ Watermelon, bu............... VEGETABLES Beans, Gr. Rd„ bu............ Beans, Kentucky Wonder, bu. Bekns, Roman, bu. .... Beets! topped, ’ bu. Broccoli, db.. bu............ Cabbage, Curly, bu........... Cabbage, Red, bu............. Cabbage Sprouts, bu.......... Cabbage, Standard, bu........ Carrots, di. bch............. Celery, Pascal, di. stks Celery, Pascal, crt. ... Celery, white, crt..... Chives, dz. bch........ Cucumber, slicers. bu. Cucumber, Pickle, bu. Cucumber, Pickle, bu. NEW YORK (AP) - Sharp losses were taken by glamor issues as the stock market continued its sharp decline early today. Trading was active. Losses of fractions to 5 or more points were shown by leading stocks. . Prices were down from the start as the market continued the decline which followed the abortive rally of ftiursday morning. It was the ninih decline in 10 sessions. ★ * ★ Higher interest rates were in \ the news again as the session m started, and this has been one of Wall Street’s biggest worries. Hope of stemming the decline rested on the market’s ability to remain {drove the Tuesday low, analysts said, and to build a base above it. Losses of key stocks, however, made this seem unlikely. OTHER LOSERS Motors, oils, rails, steels, chemicals, tobaccos, rubbers and electrical equipments sagged along with the glamor stocks. New York Central dropped 2. Losses of a point or so were taken by Easti dak, General Electric, U.S. Rubber and Montgomery Ward. Eastern Airlines lost 4, American Airlines 2, Pan American World Airways 1%. Big blocks changed hands at lower prices. . Sperry Rand was off % at 28% on 55,000 sharps. Standard Oil (New Jersey) fell % to 61% on blocks of ,9,000 and 90,000 Moscow Style Free Speech Halt News Conference by Critical American Other early blocks: Collins Radio, off 5 at 61% l 14,000 shares; General Instrument, off 3% at 55% (Hi 13,500; Itek, off 5 at 77% on 10,000; Fairchild Camera, off 5% at 185% on 12,500. Thursday the Associated Press Average of 60 Stocks fell 2.7 to 284.4. Priced declined an the American Stock Exchange. The New York Stock Exchange MOSCOW (#1 — An American professor who has led protests against the war in Viet Nam today Soviet intellectuals are discontented because they are unable to express them-selves. Stephen Smale of the University of California at Berkeley made the statement at a news conference which was interrupted by Soviet officials. ★ ★ ★ Two Russians who acted like policemen escorted Smale to a car and he went off to a separate meeting with Soviet correspondents at headquarters of Novosti, a news apd publicity agency. Western newsmen were blocked from talking with/him by tough-acting Russians. Smale said later he had been uneasy about the situation for a while but he was treated politely and returned to the international congress of mathematicians which he is attending UNIDENTIFIED One strong-arm escort in a yellow pole shirt never was identified to him, Smale said. Smale has been a persistent critic of UrS. policy in iVet Nam and had been subpoenaed to appear before the House Committee on Un-American Activities. By SAM DAWSON . AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - Profits are under fire again. President Johnson is calling for business show self-restraint in set' ting its profit margins .and thus hold down inflation. Organized labor is charging th a t| today’s rising prices are due to soaring profits rather than to rising wages. DAWSON But down in Wall Street, nervous stock traders have been watching profits with other ideas in mind — fear that profits are peaking out and profit margins narrowing. The news, of late, has spotlighted the record profits of many a concern. And housewives faced with rising prices have grumbled — and wondered who was getting the extra mon-ey. Instead he turned on the Soviet Union as well. He said he has found Soviet intellectuals discontented over internal conditions here without having any means of expres- TOKYO (AP) - The witch-hunting adolescent hordes unleashed by Mao Tze-tung in Red China’s main cities are, in effect, reimposing the bleak drabness of China’s gloomiest economic days. Any sign of a better life is attacked by the teen-agers — called Red Guards — as sym- WINTER TRIALS Speaking to reporters on the steps of Moscow University, Smale, 36, said Soviet intellectuals were discontented over the trial last winter of writers Andrei Sinyavsky and Yuri Daniel. The lack of any way for intellectuals to express discontent “shows a sad state of affairs, the mathematics professpr said. ★ ★ * Smale called the news conference to answer questions by North Vietnamese correspondent about his attitude toward the Viet Nam War. Smale termed Americahy actions in Viet Nam horrible and brutal but added the Soviet intervention in Hungary in 1956 also had been brutal. BROKEN UP A Soviet woman appeared break up the news conference with an urgent summons for le to talk with an official of the International Congress of Mathematicians, which he attending. Smale received one of its awards for the world’ outstanding young mathematicians. ttr two St»t#t Men, Who acted like policemen, escorted Smale frcnr the" meeting to car. With Western correspond-following, it went to Novosti, a Soviet news and publicity agency. ★ * There was no immediate explanation for the Soviet attitude and the abrupt manner of the two escorting men. jjiMa iifnlocal Muwt Figuru after decimal points are eighths eantatlva Inter-dealer HHH malely 11 a.m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout the da Include retail markup. ------ Engineering ........ Citizens Utilities Class A Monroe Auto Equipment . Diamond Crystal ........... Kelly Services ............ Detrex Chemical .............. Safran Printing .............. Scrlpto ..................... Frank's Norsery .............. North Central Airlines Units ... Wyandotte Chemical ........... MUTUAL funds Wtem ** s* § m lift High Sit inis <2* SI m tSS .m m E.« *u Stock Traders Eying Profit TreToo The total of corporate profits has soared — along with most other things — in the Soaring Sixties. PROFITS REPORT In 1960 the nation’s corporations reported profits of $44.2 billion before taxes and $22 billion after taxes. Based on performance in the first six months of 1966, the Department of Commerce puts profits before taxes as running at an annual rate of $82.9 billion this year, and aftertax profits at $48.7 billion. This jump in corporate inn come, the President points out, compares with a 17 per cent rise in wages since 1960 and a 10 per cent rise in prices. The reply of business is that the dollar volume of profits has grown because the economy has grown. The Gross National Product in 1960 was $502.6 billion Today this measure of the total output of goods and services is running $732.2 billion. Business China's 'Red Guards' Reimposing Bleakness bols of remnant or resurgent capitalist, bourgeois thinking, and denounced as anti-Socialist and anti-Maoist. VC Terrorists Attack Police Checkpoint SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Viet Cong terrorists attacked a Saigon police checkpoint with machine guns today, killing three policemen, a police source said. Three Vietnamese marines and three civilians were wounded. The Communist squad drove up to the checkpoint in a car, sprayed it with several bursts of gun fire and then quickly drove away. Tie number of attackers was not learned. * ★ ★ The checkpoint is m a residential area, but the attack came at the late afternoon rush hour when the area is heavily traveled by vehicles and pedestrians. Today marked the official opening of the two-week national election campaign in Sbuth Viet Nam, and there have been repeated warnings of Communist attempts to sabotage the eteetien? through terror tffld intimidation. The movement, which started with renaming of streets, parks and stores with revolutionary names has developed into virtual people’s courts on the streets, Japanese reporters observed. Western-style skirts and traditional Chinese women’ tumes which had begun to reappear in city streets, promptly vanished after the Red Guards started their “destroy the old and build the new” campaign, the reports from Peking said. CHEAP MEALS The better restaurants have been told to serve only cheap meals, tailors not to make fancy costumes, barbers not to give bizarre” Hong Kong-style haircuts. They have demanded a return to the highly collective life of the peoples communes as originally conceived in 1958 by Mao. it * it ! The Red Guards have demanded also abolition of taxis and immediate dismissals of domestics and nurses. They criticized people’s dress on the streets, ordered all luxury items and cosmetics removed from stores and even demanded ban on lovers rendezvous parks. Business Notes ary of Ameri-i Me t a-L Products Co. He has been NOWACK sales manager for the firm since 1965. Jered Products, Inc., heavily damaged by fire last June 4, has moved into new facilities located at 1520 Temple in Troy. Comedian ll LOS ANGELES (AP) - Jerry Colonna, the comedian with the big moustache and bulging eyes, is recovering in a Los Angeles hospital from a stroke he suffered last Saturday. Hospital officials would not say when Colonna, 61, would be released. Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)—The c*lh position I th# Treasury compared with aju —-Ilna data a year ago: (US. D, 1944 Aug. XL I 5,484,884,490.15 8 8,442*87,008.72 .^aita Fiscal Year July 1-30,780,529,034.24 14* Ihdrawals Fiscal Yaar— Tda The country needs self-restrain on raising profit margins, oi increasing wage demands, ot speculative expansion with thi idea of making still greate: profits, Japanese Car Is Shown Here PONTIAC f*t**=™rrS*paB!t largest auto maker, Toyota, rp, ports plans to grab an increasing share of the U.S. import market and maybe even challenge front-running Volkswagen within a few years. Heads of Toyota’s U.S. agen-ies were in Oakland County Thursday to show off t h e waresrTiw lime japarasr&off autos last June stood ini. mm imports. -------* ...*..•••■* I “By the end of the year, we should be in fifth or place,” said Shoji Hatton, head of Toyota Motor Sales U.S.S. ‘In three to five years, we might be in a position to compete with Volkswagen.” H year, Hattori Americans bought 8,500 of the Japanese cars. He predicted this year’s total would be about *‘,000. Volkswagen sales this year are expected to tota' around 400,000. Hattori said introduction of a fastback sports car in the Jaguar class, the Toyota 200-GT, is scheduled in the United States next year. News in Brief Donald H. Ball reported to Pontiac police yesterday the thaft of a chord organ valued at $125 from a truck parked at E. j E. Ball Motor Freight, 124| Franklin Road. . Coin Show Sunday Aa|. 28th. First Federal. 761 W. Huron/ Sw Mil By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am a widow, age 62, with no income except Social Security and the interest on nn $8,000 savings account. There is no mortgage on my home. I recently sold some property on contract, which will pay me $4,060 annually for four years, with interest. Everyone advises me to buy common stocks to offset inflation. Should I do this or put these funds, when received, in savings as I have Iff the past? If I should invest, what stocks, . should I buy?” M.K. A) The advice has merit Well-positioned real estate an. common stocks both offer • good hedge against inflation particularly at this time as rls 1 ing prices for goods continui to chip away the dollar’s buyini power. Vet in your circumstances, do not feel you are in a positiot 4ak» an ids are received, I sugges placement of about half to ad< to your savings accbubi and UK balance in some better-qualit; stocks, Texaco, Inc., Interna tional Paper, Cora Products Owens-Illinois Glass and Bordei all of which offer, I feel, som* of inflation protection. Q) We own 50 shares of Standard Oil of Indiana and 25 Comsat. I also believe that I carry enough insurance and we have a $1,561 emergency reserve. We wiH soon have a $10,006 inheritance and would appreciate some suggestions from yOu as to eventual placement pf this money.” W.D. A) Standard of Indiana has re ported seven consecutive yean of higher sales and earnings -this stock I feel should be beld Comsat is more speculative bu if you can forego .income ano have patience it should wi out. I’d suggest that you build yout reserves higtag, Fo*/moderat* growth and income you migh consider an/i * Montana 'ftoift-* bert and General Telephone.