WEDNESDAY, JULY20,1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY A AIPZ 1,am ' 1'HIIrCJ m For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone 764-0557 Monday through Friday, 12 Noon to 2 P.M. MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Birds Bludgeon Tigers PERSONAL GIRL ROOMMATE needed for Fall. 2 bdrm., mod., furn., 2 man. Off Pack- ard. Call 665-3200 after 6. F6 HAVE 4 MAN APT. Need 2 girls for Fall. TU 1-4971 or TU 1-6981, F8 HI HANDSOME! Just a little ad to say "hi:" Ju HI! F7 5TH GIRL NEEDED to share large house near campus. Call Donna, 483- 3554. F5 IF YOUR HOME is for rent or sublet, please CALL 761-1490. We need a 3 bedroom, unfurnished home, by Aug. 2 MALE undergrads seek 3rd student to share apt. in Fall. Call Leonard Rosen, 663-6358. F4 DANCE-Sat. nite at the Y, 350 S. Fifth St.. AA. Live music, refreshments 9-12. Single people 25 years and up. P50 AS THE BALMY breezes of summer drift in, thoughts just naturally turn to the out of doors-get all picnic supplies at HELP WANTED FOR RENT STOCKMAN - Small engin. and parts. Resp. for checking in, recording, dis- pensing to shop ad selling at retail, Automotive exp. helpful. Full time. Phone 665-8637. H38 WANTED - Men students for Psych. exp. One hour/$2. Tues., Wed. or Thurs. 7:30. Call Rob, 764-6323, 10-2 p.m. H35 PART-TIME JOB-Waitress. THANO'S PLACE (Romanoff). Hours to be arranged. 300 S. Thayer. H36 RESEARCH PROJECT needs undergrad volunteers to read and evaluate articles. 1 hour of time for $1.50 at convenient location. Call 764-9496 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., weekdays. H37 MALE UNDERGRADUATES One or two openings in personality research-20 hours work total, at $2.50/hour. No special background re- quired. All applicants will receive $1.50 for completing brief, required application. (This information will be used for an unrelated study, now underway.) phone Miss Taylor (9a .m.-4 p.m.) 764-8522 H34 APARTMENTS FOR FALL 4 to 6 man, newly furnished with screened porch. 7*1-5691 or 1-884-3852. C46 FALL - For 2, 3, 4, or 5. Mod. furn., air-cond., balconies, quiet. Call 665- 2689. C31 BEAUTIFUL 4- or 5-man modern apt. available for Fall. Air-conditioned. See it at 1000 Oakland. For information, call Dan or Jiro, 761-3785. C44 WASHINGTON MANOR 418 E. Washington Furnished luxury one bdrm.-$177. Only two available. NO 8-6906. C45 2 &3 Mans NOW LEASING FOR FALL 21,s Blocks from Campus New Building Air-conditioned, carpeted, fully fur- nished bi-levels with 1 large bedroom and study. Paved and covered park- ing. SPECIAL TERMS FOR MARRIED COUPLES 731 Packard Call 663-8866 afternoons and evenings C30 ROOMS FOR RENT--Excellent singles and doubles, available now in all- graduate house. 3 blocks from cam- pus. Phone 663-5930 anytime. C36 BIKES AND SCOOTERS SAVE $8 to $10 On all new HONDAs during HONDA of Ann Arbor's Summer Sales Festival. Buy or order new at the home of the nicest people since 1963, 3000 Packard Rd., 665-9281. Zo1 FOR SALE-1964 Honda 90, mech. exc., moderate mileage. Extras. Best offer. Call John, 761-3811, after 6. Z24 305 SCRAMBLER, 1966, 800 miles. Beau- tiful cond. Never driven over 50 mph. Must sell fast! Best offer. Ask for Denny at 665-3433. Z26 KAWASAKI LOW PRICES BIKES AND SCOOTERS 1966 MONTESSA 175cc, perf. cond. Less than 1,000 miles. Best offer of $500 or over. 449-2215. Z25 FOR SALE-1964 Yamaha 80. Only 2100 miles. Excellent condition. Call 761- 7179. Z47 YAMAHA 125, '65. 4100 miles. Elec. start. 663-3878 or 764-0318, Z22 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS HI-FI STEREO FM receiver, 75 watt, 1 year old at %? price: $170. Ten Have, 764-7516, days only. X26 SPECIAL GUITAR SALE Now in stockI GOYA and GIBSON CLASSICS UNIVERSITY MUSIC HOUSE, INC. 512 William (Maynard Street) NO 2-5579 BANJOS, GUITARS, AND BONGOS A-1 New and Used Instruments Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington SLINGERLAND Drums, Bass, Tom, Snare, High Hat and Ride Cymbals. $200 (will accept more if offered). 663-4877, ask for Rob; call late. X25 BUSINESS SERVICES INDECKS INFORMATION RETRIEVAL KITS Invaluable for writing cours- naoers By The Associated Press BALTIMORE-Frank Robinson drove in five runs with a pair of homers as the Baltimore Orioles clubbed Detroit 13-3 last night and stretched their American, League lead over the second-place Tigers to 91/2 games. Robinson hit a three-run homer in the opening inning as Detroit starter Earl Wilson, bothered with a sore elbow, made a hasty exit without retiring a batter. Robinson's second homer, which extended his league lead to 25, came in the fourth off Dave Wick- ersbam following a single by win- ning pitcher Eddie Watt. Watt, a rookie reliever making only his~ second start, further helped his own cause in the sixth when he and Curt Blefary smack- ed solo homers off Johnny Podres. Baltimore's devastating 18-hit attack included two-run singles by Brooks Robinson and Russ Snyder in the fifth as the Orioles scored five unearned runs follow- ing an error by Norm Cash. Watt struck out seven while bringing his record to 7-1. He allowed eight hits, three by Jim Northrup. Willie Horton drove in three runs with an eighth inning homer, a single and a sacrifice fly. * * * o THE place for the "IN" crowd, but you're welcome even if you are a little out. RALPH'S MARKET CO New 85cc trail or road, only $310 full price-incl. tax, title, lic., while they last. RICH BELL'S 23257 Woodward, 548-4488 Ferndale, north of Detroit Z20 1965 HONDA 0100. Helmet. 650 miles, excellent. NO 5-9468. Z42 HONDA C-100. Only 416 miles. Stored all winter. NO 3-9623. Z24 BRIDGESTONE-COTTON 50 to 250 cc. Service on Most Makes HONDA PARTS AND SERVICE UNIVERSITY MOTORCYCLE SALES 211 E. Ann NO 2-3979 Z18 MPUTER PROGRAMMER 709 Packard Open every night 'til midnight TV RENTALS - Lowest student rates. Call Hi F Studio, 663-7242. 121 W. Washington St. Free Delivery. F7 NEED EXTRA MONEY? Full or Part Time Work -be your own boss, too $25.00-$50.00-and more per month is possible, working part time. Not a door-to-door proposition, no phone soliciting, no quota to meet, no age limit, nO "franchise fee," no training period. Come to the Ann Arbor YMCA-YWCA Tuesday, July 19, 8:00 p.m., to get the full story. Ask for Mr. Campbell or Mr. Hoey. F2 Position avail. for computer program- mer to work on FORTRAN, UMAP, and IBM 360 coding and data man- agement. AB degree and 1 years exp.: math 473 or equiv. exp. Full or half time. Call 764-2115 to make appt. for interview. H21I and Howard each had three hits, with Howard driving in two runs. * * * White Sox Win CLEVELAND - Pinch-hitter Smoky Burgess' sacrifice fly in the ninth inning last night lifted the Chicago White Sox past Cleve- land 5-4. Don Buford walked to open the ninth and moved to third on Tommy Agee's single. Burgess then hit for relief pitcher Hoyt Wil- helm and hit a fly to rightfield, Buford scoring after the catch. The White Sox tied it at 4-4 in the seventh when, with the bases loaded and two out, John O'Don- oghue relieved Jack Kralick with a 1-0 count on Tom McCraw and walked him, forcing in a run. Cleveland jumped off to . a three-run lead in the first when Chuck Hinton hit his sixth home run with a man on and Fred Whitfield clouted his 14th. * * * Reds Outlast Cubs CHICAGO - Don Pavletich's 18th inning homer broke up the longest game in the majors this year and gave the Cincinnati Reds a 3-2 victory over the Chicago Cubs yesterday. Pavletich smashed his eighth homer of the season with two out in the 18th after the teams had played eight scoreless innings. The shot came off Ferguson Jenkins, the Cubs' third pitcher. Chicago left 18 men on base, threatening repeatedly in the extra innings. Joe Nuxhall, Cin- cinnati's third pitcher, who work- ed the last three innings, was the. winner. SCincinnati had tied the game with two out in the ninth when Gordy Coleman's double scored Pete Rose. Astros Crush Phils HOUSTON-Pitcher Dick Far- rell walloped a three-run homer, and hurled the Houston Astros to an 8-2 victory over Philadelphia last night in the first game played over a surface completely covered with artificial grass. Astroturf, the grass substitute which covered the infield in the Houston Astrodome for the first half of the season, was extended to the outfield with no apparent effect on the play. Farrell, who also had two sin- gles, hammered his homer in the sixth inning after Bill Health had singled and Bob Aspromonte had reached first on Dick Groat's error. EVER PLAY JACKS WHILE WORKING? WE DO. Come in and see for yourself. Join us in a game, or as a staff mem- ber. The Michigan Daily. F18 RENT Your TV from NEJAC Zenith 19-in, all channel portables for only $10 per month. FREE service and delivery. Phone 662-5671. F ANN ARBOR'S best buy on a diamond engagement ring. Check it! Austin Diamonad, 1209 S. University. 663-7151. WANTED - Man to share apt. Fall- Winter term. $57.50 monthly. Call Battle Creek collect, 962-0804, Mark. GRADUATE FELLOWSHIP OPPORTUNITY PART TIME Multi-Million Dollar Company hiring for part time sales work. Earnings in! excess of $3.00 per hour. This is not pots-knives-books or any of that door to door nonsense. This company is expanding all across the nation, con- sequently this could be more than just a part timne job for the right person. If you're 20, have use of a car, and are bondable write William D. Nichols, 3372 Washtenaw Ave., Ann Arbor, Mich. SALESMAN to start now. Professional opportunity, married, 22-30, Bachelor's degree. Phone 453-4030 for interview. COLLEGE STUDENTS-Part time eve- ning work at Ypsi-Arbor Lanes as pin jumper. Apply in the evening. H33 ON-CAMPUS AND SUMMER JOBS AVAILABLE A great opportunity for aggressive college students to earn a high in- come distributing material to college campuses all over the United States. Combine summer travel with large profits, or work part-time on your own campus. Fall jobs are also avail- able. Contact: Collegiate-Dept. D, 27 East 22 St., New York, N.Y. 10010. BLOOD DONORS 1335 GEDDES Luxury 2-bedroom apt. with new fur- nishings, wall-to-wall carpeting, dis- posal, off-street parking; for fall, Also other modern furnished 1, 2 and 3-man apts. in campus and hospital locations; immediate and fall. CAMPUS MANAGEMENT BULTACO Immediate Delivery 100cc Trails 250cc Batadors 250cc TT, '66 Scramblers 175cc Camparas 175cc Merciures RICH BELL'S We carry complete parts 23257 Woodward, 548-4488 Ferndale, north of Detroit Z21 WANTED-Used bicycles--3 speed only. Also junk motorcycles. Will pick up motorcycles only. Cal 662-6986. After 7 p~m. cal 761-0749. STUDENT BIKE SHOP 1135 E. Huron Z19 or theses, reviewing for exams, doing WASHINGTON - Jim Perry research projects in the arts, sciences pitched a two-hitter and drove in or humanities. two runs as the Minnesota Twins Call Geo. Gitzendanner, 761-3607 whipped the Washington Senators after 6 p.m. or write 536 S. Forest, 4-0 last night and completed a 19A, for free demonstration. J20 sweep of a twi-night doubleheader. Jim Kaat won his 13th in the FOR SALE opener with Harmon Killebrew's GOLF CLUBS-Full set Wilson clubs- single driving in the winning run 7 irons, 3 woods; used less than 8 in a 5-4 victory. times. Will bargain. Call 662-8196 Frank Howard lined a one-hop- after 6 p.m. B10 per back to Perry in the fourth FOR SALE-1964 Volkswagen. Spotless, inning and the ball shot off the Has everything. $1250. Call after 5. pitcher's glove towards third base 668-7107. B37 for the Senators' first hit. Don BARGAIN CORNER I Blasingame's bunt single in the The Phillies had grabbed a two- run lead in the third when Jim Bunning doubled, Tony TayIor tripled and Johnny Callison sin- gled-all with two out, Houston went ahead with four" runs in the fourth, three of them on Jim Wynn's 15th homer. * * * Cards Nip Braves ST. LOUIS - Charlie Smith singled home Bob Tolan in the 12th inning, giving the St. Louis Cardinals a 10-9 victory over the Atlanta Braves last night. Tolan went into run for Orlando Cepeda, who doubled to open the inning. Then, after Mike Shannan sacrificed Tolan to third, Smth. delivered his hit. Joe Torre socked a grand-slam in the first inning off starter Tracey Stallard, and then hit solo homer, his 24th of the season, to break a 7-7 tie in the seventh inning. The Braves also scored" another run in the inning. The Cards knotted the score the first time< with a .seven-runs outburst against starter Tony Cloninger and reliever Clay Car- roll in the sixth inning. Then, in the seventh, Smith homered after Mike Shannon singled off Chi Chi' Olivo to make it 9-9. Tim McCarver featured the big inning with his sixth homer and a run-producing single. our of the runs were unearned as a result of Eddie Mathews' error. PGA Begins Tomorrow By The Associated Press AKRON, Ohio - The PGA's golden anniversary tournament begins tomorrow with the game's top stars harboring various rea-. sons for wanting to win the final major championship of 1966. Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Billy Casper and Doug Sanders are among those who have an ax to grind In the 72-hole battle across the vast field, of the Firestone Country Club which measures 7,180 yards and carries a challenging par of 35- 35-70. Nicklaus is gunning for a three- quarter slam. If he tacks the PGA to his Master's and British Open victories, he'll become the first player to win three major titles since Ben Hogan won the Masters, the British, the U.S. Open and then didn't compete in the 1953 PGA. Palmer is still somewhat shock- ed from his big blowup loss to Casper in this year's Open and a triumph this week would gilt Arnie's somewhat tarnished image. Player, the 1965 golfer of the year, has virtually done nothing this year in the way of winning. The diminutive South African was one of the first pros to appear at. Firestone and has been practicing diligently since last Friday in an effort to shape up his game. Casper has been the steadiest golfer on tour this year, and "Buf falo Bill" could all but wrap up 1966 honors by stringing the PGA title to his recent U.S. Open and Western Open triumphs. Sanders usually is in the run- ning, but the quick-witted sport with the flashy outfits never has won a major championship, al- though he came close in the Brit- ish Open when he finished two strokes behind Nicklaus. 662-7787 days 761-4018 eves. & Sun. 016 To train a new kind of specialist- URGENTLY NEEDED In the teaching of science, math, reading, etc., to children under age $6 for Rh positive; $7, $10 and $12 for six, especially disadvantaged. Excel- Rh negative. Hours: Mon. thru Thurs. lent career opportunities at leadership 9-4: Fri. 1-7. 18-21 years old need and planning levels, as interest in parent's permission. 483-1894. quality preschool education mounts., PIA T Funds recently received for limited YPSILANTI number of $2,500 fellowships begin- Detroit Blood Service ning fall '66, providing a year of aca- demic study and active participation USED CARS in an exciting research and develop-I ment program. Able, aggressive, and1 independent students invited to ap- 1963 AAB-$250 or best offer. Cal ply, regardless of undergraduate ma- 482-6271. N jor. Write to Dr. Carl Bereiter, In- stitute for Research on Exceptional 1965 JAG XKE. 4.2 liter, conv., Met. Children, University of Illinois, Ur- Blue. Excel, cond. New Michelin X bana, Illinois 61802. F38 tires, new Blaupumkt radio. Call NO 608 MONROE-Large apt. for 2-3-4 and 5 students. Avail, for fall occupancy Air-cond., covered parking. Finest furnishings are but a few of the desirable features of our bldg. Still a few apts. available for summer. APARTMENTS LIMITED 663-0511 APARTMENTS FOR FALL-Luxury 2 bdrm. apts.,rair-cond., disposal,.park-1 ing. Well furn. Opp. Field House, Call 761-5690. If no answer call 1-864-3582. C43 NOW LEASING FOR FALL NEW AND OLD BUILDINGS Efficiencies, 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments Patrick J. Pulte Inc. WEEKDAYS-NO 5-9405 SATURDAYS 9-5-NO 2-5244 C21; FALL '66 NEW, completely furnished, close-in apartments. Available for 2-4 persons. DAHLMANN APARTMENTS Office: 545 Church St. 761-7600 RENT A CYCLE From $3.25 an hour. University Motorcycle Sales 211 E. Ann NO 2-3979 Z17 TIRES-All types and sizes-Road, Race, Srambles, Trials. Tachometers for HONDA, Yamaha, Suzuki, Bridge- stone, BSA, BMW. HONDA of Ann Arbor 3000 Packard Rd. 665-9281 Z NICHOLSON M='C SALES Authorized dealer for TRIUMPH - YAMAHA - BMW - GILERA. 224 S. First. Phone 662-7409. 7 World's FASTEST VISIT OUR Western Store - Boots, Clothes, Hats, Lee Jeans, Saddles & Tack, Schneder Western Supply, 2635 Saline Road, 1 mile from U of M Stadium. W1 SAM'S STORE Has Genuine LEVI's Galore! LEVI'S SLIM-FITS-$4.50 "White" and 5 Colors For "Guys and Gals" Cord, SLIM-FITS-$5,98 LEVI'S STA-PREST PANTS Never Needs Ironing Asst'd. Colors-$6.98 LEVI JACKETS "White"-$6.98 Blue Denim-$6.98 LEVI'S Supersim's-$4.98 LEVI'S Dungarees--$4.49 S-T-R-E-T-C-H LEVI'S "White"-$5.98 TURTLENECKS-$1.69 (15 Colors) Open Mon. & Fri. Nights SAM'S STORE 122 E. Washington ninth was Washington's only other hit. Tovar Drives in Two Perry singled following Cesar Tovar's double in the fifth. Both Tovar and Perry drove in runs with sacrifice flies in the seventh following Don Mincher's single and Phil Ortega's throwing error on an attempted sacrifice. Tovar's squeeze bunt produced another run in the ninth. Killebrew's two-out single in the i Major League Standings 1 eighth inning scored Tovar with the winning run in the opener. Tovar forced Zoilo Versalles, who had walked, and took second on an infield out. Kaat weathered the Senators' 13-hit attack, confining the scor- ing to two innings. Ken McMullen AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Street 250: The X-6 HUSTLER LOST AND FOUND LOST-Tues., 7-12-S.U. & Church- Black rim glasses. 482-5507. Al 8-6767 after 5 p.m. N24 TRIUMPH TR4-1963, overdrive, radio, heater, luggage rack, Toneau, in good running cond. Price $1250. 665-4617. ait tinore Detroit' Cleveland California Minnesota Chicago Kansas City New York Washington Boston w 62 50 49 49 45 43 41 41 40 39 L 32 39 41 42 48 49 49 49 55 55 Pct, .660 .562 .544 .538 .485 .467 .456 .456 .415 .425 GB 91 11 11 16 18 19 19 23 23 Pittsburgh San Francisco Los Angeles Philadelphia Houston St. Louis Atlanta Cincinnati New York Chicago W 55 56 51 50 46 44 44 40 39 29 L 36 37 38 42 45 46 48 50 51 61 Pet. .604 .602 .573 .543 .505 .489 .478 .444 .433 .322 GB 3~ 5 9 10 11 14%4 15 25}2 #. :# t i i M ! f C II SUMMER STUDENTS? FACULTY? MUSIC LOVERS? We get compliments galore from visitors who check our infinite variety of recorded entertainment. For the best record collection in your hometown, choose from the nationally famous Liberty Music Shop selection. 417 E. Liberty NO 2-0675 i i i E R . C28 University Towers Aa rtmnents FALL & SUMMER RENTALS ON CAMPUS From $60 per person per month FEATURES INCLUDE: HEATED SWIMMING POOL Luxury Lobby Color TVs Billiard Room Air Conditioning Many other extras MODEL APT. OPEN 536 S. Forest 10-6, Every Day 761-3565--NO 5-4480 SUMMER SUBLET FURNISHED ROOMS for Summer only. NO 8-6906. Ul 1 GIRL WANTED for rest of summer to share lovely 4-room apartment with one other. Shady street, 3 blocks from campus, rent negotiable. 308 E. Jefferson. Come see or call 665-2379. U50 WANTED TO RENT INDIVIDUAL WISHES to rent mod. ef- ficiency or 1 bldm. apt. for rest of summer. Call or leave message for Mike, after 8 p.m., NO 2-3219. L10 3 BEDROOM HOME-Wanted to rent or sublet; unfurnished, by Aug. 1. Phil- lips executive family. CALL 761-1490. WANTED FOR FALL - West of and preferably close to campus, with bed- room, living room, kitchen and bath. Willing to pay what the place is worth, maybe more. Contact Thomas R. Copi at 662- 8183 or 764-0552. L9 4040 Washtenaw 761 -2650 £31 if you are confused over recent money and securties market theyorearks may help. cal (U.S. Treasury) and set ear e w co contro poti isessential for eco- monetaY edeere are Cooperation between them nonic stability.yedofeconomic el- L a cs t D e c mb e r, t h e F e d e ra l R e s e r v e d e c id e d th a t s i t y e a o f e o m c en - Las toDecemberd by adeGovernment expenditures soca progrms aod La tatpped by massive tosrusifto- ba cdt. pansione' war, were leading to serious inflation, ea ds o the Viet Nam wre being met by too uch and toocre S resu e artment refused to cut spending or to increase goas ad srvies e eting tghenngthe money spl n However, the TreasuryReserve acted alone by tighten taxes, so the FederalR borrowing. raising interest to discourage rb attracting rt end institutiOs have a temporarily, by sefrve. ny, t a avoiding credit curtailment, at l her rates of interest-. SMany are oi rom their competitors at high te further soer, tedeitrlsrv ar okn nd will tighten fute .ni co midtrols ml business ression resultS, it WI1 , the theoFederal Rsmet. Even if a r inibashich is harmful to evefyOn' the threat of ibetter than an uncontrolled inflation, as of Our y obtte Ihna htteaeod maximso be infin ynd experience tell us that the spending s peo arofi uninterruptei 1) avoid excessive s n a grow g ord uslY 3 investi dPth with a bank savings account, ho diously 3)inveati nally, well chosen investments. credit l - ife insurance an, finalsy, our h e e wihelp you to ride out all storms and insure These three gud' koward Adams, 1r. President STATEMENT OF CONDIION JUNE 30,1966 RESOURCES Cash and Due from Banks U.S. Government and Federal Agency Securities, Less Reserve Public Housing Authority and Municipal Bonds Stock in Federal Reserve Bank Loans and Discounts, Less Reserve Real Estate Mortgage Loans Bank Premises and Equipment Other Assets TOTAL RESOURCES with 12 mo. or 12,000 mile warranty, means the most in RELIABILITY. (See the NEW Sport 150, too) at SUZUKI Cycle Center YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Minnesota 5-4, Washington 4-0 Chicago 5, Cleveland 4 Baltimore 13, Dietroit 3 Kansas City at New York (rain) Caliornia at Boston (rain) TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Cleveland (n) Minnesota at Washington (n) Detroit at Baltimore (n) Kansas City at New York (n) California at Boston (n) YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Cincinnati 3, Chicago 2 (18 Inn) Houston 8, Philadelphia 2 St. Louis 10, Atlanta 9 (12 inn) Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Cincinnati at Chicago (2) Phladelphia at Houston (n) Pittsburgh at Los Angeles (n) New York at San Francisco Atlanta at St. Louis (n) $11,504,191 23,616,54$ 14,167,630 164,650 $23,206,139 21,666,423 2,256,079 100,260 $96,681,920 $39,899,161 47,646,852 1,466,671 141,150 43,088 $1,000,000 1,687,500 3,800,000 997,492 $96,681,920 LIABILITIES Demand Deposits Time Deposits , Reserve for Unearned Interest Reserve for Interest and Taxes Other Liabilities Capital Notes Capital Stock Surplus Undivided Profits TOTAL LIABILITIES Tight Monet Inflation and t. You r Pocketbool I e ... 0.. . .1 ..flw& I I A IN - - - -T